s.13: Market Value Determination
Statute: "The compensation payable for land shall be based upon the market value thereof."
Key principles:
- Valuation date: Earlier of notice of expropriation service (Form 7) or plan registration (s.13(2))
- Highest and best use: Value based on property's optimal legal use, not current use
- Example: Agricultural land zoned industrial β valued at industrial land value, not farm value
- Special purchaser excluded: Cannot include premium a specific buyer would pay
- Example: Adjacent landowner would pay 20% premium to assemble parcels β premium excluded, use market value to typical buyer
- Forced sale discount: Not applicable - owner entitled to full market value despite forced sale
- Rationale: Public should bear cost of expropriation, not penalize owner for involuntary sale
Case law: Diggon-Hibben Ltd. v. The King [1949] S.C.R. 712 - market value defined as price willing buyer and willing seller would agree upon in open market
s.14: Special Difficulties in Relocation
Statute: "In determining compensation, there may be taken into account... any special difficulties in relocation."
Application:
- Medical needs: Elderly owner requires proximity to hospital (limited housing near hospitals) β additional compensation for difficulty relocating
- Business disruption: Specialized business (auto body shop with environmental permits) difficult to relocate β compensation for extended relocation period, permit transfers
- Cultural ties: Long-term residence in ethnic enclave (Portuguese community) β compensation for loss of community services access
Limits: Not unlimited - must be reasonable and causally connected to expropriation
s.18(1): Disturbance Damages Components and Limitations
Statute: "The owner... is entitled to be paid... (a) the market value of the land; (b) an allowance to compensate for disturbance."
Disturbance components:
- Moving costs: Reasonable costs of relocating household or business
- Legal and appraisal fees: Professional fees incurred due to expropriation
- Temporary accommodation: If relocation requires temporary housing
- Business losses: Revenue losses during reasonable relocation period
Limitations:
- Causation: Must be caused by expropriation (but-for test)
- Reasonableness: Costs must be reasonable (not gold-plated)
- Foreseeability: More liberal than tort law (broadly compensable if reasonably foreseeable)
- Mitigation: Duty to mitigate losses (cannot inflate costs unnecessarily)
Case law: Gossen v. Toronto (City) [2003] O.J. No. 4557 (Ont. Div. Ct.) - disturbance damages must be reasonable and causally connected
s.18(2): Injurious Affection from Construction vs. Permanent Use
s.18(2)(a): Injurious affection "from the carrying out of the works and not from the use of the works when constructed"
- Construction impacts: Temporary noise, dust, vibration, traffic disruption during construction period
- Quantification: Rent reduction during construction, business losses, property damage (cosmetic vibration damage)
s.18(2)(b): Injurious affection "from the use of the works after construction thereof"
- Permanent impacts: Ongoing noise from highway traffic, visual obstruction from transmission line, loss of privacy from elevated transit
- Quantification: Permanent value reduction (before/after market value)
Case law: Antrim Truck Centre Ltd. v. Ontario (Transportation) (2005), 75 O.R. (3d) 1 (C.A.) - four-part test for injurious affection:
- Damage must result from authorized public work
- Damage must be caused by execution or use of statutory powers
- Damage must result in diminished market value
- Damage must be special and not general (affects claimant specifically, not public generally)
s.18(3): Non-Compensable Items
Statute: "No compensation shall be paid for... (b) the loss of business or other income, or the loss of goodwill or any other intangible."
Business goodwill: NOT compensable
- Example: Restaurant loses 30% of customers due to highway relocation β no compensation for lost customer base
- Rationale: Goodwill is intangible, difficult to value, owner can rebuild elsewhere
Trade fixtures: Compensable (s.18(3) excludes "intangibles" but trade fixtures are tangible)
- Depreciated value of equipment, fixtures removed from premises
Revenue losses: Limited compensation
- Compensable: Losses during reasonable relocation period (disturbance damages)
- Not compensable: Ongoing business losses after relocation complete (lost income is intangible)