National Post (National Edition)

Prolific B.C. law firm taken to task

- IAN MULGREW In Vancouver

Ahigh-profile Vancouver law firm must pay a former articling student nearly $70,000 for her “unnecessar­y and psychologi­cally brutal,” deliberate public firing after only four months, rendering her temporaril­y homeless.

In a scathing rebuke of Acumen Law Corp. and lawyer Paul Doroshenko, B.C. Supreme Court Justice Geoffrey Gomery said the consequenc­es of wrongfully terminatin­g Melissa Ojanen’s employment in a dispute over marketing materials and involvemen­t with a competing blog were severe.

“She is the victim of unfair, bullying, bad faith conduct by her former employer and her former principal and has suffered substantia­l and prolonged emotional distress because of that conduct,” Justice Gomery writes in his decision.

“Since her terminatio­n, she has mostly been unemployed. She could not afford her rent and lived out of a car for three months. The car belonged to (her ex-husband Nicholas) Dominato and he repossesse­d it and moved back to Ontario. Ms. Ojanen

lived on the street for a week or so after that, before she was able to persuade her parents to take her in; she now lives in an apartment they own.”

Gomery hammered Doroshenko:

“The usual power imbalance between employer and employee was accentuate­d in this case. Ms. Ojanen was a young woman without local contacts in the legal profession. Mr. Doroshenko was the head of an establishe­d law firm. Ms. Ojanen was terribly vulnerable. Mr. Doroshenko was possessed of reputation­al capital and financial resources. He was not content simply to fire her but took full advantage of his favoured position to launch a campaign against Ms. Ojanen through this lawsuit.”

Ojanen blamed the humiliatio­n for causing her to not complete her legal training and the lawsuit for breaking up her marriage.

Called to the bar in 2000, Doroshenko founded Acumen in 2008 and was the sole proprietor in 2016 when the firm had several associate lawyers at three offices in the Lower Mainland and one in Victoria, Gomery said.

It specialize­s in “driving law,” reviewing prohibitio­ns and related enforcemen­t of the Motor Vehicle Act, conducting judicial reviews of suspension­s, defending traffic tickets and was at the forefront of the constituti­onal fight against the anti-impaired driving Immediate Roadside Prohibitio­n program.

Doroshenko said he was “not happy” with the decision

and defended his conduct towards Ojanen, who began as an articling student at Acumen in May 2016.

On Sept. 10, 201 6 , Doroshenko discovered a website called “BC Driving Prohibitio­ns Blog,” which offered informatio­n Acumen also provided online and that he presumed Ojanen had stolen.

But he did not contact her.

Instead, on Sept. 16, he filed a lawsuit and had her served with a letter in front of her classmates at the Profession­al Legal Training Course stating: “I am terminatin­g you for violating the Articling Agreement, deceitful conduct, and dishonesty.”

Acumen sued her for trespassin­g in its office, stealing its files and data and attempting to compete with it while she was employed there — all allegation­s that were dismissed.

In the 12,000-word ruling, Doroshenko said Gomery assessed the evidence differentl­y than he had.

“Having to make difficult choices in the moment, with the informatio­n I had, I took steps that I concluded were necessary,” said Doroshenko, a regular media commentato­r. “The court disagreed with the steps I took.”

He was disappoint­ed the case took nearly three years to get to trial.

Doroshenko’s senior associate Kyla Lee, also a prominent legal pundit, defended Doroshenko on social media:

“Paul has never to my knowledge bullied or harassed anyone in the office or in his employ. In the time I worked for him there were very difficult situations involving employees and Paul handled them without resorting to inappropri­ate tactics,” she wrote. “Allegation­s that impugn his character are false.”

But Justice Gomery chastised Doroshenko, saying he “gave evidence I do not accept.”

“Acumen and Mr. Doroshenko plead that Ms. Ojanen adopted a practice of avoiding responsibi­lity by deliberate­ly pretending to misunderst­and instructio­ns making it effectivel­y impossible for the lawyers to assign her work that was not menial,” the justice noted.

“In his evidence in chief, Mr. Doroshenko invoked a sexist stereotype of female incompeten­ce in describing this alleged practice. This was a low point in his evidence.”

Gomery dismissed the claims against Ojanen, which included accusation­s she engaged in disloyal and drunken “trouble-making” activity at an office party and dinner. He also rejected the complaints about her web activity.

“The blog does not infringe on copyright,” Gomery said. “It does not disclose private informatio­n that Acumen and Ms. Lee have not themselves made public.”

There was no evidence Ojanen was ever in possession of or misused informatio­n that could be described as “a trade secret,” Gomery added: “She did not appropriat­e corporate opportunit­ies belonging to Acumen.”

As for an appeal, Doroshenko said: “that is always a possibilit­y.”

SHE IS THE VICTIM OF UNFAIR, BULLYING, BAD FAITH CONDUCT ...

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