Loretta Bouwmeester, Calgary
The Ontario Court
of Appeal has unanimously upheld the Ontario Superior Court decision of Justice
Echlin in Brito v. Canac Kitchens. In doing so, the Court of Appeal has confirmed that an employer has
significant risk when a former employee becomes disabled during the
notice period, but after long-term disability (“LTD”) benefits have been
discontinued. As background, Mr. Brito
was 55 years old with 24 years of service. Canac Kitchens (“Canac”) paid
him statutory minimum amounts on termination and maintained his LTD benefits
for the 8-week notice period required under the Employment Standards Act,
2000. While Mr. Brito successfully
secured alternate employment shortly after his termination, his new position
did not include benefits or LTD coverage.
Unfortunately, Mr.
Brito was diagnosed with cancer 16 months after the termination of his
employment and he became totally disabled. Justice Echlin of the Superior Court
determined that the reasonable notice period was 22 months. Since Mr. Brito became
disabled during the reasonable notice period, compensation for lost LTD
benefits was a central issue in the case.
Justice Echlin held that Mr. Brito was entitled to be placed in the same
position he would have been had the employer offered him 22 months of working
notice. His Honour noted that the employer elected to only pay the minimum
statutory amount and gambled that the employee would secure alternate employment
and remain healthy. The employer lost this “gamble” when the employee became
disabled 16 months after termination. It
therefore was responsible for compensating Mr. Brito for his lost LTD benefit
and became the “virtual” insurer.
Justice Echlin
awarded the employee the following:
- $94,666 being the
equivalent to 16 months' salary to the date of his disability (minus the
statutory payments made by Canac and what he had earned from his new job);
- $9,078 for damages
resulting from the loss of his short-term disability benefits;
- $146,723 for damages
resulting from the loss of LTD benefits from the date of total disability to
trial;
- $47,941 representing
the present value of the remainder of the employee’s LTD benefit entitlement to
his 65th birthday; and
- $15,000 for “ancillary”
damages (which were really punitive damages aimed at punishing the company).
The Court of
Appeal upheld Justice Echlin’s decision, with the exception of the $15,000 award
for punitive damages. The trial judge’s
reasons indicate that this award was based on what he characterized as
“cavalier, harsh, malicious, reckless, outrageous and high-handed” conduct by
the employer in its treatment of Mr. Brito on termination and during the
litigation. However, the Court of Appeal
found because Mr. Brito did not claim punitive damages in his statement of
claim or otherwise request them, including at trial, Justice Echlin had no
authority to award them. If punitive
damages had been claimed, the Court of Appeal would likely have upheld Justice
Echlin’s award. As such, punitive
damages remain a risk for employers in cases where a loss of benefits is
claimed.
In addition to the
amount and nature of damages, an issue on Appeal was whether or not Mr. Brito
had sufficiently proven that he was totally disabled for the purposes of the LTD
plan language. The Court of Appeal found
that he did so and as such had no duty to mitigate his damages by participating
in LTD plan related job re-training or seeking new employment.
Given this
decision, employers are exposed to significant liability if a departing
employee who had LTD coverage during the period of employment becomes disabled before
the end of the reasonable notice period and he or she has not executed a
Release. In Ontario LTD coverage is legislatively
extended though to the end of the statutory notice period. This is not the case in other jurisdictions
in Canada. LTD providers typically will
not extend benefits past a period of active employment, unless legislatively
required to do so.
Employers
are encouraged to consider using employment contracts to limit the duration of
entitlement to LTD benefits to conform with their plan specifications or,
alternatively, to purchase private LTD insurance for an employee for the
duration of the notice period. However,
it should be noted that purchasing LTD coverage for this limited period can be
significantly more expensive than the cost of an employer’s existing Group LTD
plan. Case Citation: Brito v. Canac Kitchens, 2012 ONCA 61 (CanLII)
M. Christine O’Donohue prepared
initial October 11, 2011 communique
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