From: Stephen Pitel <spitel@uwo.ca>

Sent: Saturday 29 March 2025 10:49

To: obligations

Subject: ODG: Novel Claim in Negligence/Public Nuisance Not Struck

 

Some may find the facts and nature of the claims interesting on reading Toronto District School Board v Meta Platforms Inc., 2025 ONSC 1499 (link is: https://www.canlii.org/en/on/onsc/doc/2025/2025onsc1499/2025onsc1499.html).  The decision is a few weeks old but it was not immediately available online.

 

The plaintiffs are school boards.  The defendants are social media corporations.  The plaintiffs claim the defendants caused them substantial increased costs because they made it much harder to educate students (something they are legally required to do).  Students using various social media applications cost more to teach.  The plaintiffs claim the defendants 'entice school-age students into unhealthy dependence on social media apps such as Snapchat, TikTok, Instagram, and Facebook.'

 

My aim is to draw attention to the claim, more so than to the reasons offered for not striking it out and instead allowing it to proceed.  I suspect there are very different views across this list of whether such a claim has legal merit, whether under Canadian law or other similar common law.  Given that the negligence claim is for economic loss, I think the reasons don't grapple with some aspects of the law.  And I am highly skeptical of the public nuisance claim, similar to other claims that certain drugs or handguns are public nuisances because of widespread effects across society.

 

Could this be followed by claims for health care costs the state incurs due to the same social media use by children, much like state claims against tobacco corporations?

 

Stephen

 

 

Western Law

Professor Stephen G.A. Pitel
Faculty of Law, Western University
(519) 661-2111 ext 88433
President, Canadian Association for Legal Ethics/Association canadienne pour l ethique juridique

 

 

 

 

 

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