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Motion to quash appeals allowed; orders regarding elder care and residence were interlocutory, not final.
The moving party brought a motion to quash four appeals from orders dealing with the care, residence, and decision-making of the parties' 102-year-old father.
The Court of Appeal concluded that the orders were interlocutory because they did not finally determine any substantive issues between the parties, as evidenced by a subsequent order suspending enforcement and allowing the father to reside with his son pending a contempt motion.
The appeals therefore lie to the Divisional Court with leave.
The motion to quash was allowed, with substantial indemnity costs awarded to the moving party.
Appeal dismissed; bankruptcy and post-judgment Mareva orders were upheld.
The appellant challenged a bankruptcy order and a related post-judgment Mareva order granted at the request of a court-appointed monitor holding a substantial judgment debt.
The court held the bankruptcy order was appealable as of right under s. 193(c) of the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act and treated the Mareva order as a final order appealable under s. 6(1)(b) of the Courts of Justice Act in the circumstances.
On the merits, the court found no reversible legal or discretionary error in rejecting objections to the monitor’s authority, rejecting allegations of collateral purpose, and refusing dismissal or adjournment under ss. 43(7) and 43(10) of the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act.
The court also upheld continuation of the Mareva relief as complementary to bankruptcy administration and dismissed the appeal with agreed costs.
Appeal dismissed; landlord bound by promissory estoppel and lease requirement for accountant-prepared audited statements.
The appellant landlord appealed an application judge's decision regarding a commercial lease dispute.
The landlord challenged the interpretation of 'audited statement' for Additional Rent and the finding that promissory estoppel prevented the collection of rent prior to January 1, 2021.
The Court of Appeal dismissed the appeal, finding no extricable error of law or palpable and overriding error of fact in the application judge's interpretation of the lease.
The Court also upheld the finding of promissory estoppel, noting that the tenant had detrimentally relied on the landlord's representation that rent would not be charged until January 2021.
Successful applicant in commercial lease dispute awarded $35,415.51 in costs following unaccepted settlement offer.
This is a costs decision following the applicant's successful application for an order requiring the respondent to comply with its obligation under a commercial lease to provide audited statements and finding the respondent estopped from claiming rent prior to January 1, 2021.
The court awarded costs to the successful applicant, applying Rule 49.10 costs consequences based on an unaccepted settlement offer.
The court rejected the respondent's argument that the applicant's partial abandonment of certain relief claims warranted a reduction in costs, finding that the abandoned claims were no longer necessary once the respondent produced the required documents.
The court granted the Monitor's application to assign the debtor into bankruptcy and continued a post-judgment Mareva injunction.
The court granted the Monitor's application to assign John Aquino into bankruptcy and continued the Mareva order against him.
The decision addresses the requirements for a bankruptcy order under the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act, the discretion to dismiss or stay such an application, and the standards for continuing a Mareva injunction post-judgment.
The court found that John Aquino had committed an act of bankruptcy, was unable to pay his debts, and that there was no bona fide dispute with the Monitor.
The court also rejected arguments that the application was brought for a collateral purpose and found the continuation of the Mareva order appropriate.
The court ordered a commercial landlord to provide audited statements for additional rent and found it estopped from claiming waived early-term rent.
The court considered whether the respondent landlord was required to provide audited statements of Additional Rent under a commercial lease, and whether the landlord was estopped from claiming rent for a period prior to January 1, 2021.
The court found that the lease unambiguously required audited statements, meaning statements verified by an independent accountant, and that the respondent had not fulfilled this obligation.
The court also found that the landlord was estopped from claiming rent for the period prior to January 1, 2021, due to a course of conduct and representations made to the applicant tenant, and ordered the landlord to provide audited statements and reimburse any overpayments.
Directing mind's fraudulent intent attributed to debtor corporation despite fraud and no-benefit exceptions.
The appellants, including the directing mind of two family-owned construction companies, participated in a false invoicing scheme that drained tens of millions of dollars from the debtor companies prior to insolvency.
The trustee in bankruptcy and monitor applied under s. 96(1)(b)(ii)(B) of the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act to recover the false invoice payments as transfers at undervalue on the basis that the debtor companies intended to defraud, defeat, or delay creditors.
The Supreme Court held that insolvency is not a prerequisite to establishing fraudulent intent under s. 96(1)(b)(ii)(B), and that the directing mind's fraudulent intent was properly attributed to the debtor corporations.
The Court confirmed that the corporate attribution doctrine must be applied purposively, contextually, and pragmatically, and that the fraud and no benefit exceptions to corporate attribution do not apply in the context of s. 96 of the BIA because applying them would undermine the creditor protection purpose of that provision.
Appeal dismissed.
The court formalized the parties' agreement on costs following the dismissal of the appellants' appeals.
This is a costs endorsement following the dismissal of multiple appeals.
The Court of Appeal for Ontario had previously dismissed appeals brought by the appellants and invited submissions on costs.
The parties subsequently reached an agreement on costs.
The endorsement formalizes this agreement, ordering the appellant Lina Bertasiene to pay $7,500 in costs to the Kvyetko respondents, and appellants Lina Bertasiene and Singaras Bertasius to pay $14,700 for the appeal and an additional $5,000 for a fresh evidence motion to the Ilioukevitch respondents.
The Court dismissed appeals from summary judgments enforcing mortgages, rejecting late allegations of fraud.
The Court of Appeal for Ontario heard appeals from summary judgments enforcing multiple mortgages against the appellants.
The appellants challenged the judgments on various grounds, including allegations of criminal interest rates, invalid mortgage registration, improper crediting of payments, and mortgage fraud, including a claim of forged signatures.
The Court dismissed all appeals, upholding the motion judge's findings that the mortgages were valid and enforceable, and that there was no genuine issue requiring a trial.
The Court also rejected a request to introduce new evidence (handwriting expert report) on appeal due to lack of diligence.
A purchaser's attempt to rescind a condominium agreement for uncompleted amenities constituted an anticipatory breach.
The appellant, Chang Jiu Chen, appealed a summary judgment that found his purported rescission of an Agreement of Purchase and Sale for a condominium unit invalid and constituted an anticipatory breach.
The appellant claimed a "material change" under the Condominium Act, 1998, due to uncompleted amenities (parkette and entry/exit gates).
The Court of Appeal upheld the motion judge's decision, ruling that the uncompleted amenities were statutorily excluded from the definition of "material change" and that the appellant's prior communications demonstrated an unwillingness to close, thus constituting an anticipatory breach.
The court also affirmed a good faith requirement for notices of rescission under the Act.
The appeal was dismissed, and costs were awarded to the respondent.
Leave to appeal commercial rent arbitration award denied as grounds raised questions of mixed fact and law.
The appellant tenant sought leave to appeal and to set aside an arbitration award that determined the fair market base rent for a commercial lease renewal.
The court dismissed the application, finding no basis to set aside the award under section 46 of the Arbitration Act, as the arbitrator acted within his jurisdiction and the process was fair.
Furthermore, the court denied leave to appeal under section 45(1) because the appellant's grounds raised questions of mixed fact and law, primarily concerning contractual interpretation and factual findings, rather than extricable questions of law.
The court dismissed the motion for a stay of execution pending leave to appeal.
The moving parties (original respondents) sought a stay of execution of judgments totalling over $33 million, pending their application for leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada.
The judgments were for transfers at undervalue under the BIA and CCAA.
The court applied the three-part test for a stay (serious issue, irreparable harm, balance of convenience).
The motion was dismissed because the moving parties failed to demonstrate irreparable harm, especially given the responding parties' undertaking not to distribute seized assets, and because no security was offered for the judgment.
Motion for leave to defend derivative action dismissed as moving party failed to prove good faith.
The moving party, a director and disputed shareholder of the defendant corporation, sought leave under s. 246 of the Business Corporations Act to defend an action brought by the plaintiff for unpaid project management fees.
The motion was opposed by the plaintiff and other shareholders of the defendant corporation.
The court dismissed the motion, finding that the moving party failed to establish that he was acting in good faith or that defending the action was in the best interests of the corporation, given the disproportionate costs of litigation, the risks of an increased claim, and the opposition from other stakeholders.
Corporate attribution doctrine applies in bankruptcy to impute a directing mind's fraudulent intent.
The appellants, directing minds and associates of two insolvent construction companies, orchestrated a false invoicing scheme to siphon tens of millions of dollars from the debtors.
The monitor and trustee sought to recover the funds as transfers at undervalue under s. 96 of the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act.
The appellants argued that the companies were financially healthy at the time of the transfers, and that the directing mind's fraudulent intent could not be attributed to the companies under the common law corporate attribution doctrine.
The Court of Appeal dismissed the appeals, holding that the corporate attribution doctrine should be applied flexibly in the bankruptcy context to impute the directing mind's fraudulent intent to the debtor corporations.
This purposive approach prevents fraudsters from benefiting at the expense of legitimate creditors and fulfills the remedial objectives of the bankruptcy legislation.
Partial indemnity costs of $67,000 awarded to successful parties in commercial lease applications.
Following reasons for judgment in two related applications regarding a commercial lease, the successful parties, The Tire Pit Inc. and Michael Goldlist, sought costs on a substantial indemnity basis.
The court found that the conduct of the unsuccessful parties did not rise to the egregious level required for substantial indemnity costs.
The court awarded partial indemnity costs, ordering Augend and Charles Bulmer jointly and severally to pay $36,000 to The Tire Pit Inc., and Augend to pay $31,000 to Michael Goldlist.
Commercial lease validly extended where tenant provided actual written notice despite not using prescribed delivery method.
Augend, the new owner of a commercial property, brought an application seeking a declaration that the lease with the tenant, Tire Pit, had expired and seeking vacant possession.
Tire Pit brought a companion application seeking a declaration that it had validly exercised its option to extend the lease for another five years.
The court found that Tire Pit had personally delivered written notice of its intention to extend the lease to the former landlord at his home, more than six months before the lease expired.
Although the lease prescribed notice by registered mail or courier, the court applied the principle that actual notice by a no less advantageous method is valid where the lease does not strictly exclude other methods.
The court declared the lease validly extended and dismissed Augend's application.
Motion to dismiss action as abuse of process denied, but defective claims struck with leave to amend and actions consolidated.
The defendants brought a motion to dismiss the plaintiffs' action as an abuse of process, or alternatively to strike certain claims and consolidate the action with a related proceeding in Newmarket.
The court declined to dismiss the action as an abuse of process, finding it involved new parties and different claims.
However, the court struck the impugned claims for failing to plead material facts, granting the plaintiffs leave to amend.
The court also ordered the two actions to be consolidated or tried together to avoid inconsistent findings regarding a unanimous shareholders' agreement.
Directing mind's fraudulent intent imputed to debtor corporations to recover funds transferred in false invoicing scheme.
The Monitor of Bondfield Construction Company Limited and the Trustee in Bankruptcy of Forma-Con Construction brought applications under s. 96 of the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act to recover tens of millions of dollars transferred out of the debtor companies through a false invoicing scheme and an alleged fund cycling scheme.
The court found that the payments made under the false invoicing scheme were transfers at undervalue made with the intent to defraud, defeat, or delay creditors, and held the participating respondents jointly and severally liable.
The court declined to apply the strict corporate attribution doctrine from Canadian Dredge, instead imputing the directing mind's fraudulent intent to the corporate debtors to fulfill the remedial purpose of s. 96.
The Monitor's claim regarding the fund cycling scheme was dismissed for lack of evidence that the transfers lacked consideration.
Developer defendants found in civil contempt for intentionally breaching Mareva injunction and disclosure orders.
The plaintiffs brought a motion to find the Developer Defendants in contempt of multiple court orders, including a Mareva injunction.
The plaintiffs had invested $9,000,000 with the defendants, who allegedly misappropriated the funds and failed to provide a court-ordered accounting, disclosure, and contact information.
The court applied the three-part test for civil contempt and found the Developer Defendants intentionally breached the orders by failing to provide an accounting, failing to disclose documents, actively thwarting a real estate closing, and failing to provide vehicle information.
The Developer Defendants were found in contempt, with a sanctions hearing to follow.
The court ordered an equal division of net proceeds from a jointly owned property, dismissing most of the defendant's claims for adjustments.
This decision on a reference determined the distribution of net proceeds from the sale of a jointly purchased property between two cousins, Seyed (plaintiff) and Peiman (defendant).
Seyed sought an equal split, while Peiman claimed a larger share based on alleged lost opportunity costs, small claims court action costs, property management fees, general contractor fees, and a payment differential.
The court found that Seyed was not contractually obligated to obtain a mortgage and denied Peiman's claims for lost opportunity costs, property management fees, and late payment interest.
It partially allowed general contractor fees and allowed small claims court costs to be shared.
Ultimately, the court concluded that Seyed had not underpaid his required contribution.