Species at risk and an adjustment clause

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Case considered: Matichuk v Quattro Holdings Ltd, 2013 ABQB 164.

The case of Matichuk v Quattro Holdings Ltd involves a contractual dispute over the sale of a parcel of agricultural land in St. Albert. The parties entered into a purchase and sale agreement in June 2012. The facts set out by Mr. Justice G.A. Verville suggest the Vendor was keen to sell and the Purchaser was keen to purchase in order to develop the land (I presume residential). Time was of the essence. The closing date was set for early October 2012. But the deal began to go sideways just a couple weeks before closing. The Purchaser sought an adjustment (reduction) on the purchase price to account for the facts that there are five wetlands on the property, some which may be Crown owned under section 3 of the Public Lands Act, RSA 2000, c P-30, and that a bird species listed as “special concern” under the Species at Risk Act, SC 2002, c 29 – was known to nest on the lands. The Vendor was not agreeable, and insisted on closing for the full purchase price. The parties filed counter claims and Mr. Justice G.A. Verville heard arguments in late February at the Court of Queen’s Bench. Justice Verville decided in favour of the Vendor, ruling the environment adjustments provision in the contract being relied upon by the Purchaser was so vague as to be meaningless and thus the Purchaser could not rely on it. Accordingly, Justice Verville found that the Purchaser had repudiated the contract by refusing to close the deal.

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The interaction of the offset well and default clauses of an oil and gas lease

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Case commented on: 1301905 Alberta Ltd v Sword Energy Inc, 2013 ABQB 113.

In this case the Court granted summary judgement for breach of the offset well obligation in an oil and gas lease. Assessment of damages was referred to a referee. Continue reading

A Rather Quick Response to a Rather Typical Vexatious Litigant

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Case commented on: Onischuk v Alberta, 2013 ABQB 89.

The prominent September 2012 decision of Court of Queen’s Bench Associate Chief Justice John D. Rooke in Meads v Meads, 2012 ABQB 571, established a continuum of litigants, ranging from commonly encountered self-represented litigants, to infrequently encountered and almost always self-represented vexatious litigants, through to the highly unusual organized pseudolegal commercial argument (OPCA) litigant who is usually self-represented. Justice Rooke’s decision in Onischuk v Alberta concerns a litigant who appears to fit in the middle of that continuum, a rather typical vexatious litigant, although perhaps found to be so more quickly than has been the usual case. It is those two matters — typicality and velocity — that I focus on in this post.

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Supreme Court Renders Leave to Appeal Decisions in Several Alberta Cases

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Cases considered: R v Mack, 2012 ABCA 42, leave to appeal granted, April 11, 2013 (SCC); Métis Nation of Alberta Region 1 v Joint Review Panel, 2012 ABCA 352, leave to appeal dismissed April 11, 2013 (SCC); Fitzpatrick v Alberta College of Physical Therapists, 2012 ABCA 207, leave to appeal dismissed April 11, 2013 (SCC)

On April 11, 2013 the Supreme Court of Canada handed down leave to appeal decisions in three cases from Alberta.

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When Does the Purchaser of an Interest in a Natural Gas Processing Plant also Purchase an Interest in the Sulphur Block Associated with the Plant? Answer: Only when the Agreement (or perhaps ‘the Elephant in the Room’) says so!

PDF version: When does the purchaser of an interest in a natural gas processing plant also purchase an interest in the sulphur block associated with the plant? Answer: only when the agreement (or perhaps ‘the elephant in the room’) says so!

Case commented on: Talisman Energy Inc v Esprit Exploration Ltd, 2013 ABQB 132

Talisman purchased Canadian 88’s interest in the East Crossfield Conditioning Plant in 2000. Did it also purchase the sulphur block and the liabilities associated with ownership of the block? In this case, and after undertaking an extensive and detailed contractual paper trail, Justice Sal LoVecchio concluded that the answer was no. The ‘elephant in the room’ was C88’s draft purchase and sale agreement (PSA) (which Talisman elected not to use) which, had it been executed, would have dictated the opposite result.

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