The Ontario Court of Appeal (ONCA) in Maurice v. Alles (2016) found section 4 of the Limitations Act to apply to oppression claims under the Ontario Business Corporations Act (OBCA). Accordingly, claimants must bring their oppression claims within two years of the alleged oppressive conduct, subject to discoverability. In the case of multiple oppressive acts […]
Tag Archives: Limitation period
Adding a Defendant & “Reasonable Discoverability”
In the course of a litigation file, misapprehensions sometimes occur. When there is confusion as to the identity of the proper defendant, sometimes the need to add a new party defendant to the action arises. Depending on how far into an action the new defendant is discovered, the statutory limitation period may help to provide […]
Rolling Limitation Periods in Contract Litigation
Introduction The usual rule is that once an event occurs which triggers a possible legal action, the limitation period in which to do so commences and runs from that occurrence. A rolling limitation period is one that resets as a result of a recurring obligation by the defendant. The issue is not whether the plaintiff […]
A Set-Off in Litigation: A Shield or a Sword
In litigation, a set-off is, most simply, a credit sought by the defendant to be applied against a plaintiff’s claim. Essentially, it is an amount that the defendant claims the plaintiff owes him/her which should be subtracted from any damages claimed by the plaintiff. In Canadian law, there are two types of set-offs: legal and […]