Stephenson v. Hilti (Canada) Ltd.
(1989) 63 D.L.R. (4th) 573
Nova Scotia Supreme Court - Trial Division
Halifax, Nova Scotia
Hallett J.
Employment --
Wrongful dismissal -- Release being set aside and unsophisticated 61-year-old
plaintiff being awarded damages in lieu of 11 months' notice -- Release being
unconscionable
This was an
action for damages for wrongful dismissal. The plaintiff was 61 when dismissed.
Fearing inability to meet his financial obligations, he signed a release and
accepted three and a half months' wages plus certain improvements in his
pension. The plaintiff was not sophisticated in business and had no legal
advice.
HELD: The release
was set aside and the action allowed. The plaintiff was entitled to damages in
lieu of 11 months' notice. The release was unconscionable.
[Facts:
Stephenson was 61 years old, with 9 yearsÕ service. The employer decides
he is not working out and decides to dismiss him. They offer him a
Ôseverance packageÕ of about 4 monthsÕ salary. He accepted this, but then
later sued for wrongful dismissal seeking a longer period of notice because the
notice package heÕd agreed to was too low, very unfair, and
ÔuncounscionableÕ. The employer argued that the employee should be held
to the original agreement.]
The Plaintiff is
the employee, the defendant is the employer.
HALLETT J.:--
...
There are two related issues in this case. The plaintiff
[argues firstly that] the Court [should] to set aside the settlement as
unconscionable. However, before that issue can be decided, it is necessary to
determine what would have been reasonable notice of termination of employment
in this case so that I will have some measurement against which I can determine
if the settlement was unconscionable.
In an employment
contract for an indefinite term, the law implies that if either party wishes to
terminate the employment, the other must be given reasonable notice of the date
of termination so that the employee can have a reasonable period of time to
search for other employment and the employer a reasonable period to find
someone to fill the position. In lieu of a reasonable notice, the employer
shall pay the employee a salary for the equivalent period. In this case, the
employer wishes to terminate a sixty-one year old man who had been with the
company for nine years. This was not a dismissal for cause [and therefore the
employee was entitled to reasonable notice].
There is no doubt
that finding equivalent employment for a person of the plaintiff's age would be
very difficult. As stated in numerous cases of wrongful dismissal, what is
reasonable notice turns on the facts and circumstances of each case. In my
opinion, considering the plaintiff's age in particular, reasonable notice would
have been in the range of ten to twelve months. The plaintiff has been unable
to find work and the defendant has decided to withdraw its assertion that he
did not mitigate his damages.
That brings me to
the question whether or not to set aside the settlement on the ground as
alleged by the plaintiff that it is unconscionable. ... The
plaintiff was very bitter about having been terminated. He testified that he
needed to have his pay continued because of his financial obligations and that
is why he signed the release. I have concluded that in his distraught state of
mind he genuinely thought he had the need for his pay but in reality he
probably could have gotten by without it as he was entitled to Unemployment
Insurance benefits of approximately $1,100.00 a month for one year and his wife
was gainfully employed. They live in rented accommodations and his only
liability was a bank loan of $15,000.00, part of which arose from his having
guaranteed a loan for his son. The plaintiff could have sought legal advice but
he did not. He signed the release at a time when he was being treated by Dr.
Charles Anderson for depression and disorders related thereto. It is probable
that this condition was brought on by his sudden termination.
The Courts must
be very slow to set aside an agreement made between parties for valuable
consideration. However, agreements that are unconscionable will be set aside.
The law on the subject has been stated by Mr. Justice Jones of the Appeal
Division of this Court in Stevens v. Stevens (1983), 57 N.S.R. (2d) 141 at p.
145 as being "well settled." Mr. Justice Jones then referred to the
decision of Valta v. Valta and Johansson (1979), 8 R.F.L. (2d) 133 where
Taggart, J.A., of the British Columbia Court of Appeal quoted from a decision
in Morrison v. Coast Finance Ltd. as setting out the law on unconscionable
transactions. In the latter decision, the Court stated:
"... a plea that a bargain is unconscionable invokes relief against an
unfair advantage gained by an unconscientious use of power by a stronger party
against a weaker. On such a claim the material ingredients are proof of
inequality in the position of the parties arising out of the ignorance, need or
distress of the weaker, which left him in the power of the stronger, and proof
of substantial unfairness of the bargain obtained by the stronger. On proof of
those circumstances, it creates a presumption of fraud which the stronger must
repel by proving that the bargain was fair, just and reasonable:"
Mr. Justice Jones
then quoted from Professor Crawford in a comment in (1966), 44 C.B.R. 142 where
Professor Crawford stated at p. 143:
"... the courts intervene to rescind the contract whenever it appears that
one of the parties was incapable of adequately protecting his interests and the
other has made some immoderate gain at his expense. If the bargain is fair the
fact that the parties were not equally vigilant of their interest is
immaterial. Likewise if one was not preyed upon by the other, an improvident or
even grossly inadequate consideration is no ground upon which to set aside a
contract freely entered into. It is the combination of inequality and
improvidence which alone may invoke this jurisdiction."
With respect to
employment contracts, Professor Fridman in his text entitled The Law of
Contract, Second Edition, 1986, at p. 306 stated that the mere fact that the
parties were employer and employee and thus an obvious inequality of situations
did not of itself raise any presumption of unconscionability. Professor Fridman
stated:
"There had to be something which indicated that unfair advantage was being
taken of the employee's situation, in particular, his need to be employed, and
his inability to bargain with respect to the transaction ..."
...
In Harry v. Kreutziger (1979), 95 D.L.R. (3d) 231 the British Columbia Court of
Appeal reviewed the authorities on unconscionable transactions. Mr. Justice
Lambert proposed a fairly simple test for determining whether a transaction was
unconscionable where he stated at p. 241 that the single question is whether
the transaction, seen as a whole, is sufficiently divergent from community
standards of commercial morality that it should be rescinded.
To summarize the
principles set out in the foregoing cases, it seems to me that a transaction
may be set aside as being unconscionable if the evidence shows the following:
(1) That there is
an inequality of bargaining position arising out of ignorance, need or distress
of the weaker party;
(2) The stronger
party has unconscientiously used a position of power to achieve an advantage;
and
(3) The agreement
reached is substantially unfair to the weaker party or, as expressed in the
Harry v. Kreutziger case, it is sufficiently divergent from community standards
of commercial morality that it should be set aside.
To put it even
more succinctly, is the transaction so unconscionable that it requires the
intervention of the Court considering all the circumstances surrounding the
making of the agreement.
Based on the
decided cases and considering the facts of this case, I have concluded that a
reasonable notice would have been in the range of ten to twelve months. Was the
settlement made between the plaintiff and the defendant unconscionable? I am
satisfied on the evidence that there was an inequality of bargaining position
between the plaintiff and the defendant because of the plaintiff's distress,
lack of sophistication in business matters and genuinely felt need of the
plaintiff to have his pay continued that put him in a position that he was not
thinking as clearly as he should have been at the time when he was discussing
his termination with the defendant.
This leads to the
second question, whether the defendant, through an unconscientious use of
power, achieved a settlement that was substantially unfair to the plaintiff. I
find the defendant did not act maliciously but I do not feel the defendant gave
very much thought to the issue of what would be reasonable notice to the
plaintiff. In that sense, the defendant's decision to terminate the plaintiff's
employment but pay him to March 31, 1988, with some improvement in his pension
plan was an unconscientious use of its more powerful bargaining position. The
defendant was not thinking about the plaintiff's well-being to the extent it
should have considering the fact the plaintiff was in his sixties and had been
a loyal and dedicated employee for nine years, albeit with some deficiency as a
sales person. The termination package (the settlement) was "substantially
unfair" when measured against what I would consider to have been a
reasonable notice of termination on the facts of this case. This case is
what I would refer to as a close call but, in my view, the settlement is
sufficiently divergent from community standards of commercial morality that it
should be categorized as unconscionable and therefore the release should be set
aside. ...
Having decided
that the transaction was unconscionable and should be set aside, I will now
move to the assessment of damages. The general principles for the assessment of
damages for breach of contract should apply; that is, the plaintiff should be
put in the same position as he would have been had his employment contract been
performed. The purpose of contracts is to allow and protect reliance; that is,
the reliance placed by the parties on the performance by the other side. In
this case, the law implies a term that the defendant would not terminate the
contract without giving the plaintiff reasonable notice or in lieu thereof pay
for an equivalent period, the overall consideration being that the plaintiff
should be put in the same position as he would have been had this term been
honoured by the defendant (The Law of Contract by Waddams, Second Edition, c.
21 - Damages).
Had the plaintiff
been given reasonable notice of termination, his employment would have
continued from December 4, 1987, for another ten or twelve months. For the
purpose of calculating damages, I will use eleven months. He would, of course,
have had to pay income tax on his earnings and have had deductions for
Unemployment Insurance premiums, etc., just as was done for the period to March
31, 1988. However, the law in Canada is that the dismissed employee who is
found to be entitled to an award for wrongful dismissal is entitled to have that
award calculated on the basis of his gross salary and benefits (Innis
Christie's Employment Law in Canada, 1980, p. 404 re entitlement to award based
on "before tax" income; p. 395, awards should include benefits)....
For the purpose
of assessing damages, I have rounded this total annual benefit at $3,000.00 and
his salary at $37,000.00, for a total of $40,000.00 annually for salary and
benefits. The plaintiff's monthly remuneration based on projected
salary and benefits for the year 1988 would have been $3,333.00. As best I can
calculate from the evidence, he received the equivalent of approximately five
months salary and benefits plus vacation pay at 8% of gross earnings for the
period July 1, 1987, to March 31, 1988. The plaintiff is entitled to a damage
award of a further six months gross salary and benefits which I have rounded to
$20,000.00. In addition, he is entitled to vacation pay as provided for in the
Labour Standards Code, S.N.S. 1972, c. 10, less vacation pay he has already
been paid., he would have been entitled on termination to the vacation pay
earned from January 29, 1988, to November 10, 1988, a period of nine and
one-third months.