Lexpert Special Editions

Lexpert Special Edition on Litigation 2023

The Lexpert Special Editions profiles selected Lexpert-ranked lawyers whose focus is in Corporate, Infrastructure, Energy and Litigation law and relevant practices. It also includes feature articles on legal aspects of Canadian business issues.

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30 www.lexpert.ca Top 10 Business Decisions CO-WRITTEN BY AIDAN MACNAB, BERNISE CAROLINO ANNAPOLIS GROUP INC. V. HALIFAX REGIONAL MUNICIPALITY, 2022 SCC 36 • Annapolis Group Inc. > Lenczner Slaght LLP > Peter H. Griffin, Scott Rollwagen, Rebecca Jones, Amy Sherrard • Halifax Regional Municipality > McInnes Cooper > Michelle Awad, KC > Martin C. Ward, KC > Jeremy G. Ryant CLIENTS > FIRMS > LAWYERS THROUGHOUT THE second half of the 20th century, the Annapolis Group acquired 965 acres of land to develop and resell. In 2006, Halifax Regional Municipality adopted a planning strategy to guide land development over 25 years. e strategy reserved some of the Annapolis land for possible future inclusion in a regional park and zoned the Annapolis land as an urban settlement and reserve. Halifax had to adopt an authorizing resolution for the service development to proceed on the Annapolis land. Starting in 2007, Annapolis tried several times to develop its land. In a 2016 resolution, Halifax refused to initiate the planning process, so Annapolis filed a claim for de facto expropri- ation or constructive taking. e Nova Scotia Court of Appeal dismissed the claim, but the Supreme Court of Canada reversed the ruling. Annapolis Group Inc. v. Halifax Regional Municipality clarified the test for construc- tive taking and held that a court's assessment of the issue must accord with justice and fair- ness, says Rebecca Jones, a partner at Lenczner Slaght LLP. "What that means in the context of these claims is that the facts must be at the centre of the test," she says. "e court should focus on the effect of the public authority's actions on the landowner, the advantages gained by the public authority, and not on form. "It's a substance-over-form analysis, which the court has found that lower courts should be advancing in assessing these cases." Jones adds that the SCC also clari- fied that the intention or purposes of the public authority could be relevant in the constructive-taking assessment.

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