Calgary Herald

Lawsuit against Canntrust to proceed

- VANMALA SUBRAMANIA­M

TORONTO A consortium of law firms that includes Henein Hutchison LLP has been given the green light by an Ontario court to proceed with a class-action lawsuit against embattled licensed producer Canntrust Holdings Inc. and its former executives, following a ruling against a competing set of law firms that were vying to take on a similar class-action case against Canntrust.

The lawsuit — which centres around a May 2019 equity offering by Canntrust led by a slew of prominent investment banks including RBC Dominion Securities Inc., Canaccord Genuity Corp. and Jefferies Securities Inc. — was filed last August, but held up in court because two other law firms had jointly built up an investor class-action case against Canntrust.

In a scenario where multiple class-actions are filed in the same jurisdicti­on against the same entity, the courts are in charge of managing class proceeding­s and must determine which case best represents the interests of the class members — in this case, Canntrust investors.

According to the ruling issued by Ontario Superior Court Justice J. Hainey on Jan. 28, the law firms of Thornton Grout Finnigan LLP and Rochon Genova LLP were deemed ineligible to launch a class-action against Canntrust because RBC Dominion is a client of Thornton Grout Finnigan.

“We look forward to bringing this case before the courts at the earliest opportunit­y so that the rights of the class members can be addressed in a fair and timely way,” said Marie Henein, a renowned litigator.

The lawsuit was filed on behalf of four investors who allege that Canntrust’s former executives, including CEO Peter Aceto, and the company’s founder Eric Paul, among others, misreprese­nted the company by telling shareholde­rs that it had obtained all necessary licensing to cultivate cannabis, prior to a May 2, 2019 public offering that priced shares at US$5.50 and raised almost $200 million.

In July, Canntrust acknowledg­ed it had illegally grown pot in unlicensed areas of its Niagara facility.

A number of subsequent media reports alleged that executives, including Aceto and Paul, knew about the unlicensed growing but did not disclose it to investors. The Ontario Securities Commission has since opened an investigat­ion against Canntrust.

“The misreprese­ntations and failure to disclose this informatio­n caused Canntrust’s shares to trade at an artificial­ly high price from Oct 1, 2018 to July 23, 2019, when the class members acquired those shares,” the statement of claim reads.

The lawsuit names every board member and executive at Canntrust between October 2018 and July 2019, along with the company’s auditors KPMG LLP and underwrite­rs on the May 2019 public offering.

It further alleges that Paul, and former Canntrust insiders Mark Litwin and Mitchell Sanders profited by selling shares at those inflated prices, and were “blessed” by the underwrite­rs that led the May 2019 raise, and KPMG.

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