This appeal concerned the breadth of the court's jurisdiction to address a breach of a Mareva order and abuse of process.
The appellant, Trade Capital Finance Corp., appealed a distribution order in favour of the respondent, Buduchnist Credit Union Limited (BCU).
BCU had made advances to clients in breach of a Mareva order and subsequently obtained consent judgments.
The motion judge found BCU breached the Mareva order, disallowed its secured claim for post-Mareva advances, but allowed it to enforce as an unsecured judgment creditor.
Trade Capital argued the enforcement should be delayed.
BCU cross-appealed its loss of priority.
The Court of Appeal found that the motion judge erred in limiting his discretion.
It held that the court has broad inherent jurisdiction to respond to a breach of its orders, including delaying enforcement of claims arising from such breaches.
The Court allowed Trade Capital's appeal, ordering that BCU's judgment enforcement for post-Mareva advances be delayed until Trade Capital's action is determined, with both parties collecting pari passu if Trade Capital succeeds.
The cross-appeal by BCU was dismissed.
The issue of specific Woodland Property advances was remitted for further adjudication.