Lexpert US Guides

Corporate 2016

The Lexpert Guides to the Leading US/Canada Cross-Border Corporate and Litigation Lawyers in Canada profiles leading business lawyers and features articles for attorneys and in-house counsel in the US about business law issues in Canada.

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18 | LEXPERT • June 2016 | www.lexpert.ca/usguide-corporate/ "other material facts" should include, leaving room for consider- able interpretation on key disclosure items. To their credit, BC legislators followed Alberta's lead by putting a "substantial compliance" provision in their law. It provides that minor defects not affecting a document's substance will not give rise to rescission, the primary remedy for inadequate disclosure. at is not to say that the British Columbia legislation won't suffer from a fair dose of the interpretive uncertainty that plagues the rest of Canada. "e BC government did not adopt recommendations made by the CFA [Canadian Franchise Association] and OBA [Ontario Bar Association] proposing to limit disclosure requirements to a finite list of 'material facts' or to further restrict the definition of a 'franchise agreement' to the agreement granting the franchise," says Larry Weinberg of Cassels Brock & Blackwell LLP in Toronto. "As such, the same indefinite scope of what may need to be disclosed in any one case, present in the other provinces, will likely be a feature of British Columbia's legislation." Among other things, all this uncertainty creates undue costs for individual franchisees and constitutes a significant entry barrier for foreign companies looking to enter the Canadian retail marketplace. Fortunately, there is a move to change, as evidenced by the mere enactment of BC's new laws. In Ontario, when the Business Law Agenda Stakeholder Panel, created to make the province a more competitive business jurisdiction, filed its report in July 2015, one of the 12 pieces of legislation targeted for a major revamp was the AWA, which governs franchising law. e Stakeholder Panel recommended that revisions to the AWA be focused on creating more disclosure certainty for users, "taking account of legislative and case law developments in Canada, the United States, and elsewhere, and identifying opportunities for harmonization with the other provinces." In early March, the government set up a new Business Law Advisory Council with a mandate to advance the Panel's recom- mendations. Still, just what kind of priority the AWA will get in the massive task involving the overhaul of many statutes remains to be seen. Meanwhile, the lingering uncertainties have engendered considerable high-profile litigation. "ere were more franchising decisions in 2015 than any year in recent memory, and a couple were incredibly significant," says David Shaw of Blake, Cassels & Graydon LLP in Toronto. e key decisions, mostly in Ontario and Québec, featured the likes of GM, Pet Valu and Dunkin' Donuts. But, arguably, what the collective impact of the complex, sometimes difficult to comprehend jurisprudence did most was to highlight the need for legislative change. e Québec Court of Appeal, for example, found Dunkin' Donuts liable to the tune of about $11 million for breaching its duty of good faith towards a group of 21 franchisees. e court ruled that the franchisor had failed to protect and enhance its brand in the face of a competitive onslaught from Tim Hortons that saw Dunkin' Donuts' market share reduced from 12.5 per cent in 1995 to 4.6 per cent in 2003. "We're all waiting to see if Dunkin' Donuts will impose signifi- cant obligations on franchisors to keep up with developments in the business world," says Joëlle Boisvert of Gowling WLG LLP in Montréal. But the "wait" period could be somewhat lacking in focus. "e Court of Appeal was not clear on what 'enhancement' meant, so franchisors are still calling me all the time about that," says Stéphane Teasdale of Dentons Canada LLP in Montréal. As well, because Québec has no franchise legislation, contro- versy still rages about whether and how Dunkin' Donuts affects the duties of franchisors in provinces that do have franchise laws. "Some commentators have argued [that the Supreme Court of Canada's decision in] Bhasin, [which for the first time held that a duty of good faith existed with respect to all contractual dealings], combined with Dunkin' Donuts, increases the duties of franchisors across Canada," says Jennifer Dolman of Osler, Hoskin & Harcourt LLP in Toronto. "But Dunkin' Donuts is based on concepts contained in the Civil Code of Québec that are not mirrored in the law of other Canadian provinces and, in any event, the decision is not binding on courts outside of Québec." Nadia Effendi of Borden Ladner's Toronto and Ottawa offices thinks courts have been careful not to import Bhasin into franchise law. "What judges are saying is that the focus should be on the duties spelled out in the legislation," she says. Less than three months aer the Dunkin' Donuts ruling, the Ontario Superior Court of Justice deferred to GM's business judgment in dismissing a class action brought by dealers aer the company's Canadian arm, in a reorganization aimed at avoid- ing a Companies' Creditors Arrangement Act filing, refused to renew some 240 dealer agreements. Interestingly, the reasons for judgment made no reference to Dunkin' Donuts. At press time, the GM case was on appeal to the Ontario Court of Appeal, while the Supreme Court of Canada had denied leave to appeal in Dunkin' Donuts — therefore the status of even the clearer principles enunciated in these cases remains uncertain. "The idea behind franchising is to grow with partners who are independent contractors and invest their own capital. Making the franchisor a joint employer annuls that concept because it means the franchisor becomes invested in the business of the individual franchisee." Stéphane Teasdale Dentons Canada LLP FRANCHISING

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