ARTICLE
14 April 2016

Catastrophic Impairment Is Still A Label, Not A Benefit

LL
Lerners LLP

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Lerners LLP is one of Southwestern Ontario’s largest law firms with offices in London, Toronto, Waterloo Region, and Strathroy. Ours is a history of over 90 years of successful client service and representation. Today we are more than 140 exceptionally skilled lawyers with abundant experience in litigation and dispute resolution(including class actions, appeals, and arbitration/mediation,) corporate/commercial law, health law, insurance law, real estate, employment law, personal injury and family law.
This blog is a footnote to a related blog, Catastrophic Impairment is a Label, Not a Benefit, posted April 21, 2015, in which I discussed the Divisional Court decision in Do v. Guarantee ("Do"), which held that the two-year limitation period governing the denial of a benefit had no application when the issue in dispute related to the catastrophic impairment designation.
Canada Litigation, Mediation & Arbitration

This blog is a footnote to a related blog, Catastrophic Impairment is a Label, Not a Benefit, posted April 21, 2015, in which I discussed the Divisional Court decision in Do v. Guarantee ("Do"), which held that the two-year limitation period governing the denial of a benefit had no application when the issue in dispute related to the catastrophic impairment designation.  In Do, Mr. Do was allowed to commence an arbitration proceeding two years and nine months after The Guarantee Company first refused his application for catastrophic impairment.  His arbitration was not statute barred.

A recent decision from the Ontario Court of Appeal has put to rest any lingering doubt that the Divisional Court decision would stand. In Machaj v. RBC General Insurance Company 2016 ONCA 257, in a brief seven-paragraph endorsement, the Court of Appeal reversed the Order of Justice A.C.R. Whitten of the Superior Court of Justice from July of 2015.  Justice Whitten had distinguished Do and did not apply it.  As such, while not a direct appeal from Do, the Court of Appeal was essentially asked to review and consider the merits of Do, ultimately adding its own stamp of approval to the Divisional Court decision.  As stated by the Court of Appeal:

Do stands for the proposition that the two-year limitation period only applies to claims for specific benefits, and not to a claim for a determination of catastrophic injury status. In our opinion, (the additional words added by the insurer) "did not convert what was, in substance, a denial of a catastrophic determination into a denial of the specific benefits that would trigger the commencement of the two-year limitation period".  

The Court of Appeal determined that Do was good law and should not have been distinguished.

The ramification of this recent Court of Appeal decision emphasizes the need, if it wasn't already apparent after Do, to review all denials pertaining to a claimant's catastrophic impairment status, even those denied two or more years in the past, as it is still possible, assuming there is the requisite supporting evidence, to advance a dispute concerning that label.  A delayed dispute will not be statute barred.

www.lernerspersonalinjury.ca

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