Proper disclosure has been recognized by the Supreme Court of Canada as “the heart and soul of the securities regulations across Canada”1. Issuers are required to disclose two kinds of information to investors: “material facts” (which are to be disclosed periodically) and “material changes” (which are to be disclosed “forthwith”). But determining whether a particular event is a “material fact” or a “material change” is nuanced—in fact, it has been described as “perhaps the most difficult area of securities law”2. The inconsistent approaches courts have taken in trying to delineate between the two has resulted in uncertainty for both investors and issuers3.
In Lundin Mining Corp. v. Markowich4, the Supreme Court provided further guidance on both the interpretation of “material change” and the leave test for bringing a claim for failure to make timely disclosure, thereby adding to the Supreme Court’s jurisprudence on the related issues of mandatory disclosure and private enforcement in Canadian securities regulation5.
The Ontario Securities Act (the Act) defines a “material change” as “a change in the business, operations or capital of the issuer that would reasonably be expected to have a significant effect on the market price or value of the securities of the issuer”6. The terms “change”, and “business”, “operation” and “capital” are not defined in the Act.
A Canadian mining company detected pit wall instability at a key open pit mine. A few days later, a rockslide occurred, requiring the company to shut down at least part of the mine and reduce its production forecast for the next year by 20%. The company disclosed these events to investors a month later. In one day, the share price dropped 16%, resulting in a loss of over $1 billion in market capitalization7.
An investor then applied for: (a) leave under section 138.8(1) of the Securities Act to bring an action alleging the company’s failure to provide timely disclosure; and (b) certification of a class proceeding.
The motion judge denied the investor’s requests for leave and class certification, concluding that the instability and resulting rockslide were material facts, not material changes, because they did not lead the mining company to change its line of business, stop operating the line, or to change its capital structure8. In reaching this conclusion, the motion judge applied a dictionary definition of “change”, concluding it meant “a different position, course, or direction”9.
The Court of Appeal allowed an appeal, finding that the judge had interpreted a material change to the business, operations or capital of the company too restrictively in the context of the leave test10. The Court of Appeal said that an applicant under section 138.8(1) need only show a “plausible interpretation” of the statutory provisions at issue and sufficient evidence to support granting leave11.
The majority of the Supreme Court dismissed the appeal, clarifying that the meaning of “material change” in the business, operations or capital (a) should be interpreted flexibly and contextually; and (b) is interpreted the same way at the leave and merits stages of an action. The majority agreed that there was a realistic chance that the pit wall instability and rockslide could constitute a material change, and that the applicant therefore met the threshold test for leave to bring a statutory cause of action12. The certification motion was referred to the lower court.
Justice Coté dissented, holding that the majority’s determination conflated “material change” with “material fact” and imposed too significant a burden on issuers.
The Court reiterated that determining the meaning of “material change” is a two-step test: first, asking whether there is a change in the business, operations or capital of the issuer; and second, asking if it was material.
The majority agreed with the Court of Appeal that the motion judge erred by relying on overly restrictive definitions of “change”, “business”, “operations”, and “capital”. The Court explained that the Ontario legislature had intentionally left those terms undefined “to allow the legislation to be applied flexibly and contextually to a wide range of industries and corporate structures”13. In particular, the Court declined to qualify that a “change” must be “important” or “substantial”, or a “significant disruption and interference”. While these developments may be sufficient to constitute a change, they are not necessary14.
However, the Court’s view was that this flexible interpretation—when understood in context—would not lead to a flood of unnecessary disclosure, because:
The majority also clarified that the statutory interpretation process does not change in the context of the test for leave under section 138.8(1) of the Securities Act. The Supreme Court disagreed with the Court of Appeal that the leave stage required the applicant to put forward a plausible statutory interpretation, as suggested by the Court of Appeal. Rather, the applicant must put forward a plausible application of the legislation to the facts20. This means that the necessary analysis is “not conducted less stringently on a leave motion than at trial”21. A court determining whether to grant leave must evaluate what might qualify as a “material change”—without diluting the interpretation of that phrase—while recognizing the limited nature of the evidence available pre-discovery22.
This is a very important case in the development of securities law in Canada. It clarifies that the meaning of “material change” is not narrow or prescriptive (but has appropriate bounds), provides investors with further guidance on how issuers make their disclosure determinations and reinforces the importance of these determinations to investors and the markets.