BFL Canada Risk and Insurance Services Inc v Le
BFL Canada Risk and Insurance Services Inc.
Law Firm / Organization
Field LLP
David Le
Law Firm / Organization
McLeod Law LLP
Lawyer(s)

Shane B. King

Hub International Canada West ULC
Law Firm / Organization
McLeod Law LLP
Lawyer(s)

Shane B. King

Key Points:

  • Background:

    • On November 22, 2023, BFL sought an interim injunction against HUB to prevent them from soliciting its customers.
    • A Consent Injunction Order was granted as the parties were close to resolving the matter.
  • Positions:

    • BFL:
      • Claimed substantial effort to obtain the injunction and sought costs due to incurred expenses.
      • Requested modified McAllister costs or 1.5 times Column 5 of Schedule C.
    • HUB:
      • Denied breaches of the Unanimous Shareholders Agreement (USA).
      • Suggested each party should bear its own costs or have costs determined at the matter’s conclusion.
  • Legal Framework:

    • Rule 10.31: Costs awarded at matter's conclusion.
    • Rule 10.33: Factors considered include success degree, claimed vs. recovered amount, issue importance, and action complexity.
    • Key Precedents:
      • Costs generally awarded to the successful party.
      • Costs should not be oppressive and must be exercised judicially.
  • Decision Analysis:

    • Entitlement to Costs:
      • Despite no confirmed breaches, BFL gained a valuable Consent Order.
      • The Order required compliance with the USA, defined key terms, and imposed confidentiality.
    • Quantum of Costs:
      • Factors considered include action complexity and importance.
      • BFL largely successful but not entirely (e.g., no property return or preservation order).
      • Costs awarded on Column 4 of Schedule C, without increase, due to partial success and resolution.
  • Conclusion:

    • BFL awarded costs on Column 4 of Schedule C and taxable disbursements. Specific amount not mentioned.
Court of King's Bench of Alberta
2301 15145
Corporate & commercial law
Applicant