Montreal Gazette

Changing the culture for better

Soulpepper suit made its case without a trial

- ADINA BRESGE

TORONTO They may not have had their day in court, but the actresses who sued Toronto’s Soulpepper Theatre Company and one of its co-founders over sexual harassment allegation­s succeeded in changing the company’s culture, legal experts say, showing the power of civil actions as a tool in the #MeToo movement.

An out-of-court settlement was reached in the lawsuits against Albert Schultz and Soulpepper, all involved parties confirmed last week.

While the terms of the settlement have been tightly guarded, lawyer Margaret Waddell, who was not involved in the case, said it’s clear the plaintiffs walked away with at least one thing they wanted.

“Their objectives, as they stated, were to create a systemic change in the way (Soulpepper) was operating to create a safe environmen­t,” said Waddell, a partner at Toronto law firm Waddell Phillips.

“It looks like they’ve achieved that, and I think that that is really important.”

In January, four actresses filed separate lawsuits accusing former Soulpepper artistic director Schultz of a pattern of sexual harassment at the Toronto nonprofit theatre company.

At a media conference, Kristin Booth, Hannah Miller, Diana Bentley and Patricia Fagan said they decided to launch a civil suit in order to change what they alleged was a workplace culture that tolerated sexual harassment.

Schultz resigned and pledged to vehemently defend himself against the allegation­s. Both he and Soulpepper filed notices of intent to defend in the case.

After the suits were filed, thenHerita­ge minister Melanie Joly said her department was reviewing funding policies to ensure recipients commit to eliminatin­g sexual misconduct and harassment.

Soulpepper has since taken steps toward a safer and more inclusive environmen­t, including providing crisis counsellor­s, setting up a whistleblo­wer hotline and adopting a new code of conduct.

The months-long legal battle prompted self-reflection about the issue of sexual harassment in Canada’s artistic community, with cultural institutio­ns and associatio­ns across the country launching anti-harassment initiative­s.

And amid these sweeping changes, a court date never materializ­ed.

Karen Busby, a law professor at University of Manitoba, wasn’t surprised by the Soulpepper outcome — she said 99 per cent of civil actions never go to a full trial.

There are often powerful incentives on either side of a civil suit to resolve a case outside of court, she said, including the burden of a lengthy judicial process, expensive legal fees, the potential for reputation­al damage and the risk of retraumati­zing victims on the stand.

The actresses collective­ly sought $3.6 million in damages from Schultz and $4.25 million from Soulpepper, but Busby said in settlement­s of similar cases, compensati­on tends to be in the thousands or tens of thousands of dollars.

Waddell said she imagines those figures will creep upward as the #MeToo movement reshapes perception­s about the consequenc­es of sexual misconduct.

“I think we’re recognizin­g now as a country and within our judicial institutio­ns that those harms are real, and they are no less deserving of compensati­on.”

As Waddell proceeds with a class-action lawsuit against the Royal Winnipeg Ballet and a photograph­er who is alleged to have taken intimate photos of students, she said she thinks civil suits will be an instrument of change in the #MeToo movement, regardless of whether they go to trial.

“If the institutio­ns now are starting to recognize the problem through these highly publicized pieces of litigation, that’s good for everybody,” she said.

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