The Duty of Good Faith in Contract Law

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Good Faith in
Contractual Relations
 
Professor Rosalie Jukier
Formation Continue
February 24, 2015
Good Faith
 
1.
 
What is it that lawyers need to know about
the duty of good faith in:
A. Quebec
B. Common law Canada
2.
 
Examine good faith through the lens of two
important and recent decisions
Bhasin v. Hrynew 
 2014 SCC 71 (Common Law)
Churchill Falls (Labrador) Corp v. Hydro-Quebec 
2014
QCCS 3590
But is it also…
 
3
.
 
To see the evolutionary capacity of law and
the use of creativity in legal argumentation
4.
 
To see the cross-fertilization of ideas:
A. as between legal traditions (civil and common law)
and
B. as between legal systems within a single legal
tradition (the potential influence of German civil law
on Quebec civil law)
Outline
 
A.  Discussion of recent Supreme Court case of
Bhasin v. Hrynew
 which purportedly brings in a
general duty of good faith in contract
performance in common law Canada (Prof
Jukier)
B.
 
Discussion of good faith in Quebec including
the recent Quebec case of 
Churchill Falls v.
Hydro Québec 
(Prof Cumyn)
Mise en contexte
 
Quebec position on good faith:
« Trilogy » of Supreme Court cases (Que)
pre-dating the CCQ:
Banque National v. Soucisse 
1981
 2 SCR 339
Banque National du Canada v. Houle 
1990
 3
SCR 122
Banque du Montréal v. Bail 
1992
 2 SCR 554
Good Faith in Quebec
 
Soucisse 
(1981): SCC (Beetz, J) used former art.
1024 CCLC (now 1434 CCQ) to 
imply
, via
equity
 an obligation of good faith into the
performance of the contract
The effect was to 
add
 an obligation on the part
of the Bank (which was nowhere explicit in the
contract) to disclose to heirs a suretyship to
which they would otherwise be held
Failure to do this resulted in a 
fin de non
recevoir
Good Faith in Quebec
 
Houle 
(1990):  SCC (L
Heureux-Dub
é, J
) took
Soucisse 
a few steps further:
1. Brought in the notion of 
abuse of rights
 making a
party potentially liable in damages even if that party
performed a contractual term to its letter
2. In that sense, good faith could, in effect, 
override
an express contractual provision (demand loan
becomes loan that requires reasonable notice)
3. Confirmed that good faith requires the reasonable
exercise of contractual rights (not simply malicious
bad faith)
Good Faith in Quebec
 
Bail 
(1992): SCC (Gonthier, J) extends the duty of
good faith in the performance of a contract to the
formation
 of a contract
Codification:  CCQ brings in 3 relevant provisions
that codify jurisprudence:
Article 1375:  
The parties shall conduct themselves in
good faith both at the time the obligation is created and at
the time it is performed or extinguished
Articles 6 and 7:  Article 7 confirms that the doctrine of
good faith includes both exercising a right 
with intent of
injuring another 
or
 in an excessive and unreasonable
manner
Upshot of Good Faith in Quebec
 
Seen as a 
robust
 doctrine
Has gone so far as to imply an obligation to
cooperate between franchisor/ee (
Provigo
Distribution v. Supermarch
é
 ARG 
[1998] RJQ 47
(C.A.)
Applies in all contractual contexts, even
commercial (unusual for protective doctrines)
How much further can it go?  Can it require
parties to renegotiate contracts? 
Churchill Falls?
Common Law?
 
Summed up by Angela Swan:
Viewed as 
some kind of embarrassing 
faux
pas 
or social disease
Most academic commentators were either
against, or extremely wary, of the doctrine
It is worth adding a word about an implication which
is 
not 
made as a matter of course in English law –
that contractual duties will be performed in good
faith
 
Stephen Smith, Atiyah
s Introduction to the Law of
Contract
 
Common Law?
 
Michael Bridge wrote an article entitled, 
Does
Anglo-Canadian Contract Law Need a Doctrine
of Good Faith?
 and concluded, generally, no
Shannon O
Bryne (U of Alta) and John
McCamus (Osgoode) are common law
academic proponents of good faith
But the Canadian position was 
piecemeal,
unsettled and unclear
 (Cromwell, J. in 
Bhasin
v. Hrynew
 
Why the resistance?
 
Uncertainty
…concern that [it] will bring an unattractive degree of
uncertainty to the law
 (McCamus) and increase the
cost of litigating contract disputes
Autonomy of the Will and Freedom of Contract
Judicially imposing this obligation would permit courts
to interfere with the express terms of a contract
(Transamerica Life v. ING Canada 
2003 68 OR 457 (C.A.))
Defeat the essence of negotiation
It will 
hobble the marketplace
 (Iacobucci, J in 
Martel
Building Ltd v Canada 
2000 SCC 60)
Result…
 
Good Faith applied in the common law only
in exceptional circumstances:
In certain kinds of contracts (eg insurance,
employment, franchise)
In certain kinds of situations
Where parties must cooperate to achieve objects of
the contract
Where one party exercises discretionary power under
the contract
Where one party seeks to evade contractual duties
For example
 
McKinlay Motors Ltd. v. Honda Canada 
(1989) 46 B.L.R.
62 (Nfld SCTD)
McKinlay Motors has a long-term Honda car dealership
Contract gave Honda discretion in the allocation of cars
Honda proceeded to execute a 
downward allocation
spiral
 because it wasn
t satisfied with the level of
pizzazz
 of the dealership
Held (Trial level Nfld):  Honda acted in bad faith in the
exercise of its discretion to allocate cars
There is an 
implied term…that parties act toward each
other in their business dealings in good faith
For example
 
Gateway Realty v. Arton Holdings 
(1991) 106 NSR
(2d) 180
2 competing shopping centres
Zellers is anchor tenant of Gateway Centre
Arton convinces Zellers to relocate to its Centre
Zellers has 17 years left on its lease in Gateway Centre and
has assignment of lease clause
Zellers assigns lease to Arton and Arton proceeds to leave
premises vacant!
Obligation not to exercise the contract in a harmful manner
Contracting parties must respect community standards of
honesty, reasonableness or fairness
Bhasin v. Hrynew 
November 2014
 
B: enrollment director for Can-Am since 1989.  The parties have
a commercial dealership agreement (3 year term but renewable
unless 6 months notice given to terminate)
H: a competitor enrollment director who wants to capture B
’s
lucrative market share
H proposes a merger which B rejects
H and Can-Am work in tandem
Can-Am appoints H to be trading officer to review enrollment
directors
 compliance with securities law (B alleges this is a
conflict of interest and refuses to cooperate)
Can-Am misled B about its ultimate intention (to merge the 2
businesses) and when B refused to allow H to audit his records,
Can-Am gives notice to terminate the agreement.
What is wrong with that?
 
Trial Judge:
 
Contract was analogous to a franchise contract and
therefore court could apply duty of good faith.  Here, there was
a lack of good faith because the exercise of the non-renewal
clause was done in a dishonest and misleading manner and for
an improper purpose
Alberta C.A. reversed:
No general duty of good faith
Court cannot imply a duty that goes against an express
term of the contract (entire agreement clause)
Motive for triggering non-renewal was not restricted under
the contract
Supreme Court of Canada
 
1.
 
Acknowledges good faith contractual performance as
a 
general organizing principle
 in Canadian common
law
2.
 
Recognizes a common law duty which applies to all
contracts to act honestly in the performance of
contractual obligations
3.
 
This will be:
a. just
b. accord with the reasonable expectations of
commercial parties and
c. won
t detract from commercial certainty
 
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“Never underestimate the influence of football”
In the contract of distribution of Manchester United
branded fragrances Leggatt, J stated: “the traditional
English hostility towards a doctrine of good faith in the
performance of contracts, to the extent that it still
persists, is 
misplaced
Refusing to recognize the doctrine is “swimming against
the tide” (civil law countries and the U.S.)
There is a “general norm” = expectation of honesty
No “improper, commercially unacceptable or
unconscionable” conduct.
Unpacking the Decision – What
exactly does 
Bhasin v Hrynew 
do?
 
Academic opinion is divided
Some herald it as a landmark decision that
radically changes the law for the better
Others are less favourable.  One academic said,
“we see good faith raising its ugly head again,
courtesy of the SCC in 
Bhasin v Hrynew
, and
trying as ever to commingle focused argument
with vacuous verbiage”
Others limit its scope to the narrow duty of
honesty
Questions
 
What is the scope of the new general duty of
good faith?
On what basis does it make its way into
Canadian common law?
How to meet arguments of autonomy of the will
and freedom of contract?
Can parties contract out of it?
How will it not bring uncertainty into the law?
Scope of Good Faith
 
Cromwell, J is careful to limit the scope of
his judgment
“Incremental change”
“Highly context specific”
Focus on dishonesty:  “there is a general
duty of honesty in contractual
performance”
Divided Academic Opinion
 
“Don’t be a scumbag” and “behave
decently”
“(Merely) a general duty of honesty”
It only requires that “parties must not lie or
otherwise knowingly mislead each other about
matters directly linked to the performance of
the contract” (Justice Cromwell)
Compare with Quebec’s Duty of
Good Faith
 
While honesty is part of the duty, it is not limited
to it
Houle 
and article 7 CCQ:  extends to
unreasonable behaviour
Arguably the facts of 
Soucisse 
could fall within
the dishonesty standard
Hard to construct the facts of 
Houle 
in a similar
way (actions were sudden, impulsive and
harmful but not dishonest)
Legal Basis of the Duty of Good Faith
 
Quebec:  implied (by law) obligation of the
contract, now codified
Common Law:  unclear
Is it a duty imposed by law?
Or is it one that is implied in fact
according to the reasonable intentions of
the parties?
Implied Obligation versus
Imposed Duty
 
Yam Seng 
decision in the UK: “basis…is
the presumed intention of the parties”
“Parties bind themselves in order to co-
operate to their mutual benefit”
According to one Canadian commentator:
“it’s impossible to conceive of any contractual
relation as not being infused with obligations
of good faith”
Bhasin v. Hrynew
 
“Commercial parties reasonably expect a
basic level of honesty and good faith in
contractual dealings” (para 60)
On the other hand…
“this should not be thought of as an
implied term, but a general doctrine of
contract law that imposes as a contractual
duty a minimum standard of honest
contractual performance” (para 74)
Freedom of Contract concerns
 
Note difference in approach of L’Heureux-Dubé,
J. in 
Houle 
and Cromwell, J. in 
Bhasin v. Hrynew
“While the doctrine may represent a
departure from the absolutist approach of
previous decades, consecrated in the well-
known maxim "
la volonté des parties fait loi"
(the intent of the parties is the governing
factor), it inserts itself into today's trend
towards a just and fair approach to rights and
obligations” L’Heureux-Dubé in 
Houle
Freedom of Contract concerns
 
“[T]he duty of honest performance
interferes very little with freedom of
contract, since parties will rarely expect
that their contracts permit dishonest
performance of their obligations”
Cromwell, J in 
Bhasin v. Hryew 
(para 76)
So can parties contract out of
the duty?
 
Alberta CA held this duty was contrary to
the express terms of the parties’ contract
and that they implicitly contracted out of
it.
Cromwell (SCC):  “I would not rule out
any role for the agreement of the parties
in influencing the scope of honest
performance in a particular context”
Ability to contract out
 
Cromwell (SCC):  “parties should be free… to
relax 
the requirements of the doctrine as long as
they respect its minimum core requirements”
However a “generically worded entire agreement
clause” does not suffice
Leggett, J.:  “in practice it is hardly conceivable
that contracting parties would attempt expressly
to exclude the core requirement to act
honestly”. 
Yam Seng  (
Cromwell, J. concurs)
 
Concerns of Uncertainty
 
“There is nothing unduly vague or unworkable
about the concept.  Its application involves no
more uncertainty than is inherent in the process
of contractual interpretation” 
Yam Seng
Cromwell in 
Bhasin:  
“no risk to commercial
certainty”…”the duty is clear and easy to apply”
AND
“take comfort from experience of the civil law of
Quebec and…the United States”
Comparative Law Justification
 
Both 
Yam Seng 
(UK) and 
Bhasin v.
Hrynew 
look to foreign law
Sources:  Civil law countries/Quebec and
the U.S.
Yam Seng: 
the Common Law is
“swimming against the tide”
Bhasin v. Hrynew:  
explicit reference to
Quebec (code and jurisprudence) and U.S.
 
Comparative law provides
comfort
 
“Experience in Quebec and the U.S. shows
that even very broad conceptions of the
duty of good faith have not impeded
contractual activity or contractual stability”
Result:  Can-Am was held to have
breached its agreement “when it failed to
act honestly with Mr. Bhasin in exercising
the non-renewal clause”
Cross-Fertilization
 
Quebec civil law gives Court confidence to
move the common law forward
Raises a number of counter-currents
On the one hand, we want to maintain the
distinctiveness of Canada’s legal traditions
(message of the 
Nadon Reference)
One of the key take-aways from Justice
LeBel’s 14 years on the Supreme Court
Cross-Fertilization
 
On the other hand, while the duality of
On the other hand, while the duality of
Canada’s legal traditions should be
Canada’s legal traditions should be
maintained and jealously protected, it
maintained and jealously protected, it
need not prevent each of the traditions
need not prevent each of the traditions
from learning from the other.
from learning from the other.
Rather, careful and respectful comparative
Rather, careful and respectful comparative
judicial methodology can only influence
judicial methodology can only influence
the development of the law in a positive
the development of the law in a positive
way.
way.
 
Value of Dialogue between
Legal Traditions
 
LeBel, J. recognized in 
Globe and Mail 
(2010 SCC) that
certain areas of law are more conducive to convergence
given their globalized context
Why should parties be allowed to act differently in the
performance of their contract in different Canadian
provinces?
Bhasin 
is a good example of a decision that seeks to
preserve the duality of Canada’s legal traditions while at
the same time acknowledging the mutual influence these
traditions can have on each other.
Legal Creativity:  Using Good Faith in the
Face of No Imprévision
 
Can the duty of good faith in contract
performance extend as far as requiring parties
to renegotiate their contract in the face of
extreme changing circumstances?
Churchill Fall v. Hydro Quebec
German courts have accepted this scope for
good faith.
French and Quebec academics have as well
What will Quebec courts ultimately say?
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Delve into the duty of good faith in contractual relations, exploring its significance in Quebec civil law and common law Canada. Analyze recent landmark decisions like Bhasin v. Hrynew and Churchill Falls Corp v. Hydro-Quebec, showcasing the evolution and cross-fertilization of legal concepts. Unravel the implications of good faith obligations on contract performance, drawing insights from key Supreme Court cases and emphasizing the interplay between legal traditions.

  • Contract Law
  • Good Faith
  • Quebec Civil Law
  • Common Law Canada
  • Legal Traditions

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  1. Good Faith in Contractual Relations Professor Rosalie Jukier Formation Continue February 24, 2015

  2. Good Faith 1. What is it that lawyers need to know about the duty of good faith in: A. Quebec B. Common law Canada 2. Examine good faith through the lens of two important and recent decisions Bhasin v. Hrynew 2014 SCC 71 (Common Law) Churchill Falls (Labrador) Corp v. Hydro-Quebec 2014 QCCS 3590

  3. But is it also 3. To see the evolutionary capacity of law and the use of creativity in legal argumentation 4. To see the cross-fertilization of ideas: A. as between legal traditions (civil and common law) and B. as between legal systems within a single legal tradition (the potential influence of German civil law on Quebec civil law)

  4. Outline A. Discussion of recent Supreme Court case of Bhasin v. Hrynew which purportedly brings in a general duty of good faith in contract performance in common law Canada (Prof Jukier) B. Discussion of good faith in Quebec including the recent Quebec case of Churchill Falls v. Hydro Qu bec (Prof Cumyn)

  5. Mise en contexte Quebec position on good faith: Trilogy of Supreme Court cases (Que) pre-dating the CCQ: Banque National v. Soucisse 1981 2 SCR 339 Banque National du Canada v. Houle 1990 3 SCR 122 Banque du Montr al v. Bail 1992 2 SCR 554

  6. Good Faith in Quebec Soucisse (1981): SCC (Beetz, J) used former art. 1024 CCLC (now 1434 CCQ) to imply , via equity an obligation of good faith into the performance of the contract The effect was to add an obligation on the part of the Bank (which was nowhere explicit in the contract) to disclose to heirs a suretyship to which they would otherwise be held Failure to do this resulted in a fin de non recevoir

  7. Good Faith in Quebec Houle (1990): SCC (L Heureux-Dub , J) took Soucisse a few steps further: 1. Brought in the notion of abuse of rights making a party potentially liable in damages even if that party performed a contractual term to its letter 2. In that sense, good faith could, in effect, override an express contractual provision (demand loan becomes loan that requires reasonable notice) 3. Confirmed that good faith requires the reasonable exercise of contractual rights (not simply malicious bad faith)

  8. Good Faith in Quebec Bail (1992): SCC (Gonthier, J) extends the duty of good faith in the performance of a contract to the formation of a contract Codification: CCQ brings in 3 relevant provisions that codify jurisprudence: Article 1375: The parties shall conduct themselves in good faith both at the time the obligation is created and at the time it is performed or extinguished Articles 6 and 7: Article 7 confirms that the doctrine of good faith includes both exercising a right with intent of injuring another or in an excessive and unreasonable manner

  9. Upshot of Good Faith in Quebec Seen as a robust doctrine Has gone so far as to imply an obligation to cooperate between franchisor/ee (Provigo Distribution v. Supermarch ARG [1998] RJQ 47 (C.A.) Applies in all contractual contexts, even commercial (unusual for protective doctrines) How much further can it go? Can it require parties to renegotiate contracts? Churchill Falls?

  10. Common Law? Summed up by Angela Swan: Viewed as some kind of embarrassing faux pas or social disease Most academic commentators were either against, or extremely wary, of the doctrine It is worth adding a word about an implication which is not made as a matter of course in English law that contractual duties will be performed in good faith Stephen Smith, Atiyah s Introduction to the Law of Contract

  11. Common Law? Michael Bridge wrote an article entitled, Does Anglo-Canadian Contract Law Need a Doctrine of Good Faith? and concluded, generally, no Shannon O Bryne (U of Alta) and John McCamus (Osgoode) are common law academic proponents of good faith But the Canadian position was piecemeal, unsettled and unclear (Cromwell, J. in Bhasin v. Hrynew

  12. Why the resistance? Uncertainty concern that [it] will bring an unattractive degree of uncertainty to the law (McCamus) and increase the cost of litigating contract disputes Autonomy of the Will and Freedom of Contract Judicially imposing this obligation would permit courts to interfere with the express terms of a contract (Transamerica Life v. ING Canada 2003 68 OR 457 (C.A.)) Defeat the essence of negotiation It will hobble the marketplace (Iacobucci, J in Martel Building Ltd v Canada 2000 SCC 60)

  13. Result Good Faith applied in the common law only in exceptional circumstances: In certain kinds of contracts (eg insurance, employment, franchise) In certain kinds of situations Where parties must cooperate to achieve objects of the contract Where one party exercises discretionary power under the contract Where one party seeks to evade contractual duties

  14. For example McKinlay Motors Ltd. v. Honda Canada (1989) 46 B.L.R. 62 (Nfld SCTD) McKinlay Motors has a long-term Honda car dealership Contract gave Honda discretion in the allocation of cars Honda proceeded to execute a downward allocation spiral because it wasn t satisfied with the level of pizzazz of the dealership Held (Trial level Nfld): Honda acted in bad faith in the exercise of its discretion to allocate cars There is an implied term that parties act toward each other in their business dealings in good faith

  15. For example Gateway Realty v. Arton Holdings (1991) 106 NSR (2d) 180 2 competing shopping centres Zellers is anchor tenant of Gateway Centre Arton convinces Zellers to relocate to its Centre Zellers has 17 years left on its lease in Gateway Centre and has assignment of lease clause Zellers assigns lease to Arton and Arton proceeds to leave premises vacant! Obligation not to exercise the contract in a harmful manner Contracting parties must respect community standards of honesty, reasonableness or fairness

  16. Bhasin v. Hrynew November 2014 B: enrollment director for Can-Am since 1989. The parties have a commercial dealership agreement (3 year term but renewable unless 6 months notice given to terminate) H: a competitor enrollment director who wants to capture B s lucrative market share H proposes a merger which B rejects H and Can-Am work in tandem Can-Am appoints H to be trading officer to review enrollment directors compliance with securities law (B alleges this is a conflict of interest and refuses to cooperate) Can-Am misled B about its ultimate intention (to merge the 2 businesses) and when B refused to allow H to audit his records, Can-Am gives notice to terminate the agreement.

  17. What is wrong with that? Trial Judge: Contract was analogous to a franchise contract and therefore court could apply duty of good faith. Here, there was a lack of good faith because the exercise of the non-renewal clause was done in a dishonest and misleading manner and for an improper purpose Alberta C.A. reversed: No general duty of good faith Court cannot imply a duty that goes against an express term of the contract (entire agreement clause) Motive for triggering non-renewal was not restricted under the contract

  18. Supreme Court of Canada 1. Acknowledges good faith contractual performance as a general organizing principle in Canadian common law 2. Recognizes a common law duty which applies to all contracts to act honestly in the performance of contractual obligations 3. This will be: a. just b. accord with the reasonable expectations of commercial parties and c. won t detract from commercial certainty

  19. English Law: Yam Seng Pte Ltd v. International Trade Corp [2013] EWHC 111 (QB) Never underestimate the influence of football In the contract of distribution of Manchester United branded fragrances Leggatt, J stated: the traditional English hostility towards a doctrine of good faith in the performance of contracts, to the extent that it still persists, is misplaced Refusing to recognize the doctrine is swimming against the tide (civil law countries and the U.S.) There is a general norm = expectation of honesty No improper, commercially unacceptable or unconscionable conduct.

  20. Unpacking the Decision What exactly does Bhasin v Hrynew do? Academic opinion is divided Some herald it as a landmark decision that radically changes the law for the better Others are less favourable. One academic said, we see good faith raising its ugly head again, courtesy of the SCC in Bhasin v Hrynew, and trying as ever to commingle focused argument with vacuous verbiage Others limit its scope to the narrow duty of honesty

  21. Questions What is the scope of the new general duty of good faith? On what basis does it make its way into Canadian common law? How to meet arguments of autonomy of the will and freedom of contract? Can parties contract out of it? How will it not bring uncertainty into the law?

  22. Scope of Good Faith Cromwell, J is careful to limit the scope of his judgment Incremental change Highly context specific Focus on dishonesty: there is a general duty of honesty in contractual performance

  23. Divided Academic Opinion Don t be a scumbag and behave decently (Merely) a general duty of honesty It only requires that parties must not lie or otherwise knowingly mislead each other about matters directly linked to the performance of the contract (Justice Cromwell)

  24. Compare with Quebecs Duty of Good Faith While honesty is part of the duty, it is not limited to it Houle and article 7 CCQ: extends to unreasonable behaviour Arguably the facts of Soucisse could fall within the dishonesty standard Hard to construct the facts of Houle in a similar way (actions were sudden, impulsive and harmful but not dishonest)

  25. Legal Basis of the Duty of Good Faith Quebec: implied (by law) obligation of the contract, now codified Common Law: unclear Is it a duty imposed by law? Or is it one that is implied in fact according to the reasonable intentions of the parties?

  26. Implied Obligation versus Imposed Duty Yam Seng decision in the UK: basis is the presumed intention of the parties Parties bind themselves in order to co- operate to their mutual benefit According to one Canadian commentator: it s impossible to conceive of any contractual relation as not being infused with obligations of good faith

  27. Bhasin v. Hrynew Commercial parties reasonably expect a basic level of honesty and good faith in contractual dealings (para 60) On the other hand this should not be thought of as an implied term, but a general doctrine of contract law that imposes as a contractual duty a minimum standard of honest contractual performance (para 74)

  28. Freedom of Contract concerns Note difference in approach of L Heureux-Dub , J. in Houle and Cromwell, J. in Bhasin v. Hrynew While the doctrine may represent a departure from the absolutist approach of previous decades, consecrated in the well- known maxim "la volont des parties fait loi" (the intent of the parties is the governing factor), it inserts itself into today's trend towards a just and fair approach to rights and obligations L Heureux-Dub in Houle

  29. Freedom of Contract concerns [T]he duty of honest performance interferes very little with freedom of contract, since parties will rarely expect that their contracts permit dishonest performance of their obligations Cromwell, J in Bhasin v. Hryew (para 76)

  30. So can parties contract out of the duty? Alberta CA held this duty was contrary to the express terms of the parties contract and that they implicitly contracted out of it. Cromwell (SCC): I would not rule out any role for the agreement of the parties in influencing the scope of honest performance in a particular context

  31. Ability to contract out Cromwell (SCC): parties should be free to relax the requirements of the doctrine as long as they respect its minimum core requirements However a generically worded entire agreement clause does not suffice Leggett, J.: in practice it is hardly conceivable that contracting parties would attempt expressly to exclude the core requirement to act honestly . Yam Seng (Cromwell, J. concurs)

  32. Concerns of Uncertainty There is nothing unduly vague or unworkable about the concept. Its application involves no more uncertainty than is inherent in the process of contractual interpretation Yam Seng Cromwell in Bhasin: no risk to commercial certainty the duty is clear and easy to apply AND take comfort from experience of the civil law of Quebec and the United States

  33. Comparative Law Justification Both Yam Seng (UK) and Bhasin v. Hrynew look to foreign law Sources: Civil law countries/Quebec and the U.S. Yam Seng: the Common Law is swimming against the tide Bhasin v. Hrynew: explicit reference to Quebec (code and jurisprudence) and U.S.

  34. Comparative law provides comfort Experience in Quebec and the U.S. shows that even very broad conceptions of the duty of good faith have not impeded contractual activity or contractual stability Result: Can-Am was held to have breached its agreement when it failed to act honestly with Mr. Bhasin in exercising the non-renewal clause

  35. Cross-Fertilization Quebec civil law gives Court confidence to move the common law forward Raises a number of counter-currents On the one hand, we want to maintain the distinctiveness of Canada s legal traditions (message of the Nadon Reference) One of the key take-aways from Justice LeBel s 14 years on the Supreme Court

  36. Cross-Fertilization On the other hand, while the duality of Canada s legal traditions should be maintained and jealously protected, it need not prevent each of the traditions from learning from the other. Rather, careful and respectful comparative judicial methodology can only influence the development of the law in a positive way.

  37. Value of Dialogue between Legal Traditions LeBel, J. recognized in Globe and Mail (2010 SCC) that certain areas of law are more conducive to convergence given their globalized context Why should parties be allowed to act differently in the performance of their contract in different Canadian provinces? Bhasin is a good example of a decision that seeks to preserve the duality of Canada s legal traditions while at the same time acknowledging the mutual influence these traditions can have on each other.

  38. Legal Creativity: Using Good Faith in the Face of No Impr vision Can the duty of good faith in contract performance extend as far as requiring parties to renegotiate their contract in the face of extreme changing circumstances? Churchill Fall v. Hydro Quebec German courts have accepted this scope for good faith. French and Quebec academics have as well What will Quebec courts ultimately say?

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