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Court is functus officio and cannot amend a final costs decision to address HST credits.
The plaintiff sought leave to make further submissions on whether he was required to pay the standard 13% HST on a costs award or only the net HST the defendant would pay after receiving credits under the Excise Tax Act.
The court held that it was functus officio, as the original costs decision was final and the issue of HST credits was a new issue, not a clerical error or accidental omission.
The fact that the order had not yet been entered did not permit the court to vary its decision.
Successful defendant awarded $425,000 in partial indemnity costs following dismissal of $1.8 million pension claim.
Following the dismissal of the plaintiff's $1.8 million claim regarding pension benefits, the successful defendant sought costs of over $900,000.
The plaintiff argued the costs were excessive and that the defendant's joint offer to settle did not trigger substantial indemnity costs because the co-defendant had settled via a Pierringer Agreement.
The court agreed that substantial indemnity costs were not warranted but awarded partial indemnity costs of $425,000 plus HST and disbursements, finding the time spent reasonable given the complexity and the plaintiff's evasive conduct during discoveries.
Action for breach of verbal pension agreement and negligent misrepresentation dismissed due to lack of proof and unreasonable reliance.
The plaintiff, a former Vice President of Human Resources, sued his former employer for breach of a verbal contract and negligent misrepresentation regarding his pension benefits.
He alleged the employer's former president verbally agreed to pay all costs to transfer his previous pensionable service to the employer's Supplementary Pension Plan, or alternatively, to set up a fund to cover the difference.
He also claimed he relied on an erroneous pension estimate provided by a subordinate when deciding to retire.
The Superior Court of Justice dismissed the action, finding the plaintiff failed to prove the alleged verbal agreement and that it was unreasonable for him, given his expertise and knowledge of the pension plan's restrictions, to rely on the subordinate's inaccurate estimate.