91Ƶ

Skip to content

Former Rogers CEO responds to countersuit, alleges 91Ƶcampaign of dishonesty91Ƶ

In a statement, Rogers spokeswoman Sarah Schmidt said Joe Natale91Ƶs 91Ƶbehaviour speaks for itself91Ƶ
web1_20231005121020-8b67d60c-a35d-4423-849a-da4d7500a764
Rogers President and CEO Joe Natale attends the company91Ƶs AGM in Toronto on Thursday, April 18, 2019. The former chief executive of Rogers Communications Inc. has fired back at the company, alleging Rogers is carrying out 91Ƶa campaign of dishonesty91Ƶ surrounding his ouster in November 2021 by fabricating claims in its defence to his lawsuit. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chris Young

The former chief executive of Rogers Communications Inc. has fired back at the company, alleging Rogers is carrying out 91Ƶa campaign of dishonesty91Ƶ surrounding his ouster in November 2021 by fabricating claims in its defence to his lawsuit.

In court documents filed Thursday, Joe Natale accused Rogers of altering business documents to support its position in the ongoing legal battle between the two sides.

91ƵIn an egregious violation of ethics for one of Canada91Ƶs largest public companies, RCI has altered meeting minutes from RCI Board meetings from the relevant period to change statements made by Edward Rogers to the Board to better align with RCI91Ƶs self-serving narrative of events,91Ƶ Natale91Ƶs filing stated.

It said Edward Rogers, the company chairman, previously filed 91Ƶdifferent, contemporaneous versions of these meeting minutes in British Columbia Supreme Court in 2021, representing their accuracy to the Court at that time.91Ƶ

Natale sued the company for wrongful dismissal and breach of contract in August, alleging its chairman carried out 91Ƶmalicious, high-handed, and oppressive conduct.91Ƶ He is seeking $24 million in compensation and damages.

Rogers responded last month by launching a countersuit against Natale that claims he tried to 91Ƶsubvert corporate governance and his fiduciary duties for his personal gain.91Ƶ

None of the claims of either party have been tested in court.

In a statement, Rogers spokeswoman Sarah Schmidt said Natale91Ƶs 91Ƶbehaviour speaks for itself.91Ƶ

91ƵWhile we had hoped to deal with this matter privately, Joe Natale91Ƶs lawsuit has left us with no choice,91Ƶ she said in an email.

91ƵWe are confident the courts will discern fact from fiction, including inaccuracies about the company91Ƶs actions.91Ƶ

Natale91Ƶs departure from the Toronto-based telecom was announced after a boardroom power struggle over the chairman91Ƶs desire to replace him with then-chief financial officer Tony Staffieri, now Rogers91Ƶ CEO.

Edward Rogers91Ƶ initial attempt to oust Natale in favour of his No. 2 led instead to Staffieri91Ƶs departure in September 2021, as well as a board vote that saw Edward removed from his seat at the head of the table.

Edward penned a shareholder resolution to oust the five directors who had defied him, without holding a board meeting. The company filed a legal challenge to his revamped board, sparking a court battle over who actually served on it.

A British Columbia Supreme Court judge ruled Edward Rogers91Ƶ declaration legitimate and he was reinstated as chairman.

Staffieri replaced Natale as president and CEO in the aftermath of the ruling.

Rogers91Ƶ statement of defence and countersuit alleged that Natale had initially agreed to resign and negotiated a 91Ƶgenerous retirement package,91Ƶ but shortly afterward 91Ƶreneged on his agreement and began a campaign to entrench himself.91Ƶ

Natale91Ƶs version of events differs. He has argued that he negotiated and agreed upon the terms of his severance in a series of meetings with Edward in September 2021, which were approved by the Rogers board.

But he said a group of board members then asked him to stay on as CEO against Edward91Ƶs wishes 91Ƶto support the strategic priorities of the business91Ƶ and that the company enhanced his employment terms in written contracts in October 2021, before he was terminated the next month.

Natale91Ƶs allegation that company board meeting minutes were altered surrounds the status at the time of Robert Dépatie, the former chair of the board91Ƶs human resources committee, and whether he had resigned from the board to assume an executive position with Rogers.

Rogers has submitted that although Edward communicated to the board Dépatie planned to resign as a director of the company pending the approval of a new CEO, Dépatie had not actually stepped down or joined the management team at the time.

The company91Ƶs statement of defence argued Natale91Ƶs revised contract was invalid since Dépatie did not approve it, even though he was still on the board91Ƶs human resources committee at the time.

In new documents filed Thursday, Natale quoted minutes from a Sept. 22, 2021 board meeting filed by Edward with the British Columbia Supreme Court in the board dispute case that same year. The minutes state Edward had reported to his fellow board members that 91ƵDépatie had resigned from the board of RCI effective the day before.91Ƶ

He alleged Rogers has since altered those minutes to state Edward told the board 91ƵDépatie would resign from the board of RCI upon signing an employment agreement for such role.91Ƶ

His side called Rogers91Ƶ position a 91Ƶtransparent attempt to deter Natale from holding RCI accountable and to harm his excellent reputation.91Ƶ

91ƵIt is further evidence of RCI91Ƶs high-handed and malicious conduct against Natale warranting a claim of punitive damages,91Ƶ the filing stated.

Natale91Ƶs lawsuit accused Edward and his wife Suzanne Rogers of hiring actor Brian Cox of HBO91Ƶs 91ƵSuccession91Ƶ to create a 91Ƶdemeaning91Ƶ video about him and allegedly distributing it to family members, friends and colleagues, before it was eventually reported on by media.

The video included a message congratulating Edward Rogers on his 91Ƶreal-life Succession at Rogers Communications91Ƶ and used an expletive to describe Natale91Ƶs departure from the company.





(or

91Ƶ

) document.head.appendChild(flippScript); window.flippxp = window.flippxp || {run: []}; window.flippxp.run.push(function() { window.flippxp.registerSlot("#flipp-ux-slot-ssdaw212", "Black Press Media Standard", 1281409, [312035]); }); }