Title: Sorting Out Whitby Landmark
1Sorting Out Whitby Landmark
2?
Lac La Ronge
Whitby Landmark
Elance Steel
Paul DAoust
Citadel v. Johns Manville
Doe v. Canadian Surety
Thomas Fuller
3?
Lac La Ronge
Whitby Landmark
Elance Steel
Paul DAoust
Citadel v. Johns Manville
Doe v. Canadian Surety
Thomas Fuller
4Doe v. Canadian Surety Co. 1937 S.C.R. 1
- Bonds as a specialty
- One law for all sureties
- An undertaking given by the contractor without
the consent of the surety was a variation of the
contract discharging the surety.
5?
Lac La Ronge
Whitby Landmark
Elance Steel
Paul DAoust
Citadel v. Johns Manville
Doe v. Canadian Surety
Thomas Fuller
6Thomas Fuller Construction Co. (1985) Ltd. v.
Continental Insurance Co., 1973 3 O.R. 202
(H.C.)
- It is not a breach not to report minor delays.
- Notice was necessary, but only when default was
so serious that a declaration of default and a
call upon the bonding company to perform is
required.
7?
Lac La Ronge
Whitby Landmark
Elance Steel
Paul DAoust
Citadel v. Johns Manville
Doe v. Canadian Surety
Thomas Fuller
8Citadel General Assurance Co. v. Johns-Manville
Canada Inc.(1983), 147 D.L.R. (3d) 593 (S.C.C.)
- Compensated v. gratuitous suretyship
- Only a prejudicial non-compliance is a defense
- Even then, only to the extent of the prejudice
9?
Lac La Ronge
Whitby Landmark
Elance Steel
Paul DAoust
Citadel v. Johns Manville
Doe v. Canadian Surety
Thomas Fuller
10Falk Bros. Industries Ltd. v. Elance Steel
Fabricating Co. Ltd.(1989), 62 D.L.R. (4th) 236
(S.C.C.)
- Bonds as a class insurance
- The world post Citadel
- Failure to give notice is less serious than
failure to bring an action - Relief from forfeiture can be granted under
Insurance Act in respect of delayed notices of
claims.
11?
Lac La Ronge
Whitby Landmark
Elance Steel
Paul DAoust
Citadel v. Johns Manville
Doe v. Canadian Surety
Thomas Fuller
12Paul DAoust Construction Ltd. v. Markel
Insurance Company of Canada(2001), 208 D.L.R.
(4th) 225 (S.C.C.)
- Bonds as a specialty again
- To be effective, an original signed bond must be
delivered.
13?
Lac La Ronge
Whitby Landmark
Elance Steel
Paul DAoust
Citadel v. Johns Manville
Doe v. Canadian Surety
Thomas Fuller
14Whitby Landmark Developments Inc. v. Mollenhauer
Construction Ltd. (2002), 4 C.L.R. (3d) 1 (Ont.
S.C.J.)
- Bonds as a contract
- Failure to give notice of default fatal
- Bond extends to cost savings provisions of
contract
15Justice Lamek
- If Zurich intended to restrict the obligations
that it undertook or to eliminate certain of
Mollenhauers contractual obligations from the
scope of the bond, it could easily have done
so. It did not. Instead, Zurich issued a bond
that obliged it, in the event of Mollenhauers
default, to "complete the Contract in accordance
with its terms and conditions". It would be
difficult to formulate a provision that would
more easily embrace all of the obligations of
Mollenhauers under its contract with Landmark.
16Justice Lamek
- If Zurich intended to restrict the obligations
that it undertook or to eliminate certain of
Mollenhauers contractual obligations from the
scope of the bond, it could easily have done
so. It did not. Instead, Zurich issued a bond
that obliged it, in the event of Mollenhauers
default, to "complete the Contract in accordance
with its terms and conditions". It would be
difficult to formulate a provision that would
more easily embrace all of the obligations of
Mollenhauers under its contract with Landmark.
17Justice Lamek
- If Zurich intended to restrict the obligations
that it undertook or to eliminate certain of
Mollenhauers contractual obligations from the
scope of the bond, it could easily have done
so. It did not. Instead, Zurich issued a bond
that obliged it, in the event of Mollenhauers
default, to "complete the Contract in accordance
with its terms and conditions". It would be
difficult to formulate a provision that would
more easily embrace all of the obligations of
Mollenhauers under its contract with Landmark.
18Justice Lamek
- If Zurich intended to restrict the obligations
that it undertook or to eliminate certain of
Mollenhauers contractual obligations from the
scope of the bond, it could easily have done
so. It did not. Instead, Zurich issued a bond
that obliged it, in the event of Mollenhauers
default, to "complete the Contract in accordance
with its terms and conditions". It would be
difficult to formulate a provision that would
more easily embrace all of the obligations of
Mollenhauers under its contract with Landmark.
19Reaction to Whitby Landmark Trial Decision
- J. Steven Tatrallyay
-
- Decision will have a major impact on the surety
industry
- R. Bruce Reynolds
- Decision is much ado about nothing
- Courts statement that the CCDC performance bond
clearly and unambiguous-ly rendered the surety
liable for collateral mone-tary obligations was
just plain wrong.
20Whitby Landmark Developments Inc. v. Mollenhauer
Construction Ltd. (2003), 67 O.R. (3d) 628 (C.A.)
- There is no basis in the language of the bond
or in the circumstances surrounding its
negotiation or completion to suggest that the
cost-sharing provisions of the construction
contract are not included as bonded losses.
21?
Lac La Ronge
Whitby Landmark
Elance Steel
Paul DAoust
Citadel v. Johns Manville
Doe v. Canadian Surety
Thomas Fuller
22Meanwhile, in Saskatchewan
-
- Lac La Ronge Indian Band v. Dallas Contracting
Ltd. (2004), 35 C.L.R. (3d) 236 (Sask. C.A.)
23Facts
- Compensated surety
- CCDC performance bond
- Late completion
- Termination
- Liquidated damages
24Trial Decision (2001), 9 C.L.R. (3d) 25 (Sask.
Q.B.)
-
- Surety was liable with respect to liquidated
damages for delay.
25Trial Judge
- the phrase complete the Contract does not
confine the suretys liability to completing the
work described in the Contract - by the terms of the Contract, the Band may deduct
liquidated damages from the amount otherwise
payable to Dallas under the Contract and,
therefore, may deduct them from the remaining
funds - the definition in the Bond of the term balance
of the Contract price confirms the ability to
deduct liquidated damages from the amount
otherwise payable to Dallas.
26Court of Appeal (Jackson J.A.)(2004), 35 C.L.R.
(3d) 236 (Sask. C.A.)
-
- Surety was not liable with respect to liquidated
damages for delay.
27- Whitby
- In case of default, surety has 3 options
- - remedy default
- - complete contract
- - obtain new bid
- Lac La Ronge
- In case of default, surety has 3 options
- - remedy default
- - complete contract
- - obtain new bids
28- Whitby
- There was no qualification on type of default
referred to - Third option did not limit suretys obligation to
funding the completion of physical construction,
but included other costs and damages.
- Lac La Ronge
- Surety did neither, but the measure of damages
cant be greater than if it had fulfilled either
option. - Suretys obligation cant be greater under option
2 than under option 3, because no surety would
ever use option 2 if it meant greater liability
29- Whitby
- Third option required surety to pay costs of
completion less balance of contract price, which
was defined as total amount payable by obligee to
principal less amount paid by principal to
obligee. - Therefore, amount surety had to pay to complete
was higher than it would have been without cost
sharing agreement.
- Lac La Ronge
- Balance of contract price does not mean damages
award can be deducted from amount payable. - Total amount payable is amount of contract.
- Words complete the contract can more easily be
interpreted as complete the work than as
perform all obligations under the contract.
30?
Lac La Ronge
Whitby Landmark
Elance Steel
Paul DAoust
Citadel v. Johns Manville
Doe v. Canadian Surety
Thomas Fuller
31The End