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The Court of Appeal dismissed a motion for panel review, upholding the denial of an extension of time to perfect an appeal due to lack of merit.
The Court of Appeal for Ontario dismissed Lynne Catherine Foulidis’s motion for a panel review and to set aside the Deputy Registrar’s order dismissing her appeal for delay.
The court found that the motion judge correctly concluded the appeal lacked merit and that the criteria for an extension of time to perfect the appeal were not met.
The court reviewed the trial judge’s findings regarding the retainer agreement and legal fees, and found no palpable and overriding error.
Costs were awarded to the respondent.
Motion for leave to appeal Ontario Land Tribunal decision dismissed without costs.
The moving party brought a motion for leave to appeal a decision of the Ontario Land Tribunal.
The Divisional Court dismissed the motion for leave to appeal without costs.
An order appointing an arbitrator under section 10 of the Arbitration Act, 1991 is not appealable.
This appeal concerned whether an order appointing an arbitrator under section 10 of the Arbitration Act, 1991, is appealable.
The appellant argued that the application judge erred in appointing the arbitrator and in not limiting the scope of the arbitration.
The respondent moved to quash the appeal, asserting that section 10(2) of the Act precludes appeals from such appointments.
The Court of Appeal held that the power to appoint an arbitrator under section 10(1)(b) applies when parties fail to agree or one party refuses to follow through on an agreement to appoint.
This interpretation is consistent with the Act's purpose of limiting court intervention and appeal rights in arbitration matters.
The court found that the application judge's order, including the determination of the arbitrator's jurisdiction, was made under section 10(1) and was therefore not appealable.
The appeal was quashed.
Motion to quash judicial review and leave to appeal dismissed as high threshold not met.
The moving party sought to quash the respondent's application for judicial review and motion for leave to appeal an Ontario Land Tribunal decision.
The moving party argued the proceedings were moot due to recent legislative amendments to the Planning Act under Bill 185.
The court dismissed the motion to quash, finding the moving party failed to meet the high threshold of showing the proceedings were manifestly devoid of merit, leaving the statutory interpretation and mootness issues to be decided by the panel hearing the merits.
The court awarded partial indemnity costs because rejecting a broad settlement release was reasonable.
This endorsement addresses the costs arising from a dismissed motion brought by Evergreen Community (Burlington) Ltd. for an injunction and an order for inspection against FirstCanada ULC.
FirstCanada, the successful party in the motion, sought costs on a mixed partial/substantial indemnity scale, while Evergreen argued for partial indemnity.
The court awarded FirstCanada costs on a partial indemnity scale, finding that Evergreen was not unreasonable in rejecting FirstCanada's non-Rule 49 settlement offer, which included a broad release that would have precluded future claims.
The total costs awarded to FirstCanada were $175,214.10.
The court upheld the termination of a real estate agreement due to the buyer's five-year unexplained delay in seeking severance approval.
This appeal concerned a failed agreement of purchase and sale (APS) for a residential development, where the appellant (buyer) had an express obligation to obtain severance approval but failed to communicate or take steps for almost five years.
The respondent (seller) subsequently refused access to the property, deeming the APS terminated.
The appellant sought declarations that the APS was valid and for specific performance.
The application judge dismissed the appellant's application, finding the appellant in breach due to inordinate delay and the respondent justified in treating the APS as ended.
The Court of Appeal upheld this decision, affirming that where an APS has no fixed deadline, performance must occur within a reasonable time, and that inordinate, unexplained delay can constitute a fundamental breach justifying termination without a prior notice of a new deadline, depending on the circumstances.
The court dismissed a developer's motion for a mandatory injunction and property inspection regarding alleged ongoing environmental contamination.
Evergreen Community (Burlington) Ltd. brought a motion seeking an interim or interlocutory injunction against FirstCanada ULC to prevent alleged ongoing environmental contamination (LNAPL) from FirstCanada's property onto Evergreen's, and an order for inspection under Rule 32 to conduct groundwater and soil testing.
Evergreen argued the contamination stalled its billion-dollar development project.
The court dismissed both requests, finding that the injunction sought was mandatory and Evergreen failed to meet the strict 'strong prima facie case' test, particularly regarding irreparable harm and the ongoing nature of contamination.
The court preferred FirstCanada's expert evidence that a Record of Site Condition (RSC) or Risk Assessment could be obtained despite existing contamination.
The order for inspection was denied due to procedural unfairness and lack of demonstrated necessity for the upcoming summary judgment motion.
Motion for leave to appeal OLT decision ordered to be heard separately before judicial review.
The applicant sought to schedule a motion for leave to appeal and an application for judicial review from a summary dismissal by the Ontario Land Tribunal.
The applicant requested that the leave motion, appeal, and judicial review be heard together by a single panel, relying on the recent Supreme Court decision in Yatar.
The court ordered that the motion for leave to appeal be heard first by a single judge, to respect the legislative deference implicit in the leave requirement, with the judicial review and potential appeal to follow if leave is granted.
Motion to dismiss action for failing to purge privileged documents from court file denied.
The defendants brought a motion seeking dismissal of the actions due to the plaintiffs' alleged breach of court orders regarding privileged documents.
In the alternative, they sought removal of the plaintiffs' counsel and an increase in security for costs.
The court denied the motion, finding that there were reasonable excuses for the alleged breach of the Crown Privilege Order and that no likely prejudice was suffered by the defendants.
The request for increased security for costs was also denied, as it would be unjust to the plaintiffs and there was no evidence of their inability to pay.
Loss of bargain damages for a failed real estate transaction are calculated using the actual resale price, not expert evidence.
This is an appeal and cross-appeal concerning a failed real estate transaction.
The appellant vendor sued the respondent purchaser for breach of an Agreement of Purchase and Sale (APS) and sought loss of bargain damages.
The motion judge found the respondent liable but erred in calculating damages by relying on expert evidence instead of the difference between the APS price and the actual resale price.
The Court of Appeal allowed the appeal, holding that where a vendor reasonably mitigates damages by reselling the property in an arm's length transaction, the loss of bargain damages are the difference between the original APS price and the resale price, and expert evidence is not required.
The cross-appeal, which challenged the pre-judgment interest rate and the deduction of interest on the deposit, was dismissed.
The Court of Appeal dismissed the vendor's action for a failed real estate transaction, finding the vendor was not ready to close.
This appeal concerned a failed real estate transaction where the appellant vendor sued the respondent purchasers for losses after the purchasers refused to close.
The motion judge granted summary judgment to the purchasers, finding the vendor was not ready to close on the scheduled date as the house was not substantially complete, thus terminating the agreement.
The Court of Appeal upheld the motion judge's decision, affirming that the purchasers were ready to close and did not act in bad faith by obtaining financing, and that the vendor's miscalculation of the situation was its own responsibility.
The appeal was dismissed.
Landlord ordered to allow tenant to re-enter premises after unlawful eviction contrary to prior order.
The applicant sought an urgent case conference after the respondent purported to evict the applicant and changed the locks, contrary to a prior court order barring eviction.
The respondent claimed he had not received the prior order.
During the conference, the respondent confirmed receipt of the order and agreed not to take further steps to evict the applicant until a motion to vary the order is heard.
The court directed the respondent to schedule a motion to vary the order, to be heard alongside the applicant's motion for contempt, and permitted the applicant to change the locks to reopen for business.
The court upheld the dismissal of the action due to the appellants' persistent failure to comply with interlocutory inspection orders.
The appellants appealed the dismissal of their breach of contract claim, which was dismissed under Rule 60.12(b) for their persistent failure to comply with interlocutory orders requiring them to permit the respondents to inspect disputed limestone.
The Court of Appeal found no merit in the appellants' position, noting their history of non-compliance and attempts to avoid the inspection order.
The court upheld the motion judge's decision to dismiss the claim, finding it amply justified, and denied leave to introduce fresh evidence blaming former counsel, stating such complaints are for a negligence action.
Motion to vary order for ongoing remuneration pending share buyout dismissed as financial impact was foreseeable.
The applicant brought a motion under Rule 59.06(2) to vary a prior court order that required his companies to continue paying remuneration to the respondents pending the completion of a court-ordered share buyout.
The applicant argued that the ongoing payments caused financial hardship due to the COVID-19 pandemic and sought to terminate the payments or treat them as a set-off against the share purchase price.
The court dismissed the motion, finding that the ongoing remuneration was a foreseeable consequence of the original order requested by the applicant, and the pandemic was not a new fact that would have altered the original decision.
The Court of Appeal fixed costs payable by the unsuccessful appellant to the respondents at $27,500.
This is a costs endorsement following an appeal.
The appellant, Yong Yeow Tan, was ordered to pay costs to the respondents, C & K Mortgage Services Inc. and the Receiver for Camilla Court Homes Inc. and Elite Homes Inc. C & K Mortgage Services Inc. was awarded $20,000, and the Receiver was awarded $7,500, inclusive of taxes and disbursements.
Appeal dismissed; purchaser's equitable interest from deposit cannot defeat prior mortgagee's secured legal priority.
The appellant entered into an agreement of purchase and sale for a residential unit in a condominium project and paid a $500,000 deposit, mostly directly to the developer.
The developer was subsequently placed into receivership by the first mortgagee.
The receiver disclaimed the appellant's agreement of purchase and sale.
The appellant sought an order requiring the receiver to complete the sale, arguing he had an equitable interest in the property.
The Court of Appeal upheld the motion judge's dismissal, finding that the agreement explicitly subordinated the purchaser's interest to any mortgages and that the appellant's equitable claims could not defeat the mortgagee's prior secured legal interest.
Purchaser's motion to compel receiver to complete sale dismissed; first mortgagee's priority upheld over purchaser's deposit.
The moving party purchaser entered into an agreement of purchase and sale for a pre-construction condominium and paid a $500,000 deposit, $400,000 of which went directly to the developer.
The developer defaulted on its first mortgage, and a receiver was appointed.
The receiver sought to disclaim the purchaser's agreement.
The purchaser brought a motion to compel the receiver to complete the sale, arguing he had an equitable interest in the property.
The court dismissed the motion, finding that the purchaser's interest was contractually subordinate to the first mortgagee and that the equities did not justify overriding the mortgagee's legal priority.
The court certified a class action and approved a $425,000 settlement against the estate of an orthodontist who surreptitiously recorded patients.
The plaintiff moved to certify a class action against the estate of an orthodontist for surreptitiously video recording patients and sought approval of a settlement.
The court granted certification for settlement purposes and approved the settlement, finding it fair, reasonable, and in the best interests of the class, given the limited assets of the estate and the challenges of individual proof of damages.
The settlement provided $425,000, including $350,000 for class members, an administration fund, and partial indemnity costs.
The successful party in a corporate deadlock dispute was awarded $38,000 in partial indemnity costs.
This decision addresses the costs of an application and counter-application concerning corporate ownership and control of the "Tetra group" of companies.
The court previously dismissed the application brought by Lois Struthmann and Tansy Serediak and generally granted the relief sought by Aloysius (Al) Struthmann in his counter-application.
Mr. Struthmann, as the successful party, sought costs on a partial indemnity basis.
The court awarded Mr. Struthmann costs fixed at an all-inclusive amount of $38,000.00, payable jointly and severally by Lois Struthmann and Tansy Serediak.
The court rejected arguments that no costs should be awarded due to good faith or the absence of a formal liability finding, emphasizing the indemnity principle and the unsuccessful parties' refusal to accept an earlier settlement overture.
Corporate deadlock in family business resolved by ordering founder to buy out estranged wife and daughter.
The applicants, the estranged wife and daughter of the respondent, brought an application for an oppression remedy under the Business Corporations Act, seeking to remove the respondent from the family's chemical business and force him to sell his shares to them.
The respondent brought a counter-application seeking the reverse.
The court found that the relationship between the parties had irreparably broken down, resulting in a corporate deadlock.
Applying section 207 of the Act, the court ordered the respondent, who was the founder and primary manager of the business, to buy out the applicants' shares at fair market value, as this aligned with the parties' reasonable expectations.