Lexpert Magazine

Jan/Feb 2017

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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LEXPERT MAGAZINE | JANUARY/FEBRUARY 2017 39 | TOP DECISIONS | D'Silva of Stikeman Elliott LLP in Toronto argues that a hearing with a merits compo- nent comports with the legislative intent. "When the Canadian Securities Admin- istrators invoked the need for a leave test, they were definitely thinking of a hearing on the merits," he says. "But that doesn't mean each leave hearing will involve a full- out, extensive evidentiary record, because each case will be different." What is certainly clear is that leave hear- ings must now involve a weighing of what- ever evidence is brought forward. Herein, however, lies an unanswered question. "e Supreme Court has spoken on the level of proof necessary for the plaintiff to meet the leave test but has not at all ad- dressed the level of proof necessary for a de- fendant raising a defence to the plaintiff 's allegations," says commercial litigator John Campion in Toronto. Nonetheless, there's little doubt that litigation strategy will change dramatically. "When courts were treating leave applica- tions like rubber stamps, there was always a real discussion as to whether the defence should consent to leave instead of subjecting clients to invasive cross-examinations," Laing said. "But now that the test has teeth, there's more upside to fighting leave vigorously." 2 Ledcor Construction v. Northbridge Indemnity Insurance (SCC, ABCA) e SCC's 2014 decision in Sattva v. Cres- ton was the second case on Lexpert's Top 10 business decisions list for that year. Reject- ing the traditional view that contractual in- terpretation involves pure questions of law, the court ruled that the exercise engaged questions of mixed fact and law, meaning that rulings on contractual interpretation could only be successfully appealed if they met a very deferential standard of "reason- ableness," which required identification of a palpable and overriding error by the trial or motions judge. e business community lauded the SCC's approach, noting that it promoted certainty in commercial dealings and was in accord with both commercial reality and the way courts had been approaching con- tractual interpretation in recent years. But following the decision, Mary Pater- son of Osler, Hoskin & Harcourt LLP in Toronto predicted that the landmark rul- ing would take a while to flesh out. "It's rare to see the court turn the common law on its head," she said. "So many things depend on whether an issue is a question of law or of mixed fact and law, including the availabil- ity of civil appeals and reviews of arbitra- tors' decisions, that it will be a while before we see the full scope of this judgment." As it turns out, it didn't take that long. Just about two years later, the SCC got a chance to reconsider Sattva in the context of standard-form contracts. At issue in Ledcor was the interpretation of an exclu- sion clause in a standard-form construction insurance contract. MARY PATERSON OSLER, HOSKIN & HARCOURT LLP It's rare to see the court turn the common law on its head. So many things depend on whether an issue is a question of law or of mixed fact and law, including the availability of civil appeals and reviews of arbitrators' decisions, that it will be a while before we see the full scope of this judgment." " e Alberta Court of Appeal distin- guished Sattva and applied a much less onerous "correctness" standard of appellate review. e SCC agreed. e court held that "reasonableness" was not the appropri- ate standard of review for standard-form contracts where the interpretation at issue had precedential value and lacked a mean- ingful factual matrix specific to the parties. When these conditions arose, the interpre- tation of the contract was better character- ized as a question of law, subject to the cor- rectness standard. "e decision is important because so many commercial contracts — everything from buying a plane to dropping shoes off at a cobbler to buying construction mate- rials to securities agreements to insurance policies — are standard-form contracts," says Eugene Meehan of Ottawa's Supreme Advocacy LLP, who with in-house coun- sel Stacy Boothman, represented Ledcor. "Who among us hasn't filed an insurance claim or isn't likely to do so at some point in the future? at's how universally im- portant this area of the law is." e decision, Meehan adds, significantly changes the way commercial lawyers will be looking at standard-form contracts. "When you combine the contra preferen- tem rule with Ledcor, it's apparent that ex- ternal lawyers and in-house counsel have to dra very clear contract clauses to avoid the higher vulnerability to which their clients are now exposed." 3 Canada v. Chambre des notaires du Québec; Canada v. Thompson (SCC, ABCA) e Income Tax Act recognizes solicitor- client privilege, but excludes "an account- ing record of a lawyer" from that privilege. ese cases, which involved Canada Rev- enue Agency demands for information from lawyers and notaries, challenged the constitutionality of that exclusion, and both succeeded. According to Michael Feder, who with colleague Emily MacKinnon of McCar- thy Tétrault LLP in Vancouver represented Duncan ompson, the taxpayers not only succeeded, but succeeded in spades. "e SCC blew a hole in the ITA provisions that apply to the investigation of lawyers and notaries," he says. "Previously, there was ambiguity in the law as to whether legislators could deem something to be not privileged, but this case makes it clear that solicitor-client privilege can't just be legis- lated away — that it's not just a presump- tion that applies to lawyers and notaries but a true constitutional principle."

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