SUPREME
COURT OF CANADA
Citation:
Wilson v. Alharayeri, 2017 SCC 39
|
Appeal heard:
November 29, 2016
Judgment
rendered: July 13, 2017
Docket: 36689
|
Between:
Andrus
Wilson
Appellant
and
Ramzi
Mahmoud Alharayeri
Respondent
Coram: McLachlin C.J. and Abella, Moldaver, Karakatsanis, Wagner,
Gascon, Côté, Brown and Rowe JJ.
Reasons for
Judgment:
(paras. 1 to 74)
|
Côté J. (McLachlin C.J. and Abella, Moldaver,
Karakatsanis, Wagner, Gascon, Brown and Rowe JJ. concurring)
|
Note: This document is subject to editorial revision before its
reproduction in final form in the Canada Supreme Court Reports.
wilson v. alharayeri
Andrus Wilson Appellant
v.
Ramzi Mahmoud Alharayeri Respondent
Indexed as: Wilson v.
Alharayeri
2017 SCC 39
File No.: 36689.
2016: November 29; 2017: July 13.
Present: McLachlin C.J. and Abella, Moldaver, Karakatsanis,
Wagner, Gascon, Côté, Brown and Rowe JJ.
on appeal from the court of appeal for quebec
Commercial
law — Corporations — Oppression — Remedy — Criteria governing imposition of personal liability on
corporate directors — Corporation’s board
refusing conversion of preferred shares held by former director before issuing
private placement of convertible secured notes, thereby diluting former
director’s portfolio — Discussions resulting in
refusal being led at board level by director who subsequently had his preferred
shares converted so as to benefit from private placement by increasing his
control over corporation — Whether trial judge appropriately exercised
statutory remedial powers by holding corporate directors personally liable for
oppression — Whether pleadings sufficient to ground imposition of personal liability
— Canada Business Corporations Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. C‑44,
s. 241(3) .
From
2005 to 2007, A was the President, the Chief Executive Officer, a significant
minority shareholder and a director of Wi2Wi Corporation (“Wi2Wi”). In March 2007,
in negotiating the merger of Wi2Wi with another corporation, A also agreed to
sell it some of his common shares and signed a share purchase agreement to that
effect without notifying Wi2Wi’s Board. When the Board found out about the
existence of the agreement, A was censured for concealing the deal and failing
to disclose the potential conflict of interest. Consequently, A resigned from
his functions. W, a member of Wi2Wi’s Board and audit committee, became its
President and CEO. Neither the merger nor the share purchase occurred.
In
September 2007, in response to Wi2Wi’s continuing financial difficulties, the
Board decided to issue a private placement of convertible secured notes
(“Private Placement”) to its existing common shareholders. Prior to the Private
Placement, the Board accelerated the conversion of Class C Convertible
Preferred Shares, beneficially held by an investment company for W, into common
shares. It did so despite doubts as to whether or not the financial test for C
Share conversion had been met. However, A’s Class A and B Convertible Preferred
Shares were never converted into common shares, notwithstanding that they met
the relevant conversion tests. In Board meetings, W and another director, B,
advocated against converting A’s A and B Shares on the basis of A’s conduct and
involvement in the parallel share purchase negotiation when he was President. Consequently,
A did not participate in the Private Placement and the value of his A and B
Shares and the proportion of his common shares in Wi2Wi were substantially
reduced. A then filed an application under s. 241 of the Canada
Business Corporations Act for oppression against four of Wi2Wi’s directors,
including W.
The
trial judge granted the application in part. He held W and B solidarily
liable for the oppression and ordered them to pay A compensation. The Court of
Appeal dismissed W and B’s appeal. It held that the imposition of personal
liability was justified and that the pleadings did not preclude it. W now
appeals to the Court, challenging the trial judge’s conclusion that it was fit
to hold him personally liable for the oppressive conduct.
Held:
The appeal should be dismissed.
Section 241(3) of the Canada Business Corporations Act gives a trial court broad discretion to “make any
interim or final order it thinks fit”, before enumerating specific examples of
permissible orders. Some of the examples show that the oppression remedy
contemplates liability not only for the corporation, but also for other
parties. However, the Act’s wording goes no further to specify when it is fit
to hold directors personally liable under this section. As stated in the
leading decision, Budd v. Gentra Inc. (1998), 43 B.L.R. (2d) 27 (Ont.
C.A.), determining the personal liability of director requires a two‑pronged
approach. First, the oppressive conduct must be properly attributable to the
director because of his or her implication in the oppression. Second, the imposition
of personal liability must be fit in all the circumstances.
At least four general principles should
guide courts in fashioning a fit remedy under s. 241(3) . First, the
oppression remedy request must in itself be a fair way of dealing with the
situation. It may be fair to hold a director personally liable where he or she
has derived a personal benefit in the form of either an immediate financial
advantage or increased control of the corporation, breached a personal duty or
misused corporate power, or where a remedy against the corporation would unduly
prejudice other security holders. These factors merely represent indicia of
fairness. The presence of a personal benefit and bad faith remain hallmarks of
conduct attracting personal liability, but like the other indicia, they do not
constitute necessary conditions. The fairness principle is ultimately
unamenable to formulaic exposition and must be assessed in light of all the circumstances
of a particular case. Second, any order should go no further than necessary to
rectify the oppression. Third, any order may serve only to vindicate the
reasonable expectations of security holders, creditors, directors or officers
in their capacity as corporate stakeholders. And fourth, a court should
consider the general corporate law context in exercising its remedial
discretion. Director liability cannot be a surrogate for other forms of
statutory or common law relief, particularly where it may be more fitting in
the circumstances.
In
this case, the trial judge appropriately exercised the remedial powers provided in s. 241(3)
of the Canada Business Corporations Act by holding W personally liable for the oppression. W and B, the only members of the audit committee, played the lead roles in
Board discussions resulting in the non‑conversion of A’s A and B Shares, and were therefore implicated in the oppressive conduct. In addition, W accrued a
personal benefit as a result of the oppressive conduct: he increased his
control over Wi2Wi through the conversion of his C Shares (which was not the
case for the C Shares held by others) into common shares, which allowed him to
participate in the Private Placement despite issues as to whether the test for
conversion had been met. This was done to the detriment of A, whose own stake
in the company was diluted due to his inability to participate in the Private
Placement. The remedy went no further than necessary to rectify A’s loss. The
quantum of the order was fit as it corresponded to the value of the common
shares prior to the Private Placement. Finally, the remedy was appropriately
fashioned to vindicate A’s reasonable expectations that (1) his A and B
Shares would be converted if Wi2Wi met the applicable financial tests laid out
in the corporation’s articles and (2) the Board would consider his rights
in any transaction impacting the A and B shares.
A’s
pleadings were also adequate to ground the imposition of personal liability. They
alleged the four named directors had acted in their personal interest to the detriment
of Wi2Wi and A. Specific allegations were made against the directors and accordingly,
damages were sought against them personally. The appropriate response to A’s
bare pleadings was a motion for particulars or discovery prior to trial, not a
plea before the appellate courts.
Cases Cited
Applied:
Budd v. Gentra Inc. (1998), 43 B.L.R. (2d) 27; BCE Inc. v. 1976
Debentureholders, 2008 SCC 69, [2008] 3 S.C.R. 560; referred to: Naneff
v. Con‑Crete Holdings Ltd. (1995), 23 O.R. (3d) 481; 820099
Ontario Inc. v. Harold E. Ballard Ltd. (1991), 3 B.L.R. (2d) 113; Estate
of John Wood v. Arius3D Corp., 2014 ONSC 3322; GC Capital Inc. v.
Condominium Corp. No. 0614475, 2013 ABQB 300, 83 Alta. L.R. (5th)
1; Moon v. Golden Bear Mining Ltd., 2012 BCSC 829; Belliveau v.
Belliveau, 2011 NSSC 397, 3 B.L.R. (5th) 87; 2082825 Ontario Inc. v.
Platinum Wood Finishing Inc. (2009), 96 O.R. (3d) 467; Cox v. Aspen
Veterinary Services Professional Corp., 2007 SKQB 270, 301 Sask. R. 1; Danylchuk
v. Wolinsky, 2007 MBCA 132, 225 Man. R. (2d) 2; Incorporated
Broadcasters Ltd. v. CanWest Global Communications Corp., 2008 MBQB 296,
244 Man. R. (2d) 127; Adecco Canada Inc. v. J. Ward Broome Ltd. (2001),
12 B.L.R. (3d) 275; Walls v. Lewis (2009), 97 O.R. (3d) 16; Waiser v.
Deahy Medical Assessments Inc. (2006), 14 B.L.R. (4th) 317; Levenzon
(Demetriou) v. Spanos Korres, 2014 QCCS 258; ScotiaMcLeod Inc. v.
Peoples Jewellers Ltd. (1995), 26 O.R. (3d) 481, leave to appeal refused, [1996]
3 S.C.R. viii; Segal v. Blatt, 2007 QCCS 1488, aff’d 2008 QCCA 1094; Downtown
Eatery (1993) Ltd. v. Ontario (2001), 54 O.R. (3d) 161; Sidaplex‑Plastic
Suppliers Inc. v. Elta Group Inc. (1998), 40 O.R. (3d) 563; Gottlieb v.
Adam (1994), 21 O.R. (3d) 248; Ebrahimi v. Westbourne Galleries Ltd.,
[1973] A.C. 360; Themadel Foundation v. Third Canadian General Investment
Trust Ltd. (1998), 38 O.R. (3d) 749; Smith v. Ritchie, 2009 ABCA
373; Stern v. Imasco Ltd. (1999), 1 B.L.R. (3d) 198; Benhaim v. St‑Germain,
2016 SCC 48, [2016] 2 S.C.R. 352; Trackcom Systems International Inc. v.
Trackcom Systems Inc., 2014 QCCA 1136; Rodaro v. Royal Bank of Canada
(2002), 59 O.R. (3d) 74.
Statutes and Regulations Cited
Canada Business Corporations Act, R.S.C.
1985, c. C‑44, s. 241 .
Authors Cited
Koehnen, Markus. Oppression and Related Remedies, Toronto:
Thomson/Carswell, 2004.
MacIntosh, Jeffrey G. “The Retrospectivity of the Oppression Remedy”
(1987), 13 Can. Bus. L.J. 219.
Miller, Paul B. “Justifying Fiduciary Remedies” (2013), 63 U.T.L.J.
570.
APPEAL
from a judgment of the Quebec Court of Appeal (Morissette, Dufresne and Gagnon JJ.A.),
2015 QCCA 1350, 53 B.L.R. (5th) 43, [2015] AZ‑51207607, [2015] Q.J. No. 7670 (QL), 2015 CarswellQue 13380 (WL Can.),
affirming a decision of Hamilton J., 2014 QCCS 180, [2014] AZ‑51037940, [2014] Q.J. No. 401 (QL), 2014 CarswellQue 419 (WL Can.). Appeal
dismissed.
Terrence J. O’Sullivan, Paul Michell and Zain Naqi, for the appellant.
Douglas C. Mitchell and Emma Lambert, for the respondent.
The judgment of the Court was delivered by
Côté J. —
I.
Introduction
[1]
Section 241(3) of the Canada Business
Corporations Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-44 (“CBCA ”), allows a court
to “make any interim or final
order it thinks fit” to rectify the matters complained of in an action for
corporate oppression. The principal question raised by
this appeal is when an order for compensation under this section may properly
lie against the directors of a corporation personally, as opposed to the
corporation itself.
[2]
For almost 20 years, the leading authority on
this question has been the Ontario Court of Appeal’s decision in Budd v.
Gentra Inc. (1998), 43 B.L.R. (2d) 27 (“Budd”), and in my view,
there is no reason to depart from the guidance provided in Budd now.
[3]
In this case, the trial judge did not err in his
application of Budd or the principles governing orders under s. 241(3)
when he found the appellant director personally liable for the oppressive
conduct. Appellate intervention is therefore unwarranted, and I would
accordingly dismiss the appeal.
II.
Background
A.
Context and the Corporation’s Capital Structure
[4]
From 2005 to 2007, the respondent, Mr.
Alharayeri, was the President, the Chief Executive Officer (“CEO”), a
significant minority shareholder and a director of Wi2Wi Corporation
(“Corporation”), a technology company incorporated under the CBCA . Prior
to the events leading to the instant litigation, he held 2 million common
shares, 1 million Class A Convertible Preferred Shares (“A Shares”) and
1.5 million Class B Convertible Preferred Shares (“B Shares”) in the
Corporation. The respondent was the sole holder of the A and B Shares, which
were issued to him as performance-linked incentives. The A Shares were
convertible into common shares if the Corporation met certain financial targets
in the 2006 fiscal year, and the B Shares were convertible into common shares if
certain financial targets were met in the 2007 fiscal year. If the targets were
not met, the shares were to be converted into a reduced number of common shares
prorated according to the shortfall.
[5]
The Corporation also issued Class C Convertible
Preferred Shares (“C Shares”) as an incentive to those involved in finding
financing for it. Like the A and B Shares, the C Shares were convertible
into common shares if the Corporation met a financial target laid out in its
articles of incorporation. The appellant, Mr. Wilson, was one of the
C shareholders and beneficially owned or controlled 100,000 C Shares
through YTW Growth Capital Management Corp. (“YTW Corp.”). Like the A and B Shares,
the C Shares were non-participating, non-voting, non-transferable and non-assignable.
B.
Origins of the Dispute
[6]
In March 2007, as a result of recurring cash
flow issues, the Corporation began to seriously consider merging its operations
with those of another business, Mitec Telecom Inc. (“Mitec”). While negotiating
the merger, the respondent was also separately negotiating with Mitec the sale
of his own shares in the Corporation in order to alleviate personal financial
difficulties. Without notifying the Corporation’s Board, the respondent agreed
to sell some of his common shares to Mitec, and he signed a share purchase
agreement to that effect on April 2, 2007. On May 31, 2007, when the
Corporation’s Board finally learned of the respondent’s personal share purchase
agreement, he was censured for concealing the deal and failing to disclose the
potential conflict of interest. This triggered his resignation as President,
CEO and director of the company on June 1, 2007.
[7]
After the respondent’s resignation, the
appellant became Wi2Wi’s President and CEO. The Corporation’s Board consisted
of seven remaining directors. However, its audit committee comprised only two directors:
the appellant and Dr. Hans Black — the chairperson of the audit
committee.
[8]
During the months following the respondent’s
resignation, further negotiations were conducted by the respondent, the
Corporation, and Mitec, but none materialized into a merger or a share purchase
agreement.
[9]
In September 2007, the Corporation’s Board
decided to issue a private placement of convertible secured notes (“Private
Placement”) to its existing common shareholders in response to its continuing
financial difficulties. Under the terms of the issuance, each shareholder was
entitled to subscribe for $1.00 of notes for every two common shares the
shareholder had in the Corporation. The notes were convertible into common
shares at the rate of 50,000 common shares per $1,000 principal amount of
notes. The Private Placement would therefore substantially dilute the
proportion of common shares held by any shareholder who did not participate in
it.
[10]
Prior to the Private Placement, the Board
accelerated the conversion of 100,000 C Shares, beneficially held by YTW Corp.
for the appellant, into common shares. It did so despite doubts expressed by
the auditors as to whether or not the test for the C Share conversion had been
met. The other two holders of C Shares did not benefit from their expedited
conversion.
[11]
On the other hand, the respondent’s A Shares
were never converted into common shares. The Board never approved the 2006
audited financial statements, which contained a note stipulating that, on the
basis of the financial test laid out in the articles of incorporation, the A
Shares were convertible into 1 million common shares at the option of the
holder. In Board meetings, both the appellant and Dr. Black expressed doubts as
to whether it was appropriate to permit the conversion of the A Shares in
light of the respondent’s conduct, particularly his involvement in parallel
share purchase negotiations with Mitec. Consequently, the Board never sent the
respondent a formal notice of his crystallized conversion rights, and his A
Shares were never converted into common shares, despite his requests for
conversion at Board meetings, in emails, and otherwise.
[12]
Similarly, the respondent’s B Shares were never
converted into common shares, notwithstanding that, based on the approved 2007
financial statements, the respondent’s B Shares were convertible into 223,227
common shares.
[13]
As a result of the Private Placement, the
respondent’s proportion of common shares, and the value thereof, were
significantly reduced. Consequently, the value of the respondent’s A and B
Shares — convertible as they were into common shares — was also greatly
reduced. This prompted the respondent to file an application for oppression
under s. 241 of the CBCA against four of the Corporation’s directors,
including the two members of the audit committee: the appellant and Dr. Black.
III.
Judicial History
A.
Quebec Superior Court, 2014 QCCS 180
[14]
At trial, the respondent alleged seven specific
acts of oppression against the four defendant directors. The Corporation was
joined as an impleaded party. Hamilton J. addressed all seven of the
respondent’s allegations using the framework laid out by this Court in BCE
Inc. v. 1976 Debentureholders, 2008 SCC 69, [2008] 3 S.C.R. 560 (“BCE”).
He found that the respondent had a reasonable expectation that his A and B
Shares would be converted if they met the applicable financial tests laid out
in the Corporation’s articles and that the Board would consider his rights as
an A and B shareholder in any transaction impacting the A and B Shares. He
concluded that two of the four defendants, the appellant and Dr. Black,
were personally liable for the Board’s refusal to convert the respondent’s A
and B Shares into common stock and the failure to ensure that the respondent’s
rights as an A and B shareholder were not prejudiced by the Private Placement.
[15]
Hamilton J. adopted the test for a director’s
personal liability in an oppression case from Budd. Applying Budd,
he held that it was “fit” to order the appellant personally to pay damages to
the respondent because (1) along with Dr. Black, the appellant had
personally benefitted from the Private Placement and the dilution of the respondent’s
shares, and (2) the appellant alone had benefitted from the conversion of his C
Shares into the full number of common shares notwithstanding issues as to
whether the conversion test had been met (para. 167 (CanLII)).
[16]
In the result, Hamilton J. held the appellant
and Dr. Black solidarily liable for the oppression and ordered them to pay the
respondent compensation in the amount of $648,310.
B.
Quebec Court of Appeal, 2015 QCCA 1350, 53
B.L.R. (5th) 43
[17]
On appeal, Mr. Wilson and Dr. Black argued, among
other things, that the trial judge had erred by holding them personally liable
on the basis of the lead roles they had played in the oppression, especially in
the discussion at the Board level, and that the trial judge had violated the audi
alteram partem rule by relying on facts that had not been alleged and
arguments that had not been raised (para. 30).
[18]
The Court of Appeal rejected both of these
grounds and dismissed the appeal.
[19]
On its review of the facts, the Court of Appeal
held that the imposition of personal liability was justified, noting that both
Mr. Wilson and Dr. Black must have known that Mr. Alharayeri’s A Share
conversion rights had crystallized because of their positions on the audit
committee (para. 41). As the only audit committee members, Mr. Wilson and
Dr. Black wielded significant influence over the conversion decision and used
this influence to advocate against conversion of Mr. Alharayeri’s shares while
also advocating for the Private Placement (paras. 43-47). Further, Mr. Wilson admitted
at trial that the issue concerning Mr. Alharayeri had “disappeared because he
was no longer a shareholder in a position to block and be a big influence on
all of the stuff that the company was doing” (para. 47). In light of these
facts, the Court of Appeal held that the trial judge’s conclusions — that Mr.
Wilson and Dr. Black had played a lead role in the oppression and that the
circumstances justified the imposition of personal liability — contained no
errors warranting their reversal (paras. 33 and 48).
[20]
Regarding the audi alteram partem issue,
the Court of Appeal held that the pleadings did not preclude the trial judge’s
imposition of personal liability. In doing so, it reasoned that the matter of
the appellant’s personal advantage could not have surprised him, because
multiple pleadings — including amended versions of the Motion to Institute
Proceedings, the parties’ Joint Declaration That a File Is Complete, and the
Defence and Amended Defence — had specifically identified this to be at issue.
The Court of Appeal also distinguished Budd — in which the pleadings
were held to disclose no reasonable cause of action and the plaintiff’s claim
was against, inter alia, 30 directors, 9 officers, and 5 portfolio
companies — as involving a different situation altogether. The Court of Appeal
therefore refused to give effect to this ground of appeal, before going on to
uphold the trial judge’s decision.
IV.
Issues
[21]
The trial judge’s conclusions regarding the
oppressive conduct are not at issue before this Court. Rather, Mr. Wilson
challenges the conclusion that it is “fit” to hold him personally liable for
that oppressive conduct. In particular, this appeal raises two issues relating
to the imposition of personal liability in an oppression action:
(1)
When may personal liability for oppression be
imposed on corporate directors?
(2)
Were the pleadings sufficient to ground the
imposition of personal liability in this case?
V.
Analysis
A.
When May Personal Liability for Oppression Be
Imposed on Corporate Directors?
[22]
It is helpful to begin by situating the analysis
within the context of an oppression action under the CBCA . Sections
241(1) and 241(2) of the CBCA provide:
241 (1) A complainant may apply to a court for an
order under this section.
(2) If, on an application under subsection (1), the court is
satisfied that in respect of a corporation or any of its affiliates
(a) any act or omission of the corporation or any of its
affiliates effects a result,
(b) the business or affairs of the corporation or any of its
affiliates are or have been carried on or conducted in a manner, or
(c) the powers of the directors of the corporation or any of its
affiliates are or have been exercised in a manner
that is oppressive or unfairly
prejudicial to or that unfairly disregards the interests of any security
holder, creditor, director or officer, the court may make an order to rectify
the matters complained of.
[23]
The nature of the oppression remedy is well
recognized in our jurisprudence. Section 241 creates an equitable remedy that
“seeks to ensure fairness — what is ‘just and equitable’” (BCE, at para.
58). It gives “a court broad, equitable jurisdiction to enforce not just what
is legal but what is fair” (ibid.). Courts considering claims for
oppression are therefore instructed to engage in fact-specific, contextual
inquiries looking at “business realities, not merely narrow legalities” (ibid.).
[24]
The two requirements of an oppression claim are
equally well known. First, the complainant must “identify the expectations that
he or she claims have been violated by the conduct at issue and establish that
the expectations were reasonably held” (BCE, at para. 70). Second, the
complainant must show that these reasonable expectations were violated by
corporate conduct that was oppressive or unfairly prejudicial to or that
unfairly disregarded the interests of “any security holder, creditor, director
or officer,” pursuant to s. 241(2) . As stated above, the presence of these two
elements is not at issue in this appeal.
[25]
What is at issue is whether the trial judge
appropriately exercised the remedial powers provided in s. 241(3) by holding
Mr. Wilson personally liable for the oppression. Section 241(3) reads as
follows:
(3) In connection with an
application under this section, the court may make any interim or final order
it thinks fit including, without limiting the generality of the foregoing,
(a) an order
restraining the conduct complained of;
(b) an order
appointing a receiver or receiver-manager;
(c) an order
to regulate a corporation’s affairs by amending the articles or by-laws or
creating or amending a unanimous shareholder agreement;
(d) an order
directing an issue or exchange of securities;
(e) an order
appointing directors in place of or in addition to all or any of the directors
then in office;
(f) an order
directing a corporation, subject to subsection (6), or any other person, to
purchase securities of a security holder;
(g) an order
directing a corporation, subject to subsection (6), or any other person, to pay
a security holder any part of the monies that the security holder paid for
securities;
(h) an order
varying or setting aside a transaction or contract to which a corporation is a
party and compensating the corporation or any other party to the transaction or
contract;
(i) an order
requiring a corporation, within a time specified by the court, to produce to
the court or an interested person financial statements in the form required by
section 155 or an accounting in such other form as the court may determine;
(j) an
order compensating an aggrieved person;
(k) an order
directing rectification of the registers or other records of a corporation
under section 243;
(l) an order
liquidating and dissolving the corporation;
(m) an order
directing an investigation under Part XIX to be made; and
(n) an order requiring the trial of any issue.
[26]
Section 241(3) thus gives a trial court broad
discretion to “make any interim or final order it thinks fit,” before
enumerating specific examples of permissible orders. But this discretion is not
limitless. It must be exercised within legal bounds, and, as a starting point,
it must be exercised within the bounds expressly delineated by the CBCA .
[27]
Any order made under s. 241(3) exists solely to
“rectify the matters complained of,” as provided by s. 241(2) . The purpose of
the oppression remedy is therefore corrective: “. . . in seeking to redress
inequities between private parties . . .”, the oppression remedy seeks to
“apply a measure of corrective justice” (J. G. MacIntosh, “The
Retrospectivity of the Oppression Remedy” (1987), 13 Can. Bus. L.J. 219,
at p. 225; see also Naneff v. Con-Crete Holdings Ltd. (1995), 23 O.R.
(3d) 481 (C.A.) (“Naneff”); 820099 Ontario Inc. v. Harold E. Ballard
Ltd. (1991), 3 B.L.R. (2d) 113 (Ont. C.J. (Gen. Div.)), at p. 197 (“Ballard”)).
In other words, an order made under s. 241(3) should go no further than
necessary to correct the injustice or unfairness between the parties.
[28]
However, where, as in this case, the trial judge
has determined that a monetary order is fit, applying the principle that the
oppression remedy is corrective tells us only about the proper extent of a
party’s liability. It does not help us decide whether the monetary order should
have been made against the corporation or the director personally.
[29]
Some of the examples enumerated in s. 241(3)
show that the oppression remedy contemplates liability not only for the
corporation, but also for other parties. For instance, ss. 241(3) (f) and
241(3) (g) allow for orders against “any . . . person,” requiring them to
purchase securities, or pay to the security holder monies paid by him for
securities, respectively. Section 241(3) (j) considers an “order compensating an
aggrieved person,” but does not identify against whom such an order may lie.
The CBCA’s wording goes no further to specify when it is fit to hold
directors personally liable under this section. We must therefore turn to the
case law for illustrations.
(1)
Budd v. Gentra Inc.
[30]
In Budd, Doherty J.A. considered the
personal liability of directors under the oppression remedy. Doherty J.A.
rejected the proposition that common law principles as to when directors will
bear personal liability applied equally in an oppression case (Budd, at
paras. 31, 34-36 and 40). In particular, he rejected the view that a director’s
conduct must reveal a separate identity or interest from that of the
corporation by falling outside the normal scope of his or her duties in order
to attract personal liability (Budd, at paras. 26, 32, 35-36). In
doing so, Doherty J.A. held that
[a] director or officer may be
personally liable for a monetary order . . . if that director or officer is
implicated in the conduct said to constitute the oppression and if in
all of the circumstances, rectification of the harm done by the oppressive
conduct is appropriately made by an order requiring the director or officer to
personally compensate the aggrieved parties [Emphasis added; para. 46.]
[31]
Two requirements emerge from this passage. The
first is that the director or officer must be implicated in the oppressive
conduct. In other words, the oppressive conduct must be attributable to the
individual director because of his or her action or inaction. The second is
that the order must be fit in all of the circumstances. These two criteria
comprise the Budd “test.”
[32]
However, Budd also featured a survey of
the case law illustrating when personal orders against directors may be
appropriate. In an oft-cited passage, author Markus Koehnen suggests that this
survey revealed five situations in which personal orders against directors
might be appropriate:
(1) Where directors obtain a personal benefit . . . from their conduct;
(2) Where directors have increased their control of the corporation by
the oppressive conduct;
(3) Where directors have breached a personal duty they have as
directors;
(4) Where directors have misused a corporate power;
(5) Where a remedy against the corporation would prejudice other
security holders.
(M. Koehnen, Oppression and Related Remedies (2004), at p.
201 (“Koehnen”))
[33]
According to Koehnen, Budd may have also
referred to a sixth category of cases: those “involving closely held
corporations where a director or officer has virtually total control over the
corporation” (p. 202; and Budd, at para. 44).
[34]
Budd has since
been applied and endorsed by courts across the country (see, e.g., Estate of
John Wood v. Arius3D Corp., 2014 ONSC 3322 (“Wood Estate”),
at paras. 133-34 (CanLII); GC Capital Inc. v. Condominium
Corp. No. 0614475, 2013 ABQB 300, 83 Alta. L.R. (5th) 1, at para. 41;
Moon v. Golden Bear Mining Ltd., 2012 BCSC 829, at para. 315
(CanLII); Belliveau v.
Belliveau, 2011 NSSC 397, 3 B.L.R. (5th) 87, at para. 85; 2082825
Ontario Inc. v. Platinum Wood Finishing Inc. (2009), 96 O.R. (3d) 467 (S.C.J.
(Div. Ct.)), at para. 54; Cox v. Aspen Veterinary
Services Professional Corp., 2007 SKQB 270, 301
Sask. R. 1, at para. 158; Danylchuk v. Wolinsky, 2007 MBCA 132, 225 Man.
R. (2d) 2, at para. 59).
[35]
However, courts have also diverged in their
understanding of the case law examples identified in Budd. Some courts
appear to treat the examples as discrete categories in which a personal order
may be appropriate or as factors to be considered in fashioning a remedy (see,
e.g., Incorporated
Broadcasters Ltd. v. CanWest Global Communications Corp., 2008 MBQB 296, 244 Man. R. (2d) 127, at
para. 46; Moon, at para. 315). Others appear to treat either the
“personal benefit” category or the “closely held” category, or both, as giving
rise to necessary conditions for the imposition of personal liability (see,
e.g., Adecco Canada Inc. v. J. Ward Broome Ltd. (2001), 12 B.L.R. (3d)
275 (Ont. S.C.J.), at para. 30; Walls v. Lewis (2009), 97 O.R. (3d) 16
(S.C.J.), at para. 48; Waiser v. Deahy Medical Assessments Inc.(2006),
14 B.L.R. (4th) 317 (Ont. S.C.J.), at paras. 57-58). Still others appear not to
apply Budd at all (see, e.g., Levenzon (Demetriou) v. Spanos
Korres, 2014 QCCS 258, at
para. 69 (CanLII)).
[36]
It is apparent that Canadian courts are
unsettled as to when the guidance in Budd should lead to the imposition
of personal liability. Unsurprisingly, then, the jurisprudential debate in this
appeal centred on the content of the personal liability “test.” The appellant
does not submit that Budd was wrongly decided, but rather that it put
forth no stringent “test” at all. He urges the Court to adopt necessary
criteria governing the imposition of personal liability in every case.
(2)
The Appellant’s Proposed Criteria
[37]
According to the appellant, oppressive conduct
should be attributable to a director only where the director has control of the
corporation and acts in bad faith by using the corporation to advance his or
her own personal interest, or where the corporation functions as the director’s
alter ego. Overall, the appellant says, “the oppressive conduct must take on
the character of personal conduct of the director.” On this theory, the trial
judge would have erred in holding the appellant personally liable because the
Corporation had some 50 shareholders, none of whom was independently
controlling, so he alone was not “pulling the strings.” The appellant therefore
invites the Court to narrow the remedial scope of s. 241(3) by reference to
principles traditionally limiting director liability at common law. In my view,
this invitation should be declined.
[38]
In Budd, Doherty J.A. warned against
“overlaying restrictive common law principles on the broad statutory language
of s. 241 ” (para. 40). The appellant’s proposed reading of the attribution
prong of the Budd test boils down to integrating the same common law
rule rejected in Budd:
. . . officers or employees of
limited companies are protected from personal liability unless it can be shown
that their actions are themselves tortious or exhibit a separate identity or
interest from that of the company so as to make the act or conduct complained
of their own. [Emphasis added.]
(Budd, at para. 25,
citing ScotiaMcLeod Inc. v. Peoples Jewellers Ltd. (1995), 26 O.R. (3d) 481 (C.A.), at p. 491, leave to appeal refused,
[1996] 3 S.C.R. viii.)
[39]
While this proposition may remain true at common law,
s. 241 ’s remedial purpose lies in applying general standards of commercial
fairness given that the sometimes “clumsy tools” of the common law failed to
promote such standards (Koehnen, at p. 2). Realizing this purpose may require
imposing personal liability on a director where the director is not a
controlling shareholder but is nevertheless implicated in the oppression. For example,
where otherwise fit, it may be open to a court to impose liability on a
director who strongly advocates for an oppressive decision motivated by a
personal gain unique to that director, despite lacking control. But adopting
the appellant’s proposed control criterion would preclude this.
[40]
Additionally, adopting this criterion would effectively
give the directors of public companies (including small public companies and
new ventures) an additional layer of protection against liability unavailable
to the directors of private companies. However, neither the CBCA nor the
case law support such a distinction. To the extent that some cases emphasize
control, they do so not to provide “a more lax standard for public company
directors,” but rather to recognize “that personal benefit and increased
personal control” — two hallmarks of conduct attracting personal liability —
“are more likely to arise in private companies than in public companies”
(Koehnen, at p. 202). Therefore, although the presence or absence of control
may be considered as a factor in determining whether it is fit to impose
personal liability, it is not a necessary criterion for personal liability.
[41]
Further, while a director’s bad faith may
militate strongly in favour of holding him or her personally liable, bad faith
is not a necessary condition to imposing personal liability. Conduct may run
afoul of s. 241 even when it is driven by lesser states of mental culpability:
“Oppression” carries the sense
of conduct that is coercive and abusive, and suggests bad faith. “Unfair
prejudice” may admit of a less culpable state of mind, that nevertheless has
unfair consequences. Finally, “unfair disregard” of interests extends the remedy
to ignoring an interest as being of no importance, contrary to the
stakeholders’ reasonable expectations . . . .
(BCE, at para. 67)
[42]
As Gascon J. (as he then was) recognized, the
oppression remedy is concerned with the effects of oppressive conduct, not the
intent of the oppressor:
In
oppression matters, it is the effect of the acts and omissions of directors and
officers of a company, rather than their intentions, that determines whether
the conduct complained of is unfairly prejudicial. The rights conferred
by Section 241 CBCA turn on effect, not intent. What is important
is the result. Effect is key.
(Segal v. Blatt, 2007
QCCS 1488, at para. 43 (CanLII), aff’d 2008 QCCA 1094,
at paras. 16-17 (CanLII); see also Wood Estate,
at para. 127, per D.M. Brown J. (as he then was).)
[43]
Emphasizing the motivation of the defendant
director, to the exclusion of other considerations, would inappropriately shift
the focus of the analysis away from the effects of the oppression, and the director’s
role therein. Courts have accordingly recognized the possibility of director
liability for oppression in the absence of bad faith conduct (Downtown
Eatery (1993) Ltd. v. Ontario (2001), 54 O.R. (3d) 161
(C.A.), at paras. 55-57; Sidaplex-Plastic Suppliers Inc. v. Elta Group Inc.
(1998), 40 O.R. (3d) 563 (C.A.) (“Sidaplex”)). However, while bad faith
is not a necessary condition, it is an important consideration. A director who
acts out of malice or with an eye to personal benefit is more likely to attract
personal liability than one who acts in good faith.
[44]
The appellant also submits that a personal order
against a director can be “fit” only where the director has obtained a personal
benefit at the expense of the oppressed party and where there is a direct
connection between the impugned conduct and that benefit. On this view, a
personal order against the appellant was inappropriate because there was no
correlation between the Board’s failure to convert the A and B Shares and
the benefits accruing to the appellant in the form of increased control of the
Corporation and the expedited conversion of his C Shares.
[45]
In my view, this argument is unavailing. As
explained above, the oppression remedy exists to rectify harm to the
complainant. It is not a gain-based remedy. Gain-based remedies “are, in
any context, a striking form of redress insofar as they represent a departure
from the norm of loss-based or compensatory relief” (P. B. Miller,
“Justifying Fiduciary Remedies” (2013), 63 U.T.L.J. 570, at pp. 570-71).
Treating a personal benefit as a necessary condition to a director’s personal
liability inappropriately emphasizes the gain to the director, at the expense
of considering the oppressive conduct leading to the complainant’s loss. For
example, oppressive conduct that does not yield a personal benefit may trigger
personal liability where the director acts in bad faith or in a Machiavellian
fashion (for instance, where the director seeks to punish a shareholder for
interpersonal reasons regardless of whether that punishment brings the director
any personal benefit). But treating a personal benefit as a necessary condition
would preclude personal liability in such a case, where it may otherwise be a
fit and fair remedy. Further, demanding a strict correlation between the
complainant’s loss and the director’s benefit would imbue an otherwise
discretionary, equitable remedy that looks to commercial realities with a legal
formalism inimical to its remedial purpose.
[46]
Like the appellant’s tendered criteria of control
and bad faith, personal benefit should not be treated as a necessary criterion
for personal liability. That said, an archetypal case of personal liability
will often feature a personal benefit. And courts have regularly looked — and
should continue to look — to the presence or absence of a personal benefit in
determining whether an order may properly lie against a director personally.
(3)
The Principles Governing Orders Under Section
241(3) and the Application of the Personal Liability Test Going Forward
[47]
To reiterate, Budd provides for a
two-pronged approach to personal liability. The first prong requires that the
oppressive conduct be properly attributable to the director because he or she
is implicated in the oppression (see Budd, at para. 47). In other words,
the director must have exercised — or failed to have exercised — his or her
powers so as to effect the oppressive conduct (Sidaplex, at p. 567; see
also Budd, at paras. 41-44, citing Gottlieb v. Adam (1994), 21
O.R. (3d) 248 (Gen. Div.), at pp. 260-61).
[48]
But this first requirement alone is an
inadequate basis for holding a director personally liable. The second prong
therefore requires that the imposition of personal liability be fit in all the
circumstances. Fitness is necessarily an amorphous concept. But the case law
has distilled at least four general principles that should guide courts in
fashioning a fit order under s. 241(3). The question of director liability
cannot be considered in isolation from these general principles.
[49]
First, “the oppression remedy request must in
itself be a fair way of dealing with the situation” (Ballard, at para.
142). The five situations identified by Koehnen relating to director liability
are best understood as providing indicia of fairness. Where directors have derived
a personal benefit, in the form of either an immediate financial advantage or
increased control of the corporation, a personal order will tend to be a fair
one. Similarly, where directors have breached a personal duty they owe as
directors or misused a corporate power, it may be fair to impose personal
liability. Where a remedy against the corporation would unduly prejudice other
security holders, this too may militate in favour of personal liability (see
Koehnen, at p. 201).
[50]
To be clear, this is not a closed list of
factors or a set of criteria to be slavishly applied. And as explained above,
neither a personal benefit nor bad faith is a necessary condition in the
personal liability equation. The appropriateness of an order under s. 241(3)
turns on equitable considerations, and in the context of an oppression claim,
“It would be impossible, and wholly undesirable, to define the circumstances in
which these considerations may arise” (Ebrahimi v. Westbourne Galleries Ltd.,
[1973] A.C. 360, at p. 379 (“Ebrahimi”)). But personal benefit and bad
faith remain hallmarks of conduct properly attracting personal liability, and
although the possibility of personal liability in the absence of both of these
elements is not foreclosed, one of them will typically be present in cases in
which it is fair and fit to hold a director personally liable for oppressive
corporate conduct. With respect to these two elements, four potential scenarios
can arise:
i)
The director acted in bad faith and obtained a
personal benefit;
ii)
The director acted in bad faith but did not
obtain a personal benefit;
iii) The director acted in good faith and obtained a personal benefit;
and
iv) The director acted in good faith and did not obtain a personal
benefit.
[51]
In general, the first and fourth scenarios will
tend to be clear-cut. If the director has acted in bad faith and obtained a
personal benefit, it is likely fit to hold the director personally liable for
the oppression. On the other hand, where neither element is present, personal
liability will generally be less fitting. The less obvious cases will tend to
lie in the middle. In all cases, the trial judge must determine whether it is
fair to hold the director personally liable, having regard to all the circumstances.
Bad faith and personal benefit are but two factors that relate to certain
circumstances within a larger factual matrix. They do not operate to the
exclusion of other considerations. And they should not overwhelm the analysis.
[52]
Further, even where it is appropriate to impose
personal liability, this does not necessarily lead to a binary choice between
the directors and the corporation. Fairness requires that, where “relief is
justified to correct an oppressive type of situation, the surgery should be
done with a scalpel, and not a battle axe” (Ballard, at para. 140).
Where there is a personal benefit but no finding of bad faith, fairness may
require an order to be fashioned by considering the amount of the personal
benefit. In some cases, fairness may entail allocating responsibility
partially to the corporation and partially to directors personally. For
example, in Wood Estate, a shareholder made a short-term loan to the
corporation with the reasonable expectation that it would be repaid from the
proceeds of a specific transaction. Those proceeds were instead applied to
corporate purposes, as well as to repayment of the loans made to the
corporation by the defendant directors and officer and by another shareholder.
D.M. Brown J. held the defendant directors and officer liable for the
amounts used to repay their own loans and the shareholder loan, and also
ordered the corporation to pay an equal amount towards the balance of the loan.
As this last example shows, the fairness principle is ultimately unamenable to
formulaic exposition and must be assessed on a case-by-case basis having regard
to all of the circumstances.
[53]
Second, as explained above, any order made under
s. 241(3) should go no further than necessary to rectify the oppression (Naneff,
at para. 32; Ballard, at para. 140; Themadel Foundation v. Third
Canadian General Investment Trust Ltd. (1998), 38 O.R. (3d) 749 (C.A.), at
p. 754 (“Themadel”)). This follows from s. 241 ’s remedial purpose
insofar as it aims to correct the injustice between the parties.
[54]
Third, any order made under s. 241(3) may serve
only to vindicate the reasonable expectations of security holders, creditors,
directors or officers in their capacity as corporate stakeholders (Naneff,
at para. 27; Smith v. Ritchie, 2009 ABCA 373, at para. 20
(CanLII)). The oppression remedy recognizes that, behind a corporation, there
are individuals with “rights, expectations and obligations inter se which are
not necessarily submerged in the company structure” (Ebrahimi, at p.
379; see also BCE, at para. 60). But it protects only those expectations
derived from an individual’s status as a security holder, creditor, director or
officer. Accordingly, remedial orders under s. 241(3) may respond only to those
expectations. They may not vindicate expectations arising merely by virtue of a
familial or other personal relationship. And they may not serve a purely
tactical purpose. In particular, a complainant should not be permitted to jump
the creditors’ queue by seeking relief against a director personally. The scent
of tactics may therefore be considered in determining whether or not it is
appropriate to impose personal liability on a director under s. 241(3).
Overall, the third principle requires that an order under s. 241(3) remain
rooted in, informed by, and responsive to the reasonable expectations of the
corporate stakeholder.
[55]
Fourth — and finally — a court should consider
the general corporate law context in exercising its remedial discretion under
s. 241(3). As Farley J. put it, statutory oppression “can be a help; it can’t
be the total law with everything else ignored or completely secondary” (Ballard,
at para. 124). This means that director liability cannot be a surrogate for
other forms of statutory or common law relief, particularly where such other
relief may be more fitting in the circumstances (see, e.g., Stern v. Imasco
Ltd. (1999), 1 B.L.R. (3d) 198 (Ont. S.C.J.)).
[56]
Under s. 241(3), fashioning a fit remedy is a
fact-dependent exercise. When it comes to the oppression remedy, Carthy J.A. put
the matter succinctly:
The point at which relief is
justified and the extent of relief are both so dependent upon the facts of the
particular case that little guidance can be obtained from comparing one case to
another and I would be hesitant to enunciate any more specific principles of
approach than have been set out above.
(Themadel, at p. 754)
[57]
The four principles articulated above therefore
serve as guideposts informing the flexible and discretionary approach the
courts have adopted to orders under s. 241(3) of the CBCA . Having
surveyed these principles, I turn now to their application in the instant case.
(4)
Application of the Principles Governing Orders
Under Section 241(3) and Director Liability in This Case
[58]
The trial judge’s decision to hold the appellant
personally liable for the oppression does not reflect any errors warranting
appellate intervention.
[59]
As stated above, s. 241 vests the trial court
with broad discretion. Appellate courts should therefore adopt a deferential
stance when reviewing judgments rendered on oppression applications. Three
principles govern the applicable standard of review. First, absent palpable and
overriding error, an appellate court must defer to the trial court’s findings
of fact (see also Benhaim v. St-Germain, 2016 SCC 48, [2016] 2 S.C.R.
352, at paras. 36 and 90). Second, an appellate court may intervene and
substitute its own decision for the trial court’s if the judgment is based on
“errors of law . . . erroneous principles or irrelevant considerations” (Trackcom
Systems International Inc. v. Trackcom Systems Inc., 2014 QCCA 1136, at
para. 36 (CanLII)). Third, even if it was not so based, an appellate court may
intervene if the trial judgment is manifestly unjust (ibid.).
[60]
The first prong of the test for personal
liability requires that the oppressive conduct be properly attributable to the
director because he or she is implicated in the oppression. In this case, the
trial judge found that, although each of the four named defendant directors had
been involved in the oppressive conduct, it was the appellant and Dr. Black —
the only members of the audit committee — who had played “the lead roles” in
Board discussions resulting in the non-conversion of the respondent’s A and B
Shares (para. 167). In making that finding, the trial judge held that Mr.
Wilson and Dr. Black were implicated in the oppressive conduct. It was
therefore open to the trial judge to determine that the oppression was properly
attributable to these two defendants.
[61]
As explained above, attribution alone is
insufficient to ground a director’s personal liability. It follows that merely
adopting a “lead role” at Board meetings, without something more, can never
suffice to ground a director’s personal liability. Here, however, that
“something more” consisted of the factors properly considered at the second
prong of the personal liability inquiry.
[62]
The second prong requires that the imposition of
personal liability be fit in all the circumstances. In this case, the trial
judge found that, in addition to the “lead role” he had played, Mr. Wilson had
accrued a personal benefit as a result of the oppressive conduct:
. . . although all of the Defendants
benefitted from the changes to the stock option plan, it is the Defendants
Black and Wilson who participated in the Private Placement and benefitted from
the dilution of [the respondent’s] A and B Shares. Wilson also benefitted
from the conversion of his C Shares into the full number of common shares
notwithstanding issues as to whether the test had been met. In the
circumstances, I consider that it is “fit” to order the Defendants Black and
Wilson personally to pay the damages to [the respondent]. [para. 167]
[63]
Notably, the Board accelerated the conversion of
the appellant’s C Shares into common shares (but not the C Shares held by
others) to allow him to participate in the Private Placement, despite issues as
to whether the test for conversion had been met. This benefitted him by
increasing his control over the Corporation, to the detriment of the respondent,
whose own stake in the company was diluted due to his inability to participate
in the Private Placement — a consequence of the oppressive conduct.
[64]
Nothing about this line of reasoning reflects an
incorrect invocation of principle or improper consideration on the part of the
trial judge. The trial judge was entitled to consider that the appellant played
a “lead role” in advocating for the oppressive conduct and that he ultimately
increased his control over the Corporation as a result.
[65]
Additionally, the remedy went no further than
necessary to rectify the respondent’s loss. After adjusting for exchange rates,
the trial judge found that the value of the common shares had been Can$0.53 per
share prior to the Private Placement. He also found that, but for the oppressive
conduct, the respondent’s A and B Shares would have been converted into
1,223,227 common shares. This put the respondent’s loss at $648,310 — the
extent of the appellant’s and Dr. Black’s personal liability.
[66]
Finally, the remedy was appropriately fashioned
to vindicate the respondent’s reasonable expectations as a Series A and B
shareholder. The respondent reasonably expected that his A and B Shares would
be converted if the Corporation met the applicable financial tests laid out in
the Corporation’s articles and that the Board would consider his rights as a
Series A and B shareholder in any transaction impacting the A and B Shares. The
appellant concedes that the Board’s failure to meet these expectations amounted
to oppression. Given the absence of any palpable and overriding errors in the
trial judge’s calculation, the amount of $648,310 represents the value that
would have accrued to the respondent had his reasonable expectations been
respected.
[67]
Accordingly, the trial judge’s order against the
appellant represents a fair way of rectifying the oppression that goes no
further than necessary to vindicate the respondent’s reasonable expectations.
In my view, it should be permitted to stand.
B.
Were the Pleadings Sufficient to Ground the
Imposition of Personal Liability in This Case?
[68]
The appellant further submits that the
respondent’s pleadings were inadequate to ground the imposition of personal
liability, consequently depriving the appellant of his basic right to know the
case against him. This argument may be addressed summarily.
[69]
First, the respondent’s pleadings named four
individual directors, including the appellant, as defendants. As the Court of
Appeal recognized, the respondent specifically alleged that these four
defendants “acted in their own personal interest” and “to the detriment of
Wi2Wi and its shareholder in focusing mainly on their personal financial gains”
(paras. 51-52). In turn, the defendants specifically denied these allegations
in their Defence dated January 25, 2011, pleading that “[t]he business
decisions at issue were i) made by the Defendants in good faith, ii) not
motivated by self-interest, iii) based on informed judgment and on the honest
belief that each action was taken in the best interest of Wi2Wi” (A.R., vol.
II, at p. 34). I agree with the Court of Appeal that “[i]n such conditions, it
may be difficult to argue that the matter of the appellants’ personal interest
(or the advantage they derived) came as a surprise to them” (para. 52).
[70]
Second, in his initial Motion to Institute
Proceedings, the respondent specifically sought damages against the four named
defendants — not the Corporation — under s. 241(3) (j) of the CBCA .
Coupled with the fact that the pleadings made specific allegations against the
defendant directors, this alone sufficed to put the appellant on notice that
his own personal liability was engaged.
[71]
Third, the main authorities invoked by the
appellant on this point, namely Rodaro v. Royal Bank of Canada (2002),
59 O.R. (3d) 74 (C.A.) (“Rodaro”) and Budd, are distinguishable.
In Rodaro, the trial judge relied on a theory of liability that had been
neither pleaded nor argued by either party over the course of a 92-day trial
(paras. 59-63). In Budd, the complainant’s claim targeted more than
forty defendants, including thirty directors, nine officers and five portfolio
companies, an accounting firm and Gentra. As a result, Doherty J.A. found that
the claims against the individual directors amounted to an abuse of process:
I am left
with the uneasy impression that the claim against the directors and officers
personally is included in the appellant’s statement of claim for purposes other
than to ultimately establish their personal liability. If this impression is
correct, those claims are properly characterized as an abuse of process. [para.
50]
[72]
The pleadings here, albeit sparse, specifically
alleged that all four defendants had acted in their personal interest to the
detriment of the plaintiff. This is worlds apart from both Rodaro and Budd.
[73]
Finally, a right of appeal is not a backstop for
procedural choices made prior to trial. In this case, the more appropriate
response to the respondent’s bare pleadings lay in a motion for particulars or
discovery prior to trial, not in a plea before the appellate courts.
VI.
Conclusion
[74]
For these reasons, I would dismiss the appeal,
with costs.
Appeal
dismissed with costs.
Solicitors for the
appellant: Lax O’Sullivan Lisus Gottlieb, Toronto.
Solicitors for the
respondent: Irving Mitchell Kalichman, Montréal.