Thursday, December 5, 2013

Supreme Court Finds That Unlawfully Obtained Evidence Still Admissible

In a decision, delivered by Justice Thomas Cromwell of the Supreme Court of Canada, the court found that even though a police search of an accused's personal computers was unlawful, the evidence obtained as a result of the search should not be excluded, because the "violation was not serious" and because the police believed on reasonable grounds that the computer search was authorized by a warrant.  
 
In this case ( R v. Vu, 2013 SCC 60 ) the police charged Vu with production of marijuana, possession of marijuana for the purpose of trafficking and theft of electricity.  The police obtained a search warrant authorizing the search of a residence for evidence of theft of electricity.  The warrant allowed the police to search for documentation identifying the owners and/or occupants of the residence.   Even though the Information to Obtain a Search Warrant ("ITO") indicated that the police intended to search for, among other things, "computer generated notes", the warrant did not specifically refer to computers or authorize the search of computers.  In the course of their search of the residence, police found marijuana.  They also found two computers and a cellular telephone.  A search of these devices led to evidence that Vu was the occupant of the residence. 
 
At trial, Vu claimed that these searches had violated his rights under s. 8 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms ("Charter") - which gives everyone the right to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures - and asked the judge to exclude the evidence.  The judge concluded that the ITO did not establish reasonable grounds to believe that documentation identifying the owners and or occupants would be found in the residence and so the warrant could not authorize the search for such documents.  In addition, the trial judge found that police were not authorized to search the personal computers and cellular telephone because those devices were not specifically mentioned in the warrant.  She excluded most of the evidence obtained as a result of those searches and acquitted Vu of the drug charges.  
 
The Crown appealed and the British Columbia Court of  Appeal set aside the acquittal and ordered a new trial.  In the Court of Appeal's view, the warrant had properly authorized the searches and there had been no breach of Vu's s. 8 Charter rights.  Vu further appealed to the Supreme Court of Canada.  He raised three issues:
 
1.    Did the search warrant properly permit a search for documentation identifying the owners and/or occupants?
 
With respect to this issue, Justice Cromwell agreed with the Court of Appeal that the ITO had established reasonable grounds to believe that relevant documents would be found in the residence.  It followed that the warrant properly authorized the search for that sort of material.  The Court of  Appeal found that the facts provided in the ITO were sufficient to support a reasonable inference on the part of the issuing justice that documentation evidence of ownership or occupancy would be found in the residence.  The ITO referred to the premises to be searched as a residence and as a "two story house".  It also indicated Vu owned the property and that electricity was being consumed there.  In Justice Cromwell's view it was a reasonable inference that a residence would be the place to look for documents evidencing ownership or occupation.  "Where else would one expect to find such documents if not in the residence itself."
 
2.    Did the warrant authorize the search of the computers and cellular phone?
 
Justice Cromwell held that s. 8 of the Charter seeks to strike an appropriate balance between the right to be free of state interference and the legitimate needs of law enforcement.  The police must obtain judicial authorization for the search before they conduct it, usually in the form of a search warrant.  The prior authorization ensures that before a search is conducted, a judicial officer is satisfied that the public interest in being left alone by government must give way to the government's interest in intruding on the individual's privacy in order to advance the goals of law enforcement.  An authorized search must be conducted in a reasonable manner.  This ensures that the search is no more intrusive than is reasonably necessary to achieve its objections.  Justice Cromwell reviewed the facts found by the trial judge and then noted that the general principle is that authorization to search a place includes authorization to search places and receptacles within that place.  However, this assumption is not justified in relation to computers because computers are not like other receptacles that may be found in a place of search.  He held that, "It is difficult to image a more intrusive invasion of privacy than the search of a personal or home computer.  Computers compromise the ability of the users to control the information that is available about them in two ways.  They create information without the users knowledge and they retain information that the users have tried to erase.  These features make computers fundamentally different from the receptacles of search and seizure lawyers have had to respond to in the past."
 
Justice Cromwell found that the traditional rule concerning the search of "receptacles" found within a search of a place simply cannot apply to computer searches and that prior authorization is required.  This means, in practical terms, that if police intend to search any computers found within a place they want to search, they must first satisfy the authorizing justice that they have reasonable grounds to believe that any computers they discover will contain the things they are looking for.  He added that the police may seize a computer if they come across one in the course of the search and the warrant does not specifically authorize its search and do what is necessary to ensure the integrity of the data and obtain a separate warrant at a later date.
 
3.    Should the evidence found on the computer be excluded?
 
Justice Cromwell found that in this case the search warrant did not authorize the search of computers found in Vu's residence.  However, he also found that the trial judge was wrong in concluding that the ITO contained no facts supporting a warrant to search for documents evidencing ownership or occupation of the residence.  Therefore he had to undertake his own analysis in view of that erroneous finding.  He found that the charter-infringing conduct by the police was "not serious", after all the ITO did refer to intention of the police to search for computer-generated documents and the state of the law with respect to the search of a computer found inside a premises was uncertain when the police carried out their investigation.  One of the police officers admitted in his testimony at trial that he intentionally did not take notes during the search of the computer so he would not have to testify about the details.  Justice Cromwell held that this was clearly improper and could not be condoned.  However, given the uncertainty in the law at the time, and the otherwise reasonable manner in which the search was carried out, Justice Cromwell concluded that the violation was not serious.  In addition, the record did not indicate that the police had gained access to any more information than was appropriate.  And the relevant question was, whether the truth-seeking function of the criminal trial process would be better served by admission of the evidence or by its exclusion.  He was of the view that, on balance, the evidence should not be excluded.  The police believed on reasonable grounds that the search of the computer was authorized by the warrant.  The search did not step outside the purposes for which the warrant had been issued and it did not include forensic examination.  The evidence retained was reliable, real evidence which was important to the adjudication of the charges on their merits.  
 
Accordingly, Justice Cromwell and a majority of the court dismissed Vu's appeal and upheld the order of the Court of Appeal setting aside the acquittals and directing a new trial.  
 
Regards,
 
Blair

Monday, November 18, 2013

Top Court Rules Union's Right to Picket Trumps Individuals' Right to Privacy

During a lawful strike that lasted 305 days, both the United Food and Commercial Workers, Local 401 ("Union") and a security company hired by the Palace Casino at West Edmonton Mall in Alberta. videotaped and photographed the picket line near the entrance to  the casino.  The Union posted signs in the area of the picketing stating that images of persons crossing the picket line might be placed on a website called www.casinoscabs.ca
 
Several individuals who were recorded crossing the picket line filed complaints with the Alberta Information and Privacy Commissioner under the Personal Information Protection Act of Alberta ("PIPA").  PIPA restricts the collection, use and disclosure of personal information by a range of organizations. 
 
The Vice-President of the casino complained he was photographed or videotaped and that two pictures of him were used on a poster displayed at the picket line with the text, "This is (X's) police mug shot."   Images of his head were also used in Union newsletters and strike leaflets with captions intended to be humorous.  Another complainant, a member of the public, testified that cameras were trained on the entrance to the casino where he would regularly meet friends.  A third complainant testified that she had been photographed and videotaped while working near the casino entrance.  No recordings of the complainants were placed on the website.
 
The privacy commissioner appointed an adjudicator to decide whether the Union had contravened PIPA.  The adjudicator concluded that the Union's collection, use and disclosure of the information was not authorized by PIPA.  On judicial review, PIPA was found to violate the Union's rights under section 2(b) of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms ("Charter") which provides that, "Everyone has the following fundamental freedoms:...(b)  freedom of thought, belief, opinion and expression, including of freedom of the press and other media of communication".  The Alberta Court of Appeal agreed and granted the Union a constitutional exemption from the application of PIPA.  The employer appealed this finding to the Supreme Court of Canada. 
 
The Supreme Court substantially dismissed the appeal.  [Alberta (Information and Privacy Commission) v. United Food and Commercial Workers, Local 401 2013 SCC 62]
 
The Court held that PIPA establishes a general rule that organizations cannot collect, use or disclose personal information without consent.  None of PIPA's exemptions permitted the Union to collect, use and disclose personal information for the purpose of advancing its interests in a labour dispute.  The court held that the central issue in this case was whether PIPA achieved a constitutionally acceptable balance between the interests of individuals and controlling the collection, use and disclosure of their personal information and a union's freedom of expression.  To the extent that PIPA restricted collection for legitimate labour relations purposes, it breached section 2(b) of the Charter and could not be justified under section 1.  Section 1 provides that, "The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms guarantees the rights and freedoms set out in it subject only to such reasonable limits prescribed by law as can be demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society."
 
The court found that the purpose of PIPA is to enhance an individual's control over his or her personal information by restricting the collection, use and disclosure of personal information without that individual's consent.  The objective is to ensure individual autonomy, dignity and privacy, which are significant social values. 
 
However, the court also found that PIPA did not include any mechanisms by which a union's constitutional right to freedom of expression could be balanced with the interests protected by the legislation.  There is a long recognized fundamental importance of freedom of expression in the context of labour disputes.  The court found that PIPA prohibited the collection, use or disclosure of personal information for many legitimate, expressive purposes related to labour relations.  Picketing represents a particularly crucial form of expression with strong historical roots.  The court found that PIPA imposed restrictions on a union's ability to communicate and persuade the public of its cause, impairing its ability to use one of its most effective bargaining strategies in the course of a lawful strike.  This infringement of the right to freedom of expression was disproportionate to the government's objective of providing individuals with control over the personal information that they exposed by crossing a picket line.  It was therefore not justified under section 1 of the Charter. 
 
Given the comprehensive and integrated structure of the statute, the government of Alberta and the Information and Privacy Commissioner requested that the court not select specific amendments, requesting instead that the entire statute be declared invalid so that the Alberta legislature could consider the Act as a whole.  The declaration of invalidity was granted by the court but was suspended for a period of 12 months to give the legislature the opportunity to decide how best to make the legislation constitutionally compliant.  
 
Regards,
 
Blair

Thursday, November 14, 2013

Guatemalan Plaintiffs sue HudBay and Subsidiaries in "Novel" Negligence Actions

Justice C.J. Brown of the Ontario Superior Court of Justice dismissed a motion brought by HudBay Minerals Inc. ("HudBay") and two of its subsidiary corporations, including one Guatemalan corporation) to dismiss novel actions for negligence.  In the this case, the plaintiffs sued HudBay for its failure to prevent the harm allegedly caused by its security personnel at mining projects owned by HudBay's subsidiary corporations in Guatemala. (Choc v. Hudbay Minerals Inc. 2013 ONSC 1414)
 
The plaintiffs are indigenous Mayan Q'Eqchi' from the El Estor region of Guatemala.  They started three separate actions: Margarita Caal Caal v. HudBay;  Angelica Choc v. HudBay; and German Chub Choc v. HudBay.

In the Caal action, the plaintiffs were 11 women, who alleged that they were gang raped by mining company security personnel, police and military during their forced removal from their village as requested by a HudBay subsidiary.     
 
In the Choc action, the plaintiff alleged that her husband, a respected indigenous leader and outspoken critic of mining practices, was beaten and shot in the head by security personnel of a HudBay subsidiary in the context of a land dispute.
 
In the Chub action, the plaintiff alleged that a gunshot wound left him paralyzed from the chest down and that he was shot in an unprovoked attack by security personnel employed at HudBay's subsidiary's mining project in the context of a land dispute.  
 
The actions arose out of a dispute as to ownership of land in Guatemala.  At all material times, the HudBay defendants maintained that they had a valid legal right to the land while the Mayan communities claimed that the Mayan Q'Eqchi' were the rightful owners of the lands which they considered to by their ancestral homeland.  The plaintiffs alleged that the defendants' claim to ownership was illegitimate because the rights of the defendants were derived from a dictatorial, military government which granted those rights during the Guatemalan civil war at a time when the Mayan Q'Eqchi' were being massacred and driven off their lands. 
 
In 2011, the Constitutional Court of Guatemala, the highest court in the country, ruled that the Mayan Q'Eqchi' communities had valid legal rights to the contested land and ordered the Guatemalan government to formally recognize those rights.  When the Mayan Q'Eqchi' had originally attempted to reclaim their ancestral homelands, there were allegedly numerous forced evictions, burning of hundreds of homes, murders and alleged human rights atrocities, including those giving rise to the three actions. 
 
The defendants brought three motions:  (i)  a motion to strike the statements of claim on the basis that they disclosed no reasonable cause of action against HudBay; (ii)  a motion to dismiss the Caal action as being statute-barred pursuant to the provisions of the Limitations Act, 2002; and, (iii)  a motion disputing the court's jurisdiction over the Guatemalan subsidiary.  
 
The court ordered that the three actions be consolidated and the motions were heard together before Justice Brown.  She dismissed all three motions.   
 
The Rule 21 Motion To Strike
 
On this motion the defendants argued that there was no recognized duty of care owed by a parent company to ensure that the commercial activities carried on by its subsidiaries were conducted in a manner designed to protect people in foreign countries.  In addition, they pleaded that HudBay was not responsible at law for the actions of its subsidiaries. 
 
Amnesty International Canada intervened in the motions to support the position of the plaintiffs. 
 
With respect to the vicarious liability claim, Justice Brown held that the plaintiffs pleaded in the Choc action that the Guatemalan subsidiary was an agent of HudBay.  In doing so, the plaintiffs had pleaded an exception to the rule of separate legal personality, i.e. where the corporation has acted as the authorized agent of its controllers, corporate or human, the allegation is not patently ridiculous or incapable of proof and must be taken to be true for the purposes of the pleadings motion.  Accordingly, the claim against HudBay on the basis of actions by its foreign subsidiary was allowed to proceed.  
 
In respect of the claim for direct negligence against HudBay, the judge held that the plaintiffs had pleaded all material facts required to establish the constitute elements of their claim.  However, the duty of care that the plaintiffs pleaded was not an "established" duty of care.  Accordingly, it was necessary for Justice Brown to apply the test for establishing a novel duty of care (the Anns test), i.e. that the harm complained of was reasonably foreseeable; that there was sufficient proximity between the parties that it would not be unjust or unfair to impose a duty of care; and, that there was no policy reasons to negate or otherwise restrict that duty.  Justice Brown held that the plaintiffs had met all three parts of the test.  With respect to policy considerations, she held that they were competing policy considerations and that it was not plain and obvious that they should be fatal to the case at the pleadings stage. 
 
The Limitations Act Motion
 
The defendants sought to have the Caal action dismissed on the basis that it was statute-barred because it was commenced after the basic limitation period of two years after the day on which the claim was discovered. 
 
However, section 10 of the Limitations Act provides an exception to the two year limitation period for claims based on an assault or sexual assault.  The provision reads as follows:
 
10 (1)    The limitation period established by section 4 does not run in respect of a claim based on assault or sexual assault during any time in which the person with the claim is incapable of commencing the proceeding because of his or her physical, mental or psychological condition.  
 
10 (3)   Unless the contrary is proven, a person with a claim based on a sexual assault shall be presumed to have been incapable of commencing the proceeding earlier than it was commenced.  
 
The plaintiffs argued, and Justice Brown accepted, that the language used in the Limitations Act of "claims based on sexual assault" is not intended to be limited to claims against the actual perpetrator, but is broad enough to include claims of vicarious liability and negligence against all persons whose acts or omissions contributed to the damage suffered as a result of the misconduct.  The Limitations Act specifically defines "claim" to mean "a claim to remedy an injury, loss or damage that occurred as a result of an act or omission".  Therefore, a "claim based on sexual assault" must include a claim to remedy injuries from a sexual assault caused by negligent acts or omissions.  In addition, the plaintiffs relied on the principle of interpretation that legislative provisions were to be given a large and liberal interpretation and are to be interpreted in line with their objectives.  They submitted that the purpose of section 10 of the Act was to make it easier for victims of sexual assault to bring their claims.  
 
Justice Brown accepted the submission and dismissed the Limitations Act motion.
 
As a result, there was no need to hear the jurisdiction motion because HudBay's foreign subsidiary conceded that if the first two motions were dismissed it would be a necessary and proper party to the Choc action.  
 
Regards,
 
Blair
 

Tuesday, November 12, 2013

Supreme Court Certifies "Indirect Purchaser" Class Action Against Microsoft

The Supreme Court of Canada has ruled that a class action commenced against Microsoft Corporation and Microsoft Canada (Microsoft) for allegedly overcharging for their operating systems may proceed in British Columbia ( Pro-Sys Consultants Ltd. v. Microsoft Corporation, 2013 SCC 57 )
The representative plaintiff in the class action alleged that, beginning in 1988, Microsoft engaged in unlawful conduct by overcharging for its Intel-compatible PC operating systems and Intel-compatible PC applications software.  The plaintiff sought certification of the class action under the British Columbia Class Proceedings Act ("Act").   The proposed class is made up of ultimate consumers, known as "Indirect Purchasers" who acquired Microsoft products from re-sellers. 
The British Columbia Supreme Court certified the proceeding as a class action.  Microsoft appealed from that decision.  The British Columbia Court of Appeal allowed Microsoft's appeal and dismissed the action, ruling that indirect purchaser actions were not available as a matter of law in Canada and therefore the class members had no cause of action. 
The plaintiff appealed that decision to the Supreme Court of Canada (SCC) which allowed the appeal.  
The SCC held that indirect purchasers do have a cause of action against the party who has caused the overcharge to occur at the top of the distribution chain and who has injured the indirect purchasers as a result of the overcharge being passed on to them".  The Court acknowledged that it had rejected the "passing-on"  defence in the context of the imposition of ultra vires taxes.  However, the fact that the passing-on defence had been rejected did not lead to a corresponding rejection of the offensive use of passing on.  Accordingly, indirect purchasers should not be foreclosed from claiming "losses" passed on to them.  The risk of double or multiple recovery where actions by both direct and indirect purchasers are pursued at the same time or where parallel suits are pending in other jurisdictions can be managed by the court. 
The SCC further held that In bringing the action, indirect purchasers willingly assumed the burden of establishing that they have suffered a loss.  Whether they meet their burden is a factual question to be decided on a case by case basis.  Indirect purchaser action may, in some circumstances, be the only means by which overcharges are claimed and deterrence is promoted.  Allowing such an action is consistent with the remediation objectives of restitution law because it allows for compensating the parties who have actually suffered the harm rather than reserving those actions for direct purchasers who may have in fact passed on the overcharge.
As to meeting the test for certification under the Act, the SCC held that the pleadings disclosed causes of action that should not be struck out at the certification stage.  No such remedy should be given by the courts unless it was "plain and obvious" that the plaintiff's claim could not succeed.  The class representative must show some basis in fact for each of the certification requirements set out in the Act, other than the requirement that the pleadings disclose a cause of action.  However, the certification stage is not meant to be a test of the merits of the action, rather it is concerned with forum and with whether the action can properly proceed as a class action.  


Regards,

Blair

Monday, November 11, 2013

Ontario sues Big Tobacco for $50 Billion for "Tobacco Related Wrongs"

The Ontario Court of Appeal has held that the government of Ontario can proceed with a $50 billion lawsuit against several foreign tobacco companies to recover the cost of health care services arising from "tobacco related disease " and "tobacco related wrongs". See Ontario v. Rothmans Inc. 2013 ONCA 353
 
Ontario's case is based on legislation - The Tobacco Damages and Health Care Costs Recovery Act - enacted by the province in 2009.  The Act gave Ontario a stand-alone statutory right to sue tobacco manufacturers to recover the cost of health care services provided to the public as a result of "tobacco related disease arising out of tobacco related wrongs". 
 
In substance, Ontario is claiming that since the 1950s, several of the defendants committed tobacco related wrongs  by manufacturing and distributing cigarettes in Ontario when they knew or ought to have known that smoking cigarettes and being exposed to second-hand smoke could cause or contribute to disease.  In addition, Ontario claims that all of the defendants have engaged in various conspiracies to mislead the government and the public about the dangers of smoking and to suppress information about those dangers.
 
Many of the defendants are foreign - British American Tobacco (Investment) Limited, BAT Industries p.l.c., British American Tobacco p.l.c., Carreras Rothmans Limited, RJ Reynolds Tobacco Company and RJ Reynolds Tobacco International Inc.  Several of these foreign defendants asserted that the Ontario courts do not have jurisdiction to determine the claims against them and brought a motion to set aside the service ex juris of the statement of claim and to stay or dismiss the action on the basis of lack of jurisdiction.  Justice Conway of the Ontario Superior Court of Justice dismissed the defendants' motion.  They appealed to the Ontario Court of Appeal. 
 
The Ontario Court of Appeal dismissed the appeal for the following reasons:
 
Under rule 17.02(g) of Ontario's Rules of Civil Procedure, a defendant may be served out of Ontario with a statement of claim where there is an allegation that the damages sought  are based on a tort committed in Ontario.  The Supreme Court of Canada has confirmed that a claim in respect of a tort committed within the jurisdiction gives rise to a "presumptive connective factor" sufficient to establish a real and substantial connection with the jurisdiction. Unless rebutted, this factor is sufficient to provide the domestic court with "jurisdiction simpliciter" to determine the dispute before it.  In this case, the foreign defendants claimed that the offence created by the Act was not a tort for the purposes of rule 17.02(g).   However, the Court of Appeal held that, "If something looks like a duck, walks like a duck and quacks like a duck, it probably is a duck."   In the court's view, Ontario's claim against the defendants under the Act created a statutory tort and fell within the section of the rule.
 
In addition, the Court of Appeal held that t is a breach of a common law duty to engage in a civil conspiracy that causes harm to others.   A conspiracy occurs in the jurisdiction where the harm is suffered regardless of where the wrongful conduct occurred.  The Act addresses this sort of breach and provides for joint and several liability where two or more defendants jointly breach a duty or obligation described in the definition of tobacco related wrong.  The  Court of Appeal held that Ontario's claim in this action is founded on the common law tort of conspiracy, alleged to have been committed in Ontario because the damage flowing from the conspiracy was sustained in Ontario.  It is therefore an action in respect of a tort committed within Ontario was contemplated by the rule.  
 
Secondly, the Court of Appeal held that Ontario had established "a good arguable case" for the Ontario courts to assume jurisdiction. 
 
The Court of Appeal held that it is well established that an Ontario court will assume jurisdiction against a foreign defendant only where the plaintiff establishes a good arguable case for assuming jurisdiction either through the allegations in the statement of claim or a combination of the allegations in the statement of claim and evidence filed on the jurisdiction motion.  
 
The Court of Appeal found that Justice Conway did not err, when she concluded that, despite deficiencies in Ontario's statement of claim, Ontario had established a good arguable case for assuming jurisdiction.  
 
The case law on the issue did not go as far as the defendants had argued.  Even if Ontario's statement of claim was deficient, Justice Conway was of the view that it was capable of amendment.  In the Court of Appeals' opinion, on a jurisdiction motion, the motion judge is not required to subject the pleadings to the scrutiny applicable on a rule 21 motion (motion to strike pleadings).  So long as the statement of claim advances the core elements of a cause of action known to law and appears capable of being amended to cure any pleading deficiencies such that the claim will have at least some prospect of success, the issue for the motion judge is whether the claimant has established a good arguable case that the cause of action is sufficiently connected to Ontario to permit an Ontario court to assume jurisdiction.
 
The motion judge did that in the following way, by submitting the allegations on the motion to the following assessment:
 
(a)    the facts pleaded in the statement of claim are taken as true and if they are sufficient to establish a good arguable case, the pleadings alone can satisfy the court that it has jurisdiction;
 
(b)     the foreign defendants may put forth affidavit evidence for the purpose of challenging the factual allegations in the statement of claim, but any allegations in the statement of claim that remain unchallenged by the defendants may be challenged as true for the purpose of the jurisdiction motion; and
 
(c)    the plaintiff may respond to any evidence put forward by the foreign defendants in order to satisfy the court that there is a good arguable case.
 
The Court of Appeal held that the core allegations against the defendants were that they participated in three levels of conspiracy to breach duties to persons in Ontario:  an international conspiracy; a Canadian conspiracy, and intra-group conspiracies.  The court was satisfied that the pleadings, in combination with the affidavit evidence filed by the parties, adequately established a cause of action known to law with sufficient connection to Ontario.  It held that a jurisdiction motion is not the appropriate proceeding for scrutinizing in detail the adequacy of the pleadings, nor is it the proper place for engaging in a rigorous assessment of whether the plaintiff's claim would ultimately succeed.  
 
Ontario's case against the tobacco companies will proceed in the Ontario courts.
 
Regards,
 
Blair

Thursday, November 7, 2013

Ontario Court Enforces New York Court's Judgment for Specific Performance

The Ontario Court of Appeal recently recognized and enforced an judgment of a New York court for specific performance (Van Damme v. Gelber, 2013 ONCA 388).
 
The defendant in the case, Nahum Gelber is a very successful businessman and philanthropist.  He is a Canadian citizen and lives in Monaco.  Late in 2006, Mr. Gelber was approached about the possibility of selling a very valuable painting that he owned.  The plaintiff, Alexandre Van Damme claimed to have entered into an agreement through his agent with Mr. Gelber's agent to purchase the painting.  Mr. Gelber however refused to deliver the painting, contending that the person who purported to sell the painting on his behalf had no authority to do so.  
 
Mr. Van Damme commenced an action for specific performance in New York requiring Mr. Gelber to complete the transaction and deliver the painting for the price agreed upon in the contract.  Mr. Van Damme relied on the forum selection clause in the contract that included, "this transaction shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the laws of the state of New York without giving effect to its choice of law rules.  In the event of a dispute, the parties consent to the exclusive jurisdiction of the state and federal courts sitting in the state of New York...The parties hereto consent and submit to the jurisdiction of the and state and federal courts sitting in the state of New York."  
 
The painting is hanging in the home of Mr. Gelber's son in Toronto.  At the same time he commenced the action in New York, Mr. Van Damme commenced an application in the Ontario Superior Court of Justice for an order preserving the painting and prohibiting its sale or movement outside of Ontario pending the outcome of the New York litigation.  In a cross-motion, Mr. Gelber took the position that Ontario was forum non conveniens and New York was the more appropriate forum in which to resolve the dispute between the parties.
 
The Ontario application did not proceed to a hearing.  The parties agreed to an order that prohibited the movement of the painting pending the outcome of the New York litigation.  The consent order also provided that the order was made without prejudice to any arguments the parties might make contesting the jurisdiction of "any court in the state of New York or elsewhere to hear this matter".
 
Mr. Gelber subsequently brought a motion in the New York action challenging the jurisdiction of that court.  He maintained that he was not a party to the relevant contract and therefore was not bound by it or by its forum selection clause. 
 
The New York court declined to decide jurisdiction as a preliminary matter but instead ordered Mr. Gelber to file his statement of defence and to proceed with relevant depositions and discoveries.  Mr. Gelber complied with the order and raised many and various standard defences.  After all depositions and discoveries were completed the parties both moved for summary judgment in the New York court.  The judge granted Mr. Van Damme's summary judgment motion and denied Mr. Gelber's summary judgment motion.
 
Mr. Gelber's summary judgment motion went well beyond the jurisdiction issue.  He advanced several arguments that went to the substantive merits of Mr. Van Damme's claim.
 
Mr. Gelber subsequently brought a variety of motions for a rehearing and appeals challenging the New York judgment.  All of the motions and appeals failed.  After the judgment was entered, Mr. Gelber instituted further proceedings challenging the judgment.  Those appeals were still outstanding when the Ontario motion was heard.  However, when the matter went before the Court of Appeal, the New York judgment was final. 
 
The Court of Appeal held that Mr. Gelber had attorned to the jurisdiction of the New York court by his conduct in the course of that litigation.  It cited another decision of the court (Wolfe v. Pickar, 2011 ONCA 347) where Justice Goudge said, "When a party to an action appears in court and goes beyond challenging the jurisdiction of the court based on jurisdiction simpliciter and forum non conveniens, the party will be regarded as appearing voluntarily, thus giving the court consent-based jurisdiction."  
 
The court held that Mr. Gelber's conduct in advancing his motion for summary judgment dismissing Mr. Van Damme's claims went far beyond his jurisdictional challenges.  Mr. Gelber chose to advance substantive defences on the merits.  In doing so he implicitly accepted that the New York court has jurisdiction to decide those issues.  He raised and argued the merits of several contract-based defences to the claim brought by Mr. Van Damme.
 
The Ontario Court of Appeal also held that the fact that the New York judgment was a judgment for specific performance, as opposed to a money judgment, was not a bar to enforcing it here.  The court held that had the matter been tried in Ontario and had an Ontario court made the same finding as the New York court, specific performance would have been an appropriate remedy having regard to the nature of the property, the nature of Mr. Gelber's obligation and the ready availability of the property.  
 
Regards,
 
Blair
 
 

Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Chevron Blames Lawyer's "Racketeering Enterprise" for Massive Ecuardorean Judgment Against It

Last month (September 26), I blogged about a recent decision of Justice D.M. Brown of the Ontario Superior Court of Justice, who granted Chevron Corp.'s  stay of an action  commenced by Ecuadorean plaintiffs to enforce what was at that time a $17.2 billion judgment rendered against Chevron's predecessor, Texaco, for allegedly polluting Ecuador's Amazon Basin.  In his reasons for dismissing the motion, Justice Brown mused about why the plaintiffs had chosen to attempt to enforce the judgment in Ontario, where Chevron had no assets, "As I stated during the hearing, the jurisdiction in which the judgment debtor owns assets is only a short distance from this courthouse - in less than an hour's drive one can cross a bridge which takes you into the very state in which Chevron initiated its anti-enforcement injunction proceedings".  
Well, it looks like Chevron, at least, was listening to the judge's admonition.  In a trial commencing this week in Manhattan, Chevron is asking a federal court in New York to prevent the plaintiffs and their lawyer from using the US courts to enforce the Ecuadorean judgment.  The trial is being heard before US District Judge Lewis Kaplan, the very judge that first tossed out the plaintiffs' action saying that "the case had nothing to do with the United States".   The twist in this trial is that Chevron, the huge multi-national company, is accusing the plaintiffs and their lawyer, Steven Donziger, of fraud.  In a bit of hyperbole, worthy of any trial attorney, a lawyer for Chevron said the proceedings in Ecuador were "one of the most egregious litigation frauds in history".  Chevron is accusing Donziger and his associates of running a racketeering enterprise by bribing the judge who wrote the Ecuadorean judgment and of even writing part of the judgment themselves.  Observers have said that this case "exemplifies a new pattern of corporations seeking to crush personally plaintiffs' lawyers who bring sizable liability claims".  
In their defence, Donziger and the plaintiffs are accusing Justice Kaplan of bias.  Kaplan recently issued a 104 page pre-trial ruling warning that he has already determined "there was probable cause to suspect a crime or fraud" by Donziger in connection with the fabrication of scientific evidence, through the coercion of one Ecuadorean judge, the bribing of other Ecuadorean judges, and the ghost writing of a critical report supposedly composed by independent court-appointed official.  Kaplan also added that he suspected that Donziger's legal team in Ecuador secretly wrote some or all of the February 2011 court judgment.     
Chevron and its lawyers are seeking a ruling barring Donziger and the other plaintiffs' lawyers from trying to enforce the judgment in courts around the world wherever Chevron may have assets.  One of the reasons that Justice Brown stayed the action in Ontario was that it was shown by the evidence that Chevron had no assets in Ontario.  Justice Brown held, "Ontario courts should be reluctant to dedicate their resources to disputes where, in dollar and cents terms, there is nothing to fight over.  In my view, the parties should take their fight elsewhere to some jurisdiction where any ultimate recognition of the Ecuadorian judgment will have a practical effect."  
There is an incentive for Donziger to do so.  He and the other plaintiffs' lawyers could collect as much as $1.2 billion in fees as their portion of the judgment.
(with reports from Bloomberg.com and the National Post)
Regards,
Blair

Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Paralegal Offended by Justice of the Peace's Treatment, Calls Barristers Act Unconstitutional

Some lawyers, including those who practice before the Ontario Provincial Courts have becoming increasingly more vocal in expressing concern that paralegals are encroaching on what they consider to be their turf.  This turf war between lawyers and paralegals was ratcheted up a bit in the case of Lippa, et al. v. The Queen, (indexed as R. v. Lippa 2013 ONSC 4424).   
Marian Lippa has worked as a paralegal since 1998.  In 2006, the Law Society Act ("Act") was amended to create two forms of licensee - lawyers and paralegals - where previously, only lawyers were licensed to practice law in Ontario.  Much to the chagrin of many lawyers, licensed paralegals became members of the Law Society of Upper Canada ("LSUC").  Paralegals became subject to a regulatory regime that closely parallels the regime applicable to lawyers, including adherence to Rules of Professional Conduct.  They were authorized by the by-laws under the Act to provide specified legal services including representing a party before a summary conviction court.
Ms. Lippa became licensed as a paralegal by the LSUC in 2008.  She has her own paralegal firm, which employs other licensed paralegals.  On June 10, 2010, Mr. Lippa appeared in a Newmarket court as agent for counsel on two criminal cases.  The presiding justice of the peace ("JP") "reminded" her that agents were to remain behind the bar until their cases were called.  The JP said that the area in front of the bar was reserved for lawyers and law students.  The JP cited the Law Society's "protocol" and "safety reasons" and referred to it as a tradition that had existed for hundred's of years.  The JP also referred to the Crown having an opportunity to call matters in order of protocol by "elder counsel" first.
Ms. Lippa was offended and embarrassed by the JP's instructions.  She was also concerned that her company would lose business if its clients felt that they were not being defended as well they could be if they were represented by a lawyer.  In addition, her employees could not attend as many set-date appearances on a given day as they otherwise would have.  Accordingly, Ms. Lippa sought orders of certiorari and mandamus quashing the instructions of the JP and directing that the JP's court list be called on a "first come, first served" basis, subject to common sense exceptions.  She also sought declarations that the certain provisions of the Barristers Act were not mandatory or alternatively were unconstitutional.  
The matter was heard before Justice Michelle Fuerst of the Ontario Superior Court of Justice.  Justice Fuerst dismissed Ms. Lippa's application.  While holding that paralegals play an important role in the delivery of cost-effective legal services in Ontario and that their status as such is deserving of respect, Justice Fuerst held that the JP was "perfectly within her jurisdiction" to give the instructions that she did.
In respect of the issue of courtroom seating, Justice Fuerst held that it is common ground that a court of criminal jurisdiction has the power to control its own process in order to maintain the integrity of that process.  Determining where individuals sit in a courtroom, particularly a busy remand courtroom, where individuals are coming and going as various cases are called, falls within the jurisdiction of a judicial officer to maintain order in the courtroom and the dignity of the proceedings.  The JP did not exceed her jurisdiction or breach the principles of natural justice in ordering that only lawyers could sit in front of the bar when court was in session.
As to the order in which cases were called, Justice Fuerst held that it was not clear that the JP was adhering to the provisions in the Barristers Act which sets out an order of precedent of members of the bar in courts of Ontario.  The regime set out in the Barristers Act anticipates a mixed list, consisting of criminal and civil matters.  Accordingly, the act has very little direct application to present day criminal courts which deal solely with criminal cases.  There are a variety of ways in which cases can be called in busy courtrooms.  No one method will necessarily be the most orderly or efficient for every courtroom in the province, nor is one necessarily better than another.  However the list is called, not every case can be given priority and inevitably some individuals will wait longer than others.  The fact that it inconvenienced Ms. Lippa and caused her to feel slighted when her matters were held down does not mean that it was contrary to the principles of natural justice or otherwise an excess of jurisdiction on the part of the JP. 
Finally, as for the alleged unconstitutionality of the Barristers Act, Justice Fuerst held that there was no breach of section 7 of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms in that the JP's instructions did not impinge on Ms. Lippa's life, liberty or security of the person.  The instructions may have affected Ms. Lippa's economic interest but that interest is not protected by section 7, i.e. the ability to general business revenue by one's chosen means is not a right that is protected by section 7 of the Charter.  Further, corporations and other artificial entities such as Ms. Lippa's company were excluded from section 7 protection.  
Regards,
Blair

Thursday, October 10, 2013

Corporate Directors Accused of Bad Faith Conduct Denied Advance Funding of Legal Costs

Most Canadian business corporations statutes, including the Ontario Business Corporations Act and the Canada Business Corporations Act ("CBCA"), contain provisions which permit a director or officer of a corporation to be indemnified by the company "against all costs, charges and expenses, including an amount paid to settle an action or satisfy a judgment" if those costs had been reasonably incurred in proceedings in which the officer or director is involved because of her association with the company.  The legislation also provides that the company may advance money to an individual for her legal costs, but the individual is required to repay the money and the company is not required to indemnify her unless the individual acted honestly and in good faith with a view to the best interests of the company.  Those statutory indemnification provisions are often reproduced in company bylaws.
The law in that area is expanding.  In the case of Cytrynbaum v. Look Communications Inc. [2013] ONCA 455, the Ontario Court of Appeal agreed with the reasons of an application judge which denied an application by former directors and officers of Look Communications Inc. ("Look") for advance funding of their legal costs in defending an action brought against them by Look itself.   
Look is a CBCA company which was engaged in wireless, internet and cable services.   The defendants were either directors or officers of Look or former directors or officers of Look.  Look adopted a share appreciation rights plan "SARs" plan as an incentive to its directors, officers, employees and consultants.  The SARs plan allowed Look to award such individuals share appreciation rights based on the market value of Look's shares.  The SARs could be exercised if Look sold all or substantially all of its assets and entitled the holder to be paid the difference between the market price of the shares on that date and the price on the date the SARs were granted.  The former directors and officers of Look were all granted SARs.  Some were also granted stock options.  
Look's business seriously declined from 2005 to 2008.  In late 2008, Look's board decided to sell Look's assets pursuant to a plan of arrangement under the supervision of a monitor.  In 2009, Look sold its key assets for $80 million to a partnership formed by Rogers and Bell, less $16 million to be paid to Bell to settle certain outstanding litigation.  The sale was approved by Look's shareholders and by the court.
Following the agreement with Rogers and Bell, Look's board accepted the recommendation of certain of Look's management to set aside $11 million for management severance, retention and bonus payments.  The board also accepted management's proposal to authorize payments to terminate the SARs and cancel all stock options on the basis of a share valuation of $0.40 per share contrary to the terms of both of the SARs and option plans that specified the market value was to be used.  At the time, the market price of the shares was approximately $0.20.
Following the sale, Look paid more than $20 million, or 32 per cent of the net sales proceeds to its officers, directors, employees and consultants by way of bonuses and equity cancellation payments.  

Those payments were not disclosed to the shareholders until several months later when a management information circular was issued.  Once disclosed, the payments immediately attracted strong shareholder criticism.  The appellants anticipated that they would be sued and at a board meeting decided to authorize Look to pay $1,550,000 as retainers to three law firms acting for them personally.  Immediately after those retainers were paid, the individuals resigned as directors and officers of Look.  

Look's by-laws provided for indemnity and advance funding, in almost identical wording to the CBCA.  In addition to the by-laws, the defendants relied on indemnification agreements they had entered into with Look which provided indemnity and advancement of costs in broader and more generous terms than the provisions of the CBCA. The former management commenced an application seeking advance payment and indemnity for their legal costs in defending Look's action in accordance with the bylaws and the agreements.  Look refused to make such payments.  
In denying the defendants' application, the first issue considered by the application judge was whether the defendants could seek advance funding of their legal costs when they were defending an action brought by the company itself, as opposed to by a third party.  He found that section 124(4) of the CBCA which provides that a corporation may with the approval of a court indemnify an individual or advance monies in respect of an action "by or on behalf of the corporation" to which the individual is made a party because of the individual's association with the corporation or other entity does not apply only to derivative actions.  He found that the words "by or on behalf of the corporation" clearly and unambiguously included both actions brought by the corporation itself and actions brought on behalf of the corporation.  However, he concluded that directors or officers who have engaged in misconduct towards a corporation ought not to be allowed to use corporate funds to defend themselves.  
Secondly, the application judge held that former management were entitled to the benefit of the presumption of good faith and that it was for Look to lead evidence to rebut that presumption.  Look was required to establish a strong prima facie case that its former management acted mala fides towards the corporation and establish on the evidence that it was likely to succeed at trial.  The application judge found that Look had made out a strong prima facie case that the former management had acted in bad faith by using a share value of $0.40 to fix the equity cancellation payments and that the $0.40 value bore no relation to the market value and was contrary to the terms of the SARs and option plans.  The share price was determined without any consultation with a compensation or valuation expert and resulted in conferring personal benefits of approximately $9 million largely on the defendants at the expense of the corporation.  The application judge rejected the contention that the legal advice the board had received provided the defendants with a defence because the advice extended only to the board's general authority to make compensation awards and not to the decision to use the $0.40 per share valuation.  
Thirdly, the application judge found that the retainer payments to the law firms were made contemporaneously with the defendants' resignations in the face of mounting wave of shareholder complaints and without the support of proper legal advice despite the caution sounded by a lawyer retained by the board who was then excluded from the meeting held to consider the payments.
The former management appealed this decision to the Ontario Court of Appeal.  Mr. Justice Sharpe delivered the judgment of the court and agreed with the application judge.

 Justice Sharpe agreed that the words "by or on behalf of the corporation" unambiguously covered both derivative actions which are brought on behalf of the corporation and actions that are brought by the corporation, such as this one.  In addition, Justice Sharpe held that it was difficult to see any principled rationale for applying one regime for advance costs in derivative actions and another for actions brought by the corporation itself.  The objective underlying the indemnity provisions for directors and officers is to maintain a balance between encouraging responsible behaviour by directors and officers on the one hand and permitting enough leeway to attract strong candidates to foster entrepreneurism on the other hand.

Secondly, Justice Sharpe agreed with the application judge's application of a strong prima facie case standard instead of adopting a standard which would deny advance funding only when the evidence rises to such a level that a court is able to make a final determination of mala fides.  If the matter fell to be determined solely on the wording of the indemnity agreements, advance funding could only be denied on that basis.  However, the issue had to be decided on the basis of the overriding language of the statute which contemplates that the right to advance funding is subject to court approval before trial and that a final determination of the issue of bad faith and indemnity must await trial.
Justice Sharpe held that the application judge did not err in finding that the plaintiff had made out a strong prima facie case of bad faith and was correct in denying advance funding of the defendants legal costs. 

Regards,

Blair

Tuesday, October 8, 2013

British Columbia Arbitrator Prevented From Awarding Compound Interest on Expropriation Award

Following a commercial arbitration, the province of British Columbia was ordered to pay Teal Cedar Products Ltd. ("TCP") compensation for partially expropriating TCP's forestry licence.  However, in an application that went all the way to the Supreme Court of Canada, the province was relieved from paying compound interest on the arbitration award.
TCP held the licence to harvest a certain amount of timber in the province known as an "allowable annual cut".  The province reduced TCP's allowable annual cut to create a park.  TCP sued the province under the British Columbia Forest Act claiming compensation for partial expropriation of its timber licence.  The parties could not agree as to the appropriate compensation and the dispute was resolved through arbitration under BC's Commercial Arbitration Act.  The arbitrator awarded TCP over $6.3 million including over $2.2 million in interest compounded annually from the date the province reduced the allowable annual cut to the date of the award.  A BC superior court judge upheld the arbitrator's award and the BC Court of Appeal denied the province's application for leave to appeal the issue. 
On the province's further appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada, the court held that arbitrators operating under section 28 of the BC Commercial Arbitration Act ("CAA") could not award compound interest because the BC  Court Order Interest Act requires that a pecuniary court judgment bear simple interest and only simple interest.  While section 28 of the CAA does not expressly deem an arbitrator to be a court, this is the necessary implication stating that a sum directed to be paid by an arbitration award is "a pecuniary judgment of the court".  Given both its ordinary meaning and its legislative history, section 28 of the CAA requires arbitrators to apply the provisions of the Court Order Interest Act.  
The court held that there is no doubt that compound interest is a more accurate way of compensating parties for the "time-value of money".  However, the BC legislature has not yet amended the Court Order Interest Act to remove the prohibition of interest on interest, so simple interest remains the rule in BC courts. 
Arbitrators cannot include compound interest in the award itself.  If they could, there would be double recovery since section 28 of the CAA would then operate to add interest on top of an award that already included interest.
While courts presume that legislatures intend to provide full compensation for expropriations, that presumption can be rebutted by statutory provisions that demonstrate legislative intention to the contrary.  Section 28 of the CAA limits the interest on a sum directly to be paid by an award to simply interest.  
Finally, the arbitrator did not have jurisdiction to consider equitable grounds for awarding compound interest.  Under section 23 of the CAA, an arbitrator could only consider equitable grounds where the parties specifically agree, and in this case TCP and the province did not agree.
Regards,
Blair

Friday, October 4, 2013

Ontario Court Grants Molson's Request for Injunction to Prevent Miller from Terminating Beer License

In a recent decision, Mr. Justice Wilton-Siegel of the Ontario Superior Court of Justice, granted an interlocutory injunction preventing the Miller Brewing Co. ("Miller") from terminating its long-standing license agreement with Molson Canada 2005 ("Molson") pending the trial of an action between the parties.  ( see Molson Canada 2005 v. Miller Brewing Co. 116 O.R. (3d) p 108)
Molson had been the exclusive Canadian licensed distributor of Miller's key trademarks and brands since 1982.  The license agreement covered both Molson's domestic production of Miller's products and the importing into Canada of Miller products produced in the United States.  The license agreement had been restated and amended several times since it was first executed.  The last restatement was effective as of January 1, 2003.  
Miller is not currently a significant player in the Canadian beer market.  However, Molson has 8 strategic brands that account for approximately 90% of its Canadian business including Coors Light, Canadian and MGD.  The Miller brands licensed to Molson, which included MGD and Miller Chill, represented less than 5% of Molson's total sales volume in Canada in 2012.  Molson's evidence was that during the period of 2006 to 2009, Miller had suffered a substantial decline in MGD sales in the United States but during that same period Molson was able to increase the market share of MGD in Canada.
With MGD sales in decline, the parties began discussions in the summer of 2010 to amend the license agreement yet again.  However, Molson was forecasting MGD sales for 2010 that would fall short of the minimum volume targets in the agreement.  The negotiations led toward a letter of intent.  For its part, Molson stated that it would rely less on MGD volumes and would emphasize instead its overall portfolio of Miller products. The letter of intent was executed on July 26, 2011, and was mostly non-binding except for Miller's right to terminate the license agreement if Molson failed to meet the minimum volume targets for the years 2010 and 2011.  
Immediately after the letter of intent was signed, the parties commenced negotiations on yet another amendment to the license agreement which was executed on or about December 19, 2011.  Among other things, Miller waived its right to terminate the agreement based on Molson's failure to achieve volume targets in calendars 2010 and 2011. However, Miller delivered a notice of termination on January 18, 2013, citing in part, Molson's failure to achieve minimum volume targets.
Molson commenced the action on January 30, 2013.  In the action, Molson sought a declaration that the license agreement remained in full force and effect and that Miller could not terminate the license agreement on the basis of any known facts or circumstances that occurred prior to January 1, 2013.  Molson also sought injunctive relief preventing Miller's purported termination of the license agreement.
In granting the injunction sought by Molson, Justice Wilton-Siegel found that the three part test for an interlocutory injunction set out in the RJR MacDonald case had been met:
1.    There was a serious issue to be tried.  Justice Wilton-Siegel held that Molson had established that there was a serious issue as to whether Miller had failed to satisfy a condition precedent to the exercise of its right to terminate the license agreement in the form of satisfaction of Miller's obligation to negotiate with Molson in good faith. 
2.    In respect of the issue of irreparable harm, the judge accepted Miller's submission that proof of irreparable harm must be clear not merely speculative and must be supported by the evidence.  However, he ruled that such evidence could take many forms.  In this case neither party had provided any market studies or reports to support their respective assertions that they would suffer irreparable harm if the court's decision was adverse to their interests.  However, the judge ruled that a court is entitled to draw inferences of irreparable harm from the facts if such inferences reflect commercially reasonable conclusions based on the facts.  He concluded that Molson had satisfied the test because it was reasonable to conclude that there would be irreparable harm to Molson's customer relationships flowing from the fact that those customers for whom the Miller brand beers were an important segment of their purchases would be forced to source that beer from Miller or to switch to a different product from Molson.  The judge was satisfied Molson's damage would not be limited to the loss of the sales of Miller brand beers.  In his opinion it was reasonable to infer that in at least some cases, terminating Molson's distribution of Miller brand beers would also result in a loss of sales of other beer sold by Molson as its customers would re-evaluate their needs and their relationship with Molson when the Miller brand beers were taken out of the equation.  There was no real likelihood that any such losses would not be quantifiable.  
3.    As for the balance of convenience, the judge held that the balance of convenience favoured  preservation of the status quo. 



Regards,

Blair

Friday, September 27, 2013

Supreme Court of Canada: Restrictive Employment Covenants in Quebec are Enforceable When Linked to an Asset Sale

The Supreme Court of Canada has released a decision (Payette vs. Guay Inc. 2013, SCC 45),  upholding a decision of the Quebec Court of Appeal which granted a permanent injunction to enforce a restrictive employment covenant.

Guay Inc. acquired assets belonging to corporations controlled by Mr. Payette. The agreement for the sale of the assets contain non-competition and non-solicitation clauses. To ensure a smooth transition after the sale, the parties agreed that Mr. Payette would work full-time for Guay as a consultant. At the end of the transition period the parties entered into a contract of employment originally for a fixed term and then for an indefinite term. A few years later Guay fired Mr. Payette without a "serious reason".  Mr. Payette then started a new job with a company that was a competitor of Guay.

The Quebec Superior Court dismissed Guay's motion for an injunction compelling Mr. Payette to comply with the restrictive covenants in the agreement for the sale of assets. The Quebec Court of Appeal set aside that judgment and ordered a permanent injunction (for the duration of the period of the non-competition).

Mr. Justice Wagner wrote the decision for the Supreme Court.  He held that the permanent injunction should be enforced. The rules applicable to restrictive covenants related to an employment differ depending on whether the covenants were linked to a contract for the sale of a business or to a contract of employment. The employer-employee rules have no equivalent in the commercial context since those rules were a response to the imbalance of power that generally characterizes the employment relationship. In the commercial context an imbalance of power is not presumed to exist.

Parties negotiating the sale of assets have greater freedom of contract than do parties negotiating contracts of employment, both at common law and in the civil law of Quebec. To ameliorate the imbalance that often characterizes the employer-employee relationship, the Quebec legislature enacted rules that apply only to contracts of employment and are intended to protect employees. Accordingly where an employer has fired the employee without a serious reason, the employer may not avail himself of a non-competition covenant.

To determine whether a restrictive covenant is linked to a contract for the sale of assets or a contract of employment it is important to clearly identify the reason why the covenant was entered into. In this case, the non-competition and non-solicitation clauses could not be disassociated from the contract for the sale of assets. As a result, the scope of these clauses had to be interpreted on the basis of commercial law rules and the protection provided the employees by the Civil Code of Quebec did not apply.

In the commercial context a restrictive covenant is lawful unless it can be established on a balance of probabilities that its scope is unreasonable having regard to the context in which it was negotiated. A non-competition covenant will be reasonable and lawful provided that it is limited as to its term and to the territory and activities to which it applies to whatever is necessary to the protection of the legitimate interests of the party in whose favour it was granted. In this case, there was no evidence that the five year period was unreasonable having regard to the highly specialized nature of the business activities involved.

In addition, Justice Wagner found that, while in the case of non-competition covenants, the territory to which the covenant applies must be identified, a determination that a non-solicitation covenant is reasonable and lawful does not generally require a territorial limitation. In this case, the parties' failure to include a territorial limitation in the non-solicitation clause did not make it unreasonable and therefore unenforceable

Regards,

Blair