British Columbia – Application to stay amendments falters on attornment – #628

The case Hawrish v. Hawthorn, 2022 BCSC 849 concerned an application by the Defendants to stay amendments to pleadings on the basis that the parties had previously agreed to arbitrate those matters. The issue was whether the stay should be granted when the Defendants had already attorned to the Court’s jurisdiction over the original claim.  The Chambers Judge, Justice Wilson, refused the stay application.  He reasoned that the only issue was whether the stay application was brought in a timely manner.  This, in turn, depended on whether the amendments raised new and discrete claims or whether they simply related to the original claims.  Justice Wilson concluded that, even with the amendments, the dispute in “pith and substance” remained the same (para. 68). The amendments were “simply additional material facts” (para. 67).   As a result, he found the Defendants had attorned to the Court’s jurisdiction regarding the matters raised in the amendments and the application for the stay was dismissed.

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Ontario – Arbitrators can decide non-legal business disputes, but not in this case – #608

The case 1107051 Ontario Ltd. v. GG Kingspa Enterprises Limited Partnership, 2022 ONSC 1847 concerned the jurisdiction of an arbitrator to decide a business dispute that was not legal in nature. The Applicant, 1107051 Ontario Ltd. (“110”), applied to “set aside” a decision of an arbitrator to assume jurisdiction over a dispute about whether a major real estate development project at King Street West and Spadina Avenue in Toronto (the “Project”) should include a hotel component when the parties were deadlocked on the issue. Section 17(8) of the Ontario Arbitration Act allows a party to apply to the Court to “decide” a jurisdictional issue if, as here, an arbitrator decides it as a preliminary question, as opposed to with the merits. Justice McEwen granted the “set aside”. He agreed with the arbitrator that the dispute was of a business nature and not legal and, further, that parties could arbitrate such non-justiciable disputes if they clearly and specifically intended to do so. In this case, although the arbitration clause was described as broad, the dispute was beyond its scope because the dispute was required by the clause to arise “under this Agreement”. That meant the dispute had to be about more than just anything to do with the Project. It had to concern the rights and obligations of the parties under the Agreement. Although a hotel was contemplated as part of the Project, it was not a required component. Further, express authorization to determine a business issue would have been necessary.

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Alberta – Previous arbitral award did not create res judicata for regulator – #589

In TransAlta Corporation v Alberta (Utilities Commission), 2022 ABCA 37, TransAlta Corporation (“TransAlta”) argued on appeal that the Alberta Utilities Commission (“AUC”) erred in law when it refused TransAlta’s application to decide, as a preliminary matter, that certain issues were rendered res judicata by a previous arbitral award arising out of a dispute between TransAlta and a legislated entity called the “Balancing Pool”. The majority of the Court of Appeal dismissed the appeal as: (1) the AUC decision was an interlocutory ruling in an unfinished proceeding and the AUC may ultimately agree with the arbitral award; and (2) the AUC did not err when it refused to apply res judicata as a preliminary matter as it was making a decision in a different statutory context than the arbitral tribunal.

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Julie’s 2021 Top Pick: B.C. – Allard v The University of British Columbia – #567

Costs results in domestic commercial arbitrations are often based on, or consistent with, the norms of international commercial arbitration and can differ greatly from what is expected based on standard litigation practice. This can be an unpleasant surprise for counsel and their clients who are unfamiliar with this. In Allard v The University of British Columbia Justice Douglas confirmed that the “starting point”  for an award of costs in domestic commercial arbitration is that the winner is entitled to its reasonable legal fees and disbursements, or what is referred to in litigation practice as “solicitor client costs” or “indemnity costs” and not “party party” costs, which many litigators would expect. There are, of course, exceptions to this “normal rule” for assessing costs. Alberta’s Arbitration Act, RSA 2000, c A-43 perhaps provides one, as is discussed below.

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B.C. – Leave to appeal granted; arbitrator found party’s actions estopped him from raising statutory time limit – #550

Meszaros v 464235B.C. Ltd., 2021 BCSC 2021, concerned a petition to have the Court set aside or, alternatively, to grant leave to appeal, two awards related to costs where a party failed to apply within the time limit provided under the previous B.C. Arbitration Act: Arbitration Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 55.  The arbitrator had found that the 30-day time limit for seeking costs could be subject to an estoppel that prevented the petitioner from relying on it to challenge the ability of an arbitrator to make an award of costs outside the time limit. Justice D. MacDonald of the British Columbia Supreme Court denied the application to set aside the award but granted leave to appeal on the issue of whether an estoppel could arise on the facts of this case as found by the Arbitrator.

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B.C. – Leave to appeal denied where alleged legal errors did not reflect arbitrator’s reasoning – #530

In Ecoasis Resort and Golf LLP v Bear Mountain Resort & Spa Ltd., 2021 BCCA 285, the Applicants (Bear Mountain and related companies) argued on leave to appeal that the arbitrator committed four extricable errors of law relating to whether it was an implied term of a lease that the lessees would have access to limited common property.  The Arbitration Act, S.B.C. 2020, c. 2, like the previous Act, allows appeals on questions of law alone provided they satisfy certain other conditions.  Two of the alleged extricable legal errors concerned whether the arbitrator implied a term based on a wrong principle; the third concerned whether the arbitrator, in interpreting the lease, allowed the factual matrix to overwhelm the words of the contract;  the fourth concerned whether the arbitrator misapplied the law of the duty of good faith by implying a term into the agreement.  On examination, Justice Bennett concluded that none of the alleged errors reflected the arbitrator’s reasoning and, further, “all of the so-called legal issues raised by the applicant, fall into the category of mixed fact and law.  I do not see any extricable question of law arising from the reasons of the arbitrator” (para. 49).   Leave to appeal was denied.

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