The applicant landlord brought an urgent application against its tenant for an order requiring compliance with environmental orders issued by a Toronto Environmental Officer following a fire on the leased premises.
The orders required removal of hazardous waste and submission of an environmental impact plan.
The tenant's vehicles were blocking access for the landlord to comply.
The tenant, appearing self-represented, advised the court that vehicles were being removed to allow access.
The landlord was satisfied with this, reserving its right to seek payment for remediation costs later.
The court adjourned the matter, allowing the landlord to bring it back urgently if access remained blocked.