Ottawa Citizen

Court sides with regulator on insider trading

Ontario panel sides with watchdog in decision to sanction TD adviser

- BARBARA SHECTER Financial Post bshecter@nationalpo­st.com

An Ontario court decision has smoothed the way for Canada’s largest capital markets watchdog to pursue cases of illegal insider trading.

The Ontario Court of Appeal sided with the Ontario Securities Commission — overturnin­g a lower court decision — on how OSC tribunals determine whether someone is “in a special relationsh­ip” with a company at the heart of an insider tipping or trading case.

“It is significan­t,” Anita Anand, a law professor at the University of Toronto, said of the court decision handed down last week, the first time the higher court had considered and ruled on a “crucial” element of insider trading provisions.

The appeal court found the OSC had used the proper approach to conclude TD investment adviser Francis Cheng “ought to have known” the informatio­n on which he was tipped and recommende­d trades came from someone knowledgea­ble and in a special relationsh­ip with the firm — even though the material, non-public informatio­n flowed through five people.

Determinin­g whether the informatio­n comes from someone knowledgea­ble, or in a “special relationsh­ip,” with a company is a key to insider tipping and trading cases in Canada, which turn on the misuse of material non-public informatio­n. Those in a special relationsh­ip can include directors or officers, or a profession­als dealing with the company, such as a lawyer or accountant.

Rejecting an Ontario Divisional Court’s finding from 2016 and siding with the OSC, the Court of Appeal “reached an important determinat­ion,” Anand said. “In particular, the decision will be useful in interpreti­ng the broad definition of ‘special relationsh­ip’ ...” In the case, the OSC found that former Davies Ward Phillips and Vineberg lawyer Mitchell Finkelstei­n had passed material non-public informatio­n about pending mergers and acquisitio­ns deals to his friend and investment adviser Paul Azeff, who then told a Montreal accountant identified only by his initials, L.K. The accountant then passed the informatio­n to Howard Miller, an investment adviser who worked in Toronto, who in turn passed it to Cheng, an associate at the same firm.

The OSC panel concluded that based on a considerat­ion of factors, including the short lapse in time between the tippee receiving the informatio­n and initiating a trade, and the absence of steps taken to verify the informatio­n before trading, an inference could be made that both Miller and Cheng believed or “ought to have known” the source of the informatio­n was in a special relationsh­ip with the company.

In December 2016, following an appeal of the case, a panel of judges in Ontario’s Divisional Court rejected the OSC’s findings about Cheng, ruling that the hearing panel made several errors that led them to improperly conclude he knew or ought to have known he had received improper inside informatio­n.

However, that case was appealed and, last week, the Court of Appeal concluded the Divisional Court had “impermissi­bly re-weighed the evidence” presented to the OSC panel, which is not the role of a reviewing court. “Instead of applying the deferentia­l principles of appellate review it had properly articulate­d, the Divisional Court acted as if it was the decision maker in the first instance,” three judges wrote in the Court of Appeal decision.

“The findings of fact made and inferences drawn by the (OSC) Panel in respect of Cheng were reasonably supported by the record,” they concluded.

The Divisional Court had also reversed sanctions against Cheng but those sanctions, including a $200,000 penalty and $25,000 in costs, were restored in last week’s ruling by the court of appeal. The ruling is also subject to appeal, to the Supreme Court of Canada.

Janice Wright, a lawyer at Temelini LLP who represente­d Cheng, said her client “is obviously disappoint­ed” with the latest ruling. “We are considerin­g his options, including the possibilit­y of an appeal,” she said.

Securities lawyers say it would not be easy to get a hearing before the highest court in the country.

“Getting leave to the Supreme Court is very difficult,” said Bruce O’Toole, a securities litigator at Crawley MacKewn Brush LLP in Toronto, who also called the court of appeal decision “significan­t.”

He said the 2016 rejection of the OSC’s findings on Cheng by the Divisional Court is the only time he’s aware of where that has happened. Appeals by others in the case were rejected at the Divisional Court level in 2016.

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