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Using (and Abiding by) the Trust Provisions of the Construction Lien Act

Using (and Abiding by) the Trust Provisions of the Construction Lien Act. Duncan W. Glaholt Glaholt LLP. Trusts – A Road Map. I. Overview. Part II - Trusts. s. 7 - Owner’s trust s. 8 – Contractor’s trust s. 9 – Vendor’s trust s. 10 – Discharge s. 11 – Reduction s. 12 – Retainage

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Using (and Abiding by) the Trust Provisions of the Construction Lien Act

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  1. Using (and Abiding by) the Trust Provisions of the Construction Lien Act Duncan W. Glaholt Glaholt LLP

  2. Trusts – A Road Map

  3. I. Overview

  4. Part II - Trusts • s. 7 - Owner’s trust • s. 8 – Contractor’s trust • s. 9 – Vendor’s trust • s. 10 – Discharge • s. 11 – Reduction • s. 12 – Retainage • s. 13 – Personal Liability

  5. Owner’s Trust Is. 7.1 – “Amounts Received” Trust All amounts received by an owner, other than the Crown or a municipality, that are to be used in the financing of the improvement, including any amount that is to be used in the payment of the purchase price of the land and the payment of prior encumbrances, constitute, subject to the payment of the purchase price of the land and prior encumbrances, a trust fund for the benefit of the contractor.

  6. Owner’s Trust IIs. 7(2) – “Amounts Payable” Trust Where amounts become payable under a contract to a contractor by the owner on a certificate of a payment certifier, an amount that is equal to an amount so certified that is in the owner's hands or received by the owner at any time thereafter constitutes a trust fund for the benefit of the contractor.

  7. Owner’s Trust IIIs. 7(3) – “Holdback” Trust Where the substantial performance of a contract has been certified, or has been declared by the court, an amount that is equal to the unpaid priceof the substantially performed portion of the contract that is in the owner's hands or is received by the owner at any time thereafter constitutes a trust fund for the benefit of the contractor.

  8. Owner’s Trust IVs. 7(4) – “Prohibition” The owner is the trustee of the trust fund created by subsection (1), (2) or (3), and the owner shall not appropriate or convert any part of a fund to the owner's own use or to any use inconsistent with the trust until the contractor is paid all amounts related to the improvement owed to the contractor by the owner.

  9. Contractor’s Trust Is. 8(1) – “Amounts Owing or Received” 8.--(1) All amounts,(a) owing to a contractor or subcontractor, whether or not due or payable; or (b) received by a contractor or subcontractor, on account of the contract or subcontract price of an improvement constitute a trust fund for the benefit of the subcontractors and other persons who have supplied services or materials to the improvement who are owed amounts by the contractor or subcontractor.

  10. Contractor’s Trust IIs. 8(2) – “Prohibition” (2) The contractor or subcontractor is the trustee of the trust fund created by subsection (1) and the contractor or subcontractor shall not appropriate or convert any part of the fund to the contractor's or subcontractor's own use or to any use inconsistent with the trust until all subcontractors and other persons who supply services or materials to the improvement are paid all amounts related to the improvement owed to them by the contractor or subcontractor.

  11. Vendor’s Trust Is. 9(1) – “The Trust Fund” Where the owner's interest in a premises is sold by the owner, an amount equal to, (a) the value of the consideration received by the owner as a result of the sale, less, (b) the reasonable expenses arising from the sale and the amount, if any, paid by the vendor to discharge any existing mortgage indebtedness on the premises, constitutes a trust fund for the benefit of the contractor.

  12. Vendor’s Trust IIs. 9(2) – “Prohibition” (2) The former owner is the trustee of the trust created by subsection (1), and shall not appropriate or convert any part of the trust property to the former owner's own use or to any use inconsistent with the trust until the contractor is paid all amounts owed to the contractor that relate to the improvement.

  13. Defenses

  14. Defense I“But, I Paid My Beneficiaries”s. 10 - Discharge of the Trust Obligations Subject to Part IV (holdbacks), every payment by a trustee to a person the trustee is liable to pay for services or materials supplied to the improvement discharges the trust of the trustee making the payment and the trustee's obligations and liability as trustee to all beneficiaries of the trust to the extent of the payment made by the trustee.

  15. Defense II“But, I Borrowed to Pay My Beneficiaries”s. 11 – Repayment of Money Used or Borrowed (1) Subject to Part IV, a trustee who pays in whole or in part for the supply of services or materials to an improvement out of money that is not subject to a trust under this Part may retain from trust funds an amount equal to that paid by the trustee without being in breach of the trust. (2) Subject to Part IV, where a trustee pays in whole or in part for the supply of services or materials to an improvement out of money that is loaned to the trustee, trust funds may be applied to discharge the loan to the extent that the lender's money was so used by the trustee, and the  application of trust money does not constitute a breach of the trust.

  16. Defense III“But, He Owes Me Money”Section 12 – Retaining Trust Funds Subject to Part IV, a trustee may, without being in breach of trust, retain from trust funds an amount that, as between the trustee and the person the trustee is liable to pay under a contract or subcontract related to the improvement, is equal to the balance in the trustee's favour of all outstanding debts, claims or damages, whether or not related to the improvement.

  17. Enforcement

  18. Enforcement I “The Hammer”s. 13(1) – Deemed Breach of Trust In addition to the persons who are otherwise liable in an action for breach of trust under this Part, (a) every director or officer of a corporation; and (b) any person, including an employee or agent of the corporation, who has effective control of a corporation or its relevant activities, who assents to, or acquiesces in, conduct that he or she knows or reasonably ought to know amounts to breach of trust by the corporation is liable for the breach of trust.

  19. Enforcement II “The Sickle”s. 13 (2) – “Question of Fact” The question of whether a person has effective control of a corporation or its relevant activities is one of fact and in determining this the court may disregard the form of any transaction and the separate corporate existence of any participant.

  20. Enforcement III(As if I & II Weren’t Bad Enough)Section 336 Criminal Code Every one who, being a trustee of anything for the use or benefit, whether in whole or in part, of another person, or for a public or charitable purpose, converts, with intent to defraud and in contravention of his trust, that thing or any part of it to a use that is not authorized by the trust is guilty of an indictable offence and liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding fourteen years.

  21. Case in Point Structural Contractors Ltd. v. Westcola Holdings Inc. (2000), 48 O.R. (3d) 417 (Ont. C.A.)

  22. Facts • Westcola owned office building in Toronto • Largest tenant (government) occupied 75% of building • Westcola retained Structural to renovate underground parking garage • Payments from Westcola to Structural were to be certified by payment certifier • Contract price doubled as work progressed

  23. Facts (continued) • Government lease ran out • Government chose not renew because of ongoing ocnstruction • Owner’s cash flow stopped • Owner used rent payments from government exclusively to service mortgage debt, utility bills, maintenance costs, insurance and property taxes • No personal benefit to landlord whatsoever • Engineers certified substantial completion • Unpaid contractor sued owner of company personally

  24. Stopping There: • Q: Did the Owner Do Anything Wrong? • A: Yes

  25. Landlord’s Arguments • It cannot be breach of trust merely to service mortgage and pay utilities, because without doing so, there would be no rents • It would be grossly unfair to find the owner personally liable in such a case, because nobody could have foreseen such liability

  26. Court of Appeal’s Response: • Rents became trust funds to the extent of certified but unpaid funds due to Structural • Owner is personally liable for these trust funds • Landlord’s attempt to draw distinction between s. 7 (owner’s trust) and s. 8 (contractor’s trust) cannot prevail given the language of s. 7(4)

  27. III. Who Can Make a Trust Claim?

  28. Basics • Beneficiaries of owner’s trust: • The class of contractors having privity of contract with the owner. Beneficiaries of contractor’s trust: • Subcontractors having privity of contract with the contractor and those that have privity of contract with subcontractors who have proven claims to the fund. • Trust rights under the Act are not conditional upon the existence of an enforceable lien (Minneapolis-Honeywell Regulator Co. v. Empire Brass Co., [1955] S.C.R. 694).

  29. IV. Practical Strategies for Ensuring that You Do Not Breach the Trust Rules

  30. The New York Model • New York Lien Law expressly provides for a method of keeping books and records relating to trust funds • This provides a defendant with at least a prima facie defence to a breach of trust action • Summary judgments as seen in Westcola would be impossible if practices were adopted

  31. Highlights of the New York Model • 1. Some overheads are permissible, such as payroll taxes, unemployment insurance premiums, wage supplements, surety bond premiums. • 2. Books and records shall include (a) detailed accounting of trust assets receivable (names, addresses, amounts, dates) (b) detailed accounting of trust accounts payable (c) detailed accounting of trust accounts received (d) detailed accounting of trust accounts made

  32. Highlights of the New York Model • 3. Create legal presumptions (a) if accounting not followed: presumed breach of trust (b) if accounting followed: presumed defence to action for breach of trust (i.e. no summary judgment)

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