Englander v Telus Communications Inc
Englander v Telus Communications Inc, 2004 FCA 387 was a Federal Court of Appeal decision on Canadian privacy law under PIPEDA.
Background
An individual named Mathew Englander resided in Vancouver. Englander filed a complaint with the Privacy Commissioner of Canada against Telus, his residential telephone service provider, for disclosing its customers' personal information to third parties without the customers' knowledge and consent, and for charging customers a two-dollar fee to have an unlisted phone number.The Privacy Commissioner found the complaint not well-founded, citing a Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission rule that allowed a fee of up to two dollars for being de-listed. Englander then applied to the Federal Court of Canada – Trial Division for a judicial declaration that Telus's policies contravened PIPEDA, and other relief, but the court dismissed the application.