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COMMERCIAL TENANCIES ACT ONTARIO AND THE BANKRUPT TENANT: THE COMPLETE GUIDE TO HAPPILY LOCking IN A LANDLORD’S CLAIM

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Commercial Tenancies Act Ontario: Introduction

On October 28, 2020, the Court of Appeal For Ontario clarified the interplay between the Commercial Tenancies Act Ontario and the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act (Canada) (BIA) when a commercial tenant in Ontario goes bankrupt.

In this Brandon’s Blog, I describe what the appellate court decided in the 7636156 Canada Inc. (Re), 2020 ONCA 681 (CanLII) case. I also discuss what it means for commercial landlords when one of its tenants goes bankrupt and what the relationship is between the Commercial Tenancies Act Ontario and the BIA.

Commercial Tenancies Act Ontario: The facts

The facts were not in dispute. On May 1, 2018, the corporate tenant filed for bankruptcy and the Trustee was appointed. On July 23, 2018, the Trustee disclaimed the lease on the commercial premises.

One of the schedules for the commercial lease required the tenant to lodge a letter of credit (LOC) in the amount of $2.5 million in favour of the landlord. The LOC was to have an initial term of one year, renewed each year on an automated basis until 60 days after the expiry of the lease’s term. It was stipulated that the LOC is to continue to stand as protection for the landlord in case the tenant ended up being bankrupt.

According to the lease, the tenant provided the LOC. It was an irrevocable standby LOC issued by The Bank Of Nova Scotia (BNS) for the $2.5 million amount in favour of the landlord. The LOC had been renewed annually before the date of bankruptcy.

To get the LOC, the tenant put up money collateral in the amount of $2.5 million to BNS which was invested in a BNS GIC. BNS took security against the company and registered a financing statement under the Personal Property Security Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. P.10. The security was good and valid as against the Trustee. The Trustee was in agreement that the security was valid.

Commercial Tenancies Act Ontario: The landlord draws against the LOC

As of the bankruptcy date, there were no arrears of rent owing under the lease. Since the commercial tenant was bankrupt, the landlord made 3 claims on the LOC. These three claims totalled the full $2.5 million LOC value.

The initial draw, in the amount of $207,732.28, was made on May 16, 2018, before the Trustee disclaimed its interest in the commercial lease. Under the Commercial Tenancies Act Ontario, the Trustee has the right to occupy the premises for 3 months from the date of bankruptcy, if it wishes. By the end of the 3 months, whether the Trustee occupied or not, it must either disclaim its interest in the lease or adopt it and assign it to a purchaser.

The opportunity to sell the lease would happen if the rented commercial premises are in a sought after location and the lease has value in it. A lease can have value if it is at a rental rate below the market rent at the date of bankruptcy.

The 2nd draw, in the amount of $1,709,768.40, occurred on December 4, 2018. The 3rd claim against the LOC, in the amount of $582,499.32, was made on April 2, 2019.

The LOC draws covered the losses asserted by the landlord as follows:

  • $207,732.28 being the rent for May 2018;
  • $1,621,160.72 for rent for the months of August 2018 to April 2019, inclusive;
  • $368,479 for the unamortized cost for the landlord allowance as included in the lease, inclusive of interest; and
  • $302,628 for restoring the premises, as allowed for in the lease.

In support of each demand against the LOC, the landlord gave BNS the required certificate verifying the debt of the tenant under the lease. The landlord was the beneficiary under the LOC for the debt of the tenant, for which repayment was demanded from the tenant and not paid.

BNS accepted the landlord’s draw claims under the LOC and paid the complete amount of the LOC to the landlord. BNS never asked the landlord to return the funds paid.

The landlord believed that it was entitled to the funds under the lease drawn up in accordance with the Commercial Tenancies Act Ontario. BNS also believed that the landlord fulfilled its requirements to receive payment under the LOC from BNS.

Commercial Tenancies Act Ontario: The landlord’s proof of claim

The landlord knew how to complete form 31 proof of claim and filed it with the Trustee. The landlord filed for a preferred claim in the amount of $623,196.84. The preferred claim was for 3 months’ accelerated rent: May, June, and July 2018. The landlord’s proof of claim also attached a schedule showing the calculations.

In Ontario, a landlord’s preferred claim for rent in case of a commercial tenant’s bankruptcy is limited: a maximum of 3 months’ pre-bankruptcy arrears as well as for accelerated rent, a 3-month post-bankruptcy claim.

The right to accelerated rent must be stipulated in the lease. Further, the landlord’s entire preferred claim is limited to the value of the bankrupt company’s property on the premises, after the claims of trust claimants or secured creditors.

All these rights are laid out in the Commercial Tenancies Act Ontario.

Commercial Tenancies Act Ontario: The Trustee’s disallowance of the landlord’s proof of claim

The Trustee disallowed the landlord’s proof of claim, stating that the landlord’s preferred claim for three months’ accelerated rent had been paid by the landlord’s draws against the LOC.

The disallowance also stated that:

  • the funds used to pay the landlord from the LOC originated from funds that came from the bankrupt tenant;
  • the LOC was to be reduced prior to the date of bankruptcy; and
  • the landlord did not include proper support for its case for further damages in regard to the tenant’s obligations under the commercial lease.

The Trustee’s position that the LOC should have been reduced in amount is not important for the purpose of this Brandon’s Blog. I won’t spend any time on it other than to tell you that the court did not agree with the Trustee’s position.

commercial tenancies act ontario
commercial tenancies act ontario

Commercial Tenancies Act Ontario: The landlord appeals

The landlord appealed the disallowance to the Registrar in Bankruptcy. The Registrar permitted the landlord’s appeal partly. She held that considering that the landlord had drawn on the LOC for the May 2018 rent, the Trustee appropriately disallowed the preferred claim for the month of May.

However, she further determined that the landlord was correct in its accelerated rent claim for the other two months. The landlord could look for payment from the bankruptcy estate or from the LOC. According to the Registrar, the Trustee therefore incorrectly refused the preferred claim for those other two months.

Commercial Tenancies Act Ontario: The Trustee’s motion to a judge

The Trustee wasn’t finished debating about the landlord’s rights to claim against the entire LOC given the Trustee’s disclaimer of the lease, the Commercial Tenancies Act Ontario and the BIA. The Trustee made a motion to the court to determine what amount from the LOC the landlord was entitled to. The Trustee’s position was that the landlord was not entitled to the full amount of the LOC. Since the security for the LOC was funding from the company, any excess not required by BNS should be paid to the Trustee.

The parties’ positions that they laid out in their respective materials were largely what was already before the Master. The motion judge concluded that the landlord was only entitled to make use of the LOC for the 3 months’ accelerated rent.

The judge’s reasoning was:

  • a disclaimer of the lease by a trustee in bankruptcy is the same as a voluntary abandonment of the lease by the occupant under the Commercial Tenancies Act Ontario with the consent of the landlord. This snuffs out all obligations of the tenant under the commercial lease;
  • he turned down the landlord’s submissions that the independent obligation of BNS to it under the LOC meant that the funds coming from the LOC were not the property of the bankrupt and therefore not payable to the Trustee;
  • that upon the disclaimer of a lease by a Trustee, a bankrupt commercial tenant does not owe any amounts to the landlord. Therefore, the landlord cannot make use of the LOC for any claim other than the 3 months of rent arrears and the 3 months of accelerated rent; and
  • that the obligation of BNS, under the LOC, to make payment to the landlord beneficiary is limited to the amount owing by the commercial tenant under the lease. As he ruled that from the disclaimer the tenant’s only obligation was for the rent arrears and the accelerated rent, therefore, the landlord could not claim any other amounts against the LOC.

Commercial Tenancies Act Ontario: The landlord appeals to the Court of Appeal For Ontario

The question before the appellate court that I want to discuss is, did the judge err in holding that, upon the disclaimer of the lease by the Trustee, the landlord was not qualified to make use of the LOC other than for the amount of its preferred claim?

The decision of the Court of Appeal for Ontario in considering this case and the interplay between the BIA and the Commercial Tenancies Act Ontario clarified exactly what it means when a Trustee issues a disclaimer of lease and what the contractual relationship around the LOC means.

The Trustee argued that when it disclaimed the lease, the landlord was thereupon stopped from making use of the LOC for any amount other than the amount of its preferred claim. The Trustee contended that such a concept of insolvency legislation overrides the autonomy principle for a LOC and therefore limits the lawful amount the landlord could draw.

The Court of Appeal For Ontario made certain findings relating to a disclaimer of lease by a Trustee as follows:

  • The disclaimer under the Commercial Tenancies Act Ontario is for the sole benefit of the bankrupt commercial tenant.
  • While a disclaimer operates to finish the bankrupt tenant’s responsibilities under the lease, the disclaimer cannot be interpreted to be a consensual surrender for all purposes (emphasis added).
  • A Trustee’s disclaimer of a bankrupt tenant’s lease ends the legal rights of the landlord against the bankrupt tenant’s estate relative to the unexpired term of the lease, aside from the three months’ accelerated rent claim under the Commercial Tenancies Act Ontario and the BIA.

Commercial Tenancies Act Ontario: The landlord has a LOC on things

The appellate court recognized that the ability of the landlord to rely upon the LOC for more than just its preferred claim depends on the wording of the lease. In this case, the lease stated that the LOC functions as safety and security for indemnification of the landlord for losses:

“resulting from any termination, surrender, disclaimer or repudiation of this lease … in connection with any insolvency and bankruptcy or otherwise” and that the Landlord’s rights in respect of the LOC were not affected by the disclaimer of the Lease in any bankruptcy proceeding but would “continue with respect to the periods prior thereto and thereafter as if the Lease had not been surrendered, disclaimed, repudiated or terminated.”

Further, one of the terms of the LOC was that it will not be released, discharged or affected by the bankruptcy of the commercial tenant or the disclaimer of the lease.

The appellate court also went on to state that the motion judge’s decision runs counter to a standard principle relevant to LOCs. That is that providing financial institutions, such as BNS, have an independent responsibility to make a settlement to the beneficiary. The LOC is a contract between BNS and the landlord. It is regulated by the principle of the freedom or autonomy of LOCs, not by the BIA or the Commercial Tenancies Act Ontario.

Under the freedom principle, the issuer needs to pay the beneficiary upon appropriate qualification, subject to the minimal exemption for fraud which was not found in this case.

So with a properly worded lease and a properly worded LOC as security, the landlord can call on the LOC for all claims against the bankrupt commercial tenant after a Trustee disclaims its interest in the lease. With these facts, the landlord was successful in being able to claim everything it was owed, up to the limit of the LOC.

Commercial Tenancies Act Ontario summary

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The Ira Smith Trustee Team is absolutely operational and Ira, in addition to Brandon Smith, is readily available for a telephone consultation or video meeting. We hope that you and your family are safe and healthy.

commercial tenancies act ontario
commercial tenancies act ontario
Categories
Brandon Blog Post

ONTARIO COMMERCIAL LEASE AGREEMENT: INSOLVENT COMMERCIAL TENANT

 

Introduction

I reviewed a Court decision out of Alberta that was rendered on April 4, 2019. The case is Royal Bank of Canada v. Parkland Properties Ltd., [2019] A.J. No. 412, from the Alberta Court of Queen’s Bench. In reviewing this case about an insolvent tenant, who later became a bankrupt commercial tenant, the same would hold true in Ontario. I thought it would be helpful to review the principles in this decision, and how it would relate to an Ontario Commercial Lease Agreement.

Background

Unlike Ontario, there is no commercial tenancy act in Alberta. However, there are various other provincial statutes and a Supreme Court of Canada decision, that provides guidance for commercial landlords and tenants in Alberta.

If a commercial lessee breaches a business lease in Alberta, similar to Ontario law, a landlord has various alternatives. For a properly worded commercial tenancy agreement, the main alternatives include distraining on the tenant’s assets located on the leased commercial premises or terminating the commercial tenant’s lease. Suing for any damages, including rent arrears and for the unexpired duration of the lease, may also be part of the landlord’s rights.

Distraint or distress is the seizure of the commercial tenant’s property in order to acquire the repayment of rent arrears and various other amounts owed. Distraint normally includes the seizure of goods belonging to the lessee on the premises by the landlord to market them for the settlement of the amount owing at that point in time under the lease.

In a properly conducted distraint, no Court order is required. The landlord must also be careful when advising the tenant of the distraint, to also notify the lessee that the lease is not being ended. This way, the landlord may recoup further unpaid amounts or other damages in the future. On a practical basis, if the tenant does not bring the lease into good standing and allows the distraint to be completed, the business is probably over anyway.

Under the Alberta Civil Enforcement Regulation, the landlord would hire a bailiff to carry out the distraint and sale of the assets. This is what happened in the Royal Bank of Canada v. Parkland Properties Ltd. case I recently reviewed.

The facts and decision of the case

The facts are pretty simple. The landlord began and completed distraint proceedings against its tenant. At the time of the seizure, the insolvent tenant was $79,586 behind in rent. The landlord’s bailiff completed the sale of the assets. After taking its fee, the bailiff paid over to the landlord the amount of $223,990. The tenant became a bankrupt company after the funds were paid to the landlord.

Royal Bank of Canada (RBC) was a secured creditor of the tenant. At the date of bankruptcy, RBC was owed $498,799. RBC took an action that originally was an action that could be taken by the licensed insolvency trustee (formerly known as a bankruptcy trustee). It did so under section 38 of the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act (Canada) (BIA). The Trustee was either unwilling or unable to launch the action. The action RBC launched was for the repayment of the amount realized by the landlord as a preferential payment under section 95 of the BIA.

The Court ruled partly in favour of RBC. It ordered that the landlord could retain the amount of $79,586. The balance of $144,404 could not be kept by the landlord and had to be paid over to RBC.

Ontario commercial lease agreement: The same decision would be reached in Ontario

I am satisfied that the same decision would be reached in Ontario. As I mentioned above, distraint is not a termination of the lease. Although the practical effect would be to end the tenant’s business, the lease continues and so does the tenant’s obligations to the landlord. The commercial tenant’s rights under its Ontario commercial lease agreement also remain. Distraint is a mutually exclusive remedy from termination of the lease.

The Court determined that Section 95 of the BIA does not apply to set aside distraint proceedings by a landlord under a commercial tenancy agreement in arrears. That section just included payments made by an insolvent party. The Court also stated that Section 70 of the BIA protects the landlord’s distraint because the distraint was fully completed by payment to the landlord.

However, the Court did find that the payment to the landlord was extreme. As you will recall, the distraint is based on the arrears at the time of effecting the distraint. In this case, the amount outstanding at that time was $79,586. However, the amount paid to the landlord, after the costs of distraint, was $223,990. Commercial lease landlord responsibilities include providing proper accounting. Therefore, the Court ordered that the excess over what the landlord was owed, $144,404, had to be paid to the plaintiff, RBC.

If there were no secured creditors and the Trustee launched the application, the result would have been the same. The only difference would be that the excess funds would have to be paid over to the Trustee. The result in Ontario would be the same as in this Alberta case.

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