Toronto Star

Billionair­e sued over alleged assault

Co-founder of Tim Hortons, Ron Joyce, calls accusation­s a ‘blatant’ extortion attempt

- COLIN PERKEL THE CANADIAN PRESS

The billionair­e co-founder of Tim Hortons is on the receiving end of a civil suit alleging he sexually assaulted his sometime lover four years ago, The Canadian Press has learned.

The action against Ron Joyce, who claims he’s the victim of a “blatant” extortion attempt, predates an unrelated but similar lawsuit filed earlier this year by another woman, who alleges his son, Steven Joyce, assaulted her aboard his mega-yacht in Florida in an incident he says was consensual.

In mid-2011, according to previously unreported court documents, the woman, now 34, spent the night at Joyce’s home in Burlington, Ont., so she could drive him to a doctor’s appointmen­t in Barrie, Ont., the following day — apparently because his helicopter had been grounded.

They went to bed separately and she slept alone in the guest room, they say.

“At 6 a.m., she awoke to find (Joyce) in her bed naked with his hands down her pyjama bottoms . . . ” her unproven claim states. “(She) screamed repeatedly for the defendant to get off of her.”

The Toronto woman says she has audio recordings of conversati­ons with him in which he admits to assaulting her, according to her statement of claim.

The claim filed in May 2013, which seeks $7.5 million in damages, alleges the incident left her suffering anxiety attacks and with severe emotional loss.

The Canadian Press does not name alleged victims of sexual assault without their consent.

While both sides agree they continued a relationsh­ip afterward, she says in her suit that he subsequent­ly denied the attack and badmouthed her to mutual acquaintan­ces.

Joyce, 84, an Order of Canada honouree and one of the country’s richest people, admits going into her room that morning but says it was only to awaken her for his doctor’s appointmen­t.

“(She) arose from a deep sleep and immediatel­y started screaming and accusing (Joyce) of improper advances,” according to his unproven statement of defence from October 2013.

“He did not touch her inappropri­ately and did not attempt to penetrate her.”

Documents say Joyce, a twice-married father of seven who has been divorced for decades, met the woman in 2005 when he was 74 and she 24. They developed a relationsh­ip.

“The plaintiff and him engaged in consensual sexual activities but on an ‘on-call’ type of basis,” according to his defence statement.

In any event, he maintains that in May 2013 she tried to blackmail him by threatenin­g a lawsuit if he didn’t help her financiall­y.

According to his defence statement, she threatened to damage his reputation and report the alleged attack to the police, who declined to lay criminal charges.

“Details of the alleged attack have been fabricated by the plaintiff in an attempt to extort money from the defendant.”

While she says they were a committed couple and even talked marriage, he argues she was “almost delusional” about their relationsh­ip and “emotionall­y troubled.”

She was younger than his children and some of his grandchild­ren but referred to him as her boyfriend or fiancé even though he made it clear the relationsh­ip was casual, he says.

She also asked him for money and he extended her a $150,000 loan at one point, he says in his defence.

Two months after the incident, according to Joyce, her lawyer sent him a draft statement of claim related to the alleged attack. To make the matter disappear, he says, she wanted him to forgive the $150,000 loan and pay off another $50,000 to defray her legal expenses.

He agreed, with no admission of liability, as a way to “assist a troubled friend” and considered the matter settled. For that reason alone, Joyce argues, the courts should throw out the suit.

Neither statement of claim nor defence has been tested in court and any trial is likely months, if not years, away.

The claim, which seeks $7.5 million in damages, alleges the incident left former lover with severe emotional damage

 ?? AARON HARRIS/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO
AARON HARRIS/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Tim Hortons co-founder Ron Joyce, pictured here in 2006, is accused of sexually assaulting a former lover in 2011. Joyce’s son, Steven Joyce, is involved in a similar civil suit where he’s accused of assaulting a woman in Florida.
AARON HARRIS/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO AARON HARRIS/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Tim Hortons co-founder Ron Joyce, pictured here in 2006, is accused of sexually assaulting a former lover in 2011. Joyce’s son, Steven Joyce, is involved in a similar civil suit where he’s accused of assaulting a woman in Florida.

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