Skip to content

Richards Estate sets the limits on actions against LTD insurers

Michelle Chai & Jennifer Taylor

 

UPDATE

 

Richards Estate v Industrial Alliance Insurance and Financial Services Inc, 2020 NSCA 14

 

The Nova Scotia Court of Appeal has recently overturned the decision summarized below, where Justice Smith granted summary judgment to a disability insurer, Industrial Alliance. The Court of Appeal raised an issue that had not come up at the hearing below: whether the correct law had been applied. The parties had argued the summary judgment motion on the basis of Nova Scotia law, including the Nova Scotia Insurance Act and Limitation of Actions Act.

 

However, the insured had lived and worked in Newfoundland and Labrador at the date of his disability, and remained there “throughout his dealings with Industrial Alliance” before he died in 2015.

 

The Court of Appeal held that the motion judge should have considered whether the law of Nova Scotia, or the law of Newfoundland and Labrador, applied. Because this issue was not properly addressed on the motion, the Court allowed the appeal.

 

The Court of Appeal did not specify what should happen next. It remains to be seen whether Industrial Alliance will bring another motion for summary judgment, this time raising the issue of Newfoundland and Labrador law.

 

ORIGINAL SUMMARY (published March 6, 2019)

 

Richards Estate v Industrial Alliance Insurance and Financial Services Inc, 2019 NSSC 3

 

Justice Ann Smith of the Supreme Court of Nova Scotia recently dismissed an action against a disability insurer for being out of time. The case, Richards Estate v Industrial Alliance Insurance and Financial Services, helpfully reviews the interplay between the Insurance Act, the Limitation of Actions Act, and the test for summary judgment.

 

Facts

 

Paul Thomas Richards became unable to work in late 2008 due to fatigue, depression, and other ailments. He received long-term disability (LTD) benefits from the defendant, Industrial Alliance, until 2011, when he was advised by Industrial Alliance that he no longer satisfied the definition of total disability in his group LTD Policy. Mr. Richards appealed the decision to terminate LTD benefits, and his appeal was denied in March 2012.

 

He passed away in September 2015.  On November 15, 2015, Mr. Richards’s two children sued Industrial Alliance, on behalf of the estate and themselves (together, the “Plaintiffs”). The Plaintiffs alleged that Industrial Alliance breached the Policy and acted in bad faith. Industrial Alliance brought a motion for summary judgment on the evidence, arguing that the Plaintiffs’ claim was statute-barred.

 

Top 4 takeaways

 

  1. The limitation period was one year, as found in the Policy and the Insurance Act.

 

The Policy had a limitation period similar to that found in many LTD policies, providing that actions against the insurer “…shall be absolutely barred unless the action or proceeding is commenced within one year (or such longer period as is required under the applicable legislation of the jurisdiction of the action).”

 

Justice Smith confirmed that the “applicable legislation” was the Nova Scotia Insurance Act and the governing provision was section 209. Justice Smith further confirmed the limitation period set out in section 209 was one year (after the furnishing of required evidence) (para 111).

 

Section 209 is found in Part VIII of the Insurance Act,¹ which deals with life insurance. The Plaintiffs argued the Insurance Act did not apply to disability claims, or alternatively that the one-year limitation period in the Insurance Act had the effect of shortening the two-year limitation period in the Limitation of Actions Act (“Limitation Act”)² which the Legislature could not have intended.

 

The Insurance Act expressly includes disability insurance in the definition of “life insurance”, and therefore Justice Smith agreed with Industrial Alliance that section 209 “is applicable to disability insurance claims” (paras 96-99).

 

The limitations clock started to tick on one of two dates in early 2012. The first possibility was January 13, 2012, when Mr. Richards furnished the required evidence. The second possibility was March 12, 2012, the date of the Industrial Alliance letter denying his appeal. According to Justice Smith, the latter “was a clear and unequivocal denial of future benefits.”³

 

Justice Smith did not have to decide the exact date when the clock started ticking. The action was started in November 2015, almost three and a half years after the latest of the two dates, so it was out of time either way (para 100).

 

  1. There was no applicable saving provision in the Limitation of Actions Act – or the Insurance Act.

 

The Plaintiffs relied on several provisions of the new Limitation Act in the hopes of extending the limitation period.

 

First, the Plaintiffs pointed to the transition provision in section 23 of the Limitation Act. Subsection (3) provides that claims discovered before September 1, 2015 (like this one) had to be commenced by the earlier of September 1, 2017 and “the day on which the former limitation period expired or would have expired.”

 

In this case, the reference to the “former limitation period” was not to the former Limitation of Actions Act, but to “whatever source the limitation period might come from”, i.e. the Insurance Act.  Section 6 of the Limitation Act says that, in the case of conflict between the Limitation Act and another statute, the other statute will prevail. That meant section 209 of the Insurance Act and its one-year limitation period would prevail, so the transition provision of the Limitation Act did not assist the Plaintiffs.

 

The Plaintiffs also argued that Mr. Richards lacked capacity to bring his claim in time, relying on section 19 of the Limitation Act (limitation periods in the Limitation Act do not run while a claimant is incapable of bringing a claim because of the “claimant’s physical, mental or psychological condition”).

 

However, the one-year limitation period was not established by the Limitation Act; it came from the Policy and the Insurance Act. For this reason, Justice Smith rejected the Plaintiffs’ capacity argument, following Cameron v Nova Scotia Association of Health Organizations Long Term Disability Plan. In any event, Justice Smith found that the Plaintiffs had not proven incapacity, as their supporting evidence was either inadmissible or irrelevant.

 

The Plaintiffs also sought relief from forfeiture, under section 33 of the Insurance Act. Justice Smith rejected this argument, too, concluding the failure of the Plaintiffs to commence their action within the limitation period constituted non-compliance with the contract, and therefore relief from forfeiture was not available (para 195).⁴

 

  1. A bad faith claim is not necessarily a separate claim with its own limitation period.

 

In May 2018, the Plaintiffs had amended their pleading to add allegations of bad faith against Industrial Alliance (para 176). Justice Smith recognized that “breach of an insurer’s duty of good faith or intentional infliction of mental distress can constitute an independent cause of action” in some cases (para 178).⁵ But that was not the case here: Justice Smith held that the allegations of bad faith and the claim that benefits were wrongly denied to Mr. Richards were “one and the same for the purposes of the limitation analysis” (para 186).

 

  1. There is a streamlined test for summary judgment in limitations cases.

 

Justice Smith blended the general test for summary judgment from Shannex Inc v Dora Construction Ltd with the two-step test from Nova Scotia Home for Coloured Children v Milbury (para 43):

 

(1) Did the defendants establish that there are no genuine issues of fact on the question of whether the plaintiff’s action is statute barred because the limitation period has expired?

 

(2) When the defendant pleads a limitation period and proves the facts supporting the expiry of the time period, the plaintiff has the burden of proving that the time has not expired as a result, for example, of the discoverability rule.

 

In the result, Industrial Alliance established that there were no genuine issues of fact (or mixed fact and law) regarding whether the Plaintiffs’ action was statute-barred, and the Plaintiffs had not met their burden of proving that time had not actually expired (para 196). The limitation period had expired in 2013, and the action brought in 2015 was out of time.

 

Industrial Alliance succeeded on its summary judgment motion, and the Plaintiffs’ claims were dismissed with costs.

 

If you would like to discuss how this case might affect you, please contact a member of our Insurance Group.

 


1 Insurance Act, RSNS 1989, c 231.
2 Limitation of Actions Act, SNS 2014, c 35.
3 For more on limitation periods, see Stewart McKelvey’s client update on “rolling” limitation periods.
4 Curiously, the Court did not consider the argument that section 33 of the Insurance Act was inapplicable in any event, because it is found within Part II of the Insurance Act which expressly does not apply to disability insurance (section 17).
5 Citing the Supreme Court of Canada’s decision in Whiten v Pilot Insurance Co.

SHARE

Archive

Search Archive


 
 

Client Update: Universal interest arbitration proposed for New Brunswick

April 5, 2016

On March 29, 2016, the Province of New Brunswick tabled proposed changes to the Industrial Relations Act and the Public Services Labour Relations Act. If passed, these changes would dramatically alter well-established principles of private sector collective bargaining.…

Read More

Good Faith Fisheries: New case on Crown consultation & regulation of Aboriginal fisheries

March 22, 2016

By Jennifer Taylor Why is this case a big deal? It started with two salmon. Now, after several years of litigation, the Nova Scotia Provincial Court in R v Martin, 2016 NSPC 14 has stayed proceedings against…

Read More

Atlantic Employers’ Counsel – Winter 2016

March 10, 2016

THE EDITORS’ CORNER Michelle Black and Sean Kelly One day, the line between mental and physical disabilities may not be so pronounced, but, for now, distinctions are still drawn between Employee A with, for example, diabetes and…

Read More

Hiring the “Right” Employee

February 24, 2016

By Lisa Gallivan Employees can be your biggest asset, if you hire the right people. This can often be one of the biggest decisions that you make as a business owner or employer. The “right” employee…

Read More

Bye, Bye Canadian P.I.?: What Apple’s fight against the FBI means for the protection of Personal Information in Canada

February 23, 2016

By Burtley Francis and Kathleen Leighton Order Up: Apple, P.I. Recently, the public safety versus personal privacy debate has been brought to main headlines. Apple is facing a court order (available here) requiring the company to assist the FBI in the investigation of…

Read More

Client Update: Outlook for the 2016 Proxy Season

February 12, 2016

In preparing for the 2016 proxy season, you should be aware of some regulatory changes and institutional investor guidance that may impact disclosure to and interactions with your shareholders. This update highlights what is new…

Read More

Left Sharks and Copy Cats: The Super Bowl’s Impact on Protecting a Brand

February 5, 2016

By Burtley Francis and Michael MacIsaac You remember Left Shark… The Super Bowl is a lot of things to a lot of people and is arguably the most anticipated event of the year that is not a holiday…

Read More

The Labour Relations of First Nations’ Fisheries: Who gets to decide?

February 2, 2016

By Jennifer Taylor Summary The Canada Industrial Relations Board recently held that it had no jurisdiction as a federal board to certify a bargaining unit comprised of fisheries employees of the Waycobah First Nation. The decision…

Read More

Can an employer prohibit tattoos and piercings?

January 21, 2016

By Peter McLellan, QC In the 1970s the issue for employers was long hair and sideburns. In the 1980’s it was earrings for men. Today the employer’s concerns are with tattoos and facial piercings. What are…

Read More

Settling for it: Two new NS decisions on settlement agreements and releases

January 15, 2016

By Jennifer Taylor Introduction It sounds simple: Two disputing parties, hoping to resolve their disagreement without drawn-out court proceedings, will mutually agree to a settlement on clear terms; release each other from all claims; and move…

Read More

Search Archive


Scroll To Top