The Scope Of The Entire Agreement Clause
May 2, 2023 By Mark Mikulasik If you are a landlord and promise customer parking as part of convincing a prospective tenant to sign a lease, make sure that it is provided, even if not mentioned in the lease. Especially if it is not mentioned in the lease. THE ISSUE Otherwise, do not expect your […]
Bad Faith, Illegality And By-Laws
May 2, 2023 By Mark Mikulasik THE ISSUE You might think that a by-law which is passed with procedural illegalities would be routinely quashed in court. The law is not that simple. THE CASE In Larabie Estate v. Moonbeam (Township) the Ontario Court of Appeal upholds a Superior Court judgment dismissing an application to have […]
Equity and the Defence of Dishonesty
February 24, 2023 By Brian Babcock It must take a particular kind of bravery to execute a multimillion-dollar fraud against the government. That same foolish bravery may then lead the fraudster to try to defend an action by the government to recover the money on the basis that it is really the government’s fault for […]
Can you appeal court costs?
February 24, 2023 By Jonathon Clark In Ontario it is normal that a successful party in a lawsuit is awarded a portion of their legal expenses as court costs following a trial, motion, or other event. THE ISSUE You are most likely aware that most final judgments are subject to appeal to the Court of […]
The Importance of Written Agreements in Oppression Remedy Cases
February 19, 2023 By Jonathon Clark We have written a number of articles on the oppression remedy so you may be thinking that there must be nothing left to say. THE ISSUE Except, we have yet to write about a case emphasizing the importance of written agreements in resolving the fallout of an oppression claim. […]
What About Innocent Misrepresentation?
February 19, 2023 By Nick Melchiorre We have previously written about fraudulent misrepresentation, often simply called fraud or civil fraud, and its ugly stepsister, negligent misrepresentation. THE ISSUE But what happens when the opposite party in a contract induces you to enter into the contract with a representation that is false, but which they believe […]
Is Adverse Possession Dead In Ontario?
February 10, 2023 By Mark Mikulasik Don’t take adverse possession off life support yet. THE ISSUE Most lawyers in Ontario assumed that adverse possession – the ability to obtain the rights of an owner of land by possessing it as if you were the owner – would have vanished by 2022. Ontario has transitioned almost […]
Building a Record for the Appeal
February 10, 2023 By Brian Babcock What just might be worse than losing your case at trial? Winning the case and then having to go back to try it all over again because not only does the Court of Appeal grant the appeal, but they also decide that the factual record from the trial is […]
Think Before You Terminate
February 4, 2023 By Brian Babcock Be careful not to terminate an employee by accident. The surest way to accidentally terminate an employee is to give them a notice of termination. This may sound obvious, yet the case ended up at the Ontario Court of Appeal. Getting sound professional advice BEFORE terminating may prevent expensive […]
What Is Negligent Misrepresentation?
February 4, 2023 By Jonathon Clark We have mentioned the phrase “negligent misrepresentation” in several articles so far. We have yet to discuss negligent misrepresentation in an article specifically dedicated to the subject. That probably leaves some of you wondering “what is negligent misrepresentation?”, either because you landed here by Googling the term or because […]