Fiduciary Responsibilities of Municipal Councillors Serving as Directors
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Transcript of Fiduciary Responsibilities of Municipal Councillors Serving as Directors
Presented by:
Calgary Regional Partnership:
Fiduciary Responsibilities of Municipal
Councillors Serving as Directors
2014
[email protected] 403-260-1472
Derek J. King, Partner
Overview
Purpose is to explain the: • Fiduciary relationship of CRP and its Directors
• Role as a CRP Director versus Role as an Elected Official
• Consequences (and personal risks) of breaching fiduciary duties
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Overview
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A. Fiduciary Du/es B. Role as CRP Directors
C. Role as Municipal Councillors D. Dual Roles
E. Personal Liability of Directors
F. Management Strategies
PART A
Fiduciary Duties
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A. Fiduciary Duties 1. Terms
The person owing the duty Fiduciary
Beneficiary The person or entity to whom the duty is owed
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A. Fiduciary Duties 2. When does a duty arise?
Fiduciary Duty arises where the:
Ø Fiduciary has scope for the exercise of some discretion or power
Ø Fiduciary can unilaterally exercise its power or discretion so as to affect the beneficiary’s legal or practical interests
Ø Beneficiary is vulnerable to or at the mercy of the fiduciary holding the discretion or power
(Frame v Smith, [1987] 2 SCR 99)
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A. Fiduciary Duties 3. What does the duty require?
Fiduciary Duty Requires One:
Ø To act honestly and in good faith
Ø To act with the same degree and skill as an ordinary person (objective standard)
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A. Fiduciary Duties 3. What does the duty require?
Fiduciary Duty Requires:
Ø Avoiding conflicts of interest
Ø Acting in the best interest of your Entity
Ø Making decisions in accordance with legislation and the best interests of your Entity
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A. Fiduciary Duties 3. What does the duty require?
Case law : Peoples Department Stores Inc (Trustee of) v Wise, 2004 SCC 68
The statutory fiduciary duty requires directors and officers to act honestly and in good faith vis-‐à-‐vis the corpora/on. They must respect the trust and confidence that have been reposed in them to manage the assets of the corpora/on in pursuit of the realiza/on of the objects of the corpora/on. They must avoid conflicts of interest with the corpora/on. They must avoid abusing their posi/on to gain personal benefit. They must maintain the confiden/ality of informa/on they acquire by virtue of their posi/on. Directors and officers must serve the corpora/on selflessly, honestly and loyally…
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A. Fiduciary Duties 4. For Profit vs Non-Profit
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For Profit vs Non-Profit
Ø Different governing legislation including:
Ø Alberta Business Corporations Act, Alberta Societies Act, Part 9 Companies under the Companies Act …
Ø The wording in the legislation varies. Some statutes are silent on standards of care (like Part 9 Companies) but Courts have imposed standards of care on Directors where statutes do not.
Ø Duties are serious – whether for profit or non-profit
A. Fiduciary Duties 5. Summary
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Fiduciary Duty
Highest Standard of Care in law
Must act in the best interests of the Entity
Must act in an honest, loyal and faithful manner
PART B
Role as CRP Directors
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B. Role as CRP Directors 1. What is the CRP?
The Calgary Regional Partnership (CRP):
Ø Part 9 (non-profit) corporation
Ø The CRP is separate legal entity governed by the Board of Directors:
Ø CRP has its own mandate
Ø Reference:
Ø http://calgaryregion.ca/dam/Website/reports/General/Agendas-and-minutes/2014-Board-of-Directors-agenda-and-meeting-minutes/2014-agenda/Board-of-Directors-handbook/Board-of-Directors-Handbook.pdf
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B. Role as CRP Directors 2. The CRP Mandate (CRP Handbook)
CRP Mandate:
Ø As an independent legal entity, CRP has its own purpose and objectives
Ø Affects a wide range of geography and multiple aspects of municipal affairs
Ø The CRP’s mandate can and does overlap with those of other municipalities and organizations
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B. Role as CRP Directors 3. The Mandate of the CRP Board of Directors
(CRP Handbook)
CRP Board of Directors:
• The Board is responsible under the Companies Act (Alberta) for the overall governance of the CRP
• The Board is ultimately accountable for and has authority over the CRP’s resources and activities
• Certain meeting requirements
• Responsible for hiring and directing the CRP’s Executive Director
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B. Role as CRP Directors 3. The Mandate of the CRP Board of Directors
(CRP Handbook)
Role as a Director:
• Tasks:
• High level governance decisions for the CRP
• Strategic and business decisions and the overall guidance of the CRP towards its long term goals
• Responsible to the CRP as a Whole:
• As a Director you are required to act in the best interests of the region as a whole
• No Delegation of Authority
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B. Role as CRP Directors 4. Duties (CRP Handbook)
Duties as a Director:
• Duty of Honesty
• Duty of Care
• Duty of Loyalty
• Duty of Obedience
• Duty to Exercise Power and Promote CRP
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FIDUCIARY DUTY
PART C
Role as Municipal Councillors
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C. Role as Municipal Councillors 1. Municipal Councillors
Elected Officials:
Ø The relationship between a municipality and its councillors is unique:
Ø Distinct from an employer-employee relationship
Ø Distinct from the relationship between a private corporation and its directors
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to consider and promote the welfare and interests of the
municipality as a whole
C. Role as Municipal Councillors 2. Section 153 of the Municipal Government Act
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C. Role as Municipal Councillors 2. Section 153 of the Municipal Government Act
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to participate in Council meetings, Committee
meetings and meetings of other bodies to which they are appointed by
Council
C. Role as Municipal Councillors 2. Section 153 of the Municipal Government Act
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to keep in confidence matters discussed in private at Council or Committee Meetings
C. Role as Municipal Councillors 3. Councillors Duties
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Fiduciary Duty
Must act exclusively for
the Municipality
Must not profit at the expense of
the Municipality
Must avoid conflicts of duty
and interest
C. Role as Municipal Councillors 4. Breach of Councillor Duties
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“The need to maintain integrity in public office is of paramount importance and requires that elected officials be held to a very high objective standard of care.”
Calgary Roman Catholic Separate School District No. 1 v. O'Malley, 2007 ABQB 57
PART D
Dual Roles
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D. Dual Roles 1. The Issue
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Director Duty to CRP
Councillor Duty to the
Municipality
D. Dual Roles 2. Conflicting Duties
• The Councillor-Director has statutory obligations to the municipality imposed by the Municipal Government Act
• The Councillor-Director also owes a fiduciary duty to the CRP
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While sitting on the Board of the CRP, this duty requires the
Councillor-Director to act in the best interests of the CRP.
D. Dual Roles 3. Municipal Interests are Subordinate
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• When acting as a Director of CRP (vs acting as a councillor):
• Act in the best interests of CRP
• Where the best interests of the municipality conflict with the best interests of the CRP, the Councillor-Director must put the interest of the CRP first
• This may mean:
• Voting against or refraining from voting in favour of the interest of the municipality
D. Dual Roles 4. Confidentiality
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The Councillor-Director must not disclose any information to the
municipality which is received as a Director of CRP which is
determined to be of a confidential nature
D. Dual Roles 5. Summary
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Director Duty to CRP
Councillor Duty to the
Municipality
PART E Personal Liability of
Directors
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E. Personal Liability of Directors 1. Protection of Directors
• Directors are not separate legal Entities. They cause the Entities to take action. The actions are of the Entities
• Generally, Directors will not be held personally liable for any act or omission which is done in good faith while carrying out their duties or exercising their legitimate powers as a Director
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E. Personal Liability of Directors 2. Limits of Liability Protection
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Ultra Vires (Out of scope)
• Director acts outside the scope of his/her duties, obligations and legitimate boundaries of authority, or willfully fails to fulfill them
Fiduciary Duty • Director fails to discharge his/her fiduciary duty
E. Personal Liability of Directors 2. Limits of Liability Protection
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Bad Faith • Director acts in bad faith
Gross Negligence
• Likely no protection for defamation, dishonesty, gross negligence or willful misconduct because out of the scope of duties
E. Personal Liability of Directors 2. Limits of Liability Protection
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Dual Loyalty
• Individuals acting as a director of one entity and who are a fiduciary of another entity (as another director or a councillor), have been found to be personally liable for losses for breaching fiduciary duties
Dual Loyalty
• In numerous court decisions, if a parent company incurs a loss due to director’s actions on a subsidiary company, that director is personally responsible
PART F Management Strategies
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F. Management Strategies
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Conflict of Interest Policies
Confiden2ality Policies
F. Management Strategies
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Train and Educate Both Directors and Municipal Members
Regular Communica2on