Court of Appeal for Ontario
Date: 2017-06-08
Docket: M47815/M47846
Judges: Cronk, Blair and van Rensburg 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:
- Essar Steel Algoma Inc.
- Essar Tech Algoma Inc.
- Algoma Holdings B.V.
- Essar Steel Algoma (Alberta) ULC
- Cannelton Iron Ore Company
- Essar Steel Algoma Inc. USA
Counsel
For the Moving Parties, GIP Primus LP and Brightwood Loan Services LLC: Peter H. Griffin, Matthew B. Lerner, Kim Nusbaum and Robert Trenker
For the Moving Party, Port of Algoma Inc.: Patricia D.S. Jackson, Andrew Gray, Jeremy Opolsky and Alexandra Shelley
For the Applicants/Respondents: Ashley Taylor, Eliot Kolers and Sanja Sopic
For the Monitor Ernst & Young Inc.: Clifton P. Prophet, Nicholas Kluge and Delna Contractor
Heard: June 2, 2017 (In Writing)
Motions for leave to appeal from the order of Justice Frank Newbould of the Superior Court of Justice, dated April 28, 2017.
Reasons for Decision
Background
[1] GIP Primus LP and Brightwood Loan Services LLC (collectively "GIP") and Port of Algoma Inc. ("Portco") apply for leave to appeal the order of Newbould J. dated April 28, 2017. The order was made in the context of insolvency proceedings under the CCAA involving Essar Steel Algoma Inc. ("Algoma") and related companies. Newbould J. is the supervising CCAA judge in those proceedings.
[2] Algoma and its predecessors are no strangers to restructuring proceedings. The first CCAA proceedings were commenced in 1991. A second CCAA restructuring took place in 2001. By 2014 Algoma was in further need of a cash injection and an attempt was made to address the problem through a solvent restructuring under the Canada Business Corporations Act. This resulted in a complex transaction in the course of which GIP advanced $150 million which was then paid to Algoma as the major portion of the purchase price in what is referred to by the parties as the "Port Transaction". That overall transaction involved four basic components:
(i) the sale by Algoma to Portco of the port facilities at Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario;
(ii) a lease of the port lands to Portco for a period of 50 years;
(iii) a Cargo Handling Agreement, whereby Algoma was to pay Portco US$36 million annually, in monthly instalments, for use of the port and cargo-handling facilities; and
(iv) a Shared Services Agreement that required Portco to pay Algoma US$11 million annually, in monthly instalments, in exchange for Algoma providing operation and maintenance services at the port.
[3] At the end of the day, Algoma received a total purchase price of US$171.5 million. Of that amount, US$150 million was advanced by GIP to Portco which, in turn, used it to pay Algoma. Portco paid a small further amount itself and the balance of the purchase price was paid by way of a US$19.8 million promissory note from Portco to Algoma (the "Note"). Portco's obligation under the Note was subsequently assumed by Essar Global Fund Ltd. ("EGFL"), the indirect parent company of both Portco and Algoma. The structure of the Cargo Handling Agreement and the Shared Services Agreement was designed to provide Portco with a net stream of payments that would enable it to service the GIP loan.
[4] Unfortunately, the restructuring was unsuccessful. Algoma filed for protection under the CCAA in November, 2015. DIP lenders provided financing during the proceedings.
[5] Under the Initial CCAA Order, Algoma was required to pay post-filing expenses as set out in a cash-flow budget approved by the DIP lenders, and for a period of time after the filing Algoma continued to make regular payments under the Cargo Handling Agreement. These payments stopped in May, 2016, however, when the DIP lenders refused to approve cash-flow budgets providing for those payments so long as the $19.8 million Note remained outstanding.
[6] This triggered proceedings that have ultimately led to these motions for leave to appeal.
The First Motion
[7] In June, 2016, Portco brought a motion – supported by GIP – for an order requiring Algoma to resume payments under the Cargo Handling Agreement, relying on the provisions of s. 11.01(a) of the CCAA as the basis for the order. Section 11.01(a) permits a company under CCAA protection to make payment for post-filing goods and services provided to it. Portco argued it was providing post-filing services under the Cargo Handling Agreement.
[8] There was also an issue raised by the Monitor and the DIP lenders as to whether there was a right, on the part of Algoma, to set off payments due under the Cargo Handling Agreement against the amount outstanding on the Note.
[9] The CCAA Judge dismissed the motion. He held that s. 11.01(a) was not applicable because, in fact, it was Algoma and its employees, and not Portco, who were providing all the services necessary for Portco to fulfill its obligations under the Cargo Handling Agreement. He concluded that it was premature to deal with the set-off issue. In dismissing the motion, he said that the dismissal was "without prejudice to it being brought back on after the set-off issue [had been] determined".
[10] No steps were taken to seek leave to appeal from this decision.
The Second Motion
[11] Not to be deterred, however, Portco – again supported by GIP – brought a second motion in October, 2016, seeking the same relief. Again Portco and GIP relied on s. 11.01(a). But this time, they presented a different argument. The Cargo Handling Agreement was in reality a licensing agreement, they submitted, and Algoma was not entitled to enter onto the premises without paying under the license.
[12] The CCAA Judge dismissed the motion again. First, he held that the issue of s. 11.01(a)'s applicability had been decided on the previous motion – from which no leave to appeal had been sought – and could not be re-litigated under the guise of a different argument which could have been raised on the First Motion. In holding that the s. 11.01(a) issue had already been finally decided against Portco, and with respect to the "without prejudice" aspect of the first order, he was very clear:
I must say that when I stated that the first Portco motion was dismissed without prejudice to it being brought back on after the set-off issue was determined, it was not intended to enable Portco to raise anew those issues that had been decided against it. It was intended to permit Portco to come back if it succeeded on the set-off point or the issues raised by the Monitor. Portco however continues to raise issues already decided against it.
[13] Secondly, and in any event, the CCAA Judge rejected the licensing argument. He further concluded that even if Portco were free to raise the s. 11.01(a) issue – which it was not free to do – he would not have ordered payment of amounts due under the Cargo Handling Agreement at that stage in the face of related oppression remedy proceedings involving the Port Transaction that were pending before him as well.
[14] No steps were taken to seek leave to appeal from this second order.
The Oppression Proceedings
[15] In September, 2016, the CCAA Judge had authorized the Monitor to commence oppression remedy proceedings on behalf of Algoma with regard to the Port Transaction. EGFL (the obligor under the Note) asserted a counterclaim in those proceedings, arguing that the amounts owing to Portco under the Cargo Handling Agreement could be set off against the $19.8 million Note and that that amount had then been exceeded, with the result that payments should resume under the Cargo Handling Agreement.
[16] The oppression remedy proceedings were heard by Newbould J. as well, in early 2017. On March 6, 2017, he released his reasons. He found the Port Transaction was oppressive and unfairly disregarded the interests of Algoma's trade creditors, employees, pensioners and retirees, but did not set aside the transaction. Instead, he ordered that the transaction documents be amended in various ways, the particulars of which are not important to the leave to appeal issues. He declined to deal with the set-off issue in those proceedings, however, concluding instead that "the appropriate place to make this claim is in the CCAA proceedings."
The Third Motion
[17] Very quickly – in April, 2017 – the s. 11.01(a) issue was brought back again, this time by way of a GIP motion, supported by Portco. In an April 28th endorsement, Newbould J. once again dismissed the motion. This time he said:
This is the third time that this argument has been advanced. It was unsuccessfully argued by Portco on two previous motions requesting orders that the payments under the Cargo Handling Agreement resume. On the first occasion, it was argued that Portco was providing services to Algoma on the Port facilities and that section 11.01(a) required immediate payment. I held that Portco was not providing the services but rather Algoma personnel who were doing all of the work. On the second occasion Portco added the argument that Portco was licensing the Port facilities to Algoma and that the payments under the Cargo Handling Agreement were for that purpose and therefore had to be made. I held that it was not open to Portco to make that new argument but that in any event I did not accept it…
Portco adds another argument why the access of Algoma to the Port facilities is a licence. Again, that should have been argued in the first go-around on the point. It says that under the Cargo Handling Agreement, Algoma can enter the property only if it makes payment under that agreement. I do not agree. What the Cargo Handling Agreement provides in section 3.3 is that notwithstanding that Algoma's access to the Port is non-exclusive, Algoma shall have priority access so long as it makes its payments due under the Cargo Handling Agreement. That in no way can be construed to be a licence. That section recognizes Algoma's right to access to the Port facilities as provided for in the Lease.
In short, even if it were permissible for Portco or GIP to again raise section 11.01(a), which it is not, I cannot find that there was a licence relationship between Algoma and Portco regarding the Port assets.
[18] It is this order that is the subject of these motions for leave to appeal.
Analysis
The Test for Leave to Appeal
[19] Leave to appeal is to be granted sparingly in CCAA proceedings. This is because of the "real time" dynamic of CCAA matters and the "generally discretionary character underlying many of the orders made by supervising judges in such proceedings" and the deference to be accorded to those decisions. In considering whether to grant leave, the court will consider whether:
(i) the proposed appeal is prima facie meritorious or frivolous;
(ii) the point on the proposed appeal is of significance to the practice;
(iii) the point on the proposed appeal is of significance to the proceeding; and
(iv) whether the proposed appeal will unduly hinder the progress of the action.
See Re Stelco Inc., [2005] O.J. No. 4883 (C.A.), at paras. 15-20; Nortel Networks Corporation (Re), 2016 ONCA 332, 130 O.R. (3d) 481, at para. 34.
[20] In our view, the leave motions fail on the first two of these factors.
The Merits
[21] GIP and Portco propose identical questions to be determined on the appeal if leave is granted:
(i) Did the motion judge err in concluding that [GIP and Portco were] precluded from arguing that Algoma is required by section 11.01(a) of the CCAA to make payments under the Cargo Handling Agreement?
(ii) Did the motion judge err in his interpretation of section 11.01(a) of the CCAA?
[22] The application and interpretation of s. 11.01(a) of the CCAA are precisely the issues that were addressed by the motion judge in the First Motion, and in the Second Motion (in addition to whether those issues were res judicata), and in the Third Motion (which led to the order from which leave to appeal is now sought). In spite of the moving parties' attempts on the Second and Third Motions to wrap their arguments in different packaging, the issues remained the same: the interpretation of s. 11.01(a) and its application in the particular circumstances of this CCAA proceeding.
[23] Those issues have now been determined adversely against the moving parties three times. No steps were taken to obtain leave to appeal from the motion judge's orders on the First Motion or the Second Motion. We are not persuaded there is prima facie merit in the attempt now to seek leave to appeal from a third unsuccessful attempt to invoke s. 11.01(a) of the CCAA.
[24] The moving parties argue that the landscape has changed since Newbould J.'s determination of the oppression remedy proceedings. They submit that, in declining to deal with the set-off issue in those proceedings and determining that "the appropriate place to make [that] claim is in the CCAA proceedings", he opened the door for a re-consideration of the s. 11.01(a) issue. The record does not support that submission.
[25] Newbould J. dealt with the set-off counterclaim in one paragraph at the end of his reasons in the oppression remedy proceedings. He said:
Portco has made a counterclaim for a declaration that the $19.8 million note has been paid in full as a result of set-off and for payments beyond that amount said to be owing under the Cargo Handling Agreement. When and how the set-off occurred is not in the record and whether that could be affected by the stay of proceedings in the CCAA has not been argued. Nor are the amounts said to be owing set out with any precision. In my view the appropriate place to make this claim is in the CCAA proceedings and I do not intend to deal with it in this counterclaim.
[26] We see nothing in this disposition to suggest that Newbould J. had somehow signalled that he was re-opening – even if he were entitled to do so – the s. 11.01(a) issues, which he had clearly determined against the moving parties' interests on the First and Second Motions. Nor is there any indication in his reasons provided on the Third Motion – which was heard after his decision in the oppression remedy proceedings had been released – that he intended that to be the case. Indeed, as stated in the passage of his reasons on the Third Motion set out above, quite the opposite was the case.
[27] The same parties have now joined issue on the same legal questions (the interpretation and application of s. 11.01(a) in the circumstances of the CCAA proceedings) three times. The CCAA Judge, presiding in a court of competent jurisdiction, had finally determined those legal questions twice before the Third Motion was launched, and there were no attempts to appeal. All the relevant factors for the application of issue estoppel are present and the decisions are binding on the moving parties, absent a successful appeal: see Danyluk v. Ainsworth Technologies Inc., 2001 SCC 44, at para. 25; Diamond v. Western Realty Co., [1924] S.C.R. 308, at para. 35. They deprive the proposed appeal of the merit required for leave to appeal to be granted.
[28] The moving parties raise an additional argument, however. They submit that, even if the elements of issue estoppel have been established, the court retains a residual discretion to decline to apply the doctrine, and that the CCAA Judge failed to take that factor into consideration.
[29] We disagree. In concluding that payments to Portco under the Cargo Handling Agreement should not resume, the CCAA Judge considered and weighed the interests of all stakeholders involved in the CCAA proceeding – including the fact that to allow the payments to resume would be to permit a breach of the DIP financing then in place, thereby jeopardizing that financing – and concluded that it would not be appropriate in the circumstances to lift the CCAA stay in respect of those payments. In doing so, he was exercising the same discretion that would apply to the estoppel issue. We see no error that would justify granting leave to appeal in the exercise of that discretion.
Significance to the Practice
[30] We accept that the s. 11.01(a) issues have considerable significance for this particular CCAA proceeding, but we are not persuaded that they have significance for the practice in the circumstances of this proceeding.
[31] Whether s. 11.01(a) is available to benefit the moving parties, thereby giving them an advantage over other stakeholders in terms of the servicing of the GIP loan, depends upon the interpretation and application of the particular agreements that underlie the Port Transaction and upon how they are being carried out in practice. Thus, the proposed appeals arise out of the unique and inter-related agreements that formed the Port Transaction. We see little of assistance to the general practice of insolvency law that would arise in the proposed appeals.
Undue Hindrance of the Proceedings
[32] We do not think that granting leave to appeal would unduly hinder the progress of the CCAA proceedings, given that the appeals could be heard together with the pending appeal in the oppression remedy proceedings in August. However, in view of the foregoing conclusions, this does not assist the moving parties in the circumstances.
Disposition
[33] For the reasons set out above, the motions for leave to appeal are dismissed.
[34] The Monitor and Algoma are each entitled to their costs of the leave motions, fixed in the amount of $3,000, as against the moving parties, jointly and severally.
E.A. Cronk J.A.
R.A. Blair J.A.
K. van Rensburg J.A.

