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The Court of Appeal apportioned liability and costs among multiple defendants, issuing a partial Sanderson order.
This is a costs decision on appeal from a trial judgment concerning liability for damages arising from an accident.
The appellants sought to challenge the trial judge's costs award.
The Court of Appeal determined that liability should be apportioned two-thirds to Safranyos and one-third to Hamilton.
The court made a Sanderson order requiring Safranyos to pay one-third of McHugh's costs of trial and appeal, but declined to impose such an order against Hamilton, as Hamilton made no arguments relating to McHugh's liability at trial or on appeal.
The court upheld municipal liability for intersection non-repair but reversed the speeding driver's liability.
A motor vehicle collision occurred at an intersection in Hamilton when a vehicle operated by Ms. Safranyos failed to yield the right-of-way and was struck by a vehicle operated by Mr. McHugh, who had consumed alcohol and was speeding.
The trial judge found all three defendants liable: Ms. Safranyos at 50%, Mr. McHugh at 25%, and the City of Hamilton at 25%.
The City appealed on grounds that the trial judge misapplied the non-repair standard and improperly used adverse inferences.
Mr. McHugh appealed on grounds that the trial judge erred in finding he could have avoided the collision and misused evidence regarding his intoxication.
The Court of Appeal dismissed the City's appeal but allowed Mr. McHugh's appeal, finding the trial judge committed palpable and overriding errors in her factual findings and legal analysis regarding Mr. McHugh's liability.