Refusal to Accept a Rental Payment: Difference between revisions

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(Created page with "Category:Landlord Tenant ===[http://canlii.ca/t/hq9gj Pfeiffer v. Metcap Living Management Inc., 2018 ONSC 910 (CanLII)]]=== ISSUES ON THE APPEAL: <br> [15] Pur...")
 
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[[Category:Landlord Tenant]]
[[Category:Landlord Tenant]]
[[Category:Payment of Rent (LTB)]]
===[http://canlii.ca/t/hq9gj Pfeiffer v. Metcap Living Management Inc., 2018 ONSC 910 (CanLII)]]===
===[http://canlii.ca/t/hq9gj Pfeiffer v. Metcap Living Management Inc., 2018 ONSC 910 (CanLII)]]===



Revision as of 17:13, 4 June 2020


Pfeiffer v. Metcap Living Management Inc., 2018 ONSC 910 (CanLII)]

ISSUES ON THE APPEAL:
[15] Pursuant to section 210 of the RTA a party may appeal an order of the Landlord Tenant Board to the Divisional Court, but only on a question of law.

[16] There are two issues that have been raised by the appellant in this appeal:

1. Does the landlord’s refusal to accept a rental payment satisfy the tenant’s obligation to pay rent? To use the appellant’s words in court today, has he been discharged from making those rent payments?
2. Did Member Kevin Lundy make an error of law in exercising his discretion in refusing to set aside the eviction order, including the issue raised in Issue #1?

Issue #1: Does the landlord’s refusal to accept a rental payment satisfy the tenant’s obligation to pay that rent?

[18] In this case, Member Lundy found that there was no error in the decision he was reviewing – the landlord’s mistake, refusing cash payments tendered by the tenant, did not serve to erase or satisfy the tenant’s obligation to pay the rent.

[19] The issue of whether the obligation to pay rent has been satisfied for the purpose of the RTA falls squarely within the expertise of the Landlord Tenant Board. Member Lundy’s determination is entitled to deference.

[20] As previously determined in a number of other Landlord Tenant Board cases, a landlord’s refusal to accept a rental payment does not satisfy the tenant’s obligation to pay rent.

[21] The Member’s decision to uphold the order that he was reviewing falls within the range of reasonable outcomes. There was no error of law.

[22] Nor was there an error of law in not finding estoppel or waiver by the respondent. The respondent persistently took steps to recover rental arrears.