Court File and Parties
COURT OF APPEAL FOR ONTARIO DATE: 20210331 DOCKET: M52287
Hoy, Pepall and Zarnett JJ.A.
In the Matter of the Companies’ Creditors Arrangement Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-36, as amended; And in the Matter of a Plan of Compromise or Arrangement of Laurentian University of Sudbury
Counsel: Murray Gold and James Harnum, for the moving party the Ontario Confederation of University Faculty Associations Susan Philpott and Charles Sinclair, for the moving party the Laurentian University Faculty Association Miriam Martin, for the moving party the Canadian Union of Public Employees D.J. Miller, Scott McGrath and Derek Harland, for the responding party Laurentian University of Sudbury Ashley Taylor, Elizabeth Pillon and Zev Smith, for the responding party Ernst & Young Inc., acting as the Monitor
Heard: in writing
Motion for leave to appeal from the order of Chief Justice Geoffrey B. Morawetz of the Superior Court of Justice, dated February 26, 2021.
REASONS FOR DECISION
[1] Laurentian University of Sudbury (“Laurentian”) is a publicly funded, bilingual and tricultural post-secondary institution, serving domestic and international undergraduate and graduate students. Due to recurring operational deficits, it has encountered a liquidity crisis and is insolvent.
[2] Laurentian sought and obtained protection under the Companies’ Creditors Arrangement Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. C.36 (“CCAA”), to permit it to restructure, financially and operationally, in order to emerge as a sustainable university for the benefit of all stakeholders. Among the stated reasons for Laurentian’s CCAA application was what it described as unsustainable “academic costs”, which Laurentian attributes in part to the terms of its collective agreement with its faculty members.
[3] Two unions representing Laurentian employees - the Laurentian University Faculty Association (“LUFA”) and the Canadian Union of Public Employees (“CUPE”) - and the Ontario Confederation of University Faculty Associations (“OCUFA”), an umbrella organization representing faculty associations, seek leave to appeal the decision of the CCAA judge, dated February 26, 2021, which continues a sealing order over two documents that Laurentian filed on its application for CCAA protection.
[4] Having reviewed the written submissions of the parties and the sealed documents, we refuse leave for the reasons that follow.
Background
[5] On February 1, 2021, the CCAA judge made an order (the “Initial Order”), granting Laurentian initial relief under the CCAA.
[6] Four days later, on February 5, 2021, the CCAA judge made an order appointing Dunphy J. as mediator to conduct a confidential mediation among Laurentian’s key stakeholders. The mediation is intended to address various issues concerning Laurentian’s restructuring, including a new collective agreement with LUFA, which represents 612 Laurentian faculty, accounting for 60% of the university’s payroll. LUFA supported the appointment of the mediator.
[7] The Initial Order contained a sealing provision. At the comeback hearing, there was opposition to it. The CCAA judge continued the sealing provision in the Amended and Restated Order, dated February 11, 2021, on an interim basis, pending a supplementary endorsement.
[8] The sealing provision, which was identical in both orders, covers two exhibits (Exhibits “EEE” and “FFF”) to the affidavit by Dr. Robert Haché, which was filed in support of Laurentian’s request for the Initial Order. Dr. Haché is the President, Vice-Chancellor and CEO of Laurentian.
[9] The sealing provision states that the Exhibits “are herby sealed pending further order of the Court, and shall not form part of the public record”. Both the Initial Order and the Amended and Restated Order provide that any interested party may apply on seven days’ notice to vary or amend the order.
[10] The sealed Exhibits consist of two letters. Exhibit “EEE” is a letter from the Ministry of Colleges and Universities (“Ministry”) to Laurentian, dated January 21, 2021. Exhibit “FFF” is a letter from Laurentian to the Ministry, dated January 25, 2021. Laurentian has described the letters as containing “information with respect to [Laurentian] and certain of its stakeholders, including various rights or positions that stakeholders or [Laurentian] may take either inside or outside of these CCAA proceedings, the disclosure of which could jeopardize [Laurentian’s] efforts to restructure.”
[11] None of the moving parties sought to cross-examine Dr. Haché on his affidavit or the communications between Laurentian and the Ministry.
[12] The CCAA judge released his supplementary endorsement on February 26, 2021, continuing the sealing provision. The effect of the sealing provision is that both the broader public and the parties to the CCAA proceeding are prevented from accessing the Exhibits.
[13] The CCAA judge held that the sealing provision was authorized under s. 137(2) of the Courts of Justice Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. C.43, and by the application of the principles in Sierra Club of Canada v. Canada (Minister of Finance), 2002 SCC 41, [2002] 2 S.C.R. 522. According to Sierra Club, at para. 53, a confidentiality or sealing order should only be granted when:
(a) such an order is necessary in order to prevent a serious risk to an important interest, including a commercial interest, in the context of litigation because reasonably alternative measures will not prevent the risk; and
(b) the salutary effects of the confidentiality order, including the effects on the right of civil litigants to a fair trial, outweigh its deleterious effects, including the effects on the right to free expression, which in this context includes the public interest in open and accessible court proceedings.
[14] The CCAA judge summarized the evidence in Dr. Haché’s affidavit and noted that he had reviewed the Exhibits in detail. He indicated that the evidence, as contained in Dr. Haché’s affidavit, outlines that there has been continuous communication between Laurentian and the Ministry with respect to Laurentian’s financial crisis, and that the government is well aware that a real-time solution must be found if Laurentian is to survive. He noted that ”the role, if any, that the Ministry will play is at this moment uncertain.”
[15] Considering the first branch of the Sierra Club test, he concluded that disclosure of the Exhibits, “at this time, could be detrimental to any potential restructuring of [Laurentian]” (emphasis added). Accordingly, “the risk in disclosing the Exhibits is real and substantial and poses a serious risk to the future viability of [Laurentian].” He also noted that “it is speculative to conclude that the Exhibits contain information that is not helpful to [Laurentian’s] position.”
[16] He found that the commercial interest was that of the entire Laurentian community, including the faculty, students, employees, third-party suppliers and the City of Greater Sudbury and the surrounding area; that it is of paramount importance to these groups that all efforts to restructure Laurentian be explored; and that it is necessary to maintain the confidentiality of the Exhibits in order to do so. He reiterated that “[t]he disclosure of the Exhibits, at this time, could undermine the restructuring efforts being undertaken by [Laurentian]” (emphasis added).
[17] He was not satisfied that there were any reasonable alternatives to a sealing order over the Exhibits. Stakeholders were involved in the mediation and the negotiations could or could shortly be at a sensitive stage. It would not be appropriate to implement any alternative to a confidentiality order. To do so could negatively impact the mediation efforts.
[18] Turning to the second branch of the Sierra Club test, the CCAA judge was also satisfied, based on the evidence, that the salutary effects of the sealing provision outweighed its deleterious effects, including the public interest in accessing the Exhibits.
Leave Test
[19] Section 13 of the CCAA provides that any person dissatisfied with an order or a decision made under the CCAA may appeal from the order or decision with leave. Leave to appeal in CCAA proceedings is to be granted sparingly and only where there are serious and arguable grounds that are of real and significant interest to the parties. This cautious approach is a function of several factors.
[20] First, a high degree of deference is owed to discretionary decisions made by judges supervising CCAA proceedings, who are “steeped in the intricacies of the CCAA proceedings they oversee”. Appellate intervention is justified only where the “supervising judge erred in principle or exercised their discretion unreasonably”: 9354-9186 Québec inc. v. Callidus Capital Corp., 2020 SCC 10, 78 C.B.R. (6th) 1, at paras. 53 to 54.
[21] Second, CCAA proceedings are dynamic. It is often “inappropriate to consider an exercise of discretion by the supervising judge in isolation of other exercises of discretion by the judge in endeavouring to balance the various interests”: Edgewater Casino Inc. (Re), 2009 BCCA 40, 51 C.B.R. (5th) 1, at para 20.
[22] Third, CCAA restructurings can be time sensitive. The existence of, and delay involved in, an appeal can be counterproductive to a successful restructuring.
[23] In addressing whether leave should be granted, the court will consider four factors, specifically whether:
(a) the proposed appeal is prima facie meritorious or frivolous; (b) the points on the proposed appeal are of significance to the practice; (c) the points on the proposed appeal are of significance to the action; and (d) whether the proposed appeal will unduly hinder the progress of the action.
See: Nortel Networks Corp. (Re), 2016 ONCA 332, 130 O.R. (3d) 481, at para. 34.
Leave is Not Warranted
[24] As we will explain, we refuse to grant leave because the proposed appeal is not prima facie meritorious, granting leave would unduly hinder the progress of the action, and the proposed appeal is not of significance to the action. This is not an appropriate case for this court to explore issues of significance to the practice relating to the granting of sealing orders in the CCAA context.
Leave Not Prima Facie Meritorious
[25] The moving parties raise three questions for determination on their proposed appeal, which we paraphrase as follows:
- Did the CCAA judge err in focussing solely on Laurentian’s assertion of an important commercial interest without balancing the various competing interests applicable to a sealing order?
- Did the CCAA judge err in granting the sealing provision without a sufficient evidentiary foundation?
- Did the CCAA judge err in concluding that the sealing provision was justified as a result of speculative concerns about the impact that disclosure of the Exhibits that were sealed would have on the CCAA restructuring process?
[26] A significant plank of the moving parties’ argument is that the sealing provision denies access to the sealed documents to parties to the CCAA process on the ostensible ground that the documents might have an impact on the positions those parties choose to take vis-à-vis the restructuring. They argue that the importance of the documents to the formulation of their positions is the exact reason why they should have access to the documents, not a justification for denying access to them.
[27] We note that one of the moving parties, OCUFA, is not a creditor of Laurentian and is apparently not participating in the court-ordered mediation, the aim of which is a consensual restructuring. It is not clear in what sense OCUFA is a party to the CCAA proceeding or is in any different position than any other member of the public who may be interested in the court-filed materials. Yet the moving parties do not differentiate, in their proposed appeal questions or in the relief they propose to seek, between the entitlements of OCUFA to obtain the documents and those of the other moving parties. In other words, although reference is made to the denial of access to “litigants”, the underlying theory of the moving parties actually starts and stops with the proposition that there should be no sealing order at all.
[28] We are not persuaded that the proposed appeal, challenging what is a discretionary order, is prima facie meritorious.
[29] The CCAA judge set out the Sierra Club test in his reasons. Contrary to the submissions of the moving parties, he was well aware that Sierra Club required him to balance the deleterious effects of the sealing order.
[30] In earlier reasons, the CCAA judge noted that if the restructuring is to be successful, it will have to be largely completed by the end of April 2021. The timeline is exceptionally short. In exercising his discretion, the CCAA judge concluded that the risk to the potential restructuring of Laurentian within this extremely tight timeframe if the Exhibits were disclosed outweighed other relevant interests.
[31] The moving parties were (and are) concerned that they understand the Ontario government’s position in relation to the restructuring, yet they did not seek to cross-examine Dr. Haché. The CCAA judge, who reviewed the Exhibits, strove to address that concern, carefully signaling that “the role, if any, that the Ministry will play is at this moment uncertain.” Alive to concerns about fairness, he also signaled to the parties that it would be “speculative to conclude that the Exhibits contain information that is not helpful to [Laurentian’s] position.”
[32] The moving parties have expressed particular concern that the sealing order creates an informational imbalance that may hurt them in the mediation process. Nothing before us suggests that the moving parties who are participating in the court-ordered mediation (which appears to be only LUFA) have been hampered by any informational imbalance. The judicial mediator, who was appointed by the CCAA judge, is a bulwark against unfair treatment in the mediation. Should the judicial mediator have concerns that the moving parties have been hampered in the mediation by an informational imbalance or a perceived informational imbalance, it is open to him to raise them with the CCAA judge within the parameters of the February 5, 2021 order appointing the mediator.
[33] Nor do we see anything in the sealing provision that would prevent a party from making a request to the CCAA judge, at the appropriate time, for relief on appropriate terms. As noted, the sealing provision is expressly subject to “further order of the Court”. The CCAA judge in his reasons of February 26 said only that an alternative to the sealing provision was not appropriate “at this time”.
[34] In seeking leave, the moving parties have raised questions about how s. 2(d) of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms comes into play, as one of the purposes of the mediation is to conclude a new collective agreement with LUFA. But they do not dispute Laurentian’s submission that this issue was not argued below. It is difficult to fault the CCAA judge for not weighing a competing interest that was not asserted before him.
[35] The moving parties also say that the CCAA judge failed to advert to the impact his ruling would have on freedom of expression. We are satisfied he did take that factor into account, as he mentions it in setting out the test and later says that the deleterious effects include “the public interest in accessing the Exhibits.”
[36] The second and third questions raised by the moving parties ask the court to revisit an issue raised before the CCAA judge. He described the essence of the submissions made to him by those opposing the sealing order as there being no evidence that the sealing order was necessary to protect a valid commercial interest.
[37] The CCAA judge was satisfied that there was a sufficient evidentiary basis. He based his conclusion that disclosing the Exhibits posed a serious risk to the restructuring on his review of the Exhibits and Dr. Haché’s evidence. The moving parties are correct that Dr. Haché did not opine in his affidavit that disclosure of the Exhibits posed a serious risk to the viability of the restructuring. But Dr. Haché’s evidence describes something of the dynamics at play and is clear as to Laurentian’s dire position and the timeframe within which the restructuring must be completed, if it to be successful. It provided the foundation on which the Monitor, an officer of the court, supported Laurentian’s position that disclosure posed a serious risk, and the CCAA judge, who has extensive experience in CCAA restructurings, concluded that disclosure posed a serious risk. The CCAA judge exercised his judgment, based on an evidentiary record.
[38] The fact the proposed appeal is not prima facie meritorious weighs significantly against granting leave.
Appeal Would Hinder Progress of the Action
[39] As we have said, this restructuring is on an exceptionally short timeline. We are told that the mediation is ongoing, with sessions occurring daily. There is urgency to being able to reach a successful restructuring by the end of April, in light of Laurentian’s financial position and the need for certainty regarding the next academic year. There is too great a risk that an appeal would be a distraction from restructuring efforts and thus would unduly hinder the progress of the action, which also weighs significantly against granting leave.
No Significance to the Action
[40] Given the involvement of a court-appointed mediator and that it is open to the CCAA judge to revisit the sealing provision and possibly revoke it or limit its impact by allowing the parties to the CCAA proceeding to access the sealed documents, the significance of the proposed appeal to the action is insufficient to justify leave.
Significance to the Practice
[41] The facts of this case highlight some novel and interesting questions about the application of the Sierra Club test in the CCAA context. These include questions about granting sealing orders over information filed in support of the application for protection under the CCAA, the granting of sealing orders where interests under s. 2(d) of the Charter are arguably at play, and about the application of sealing orders to parties and stakeholders involved in the restructuring efforts. However, given our view of the merits of the proposed appeal and the other factors, this is not the appropriate case in which to explore these issues.
Disposition
[42] Leave to appeal is refused. In the circumstances, there shall be no order as to costs.
“Alexandra Hoy J.A. “S.E. Pepall J.A.” “B. Zarnett J.A.”



