Clarke v. Mathews v. Gondosch and 1394536 Ontario Ltd.
GORDON S. CLARKE
Law Firm / Organization
Self Represented
THOMAS MATHEWS
Law Firm / Organization
Not Specified
Lawyer(s)

J. Samac

THOMAS MATHEWS PROFESSIONAL CORPORATION
Law Firm / Organization
Not Specified
Lawyer(s)

J. Samac

MICHAEL GONDOSCH
Law Firm / Organization
Giffen LLP
Lawyer(s)

Kelsy King-Gill

1394536 ONTARIO LTD.
Law Firm / Organization
Giffen LLP
Lawyer(s)

Kelsy King-Gill

Background:

  • Gordon Clarke sought to assess three legal accounts ($15,227 total) issued by Thomas Mathews/TMPC for work on a removal motion in litigation involving Clarke’s clients, the Gondosch parties.
  • Clarke disputed liability, citing alleged amendments to the retainer agreement and delays tied to his clients’ payment ability.

Key Issues and Rulings:

  1. Assessment Limitation Period:

    • Accounts older than one month but less than a year can be assessed if deemed fair. Older accounts need "special circumstances."
    • The court ruled the accounts were interim, with the limitation period triggered by the final account's delivery.
  2. Retainer Agreement Scope:

    • The agreement was found to be a standard hourly fee arrangement, without caps or limits, making Clarke solely liable for fees—not the Gondosch parties.
  3. Recorded Conversation:

    • Clarke’s recording of Mathews was ruled inadmissible due to lack of explicit consent and insufficient evidence of authenticity.
  4. Assessment Jurisdiction:

    • Accounts were referred to an assessment officer rather than being resolved in Small Claims Court. The Gondosch parties were excluded, as they were not TMPC clients.

Outcome:

  • TMPC accounts were referred for assessment. The Small Claims Court action was stayed, except for costs.
  • Clarke’s claims about limiting liability were dismissed, but his right to assessment under the Solicitors Act was upheld, highlighting clients' entitlement to question legal fees.
  • The court ruled in favor of Gordon Clarke’s right to assess all three accounts, making him partially successful. However, his arguments about amending the retainer to limit his liability and involving the Gondosch parties were dismissed, indicating partial success for Thomas Mathews/TMPC on those issues.
  • Costs were deferred.
Superior Court of Justice - Ontario
CV-24-00182
Civil litigation