Ontario, Canada
The following excerpt is from Fulawka v. Bank of Nova Scotia, 2010 ONSC 1148 (CanLII):
The resolution of common issues is what a class action is all about. As Winkler J. said in Bywater v. Toronto Transit Commission, above, at para. 12: The Class Proceedings Act, 1992, is an entirely procedural statute, and, as such, does not create any new cause of action. A decision on certification does not constitute a determination on the merits of the action. The presence of common issues is at the very center of a class proceeding. It is the advancement of the litigation through the resolution of the common issues in a single proceeding which serves the goals of the Act. It is clear from the language of s. 5(1)(c) that the Act contemplates that there be a connection between the common issues, the claims or defences and the class definition. In like fashion, the common issues must have a basis in the causes of action which are asserted.
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