Substantial Compliance - Notice Law - (LTB)

From Riverview Legal Group


Residential Tenancies Act, 2006, S.O. 2006, c. 17

212 Substantial compliance with this Act respecting the contents of forms, notices or documents is sufficient. 2006, c. 17, s. 212.

TSL-75466-16 (Re), 2016 CanLII 71279 (ON LTB)

6. The applicable statutory notice provisions above are mandatory in nature and require strict compliance (Re Bianchi et al. and Aguanno et al., 1983 CanLII 1967 (ON SC)). In Re Bianchi, supra, the termination date was not at the end of the term as mandatorily required by the Act, so the Divisional Court found the notice defective. Here, the identification of the rental unit is, similarly, a mandatory requirement of the Act.

7. I considered s. 212 of the Act, which provides that substantial compliance with the Act respecting the contents of forms, notices or documents is sufficient. However, in my opinion, while the application of s. 212 to situations of non-compliance with non-mandatory requirements of the Act may be appropriate, a parallel application of that section to mandatory legislative requirements amounts to an error in law, could not have been an exercise contemplated by the drafters of the legislation and would lead to absurd results. For example, in the instant case, given that at the time when the N4 notice was served, the unit was not designated as “2A”, the application of s. 212 would allow the Landlord to bring the unit into harmony with the N4 notice after the notice was served.

O’Shanter Development v. Bernstein, 2018 ONSC 557 (CanLII)

[12] The Board identified that the central issue to be determined in the case was whether the Landlord’s notices of rent increase comply with the requirements of the Residential Tenancies Act, 2006, S.O. 2006, c. 17 (RTA). The Board noted that the Landlord’s representative agreed at the hearing that, if the Board determines that the Landlord’s notices of rent increase are defective, the Landlord’s applications to terminate the tenancy and evict the Tenant for non-payment of rent must be dismissed.

[13] A primary issue of estoppel was raised at the hearing by the Landlord. In his submissions to the Board at the hearing, counsel for the Landlord, stated the following, in part:

So clearly, if the tenants sought to challenge the validity of the rents charged, the time to do it was in the context of the AGI, if you accept the reasoning in Mascan and Ponzi and then if you apply the principles in Mascan and Ponzi, it’s my submission that it would be an abuse of process to allow the tenants after having consented to the increases that were set out in the Notices of Rent Increase subject to adjustment to allow them now to challenge the validity of those Notices of Rent Increase, and those rent increases were essentially established as a result of the Board’s processes, and the Board’s reliance on the rents that were set out in the applications filed with the Board.

[14] In response, the Tenant submitted that estoppel was not available in this case and in support of this position referred the Board to the decision in Price v. Turnbull's Grove Inc., 2007 ONCA 408, (2007), O.R. (3d) 641, which held that a rent increase that is void under the Act is of no force and effect. The Court stated at para. 37, “It is as if the increase never occurred.”

Issue 3: Did the Board make an unreasonable determination that the NORIs were void on the basis that the content of the prepaid rent attachment to the form was “misleading” or “confusing”?
The Landlord argues that the Board imported a subjective inquiry into its consideration of s.212 of the RTA and s. 84 of the Legislation Act, and as such the Board’s decision is unreasonable. However, the Board dealt with the issue relating to substantial compliance at paragraphs 12 to 15 of the decision. The Board stated:
The Landlord’s representative submitted that the Landlord’s addendum does not render the Landlord’s NORI void, because the NORI substantially complies with the Act’s requirements. Section 212 of the Act states that forms that substantially comply with the Act’s requirements “respecting the contents of forms, notices or documents is sufficient.”
The parties did not submit at the hearing case law from the Divisional Court, or from another binding authority, on the issue of substantial compliance. The Board, however, considered the issue of substantial compliance with its forms in TSL-03635, issued on September 24, 2007. In that decision, the Board quoted from TNL-52825-RV, in which the Board held that the landlord who had altered a NORI “should be held to an even higher standard to correctly state the law when he appends an addendum to an ORHT-approved form and uses the same font and format used by the ORHT.” In TNL-52825-RV, the Board determined that the addendum the landlord made to a NORI failed to correctly state the law. The Board concluded that the landlord’s NORI was void because of the addendum.
In TSL-052280, issued on September 19, 2003, the Ontario Rental Housing Tribunal (as the Board was then called) found that a misleading addendum to the landlord’s NORI rendered the NORI void. The Tribunal in that case found that information in the landlord’s addendum “would mislead most tenants”.
The principle that emerges from the Board’s decisions on substantial compliance with the Act’s requirements for forms and other documents, is that landlords must exercise great care when adding an addendum to, or otherwise altering, a Board approved form. Any information that does not comply with the Act may be found to be misleading, and may render the altered form invalid.

[51] I am further of the view that on the facts of this case the Board should have exercised its discretion to apply issue estoppel. Contrary to the Board’s statement that “prohibiting the Tenant from raising the validity of the Landlord’s NORIs at the hearing could lead to an absurd result, if the Board were to uphold and legitimize an invalid rent increase”, the opposite is true. The rent increase was not invalid. It was implemented by the Orders of the Board. The absurd result arises in permitting the Tenant to challenge the validity of the NORIs in circumstances where she has agreed to Orders of the Board implementing the rent increase.

[59] For the above reasons therefore, based on the facts of this case, I conclude that the Board erred in failing to apply estoppel to the Tenant’s defence to the Landlord’s application that the rent increases were void based on defective NORIs.

TSL-03635 (Re), 2007 CanLII 75976 (ON LTB)

4. Subsection 116(3) of the Act and subsection 127(3) of the TPA provide that a NORI “shall be in form approved by the Board.” Section 212 of the Act and section 198 of the TPA also provide that “substantial compliance with this Act respecting the contents of forms, notices or documents is sufficient.”

6. In the first of the Tenant’s cases, Review Order No. TNL-52825-RV, the landlord relied on the tenants’ execution of an identical NORI to the one before me to argue that the tenants’ 60-day notice of termination was invalid. In his decision, Member Lee relied on a Divisional Court case neither party provided at the hearing to find that the addendum was misleading and that a form should “enunciate all available options to the tenant.” Additionally Member Lee found that “a landlord should be held to an even higher standard to correctly state the law when he appends an addendum to an ORHT-approved form and uses the same font and format used by the ORHT. Whether or not by intention, the impact of such usage induces a belief in the mind of the reader that the form and its contents have been sanctions by the ORHT. Clearly, in the instant case, the law had been misstated.” He proceeded to find the NORI void as a lease renewal.

10. For the same reasons as given by previous Members Lee and Suraski I find the NORIs void. As a result, and as previously found in TSL-52280, I find that the Landlord cannot take the rent increase that is contained in a form that is void. The form does not substantially comply with the form approved by the Tribunal and the Board because it contains additions that contradict and confuse the approved form. The Landlord’s application for rent arrears based on these void NORIs must therefore be dismissed.

CET-74019-18 (Re), 2018 CanLII 88562 (ON LTB)

2. The Tenant did not receive an N12 notice of termination which is the relevant Board form when a Landlord seeks possession of the unit for their own use. Instead, the Landlord’s Agent sent the Tenant an email dated April 12, 2017 informing the Tenant that this was “a formal 2 months’ notice to terminate the month to month lease agreement…effective June 14, 2017 as landlord requires vacant possession of the property”. The Tenant submitted this email into evidence. VP testified that the Landlord spoke with him by telephone and told him that his son is moving into the unit and he needed possession of the premises by a certain date.

3. Section 48 of the Act permits a landlord to give notice to terminate the tenancy if the landlord in good faith requires possession of the rental unit for the purpose of residential occupation by the landlord, landlord’s spouse, a child or parent of the landlord or landlord’s spouse or a person who provides or will provide care services.

4. Section 212 of the Act states that substantial compliance with the Act respecting the contents of forms, notices or documents is sufficient.

5. Section 202 requires the Board to ascertain the real substance of all transactions and activities relating to a residential complex or rental unit and the good faith of the participants and in doing so, may disregard the outward form of a transaction and may have regard to the pattern of activities relating to the residential complex or residential unit.

6. The email notice of termination from the Landlord substantially complies with section 48. The notice informs the Tenant that it is a sixty day notice for the monthly tenancy and the reason for the notice was that the Landlord required possession. Although the email did not state that the possession was for the Landlord’s son, this detail was provided through a phone conversation with the Landlord. Although the termination date in the notice is not the last date of a rental period, subsection 57(1)(a) does not state that the notice of termination must be valid but rather that it is given under section 48 in bad faith.