Lexpert Special Editions

Special Edition on Litigation -December 2015

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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Big Suits | 39 Tenai, Steve J. Norton Rose Fulbright Canada LLP (416) 216-4023 steve.tenai@nortonroseful- bright.com Mr. Tenai's practice includes class action, securities, commercial, oppression, take-over and privacy litigation. He also represents companies and/or their directors and officers in internal and regulatory investigations. Thacker, Lawrence E. Lenczner Slaght Royce Smith Griffin LLP (416) 865-3097 lthacker@litigate.com Recognized as a lead- ing trial and appellate lawyer, Mr. Thacker has broad experience in M&A, shareholder dis- putes, complex class ac- tions, patent disputes, securities issues, tax litigation, commercial arbitrations and insol- vency and restructuring. Thomson, Mary M. Gowling Lafleur Henderson LLP (416) 862-4644 mary.thomson@gowlings.com Ms. Thomson serves as head of Gowlings firm- wide litigation practice. She represents clients in high-profile product liability class actions and mass tort litigation (pharma and medical devices), as well as in health law, consent law and privacy law. Terry, John A. Torys LLP (416) 865-8245 jterry@torys.com Mr. Terry's civil litiga- tion practice focuses on public, business and international trade and investment law. Regularly advises cor- porations and federal, provincial and municipal governments on NAFTA and WTO matters. Thomson, Kent E. Davies Ward Phillips & Vineberg LLP (416) 863-5566 kentthomson@dwpv.com Mr. Thomson is recog- nized as one of Can- ada's leading litigation counsel and has acted in a number of preced- ent-setting cases. He specializes in complex, high-stakes commercial litigation. He is a Fellow of the American College of Trial Lawyers. Torralbo, Robert J. Blake, Cassels & Graydon LLP (514) 982-4014 robert.torralbo@blakes.com Mr. Torralbo's corpor- ate commercial litiga- tion and arbitration practice emphasizes the defence of class actions, product liability, securities, banking, real estate & shareholder disputes. His clients include financial institutions and multinationals. her company ree Pines Creations Inc. seeking to end the made-for-TV rights of production company PDM Enter- tainment Inc. Ms. Penny and ree Pines were appealing from a January 2015 decision of the Ontario Superior Court of Justice that found that an option agreement between ree Pines and PDM Entertainment permitted PDM Entertainment to ex- tend its option for two one-year periods, and that granted PDM Entertainment relief from forfeiture relating to its first non-compliant extension of the option agreement. e case is important for its holdings on what constitutes adequate reasons for decision and the standard of review for questions of contractual interpretation and on the court's broad jurisdiction to grant relief from forfeiture even with- out a breach of contract. Ms. Penny is the author of a series of novels featuring Chief Inspector Armand Gamache of the Sûreté du Québec, set in the imaginary village of ree Pines. More than three million copies of her novels have been sold in 30 countries and 23 languages. In 2011, ree Pines, which holds the intellectual prop- erty in the Gamache series, entered into an option agreement with PDM Entertainment granting PDM a two-year option to acquire certain rights in the Gamache series, including the exclusive right to make a made-for-television film based on each of the novels. In or around October 2012, PDM exercised its option to the first book in the series, Still Life. e movie aired on CBC on September 15, 2013, and was the highest-rated television movie that year for CBC. In September 2013, PDM extended its option rights on the second book of the series by one year, relying on clause 2.3B of the agreement. PDM purported to extend this op- tion by a further year in September 2014, again relying on clause 2.3B. Ms. Penny and ree Pines disputed that PDM was entitled to extend twice pursuant to clause 2.3B, and PDM took the position that it had erroneously referred to the wrong clause (2.3B instead of 2.3) and paid the wrong lower extension fee when it first extended the option in Sep- tember 2013. PDM sought relief from forfeiture to relieve it of the consequences of its errors. e Court of Appeal held that the application judge's reasons on the interpretation of the option agreement were "conclusory," but that they did not cross the line into "insuf- ficient." With respect to the standard of review, the Court cited the Supreme Court of Canada's decision in Sattva Cap- ital Corp. v. Creston Moly Corp., which held that deference is generally owed to first-instance decision makers on points of contractual interpretation. Nonetheless, the Court of Appeal applied a correctness standard to the application judge's contractual interpreta- tion. In doing so, the Court relied on the fact that the reasons below had not mentioned an important contractual provi- sion, that there were no credibility issues, that the matter had been determined on an application, not aer a trial, and that only a few contractual provisions need be considered. e Court agreed with PDM that the option agreement gave it two one-year extensions, one pursuant to clause 2.3 and a second, which will expire in September 2015, pursuant to clause 2.3B. With respect to relief from forfeiture, Ms. Penny and ree Pines had argued that there was no jurisdiction to grant relief because the remedy is only available where a party has breached a contract, which PDM had not done.

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