Southcott Estates Inc v Toronto Catholic District School Board explained

Case-Name:Southcott Estates Inc v Toronto Catholic District School Board
Heard-Date:2012-03-20
Decided-Date:2012-10-17
Citations:2012 SCC 51, [2012] 2 SCR 675
Docket:33778
History:APPEAL and CROSS‑APPEAL from Southcott Estates Inc. v. Toronto Catholic School Board. 2010. onca. 310. 2010-05-03. 104 OR (3d) 784., setting aside Southcott Estates Inc. v. Toronto Catholic District School Board. 2009. onsc. 3567. canlii. 2009-01-30. 78 R.P.R. (4th) 285. auto.
Ruling:Appeal and cross‑appeal dismissed
Scc:2011-2012
Majority:Karakatsanis J
Joinmajority:LeBel, Deschamps, Abella, Rothstein, and Cromwell JJ
Dissent:McLachlin CJ
Notparticipating:Fish and Rothstein JJ

Southcott Estates Inc v Toronto Catholic District School Board, 2012. scc. 51. [2012] 2 SCR 675., is a landmark case of the Supreme Court of Canada in the area of commercial law, with significant impact in the areas of:

Background

Southcott Estates Inc sued the Toronto Catholic District School Board for specific enforcement of a contract to sell it 4.78acres of land. Southcott Estates Inc was a subsidiary of Ballantry Homes Inc, a developer,[1] and special purpose entity created just for purchasing and developing the land. The deal was conditional upon Southcott paying a 10% deposit, and the Toronto School Board getting severance permission from Toronto's Committee of Adjustment before a certain date. However, the Committee refused without reviewing a development plan for the land, which meant severance was not granted in time. Southcott sued for specific performance or damages.

At trial, Southcott stated it never had any intention to mitigate its loss and had not tried, that it had no assets other than the deposit from Ballantry Inc for the deposit, and it was never going to purchase any other land.

The courts below

At the Ontario Superior Court of Justice, Spiegel J held that:

He rejected the Board's submission that Southcott had mitigated damages through several purchases subsequent to the breach of the agreement, declaring:

The Board appealed to the Ontario Court of Appeal, where Sharpe JA held that:

As a result, nominal damages were awarded in the amount of $1.

Leave to appeal and cross-appeal the decision were granted by the Supreme Court of Canada in November 2011:[8]

At the Supreme Court

In a 6-1 ruling, the appeal was dismissed with costs. As it was therefore unnecessary to consider the cross-appeal, it was dismissed without costs.

Majority opinion

Karakatsanis J began by summarizing the principles for mitigation previously adopted by the Court in Asamera Oil Corporation Ltd. v. Sea Oil & General Corporation[9] where Lord Haldane's observation was endorsed:

The principles have since been refined in further cases at the Court, as well as at the Federal Court of Appeal.[10]

Southcott had argued that, as a single-purpose company, it was impecunious and unable to mitigate without significant capital investment of the parent company or without the corporate mandate to do so. In addition, it would be reasonably foreseeable to those contracting with a single-purpose corporation that such an entity would have finite resources and a confined corporate mandate.[11] This was held to be insufficient:

Asamera, when read together with Semelhago v. Paramadevan, holds that it "cannot be assumed that damages for breach of contract for the purchase and sale of real estate will be an inadequate remedy in all cases,"[15] and specific performance will be available only where money cannot compensate fully for the loss, because of some “peculiar and special value” of the land to the plaintiff.[16]

Dissent

McLachlin CJ believed that the trial judge was correct in finding in fact that the Board had not proved that Southcott had an opportunity to mitigate, which was sufficient to dispose of the appeal. She would have reversed the Court of Appeal's ruling and restored the original verdict. She saw no basis on which to conclude that Southcott acted unreasonably in maintaining its suit for specific performance instead of mitigating its loss:[17]

  1. It had a “fair, real, and substantial justification” for claiming specific performance of the contract.[18] [19]
  2. The act of filing a claim for specific performance is inconsistent with the act of acquiring a substitute property.[20]
  3. Plaintiffs can never be certain that an action for specific performance will succeed, particularly as this is an equitable, discretionary remedy. Demanding that losses be mitigated unless success in obtaining specific performance is assured would deter valid claims for specific performance and hold plaintiffs to an impossible standard.[21]
  4. It can be fairly argued that Southcott did not act unreasonably in pursuing specific performance of the contract. Though the common law presumption of the uniqueness of real property no longer holds, a claim for specific performance may still be reasonable if a property has unique characteristics such that a substitute property is not readily available.[22] [23]
  5. Whether it could have obtained financing to buy a different property is at the very least speculative.[24]

Impact

The decision has raised significant debate on many of the issues it discussed:

Notes and References

  1. Part of the Ballantry Group of Companies, see Web site: Ballantry Homes website.
  2. ONSC, par. 93116
  3. ONSC, par. 128133
  4. ONSC, par. 144146
  5. ONCA, par. 1114
  6. ONCA, par. 2427
  7. ONCA, par. 30
  8. Southcott Estates Inc. v. Toronto Catholic District School Board. 2010. scc-l. 67504. canlii. 2010-11-18.
  9. Asamera Oil Corporation Ltd. v. Sea Oil & General Corporation et al.. 1978. scc. 16. canlii. [1979] 1 SCR 633. 1978-10-03.
  10. SCC, par. 2425
  11. SCC, par. 26
  12. SCC, par. 27
  13. SCC, par. 29
  14. SCC, par. 30
  15. Semelhago v. Paramadevan. 1996. scc. 209. canlii. par. 21. [1996] 2 SCR 415. 1996-06-20.
  16. Adderley v. Dixon (1824), 1 Sim. & St. 607, 57 E.R. 239, at p. 240
  17. SCC, par. 65
  18. Asamera, at pp. 667-68
  19. SCC, par. 92
  20. SCC, par. 93
  21. SCC, par. 94
  22. Semelhago, at par. 22
  23. SCC, par. 95
  24. SCC, par. 96
  25. Web site: Peter S. Spiro. Quashing specific performance and piercing the veil in Southcott Estates Inc v Toronto Catholic District School Board. 25 March 2014. thecourt.ca.
  26. Web site: Geoff R. Hall. A Doctrine of Mitigation in the Supreme Court of Canada: A Triumph of Theory over Commercial Reality. 25 October 2012. McCarthy Tétrault, Canadian Appeals Monitor.
  27. Web site: John Mullen. Southcott Estates Case – The Death Knell for Specific Performance in Commercial Real Estate Transactions?. 23 January 2013. Keyser Mason Ball LLP.
  28. Web site: Mark S. Thompson. Mitch Dermer. The End of the Line for Specific Performance?. 13 December 2012. Singleton Urquhart.
  29. Web site: Case comment on Southcott Estates v. Toronto Catholic District School Board. July 2013. Canadian Bar Association, National Civil Litigation Section Newsletter.
  30. Web site: Jenna Anne de Jong. Supreme Court clarifies requirements of the duty to mitigate. November 2012. Norton Rose.
  31. Web site: Jonathan D. Born. Purchasing Property for Development or Investment? What to do if there is a Breach of Contract. November 2012. Weir Foulds LLP, Property Update.
  32. Web site: Michael B. Morgan. Don't get too specific. 1 April 2013. Building.