Canada Bread owner sues Maple Leaf over alleged bread price-fixing
McCain, formerly the chief executive at the company, is named as a defendant in Grupo Bimbo's lawsuit.
"Maple Leaf Foods and its officers acted appropriately at all times, including with respect to making full, plain and true disclosure to Grupo Bimbo at the time of its acquisition of Canada Bread," he said.
Mexico-based Grupo Bimbo said in the statement of claim that it bought all the outstanding shares of Canada Bread in 2014 for about $1.83 billion. The acquisition price, it said, was predicated on Maple Leaf's allegedly false representations that Canada Bread was in compliance with applicable laws and had made the appropriate disclosures about its business.
Grupo Bimbo claims that Canada Bread participated in the alleged price-fixing conspiracy at the direction of Maple Leaf, which "was itself a participant and a profiteer of the conspiracies."
Canada Bread has said that any anticompetitive behaviour it participated in was at the direction of and to the benefit of Maple Leaf.
Maple Leaf said in its defamation lawsuit that there is no merit to the allegations the bureau has made against Canada Bread concerning an alleged conspiracy.
The Competition Bureau's investigation began in 2016. It has alleged that at least $1.50 was added to the price of a loaf of bread over 16 years.
Canada Bread, along with the major grocers and other companies, is a defendant in both class-action lawsuits, though Loblaw and George Weston — which received immunity from prosecution after admitting to participating in an “industry-wide price-fixing arrangement" — recently settled both suits for a combined $500 million.
The other companies implicated in the ongoing lawsuits have denied participating in the alleged bread price-fixing scheme.