Licence fees for prescriptive easements set aside as assertion of strict legal rights was not unconscionable.
The appellants and respondents owned cottage properties on Lake Erie.
The trial judge found the appellants had acquired prescriptive easements for parking and a pier on the respondents' land, but applied equitable proprietary estoppel to impose annual licence fees.
The Court of Appeal held the trial judge erred in applying the equitable doctrine without a finding of unconscionability, setting aside the licence fees.
The Court dismissed the respondents' cross-appeal, upholding the findings that parking was reasonably necessary for the enjoyment of the dominant tenements, and that proprietary estoppel was established for a well and concrete blocks.
OCACourt of AppealJul 31, 2002