Bank’s information disclosure failed to comply

Federal court | Financial Institutions

GENERAL

Bank’s information disclosure failed to comply

Appeal by bank from decision of Commissioner of Financial Consumer Agency of Canada finding bank had contravened Cost of Borrowing (Banks) Regulations (Can.), and imposing administrative penalty. Agency had been created pursuant to Financial Consumer Agency of Canada Act. Bank was subject to jurisdiction of agency. Regulations were passed to require financial institutions to include information disclosure boxes in their disclosure documentation for lending products. Agency sent letter to financial institutions indicating they could self-report their compliance and that agency would work with banks that self-reported non-compliance. Bank represented that it was compliant but it was not. Deputy Commissioner issued notice of violation to bank indicating reasonable grounds to believe bank had failed to utilize compliant information disclosure boxes. Bank made submissions. Commissioner found contravention of Regulations and imposed administrative penalty in amount of $12,500. Appeal dismissed. Bank failed to establish reviewable errors. Letter from agency had not contained any commitment, either explicit or implicit, upon which bank could claim expectation of opportunity to remedy deficiencies prior to issuance of notice of violation. Quite to contrary, agency had followed process it had committed to follow. Bank had knowledge of case it had to meet and had been given full opportunity to respond to that case. Agency had not misconstrued requirements in regulations. Strict reading of regulations was more consistent with overriding purpose of Act and Regulations. It was clear and undisputed that bank’s information disclosure boxes had failed to comply with Regulations in number of ways. Commissioner had not erred in her application of defence of due diligence. Steps taken by bank had not amounted to all reasonable steps to avoid non-compliance. Commissioner had not erred in finding some harm arising from bank’s customers having not received benefit of complete and accurate disclosure. Commissioner had properly considered relevant factors when determining penalty.

Mega International Commercial Bank (Canada) v. Canada (Attorney General) (Apr. 11, 2012, F.C., de Montigny J., File No. T-459-11) 215 A.C.W.S. (3d) 179 (34 pp.).

Free newsletter

Our newsletter is FREE and keeps you up to date on all the developments in the Ontario legal community. Please enter your email address below to subscribe.

Recent articles & video

Relocation disputes surge in family law litigation, says Lerners LLP’s Ryan McNeil

Ont. CA confirms future harm risk not compensable in contaminated medication class action

Law Commission of Ontario announces new board of governors appointments

Ontario Superior Court upholds ‘fair dealing’ in franchise dispute

Ontario Superior Court orders retrial for catastrophic impairment case due to procedural unfairness

LEAF celebrates 39 years fighting gender-based discrimination at annual Evening for Equality gala

Most Read Articles

Ontario Superior Court confirms License Appeal Tribunal cannot award punitive damages

Ontario Court of Appeal denies builder's request for a trial on damages in a real estate dispute

Ontario Superior Court grants extension for service of expert reports in medical negligence case

Relocation disputes surge in family law litigation, says Lerners LLP’s Ryan McNeil