2 total
Appeal dismissed as moot after strike ended, without endorsing lower court reasoning.
The Court considered an appeal arising during an indefinite strike by members of Les avocats et notaires de l’État québécois, where an adjournment request had been refused as part of an essential-services context.
By the hearing date, the strike had ended and a special statute had required a return to work.
The Court held the issue was moot and dismissed the appeal without costs.
It stated that dismissing the appeal did not endorse either the process used or the validity of the considerations identified by the Court of Appeal.
Injunction to enforce employment non‑compete refused for lack of strong prima facie case.
An employer sought an interlocutory injunction enforcing a non‑competition covenant against a former executive who joined a competitor.
The employer alleged breach of a 2008 employment agreement and argued that, where a clear negative covenant is breached, the usual injunction test should not apply.
The court applied a modified RJR‑MacDonald test and held the employer failed to establish a strong prima facie case because the covenant may have been superseded by a later agreement and was arguably overly broad and unnecessary to protect legitimate interests.
The court also noted that the inevitable disclosure doctrine is not recognized in Canada and that evidence of irreparable harm was speculative.
The motion to enjoin the employee and the competitor was dismissed, although the employee was ordered not to disclose confidential information or solicit the employer’s customers.