Skip to content

Duty of honest performance in termination of commercial contracts – the Supreme Court of Canada elaborates in Callow v. Zollinger, 2020 SCC 45

Rob Aske

In late December 2020, the Supreme Court of Canada (“SCC”) issued a key decision elaborating on the duty of honesty in relation to termination of a commercial contract.

This duty was primarily established in the SCC’s 2014 decision in Bhasin v. Hrynew.

The facts of the Callow case are quite simple and involve very typical commercial contracts. The claimant, Callow, provided certain winter and summer maintenance services for various Baycrest condominiums in the Ottawa area. Callow and Baycrest had separate contracts for the winter services (e.g. snowplowing) and the summer services (e.g. gardening). The winter services contract was the main one at issue in the proceedings.

The winter services contract ran from November 1, 2012 to April 30, 2014, and therefore covered two winters of work.

However, the contract provided Baycrest with the right to terminate at any time, for any reason (or without reason) by providing ten days’ notice.

Callow was not in breach of the contract, but Baycrest decided at the end of the first winter, in March 2013, that it would later terminate the winter services contract, though it did not notify Callow of this decision until six months later in September 2013. The decision to delay provision of notice was made by Baycrest deliberately, to ensure that Callow’s summer maintenance services would not be jeopardized, and that certain damage from the preceding winter work would be fixed.

Soon after receiving the notice of termination, Callow sued for damages. He was successful at trial, was overturned by the Ontario Court of Appeal, but again triumphed before the SCC.

The SCC majority found that while Baycrest effectively remained silent over the summer months about its decision to terminate the winter services for 2013-2014, and that the contract imposed no express obligation to disclose its decision other than ten days’ notice, Baycrest had nonetheless deceived Callow through a series of “active communications”.

These communications consisted, firstly, of statements from Baycrest personnel, informal in nature (including by email), suggesting that a termination was unlikely.

Other communications related to certain “freebie” summer gardening work, above and beyond Callow’s summer contractual obligations, which Baycrest accepted, and which Baycrest was aware that Callow was providing with hopes of pleasing Baycrest and maintaining the winter services work. Callow was advised by Baycrest personnel that the Baycrest board members would be informed about the provision of this “freebie” work. But such personnel were also aware that Callow was under a false impression that his services would still be required for the upcoming winter.

As a result of these communications, by mid-summer of 2013 Callow was under the false impression that Baycrest would not be terminating the winter services, even though Baycrest had decided to terminate back in March. The SCC majority stated:

“…Baycrest intentionally withheld information in anticipation of exercising clause 9 [to terminate early], knowing that such silence, when combined with its active communications, had deceived Callow. By failing to correct Mr. Callow’s misapprehension thereafter, Baycrest breached its contractual duty of honest performance.”

The Court ruled that had Baycrest been honest, Callow would have had the opportunity to obtain alternative winter work, which he did not do under the mistaken impression that he would not be terminated. Therefore Callow was awarded the profit he would have earned had he carried out the winter maintenance work which had been dishonestly terminated. This award was much more than merely the ten day notice period under the contract’s termination clause.

The SCC also wrote at length in an attempt to clarify the scope of the duty of honest performance in this situation, and held as follows:

  • The duty should interfere very little with the freedom of contract, but the parties should expect that a contract can be performed without lies or deception;
  • The duty is not a positive obligation to disclose – but is an obligation to refrain from being misleading in exercising a contractual right;
  • A failure to speak out (i.e. silence) may be active dishonesty which would be a breach of contract; and
  • The duty cannot be excluded by contract.

(A lone dissenting SCC judge held that silence cannot be considered dishonest unless there is a positive obligation to speak, and that such an obligation does not arise simply because a party to a contract realizes that the other party is operating under a mistaken belief.)

One of the most immediate questions from this decision is how a commercial party which decides to terminate at a future date, weeks or months away, can address any query from, or potential misunderstanding of, the other party about such termination. The terminating party may have genuine concerns about a deteriorating relationship, including for the balance of any contract term, if the notice of termination is provided too early. But faced with any such query or misunderstanding, the terminating party will face risk if they remain silent or mislead.

While the parties cannot “contract out” of the duty of honesty, parties may nonetheless wish to consider very explicit termination clauses which provide broad discretion, state that decisions to terminate need not be communicated early, and state that no party can rely on any representations of any form, other than the formal notices under the express terms of the contract.


This article is provided for general information only. If you have any questions about the above, please contact a member of our Commercial Transactions/Agreements group.

SHARE

Archive

Search Archive


 
 

Client Update: Jury Duty – Time to Think Twice

June 6, 2013

The integrity of the jury system has become a pressing topic for our courts of late, with articles about jury duty frequently appearing front and centre in the press. The recent message from the Nova…

Read More

Doing Business in Atlantic Canada (Summer 2013)(Canadian Lawyer magazine supplement)

June 2, 2013

IN THIS ISSUE: Cloud computing: House to navigate risky skies by Daniela Bassan and Michelle Chai Growing a startup by Clarence Bennett, Twila Reid and Nicholas Russon Knowing the lay of the land – Aboriginal rights and land claims in Labrador by Colm St. Roch Seviour and Steve Scruton Download…

Read More

Client Update: The Personal Health Information Act (PHIA) is coming…..

May 27, 2013

DOES IT APPLY TO YOU? On June 1, 2013, the Personal Health Information Act (PHIA) comes into force in Nova Scotia.  If you are involved in health care in Nova Scotia, you need to know whether PHIA…

Read More

Atlantic Employers’ Counsel – Spring 2013

May 22, 2013

EDITOR’S COMMENT This edition of Atlantic Employers’ Counsel focuses on key areas of employment standards in Atlantic Canada. Employment standards legislation outlines the rights and obligations of employees and requirements that apply to employers in…

Read More

Client Update: Nova Scotia New tort of cyberbullying

May 17, 2013

NEW TORT OF CYBERBULLYING On May 10, 2013 the Nova Scotia legislature passed the Cyber-safety Act (Bill 61). When this bill comes into force, it will give rise to a new tort of cyberbullying that…

Read More

Client Update: Lender Code of Conduct Prepayment of Consumer Mortgages

May 2, 2013

GOVERNMENT ACTION In the Economic Action Plan 2010, the Harper Government committed to bring greater clarity to how mortgage prepayment penalties were calculated. As part of the commitment, on February 26, 2013 the government released…

Read More

Client Update: Corporate Services – Keeping you up to date

March 7, 2013

STEWART MCKELVEY WELCOMES BACK WANDA DOIRON AS MANAGER, CORPORATE SERVICES – NOVA SCOTIA You might remember Wanda from her time in our Corporate Services group from 2002 to 2008. Since then, she has worked in-house…

Read More

Atlantic Employers’ Counsel – Winter 2013

March 6, 2013

REASONABLE PEOPLE DOING QUESTIONABLE THINGS: CONFLICTS OF INTEREST AND JUST CAUSE Can a unionized employee moonlight in his off hours to earn some extra money by doing the same work he does for his daytime…

Read More

SVILA E-Discovery

March 5, 2013

Stewart McKelvey’s Vision Improving Legal Analysis (SVILA*) is an e-discovery project and litigation management tool. For more information on our e-discovery services, download the SVILA e-discovery document.

Read More

Doing Business in Atlantic Canada (Spring 2013)(Canadian Lawyer magazine supplement)

March 5, 2013

IN THIS ISSUE: A New Brunswick business lawyer’s perspective by Peter Klohn Why Canada’s immigration rules matter to your business by Andrea Baldwin Financing Energy Projects during the Project Lifecycle by Lydia Bugden, Colm St. Roch Seviour and Tauna Staniland Download…

Read More

Search Archive


Scroll To Top