class action lawsuit quebec

If you purchased Keurig K-Cup pods or a coffee machine in Quebec over the past eight years, your window to claim cash from a $1.85-million settlement is now officially open, but the clock is ticking.

For context, the Ontario Superior Court of Justice officially approved the national class action settlement on December 8, 2025, which means Canadians who bought Keurig products between June 8, 2016, and December 8, 2025, can now submit claims for compensation. The deadline to file is July 8, 2026.

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If you bought tickets to a concert, sporting event, or any other show through Ticketmaster while living in Quebec since 2021, you may have been overcharged.

A Quebec court just approved a class action lawsuit against Ticketmaster over what a judge is calling "excessive, unreasonable, abusive and disproportionate" fees charged when buying tickets.

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If you bought Silk or Great Value plant-based beverages last year, you may soon be able to claim money from a new Canada-wide settlement. A proposed $6.5 million fund is now before the Superior Court of Quebec, tied to the major recall that affected dozens of plant-based drinks in July 2024.

The case is being led out of Montreal, where the class action was first filed under the Quebec Superior Court. On November 17, 2025, the Court officially authorized the class action for settlement purposes, clearing the way for a possible payout to people across Canada who bought or drank the recalled products.

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If you've ever stocked your kitchen with Keurig K-Cup pods or owned one of the company's coffee machines, you could soon be entitled to cash — even if you don't have a receipt.

A proposed $1.85-million settlement has been reached in a Canadian class action lawsuit that accuses Keurig Canada of misleading consumers about the recyclability of its K-Cup pods. The company denies any wrongdoing, but the deal will go before the Ontario Superior Court of Justice for approval on December 8, 2025.

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A major class action lawsuit has been authorized in Quebec against Rogers, Fido, and Chatr over a nationwide wireless outage that left millions of Canadians without service in 2021. If you were one of the many customers affected that day, you could soon be eligible for compensation.

According to a new press release from Lex Group Inc., which is leading the case, the Superior Court of Quebec has approved a national class action targeting Rogers Communications Inc., Rogers Communications Canada Inc., and Fido Solutions Inc. (collectively called the "Rogers Group"). The lawsuit alleges that customers across Canada suffered damages as a result of the service interruption that began on April 19, 2021.

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A class action lawsuit against Tim Hortons has officially been authorized in Quebec, and it could lead to significant compensation for customers who received a misleading email during the 2024 Roll Up to Win contest.

The case, filed by Montreal law firm LPC Avocats, centres on an incident in March and April 2024, when roughly 500,000 people received an email from an official Tim Hortons address claiming they'd won a brand-new powerboat and trailer worth $64,000. The messages, complete with recipients' names, appeared authentic, and many believed they had won.

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Good news, travellers! If you were one of the unfortunate passengers involved in the Sunwing "champagne" saga between 2014 and 2017, you could be eligible for some serious travel discounts in the future!

That's because thousands of Quebecers can now qualify for a discount on unlimited Sunwing trips over the next few years, as part of a recent class action settlement agreement over the infamous "champagne" drama.

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A Quebec law firm announced on Thursday that it has filed a class-action lawsuit against Ticketmaster.

In a press release, Paquette Gadler Inc. accused the ticket sales and distribution giant of "imposing abusive and disproportionate fees on Quebec consumers," which it says violates Quebec's Consumer Protection Act as well as the Civil Code of Quebec and the Competition Act of Canada.

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Attention all Montreal weed smokers: the Société québécoise du cannabis (SQDC) is being sued, and you might be eligible to get in on the (class) action.

Groupe SGF, a law firm specializing in the cannabis industry, announced Thursday that it would be launching a class action lawsuit application against the SQDC on behalf of someone named Gabriel Bélanger, who is both a cannabis consumer and the founder of cannabis concentrate company Origami Extraction.

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Class action suits are both exciting and deeply boring – exciting because they might involve you, boring because they take forever to resolve and rarely result in a significant amount of money for most people. That said, these ongoing class action lawsuits in Quebec involve very common purchases and their affected classes could include you!

Whether they're currently before the Quebec superior court or just biding their time before being resolved, perhaps these suits could make you feel a little better about how much money you spend at these various stores, websites and institutions. It's small comfort, but money is comfort nonetheless. Let's get into these class action suits, and you can see whether the world really might owe you more than you're getting.

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Quebec's Court of Appeals has granted permission for a class action lawsuit against Facebook to move ahead. Plaintiffs in the case allege that the social media giant engaged in discriminatory advertising practices on the basis of age, race and gender.

They say targeted ads that appeared only to Facebook users falling in a pre-determined age, race or gender brackets may have privileged certain demographics over others when it comes to job and housing opportunities.

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The Superior Court of Québec has approved a settlement following a class action lawsuit against Honda Canada. Consequently, current and former owners of 2006-2013 Honda Civics and 2006-2011 Acura CSXs purchased in the province can now claim compensation if they experienced early paint degradation on their vehicle.

Eligible drivers have four different options.

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