Showing posts with label Lost Profits. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lost Profits. Show all posts

Tuesday, 2 January 2018

Ontario's New Minimum Wage - Impact on Profits of the Restaurant Industry


Introduction
On January 1, 2018, the minimum wage in Ontario government changed from $11.60 to $14.00. It is scheduled to rise to $15.00 in 2019.

The move has provoked negative reactions from business groups. For example, according to Restaurants Canada:

“These aggressive changes to labour legislation will have severe and immediate consequences for the foodservice industry and the customers they serve every day. Prices for consumers will go up. Jobs will be lost, it’s as simple as that." A recent story in the Globe and Mail contains different reactions from restaurant owners; some are unfazed, others somewhat less so.
This issue is also of interest to business valuators such as myself. Valuations of established businesses are often based on the future anticipated profits or cash flows of a business. These are typically projected based on an analysis of the business's historical results, adjusted for forecasted changes. Valuators need to understand how the change to the minimum wage will impact profitability going forward.
The Data

Somewhat surprisingly, when we look at average labour costs for limited service restaurants (as a percentage of revenue) for the period 2001 to 2012, we see surprisingly little change:

The chart (which is based on data from Statistics Canada, CANSIM Table 355-0005) includes several periods where the minimum wage stayed constant in nominal dollars.
For example, in BC the rate was stagnant at $8.00 per hour from November 2001 until May 2011.  During that period, the CPI for restaurant food grew by 35%. Assuming that the average restaurant has 75% of its employees making the minimum wage, one would have expected the average cost of labour at BC restaurants to fall to 23% of revenue. Yet that did not happen.
The chart also includes periods in which the minimum wage grew very quickly. Again looking at BC, the minimum wage in 2010 was $8.00; in 2012, the average was approximately $10, an increase of 25% (slightly higher than the proposed Ontario change). A restaurant with 75% of its employees making the minimum wage would expect to see its cost of labour rise from 29% to 33%. Yet that did not happen.
Some (Tentative) Theories
What should one make of the data?
One theory might be that restaurants are able to pass along wage increases to consumers in the form of higher prices; the Globe and Mail article gives some examples of restaurants that are planning to do precisely this. Unlike, say, a manufacturing plant, restaurants cannot really be moved to other jurisdictions with more favorable labour laws. A change affecting all restaurants will therefore result in higher prices for consumers.
Another possibility is that the aggregate data shown above masks significant changes.
Imagine for a moment that there are two types of restaurants: prosperous ones who have an average wage cost of 25%, and less efficient ones whose average cost is 35%. The former have profit margins of 15%, the latter have profit margins of 5%. A rapid hike in wage costs equal to 5% of revenue will mean that the less prosperous firms will no longer be viable; they will be forced to close.  The more prosperous firms, meanwhile, will see an increase in their labour cost, such that the industry average will remain 30%.

A third possibility is that the increase in third-party wage costs results in owners (many of whom pay themselves via a salary) being forced to reduce their own wages.


Friday, 24 July 2015

Foreign Exchange Issues in Damage Quantification: Part I - Basic Concepts

International trade is an increasingly important part of the Canadian economy, as this picture clearly shows:
 
 
As a result, it is not uncommon for litigation to involve the quantification of financial remedies across multiple political and monetary boundaries. How does one take foreign exchange rates – and more specifically, fluctuations in foreign exchange rates between the date of initial wrongdoing and the trial date – into account? In the next two posts, I will consider the following five examples, through which I hope to illustrate some basic concepts:

1.   A US-based company, Manifest Destiny Inc. (“MDI”) has a contract to sell $1M (USD) of specialized goods to a Canadian firm. The Canadian firm breaches the contract, and MDI is unable to make the sale (or to mitigate its loss). The exchange rate at the time of breach was $1 USD = $1.25 CDN; it is now $1 USD = $1 CDN.

2.   Gordon C. Canuck (“Mr. Canuck”), an executive working for a Canadian subsidiary of a US-based public company is wrongfully terminated. As a result, the stock options to which he would have been entitled as of July 2009 did not vest. He sues for wrongful dismissal, and is successful. His damages are assessed as the difference between the exercise price ($1 USD per share) of the options and the market value of the stock on July 2009 ($10 USD per share). The trial occurs in 2011, and an award for damages is granted shortly thereafter.

3.   Nancy Nascar, (“Ms. Nascar”) a US resident, is injured in a motor vehicle accident in Canada, and will never be able to work again. She sues the motorist who collided with her, and seeks to recover her future loss of income.

4.   Maple Leaf Technologies Inc. (“MLT”) infringes a patent by manufacturing goods in Canada and selling them in the United States. Most of the firm’s operations are in Canada. Under Canadian law, the patent owner – a US based firm, Stripes and Stars Inc. (“SSI”) - may sue for either damages on its lost sales, or an accounting of the defendant’s profits from the infringing sales.

5.   Stick and Puck Ltd. (“SPL”) a Canadian firm that manufactures products in Canada and sells them in the United States, suffers a fire in its factory. It sues the electrical contractor to recover its lost profits. SPL does a steady volume of business in the US, and in order to reduce its exposure to fluctuations in foreign exchange rates, it typically enters into forward contracts to sell USD and purchase CDN.

 The Law

You may be asking at this point, why not simply quantify whatever the financial remedy is in the foreign currency? If only it were that simple!The Currency Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. C-52, s. 12, requires that any money referenced in a legal proceeding in Canada must be stated in Canadian currency.  It is on this basis that Canadian courts have generally felt compelled to convert awards for financial loss into Canadian dollars, even if the losses relate to a foreign currency.

There was, for many years, an established rule that the exchange rate be set based on the date of breach or wrongdoing. As summarized by the Manitoba Court of Appeal:

 
89                    At present, the Canadian “breach date rule” is based on a series of Canadian cases which adopted a now obsolete British rule.

90                        In 1945, the Supreme Court of Canada, in Gatineau Power Co. v. Crown Life Insurance Co., 1945 CanLII 33 (SCC), [1945] S.C.R. 655, applied a date of conversion at breach date in an action to recover a debt.  They did so in brief reasons, referring to the cases of The Custodian v. Blucher, 1927 CanLII 69 (SCC), [1927] S.C.R. 420 (a case dealing with unpaid dividends), and S.S. Celia v. S.S. Volturno, [1921] 2 A.C. 544 (H.L.).

91                        Those two cases, in turn, relied upon principles enunciated by previous English House of Lords cases.  That principle was that in all cases involving sums payable in a foreign currency, the applicable rate of exchange was the rate in existence on the date of breach.  See, for example, Re United Railways of the Havana and Regla Warehouses, Ltd., [1960] 2 All E.R. 332 (H.L.).[1]

The MBCA went on to describe how some Canadian jurisdictions have moved away from this principle, writing into their statutes specific rules to the contrary. For example, in Ontario, section 121 of the Courts of Justice Act stipulates that a damages award calculated in a foreign currency must be converted to Canadian dollars based on the exchange rate in effect at the judgment date; section 121(3) of that Act provides the court with discretion to use an alternate exchange rate when warranted. Other jurisdictions, even without explicit statutory adjustments, have also departed from this "rule" (as indeed did the MBCA in the case in question).

In this post and the next, I will discuss a variety of situations in which the issue of foreign currency conversion will arise. I will suggest that a simple set of principles can be applied to cut through some of the confusion to arrive at monetary awards that are economically fair and predictable.

1.     Matching the Remedy to the Loss

The basic principle behind an award for damages is to return the injured party to the position he or she would have been in but for the wrongdoing. Let us apply this principle to the question of foreign exchange in each of the five examples listed above.

Turning to our first example listed above, consider that MDI is a US company, and its lost sales were in USD. The exchange rate at the date of breach is irrelevant to MDI; MDI was never going to take the proceeds from the sale and invest them in Canadian dollars. It would have taken the USD from the sale and used them to run its US-based business. It has lost USD.

In order to be made whole, MDI needs to receive an amount of Canadian dollars such that it can take them to the bank today and convert them into $1M USD (the amount of its loss). The relevant exchange rate is therefore the rate in effect on the award date, not on the date of breach.

(By the same logic, if there is a delay between the award date and the date of actual payment, we would argue that it is the date of actual payment that is more relevant.)[2]

Conclusion
 
Thus far, I have argued that the treatment of foreign exchange should be consistent with the principal underlying the financial remedy being awarded. In the next post, I will show how this approach can be applied to other types of cases.



[1] Kellogg Brown & Root Inc. v. Aerotech Herman Nelson Inc. et al, 2004 MBCA 63, at para. 89. This decision contains a useful summary of the legal background to this issue.
[2] This is an issue that the MBCA grappled with in Kellogg.
 

Monday, 8 June 2015

Top 10 Issues in Damage Quantification - #2: "Build It and He Will Come"

I have already written, in another context, about the interaction between physical assets and lost profits. I want to explore the issue from a couple of additional angles.

In the 1989 film Field of Dreams, Kevin Costner’s character hears a voice telling him “build it and he will come”. Costner acts on the voice – why not, wouldn’t you? – and builds a baseball diamond in his Iowa cornfield; sure enough, the ghosts of the 1918 Chicago White Sox, and eventually Costner’s father, appear on the diamond. And James Earl Jones sounded great.
In real life, this is not the way business works. Sales do not necessarily grow or contract in direct proportion to a firm’s capacity. You can build it, but they may not come. (Just ask Target Canada).***

***For anyone reading this in the year 2020, Target Canada was the Canadian subsidiary of a  US department store that made a grand entrance into Canada in 2013, and a rather less grand exit less than two years later.

Consider the following examples:
  • A hotel suffers a fire on one of its 10 floors, which cannot be used for 1 year. The hotel had an average of 75% occupancy in the year prior to the fire.  If the hotel’s normal annual revenue is $1M (or $100,000 per floor per year), is the revenue loss equal to 75% of $100,000?
  • A commercial helicopter operator planned to expand his fleet from 3 to 4 helicopters, but as a result of a bodily injury sustained in a car crash he was forced to cease operations. If he had historically generated annual revenue of $600,000 per year, is it reasonable to assume that his annual revenue would have been $800,000 per year with the addition of a fourth chopper (assuming he can prove that he would have gone ahead with the fleet expansion)?
  • A manufacturing plant with 8 identical production lines suffers damage to 2 of its lines. Is it appropriate to assume that it will suffer a 25% decline in revenue?

The answer in all three cases is: maybe, but likely not.  If a hotel is normally at 75% capacity, that means that it normally has unused capacity of 25%, or 2.5 floors out of a 10 floor hotel; theoretically, the loss of only 10% of the hotel’s normal capacity (i.e. one floor) may not have any impact on revenue.

Similarly, the addition of a fourth helicopter may lead to a proportionate increase in revenue, but only if there is sufficient demand willing to pay for and make use of the additional capacity.

This is not to say that there is no impact from the loss of capacity. The hotel that averages 75% occupancy may have 100% occupancy for half the year and 50% occupancy for the other half; clearly, in that case the loss of an entire floor would be quite impactful during the half year in which the hotel is normally full.

Moreover, even if the historic demand had been consistently 75%, night after night, that does not mean that this would have continued indefinitely into the future. It is important to consider any changes to the demand for the claimant’s planned capacity. A review of pertinent industry statistics, where available, may prove helpful in this regard (e.g. published tourism statistics for the region in which the hotel was located).

Conclusion

There is a flip side to the assertion that an increase in capacity does not necessarily drive a corresponding increase in revenue, and that is that a large increase in revenue (premised on anticipated demand for a product or service) can rarely ever be accomplished without a corresponding capital investment.  An increase in capacity is necessary, but not sufficient, for an increase in revenue to occur. In a coming post, I will provide an illustration of this and show how it can have a significant impact on lost profit calculations.

Friday, 5 June 2015

Pre-Judgment Interest, Part III: Property Damage, Profit, and PJI

My practice involves a lot of work for property insurance companies. When damage to property occurs, the property owner may advance a claim against the third party tortfeasor for both the value of the damaged property as well as an ongoing loss of income or profit associated with the damage. While most first party business interruption insurance policies will typically limit any claim for lost profits to a 12-month period from the date of incident, third party claims for lost profits can often extend outside of this period.

In such cases, not only will there be damages claimed for both the physical damage and lost profits; there will also claims for pre-judgment interest. This post looks at how pre-judgment interest should be calculated in such situations.

In my experience, pre-judgment interest is often awarded on the property damage as well as on the lost profits. Is this correct from a financial point of view? Consider that lost profits represent a rate of return that would have been earned on the damaged property. If the plaintiff is already being awarded a rate of return on its lost property, it would seem unfair to also award it with pre-judgment interest on that same asset.

An Example

Consider the following example, which should illustrate this basic point:
  • Assume that ABC Corp. (“ABC”) has a single machine, which will cost $1M to replace in Year 5 and would have cost $900,000 to replace in Year 1. 
  • The machine allows ABC to generate profits of $100,000 per year (we will ignore taxes for the sake of this example).
  • The machine is destroyed in a fire at the beginning of Year 1; the fire was caused by faulty electrical work performed by a subcontractor, and liability is admitted***. Due to lack of funds and other logistical issues, the plaintiff was unable to replace the machine until the end of Year 5; once the machine is replaced, it is not anticipated that ABC will suffer any ongoing adverse effects.
***It is great how financial experts always get to assume liability is a non-issue in their examples, isn’t it? Nothing to it...

It is now the end of Year 5, and the trial has just concluded. The trial judge has awarded the plaintiff the replacement cost of the machine, which is $1M, as well as lost profits of $500,000 representing five years of lost profits.
 
In addition, ABC will likely receive pre-judgment interest (for a five-year period) on the value of the machine, as well as interest on each year’s annual lost profits. Let us assume that the judge has decided to apply a simple interest rate of 5%, based on the rates specified in the Courts of Justice Act for the relevant date of loss.
The award may look something like this: the end result is a damages award of $1.5M and pre-judgment interest of $312,500.

 
But there are two problems with this calculation, both of which will tend to overstate the pre-judgment interest award.
First, the replacement cost of the machine has been calculated in Year 5 dollar terms; the replacement cost in Year 1 was only $900,000, but due to inflation the price of the same machine has increased by around 11%, to $1M. Pre-judgment interest rates include an inflation component; banks (including the Bank of Canada) lend money in the anticipation that inflation will occur, and they need to recover the erosion in the nominal value of the principal as part of their interest payments. If the property damage award already includes an adjustment for inflation, then compensating ABC for inflation a second time (through the pre-judgment interest mechanism) will result in a windfall to ABC.
But there is a second, somewhat less intuitive problem with the award.
Pre-judgment interest is meant to compensate the plaintiff for the loss of return on its assets during the interval between the date of the loss and the trial date. Yet that is precisely what the award for lost profits represents – the loss of the annual return on the machine that would have been earned by ABC. By awarding both pre-judgment interest and lost profits resulting from the destruction of the machine, we are essentially double-counting the plaintiff’s lost returns on its machine.

Both of these problems can be easily illustrated by modeling the plaintiff’s cash flows "but for" the destruction of the machine. The plaintiff would have earned $100,000 per year, which it would have (presumably) reinvested and used to earn additional returns. These additional returns can be modelled with pre-judgment interest (notwithstanding the issues I raised in previous posts, which argue that such rates tend to undercompensate plaintiffs). It is these cash flows that will need to be replaced.
In addition, but for the wrongdoing, the plaintiff would have still had the machine; but now it does not. It therefore needs to receive an amount that will allow it to buy a replacement machine in Year 5; it needs only $1M to replace the asset, not $1M plus interest.



As you can see, our damages award is still $1.5M, but we no longer accrue any additional amounts for pre-judgment interest for the damaged machine; PJI falls from over $312,500 to only $62,500. The combined award will put ABC back in the position it would have been in but for the destruction of its machine.
Conclusion
 
Property damage and lost profits are commonly viewed as two distinct heads of damage, and in some senses they are indeed separate: property damage occurs at a point in time, while lost profits are the consequential result of that physical event.
But failure to recognize the linkages between property damage and lost profits can result in damages assessments that are significantly distorted. There are many senses in which this is true, and I hope to delve into this area in a future post, but the area of pre-judgment interest is one example in which failure to account for these linkages can result in an inflated overall award.

Monday, 1 June 2015

Pre-Judgment Interest: Part I: Establishing a Rate – A Basic Framework

This first post on pre-judgment interest deals with the basic question: what is the best method by which to calculate a pre-judgment interest rate?

 The Law

Pre-judgment interest is interest that is added to a plaintiff’s monetary award in respect of past losses suffered prior to the date judgment is pronounced. 

Pre-judgment interest may be awarded by statute. In Ontario, for example, the relevant legislation is found in sections 127 to 130 of the Courts of Justice Act. The pre-judgment interest rates set out in those sections are noteworthy in two respects:

·         Rate - the prejudgment interest rate is based on “the bank rate established by the Bank of Canada as the minimum rate at which the Bank of Canada makes short-term advances to Canadian banks”. This is a very low interest rate that reflects very little in the way of a premium for default risk.

·         Method - the interest is calculated as simple, not compound, interest. In most commercial contexts, compound interest applies.

These peculiarities of the statutory rates were acknowledged by the Supreme Court of Canada in Bank of America Trust v. Mutual Trust Co. 2002 SCC 43. That case involved two lenders who were both party to a contract with a condominium builder. One of the two lenders (Mutual Trust) failed to fulfill its obligations under the contract, with the result that the builder was forced into receivership, resulting in the second lender (Bank of America) suffering losses of both principal and interest. Bank of America sought to recover its losses from Mutual Trust.

The Supreme Court ruled that Bank of America could recover compound interest at the rate specified in the contract, and was not bound to the interest provisions set out in the Courts of Justice Act. It noted that in general, interest is meant to compensate lenders for three things: (i) the time value of money (i.e. the idea that the ability to spend a dollar today is worth more than the opportunity to spend that same dollar at a later date) (ii) risk, and (iii) inflation. Historically, societal attitudes towards the charging of interest were generally negative, with the result that statutory pre-judgment interest rates have been set somewhat parsimoniously (or “miserly”, to quote another case from the Alberta Court of Appeal), and the commercial reality is that the rates set out in the Courts of Justice Act and various other statutes do not reflect any element of risk.

The Courts of Justice Act does provide for some flexibility in the granting of pre-judgment interest if can be shown to be “payable by a right other than under this section”. The Supreme Court ruled that in certain circumstances, such as breach of contract cases where an interest rate is clearly stipulated, it may be appropriate to depart from the statutory prejudgment interest rates, and to award pre-judgment interest as a head of damage. It noted, at paragraph 55, that “It may be awarded as consequential damages in other cases but there would be the usual requirement of proving that damage component” (emphasis added).

While the case before the Supreme Court at the time was for the breach of a loan contract (in which the interest rate was explicitly stated), this idea of awarding interest as an element of damages has been applied in other areas in which no contractual interest rate had been agreed to. In a recent patent infringement case, Eli Lilly v. Apotex, 2014 FC 1254 (“Cefaclor”), the trial judge awarded $31M in damages for the period 1997 to 2000, and approximately $75M in pre-judgment interest as part of the damages award under the Patent Act, rather than as a prescribed remedy under the Federal Courts Act.

The impact of this decision was profound. Although (for example) the pre-judgment interest prescribed under Ontario’s Courts of Justice Act for Q1 of 1997 (when the infringement action was brought) would have been simple interest at 3.3%, the trial judge awarded interest on Lilly’s lost profits using an average compound interest rate of approximately 8.5%.

The Theory

Once one recognises that the statutory rates do not properly reflect either the time value of money or risk, and that it may be possible in some situations to argue for compound interest on some other basis, the question becomes, what is the most appropriate way in which to quantify those factors? How should a pre-judgment interest rate that is economically “fair” be set?

There are two ways of conceptualizing pre-judgment interest.

The first is compensatory, and focuses on the plaintiff’s perspective. Under this view, pre-judgement interest compensates the plaintiff for not having the damage award between the time it was harmed until the time damages were determined.

The second is restitutionary, and looks at things from the point of view of the defendant. Pre-judgment interest can be viewed as the amount the defendant must disgorge to the plaintiff as a result of having, on an interest-free basis, wrongly held money to which the plaintiff was entitled. This focus on restitution will make most sense for financial remedies that are explicitly defendant-focused (e.g. the accounting of profits remedy),[1] but may also be applicable in other situations, as I discuss further below.

Note that these two rationales may not yield identical interest rates. For example, if the plaintiff’s borrowing cost is 6% but the defendant’s is 8%, the benefit to the defendant of holding the disputed funds in the period prior to trial is greater than the cost to the defendant in foregoing those funds. Similarly, if the plaintiff was forced to forego a highly profitable venture as a result of lack of funds, while the defendant earned a low rate of return while it held the award, its loss may be greater than the defendant’s gain.

The Options

1.     Plaintiff’s Return on Capital: The Alternative Investment Theory

This theory argues that as a result of the wrongdoing and the withholding of an award that rightfully belonged to the plaintiff, the plaintiff has had to forego potential investments on which it would have earned a return. It argues that the appropriate rate of interest should compensate the plaintiff for this lost opportunity. [2]

This appears to have been the approach adopted by the court in Cefaclor. The trial judge calculated the interest rate with reference to the plaintiff’s actual[3] “profit margins” during the damages period.

(Though it is not clear from the decision, it is possible that Zinn J. was referring to the plaintiff’s return on capital not its profit margin. Profit margins are calculated by taking a firm’s profits and dividing by its revenue; they say nothing about the profit a firm earns as a percentage of its invested capital.)

This choice of metric is noteworthy, insofar as it tacitly assumes that as a result of not having access to the damages award, the plaintiff may have been required to forego additional profit-making ventures. While this assumption may be valid for smaller businesses without ready access to capital, it may be less so for large publicly traded companies such as Eli Lilly, who have ready access to public debt and equity markets. It does not appear that Eli Lilly was required by the court to prove that it had in fact been forced to forego any specific investments as a result of not having access to its lost profits, let alone to adduce any evidence as to what the profitability of such hypothetical investments might have been.

There is another, more subtle, objection that can be raised to the above measure. The assumption that the plaintiff’s average return on capital is representative of the return the plaintiff would have generated on the award is also debatable. Plaintiffs invest in a variety of projects, some with higher rates of return than others. If the plaintiff can be assumed to be a knowledgeable economic agent, one might assume that in the absence of funds, the plaintiff would ration its funds and turn down the least profitable or most risky projects. The marginal loss of funds would then result in the loss of only these marginal, below average investment opportunities.

2.     Plaintiff’s Cost of Borrowing: The Alternative Investment Theory, Light

This theory is similar to the previous one, but instead of arguing that the plaintiff would have used the award to invest in another project, it assumes that, at the very least, the plaintiff would have paid down some of its debt and relieved itself of interest obligations on that debt.
The advantage of this approach over the first is largely evidentiary. While it may be very difficult for the plaintiff to point to investments that it rejected due to insufficient funds – and not only that, but to also prove the level of profit it would have made from those investments – it should be easy for the plaintiff to point to specific bank loans it could have paid off had it had access to capital.

This may be what the plaintiff could have done, but is it what the plaintiff would have done? Perhaps, but this is not easy to prove. There are numerous other ways in which corporations expend their money – reinvestment, dividends, and increased executive compensation. Many companies have a target debt level, and will not use every spare dollar to pay down debt the way a conservative middle-aged investor preparing for retirement would. In short, it is not always easy to determine what the plaintiff would have done with the money, and insofar as that is the correct measure of the plaintiff’s damages, using the plaintiff’s cost of borrowing may also not be appropriate.
3.     Defendant’s Return on Capital: Disgorging the Profit

This is similar to option #1 above, but from the perspective of the defendant; it looks to disgorge the defendant’s profit earned from holding the award that rightfully belonged to the plaintiff.
The evidentiary problems with reconstructing what the plaintiff would have done with the money do not exist under this option – the defendant’s use of the money, and its profit from that use, is known. It might be attractive to look at the arrangement in existence between the damage date and the date of trial as some sort of partnership or constructive trust, in which the silent and unwilling partner is entitled to the profit earned on its capital.

Of course, in reality there is no real equity investment here. If the defendant incurs negative investment returns during the period between the date of damage and the trial, it is surely no argument for it to say that the plaintiff should be stuck with those losses on its share of the capital. It may be unfair to reward the plaintiff with any profits, while at the same time not exposing it to any of the losses.

4.     Defendant’s Cost of Borrowing: The Coerced Loan Theory

 This is the approach endorsed in an excellent article by two US scholars, Michael S. Knoll and Jeffrey M. Colon. Knoll and Colon argue that in wrongfully holding the plaintiff’s money, the defendant has effectively coerced the plaintiff into loaning it money. They argue that the interest rate to be charged, retroactively, on such a loan should be equal to the defendant’s floating cost of unsecured debt.

This was a measure that was advocated by the plaintiff in Merck & Co., Inc. v. Apotex Inc., 2013 FC 751 (“lovastatin”), and received favourable comment by Snider J. as being restitutionary; it is  a sound measure of the defendant’s benefit to be disgorged, in that it measures what the defendant would otherwise have had to pay in order to borrow an amount equal to the award.

Less intuitively, it can also be viewed as a measure of the plaintiff’s loss, if one considers that the plaintiff has been deprived of the difference between a market rate of return on lending funds to the defendant (or a firm with a similar default risk profile). To consider how this is so, consider the following example:

·        Suppose that Defendant caused the Plaintiff to lose $1M in profits in the year 2000. Damages will be awarded 10 years later.

·        Knoll and Colon argue that the unpaid judgment in the hands of the defendant is effectively an unsecured loan from the plaintiff to the defendant. Immediately following the date of damage, one can think of a notional “asset” (i.e. a loan receivable) accruing to the Plaintiff in the amount of $1M, and a corresponding “liability” (a loan payable) accruing to the Defendant’s balance sheet.

·        Knoll and Colon argue that the pre-judgment interest rate should be the rate that compensates the Plaintiff for a) inflation, b) the time value of money, and c) the risk that the Defendant will not repay the Plaintiff the $1M.[4] It is this risk that was actually borne by the plaintiff, and it is this risk – not the risk of, theoretically, investing in a new factory or technology – for which the plaintiff should be compensated.

This is arguably the least speculative measure that can be used to calculate pre-judgment interest. It looks not at what the plaintiff would have done with its money, nor at what it could have done, but at what it did. The plaintiff has lent the defendant money, and the defendant should pay it an appropriate rate.

Discretion

Section 130(2) of the Ontario Courts of Justice Act states that in some situations, the court may decide to vary the award of pre-judgment interest for any number of reasons, including:

 (f) the conduct of any party that tended to shorten or to lengthen unnecessarily the duration of the proceeding;

This paragraph is often used by defendants – and often used successfully – to argue that the award of pre-judgment interest should be reduced on account of the plaintiff’s role in delaying resolution of the dispute.[5]

From the discussion above, I would hope that it is clear that this section of the Act is likely based on a view of pre-judgment interest as somehow punitive in nature, as opposed to merely compensatory. The economic reality is that the plaintiff is rarely better off by having its award sit in the hands of the defendant and accrue simple interest at the low rates set by the Courts of Justice Act.[6] The very fact that the default pre-judgment interest award will be at a low, simple rate should be enough to encourage plaintiffs to expedite proceedings to the extent possible, and further reducing the pre-judgment interest award on these grounds may be redundant.
Conclusion

The Bank of America decision is more than ten years old; yet (based on an admittedly non-exhaustive inquiry) there do not seem to be a large number of cases in which pre-judgment interest has been awarded based on common law or equitable principles of damages. In many cases, no doubt, it may not be worth the hassle, although the Cefaclor case certainly presents an extreme situation in which pursuing the argument was highly profitable to the plaintiff. I hope the above discussion may prove useful in setting straight some of the conceptual and evidentiary issues associated with each potential measure.



[1] In Reading & Bates Construction Co. v. Baker Energy Resources Corp. ( C.A. ), [1995] 1 F.C. 483, the Federal Court of Appeal noted that in an accounting of profits case, “The awarding of pre-judgment interest should be characterized as deemed secondary benefits, i.e. deemed earnings on the profits... The awarding of interest on the contract profits is part of the assessment of the profits that the plaintiff is entitled to and would have made if they had been paid to him rather than to the infringer.
 
Bearing in mind the modern reality that interest paid or earned on deposits or loans is compound interest and the need to achieve equity in the accounting of profits, the awarding of compound pre-judgment interest as deemed earnings on the profits is the rule, subject to a Court's discretion to mitigate it or to award only simple interest in appropriate circumstances.”
[2]Interestingly, this is also the rationale used by the trial judge in Bank of America, namely that (as summarized by the Supreme Court):
In deciding the appropriate measure of pre-judgment and post-judgment interest, the trial judge agreed with the appellant that it should be awarded the interest rate provided for in the Loan Agreement because, although it only intended to be an interim lender, the breach by the respondent resulted in the appellant becoming a long term lender which resulted in the appellant missing other investment opportunities as the money due to it was not paid and not available for other loans [para 12]. 
The case was somewhat unique in that Bank of America’s “investments” were in fact bank loans.
[3] Justice Zinn rejected the proposal that the plaintiff’s weighted average cost of capital – which measures the rate of return required by rational investors, given the risks inherent in the company – be used to calculate the discount rate, noting that it was a merely theoretical measure and that it was not reflective of what the plaintfif had actually done (and, presumably, would have done)
[4] I should hasten to point out that we are not speaking here of what is known as “litigation risk”, i.e. the risk the plaintiff might be unsuccessful in winning its case. Rather, we are referring to the risk that the defendant might go bankrupt between the date of wrongdoing and the judgment.
[5] I am not aware of any case in which a plaintiff has argued that the defendant has unnecessarily shortened the duration of the litigation.
[6] This reality has been recognized by some courts. For example, the Federal Court of Appeal noted in Reading & Bates Construction Co. v. Baker Energy Resources Corp. that:
A judgment in an infringement action is not complete, where the plaintiff elects an accounting of profits, until the profits have been accounted for and the judgment rendered on the report of the person designated to take accounts. The complaint that the referee took more than two years to file his report while pre-judgment interest was accruing overlooked the fact that the respondents had been deprived of that money during that period of time while the appellant had it. Furthermore, compound interest is not a penalty, but a recognition of reality.