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Law Times • may 30, 2016
Page 3
www.lawtimesnews.com
NEWS
Court says agreement was 'unconscionable'
No interest on litigation loan for injured woman
MICHAEL MCKIERNAN
For Law Times
A
woman who suffered
a brain injury in a car
crash will not have
to pay the interest on
a litigation loan made by the
wife of her former personal in-
jury lawyer aer the Divisional
Court declared the agreement
"unconscionable."
Marta Narbutt was 17 when
she hired Niagara Falls, Ont.
lawyer Ashley Gnyś' firm
Sharpe Beresh Gnyś on a con-
tingency fee agreement shortly
after the 2004 accident that
killed her boyfriend when their
car was struck by another vehi-
cle. According to the Divisional
Court, between 2008 and 2009,
Gnyś arranged three loans for
his client totalling $13,500 with
a company called Health Ser-
vices Recovery Network.
However, Gnyś did not tell
Narbutt that HSRN was owned
and operated by his wife Valerie
Gnyś, who, according to the firm's
web site, has worked as a paralegal
there since 1986, and had done
work on Narbutt's file. Nor did he
explain that Timothy Beresh, the
man who talked Narbutt through
the loan documentation, was ac-
tually working for both the law
firm and the litigation loan com-
pany and not for her.
Narbutt switched lawyers in
2009, and settled for $306,000,
but she didn't repay the loans, so
HSRN launched a court action
in 2012 to get her to pay up.
By June 2015, when a superi-
or court judge granted HSRN's
motion for summary judgment,
Narbutt's bill had ballooned
to $41,649, including about
$28,000 in interest alone on the
loans, which had an effective
annual interest rate of 19.5 per
cent. After losing the motion,
she paid back the entire $13,500
she had originally borrowed,
but continued her fight over the
interest owed.
On April 29, a 2-1 majority
of the Divisional Court granted
Narbutt's appeal, rescinded the
loan agreement, and dismissed
HSRN's claim, expressing con-
cern about the way the iden-
tity of the lender was concealed
from Narbutt, and the lack of
independent legal advice of-
fered to her.
"I find that these agreements
are unconscionable because there
was an imbalance of power, the
Respondent took unfair advan-
tage of the imbalance of power
and the bargain was improvident.
"Furthermore, the Appel-
lant had every reason to believe
that everyone who spoke with
her about the loans was rep-
resenting her interests," wrote
Ontario Superior Court Justice
Julie Thorburn in the Division-
al Court decision, with Justice
Graeme Mew concurring.
"The Appellant dealt with
the lender in the belief that the
lender was independent of her
lawyer, who had been instru-
mental in the arrangement of
the loan and choice of lender.
She reasonably understood her
law firm as assisting her in bor-
rowing what was for her a sub-
stantial sum of money when
in fact the Respondent, Valerie
Gnyś, was the lender, her lawyer
was the lender's husband and
employer and Mr. Beresh, who
did accident benefits work for
her lawyers, was in fact acting
for the lender," they added.
In a dissent, Justice James
Kent, the third member of the
panel, saw no reason to interfere
with the decision of the mo-
tion judge, who found the lack
of disclosure around the loan
agreement was "irrelevant" be-
cause Narbutt could not have
got a better deal elsewhere than
HSRN gave her, and had, there-
fore, suffered no loss.
"My client is delighted," says
Margaret Hoy, another Niagara
Falls, Ont. lawyer who took over
Narbutt's personal injury case
and also acted for her in the loan
dispute. "She was always prepared
to pay back the principal. The
problem was the interest they
were charging her. When you
have a young vulnerable person,
it's important to get them to re-
alize how much this kind of bor-
rowing will actually cost them."
In an interview, Ashley Gnyś,
who represented his wife at the
Divisional Court, tells Law
Times they will not appeal the
majority verdict. Even in the
event of a victory at the Court of
Appeal, he says the most likely
outcome would be an order for
a full trial of the matter.
"A full trial is what we were
trying to avoid in the first place
with the summary judgment
motion. It would be a little bit
like winning the battle and
losing the war," he says. "The
amount of money at stake in
the grand scheme of things is
not such a huge amount that
you would want to devote those
kinds of resources to it."
Gnyś says his wife continues
to offer litigation loans, but they
have adjusted their practice to
respond to the concerns raised
in the judgment.
"We have learned from this
case and made changes," he says.
"All we can hope is to make new
mistakes, and not repeat old
ones."
Darryl Singer, a Markham,
Ont. personal injury lawyer,
says the decision highlights the
importance of disclosure by
lawyers in cases where they have
an interest in a litigation lender.
"I'm not aware of any lawyers
who are involved to that extent
in loans, but if they are, the les-
son is that they need to disclose
their connection to the lender,
and then send the client down
the street to another lawyer for
independent legal advice. It's
hard at that point for them to
come back later and say they
didn't understand the agree-
ment," Singer says.
Alison Burrison, a partner at
personal injury firm McLeish
Orlando LLP, says her firm
views litigation loans as a last
resort. She says Narbutt got a
competitive interest rate, since
typical annual rates are current-
ly around 24 per cent. However,
she adds that Gnyś may have got
more sympathy from the judges
if the law firm had explored
other options apart from a liti-
gation loan, such as an advance
from the tort insurer or a per-
sonal line of credit.
"The average case takes at
least three to four years, so a
loan at 24 per cent compound-
ing monthly is going to add up
pretty quickly. You don't want
clients incurring that kind of
rate if you can avoid it," Bur-
rison says. "At the same time, a
litigation loan can be important
for access to justice. If one side is
forced into settling prematurely
because they are running out of
funds, that puts them in an un-
fair position."
Hoy says she was stunned
to find out the hidden identity
behind HSRN in 2012, soon
after negotiating Narbutt's final
settlement.
The revelation prompted her
to file a complaint with the Law
Society of Upper Canada about
Ashley Gnyś' conduct, which in
turn prompted HSRN to seek
costs against Hoy personally
after its original success at the
summary judgment motion.
However, Ontario Superior
Court Justice Robert Nightingale
wrote in his Sept, 30, 2015 judg-
ment on costs that the claim was
undermined by the fact that the
LSUC investigation concluded
that the law firm was in an actual
or potential conf lict of interest
regarding the loan situation.
According to the Divisional
Court, the law society conclud-
ed no disciplinary action was
required, deeming the failures
matters of "best practice." LT
Darryl Singer says a recent ruling highlights the importance of disclosure by lawyers in
cases where they have an interest in a litigation lender.
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