Clifton P. Prophet
Partner
Guide
2
Originally part of a 44 jurisdiction Global Practice Guide by Chambers and Partners, this section on Insolvency in Canada has been republished with permission.
Out now, the Chambers and Partners Insolvency 2023 Global Practice Guide is a resource for legal and non-legal professionals to learn about the differing legal regimes that apply to business restructurings, reorganisations, rehabilitations, insolvencies and liquidations in 44 jurisdictions.
Gowling WLG lawyers David F.W. Cohen, Virginie Gauthier, Thomas Gertner, Cliff Prophet and Kate Yurkovich are contributing authors for the section on "Law and Practice" for the Canadian jurisdiction.
NOTE: The information and summaries in the Guide are not provided as legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Readers should consult the contributing authors or other qualified legal and non-legal advisers directly if they need to further understand what rules and practices might apply in particular situations and jurisdictions.
Throughout the first and second quarters of 2023, insolvency and restructuring proceedings pursuant to the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act (BIA) and the Companies' Creditors Arrangement Act (Canada) (CCAA) have increased.
In Q1 of 2023, business bankruptcies were up 34.4% and BIA proposal proceedings were up 26.7% from the same quarter in 2022. This upward trend continued in Q2 of 2023, with business bankruptcies up 32.4% and BIA proposal proceedings up 53.2% from Q2 2022.
With respect to proceedings commenced pursuant to the CCAA, 32 CCAA proceedings were filed in Q1 and Q2 of 2023, as compared to 13 CCAA proceedings filed in Q1 and Q2 of 2022.
Throughout the first and second quarters of 2023, insolvency and restructuring proceedings pursuant to the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act (BIA) and the Companies' Creditors Arrangement Act (Canada) (CCAA) have increased.
In Q1 of 2023, business bankruptcies were up 34.4% and BIA proposal proceedings were up 26.7% from the same quarter in 2022. This upward trend continued in Q2 of 2023, with business bankruptcies up 32.4% and BIA proposal proceedings up 53.2% from Q2 2022.
With respect to proceedings commenced pursuant to the CCAA, 32 CCAA proceedings were filed in Q1 and Q2 of 2023, as compared to 13 CCAA proceedings filed in Q1 and Q2 of 2022.
There are three main insolvency statutes in Canada:
The BIA governs proposals (a restructuring regime for individuals and small to mid-sized companies), receiverships and bankruptcies (both personal and corporate).
The CCAA provides a restructuring regime for larger corporations.
The WURA is a liquidation statute designed to deal with, among other things, the formal liquidation of certain regulated entities, including financial institutions and insurance companies.
There are five main insolvency processes:
There are no express obligations imposed on the directors of a debtor to initiate bankruptcy or restructuring proceedings. However, directors may consider it prudent to commence insolvency proceedings to avoid or minimise statutory liabilities for which the directors may be personally liable by reason of being a director of an insolvent company. Directors may also consider that an insolvency filing is required to avoid any potential claims that the debtor traded while "knowingly insolvent", or that the debtor conducted its affairs in a manner that was oppressive to its stakeholders.
Involuntary proceedings may be commenced by creditors under four of the five insolvency and restructuring regimes summarised in 2.2 Types of Voluntary and Involuntary Restructurings, Reorganisations, Insolvencies and Receivership.
Creditors can apply for:
Involuntary proceedings can be commenced in respect of entities to which WURA applies by:
The BIA defines an insolvent person as a person who is not bankrupt and who resides, carries on business or has property in Canada, whose liabilities to creditors amount to CAD1,000, and:
The restructuring and insolvency regime applicable to banks regulated under Canadian law is governed by both the Bank Act and WURA. Generally, following the exercise of control over a bank by OSFI under the Bank Act, the AG, at the request of OSFI, will seek the appointment of a liquidator and the making of a winding-up order under WURA.
Other financial institutions such as credit unions, insurance companies, loan and trust companies and related businesses are subject to WURA and their home statutes (eg, the Insurance Companies Act, the Trust and Loan Companies Act, and the Cooperative Credit Associations Act) with respect to substantive or regulatory matters relevant to winding up under WURA.
Part XII of the BIA applies to the insolvency of "securities firms". Historically, railways have been subject to specific restructuring and insolvency regimes prescribed under their statutes of incorporation; however, in limited circumstances, application has been permitted under the CCAA.
The effectiveness of consensual out-of-court workouts and restructuring in Canada varies depending on the specific circumstances and business context of the debtor.
In certain situations, required regulatory approvals and critical contractual relationships mitigate in favour of out-of-court workouts, to avoid triggers or terminating events affecting these relationships. Where possible, consensual workouts can save transaction costs and preserve stakeholder value.
Financing parties in Canada often use professional financial advisers to obtain detailed assessments of their borrower's position and, in appropriate circumstances with contractual protections, permit time for this to happen. Forbearance arrangements allowing financing parties to develop a highly informed picture of their borrower's situation are preferable, although not suitable in every case.
It is common for significant out-of-court work to be done on the restructuring or workout of distressed companies before invoking the authority of the courts to complete this work.
Forbearance agreements are common. These agreements provide borrowers with contractual breathing space subject to enhanced credit agreement protections and milestones specific to the financial circumstances of the borrower. The terms of these arrangements vary widely and are context-specific.
Creditors' committees may play a role in consensual restructurings, depending on how widely the debt obligations of a business are held. First lien financings (controlled by syndicates governed by their own internal rules) and bilateral financings (between one financing party and a borrower) are common in Canada, making creditors' committees less important.
Informational requirements in relation to consensual restructurings are common, and often additional to those provided for in existing credit documentation.
Priorities tend to be preserved in relative terms during informal restructurings.
A debtor subject to CCAA or proposal proceedings may obtain interim financing, referred to as debtor-in-possession (DIP) financing.
DIP financing must be approved by the court. A court will consider the following factors, among others, in determining whether to grant an order approving DIP financing:
Where an order is granted approving DIP financing, a DIP lender may be granted a corresponding priority charge over the debtor's property and assets, and in priority over existing secured creditor claims. See 5.5 Priority Claims in Restructuring and Insolvency Proceedings.
Where a debtor's application for interim financing is made at the same time as the initial application for protection under the CCAA, the court must be satisfied that the terms of the loan are limited to what is reasonably necessary for the continued operation of the debtor in the ordinary course of business during the ten-day "come-back" period after the granting of the initial order.
Creditors are subject to limited duties in a formal insolvency process. These include, in the context of proceedings under the BIA and CCAA, the statutory duty to act in good faith with respect to those proceedings. Creditors are also subject to restrictions and obligations that may be included in a court order. Subject to these requirements, creditors can vote and participate in insolvencies in their own individual economic interest.
There is no "cram-down" in an out-of-court restructuring or workout. Where the landscape of stakeholders is complex and a compromise is required from each, an out-of-court agreement may be elusive. Accordingly, out-of-court solutions are normally achieved where a small number of stakeholders are in a position to negotiate a compromise that does not require agreement from a wider group.
Large syndicated credits may include provisions permitting a majority (or super-majority) of lenders to bind dissenting lenders. The presence or absence of such provisions and the threshold for the contractual cram-down are a matter of negotiation. Syndicate co-operation in the face of debtor restructurings is the norm, and conflict is less common because the syndicate members value stable relations across a large number of credits over winning a single syndicate battle.
Informal processes are not perceived as unworkable. A distressed investor may decide to acquire the secured debt as part of an acquisition transaction arising from an informal restructuring in order to retain that secured creditor's leverage in negotiations with remaining stakeholders after an acquisition is consummated. The implied threat of a formal restructuring, with its declining returns to stakeholders and associated costs of recovery, often facilitates a post-acquisition negotiated solution among rational economic actors.
In the common law provinces of Canada, security over personal property (both tangible and intangible) is usually taken under a general security agreement granting a security interest in all property, undertakings and assets of a debtor. Real property can be charged by way of a mortgage registered on title. In addition, a lender may wish to take specific types of security against specialised personal property such as shares pursuant to a supplementary share pledge. Debenture security may also be taken over real and personal property. Banks licensed in Canada can take specialised types of security under the Bank Act.
In Quebec, the only civil law jurisdiction in Canada, security is obtained by way of hypothecs that can charge both movable and immovable property.
Outside of an insolvency process, secured creditors may exercise their contractual rights and avail themselves of the sale and foreclosure regimes prescribed by real and personal property legislation. These regimes prescribe statutory notice periods. Where a creditor is seeking to enforce on all or substantially all of a debtor's property, it is also required under Section 244 of the BIA to provide ten days' notice of its intention to enforce its security (a "244 Notice").
In formal insolvency proceedings (other than bankruptcy), secured creditors are subject to the stay of proceedings, subject to limited exceptions. For instance, if the ten-day notice period described above has elapsed, a secured creditor will not be subject to the stay of proceedings in a proposal proceeding. In a bankruptcy, secured creditors are not stayed and may enforce their rights.
Under the BIA, the vesting of title to a debtor's assets in the trustee in bankruptcy ("trustee") and distributions to unsecured creditors are subject to the claims of secured creditors. To the extent of their validity, enforceability and perfection, and subject to limited statutory priorities, secured creditors have priority over a trustee and unsecured creditors.
In an insolvency, creditors' claims generally rank as follows:
Super-priority and secured claims are paid out of the proceeds from sales during the insolvency proceedings in accordance with their respective priority. Where there is a surplus following satisfaction of super-priority and secured claims, the surplus is distributed to preferred unsecured claims and then ratably among general unsecured creditors.
Claims of creditors have priority over the claims of shareholders.
Unsecured creditors are not required to supply goods or services, or provide credit, to a debtor without assurance of payment for post-filing goods or services. Unsecured creditors may require that any such goods or services be provided strictly on a cash on delivery basis to ensure they are kept whole during the restructuring process.
Unsecured creditors have the right to commence an action to recover their debt and apply to the court for an order adjudging the debtor bankrupt. These remedies are stayed when insolvency proceedings begin. Unsecured creditors have the ability to prove their claim in a bankruptcy, CCAA plan or proposal and receive a dividend based on the pro rata value of their claims relative to the claims of all other unsecured creditors.
Pre-judgment attachment is available to creditors in appropriate circumstances under laws of general application and those specific to restructuring and insolvency.
Remedies under laws of general application include court orders providing for injunctive relief, prohibiting certain acts by debtors or prescribed dealings with particular assets. In addition, Mareva injunctions can prohibit debtors from dissipating or concealing assets, or transferring assets out of the jurisdiction.
Secured and unsecured creditors seeking bankruptcy orders have remedies that share some of the characteristics of pre-judgment attachments. A secured creditor who has delivered a 244 Notice may seek the appointment of an interim receiver to conserve the debtor's estate, pending the expiry of the ten-day notice period. An unsecured creditor who has filed a bankruptcy application may seek the appointment of an interim receiver to conserve the debtor's property, pending the hearing of the bankruptcy application.
The BIA and CCAA provide the court overseeing the CCAA, proposal and receivership proceedings jurisdiction to make orders granting super-priority charges that will rank ahead of secured creditors, to the extent that such creditors have received notice of the proposed charges. The charges can include the following.
The BIA also contains statutory provisions granting priority charges (or similar protections in the context of CCAA proceedings) protecting employees' claims for unpaid wages and vacation pay for the six-month period preceding the commencement of the proceedings, up to CAD2,000 per employee. A similar charge against all assets of the debtor protects certain prescribed unremitted pension contributions. Finally, the CCAA provides that a court may not approve a CCAA plan unless it is satisfied that an employer's unremitted source deductions that were outstanding at the time of filing will be paid during the six-month period following implementation of the CCAA plan.
CCAA and proposal proceedings are the main Canadian restructuring proceedings. An alternative to these proceedings, in certain circumstances, are the arrangement provisions contained in the Canada Business Corporations Act and equivalent provincial corporate statutes.
CCAA proceedings
The principal objective of the CCAA is to enable a debtor to formulate a plan of compromise or arrangement in respect of the obligations it owes its creditors, to be voted on by the creditors, and if approved by the requisite majorities in each class of creditors, sanctioned by the court.
In many CCAA proceedings, the debtor will not file a plan but will rather use the proceedings as a mechanism to effect a sale of all or part of its business, property or assets, through either the implementation of a sale process, or a pre-packaged sale transaction that was formulated prior to, but is consummated as part of, the CCAA proceedings.
Either a creditor or the debtor can initiate CCAA proceedings by application to the court.
To proceed under the CCAA, the debtor must:
The court will exercise its discretion to grant protection if:
Provided the applicant establishes that the debtor meets the CCAA requirements, the burden will be on any opposing creditors to show why the court should not grant the relief requested.
The court will appoint a monitor that is a licensed insolvency trustee (LIT), to oversee the proceedings, report on the debtor's business and financial affairs, and assist the debtor in formulating its plan.
The debtor remains in control of its business and property; however, it remains subject to the monitor's scrutiny. If a transaction is outside the ordinary course of business or does not comply with any court order, the monitor will report such activities to the court.
The court will issue an initial order prohibiting all persons from taking any further steps to pursue claims against the debtor and its directors and officers, without the prior consent of the debtor and monitor, or leave of the court.
The initial order grants the debtor up to ten days' protection from its creditors. Before the expiry of that period, the debtor must return to court to request an extension. There is no limit on the length or number of extensions that a debtor may seek from the court, provided the applicant shows that circumstances exist that make the order appropriate and that it has acted and is acting in good faith and with due diligence.
For a plan to be accepted by creditors, a meeting must be held for voting on the plan, and a majority in number of each class of creditors holding two thirds in value of the total debt represented by that class, must vote in favour of the plan. Once the requisite majorities of creditors in each class approve the plan, the court must sanction it before it becomes binding on all creditors.
After the implementation of the plan and the conclusion of the proceedings, the debtor can resume its normal business operations.
BIA proposal
The objective of proposal proceedings is to enable a debtor to reach a compromise with its creditors through a restructuring of its obligations pursuant to a proposal. The debtor may also use proposal proceedings to effect a sale of all or part of its business or assets.
An insolvent person, a receiver, a liquidator, a bankrupt or a trustee may make a proposal. A proposal is initiated by filing a proposal or a notice of intention (NOI) to make a proposal.
To proceed with a proposal, the debtor must:
The Office of the Superintendent of Bankruptcy (OSB) will appoint a trustee to supervise the proposal. Its role is to monitor the debtor's actions, assist it in developing the proposal, and advise the court if any material adverse changes occur.
The debtor remains in control of its property; the trustee does not control the debtor's affairs.
Once a proposal or NOI has been filed, no creditors can bring or continue any proceedings against the debtor. The stay of proceedings prohibits creditors from exercising any remedy against the debtor or its property, or commencing or continuing any action, execution or other proceeding for the recovery of a claim provable in bankruptcy without leave of the court granted on motion on notice to the debtor and the proposal trustee.
Secured creditors may enforce their security only if they have a 244 Notice and the statutory ten-day notice period has lapsed or been waived by the debtor. All other creditors are stayed for an initial period of 30 days. The time for filing a proposal (and the stay period) can be extended by the court for a maximum period of six months (including the initial 30-day stay), in 45-day intervals.
Both the debtor's creditors and the court must approve a BIA proposal pursuant to the BIA. At least two thirds in value and a majority in number of the creditors, including secured creditors to whom the proposal was made, must approve the proposal. Following the creditors' approval, the court will approve the proposal if it is for the general benefit of the creditors. To this end, evidence must be adduced to show that the debtor's creditors will be better off under the terms of the proposal than they would be if the debtor were liquidated pursuant to bankruptcy proceedings.
When the debtor has fulfilled all of its obligations as set out in the BIA proposal, the trustee will issue a certificate confirming the debtor's full compliance. Once this is issued, the debtor is considered to have completed its restructuring and may resume its normal business operations. However, if the debtor defaults on its obligations to its creditors under the proposal, as approved by its creditors and the court, its proposal may be annulled. Similarly, if a debtor's proposal is rejected by the requisite majority of creditors, the debtor will be deemed to be bankrupt.
Proceedings under the BIA and CCAA result in the debtor obtaining a stay of proceedings, whether automatically by statute or by order of the court.
A debtor subject to CCAA or proposal proceedings may obtain DIP financing (see 3.3 New Money).
For the purposes of voting on proposals or plans under the CCAA, creditors are placed in classes. The voting requirements in proposals and plans (a majority in number and two thirds by value of the creditors present and voting at a properly constituted meeting) apply on a class-by-class basis. Proposals must be made to all unsecured creditors, classed as is appropriate, and may be made to secured creditors.
Creditors are organised into classes based on their commonality of interest.
There is no statutory basis for creditors' committees in Canada and they are not common. However, creditors do form ad hoc committees in some cases.
The BIA and CCAA contain disclosure requirements. These include duties of court officers and debtors, such as:
Receivers and trustees also have disclosure requirements which include creditor notices, creditor lists and discharge reporting.
The CCAA also permits "interested persons" to apply for orders requiring a creditor to disclose any aspect of its economic interest in the debtor.
There is no provision permitting an inter-class "cram-down". Proposals and plans will be binding on dissenting creditor minorities within a class if approved at a properly constituted meeting by the requisite majorities and subsequently sanctioned by the court. If court approval is not granted for a proposal or plan, it will not be binding on an affected class.
There are no general restrictions on trading the debt of a company undergoing a formal restructuring. Such claims may be recognised as provable claims. Trading of such claims can be structured as either assignments or outright sales. There is no strict time limit on when any claims may be traded. Claims purchasers need to be mindful of claims bar dates and claims procedures implemented in insolvency proceedings.
Multiple debtors within a corporate group can commence insolvency proceedings. Procedural (or administrative) consolidation can avoid unnecessary multiplicity of proceedings. Under procedural consolidation, estates of related debtors are jointly administered but each debtor's assets and liabilities are kept separate.
It is rare for a court to allow "substantive consolidation", that is, a consolidation of the assets and liabilities of multiple debtors. The situations where such relief is granted are limited given the prejudice it may have on creditors.
As a general principle, a debtor will seek court approval prior to the sale of assets that are non de minimis in value.
In CCAA and receivership proceedings, the initial order and appointment order set out a dollar threshold at which court approval must be obtained prior to consummating a sale transaction.
In determining whether a transaction should be approved, a court will consider, among other things:
The structure and process for disposal of assets or sale of a going concern business in an insolvency context depend on which insolvency legislation is being used to transact the sale.
The CCAA
With limited exceptions, the debtor runs the process for assets and going concern sales. Following negotiations with its primary creditors, the debtor will often seek court approval for an order that prescribes a sales and investment solicitation process (SISP) that involves varying degrees of involvement of, and supervision by, the monitor. A court may order the monitor to have a much higher degree of control over a SISP where the debtor's directors/management are unwilling to be involved, lack sufficient resources to run the process, or are in a conflict of interest. DIP lenders and secured creditors may also be granted rights to information and input into a SISP. The court may permit or even mandate the hiring of a "sales agent" to run the SISP.
Going concern sales and sales of assets in bulk or by lot of "material" assets require court approval. The debtor will apply to the court for an approval and vesting order, approving the sale transaction and vesting out of all pre-existing secured and unsecured claims against the purchased assets, such that the buyer acquires the debtor's title free and clear of claims and liabilities asserted against those assets.
Recently, share acquisition transactions through the use of a "reverse vesting" structure have been employed in situations such as where a debtor entity holds valuable assets such as licences, or favourable tax attributes that a purchaser entity wishes to preserve, that cannot be transferred out of a debtor company's existing corporate structure. In a reverse vesting transaction, a debtor will seek the court's approval of a reverse vesting order, whereby the unwanted assets and liabilities of a debtor entity are transferred out of the debtor company and into a related "residual co", expunging the corporate structure of the debtor entity from assets and liabilities the purchaser does not want to acquire. As a result, the debtor entity successfully emerges from its CCAA proceedings (albeit under new ownership) and the residual co, holding the unwanted liabilities and assets of the CCAA debtor, will be liquidated and placed into bankruptcy. It is also possible to use a formal CCAA compromise or plan of arrangement to have a plan sponsor acquire the equity of the debtor (extinguishing all pre-plan equity) and have a plan approved by the affected creditors which would permit the acquisition in return for a payment of a compromised amount of the liabilities to the creditors. The funding of that compromise payment would form part of the plan and would be made by the plan sponsor upon successful plan implementation. The plan sponsor would then acquire the business subject only to uncompromised liabilities it has agreed to assume.
BIA proposal
The board of directors and management of the debtor generally run any sale process. As in the CCAA context, there may be a SISP. The proposal trustee appointed under the BIA to help the debtor will generally be involved in any sale process and will help the board of directors and management of the debtor consummate a sale. If that sale process does not result in a transaction, it is likely that the court will be asked by creditors to convert the BIA proposal process into a receivership or a bankruptcy.
Acquirers in a BIA proposal sale process will have the benefit of an approval and vesting order (or reverse vesting order).
Receivership
In a court-appointed receivership, the receiver will either sell the assets of the business in bulk or in lots. Where the receiver is operating the business as a going concern, it may attempt to sell the business as a going concern. The receiver is an officer of the court who must act in the interest of all creditors; however, in conducting a sale process, the receiver will usually consult creditors who are likely to be impacted by the transaction, typically secured creditors, since few receiverships result in payments to unsecured creditors.
Acquirers in a court-appointed receivership proceeding will have the benefit of an approval and vesting order (or reverse vesting order).
BIA bankruptcy
If a debtor is adjudged a bankrupt or assigns itself into bankruptcy, the sale of assets will be run by the bankruptcy trustee for the benefit of the unsecured creditors. A bankruptcy trustee can only sell the assets of the debtor not encumbered by security unless the secured creditor consents to the trustee's sale or the secured creditor seeks the appointment of the trustee also as a court-appointed receiver of the bankrupt debtor.
Credit bids
Secured creditors can, and frequently do, credit-bid in CCAA, BIA proposal and receivership proceedings. These can be structured as stalking horse bids. Sales under these regimes are all court-supervised, and as such there are no special rules for them beyond the test of the prudency of the sale used by court in that context.
Unsecured credit bids are uncommon given the propensity of Canadian secured creditors to take "blanket security" and given the significant shortfalls suffered by unsecured creditors.
Pre-packs
Pre-negotiated or pre-packaged sale processes are not uncommon. Most often, a pre-packaged sale process follows an informal SISP run prior to the proceeding which lends credibility to an abbreviated process post-filing. The debtor enters the proceeding with either a stalking horse bid (requiring an abbreviated post-filing SISP process) or a sale to be approved immediately following filing with compelling evidence to support the abridgement or complete avoidance of a post-filing sale process. Pre-packaged sales require either a significant pre-filing SISP process or some existential threat to the value of the business necessitating an expedited sale approval.
It is common as part of any sale approved by the court that all secured claims and liens that are attached to the assets being sold be vested out by order of the court so that the purchaser obtains clear and free title to the assets.
Additional financing can be obtained by the debtor subject to insolvency proceedings; see 3.3 New Money and 5.5 Priority Claims in Restructuring and Insolvency Proceedings.
The BIA provides prescribed forms and procedures for creditors to formally prove their claim against the insolvent debtor in order to vote on and participate in proposals. Claims are adjudicated in the first instance by the proposal trustee, subject to rights of appeal to the court. A vote cannot be taken on claims not proven in advance of a creditors' meeting. Claims not proven prior to the implementation of a proposal cannot be included.
Under the CCAA, the court commonly makes orders prescribing the procedure for proving and determining claims and establishing dates after which they will be barred as against the insolvent debtor if not proven. Generally, monitors appointed in CCAA proceedings administer these claims processes.
Proposals under the BIA and plans of compromise or arrangement under the CCAA are not binding unless approved by the court, even if approved by the requisite creditor double majorities. Before approving a proposal or plan, the court must be satisfied that the proposal or plan is fair and reasonable and that the provisions of the applicable insolvency statute and any prior court orders have been strictly complied with. In determining the fairness and reasonability of a proposal or plan, the courts will compare the treatment of creditors under the proposal or plan with the treatment that they would receive in bankruptcy or liquidation.
Insolvent debtors restructuring under the BIA or the CCAA are specifically empowered to disclaim executory contracts, with certain exceptions. To disclaim a contract, debtors must obtain the approval of the applicable court officer and provide notice in the prescribed form to the contract counterparty. Contract counterparties may object to the disclaimer of their contracts within 15 days of the giving of notice, and apply to the court for an order giving effect to their objection. A court will consider whether the proposed disclaimer is approved by the court officer, whether it will enhance the prospect of a viable proposal or plan being made, and whether it is likely to cause significant hardship to the contract counterparty. The following contracts are not subject to disclaimer:
In addition, Canadian courts have also found that an option to purchase land is a proprietary interest that cannot be disclaimed under the BIA or vested off pursuant to a vesting order.
A court supervising restructuring proceedings may make an order releasing claims against parties other than the debtor provided that the court is satisfied that the releases are reasonably connected to the restructuring. The court will consider whether:
Third-party releases have included professionals involved in the restructuring, secured creditors, and affiliates of the debtor. Third-party releases have also been included in corporate plans of arrangement although they have been met with some reluctance by the courts.
During insolvency, a right of set-off can arise by law, in equity or by contract.
Legal Set-Off
There are two requirements that must be met for the claim of legal set-off to be made:
Equitable Set-Off
Equitable set-off is available where it would be manifestly unjust to allow one claim to be enforced without taking the other claim into account. Courts will inquire into the connection between the claims and examine the general equities between the parties.
Contractual Set-Off
Contractual set-off is the recognition of the entitlement of parties to explicitly contract to allow for setting-off obligations owing between them.
Under the BIA
Where there is default in the performance of a proposal, the proposal trustee must give notice of default to the creditors and the government insolvency regulator. Following default, or where it is determined that the proposal cannot continue without injustice or undue delay, the court is empowered to order that the proposal be annulled. The court may also annul proposals obtained by fraud. If a proposal is annulled, the debtor will be deemed to have made an assignment in bankruptcy and a trustee will be appointed.
Under the CCAA
Where there is default in the performance of a plan, upon application by a creditor or the monitor, the court is empowered to make whatever order is just in the circumstances, including an order adjudging the debtor to be bankrupt.
Equity claimants may not vote at a meeting of creditors unless the court orders otherwise. Proposals and plans cannot provide for the payment of equity claims unless all other claims are paid in full.
Bankruptcy
The formal liquidation of an insolvent debtor is most commonly carried out through bankruptcy proceedings pursuant to the BIA. In the context of liquidation, bankruptcy is intended to provide for the fair distribution of the debtor's unencumbered assets among its unsecured creditors.
The pre-bankruptcy remedies of a debtor's unsecured creditors are replaced with the right to file a claim and receive a dividend in the distribution of proceeds resulting from the liquidation of the bankrupt debtor's unencumbered assets. However, secured creditors of a bankrupt debtor can also enforce their security outside of the administration of bankruptcy.
Under the BIA, a debtor is considered bankrupt when it:
A bankruptcy can be initiated in three ways where the debtor is insolvent:
For a corporate debtor, voluntary initiation also requires the company's board of directors to pass a resolution before the company can assign itself into bankruptcy.
Once the bankruptcy is effective, all the debtor's property and assets vest in the trustee (subject to the rights of secured creditors) and the debtor ceases to have any control over its affairs. In a corporate bankruptcy, the trustee replaces the management of the corporation and assumes full control over all the debtor's assets and property. On bankruptcy, the trustee proceeds to administer the estate for the benefit of the bankrupt's unsecured creditors. Secured creditors retain their right to enforce on their security, provided they do so in a commercially reasonable manner.
In order to participate in any distribution of the bankrupt's estate, a creditor must file a proof of claim with the trustee in the manner and form prescribed under the BIA. Where such a claim is allowed, said creditor will, in accordance with the priority regime set out under the BIA, be eligible to potentially share in the recovery from any realisation on the property of the bankrupt debtor. Creditors whose claims are disallowed by the trustee may appeal the trustee's decision to the court.
The debtor's assets are distributed to unsecured creditors on a pro rata basis in accordance with the creditors' proven claims. Such distributions are made only after secured creditors have realised their security and after super-priority and preferred creditors have been paid.
A bankrupt corporation is not eligible to obtain a discharge from bankruptcy unless it has satisfied the claims of creditors in full. There is no specified timeline for corporate bankruptcy proceedings.
Once the trustee has administered the estate for the benefit of the bankrupt's unsecured creditors, the trustee applies to the court for a discharge from its duties.
Receivership
The BIA provides for the enforcement of security and the appointment of a receiver on a national basis. A 244 Notice must be delivered prior to a secured creditor enforcing its security on all, or substantially all, of the property and assets of an insolvent debtor. Once the 244 Notice period has lapsed (or if the debtor has consented to an earlier enforcement at the time of the delivery of the 244 Notice), a secured creditor may apply for the appointment of a receiver.
The jurisdiction for the court appointment of a receiver is found in the applicable provincial judicature acts, the rules for court proceedings, under Section 243 of the BIA, and under certain specific statutes (eg, securities legislation).
The court appointment of a receiver typically commences by a secured creditor bringing an action or application against the debtor. The receiver is then appointed in a summary proceeding within that action or application.
A court order appointing a receiver typically:
Unlike privately appointed receivers, whose duty is primarily to the appointing secured creditor (subject to a general duty to act in a commercially reasonable manner), a court-appointed receiver is an officer of the court and has a duty to protect the interests of all the debtor's creditors.
Restructuring proceedings
The main restructuring and rescue procedures in Canada are proceedings pursuant to the CCAA and proposal proceedings pursuant to Part III of the BIA. See 6.1 Statutory Process for a Financial Restructuring/Reorganisation.
In addition, the arrangement provisions contained in the Canada Business Corporations Act and equivalent provincial corporate statutes may be used as an alternative to the formal insolvency proceedings outlined in 6.1 Statutory Process for a Financial Restructuring/Reorganisation.
See 6.8 Asset Disposition and Related Procedures for court-supervised disposal of assets and businesses.
Distressed sales of assets and/or businesses can and do occur outside of the formal insolvency court proceedings highlighted in 6.8 Asset Disposition and Related Procedures. However, such "self-help" or "consensual" sales processes:
The statutory distribution schemes for proceeds of sale flowing from any such notices of sale are prescribed by legislation and cannot be altered except by consensual arrangements made with secured creditors who otherwise have the protection of the priority scheme thereunder.
If the sale transaction is consensual, the purchaser contractually confirms the release of security with the secured creditors. If the transaction is under provincial enforcement regimes, in order to obtain clear title free of secured claims, the enforcing creditor must be a first-ranking creditor thereunder. Otherwise, prior-ranking security is not impacted by the notice of a subordinate-ranking secured creditor. Court approval and vesting orders provide the highest degree of certainty where priority in the debtor's collateral is in dispute.
Credit bids generally occur in the context of a formal proceeding. However, it is possible to structure debt-to-equity conversions/debt-forgiveness transactions where a secured creditor acquires equity in the debtor by private agreement and generally as part of a recapitalisation of the debtor outside of formal proceedings.
In bankruptcy, creditors of the bankrupt appoint inspectors to represent their interests. Appointing an inspector is mandatory in corporate bankruptcies. Inspectors may also be appointed in proposal proceedings; however, this is optional.
There is no requirement or statutory framework under the CCAA or the BIA for the formation of creditors' committees. Creditors' committees have been recognised by courts in limited circumstances and granted court-approved funding.
Both the CCAA and BIA contain provisions allowing for recognition of and co-ordination with foreign proceedings as either a foreign main proceeding or a foreign non-main proceeding.
A foreign proceeding will be recognised as a foreign main proceeding in Canada where the debtor's centre of main interest (COMI) is located in the foreign jurisdiction. A court will determine a debtor's COMI by looking to, among other things, the location of the debtor's management and headquarters, and the location that significant creditors recognise as being the centre of the debtor's operations.
The definition of a "foreign non-main proceeding" in Canada is derived from the UNCITRAL Model Law on Cross-Border Insolvency 1997 and refers to any foreign proceeding other than a foreign main proceeding.
In limited circumstances, Canadian courts have entered into protocols with foreign courts to co-ordinate cross-border proceedings.
Whether the proceeding is determined to be a foreign main or non-main proceeding by a Canadian court has important implications on the treatment of that proceeding and the debtor in Canada. If the proceeding is determined by the Canadian court to be a foreign main proceeding, the debtor is entitled to certain automatic relief by the Canadian court.
The recognition provisions of the BIA and CCAA are largely modelled on the UNCITRAL Model Law on Cross-Border Insolvency 1997. Canada passed legislation adopting the treaty in 2005.
Foreign creditors are dealt with in the same manner as domestic creditors. That being said, in the absence of a recognition order in their local jurisdiction, foreign creditors will not be subject to the stay of proceedings in their home jurisdiction.
Canadian courts may recognise foreign judgments. In recognising a foreign judgment, Canadian courts will consider:
There are a number of defences to recognising a foreign judgment, including on public policy grounds. Once recognised, however, a foreign judgment can be enforced in a manner similar to a domestic judgment.
Trustee in Bankruptcy
In bankruptcy, the debtor's property vests in the trustee (subject to the rights of secured creditors) and the debtor ceases to have control over its affairs. The trustee replaces the management of the corporation and assumes control over the debtor's assets. The trustee administers the estate for the benefit of the bankrupt's unsecured creditors. Secured creditors retain their right to enforce on their security. Trustees are licensed by the OSB to carry out the administration of all aspects of a bankruptcy. Trustees are court officers and act as fiduciaries for the benefit of the bankrupt's creditors.
Monitors
A monitor oversees CCAA proceedings, reports on the debtor's business and financial affairs and assists the debtor with the formulation of its plan. The monitor does not displace the debtor, which continues to be in control of its property.
Court-Appointed Receiver
The BIA provides for the enforcement of security and the appointment of a receiver on a national basis over all or part of a debtor's property. A receiver has broad power to market and sell a debtor's assets with the oversight of the court. The receiver's duties include:
Inspector
The role of inspectors is to oversee the bankruptcy and approve certain actions, including the sale of most assets. Inspectors supervise the trustee on behalf of creditors, and instruct the trustee to act in a manner that is appropriate in order to protect the interests of creditors and the bankrupt estate.
One of the hallmarks of Canadian bankruptcy and insolvency proceedings is the mandatory requirement that a licensed insolvency trustee (LIT) be involved in a supervisory or advisory role, depending on the proceedings.
LITs are insolvency specialists licensed by the OSB.
Trustees
Role
See 9.1 Types of Statutory Officers.
Duties
As a court officer, the trustee must act fairly, equitably and impartially.
The BIA imposes numerous statutory duties on trustees, many of which are administrative in nature. The BIA also confers broad powers that a trustee can exercise with the permission of the inspectors appointed in the bankruptcy.
Receivers
Role
See 9.1 Types of Statutory Officers.
Duties
A court-appointed receiver is an officer of the court, subject to the court's authority and direction and accountable to the court. A court-appointed receiver has a fiduciary duty to act in the best interest of all interested parties, including the debtor. A court-appointed receiver takes instruction from neither security holder nor debtor, and generally retains independent counsel.
A receiver must exercise prudence and reasonable care in the conduct of the receivership and in dealings with the receivership property.
The BIA imposes the following statutory duties on receivers:
CCAA Monitor
Role
See 9.1 Types of Statutory Officers.
Restrictions on who may be monitor
No trustee may be appointed as monitor if, within the last two years, the trustee was a director, officer or employee of the debtor; or is related to the debtor, or any director or officer of the debtor, or the auditor, accountant or legal counsel of the debtor.
Statutory duties
The monitor has many duties that are administrative in nature, such as publishing orders and reports and filing prescribed documents with the OSB.
The monitor also has duties that are substantive in nature, such as reviewing the company's cash-flow statements filed with the court and commenting on them, advising on the reasonableness and fairness of a proposed plan, and reporting to the court on developments or changes in the proceeding.
The CCAA imposes an obligation on the monitor to act honestly and in good faith.
Obligations pursuant to court orders
The initial order and ensuing orders may require the monitor to perform additional obligations. For example, they may empower the monitor to monitor the debtor's receipts and disbursements, and assist the debtor in dealings with its creditors and in preparing the required cash-flow statements.
Proposal Trustee
Role
The role of a proposal trustee is similar to that of a monitor.
A proposal trustee is an independent third party appointed by the OSB to assist the company with the filing of its NOI or proposal and to monitor the company's ongoing operations during the proceedings. A proposal trustee must be an LIT. The debtor continues to be in possession of its assets; the assets do not vest in the proposal trustee.
Duties
Duties include monitoring the business's ongoing financial activities, reporting to the court on events that might affect the viability of the company, assisting the company in the preparation of its proposal, notifying the creditors of meetings of creditors and tabulating the votes at these meetings. The proposal trustee will also prepare a report on the proposal that is included in the mailing of the proposal to creditors.
Proposal trustees must report on the reasonability of the cash flows filed by the debtor on material adverse changes in the debtor's affairs and on any proposal presented by the debtor.
The proposal trustee must advise the court on the terms of the proposal and the conduct of the debtor. The proposal trustee's recommendation on the proposal will typically include a statement advising that the proposal offers more to a debtor's creditors than they would receive in a bankruptcy. If the proposal trustee cannot make this statement, it is likely that a court will refuse to approve the proposal.
The debtor will usually select court-appointed officers. If a creditor initiates the proceeding, that creditor will usually put forward its preferred officer. The appointment of a monitor or court-appointed receiver is not official until the court issues an order confirming the appointment.
Statutory officers are restructuring professionals with business and accounting qualifications who assist the debtor's employees in managing the operations during an insolvency proceeding, as well as evaluating and making recommendations to the board of directors on restructuring alternatives available to the debtor. Trustees in bankruptcy and receivers displace the directors of the insolvent debtor in relation to dealings with the property, and may decide to continue to work with the existing management. The debtor's employees are not employees of the court-appointed officers, although they work under their supervision and many of the decisions to be taken in a proceeding will require the court-appointed officer's consent.
Only an LIT may act as a trustee, proposal trustee, monitor or court-appointed receiver.
Corporate directors in Canada are subject to statutory and common law duties. Two general obligations that are imposed on directors are:
Corporate directors can attract personal liability under a number of provincial and federal statutes. For example, with respect to labour relations, personal liability is imposed on directors for unpaid wages, accrued vacation pay and, in certain cases, pension plan contributions that are due but unpaid.
Directors are personally liable for payroll remittances for amounts deducted from employees' wages on account of income taxes, contributions to the Canada (or Quebec, as applicable) Pension Plan, and employment insurance premiums.
Directors will not be held personally liable for the above to the extent they can show that they were duly diligent, or that the failure to remit the amounts required in a timely manner was due to circumstances beyond their control.
Furthermore, directors may also be held personally liable for a corporation's default in payment of its goods and services tax or harmonised sales tax (HST) obligations.
Corporate directors may also be held personally liable if they are found to have acted improperly so as to cause a loss to the company's creditors.
In appropriate cases, court officers have been authorised to commence claims for breach of duties owed by shareholders and others to debtors and their stakeholders. These claims are based on the oppression and derivative action provisions of applicable corporate law statutes. The commencement of these claims generally requires leave of the court and evidence that it is more appropriate or practical for the court officer, rather than the creditors, to bring the claims. Courts will also consider whether the commencement of these claims by a court officer will facilitate restructuring proceedings.
Assuming other applicable criteria are satisfied, creditors retain the ability to make claims for breach of duties owed by shareholders and others in respect of the debtor. Claims for breach of duty owed to debtors must either be brought by creditors or court officers, not both.
Preference
A preferential transaction occurs where one creditor receives payment over another creditor before the initial bankruptcy event, or the date the CCAA proceedings were commenced, with the effect of the debtor preferring one creditor over another.
One of the following circumstances must exist:
A preferential transaction is void and will be set aside by the court.
Transaction at Undervalue
A transaction at undervalue (TUV) occurs where the debtor was insolvent at the time the transaction occurred, or became insolvent as a result of the transaction, and the intent of the debtor was to defeat, delay or defraud its creditors.
For a transaction to constitute a TUV, it must have occurred:
Where a TUV occurs, a court can set aside the transaction, or order the recipient of the payment to pay the difference between what it paid for the property and the actual fair market value of that property.
Improper Payments by the Bankrupt Corporation
Under the BIA, a court may inquire into whether the following payments made by a debtor were made at the time when the corporation was insolvent (or such payment rendered the corporation insolvent):
If a court finds that such payments have been made improperly, judgment may be made against the directors of the debtor requiring repayment of such amounts.
These provisions place a reverse onus on the directors to prove that any of the aforementioned payments were:
Directors who objected to the corporation making payments of such benefits are exonerated from liability.
See 11.1 Historical Transactions.
A trustee or monitor can initiate proceedings to challenge a transaction as a preference or TUV.
Provincial legislation permits creditors to seek to set aside preferences and transactions to defeat, delay or defraud creditors.
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