A B.C. man鈥檚 lawsuit over ticket resellers jacking up prices for live events has taken a step forward in B.C. Supreme Court.
David Gomel is suing TicketMaster and associated companies in a class action on behalf of all B.C. residents who bought event tickets for personal use from resellers between Jan. 25, 2010 and Sept. 18, 2018. It鈥檚 one of a series of similar class action lawsuits, and Gomel alleges that Ticketmaster isn鈥檛 doing enough to stop scalpers from using 鈥渂ots鈥 to scoop up tickets within seconds of them going on sale.
B.C. Supreme Court Justice Michael Tammen ruled this week that Gomel鈥檚 lawsuit can proceed, refusing a procedural motion by Ticketmaster lawyers to stay the action until Saskatchewan case involving multiple provinces can be decided. Ticketmaster has not yet filed a statement of defence in the B.C. case.
Gomel鈥檚 case is based on his purchase of a concert ticket from a secondary seller, StubHub, which was originally sold by Ticketmaster.
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鈥淏roadly put, the essential claim is that Ticketmaster represents on its website, at the time of initial sale of all tickets, that there are purchasing limits in place for the number of tickets per customer, and that such limits ensure fairness and prevent purchasers from purchasing a large number of tickets for resale,鈥 Tammen wrote in a decision released this week.
鈥淭he notice of civil claim alleges that Ticketmaster has, contrary to the representations on its website, actively developed and marketed software called TradeDesk, which facilitates and encourages the use of 鈥榯icket bots.鈥 Ticket bots are automated software programs used to allow one purchaser to purchase a large number of tickets online.鈥
B.C. Public Safety Minister Mike Farnworth in the spring of 2019 aimed at preventing mass-buying software for live event tickets. The law requires clear disclosure of ticket prices, refund guarantees by secondary sellers and declarations by them that they are not the original ticket provider. Enforcing such rules is hampered by ticket resellers operating outside of the province.
The B.C. government hosted an online questionnaire in March 2018 on the subject. Of the 6,507 people who responded, 96 per cent reported live event tickets selling out quickly, and nearly 60 per cent said they had seen tickets offered by a secondary seller before the primary seller made them available.
tfletcher@blackpress.ca
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