Employment Contracts

From Riverview Legal Group


Waksdale v. Swegon North America Inc., 2020 ONCA 391 (CanLII)

[6] The respondent conceded on the motion that the Termination for Cause provision in the employment contract breached the ESA. Likewise, the appellant acknowledged that the Termination of Employment with Notice provision complied with the minimum requirements of the ESA. Therefore, the issue for the motion judge was the discrete question of whether the illegality of the Termination for Cause provision rendered the Termination of Employment with Notice provision unenforceable.

[7] The law regarding the interpretation of termination clauses in employment contracts was helpfully summarized by Laskin J.A. at para. 28 of Wood v. Fred Deeley Imports Ltd., 2017 ONCA 158, 134 O.R. (3d) 481. The following points from that summary are particularly apt for the purposes of this appeal:

• The ESA is remedial legislation, intended to protect the interests of employees. Courts should thus favour an interpretation of the ESA that “encourages employers to comply with the minimum requirements of the Act” and “extends its protections to as many employees as possible”, over an interpretation that does not do so: Machtinger, p. 1003.
• Termination clauses should be interpreted in a way that encourages employers to draft agreements that comply with the ESA. If the only consequence employers suffer for drafting a termination clause that fails to comply with the ESA is an order that they comply, then they will have little or no incentive to draft a lawful termination clause at the beginning of the employment relationship: Machtinger, p. 1004.

[8] Laskin J.A. went on to observe that the enforceability of a termination provision in an employment contract must be determined as at the time the agreement was executed. The wording of the contract alone should be considered in deciding whether it contravenes the ESA, not what the employer might have done on termination: Wood, at paras, 43-44. Thus, even if an employer’s actions comply with its ESA obligations on termination, that compliance does not have the effect of saving a termination provision that violates the ESA.

[9] In the present case, there is no question that the respondent would not be permitted to rely on the Termination for Cause provision. The issue is whether the two clauses should be considered separately or whether the illegality of the Termination for Cause provision impacts the enforceability of the Termination of Employment with Notice provision. The respondent submits that where there are two discrete termination provisions that by their terms apply to different situations, courts should consider whether one provision impacts upon the other and whether the provisions are “entangled” in any way. If they are not, the respondent argues, then there is no reason why the invalidity of one should impact on the enforceability of the other.

[1]

References

  1. Waksdale v. Swegon North America Inc., 2020 ONCA 391 (CanLII), <http://canlii.ca/t/j89s5>, retrieved on 2020-09-08