The Court of Appeal held that a 1985 environmental indemnity covered regulatory compliance costs but remitted the assignee's rights issue.
The Court of Appeal for Ontario considered whether a 1985 indemnity provided by the Province of Ontario to Great Lakes and Reed covered the costs of complying with a 2011 Director's Order requiring remedial work at an abandoned mercury waste disposal site near Dryden, Ontario.
The motion judge had granted summary judgment in favour of Weyerhaeuser and Resolute, finding both were entitled to indemnification.
The appellate court was divided.
The majority (Brown and Lauwers JJ.A.) held that the 1985 indemnity did cover the costs of complying with the Director's Order, but found that Resolute had no legal interest in the indemnity because Bowater had assigned the full benefit to Weyerhaeuser in 1998.
The majority remitted the issue of Weyerhaeuser's rights as assignee to the trial court.
Justice Laskin dissented, arguing the 1985 indemnity covered only third-party pollution claims, not first-party regulatory compliance costs.
Weyerhaeuser Company Limited v. Her Majesty the Queen as represented by the Ministry of the Attorney General, 2017 ONCA 1007