Parents file $1.5M lawsuit after Quebec teacher accused of selling students’ artwork online

A group of parents have filed a lawsuit against a Montreal-area high school art teacher and his school board after students found their classroom artwork available for purchase on the teacher’s personal website last month. 

The parents of 10 young students at Westwood Junior High School in Saint-Lazare, Que., an off-island suburb west of Montreal, filed the lawsuit for $1.575 million, or $155,000 per plaintiff plus punitive damages, against the teacher, Mario Perron, and the Lester B. Pearson School Board (LBPSB) for alleged copyright infringement. 

Edith Liard, one of the parents represented in the lawsuit filed in Quebec’s Superior Court Friday, said the incident turned her daughter off the idea of becoming an artist. 

“My daughter loves art, always has been into art, and this year after everything happened, she said to me, ‘I don’t think I’ll do art next year,'” said Liard.

“I was surprised because she’s always been artsy at home before school, and she actually picked Westwood because of their art program.”

Joel DeBellefeuille, another parent represented in the lawsuit, says while the amount of money sought might seem outrageous, it represents the scale of intellectual property infringement that took place. 

“With there being in total 96 students whose artwork was [plagiarized] … we requested $5,000 per artwork that was infringed,” he said. 

Statutory damages range from $500 to $20,000 per work under Canada’s Copyright Act.

WATCH | Quebec teacher allegedly selling students’ artwork online: 

Quebec teacher allegedly selling students’ artwork online

1 month ago

Duration 1:38

Students from a school in Saint-Lazare, Que., discovered their work online after Googling their teacher’s name and visiting his website. The Lester B. Pearson School Board says it’s investigating.

According to the lawsuit, the teacher assigned his 96 students a project called “Creepy Portrait” in January, in which students drew a portrait of a classmate or themselves inspired by the style of artist Jean-Michel Basquiat.

The students submitted their projects in February and were shocked to stumble upon their classroom artwork being sold after finding their art teacher’s website. 

On it, the students found their “Creepy Portraits” available for purchase as prints as well as emblazoned on coffee mugs, T-shirts and cellphone cases — with some items listed for as much as $174. 

“Here we are in a digital age where families and parents are there to scrutinize everything that [kids] are looking at … but who would have thought that it should have been the parents scrutinizing the teacher?” DeBellefeuille said.

In addition to the money, the group of parents is asking for a written apology from the teacher, the removal of the students’ artwork from all websites and a report of any sales made in connection with the plagiarized works. 

“It will teach them a lesson because they broke our trust. The teacher broke the trust of the parents to teach the students,” said Liard.

Prior to filing the lawsuit, Liard and DeBellefeuille say parents had sent the LBPSB a demand letter making similar requests. He says it went unacknowledged. 

The teacher and the school board now have two weeks to respond to the lawsuit. 

In an email Sunday, the LBPSB told CBC News it does not comment on internal investigations or human resources issues. 

Last month, the school board said it is investigating and takes the allegations seriously.

CBC was unable to reach out to the teacher.

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