Law Times

April 23, 2018

The premier weekly newspaper for the legal profession in Ontario

Issue link: https://digital.lawtimesnews.com/i/971838

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 9 of 19

Page 10 April 23, 2018 • lAw Times www.lawtimesnews.com 'Courts have struggled with deference and appropriate intervention' Battle over ruling may be headed to Supreme Court BY SHANNON KARI For Law Times T he scope of a review- ing court's authority to overturn an adminis- trative tribunal that it finds to have erred in its factual conclusions could be headed to the Supreme Court of Canada. Two of the defendants in a high-profile insider trading prosecution by the Ontario Se- curities Commission are seek- ing leave to appeal a decision earlier this year by the Court of Appeal. The decision in Finkelstein v. Ontario Securities Com- mission upheld the finding that Howard Miller breached the insider trading provisions of the Securities Act. The Court of Appeal also reversed a decision of the Di- visional Court and upheld the original decision by an OSC panel that Francis Cheng had breached the Securities Act. The Court of Appeal deci- sion, written by Justice David Brown with justices Paul Rou- leau and Janet Simmons, found that the Divisional Court had improperly engaged in an "in- tense parsing" of the OSC pan- el's ruling as it related to Cheng. "It over-stepped the proper bounds of appellate review," wrote Brown. "The function of a review- ing court, such as the Divisional Court, is to determine whether the tribunal's decision contains an analysis that moves from the evidence before it to the conclu- sion that it reached, not whether the decision is the one the review- ing court would have reached," the Court of Appeal stated. While the standard of defer- ence on factual findings of an administrative tribunal is clear, the application of this standard can be difficult to interpret, suggests Andrew Matheson, a litigation partner at McCarthy Tetrault LLP in Toronto. "Courts have struggled with deference and appropriate in- tervention," says Matheson, who specializes in securities litigation and white collar defence. "Senior members of the bench [on the Divisional Court panel] said all the right things about deference and yet the Court of Appeal came to a different con- clusion. This is a good example of how hard that line is hard to draw." In fact, in the Divisional Court ruling written by Justice Ian Nordheimer (who has since been elevated to the Court of Appeal), it stresses what a re- viewing court is not permitted to do. "Appellate review does not require a minute examination of each piece of evidence or of each witness," wrote Nordheimer, with justices Frank Marrocco and Julie Thorburn concur- ring. "Reasons are seldom per- fect. The real question is whether any such errors are fundamental to the reasonableness of the con- clusion reached," the Divisional Court stated. The OSC panel in its decision about Cheng made a number of factual errors related to the evi- dence, concluded the Divisional Court. "The cumulative effect of these errors renders the Panel's conclusion regarding Cheng both an unsafe, and an unrea- sonable, one." According to the Court of Appeal, however, it was the Di- visional Court that made errors. "There is a 'standing tempta- tion' for a court conducting a reasonableness review to place itself in the position of the deci- sion-maker of first instance and compare the decision it would have reached with that actually made at first instance. A review of the panel's reasons and the record before it discloses the Divisional Court succumbed to this temptation," the Court of Appeal stated. Stephen Cavanagh, an Ot- tawa lawyer, says the conf licting interpretations on how to apply the standard of deference also highlight the difficulty in suc- cessfully appealing a decision of an administrative tribunal. "Figuring out what is reason- able is the challenge," says Cava- nagh, who heads Cavanagh LLP and who specializes in profes- sional liability. "Reasonableness is a pretty low standard," he says. "At the appellate level, it is challenging. Your focus is not that they got it wrong. You have to show that their conclusion was not even available to them," Cavanagh says. The Divisional Court deci- sion was significant in the Securi- ties Act context because it was the first time an OSC panel decision "on the merits" had been over- turned on appeal, notes Bruce O'Toole, a partner at Crawley MacKewn Brush LLP in Toronto. "To see it get overturned by the Court of Appeal was upset- ting. How can this tribunal be correct 100 per cent of the time?," asks O'Toole, who focuses on securities defence litigation. He was not involved in this case. The amount of deference shown to the OSC by review- ing courts has "been very large," notes O'Toole. "A finding of in- sider trading by an OSC panel can have massive professional consequences. But they only have to be reasonable; they do not have to be right," he says. The impact of the Court of Appeal decision in this case is that a reviewing court should not be "digging down into the infer- ences that need to be drawn" for there to be a finding of insider trading, O'Toole suggests. In defending Securities Act prosecutions, he adds that it is now clear that, in nearly every case, the client will have to tes- tify before the OSC panel for there to be any chance of success in an appeal. "You need to lead strong evi- dence to counter the commis- sion's evidence. Get your client's side of the story out there and make the panel to deal with it in its reasons. Otherwise, your client's compelled interview is the only thing going in," says O'Toole. Lawyers for Miller and Cheng declined comment as their leave application to the Su- preme Court is pending. LT FOCUS Bruce O'Toole says the amount of defer- ence shown to the OSC by reviewing courts has 'been very large.' In-class and online programs recognized by Law Societies Executive Education to Navigate the Canadian Legal Landscape Visit Lexpert.ca to find out more Available risk-free for 30 days Online: store.thomsonreuters.ca Call Toll-Free: 1-800-387-5164 | In Toronto: 416-609-3800 © 2018 Thomson Reuters Canada Limited 00250IZ-A92149-CM Keep pace with the most current terminology used in the e-commerce and IT industries with this comprehensive glossary of legal and technical definitions. One of Canada's foremost authorities on IT, online and copyright law, author Barry B. Sookman draws definitions from Canadian, U.S., U.K., and European cases, statutes, and regulations. His concise, comprehensive dictionary arms you with the language you need to: • Understand your clients • Analyze regulations, statutes, and case law as they apply across global jurisdictions • Conduct litigation or render opinions • Draft agreements — both national and international New in this edition This year's edition encompasses the latest digital terminology, with added definitions for terms such as BitTorrent Protocol, cloud services, Domain Name System server, IP Address blocking, swarm, and software as a service. Where necessary, multiple definitions are provided for clarity across global jurisdictions. New Edition Computer, Internet and Electronic Commerce Terms: Judicial, Legislative and Technical Definitions 2017 Barry B. Sookman Keep pace with evolving trends in global e-commerce and IP law Order # L7798-8606-65203 $147 Softcover approx. 700 pages March 2018 978-0-7798-8606-7 Annual volumes supplied on standing order subscription Multiple copy discounts available Shipping and handling are extra. Price(s) subject to change without notice and subject to applicable taxes.

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of Law Times - April 23, 2018