Legal Project Management Plan & Checklist
Ontario oppression remedy application under OBCA s 248 or CBCA s 241: from Notice of Application to buy-out enforcement.
What is the test for an oppression remedy under the Ontario Business Corporations Act?: The court must find that the corporation's conduct was oppressive, unfairly prejudicial to, or unfairly disregarded the interests of a complainant, and that the conduct violated the complainant's reasonable expectations: BCE Inc v 1976 Debentureholders [2008] 3 SCR 560. The reasonable expectations test is objective - the court asks what a reasonable stakeholder in the complainant's position would legitimately expect, considering the corporate structure, the relationship between the parties, and any representations made. Both wrongs must be established: a breach of reasonable expectations AND conduct that is oppressive, unfairly prejudicial, or unfairly disregarded. The OBCA test (s 248) and the CBCA test (s 241) are substantively identical.
What relief can the court grant in an oppression remedy application?: The court has very broad remedial discretion under OBCA s 248(3) and CBCA s 241(3). Common orders include: buy-out of the complainant's shares at fair value; rectification of the corporate records; appointment of a receiver or receiver-manager; winding up of the corporation on a just and equitable basis; restraining orders; amendment of the articles or by-laws; requiring the corporation to produce financial records; and - critically - imposing personal liability on directors or officers for the oppressive conduct. Courts prefer the least intrusive remedy that remedies the wrong, so winding up is generally a last resort.
Defend a director or officer in an Ontario oppression application: challenge standing, assert the business judgment rule, and negotiate a buy-out.
Jurisdiction: Ontario Superior Court of Justice, or the Commercial List (393 University Ave, Toronto) for complex or high-value corporate disputes. Provincial corporations are governed by the Business Corporations Act (Ontario); federally incorporated corporations by the Canada Business Corporations Act.
The Process at a Glance: The complainant's lawyer opens the matter, confirms standing (registered or beneficial shareholder, director, officer, or debenture holder under OBCA s 245), and reviews all corporate records including shareholder agreements and unanimous shareholder agreements. A Notice of Application is prepared under Rules of Civil Procedure Rule 14.05(3)(h), supported by a detailed founding affidavit identifying the oppressive conduct and the reasonable expectations violated. If urgent interim relief is needed (e.g., to prevent dissipation of assets or further oppression), a motion for an interim or interlocutory injunction is brought on short notice. The respondent serves an answering affidavit and the parties may cross-examine on affidavits. The matter is case-conferenced (mandatory on the Commercial List) and then proceeds to an application hearing. If the court grants relief, the most common order in closely-held company disputes is a buy-out order - the parties then require a share valuation, which may itself be contested.
Key Legislation and Case Law: Governed by OBCA, RSO 1990, c B.16, s 248 (oppression remedy for Ontario corporations) and CBCA, RSC 1985, c C-44, s 241 (federal corporations). Complainant standing is defined in OBCA s 245 and CBCA s 238. Key cases: BCE Inc v 1976 Debentureholders [2008] 3 SCR 560 (Supreme Court of Canada - the definitive two-part test: reasonable expectations + oppressive/unfair conduct); Brant Investments Ltd v KeepRite Inc (1991) 3 OR (3d) 289 (CA) (business judgment rule and standard of review for oppression); Waxman v Waxman [2004] OJ No 1765 (CA) (personal liability of directors; broad scope of remedy). Case law is searchable on CanLII.
Further Reading
* Disclaimer: We're nobody's lawyer, because we aren't lawyers. You are, so you know better than to take legal advice from an app. We also aren't accountants or dog trainers - just digital spirit guides taking zero liability for any of this. This site exists to gather the collective knowledge of practitioners like you. Verify everything and submit your feedback on the Oppression Remedy Application - Minority Shareholder matter plan to improve the playbook. THIS IS NOT LEGAL ADVICE, it's a request for input.
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