The Ontario Court of Appeal weighed in on the consequences and remedies of a force majeure. While many cases focus on whether a force majeure event has occurred, here it was not in dispute. In contrast, this case illustrates the wide latitude parties have to create tailored contractual remedies when a force majeure event occurs, including remedies that provide immediate relief to only one party and shift the entirety of the risk to the other party.
In Niagara Falls Shopping Centre Inc. v. LAF Canada Company, a landlord claimed force majeure when COVID-19 government orders closed Ontario gyms1. The tenant sought rent relief for the same period. The Court of Appeal refused, instead enforcing a contractual “pay now, be compensated later” remedy in the lease. The lease’s terms relieved the landlord of its obligation to provide access to the premises during a force majeure event but required the tenant to continue paying rent during the same period. The tenant’s only remedy was the contractual right to an extension of the lease after the force majeure event, for the same period as the shutdowns, rent free.
In this case, there was no dispute that government shutdowns counted as a force majeure event under the lease, relieving the landlord of its obligation to provide access to the premises. The dispute was over whether the tenant would be excused from the obligation to pay rent while the event of force majeure deprived it of use of the property.
The force majeure clause provided:
If either party is delayed or hindered in or prevented from the performance of any act required hereunder because of…restrictive laws…or other reason of a similar or dissimilar nature beyond the reasonable control of the party delayed, financial inability excepted (each, a “Force Majeure Event”), subject to any limitations expressly set forth elsewhere in this Lease, performance of such act shall be excused for the period of delay caused by the Force Majeure Event and the period for the performance of such act shall be extended for an equivalent period (including delays caused by damage and destruction caused by such Force Majeure Event). Delays or failures to perform resulting from lack of funds or which can be cured by the payment of money shall not be Force Majeure Events.
The Court of Appeal found that shutdowns did not excuse the tenant’s obligation to pay rent because the force majeure clause excluded relief for “financial inability.”
The practical consequence of this exclusion is that, except for a force majeure that incapacitates major payment networks (preventing funds from deposited into the landlord’s account), the obligation to pay rent under this lease was virtually guaranteed—even while the tenant was deprived of the use of the property.
The tenant’s remedy was to receive credit for rent paid during the shutdowns, during an equivalent extension to the lease after the shutdowns. This remedy was set out in the contract and was, in fact, one of the outcomes pursued by the tenant in court. The motions judge refused to grant this relief holding that it was “commercially absurd”. The Court of Appeal overturned and held that such an extension was required on the strict language of the force majeure clause.
The decision illustrates the wide latitude parties have to allocate risk for force majeure events in their contracts, including tailored remedies that may provide immediate relief to only one party.
When drafting or reviewing force majeure clauses, counterparties should consider how these clauses allocate risk:
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