46 total
CBCA arrangement approved as fair and reasonable despite shareholder opposition; sealing order granted for confidential bids.
The applicants sought a final order approving a proposed arrangement under section 192 of the Canada Business Corporations Act to effect a recapitalization transaction.
A group of Class B shareholders opposed the arrangement, arguing the dilution of existing shareholders to 1% of new shares was unfair.
The court found the arrangement was put forward in good faith, had a valid business purpose, and was fair and reasonable given the company's financial distress and the lack of viable alternatives other than CCAA proceedings.
The court also granted a sealing order over confidential exhibits containing third-party bids, finding disclosure would pose a serious risk to important commercial interests.
The court granted a preliminary interim order and stay of proceedings under the CBCA to allow Corus Entertainment to finalize a complex recapitalization transaction.
Corus Entertainment Inc. and 17311737 Canada Inc. sought and obtained a preliminary interim order in connection with a proposed arrangement under the Canada Business Corporations Act.
The court granted a stay of rights and remedies against the Corus Entities until December 18, 2025, to provide breathing space for the applicants to finalize definitive documentation for a recapitalization transaction.
The transaction is designed to significantly reduce the company's debt and annual cash interest costs while extending maturity dates.
The applicants demonstrated compliance with statutory requirements and good faith in pursuing the arrangement following a formal strategic review.
The stay does not affect obligations to trade creditors, suppliers, customers, or employees.
The court approved lease assignments, extended the stay, and granted a sealing order under CCAA.
In this CCAA proceeding, the court granted multiple orders sought by Hudson's Bay Company and related entities, including approval of lease assignment agreements with YM Inc. and Ivanhoe Cambridge, sealing of confidential bid information, extension of the stay of proceedings to October 31, 2025, and approval of the Monitor's reports and activities.
The court rejected requests for adjournment and conditional distributions, finding the lease monetization process was fair and transparent, and that the proposed transactions represent a positive development for stakeholders.
The court approved a reverse vesting order and related relief in a CCAA insolvency proceeding.
The decision concerns the approval of a reverse vesting order (RVO) in the context of insolvency proceedings under the Companies' Creditors Arrangement Act (CCAA).
The Court-appointed Monitor sought approval for a transaction involving the sale of all shares of the Purchased Companies to North Mill Equipment Finance LLC, the granting of related releases, a sealing order, and an extension of the stay of proceedings.
The court reviewed the necessity and fairness of the RVO structure, the process leading to the transaction, and the impact on stakeholders, ultimately granting the relief sought.
The court sanctioned the CCAA plans of major tobacco companies to effect a global settlement.
This decision sanctions the CCAA Plans of Imperial Tobacco Canada Limited, Imperial Tobacco Company Limited, JTI-Macdonald Corp., and Rothmans, Benson & Hedges Inc., effecting a global settlement of all tobacco-related claims in Canada.
The court reviews the structure, allocation, and fairness of the plans, including the creation of a $1 billion Cy-près Foundation, and addresses objections from social stakeholders.
The court finds the plans fair, reasonable, and in the public interest, and grants the requested relief, including third-party releases and the appointment of plan administrators.
Court approved CCAA plan amendments and dismissed a social stakeholder's objection for lack of standing.
This endorsement addresses motions by the court-appointed Monitors in the ongoing Companies’ Creditors Arrangement Act (CCAA) proceedings involving JTI-Macdonald Corp., Imperial Tobacco Canada Limited and Imperial Tobacco Company Limited, and Rothmans, Benson & Hedges Inc. The Monitors sought approval for amendments to the CCAA Plans to resolve the allocation of a $750 million working capital holdback among the Tobacco Companies.
The only opposition came from the Heart and Stroke Foundation, which objected as a social stakeholder but was found to lack standing.
The court granted the motions, finding the amendments did not adversely affect any creditors and were appropriate in the circumstances.
The court granted interim CCAA relief, authorizing deferred payments for working capital and interim distributions.
This decision concerns motions brought by Pride Group Holdings Inc. and related applicants under the Companies' Creditors Arrangement Act (CCAA) for interim relief in their restructuring proceedings.
The court addresses requests for approval of interim distributions, payment of direct costs, application of deferred payments for working capital, and approval of certain activities of the Monitor.
The court grants the requested relief, finding it necessary to maintain liquidity and continue the wind-down process, and holds that the proposed mechanisms are equitable and consistent with the CCAA’s remedial objectives.
The court approved a CCAA stalking horse transaction, contract assignments, limited releases, and sealing order.
This endorsement addresses a motion by Sandvine Corporation and related entities under the Companies’ Creditors Arrangement Act for approval of a Stalking Horse Transaction Agreement, a vesting order, and related relief.
The court denied an adjournment request by Telecom Egypt, found that all statutory and procedural requirements were met, and approved the transaction, assignments, limited releases, sealing of confidential materials, enhanced monitor powers, and an extension of the stay of proceedings.
The court granted an unopposed motion for a Sanction Protocol Order in ongoing CCAA proceedings.
This endorsement concerns a joint motion brought by the court-appointed Monitors for JTI-Macdonald Corp., Imperial Tobacco Canada Limited, Imperial Tobacco Company Limited, and Rothmans, Benson & Hedges Inc. in their ongoing Companies’ Creditors Arrangement Act (CCAA) proceedings.
The Monitors sought a Sanction Protocol Order to establish the date for the Sanction Hearing, ratify the litigation timetable, approve the dissemination of the Agenda and Sanction Hearing procedure, approve the Omnibus Sanction Hearing Notice, and set the deadline for Sanction Hearing Objection Notices.
The motion was unopposed and was granted by the court, with three orders signed.
The court granted an unopposed motion to approve a notice protocol order for class action plaintiffs.
This endorsement concerns ongoing insolvency proceedings under the Companies’ Creditors Arrangement Act (CCAA) involving JTI-Macdonald Corp., Imperial Tobacco Canada Limited, Imperial Tobacco Company Limited, and Rothmans, Benson & Hedges Inc. The specific motion, brought by the applicants, sought a Quebec Class Action Plaintiffs Notice Protocol Order.
The motion was unopposed and was granted by the court, with the requested order signed.
The court granted an initial CCAA order, including a stay of proceedings and DIP financing, to allow a multinational network optimization company to restructure following a liquidity crisis.
Sandvine Corporation and its affiliates sought an initial order under the Companies’ Creditors Arrangement Act (CCAA), including an urgent 10-day stay of proceedings, extension of the stay to non-applicant entities (Procera II LP and other foreign subsidiaries), appointment of KSV Restructuring Inc. as monitor, and approval of interim financing (DIP) charge, administration charge, and directors' charge.
The court found the applicants insolvent, established jurisdiction in Ontario, and determined that the requested relief was necessary for the continued operation and restructuring of the integrated global business.
The Initial Order was granted, and a comeback hearing was scheduled.
The court confirmed that notice elements in the Claims Procedure Orders were reasonable.
This supplementary endorsement addresses a request from JTI-Macdonald Corp. regarding the adequacy of notice elements in the Claims Procedure Order within the ongoing Companies' Creditors Arrangement Act (CCAA) proceedings.
The court confirmed its satisfaction that the notice elements in the Claims Procedure Orders are reasonable in the circumstances, addressing an oversight from previous submissions.
The court granted Meeting Orders and Claims Procedure Orders to advance a $32.5 billion global settlement of tobacco claims under the CCAA.
The Superior Court of Justice addressed multiple motions within the complex Companies’ Creditors Arrangement Act (CCAA) proceedings of JTI-Macdonald Corp., Imperial Tobacco Canada Limited, Imperial Tobacco Company Limited, and Rothmans, Benson & Hedges Inc. The court granted a stay extension until January 31, 2025, and approved Meeting Orders and Claims Procedure Orders.
These orders facilitate the advancement of comprehensive Plans of Arrangement, developed by the court-appointed Mediator and Monitors, aiming for a Pan-Canadian global settlement of tobacco claims totaling $32.5 billion.
The court found the plans were not "doomed to fail" despite outstanding issues regarding financial allocation among the Tobacco Companies and the creditor status of JTI-Macdonald TM Corp.
The court granted an Amended and Restated Initial Order increasing charges and extending the stay.
This endorsement concerns an application by Accuride Canada Inc. for an Amended and Restated Initial Order (ARIO) under the Companies’ Creditors Arrangement Act (CCAA).
The applicant sought to increase the maximum amounts secured by the Administration, Directors', and Intercompany Charges, approve an Intercompany Supply Agreement with its parent company, and extend the stay of proceedings.
The court granted the ARIO, finding the requested relief necessary for the applicant's continued operations and restructuring efforts, and noting the Monitor's support for the reasonableness and necessity of the proposed changes.
The court granted an initial CCAA order with a stay and interim financing.
Accuride Canada Inc. sought an initial order under the Companies’ Creditors Arrangement Act (CCAA) due to insolvency, exacerbated by declining demand, increased costs, and the withdrawal of financial support from its U.S. parent, Accuride Corp, which had commenced Chapter 11 proceedings.
The Applicant's London Plant had been unprofitable for over a decade.
The Applicant requested a 10-day stay of proceedings to explore a going concern transaction or an orderly wind-down, along with approval for interim financing (Intercompany Loans secured by an Intercompany Charge), an Administration Charge, a Directors' Charge, and authority to make pre-filing payments to critical third-party suppliers.
The court granted the initial order, finding the Applicant met the CCAA requirements for insolvency and jurisdiction, and that the requested relief was appropriate and necessary to stabilize operations and preserve stakeholder value during the initial stay period.
Court grants unopposed CCAA monetization orders and directs parties to mandatory mediation over contested restructuring plans.
In the context of ongoing CCAA proceedings, the applicants and various equipment financiers reached an impasse regarding the wind-down plan and a proposed going-concern sale of the logistics business.
The applicants sought a monetization order, an increase in the administration charge, and lien regularization, which were unopposed and granted by the court to maintain operations.
Due to significant disputes over the sale and liquidation of assets, the court adjourned the contested motions, including several lift-stay motions brought by creditors, and ordered the parties to attend mandatory mediation before a former Commercial List judge.
The court approved property proceeds distribution and vehicle retrieval but adjourned a factoring sale motion.
In a CCAA proceeding, the Applicants sought three orders: approval of a factoring portfolio purchase agreement, approval for distribution of proceeds from a property sale, and permission for a creditor to sell certain vehicles.
The court approved the distribution of Chehalis property proceeds to Roynat.
For the Regions vehicles, the court granted the order allowing Regions to take possession, setting a 30-day retrieval period and approving storage costs of $35/day.
The motion for approval of the JD Factors Purchase Agreement was adjourned to a later date, as Mitsubishi HC Capital Canada Inc. objected, claiming ownership of the receivables and requiring more time to prepare its position.
The court approved the debtor's preferred DIP financing agreement and extended the CCAA stay period.
The applicant, Tacora Resources Inc., sought approval for an Amended and Restated Debtor in Possession (DIP) financing agreement with Cargill and an extension of the CCAA Stay Period.
The Ad Hoc Group of Noteholders (AHG) opposed the Cargill DIP, proposing an alternative and seeking renegotiation of terms, including an exit fee, legal costs, and the "Offtake Condition" related to a pre-existing commercial agreement with Cargill.
The court approved the Cargill DIP and extended the stay, finding the Cargill agreement offered greater short-term stability and liquidity, was recommended by the Monitor, and did not materially prejudice other stakeholders beyond what already existed due to the pre-CCAA Offtake Agreement.
The court held that the DIP approval motion was not the appropriate forum to address the enforceability or commercial reasonableness of the Offtake Agreement itself.
The court approved a stay extension, a $30 million debtor-in-possession facility, and various restructuring protocols under the CCAA.
The applicants, Pride Group Holdings Inc. et al., sought an amended and restated initial order under the CCAA, including an extension of the stay period, approval of a debtor-in-possession (DIP) facility, elevation of charge priorities, confirmation against set-off, and approval of governance, real estate monetization, and intercompany/unsecured claims preservation protocols.
The court granted the requested stay extension to June 30, 2024, approved the $30 million DIP facility, and approved all proposed protocols.
The court declined to add an exception to the paramountcy provision as requested by certain securitization funders and approved a carve-out for Triumph Business Capital but limited it to CDN $3 million.
The court granted unopposed motions extending the CCAA stay period and authorizing ancillary operational relief for the applicant tobacco companies.
This endorsement concerns three tobacco companies (JTI-MacDonald Corp., Imperial Tobacco Canada Limited, Imperial Tobacco Company Limited, and Rothmans, Benson & Hedges Inc.) operating under the Companies’ Creditors Arrangement Act (CCAA).
Each applicant sought an extension of their stay period until September 30, 2024, to continue formulating plans of arrangement.
Imperial also requested authorization to terminate a retirement plan and post security for a vaping product license.
RBH sought a procedural amendment for employee grievances.
The court, finding no opposition and satisfied with the applicants' good faith, diligence, and sufficient resources, granted all requested relief, noting significant progress in ongoing mediation.