AN OVERVIEW OF EXTRAORDINARY REMEDIES

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EXTRAORDINARY REMEDIES IN CIVIL LITIGATION

2 EXTRAORDINARY REMEDIES Extraordinary remedies available in civil proceedings include: Prohibitive, Mandatory and Preventative Injunctions Preservation of and Recovery of Property orders Pre-judgment garnishment orders Pending litigation orders

THE PURPOSE OF EXTRAORDINARY REMEDIES 3 POTENTIAL FOR QUICK, COST-EFFECTIVE RESOLUTION OF DISPUTES PRESERVATION AND PROTECTION OF PROPERTY, RIGHTS AND EVIDENCE PENDING LITIGATION

PRINCIPLES COMMON TO OBTAINING MANY EXTRAORDINARY REMEDIES 4 Demonstrating an underlying cause of action on a standard commensurate to the nature of the relief sought Providing full and frank disclosure of all material facts Demonstrating the necessity or desirability of obtaining urgent or immediate relief Satisfying technical requirements Demonstrating why pre-judgment relief should be awarded in the face of competing rights and interests Coming to Court in good faith and with clean hands Having a sympathetic judge

5 RISK, BENEFIT, COST RISK OF LOSING PRACTICAL EFFECTIVENESS OF CHOSEN REMEDY COST DELAY IN PURSUING MAIN ACTION RISK OF DIMINISHMENT OF PROFESSIONAL REPUTATION IF THERE IS A FAILURE TO BE FORTHRIGHT WITH THE COURT DEFLATION OF CLIENT S MORALE/INFLATION OF OPPONENT S MORALE ( INFLATEGATE )

6 SOURCES OF JURISDICTION Court of Queen s Bench Act: ss. 55-57 (Injunctions), s. 58 (Pending Litigation Orders), s. 59 (Recovery of Personal Property), ss. 60 and 62 (Pre-Judgment Attachment), ss. 61 and 62 (Pre- Judgment Garnishment) QB Rules: R. 40 (Injunctions), R. 42 (Pending Litigation Orders, Rule 44 (Interim Recovery of Personal Property), Rule 45 (Interim Preservation of Property, Rule 46 (Pre-Judgment Attachment and Garnishment) Equity, Common Law and Inherent Jurisdiction of the Court: Anton Piller and Mareva

7 INJUNCTIONS Types of injunctions include: Mareva (freezing order) Anton Piller (private search warrant) Quia timet (preventing imminent harm) The Courts will typically apply the tri-partite test set out in RJR MacDonald Inc. v. Canada (Attorney General) to determine whether or not an injunction should be granted prior to trial: Is there a serious question to be tried? Will the plaintiff suffer irreparable harm? Does the balance of convenience favour the granting of the injunctive relief? A more stringent test is applied to more intrusive injunctions, such as the Mareva, Anton Piller and quia timet.

8 FLEXIBILITY OF THE TRI-PARTITE TEST The three criteria mentioned in RJR - MacDonald Inc. (serious issue to be tried; irreparable harm to the moving party if injunction is not granted; and the balance of convenience) are not separate hurdles for an applicant for an injunction; rather, they are interrelated considerations. Depending on the circumstances, strength in one of the factors can compensate for weakness in another Hudson Bay Mining & Smelting Co., Limited v. Dumas et al., 2014 MBCA 6 at para. 82

MANDATORY V. PROHIBITORY INJUNCTIONS 9 When the injunctive relief sought requires the target to carry out a positive act, the first step of the tri-partite test is modified and the plaintiff must establish a strong prima facie case. In the context of claims for mandatory injunctions, a strong prima facie case has been interpreted to mean that the plaintiff must satisfy the court that he or she is clearly right and is almost certain to be successful at trial. Given the very intrusive nature of a mandatory injunction, there must be a high assurance that the injunction would be rightly granted. (Saba v. Interlake Eastern Regional Health Authority, 2016 MBQB 78 at para. 80)

10 IRREPARABLE HARM "Irreparable" refers to the nature of the harm suffered rather than its magnitude. It is harm which either cannot be quantified in monetary terms or which cannot be cured, usually because one party cannot collect damages from the other. (RJR - MacDonald Inc. v. Canada (Attorney General), [1994] 1 SCR 311 at 341) Evidence of irreparable harm must be clear and not speculative (Oberg et al. v. Canada (Attorney General), 2012 MBQB 64 at para. 36).

11 DAMAGES UNDERTAKING Rule 40.03 requires parties seeking injunctive relief to provide an undertaking as to damages. Parties giving undertakings may also be required to tender evidence concerning their ability to satisfy the undertaking. If the injunction is set aside, the party that obtained it may be required to compensate their opponent for any damages suffered as a result of the injunction. The giving of the undertaking exposes the party to contempt proceedings if they fail to pay the damages award. The Court has the discretion to waive the undertaking but that is typically done only when the moving party is impecunious.

Ex Parte MOTIONS AND FULL AND FRANK DISCLOSURE 12 Rule 37.06 permits motions to be brought without notice (ex parte). However, Rule 39.01(6) states: Where a motion or application is made without notice, the moving party or applicant shall make full and fair disclosure of all material facts, and failure to do so is in itself sufficient ground for setting aside any order obtained on the motion or application.

Ex Parte MOTIONS AND FULL AND FRANK DISCLOSURE 13 Applying for an order without notice places upon an applicant a heavy onus for full, frank and complete disclosure of all material facts (St. Vital School Division No. 6 v. Trnka, 2001 MBCA 164 at para. 2) an ex parte injunction must be dissolved promptly once it appears that material facts were not presented to the Judge who granted the ex parte injunction (Griffin Steel Foundries Ltd. v. Canadian Association of Industrial, Mechanical and Allied Workers (1977), 80 D.L.R. (3d) 634 at 640 (Man. C.A.).

14 MAREVA INJUNCTIONS PURPOSE To prevent the frustration of judgment enforcement by the dissipation or concealment of assets Most often brought in cases involving allegations of fraud Generally require third party compliance to be effective LEGAL REQUIREMENTS A strong prima facie case A serious risk of removal or disposition of assets An intention to frustrate the plaintiff s potential judgment (although the absence of such an intention is not fatal where there is a very compelling and strong claim Irreparable harm Favourable balance of convenience

15 MAREVA INJUNCTIONS PROCESS Motion brought without notice, ex parte Full and frank disclosure of all material facts Order needs to specify what assets are frozen and provide as much detail as possible to ensure third party compliance AUTHORITIES Clark et al. v. Nucare PLC, 2006 MBCA 101 Isofoton S.A. v. Toronto Dominion Bank (2007), 85 O.R. (3d) 780 (Ont. S.C.J.) Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce v. Credit Valley Institute of Business and Technology, 2003 CanLII 12916 (Ont. S.C.J.) Order should provide for disclosure of assets and ability to obtain information from third parties such as banks Order may contain provisions for reasonable living and legal expenses Order should be served widely and quickly

16 ANTON PILLER ORDERS PURPOSE Prevent the destruction of evidence by an unscrupulous opposing party LEGAL REQUIREMENTS Strong prima facie case Serious damage to the plaintiff as a result of the defendant s alleged misconduct, potential or actual Convincing evidence that the defendant has incriminating documents or things A real possibility that the defendant may destroy such material before the discovery process

17 ANTON PILLER ORDERS PROCESS Similar to a criminal search warrant and sometimes known as a civil search warrant Motion brought without notice, ex parte Full and frank disclosure of all material facts AUTHORITIES Celanese Canada Inc. v. Murray Demolition Corp. [2006] 2 S.C.R. 189 British Columbia (Attorney General) v. Malik, 2011 SCC 18 Security posted Order needs to specify materials sought and provide safeguards against disclosure of privileged information Search supervised by independent, court appointed solicitor Restraint against over-zealous execution of order

18 QUIA TIMET INJUNCTIONS PURPOSE To prevent imminent harm that has not yet occurred LEGAL REQUIREMENTS High degree of probability that the harm will in fact occur Strong probability almost amounting to moral certainty or a strong prima facie case Irreparable harm Favourable balance of convenience AUTHORITIES Operation Dismantle v. The Queen, [1985] 1 S.C.R. 441

19 REPLEVIN PURPOSE To recover possession of personal property on an interim basis pending trial LEGAL REQUIREMENTS Substantial grounds or high degree of assurance the plaintiff will succeed at trial Right of ownership or lawful possession Unlawful taking or detention Payment of security

20 REPLEVIN PROCESS Affidavit describing nature of property, right to ownership or possession and circumstances of unlawful taking or detention Security in the amount of twice the value often required Failure to comply may give plaintiff right to obtain possession of other property of the defendant of an equivalent value AUTHORITIES Section 59 of The Court of Queen s Bench Act Rule 44 of the Queen s Bench Rules Manitoba Agricultural Credit Corp. v. Heaman (1990), 70 D.L.R. (4th) 518 (Man. C.A.) Clark Door of Canada Ltd. v. Inline Fibreglass Ltd, (1996) 45 C.P.C (3d) 244 (Ont. Gen. Div.)

21 PRE-JUDGMENT GARNISHMENT PURPOSE Securing collection of a claim for the payment of a debt or specified ( liquidated ) demand LEGAL REQUIREMENTS Good cause of action for payment of a debt or liquidated demand Amount of claim must be known and factor in just credits, set-offs and counterclaims Identification of object of garnishment Evidence that the object of garnishment is or will become indebted to the defendant Particulars of the debts as are known to the plaintiff

22 PRE-JUDGMENT GARNISHMENT PROCESS (Usually) without notice ex parte motion Full and frank disclosure of all material facts Security is sometimes required AUTHORITIES QB Act ss. 61 and 62 Rule 46 DVJ Inc. v. Mercor Management Inc., 2011 MBQB 239 (Master) S.E.G. Engineering Inc. v. Garden Hill First Nation, 2010 MBQB 160

23 PRE-JUDGMENT ATTACHMENT PURPOSE Preserve and secure property of the defendant pending litigation LEGAL REQUIREMENTS Good cause of action in which the payment of money is claimed One of the following characteristics of the defendant: Residence outside of Manitoba (if an individual) Corporate registration outside of Manitoba (if a corporation) Is about to leave or has left Manitoba with the intent to Change residence, Defraud a creditor, or Avoid service of a document Is about to permanently remove or has permanently removed property out of Manitoba Has concealed, removed, assigned, transferred, conveyed, converted or otherwise disposed of property with an intent to delay, defeat or defraud a creditor or is about to do so

24 PRE-JUDGMENT ATTACHMENT PROCESS (Usually) without notice ex parte motion Full and Frank disclosure of all material facts Security Enforced by Sheriff where object is personal property AUTHORITIES QB Act, ss. 60 and 62 Executions Act, ss. 5(1), 8-9.1 Real Property Act, s. 75(7) Rules 46.01-46.13 Clark v. Nucare PLC, 2006 MBCA 101

25 PENDING LITIGATION ORDER PURPOSE Provides notice to third parties of an interest in land and constitutes a lien and charge against land LEGAL REQUIREMENTS Triable issue as to whether the plaintiff has a reasonable claim to an interest in land

26 PENDING LITIGATION ORDER PROCESS Provides notice to third parties of an interest in land and constitutes a lien and charge against land AUTHORITIES QB Act, s. 58 Rule 42 Mellco Developments v. Portage la Prairie (City), 2002 MBCA 125 Elgin Enterprises Inc. (Receiver of) v. Sopko, 1991 CarswellMan 220

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