Ground Breaking News for Employers: On September 4, 2013, the Court of Appeal for Ontario held that, in appropriate cases, courts can essentially fine a company into bankruptcy for a Criminal Code conviction. The Court of Appeal released its decision in the sentence appeal in R. v. Metron Construction Corporation (“Metron”) as a result of tragic circumstances.
What circumstances brought about this ground breaking decision? In September 2009 there was a tragic worksite accident that left 4 workers dead and one who survived with serious injuries. Metron was restoring concrete balconies on 2 high-rise buildings in Toronto. They had arranged for a number of swing stages for the project; however 2 of the swing stages from an Ottawa-based supplier did not have any markings, serial numbers, identifiers or labels describing maximum capacity, as required by law and industry practice. They were delivered without manuals, instructions or design drawings and, contrary to legal requirements, were not accompanied by a written report from a professional engineer stating that the swing stage had been erected in accordance with design drawings. There were 2 lifelines for the swing stage to which workers could connect their fall harness. The normal practice was that only 2 workers would be on the swing stage at any one time. On December 24, 2009, 6 workers were on a swing stage at a height of approximately 13 storeys. The swing stage collapsed and 4 workers were killed, 1 survived with serious injuries and 1 who was actually connected to a fall arrest system was not injured.
After an investigation by the Ministry of Labour and the police it was determined that three of the four deceased, including the site supervisor, had recently consumed marijuana. It was also determined that the swing stage collapsed because its design was defective and it was unable to tolerate the combined weight of six men and their equipment. Many charges were laid by The Ministry of Labour against multiple parties under the Ontario Occupational Health and Safety Act (“OHSA”). After its own investigation, the Toronto Police Service also laid numerous criminal charges.
Employers Beware!
- It appears possible that the criminally negligent behaviour of a single, low-level official could lead to a sentence that sends a company into bankruptcy, notwithstanding the absence of systemic conduct or the involvement of highly placed officials.
- There is no due diligence defence to a criminal negligence charge and the corporate level at which the criminally negligent behaviour occurred is irrelevant and cannot diminish corporate culpability.
- A corporation cannot diminish its culpability based on the hierarchical position of the criminally negligent individual(s) within the organization.
- Criminal negligence is a different and more serious offence than a breach of health and safety legislation and is expected to result in more severe sentences.
If your small company, entrepreneurial corporation, or a multi-faceted complex organization has found itself in financial difficulty for any reason, Contact Ira Smith Trustee & Receiver Inc. immediately. Our practitioners are available seven days a week do deal with your urgent needs. Starting Over, Starting Now we’ll put an immediate plan in place and start the process for dealing with the longer-term situation.