In Kapeluck v Two Girls And A Hammer Inc., 2022 ABQB 467, the Applicant ICF Plus Inc. (“ICF”) successfully appealed a Master's decision denying ICF's application to file a third-party claim against the Respondent, Rapid Concrete Ltd (“Rapid”) after the six month period imposed by Rule 3.45 of the Alberta Rules of Court  had expired. ICF was able to demonstrate that the third-party claim was not statute barred by Rule 3.45 or section 3(1.1) of the Limitations Act  and that there was an air of reality to the claim.

Background

The action in Kapeluck  related to construction deficiencies in a residential home purchased by the Plaintiffs in the action. ICF was hired by the general contractor to provide a concrete foundation for the home. ICF subcontracted its work to Primetime Pro ICF ("Primetime") who retained Rapid to supply the concrete. The Plaintiffs' action alleges multiple deficiencies with the foundation. Relevant to the third-party application, honeycombing of the concrete foundation was alleged to have resulted in water ingress and damage to the home. 

The Master's Decision

The Master dismissed ICF's application to file the third-party claim against Rapid on the basis that ICF's application was filed outside the 2-year time limit imposed by section 3(1.1) of the Limitations Act. Having applied the discoverability test from Grant Thornton LLP v New Brunswick, 2021 SCC 31, the Master concluded that despite ICF having lacked knowledge of the identity of Rapid prior to Primetime's filing of its Affidavit of Records, ICF was expected to have discovered the identity of Rapid earlier based on an understanding that Primetime would not have supplied the concrete.

Section 6(4) of the Limitations Act Can Save a Claim Barred by Section 3(1.1)

The six month deadline imposed by Rule 3.45 is superseded by the 2-year limitation period provided by section 3(1.1) of the Limitations Act  in the context of filing a third-party claim (Whitecourt Power Limited Partnership v Elliott Turbomachinery Canada Inc, 2015 ABCA 252). Even if a third-party claim is barred based on section 3(1.1) of the Limitations Act, the third-party will not be immune from liability if section 6(4) of the Limitations Act  is met. 

Section 6(4) requires that the added claim must be related to the behaviour, transaction or incident described in the original pleading. It also requires that the defendant must have received, within the limitation period applicable to the added claim plus the time provided by law for the service of process, sufficient knowledge of the added claim that the defendants will not be prejudiced in maintaining a defence to it on the merits. 

The major disagreement between the parties was based on the meaning of “plus the time provided by law for the service of process”. The court accepted ICF's submission that Acielo v Condominium Plan 9022496, 2016 ABCA 25 ("Acielo") stands for the proposition that “time provided by law for the service of process” meant the 1-year period provided for service of the document commencing the action specified by Rule 3.26. The Court rejected Rapid's argument that Acielo was distinguishable based on having dealt with a counterclaim where the Rule provided 30 days for service as opposed to 6 months provided by Rule 3.45 for a third-party notice. The Court of Appeal's decision was held not to be confined to service of a counterclaim.

ICF was served with the Statement of Claim on June 7, 2018. ICF served Rapid with the application on April 27, 2021. Consequently, the claim was not barred by the Limitations Act.   The application was found to fall within the allowable time period of three years calculated via the addition of the 1-year period provided for service of the document commencing the action specified in Rule 3.26 with the 2-year period specified in section 3(1.1) of the Limitations Act.

The Threshold for Proving an Air of Reality is Low

According to Condominium Corp. No. 0425636 v Amyotte's Plumbing Ltd., 2015 ABQB 801, all that must be demonstrated to prove an air of reality to a claim is that a triable issue exists. A triable issue will exist if the proposed claim alleges facts that, if proved, would constitute a viable action.

ICF submitted that based on an expert report, honeycombing of the concrete had occurred, and the honeycombing had been caused or materially contributed to by the negligence and breach of contract of Rapid. The court concluded there was some merit to the allegations and consequently the third-party notice was deemed to have an air of reality.

Takeaways

  1. The 6-month deadline imposed by Rule 3.45 will be superseded by the 2-year limitation period imposed by section 3(1.1) in the context of a third-party claim.
  2. A claim that would be barred by Section 3(1.1) of the Limitations Act can be saved by Section 6(4) which extends the limitation period to include “time provided for service of the document commencing the action”.
  3. "Time provided by law for the service of process” will be interpreted to mean the 1-year period provided for service of the document commencing the action specified by Rule 3.26.
  4. The threshold for proving an air of reality is low; this requires only that the proposed claim alleges facts that, if proved, would constitute a viable action.

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