The Court Of Appeal Of Ontario Affirms The Exclusive Jurisdiction Of The License Appeal Tribunal Over Statutory Accident Benefits Disputes

Published date15 April 2022
Subject MatterInsurance, Litigation, Mediation & Arbitration, Insurance Laws and Products, Trials & Appeals & Compensation
Law FirmRogers Partners LLP
AuthorMs Athina Ionita

The Court of Appeal in Yang v. Co-operators General Insurance Company, 2022 ONCA 178, confirmed the exclusive jurisdiction of the License Appeal Tribunal (LAT) over disputes concerning Statutory Accident Benefits (SABs).

The decision underlying the appeal concerned a motor vehicle accident, where the plaintiff claimed damages in the amount of $150 million.1 Specifically, the plaintiff's claim concerned how the automobile accident insurer, Co-operators General Insurance Company, administered her claims for SABs. The plaintiff sued several Co-operators employees, multiple SABs service providers, various doctors and others. The defendants brought a motion to strike the plaintiff's statement of claim.

Justice Perell heard the defendants' motion and dismissed the plaintiff's action for a number of reasons, including that the pleading was scandalous, the Court did not have subject matter jurisdiction over her claim and the plaintiff had not plead a legally tenable cause of action against any of the defendants.

The plaintiff appealed, arguing that the motion judge erred in holding that the Superior Court lacked jurisdiction over the subject matter of her claim and in striking her pleadings under both Rule 21.01(1)(b) and Rule 25.11.

The Court of Appeal found that the motion judge made no error in interpreting and applying s. 280 of the Insurance Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. I.8, which grants the LAT exclusive jurisdiction over disputes in respect of SABs. The appeal panel affirmed that s. 280(3) also deprives the Superior Court of jurisdiction.

The crux of the appellant's complaints in her statement of claim relate to her insurer's handling of her claims under the Statutory Accident Benefits Schedule. She alleges that Co-operators and that the other respondents conspired to coerce the respondent health care practitioners into "staging" multiple insurer examinations and preparing false reports.

The Court of Appeal states that the appellant's statement of claim concerns the respondents' alleged efforts to circumvent the Schedule and that framing the action as one in bribery, conspiracy, breach of privacy, breach of contract, or breach of fiduciary duty did not alter the...

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