Menu

Topics

Connect

Comments

Want to discuss? Please read our Commenting Policy first.

Quebec law firm seeks class action against Netflix over fee hikes

WATCH ABOVE: More than five million Canadians now subscribe to Netflix, all paying a monthly fee. The Liberal government is on the lookout for new streams of revenue and is now considering slapping a sales tax on Netflix. Mike Le Couteur has more on the back room discussions – Jan 17, 2017

A Quebec law firm is seeking authorization to launch a class action lawsuit on behalf of Netflix users in the province who were allegedly charged higher fees unilaterally.

Story continues below advertisement

READ MORE: Disney will stop putting new movies on Netflix in 2019

The motion, filed earlier this month in Quebec Superior Court, alleges Netflix didn’t follow rules laid out in the province’s Consumer Protection Act.

The suit contends Netflix didn’t specify the previous rate that users were paying and didn’t give an option to cancel if they disagreed with the hike.

READ MORE: Netflix completes first ever acquisition, buys Millarworld comic publishing company

A judge must still authorize the suit, which law firm Kugler Kandestin is seeking on behalf of Frederic Seigneur.

WATCH BELOW: Netflix raising prices

Story continues below advertisement

If authorized by a judge, the lawsuit would apply only to Quebec users of the popular video streaming service. The court document pegs that number at 1.45 million.

READ MORE: Can Netflix’s business model survive?

Lawyer Pierre Boivin says the suit seeks a reimbursement of the fee hike as well as several million in punitive damages.

Curator Recommendations
Advertisement

You are viewing an Accelerated Mobile Webpage.

View Original Article