Commercial Evictions in Nunavut: Notice and Remedies
A guide for Nunavut commercial landlords on handling tenant defaults, understanding the right of distress, and executing commercial evictions safely.
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Цей контент призначений виключно для загальної інформаційної та освітньої мети. Він не є юридичною консультацією і не повинен на нього покладатися як на таку. Закони часто змінюються — завжди перевіряйте чинні норми та консультуйтеся з ліцензованим юристом у вашій юрисдикції щодо порад, специфічних для вашої ситуації. Landager — це платформа управління нерухомістю, а не юридична фірма.Інформація востаннє перевірена: April 2026.
Commercial evictions in Nunavut are fundamentally different from residential evictions. They are swifter, harsher on the tenant, and rely heavily on common law principles and the specific wording of the commercial lease agreement.
Defining a Default
Before a commercial landlord can take any action against a tenant, the tenant must be in default of the lease. The lease itself defines what constitutes a default. Common triggers include:
- Monetary Default: Failure to pay base rent, additional rent (CAM, taxes), or late fees on time.
- Non-Monetary Default: Unauthorized subletting, abandoning the premises, failure to maintain required insurance, or using the property for an unpermitted business purpose.
Notice and Cure Periods
Unlike residential law, there are no statutory notice periods forced upon commercial landlords. The required notice depends entirely on the lease:
- Monetary defaults: Many commercial leases stipulate that if rent is late, the landlord must provide a written Notice of Default giving the tenant a short "cure period" (e.g., 3 to 5 days) to pay the arrears before the landlord can take action. Some stringent leases require zero notice for unpaid rent.
- Non-monetary defaults: These typically require a longer cure period (e.g., 15 to 30 days) to allow the tenant time to fix the breach (e.g., arrange repairs or obtain proper insurance).
If the tenant fails to cure the default within the timeline specified in the lease, the landlord can exercise their remedies.
The Two Primary Landlord Remedies
When a commercial tenant fails to cure a default, a landlord in Nunavut generally has two distinct legal remedies. Crucially, a landlord must choose one or the other; they cannot execute both simultaneously.
Remedy 1: Re-entry and Forfeiture (Eviction)
This is the process of terminating the lease and recovering possession of the premises.
- The landlord must serve formal written notice terminating the lease due to the uncured default.
- The landlord has the common law right to change the locks and physically lock the tenant out of the building.
- Once the lease is terminated, the landlord can sue the tenant for the unpaid rent and damages for the remaining value of the lease term.
Warning: Once a landlord terminates the lease and locks the tenant out, they lose the right to seize the tenant's goods to pay for rent arrears (Distress).
Remedy 2: Right of Distress (Seizure of Goods)
Under common law, if a tenant owes rent, a landlord has the right to enter the premises, seize the tenant's inventory, equipment, or chattels, and eventually sell them to recover the unpaid rent.
- A landlord exercising distress does not terminate the lease. The tenant is still legally bound to the space.
- Distress must be carried out carefully, usually by hiring an authorized bailiff to ensure goods are appraised and seized legally.
- In many Canadian jurisdictions, landlords must hold seized goods for a specific period (usually 5 days) before selling them, giving the tenant a final chance to pay the rent and reclaim their property.
- If a landlord changes the locks while exercising distress, courts may view this as an illegal termination of the lease, invalidating the distress action. Therefore, if a bailiff padlocks the door to secure the seized goods, they must technically allow the tenant access if requested (though the goods cannot be removed).
Bankruptcy Considerations
If a commercial tenant files for bankruptcy or insolvency, the rules change dramatically. Federal bankruptcy laws supersede provincial/territorial landlord remedies. A "stay of proceedings" is initiated, preventing the landlord from evicting the tenant or seizing goods without court approval.
Best Practices for Landlords
- Hire a bailiff/lawyer: Never attempt a commercial lockout or property seizure (distress) yourself. The legal liability for wrongful eviction or improper seizure is immense. Always use a licensed bailiff and consult a commercial real estate lawyer.
- Review your lease: Ensure your lease explicitly outlines the required cure periods for different types of defaults.
- Decide strategically: Carefully weigh whether you want the tenant out immediately to re-lease the space (Eviction), or if you believe seizing their inventory is the only way you will get paid the rent arrears (Distress).
How Landager Helps
Operating a rental property in Nunavut requires navigating a distinct regulatory environment under the Nunavut Rental Office. From adhering to the unique rule that allows tenants to pay security deposits across three months, to calculating heavily restricted late payment penalties that demand an official Rental Officer order, manual compliance tracking is error-prone. Landager’s platform fully automates these localized schedules. We instantly track partial deposit payments, flag the legally required 12-month spacing for rent increases, and enforce the mandatory three-month notice period before rent jumps take effect. By storing rigorous documentation of property conditions and notices, Landager ensures that you have perfectly organized evidence ready for any fast-tracked rental hearing, keeping your portfolio compliant, organized, and out of the territorial courts.
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