Lexpert Magazine

Jul/Aug 2016

Lexpert magazine features articles and columns on developments in legal practice management, deals and lawsuits of interest in Canada, the law and business issues of interest to legal professionals and businesses that purchase legal services.

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44 LEXPERT MAGAZINE | JULY/AUGUST 2016 | ART OF THE CASE | claims process and Target Canada began to develop a plan that would distribute the proceeds and complete an orderly winding- down of the business. But closing the stores and selling the as- sets proved far simpler than winding down and leaving. "It's important to understand the com- plexity involved in this restructuring," says Tracy Sandler, a member of Target Canada's legal team at Osler, Hoskin & Harcourt LLP in Toronto. "It was the most challenging mandate of my 25-year career." To begin with, Target's insolvency was the first of a major anchor tenant since that of the T. Eaton Company in 1999. But Tar- get had more than twice as many stores as Eaton's did. "We were in unheard-of territory, largely because the premises were so huge," says Linda Galessiere of McLean & Kerr LLP in Toronto, who acted for a significant group of independent landlords. e 133 stores ranged in size from 80,000 to 125,000 square feet. ere were four unopened stores, three huge distribu- tion facilities, three owned distribution centres, a leased headquarters building, 10 office suites and six warehouse facilities. "Each retail location could probably have sustained a CCAA proceeding on its own," Sandler says. Many of the locations also had unique is- sues attached to them, including those em- ments discontinued under various fran- chise programs," Sasso says. "ere was no offer to buy back assets or provide financial relief. Instead, the pharmacists were told they alone were responsible for shutdown costs and for their own employees and con- tractors. en Target cut off communica- tions. I'm not even quite sure I heard any- one saying 'good luck.'" Ultimately, however, the negotiations and outcome turned on three pivotal is- sues: the status of Target's intercompany debt claims; the status of guarantees that Target US had signed in support of 75 leas- es; and suppliers' "30 Day Goods" claims, those involving inventory that could be repossessed under the Bankruptcy and In- solvency Act, but not under the Companies' Creditors Arrangement Act, by unpaid sup- pliers if they had been delivered within 30 days of the bankruptcy. Remarkably, all was substantially re- solved in less than 16 months from the original filing. e scenario was one that had seemed unlikely even four months earlier in January 2016 when Justice Morawetz, in a rare ruling, refused to send an initial restructuring plan put forward by Target Canada to a creditor vote. is despite the fact that the Mon- itor, Alvarez & Marsal Canada, and its counsel, a team from Goodmans LLP in Toronto led by Jay Carfagnini, sup- ported the motion. But in May 2016, Justice Morawetz sent a new plan from Target to the creditors. It provided for subordination of the inter- company debt and a release of Target US's lease guarantees. Unsecured creditors re- ceived between 66 and 77 per cent of what they were owed, an almost unheard-of re- sult. e vote in favour was unanimous. At press time, the distribution of funds was to begin in early July. As it turns out, Target Canada could simply have gone bankrupt under the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act. According to Sandler, Target US preferred this route, at least initially. "e parent company would have been very prepared to have this go into a bank- ruptcy because the recovery for them would be so much better," Sandler says. "ey wouldn't have subordinated the intercom- pany debt and that would have funded the anating from differences in provincial law. Some of the landlords had guarantees from the parent and some didn't. While the eco- nomic interests of the various landlords were in many cases discrete in other ways as well, consensus was ultimately required to present a common front in the proceeding. "It was a miracle that 100 per cent of the landlords ultimately signed on to the de facto group," says one landlord's counsel. "We really pulled a rabbit out of the hat." Suppliers also came in different shapes and sizes: some from Canada, some from the US, some from abroad, some who had ongoing relationships with Target US and some who did not. As well, Target em- ployed about 17,600 employees in Canada, all of whom were terminated together with 800 in the US who were working on the Canadian operation. en there were the stores within the stores, including kiosks, pharmacies, food markets and Starbucks. When Justice Morawetz made his initial protection or- der, goods were in the outlets, in inventory, in transit and on the dock. ere were is- sues relating to such diverse matters as sig- nage, refrigeration systems and regulatory concerns regarding controlled drugs in the possession of 110 shuttered pharmacies. "Arguably, the pharmacists were the most affected group," says William Sasso of Sutts, Strosberg LLP in Windsor, Ont., who represented them. "Target set up pro- grams and compensation funds for their own employees, many of the suppliers had the leverage that came from ongoing deal- ings and relationships with Target US, and many of the landlords had guarantees from the parents." e pharmacists, who as profession- als were stuck with legal responsibilities as well as financial consequences, found themselves on the wrong end of the stick. "Target wasn't going to accept any re- sponsibilities for shutdown costs or pay- "If this had been a bankruptcy, there would have been no subordination. Instead, we'd have had a liquidation followed by ongoing, costly litigation over the landlord guarantees and the 30-day goods that would have depleted the amount of the recovery available from the liquidation." TRACY SANDLER > OSLER, HOSKIN & HARCOURT LLP

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