Self-Help - Re: Commercial Tenancy

From Riverview Legal Group


1328773 Ontario Inc. o/a Angling Outfitters v. 2047152 Ontario Limited, 2013 ONSC 4953 (CanLII)[1]

[10] I start with the provisions of s.19(2) of the Commercial Tenancies Act, R.S.O. 1990, c.L.7, which reads as follows:

19. (2) A right of re-entry or forfeiture under any proviso or stipulation in a lease for a breach of any covenant or condition in the lease, other than a proviso in respect of the payment of rent, is not enforceable by action, entry, or otherwise, unless the lessor serves on the lessee a notice specifying the particular breach complained of, and, if the breach is capable of remedy, requiring the lessee to remedy the breach, and, in any case, requiring the lessee to make compensation in money for the breach, and the lessee fails within a reasonable time thereafter to remedy the breach, if it is capable of remedy, and to make reasonable compensation in money to the satisfaction of the lessor for the breach.

[12] First, any purported right of a commercial landlord to re-enter leased premises or treat the lease as having been forfeited obviously is predicated on the existence of a breach or breaches of the lease agreement by the tenant. In that regard:

[20] The Court of Appeal also quoted with approval from Ewart, Waiver Distributed (1917), at p.168:

A demand for the payment of rent which fell due after a breach of a stipulation is evidence of an election to continue the tenancy notwithstanding the breach; for the demand necessarily implies the continued existence of the lease (without that there could be no rent), and is inconsistent with election to terminate.

[21] In this case, when the Landlord accepted rent from Angling Outfitters after indicating its knowledge of specified defaults allegedly warranting termination of the lease, it therefore made a binding implicit election and indication that it henceforth would not be relying on the alleged defaults as a basis for termination or forfeiture of the lease, (as opposed to a possible claim for damages).

[1]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1328773 Ontario Inc. o/a Angling Outfitters v. 2047152 Ontario Limited, 2013 ONSC 4953 (CanLII), <http://canlii.ca/t/g01hz>, retrieved on 2020-07-27