Mayaben Shah and her company applied for a small business loan with the Bank of Montreal for her and her husband’s donut shop. In order to secure the loan, Mr. Ileshkumar Shah and Mr. Amer Javed provided a joint guarantee to the Bank of Montreal. The loan application went through and the principal company was provided with a loan of $213,486.00. Later, amidst financial turmoil, Mr. Shah resigned as a director of the company which operated the donut shop, and ceased involvement with the store despite remaining on the books as the Vice-President. The company defaulted on the loan and Bank of Montreal sought repayment from the guarantors.
On a motion for summary judgment, Justice Mario D. Faieta ordered the appellants to pay $55,521.79 on their personal guarantee to Bank of Montreal and further, set aside Mr. Shah’s fraudulent transfer of his half-interest in the matrimonial home to his spouse. The appellants challenged that decision on two grounds:
- the trial judge erred in failing to find the Bank of Montreal’s conduct regarding the loan was unconscionable; and
- the motion judge erred in finding that Mr. Shah’s transfer of his interest in the Matrimonial home to Mrs. Shah was a fraudulent conveyance.
The Court of Appeal dismissed this appeal in whole. This review will focus on the Court of Appeal’s decision in regards to the first question only.
REASONS
Unconscionability is an equitable doctrine which allows a court to release parties from contractual obligations where it finds the contract to be patently unfair to either side or where one party took advantage of the other when entering into the contract. The appellants argued that while the contract was not unconscionable in its inception, it became unconscionable when the Bank refused to grant access to Mr. Shah of the debtor company’s account information. The Court of Appeal found that, while the Bank did breach a term of the contract by refusing to provide account information to Mr. Shah, this failure was not substantial enough to allow the appellant to be released from his obligations as guarantor of the loan. The Court of Appeal found that the Supreme Court decision in Bahsin v Hrynew did not extend the common-law test for unconscionability beyond the equities of an agreement, towards an assessment of a party’s ongoing performance of their duties under the contract. The Court of Appeal went on to state that, while there is a duty to act honestly in the performance of a contract, the appellants failed to bring forth any evidence of dishonesty and their case therefore failed. Citing previous decisions, the Court of Appeal affirmed that a guarantor should not be discharged from their obligations absent actions on behalf of the creditor which go to the heart of the agreement. Instances of the types of breaches which would likely release a guarantor from their obligations exist where:
- a creditor acts in bad faith towards the surety;
- the creditor concealed material information at the inception of the guarantee;
- the creditor causes or connives the default of the principal debtor; or
- where there is a variation in the terms of the contract between the creditor and the principal debtor of a type that would prejudice the interests of the surety.
In this case, the Bank’s failure to provide Mr. Shah with account information was not a material breach and therefore did not warrant Mr. Shah’s release from his obligations as guarantor.
OUR THOUGHTS