Rent Increase - Defective Notice (LTB): Difference between revisions

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<ref name="Price">Price v. Turnbull's Grove Inc., 2007 ONCA 408 (CanLII), <http://canlii.ca/t/1rpw5>, retrieved on 2020-06-10</ref>
<ref name="Price">Price v. Turnbull's Grove Inc., 2007 ONCA 408 (CanLII), <http://canlii.ca/t/1rpw5>, retrieved on 2020-06-10</ref>
==Williams v 1175326 Ontario Ltd., 2016 ONSC 7781 (CanLII)<ref name="Williams"/>==
<b><u>[6] In late 2015, the respondent, along with other tenants, filed an application for a rebate alleging that the landlord had been charging unlawful rent since at least December 31, 2012</b></u>.  The Board heard the matter over two days.  With the exception of three tenants, the Board dismissed the tenants’ application.  In doing so,<b><u> the Board determined that the unsuccessful tenants (who included the respondent) had not challenged the rent increases within the one year limitation provided for in the Residential Tenancies Act, 2006, S.O. 2006, c. 17 (“RTA”) and thus had lost their rights to dispute the rent increases.</b></u>
[7] The unsuccessful tenants sought a review of the Board’s decision.  That review was dismissed.
[12] The tenant, both before the Board and now on this appeal, places her entire argument on her reading of the decision in Price v. Turnbull's Grove Inc. (2007), 2007 ONCA 408 (CanLII), 85 O.R. (3d) 641 (C.A.)<ref name="Price"/> which she says renders the manner, in which the landlord proceeded with its Notices of Rent Increase, a nullity. <b><u>The respondent needs to have the finding of a nullity, in other words that the Notices of Rent Increase are void, in order to avoid the effect of s. 136 and the one year limitation period.</b></u>
[13] The Board held that the respondent’s reading of Price was fundamentally flawed.  The Board held that the principle in Price only applied if the landlord failed to give the requisite written notice.  It did not apply if the flaw in the Notice related to other matters, such as an improperly calculated or claimed rent increase.
<b><u>[14] In my view, the Board’s conclusion in this regard is correct.  It is supported by the plain language of the decision in Price.  The respondent’s contention that the finding of a nullity can go beyond the notice requirement is not only incorrect, it is expressly rejected by that decision. </b></u> Indeed, the factual circumstances raised in this matter were specifically addressed in Price, where  Cronk J.A. said, at para. 42:
::Fifth, while Part VI of the Act prohibits various conduct in respect of rent and rent increases, only conduct concerning a rent increase that offends s. 127(1) renders the increase void under Part VI.  This signifies the importance of the s. 127(1) notice requirement to the rent control scheme established by the Act.  For example, rent charged in contravention of s. 121(1) of the Act - rent in an amount that is greater than the lawful rent permitted under Part VI of the Act - is not deemed to be void under Part VI of the Act.  This type of “tainted” rent charge, therefore, could be subject to the remedial effect of s. 141(1) of the Act in a proper case.  Similarly, where proper notice of a proposed rent increase is given in conformity with s. 127(1) of the Act, but the amount of the proposed increase exceeds the permitted increase prescribed by the guideline under the Act - in contravention of s. 129(1) of the Act - s. 141(2) may be engaged.
[17] One other argument should be addressed.  The respondent points to the fact that there was an earlier decision of the Board, involving this same building, that concluded, in similar circumstances, that the Notice of Rent Increase was void.  I make the following observations with respect to that argument.  First, the Board member here was not bound by an earlier decision of another Board member.  While consistency is desirable as a general rule, it is not a requirement.  Second, the earlier decision turns on a misreading of the decision in Price.  The Board member here was not obliged to follow a flawed decision, even in the interests of consistency.  Third, the earlier decision is not, of course, binding on this court.  This court is, however, bound by the decision of the Court of Appeal.
<b><u>[18] The appeal must therefore be quashed.</b></u>
<ref name="Williams">Williams v 1175326 Ontario Ltd., 2016 ONSC 7781 (CanLII), <http://canlii.ca/t/gw0pk>, retrieved on 2020-06-10</ref>


==TSL-57945-14-RV (Re), 2015 CanLII 69071 (ON LTB)<ref name ="TSL-57945-14-RV"/>==
==TSL-57945-14-RV (Re), 2015 CanLII 69071 (ON LTB)<ref name ="TSL-57945-14-RV"/>==
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<ref name="TSL-72945-16">TSL-72945-16 (Re), 2016 CanLII 53015 (ON LTB), <http://canlii.ca/t/gt012>, retrieved on 2020-06-10</ref>
<ref name="TSL-72945-16">TSL-72945-16 (Re), 2016 CanLII 53015 (ON LTB), <http://canlii.ca/t/gt012>, retrieved on 2020-06-10</ref>


===[http://canlii.ca/t/h5zf2 TSL-80962-17 (Re), 2017 CanLII 60295 (ON LTB)]===
==TSL-80962-17 (Re), 2017 CanLII 60295 (ON LTB)<ref name="TSL-80962-17"/>==


20. The Act and the Board’s Rules require a landlord to provide a tenant with documents, including NORIs, and, if they are served in accordance with the Act and Rules, they are deemed to have been served whether the tenant receives them or not. <b><u>It is only when documents are not served in accordance with one of the permissible methods set out in subsection 191(1) of the Act or Rule 5 that a landlord must prove the tenant actually received them (pursuant to subsection 191(2) of the Act).</b></u>
20. The Act and the Board’s Rules require a landlord to provide a tenant with documents, including NORIs, and, if they are served in accordance with the Act and Rules, they are deemed to have been served whether the tenant receives them or not. <b><u>It is only when documents are not served in accordance with one of the permissible methods set out in subsection 191(1) of the Act or Rule 5 that a landlord must prove the tenant actually received them (pursuant to subsection 191(2) of the Act).</b></u>
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22. AC was cross-examined by the Tenant’s legal representative during the sitting of this matter on March 27, 2017. His testimony going to the service of the NORI to the Tenant remained unshaken, was provided in a straightforward fashion and was wholly devoid of internal inconsistencies and was consistent with the documentary evidence provided.
22. AC was cross-examined by the Tenant’s legal representative during the sitting of this matter on March 27, 2017. His testimony going to the service of the NORI to the Tenant remained unshaken, was provided in a straightforward fashion and was wholly devoid of internal inconsistencies and was consistent with the documentary evidence provided.


===[http://canlii.ca/t/25tsd SWT-00924 (Re), 2008 CanLII 82447 (ON LTB)]===
<ref name="TSL-80962-17">TSL-80962-17 (Re), 2017 CanLII 60295 (ON LTB), <http://canlii.ca/t/h5zf2>, retrieved on 2020-06-10</ref>
 
5. I believe the RTA and the Court of Appeal decision make it clear that <b><u>where notice to increase the rent did not give 90 days notice, the notice is void – a nullity – as though it never existed.</b></u> Section 116(4) of the RTA makes it clear that a landlord must first give a new, valid, notice before any increase may be taken from a tenant. The Landlord’s honest, but mistaken, belief while understandable cannot change the application of the law. In light of this, I must find that none of the Landlord’s notices complied with either the TPA or the RTA. Accordingly, all of the Landlord’s notices are void and it is as though they never existed.
 
6. As the Court of Appeal explored in Price, even though the Tenant has paid the unlawful rent for more than 12 months this rent cannot be “deemed lawful” as section 136 is not intended to make a void increase lawful. Therefore, this section will not be applied in this case.


==References==
==References==

Latest revision as of 17:36, 10 June 2020


Nanne v. 3011650 Nova Scotia Limited (Michipicoten Forest Resources), 2015 ONCA 391 (CanLII)[1]

[10] Section 135(1) of the RTA enables a tenant of a “rental unit” to apply to the Board for an order that the landlord repay any money collected in contravention of the Act. In March 2012, the three respondents each filed with the Board applications for rent rebates against the Landlord by using the standardized Form T1 entitled “Tenant Application for a Rebate.” The respondents argued in their applications that the Landlord had imposed unlawful rents for the years 2009 through 2011 and, as a result, had collected rents for those years in excess of the lawful rents permitted under the RTA. The respondents contended that the rent increases imposed by the Landlord were void. They sought rent rebates in the following amounts: (i) Nanne - $4,353.96; (ii) Pasternak - $3,903.99; and, (iii) Campbell - $3,175.83.

[11] The Board held that the rents charged by the Landlord since 2008 were illegal and ordered the Landlord to pay the respondents rebates for the two years 2011 and 2012 – the maximum period recoverable due to RTA s. 135(4) – specifically, rebates of $1,181.11 to Nanne, $1,083.19 to Pasternak, and $926.68 to Campbell.

[17] The Divisional Court dismissed the Landlord’s appeal. The court found it unnecessary to determine the applicable standard of review as it held that the Board’s decision was correct. At paras. 22-23 of its reasons, the Divisional Court stated:

In my view, the Board correctly interpreted s. 50(3) and correctly observed that the Landlord’s interpretation of the subsection would lead to an absurd result. The wording of section 50(3) is directed at the parties entering into an agreement that has the effect of directly or indirectly providing for the use of the land for more than 21 years. In other words, for a lease to be void, it is the agreement entered into by the parties, not a statutory provision, that must have the effect of providing for a term of usage of more than 21 years. …
Such an interpretation is consistent with the legislature’s intention to prevent people from circumventing the subdivision control provisions of the PA by entering into leases with a term of more than 21 years and consistent with the remedial purpose of the RTA to protect residential tenants in Ontario. [Emphasis in original.]

[1]

Price v. Turnbull's Grove Inc., 2007 ONCA 408 (CanLII)[2]

[23] I agree with the appellant that the challenged rent increase imposed by TGI in November 2002 was void by operation of s. 127(4) of the Act and, consequently, that it was of no [page647] legal force or effect. I also agree that ss. 141(1) and (2) of the Act do not operate in this case to render the void rent increase lawful. It follows, in my opinion, that the Divisional Court erred by failing to consider the effect of ss. 127(1) and 127(4) of the Act in the circumstances of this case and by holding, as it appears to have done, that the rent increase attacked by the appellant was deemed to be lawful by virtue of s. 141 of the Act. I reach these conclusions for the following reasons.

[37] Thus, a rent increase rendered void under s. 127(4) of the Act for non-compliance by the landlord with the mandatory notice requirement of s. 127(1) is not merely unlawful -- it is a nullity. It is as if the increase never occurred. Accordingly, in the case of a void rent increase, there is nothing to be 'saved' by the curative provisions of s. 141.


[2]

TSL-57945-14-RV (Re), 2015 CanLII 69071 (ON LTB)[3]

1. This request for review is about the proper interpretation and application of the Court of Appeal’s decision in Price v. Turnbull's Grove Inc., 2007 ONCA 408[2]. The Tenant argues that the Member erred in law by failing to declare that notices of rent increases (‘NORIs’) served on her were void and of no force and effect.

2. On the basis of the submissions made in the request, I am not satisfied that there is a serious error in the order or that a serious error occurred in the proceedings. I say this for the reasons set out below.

8. To meet the requirements of s. 116 a NORI must be in the prescribed form, it must set out the landlord’s intention to increase the rent and the amount of the new rent, and it must be served at least 90 days in advance of the effective date of the rent increase. Pursuant to s. 116(4) a NORI that does not meet these requirements is “void”.

9. The rule set out by the Court in Price v. Turnbull's Grove Inc[2]. is that a NORI that is “void” because it does not meet the requirements of what is now s. 116 cannot be saved or deemed to be a valid increase by operation of s. 136. This is because the word “void” means the notice is a nullity just like if it had never been served at all. The Court explained that what is now s. 136 only applies to NORIs that meet the requirements of s. 116 but are otherwise invalid.

12. The Landlord served a NORI on the Tenant with an effective date of October 1, 2013. That NORI would appear to be invalid as it purported to raise the rent more than the guideline amount that was in effect in 2013. But it was not “void” as it was in the prescribed form, set out the rent increase, and was served at least 90 days prior to the effective date. This application was filed with the Board on November 17, 2014 which is more than one year after the effective date; no other application was filed after October 1, 2013, in which the lawful rent was an issue. So as a result of s. 136 the Member found that the increase taken October 1, 2013, is deemed to be lawful.

[3]

TSL-72945-16 (Re), 2016 CanLII 53015 (ON LTB)[4]

12. Moreover, I note that, on October 30, 2015, some five months before the Landlord filed the within application and the Tenant became aware of these proceedings, the Tenant delivered a letter to the Landlord stating, in part, “I have never been notified of any rent increase since the initial increase to $1015 in April 2014.” The Tenant then proceeds to ask the Landlord for information and clarification about the arrears claimed in the N4 notice. Equally telling, is the Tenant’s statement in the said letter where he informs the Landlord as follows: “If rent is going up, notify me, and I will pay the increase (if it is reasonable). I can pay $1050 monthly. That is not the issue.” The Tenant’s letter, in my view and for the reasons stated, corroborates his testimony that he was not served with a NORI 90 days prior to April 1, 2015. It appears that the Landlord’s response to the Tenant’s letter was to file this application with the Board.

13. For these reasons I find, on a balance of probabilities, that the Landlord failed to serve the Tenant with a NORI 90 days prior to April 1, 2015 and, accordingly, the rent increase claimed by the Landlord to have taken effect on that date is unlawful.

[4]

TSL-80962-17 (Re), 2017 CanLII 60295 (ON LTB)[5]

20. The Act and the Board’s Rules require a landlord to provide a tenant with documents, including NORIs, and, if they are served in accordance with the Act and Rules, they are deemed to have been served whether the tenant receives them or not. It is only when documents are not served in accordance with one of the permissible methods set out in subsection 191(1) of the Act or Rule 5 that a landlord must prove the tenant actually received them (pursuant to subsection 191(2) of the Act).

21. Here, the certificate of service provided by the Landlord states that the NORI was served to the Tenant, by AC, in accordance with one of the permissible methods set out in subsection 191(1) of the Act. In particular, by placing the document under the door of the rental unit on August 16, 2016. Moreover, AC’s affirmed and uncontradicted testimony was to the same effect. I further note that the Tenant acknowledged that he received the N5 notice of termination that was served to him, by AC, at the same time as the NORI. As well, NO, who initially testified that he was unaware of the NORI at issue, later conceded that it is possible that the Tenant received the NORI and did not bring the document to his attention. NO also testified that he was unaware that the Tenant was served with the N5 notice on August 16, 2016—something readily admitted by the Tenant.

22. AC was cross-examined by the Tenant’s legal representative during the sitting of this matter on March 27, 2017. His testimony going to the service of the NORI to the Tenant remained unshaken, was provided in a straightforward fashion and was wholly devoid of internal inconsistencies and was consistent with the documentary evidence provided.

[5]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Nanne v. 3011650 Nova Scotia Limited (Michipicoten Forest Resources), 2015 ONCA 391 (CanLII), <http://canlii.ca/t/gjddd>, retrieved on 2020-06-10
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Price v. Turnbull's Grove Inc., 2007 ONCA 408 (CanLII), <http://canlii.ca/t/1rpw5>, retrieved on 2020-06-10
  3. 3.0 3.1 TSL-57945-14-RV (Re), 2015 CanLII 69071 (ON LTB), <http://canlii.ca/t/glv0p>, retrieved on 2020-06-10
  4. 4.0 4.1 TSL-72945-16 (Re), 2016 CanLII 53015 (ON LTB), <http://canlii.ca/t/gt012>, retrieved on 2020-06-10
  5. 5.0 5.1 TSL-80962-17 (Re), 2017 CanLII 60295 (ON LTB), <http://canlii.ca/t/h5zf2>, retrieved on 2020-06-10