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CITATION: Combined Air Mechanical Services Inc. v.
Flesch, 2010 ONCA 633
DATE: 20100930
DOCKET: M39163 (C51986)
Laskin J.A. (In Chambers)
BETWEEN
Combined Air Mechanical Services Inc., Dravo Manufacturing Inc. and
Combined Air
Mechanical Services
Plaintiffs (Appellants/Responding Parties)
and
William Flesch, WJF Investments Inc., Service Sheet Metal Inc.
and James Searle
Defendants (Respondents/Moving Parties)
Daniel Chitiz and Alastair McNish, for the moving parties
J. Gardner Hodder, for the responding parties
Heard: September 28, 2010
On appeal from the judgment of Justice Edward Belobaba of the Superior Court of Justice, dated April 8, 2010, and on a motion for security for costs.
Laskin J.A. (In Chambers):
A. The Motion
[1] The defendants, James Searle and his company Service Sheet Metal
Inc. (the Searle respondents) move for security for the costs of an
appeal brought by the plaintiffs (now appellants).
[2] The Searle respondents and the defendant William Flesch and his
company WJF Investments Inc. brought summary judgment motions to
dismiss the appellants’ action against them. Belobaba J. granted
their motions. The appellants have appealed his orders. The Searle
respondents seek an order that the appellants be required to post
security for the costs awarded in their favour by Belobaba J. on the
summary judgment motion, $20,000, together with $6,420 for the costs
of the appeal.
[3] I will briefly set out the background that gives rise to this
motion. In 2003, Searle and Flesch formed a partnership to sell and
service heating, ventilation and air conditioning systems in the
commercial and industrial market. In 2006, they sold their interests
to the appellants under an acquisition agreement. The agreement
contained restrictive covenants and an indemnification clause. Under
the indemnification clause, if Flesch and his company breach the
restrictive covenants or otherwise wrong the appellants and are
required to pay damages, the Searle respondents are required to pay
one third of the damages awarded.
[4] The appellants brought this action claiming that both Flesch and Searle breached the restrictive covenants in the acquisition agreement and committed other wrongs. However, on the summary judgment motions, the appellants acknowledged that they had no direct case against the Searle respondents. The Searle respondents remained in the action only because of their potential liability under the indemnification clause.
[5] On the motion before me, counsel for the appellants reiterated
that his clients have no claim against the Searle respondents apart
from their obligation under the indemnification clause. The
appellants still seek to hold Flesch liable for damages and to
obtain one third of those damages from the Searle respondents.
[6] Under rule 61.06 of the Rules of Civil Procedure, a judge of
this court has jurisdiction to order security for the costs of an
appeal (including costs of the proceeding) in three categories of
cases:
• Where it appears there is good reason to believe that the appeal is frivolous and vexatious and that the appellant has insufficient assets in Ontario to pay the costs of the appeal;
• Where it appears that an order for security for costs could be made against the appellant under rule 56.01;and
• Where it appears that for other good reasons security for costs should be ordered.
[7] The Searle respondents cannot rely on either of the first two categories. Although they question the strength of the appeal, the Searle respondents do not assert that it appears frivolous. Moreover, they acknowledge that the appellants are not impecunious. They also acknowledge that they are not entitled to an order for security for costs under rule 56.01. They rest their motion on the residual third category, “for other good reason”.
[8] What constitutes “other good reason”? The court does not have a
closed list of cases in which security for costs has been ordered
under the residual category. The list of reasons justifying security
under the residual category is open ended. However, the “other good
reason” must be related to the purpose for ordering security: that a
respondent is entitled to a measure of protection for costs incurred
and to be incurred in the proceeding, which is now on appeal. And,
the “other good reason” should be a fairly compelling reason, as the
respondent cannot meet the requirements of either of the first two
categories. Security for costs awards under the residual category
are not to be made routinely. I now turn to the Searle respondents’
specific requests.
(a) Security for costs of the appeal
[9] The Searle respondents’ request for security for the
costs of the appeal has no merit. Searle and his company are
properly respondents on the appeal because of their
potential liability under the indemnification clause. They
intend to participate in the appeal, as might be expected,
by supporting the position of Flesch. There is no “good
reason” to order the appellants to post security for the
costs of the appeal.
(b) Security for the costs of the motion before Belobaba J.
[10] The Searle respondents’ request that the appellants
post security for the $20,000 in costs ordered by Belobaba
J. is not as straightforward. The appellants made two
separate claims against the Searle respondents: a claim for
damages for breach of the restrictive covenants and for
other wrongdoing; and, a claim for indemnification should
Flesch be found liable for damages. In their appeal, the
appellants maintain the latter claim, but not the former.
[11] The Searle respondents say that most, if not all, of the
$20,000 costs award pertains to the appellants’ claim for breach of
the restrictive covenants and other wrongdoing, which the appellants
have now abandoned. Therefore, the Searle respondents argue that it
would be just to order the appellants to post that amount as
security.
[12] The argument has some attractiveness, but I reject it. First,
as I have said, the Searle respondents are properly parties to the
appeal both from their perspective and the perspective of the
appellants because of their potential liability under the
indemnification clause. Thus, at bottom, the Searle respondents seek
to have the appellants make an advance payment into court in the
amount of the motion judge’s costs award before the appeal is heard,
even though the notice of appeal automatically stays payment of that
costs award. I see no compelling reason for requiring the appellants
to do so. If the costs award stands after the appeal is decided,
there is no suggestion that at that time the Searle respondents will
be unable to collect those costs from the appellants.
[13] Second, the $20,000 costs award is not wholly attributable to
the abandoned claim against the Searle respondents. The motion judge
commented in his endorsement on costs (at para. 12) that the Searle
respondents’ position on the summary judgment motion was to “follow
on” and support the Flesch defendants. From his comments, I take it
that the costs award in favour of the Searle respondents reflects
both time taken to defend the allegations against them and time
taken to support Flesch. Yet there is no breakdown between the two.
[14] Third, if the appellants succeed on their appeal, they may be
entitled to have the $20,000 costs award reduced and even offset by
a costs award in their favour from this court.
[15] For these reasons, I would dismiss the Searle respondents’
motion for security for costs. The appellants are entitled to their
costs of this motion in the amount of $3,500, inclusive of
disbursements and applicable taxes.