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Section 6 - Sinking Fund,
Blended Payments of Principal and Interest, Allowance of Interest
Section 6 states as follows:
"Whenever any principal money or interest secured by
mortgage on real property is, by the mortgage, made payable on
a sinking fund plan, on any plan under which the payment of
principal money and interest are blended or on any plan that
involves an allowance of interest on stipulated repayments, no
interest whatsoever shall be chargeable, payable or
recoverable on any part of the principal money advanced,
unless the mortgage contains a statement showing the amount of
the principal money and the rate of interest chargeable
thereon, calculated yearly or half-yearly, not in
advance". R.S., c. I-18, s.6."
Section 6 of the Interest Act of Canada requires that
principal and the rate of interest expressed yearly or half
yearly be specified within a mortgage whenever:
Any principal money or interest is made payable on a
sinking fund plan
There does not appear to be any judicial determination on
what is a "sinking fund plan". For example would a
pre-payment of interest be a "Sinking fund plan"? In
some cases I have seen a lender set up an "Interest reserve
fund" where out of the mortgage advance the lender holds
back a portion of the principal and each month applies it to
principal. Is this a mortgage made payable on a Sinking fund
plan?
Payments of principal money and interest are blended
Most standard residential mortgages contain this kind of
payment.
In Kilgoran Hotels v. Samek (1968) S.C.R., 3, a
mortgage required fixed quarterly payments to be applied both to
first interest and then principal. Interest to be compounded
quarterly. No equivalent yearly or half yearly rate was
disclosed. The Court stated that a payment is not blended where
it is mathematically possible to compute the interest payable. A
Court held that a "blended" payment was a payment that
was "mixed so as to be inseparable and
indistinguishable".
In Paragon Properties (Finance) Ltd. v. Matthews
(1996) A.W.L.D., 647 - the interest clause in the mortgage
provided for payment at the rate of 3.5% per month calculated
and compounded monthly not in advance, and provided that the
principal together with interest would be paid in monthly
instalments of $1,750.00 each, to be applied firstly on interest
and secondly on principal. There was no statement showing the
equivalent rate calculated yearly or half yearly not in advance.
The Master held the clause violated section 6, however on appeal
Mr. Justice Lomas held:
"The purpose of section 6 of The Interest Act
is to protect a mortgagor from having concealed from him or
her the true rate of interest which he or she is paying. In
the mortgage in question, the rate of interest was clearly set
out, the compounding date was the same date as the calculation
date, and the payments were clearly set out. The arithmatic
calculation involved on each payment date could scarcely be
simpler."
Monies are payable on any plan that involves an allowance
of interest on
stipulated
re-payments
In Edmonton Saving and Credit Union Ltd. v. Trison
Developments Ltd. (1988) interest was payable monthly at the
CIBC floating rate from time to time plus 1.5%. The Defendants
alleged the claim was void by virtue of section 6 of the Interest
Act of Canada since the mortgage did not specify an annual
rate of interest. The Court held that the mortgage did not
contain a "plan that involves an allowance of interest on
stipulated re-payments". The Court stated that the purpose
of section 6 is to protect the mortgagor from having concealed
from him the true rate of interest he is paying. Here the rate
was in no way concealed. The mortgage need not specify that this
rate is to be "per annum" since it is common knowledge
that a prime lending rate is a rate per annum.
Ihnat v. Wetston (1978) 89 D.L.R., 595 the parties
entered into a mortgage for one year at a floating rate of
interest tied to bank prime. No mention was made of the yearly
or half-yearly equivalent rate. The year's interest was deduced
from the face amount of the mortgage. The Court of Appeal held
that a pre-payment provision was not a "Stipulated
Re-Payment".
In Greymac Trust Co. v. Gould (1983) 30 R.P.R., 157,
the mortgage provided for payment to be made, in advance, of an
amount to cover part of the interest charges on the mortgage.
The payment was made as a deposit into an interest bearing
account with Greymac. Greymac paid interest on the account and
from the account in turn paid interest on the mortgage. The
Court held this did not violate the section. Note - in Greymac
it was agreed between Counsel that the principal or interest was
not made payable on a Sinking fund plan.
What about situations where a bonus is added to the principal
amount. Does this violate the requirement of the section that
the mortgage contains a statement showing the amount of the
principal money where in effect a nominal principal exists? For
example:
A mortgage states that the principal of the loan is
$1,000.00 and the interest rate is 10% per annum calculated
yearly. In fact only $900.00 is actually advanced. $100.00 is
a bonus to the lender. At the end of the year, the $900.00
loan has cost the borrower $200.00. Expressed as a percentage
of the principal advanced, the total cost is 22.22%. Can it be
argued that the mortgage does not contain a statement showing
the amount of principal money?
In London Loan and Savings Co. v. Meagher (1930) S.C.R.,
378, the Supreme Court of Canada held that the disclosure of the
nominal principal and yearly per annum rate, excluding the
bonus, was sufficient. The practical result is that parties may
agree to capitalize certain costs, keeping the disclosed
interest rate at an attractively lower level. The Courts have
consistently applied this rule to bonuses (Asconi Building
Corp. v. Vocisano (1987) S.C.R., 358).
There does not appear to be any reported decision where a
Court has struck down a mortgage interest rate by virtue of
section 6.
Section 8 - Penalty Interest
Section 8 states:
"(1) No fine, penalty or rate of interest shall be
stipulated for, , taken, reserved or exacted on any arrears
of principal or interest secured by mortgage on real
property that has the effect of increasing the charge on the
arrears beyond the rate of interest payable on principal
money not in arrears."
"(2) Nothing in this section has the effect of
prohibiting a contract for the payment of interest on
arrears of interest or principal at any rate not greater
than the rate payable on principal money not in arrears. R.S.,
c.I-18, s.8."
The Courts appear more ready to avail a debtor of the
protection under this section than section 6 in which the
wording is archaic and too inflexible for modern conditions. For
example, it appears that an increase in the rate of interest
once the mortgage matures is unenforceable. Levy v. Booksban
(1931) 40 O.W.N., 187; Beauchamp v. Timberland (1983) 1
O.A.C., 73 (however a change in the interest rate from a fixed
rate to a floating rate appears not to offend the section - see Agricultural
Credit Corporation of Saskatchewan v. Lozinski (1993) 8
W.W.R., 373) .
However, in Patrician Land Corp. v. Dillingham (1985)
29, B.L.R. 81, the agreement provided that there would be no
interest until maturity and default and thereafter interest at
14% per annum. Commentary on the case has suggested that the
Court concluded that the loan was not interest free since the
parties had factored in an unspecified amount for interest over
the original term and it was therefore impossible to say that
the default provision increased the interest. Therefore it did
not offend section 8.
In Vohra Enterprises Ltd. v. Creative Industrial
Corporation (1988) 47 R.P.R., 243, the mortgage provided
that the mortgagee agreed to waive interest provided the
mortgagor was not in default of payments by a certain date. The
Court concluded that this offended section 8 and no interest was
payable under the mortgage. Here, the effect of the mortgage was
to increase the charge on arrears beyond the rate of interest
payable on principal not in arrears, therefore section 8 was
offended.
In TD Trust Co. v. Guiness (1995) Vancouver Registry
Number H950544, the mortgaged matured March 1, 1995 and interest
was stipulated to be 16.5% until February 22, 1995 and 24%
thereafter. It was held that a Court should not restrict itself
to the form of the interest provision in the mortgage but should
look to its substance. In this case the substance was clearly to
abstract a higher rate of interest if the mortgage was not
re-paid by its maturity date and was an attempt to avoid section
8 and the higher rate of interest was unenforceable. Contrast
this to Rain Tree Financial Ltd. v. Bell (1993) 35 R.P.R.,
275 where the mortgage provided that the interest rate would
increase from 18% to 24% one week before the date of redemption.
Held that the increase in interest which came into effect a week
before redemption in this case increased the rate payable on
both the principal not in arrears and that portion in arrears
thereafter and did not violate section 8. Both cases are from
the British Columbia Supreme Court. In Alberta, Grandville
Savings and Credit Union v. Pekrich (1995) 28 A.L.R., 17,
the mortgage provided for interest at 9% increasing to 14% on
any principal outstanding one month prior to maturity. Held the
mortgage did not offend section 8.
The Criminal Code of Canada -
Section 347 - Criminal Rate of Interest
Section 347. (1) reads as follows:
"Notwithstanding any Act of Parliament, every one
who
(a) enters into an agreement or arrangement to
receive interest at a criminal rate, or
(b) receives a payment or partial payment of
interest at a criminal rate,
is guilty of
(c) an indictable offence and liable to
imprisonment for a term not exceeding five years, or
(d) an offence punishable on summary conviction
and is liable to a fine not exceeding six months or to
both."
"Criminal Rate" is defined as exceeding 60% and
"Interest" means the aggregate of all charges and
expenses, whether in the form of a fee, fine, penalty,
commission or other similar charge or expense or in any other
form, paid or payable for the advancing of credit under an
agreement or arrangement, by or on behalf of the person to whom
the credit is or is to be advanced, irrespective of the person
to whom any such charges and expenses are or are to be paid or
payable, but does not include any repayment of credit advanced
or any insurance charge, official fee, overdraft charge,
required deposit balance or, in the case of a mortgage
transaction, any amount required to be paid on account of
property taxes.
A breach of the Code means the interest agreement cannot be
enforced in a civil action - 667950 Ontario Ltd. v. Artell
(1992) 24 R.P.R., 113.
Helo Enterprises Ltd. v. Standard Trust Company (1996) 1
S.C.R., 183 confirms that a broker’s fees are not interest and
not calculated in determining the rate of interest. This case
over-rules prior Court of Appeal decisions.
The stipulation that the borrower was to pay a share of the
anticipated profit from a real estate deal was a condition of
the borrower receiving the loan and fell within the all
inclusive definition of "Interest" - 677950 Ontario
Ltd. v. Artell Developments Ltd. (1992) 93 D.L.R., 334.
However, note, the anticipated profit was pre-set and added to
the mortgage and its payment was not contingent upon profits
being made. The Court did not comment on what the result would
be had this been a true risk-taking venture.
Care should be exercised in the case of short term or demand
mortgages. To determine whether the loan is illegal, the return
must be converted into a per annum rate. This means the period
over which the return has been earned is of crucial importance.
For example, a loan of $20.00 for one week at a fee of $1.00
produces a per annum interest rate of more than $260% per annum.
In Nelson v. C.T.C. Mortgage Corporation (1985) 2
W.W.R., 560, the borrower repaid a term loan before the expiry
of the term pursuant to a pre-payment option. If the interest
was calculated over the term of the loan, the rate was less than
60% per annum. If it was calculated over the period for which
the loan was actually outstanding, the rate exceeded the limit.
The Court held that the appropriate period was the date at which
the lender could require re-payment. They were not prepared to
hold that the borrower could, by electing to take advantage of
early pre-payment, turn what had been a legal arrangement in its
inception into a criminal one. It should be noted that the
consideration as earned over the period ending when it was
received, was above the criminal rate and indeed in dissent,
Hutcheon J. A. considered that this made the loan criminal
pursuant to section 347 (10 (b) even though it was not a
violation of 347 (1) (a). The majority did not discuss the
second branch of this section, but seem simply to have ignored
it. The decision of the majority was upheld by the Supreme Court
of Canada without additional reasons.
A recent Supreme Court of Canada decision on this topic is Dan
Corp. Developments Ltd. v. Metropolitan Trust Company of Canada
(October 30, 1998) 165 D.L.R., 417 - In the mortgage there was a
30% bonus and an additional 5% if slightly over half of the
mortgage was advanced, a placement fee of $75,000.00 and the
payment of all legal other fees with the mortgage re-payable
within one year. As a result of the borrower becoming insolvent,
the loan was not paid out for approximately three years. Based
on the mortgage term the interest rate exceeded 75% and based on
the actually time outstanding the mortgage rate was
approximately 20%. The Court found three principals as follows:
"Section 347 (1) (a) should be narrowly construed.
Whether an agreement or arrangement for credit violates
section 347 (1) (a) is determined as of the time the
transaction is entered into. If the agreement or
arrangement permits the payment of interest at a criminal
rate but does not require it, there is no violation of this
section although section 347 (1) (b) might be engaged.
Section 347 (1) (b) should be broadly construed. Whether
an interest payment violates section 347 (1) (b) is
determined as of the time the payment is received. For the
purposes of this section, the effective annual rate of
interest arising from a payment is calculated over the
period during which the credit is actually outstanding.
There is no violation of section 347 (1) (b) where a
payment of interest at a criminal rate arises from a
voluntary act of the debtor, that is, an act wholly within
the control of the debtor and not compelled by the lender or
by the occurrence of a determining event set out in the
agreement."
Note: In this case the Plaintiff relied on subsection (b)
and the Defendant escaped the provision for criminal
interest.
Equity or Participation Mortgages
The issue of the Criminal Rate of Interest is likely to raise
its ugly head where the lender takes part of the equity of the
project in the form of a participation mortgage. The Helo case
was a case involving participation mortgages however, once the
broker’s fee was eliminated the rate fell below 60% per annum.
Another case involving participation mortgages is First
Island Financial Services Ltd. v. Kirkstone Management Ltd. (1995)
7 W.W.R., 135. In this case, the mortgage called for 18% per
annum and a 20% profit participation. The mortgage provided that
in the event the aggregate of payments exceeded the maximum
payment permitted by law, the agreement would be modified to
negate the excess. The case established or re-affirmed a number
of principals:
a. The standard of proof required was not proof beyond a
reasonable doubt but on a preponderance of probability;
b. The following items were either included or excluded
in the calculation of interest:
(i) Any sharing by the lender in the mortgage broker’s
fee was included;
(ii) Insurance premiums and appraisal costs were
excluded although possibly for facts peculiar to the
case;
(iii) Registration fees were excluded;
(iv) Solicitor’s fees were excluded;
c. The "Severance" clause was effective and
"negates the mental element required to prove an
infringement of section 347 of The Criminal Code".
The lender had acted reasonably in taking steps to ensure
that an infraction of this section did not occur. Rather
than re-writing the parties’ agreement this was a
recognition of a consensual solution to a problem of
contingencies.
Contrast this, however, to B.C.O.R.P. Financial Inc.
v. Baseline (1990) 46 B.C.L.R., 89, which held that such
a severance clause was ineffective to save the transaction.
Essentially the Court found that declaring the parties’
intention was irrelevant when the contract on its face
called for a Criminal Rate. This case also confirms that
such a severance clause should be precise on how the
contract must be re-written.
Participation Agreements
The practice appears to be to remove the participation aspect
of the loan from the mortgage and place it in a separate
agreement registered as an encumbrance against the title. The
argument is that such clause in the mortgage may constitute a
clog on the equity of redemption. There does not appear to be
any case authority substantiating this practice. BCE
Development Corporation v. Cascade Investments Ltd. (1987)
55 A.L.R., 22 confirms that a mortgage cannot be made
irredeemable by a collateral agreement entered into at the time
of the mortgage and as part of the mortgage transaction. The
Court should look to the substance not the form of the
transaction. In North American Life Assurance Co. v.
Beckhuson (1981) 2 W.W.R., 446, the Court held that a
participation clause which allows the mortgagee to share in
profits is not a clog in the equity of redemption.
Disguised Loans
Avoiding interference by the Courts in mortgage terms by
disguising the mortgage as a sale with an option to repurchase
has generally not been successful. "Once a mortgage always
a mortgage". Kreick v. Wansborough (1973) S.C.R.,
588; Cresswell v. Raven Bay (1984) 53 B.C.L.R., 183
The Unconscionable Transactions Act; Consumer Credit Transactions
Act; and Fair Trading Practices Act
The Unconscionable Transactions Act -
this legislation does not confine itself to interest
however, interest is included in the definition of
"Cost of the Loan" along with other items such as
discounts, dues, bonuses, etc. Under section 2, with respect
to money lent the Court may re-open the transaction if it
finds having regard to the risk and all the circumstances
that the cost of the loan is excessive and that the
transaction is harsh and unconscionable.
Consumer Credit Transactions Act - this
Act applies to mortgages on real property and requires that
the "Credit Charges", which include interest or
discount, be calculated in the manner prescribed pursuant to
the Act. In particular it requires them to be expressed as
an annual percentage rate. The Act does not apply to
mortgage loans greater than $150,000.00 (section 2 (e)) nor
to loans to a corporation or a partnership other than for
farming purposes (section 2 (i)). Under section 8 (a) (iii),
in the event of failure to comply with the Act the mortgagee
is entitled to receive the principal amount of the loan back
and under section 8 (c) the Court may allow "Credit
Charges" that it considers appropriate in the
circumstances. However, section 3.1 (2) of the Regulations
exempt the application of section 8 to mortgages on real
property.
This Act will be replaced by the new Fair Trading Act,
September 1, 1999.
Fair Trading Practices Act - pursuant
to section 60 (iii) it appears that the Act only applies to
mortgage loans for personal, family, household, or farming
purposes and if the mortgage lender enters into the
agreement in the course of carrying on a business or the
credit agreement is arranged by a loan broker.
This Paper Was Prepared By Paul
J. Caron, Q.C.
Originally submitted to the Foreclosure Law Subsection of the
South Alberta Canadian Bar Association, May 27, 1999 |