24 total
Leave to appeal denied in CCAA proceeding regarding insurer's obligation to pay directors' legal fees.
The applicant insurer sought leave to appeal an order requiring it to pay the legal fees of Nortel's executives without reference to a $10 million retention amount or a directors and officers trust fund.
The motion judge had found that the indemnification was a pre-filing claim subject to the CCAA stay, and that allowing access to the trust would improperly elevate the insurer's priority.
The Court of Appeal denied leave, finding the motion judge's conclusions were within his expertise and entitled to deference, and the issues were specific to the case rather than of broader interest.
The Court also declined to consider fresh evidence filed by the applicant because no motion for leave to admit it was brought.
Leave to appeal denied; joint Ontario-Delaware trial for allocating CCAA sale proceeds does not infringe judicial independence.
The EMEA Debtors sought leave to appeal an order approving an Allocation Protocol that provided for a joint trial by the Ontario Superior Court of Justice and the US Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware to allocate over US$7 billion in proceeds from the sale of Nortel assets.
The moving parties argued the joint trial violated the Ontario court's independence and that the parties had previously agreed to binding arbitration.
The Court of Appeal dismissed the motion for leave to appeal, finding the proposed appeal lacked prima facie merit as the joint trial did not infringe judicial independence and the relevant agreement did not mandate arbitration.
CCAA stay extended after court found good faith and ongoing progress in claims process.
In ongoing proceedings under the Companies’ Creditors Arrangement Act, the applicants sought approval of an Employee Hardship Application Process and an extension of the stay of proceedings.
The requested hardship process was unopposed and approved.
Certain noteholders sought conditions requiring enhanced reporting and procedural safeguards in relation to the claims process and employee claims.
The court held that the statutory test under s. 11(6) of the CCAA was satisfied because the circumstances warranted the extension and the applicants had acted in good faith and with due diligence.
The stay extension was granted, while proposed procedural changes to the claims process were found more appropriately addressed through a motion to vary existing orders.
Initial CCAA order granted with stay, charges, and approval of sale process.
The applicant corporation sought relief under the Companies’ Creditors Arrangement Act including an initial order, a stay of proceedings, approval of a sale process, and authorization of administration and directors’ charges.
The court considered whether the corporation qualified as a debtor company and whether the requested restructuring steps were appropriate in the circumstances of significant financial distress and ongoing investigations.
The court accepted that the corporation was insolvent and that a restructuring under the CCAA was necessary to preserve enterprise value and explore a potential sale of business operations.
The court approved the requested charges, authorized the sale process, and granted ancillary relief including recognition proceedings in foreign jurisdictions.