A federal-government case against the owners of the Ambassador Bridge over toll and compensation claims will proceed to trial, a judge rules.
Bridge ownership dispute heads to court
A Canadian judge has ruled that a legal dispute between the federal government and the owners of the Ambassador Bridge must proceed to trial. The decision follows a request by the government to have the case dismissed without a full hearing. The judge’s ruling marks a significant turn in a long-running contest over toll-collection rights and compensation claims.
Origins of the case and the companies involved
The dispute involves the Canadian Transit Company (CTC), a U.S.-based firm that owns the Canadian side of the Ambassador Bridge and operates tolls at the Windsor, Ontario crossing. CTC claims it holds exclusive rights to collect tolls under a century-old statute, the Canadian Transit Company Act of 1921, and that the federal government’s approval of the new Gordie Howe International Bridge constitutes an infringement of those rights.
The motion and the judge’s reasoning
In the motion before the court, the government asked for summary judgment, arguing that the 1921 Act did not explicitly grant CTC exclusive toll rights and that the case should not proceed to trial. The motion was denied by Robert Centa, who wrote that whether the statute implies exclusivity by CTC had assumed the “burden of operating the Ambassador Bridge in exchange for the right to collect tolls” is a «genuine issue requiring a trial.» In other words, the judge found the question complex enough that it cannot be resolved without a full hearing.
When and where the case will go to trial
Although the ruling orders the matter to trial, no date has yet been set. The case is pending before the Ontario Superior Court of Justice in Toronto, where the parties will proceed with pre-trial deadlines. The judge has scheduled administrative processes to be completed by early November.
What the claim seeks and its legal basis
CTC’s claim began in 2012 when it sued the federal government for approving the Gordie Howe International Bridge. CTC seeks a legal declaration that the government has infringed on its toll-collection rights, and compensation for “de facto expropriation” of those rights, plus damages for nuisance, interference with property rights, breach of contract or negligent misrepresentation. The central question is whether the 1921 Act implies exclusivity even though it does not explicitly state it. The judge noted precedents dating to 1837 where exclusive rights have been found implicitly under certain legal frameworks.
Why this matters for cross-border infrastructure and compensation law
The case holds broader significance for how long-standing infrastructure rights are handled when governments approve new crossings or competing infrastructure. If CTC’s claim succeeds, it could affect how toll-rights and compensation mechanisms are structured for major border-crossing projects between Canada and the U.S. It also underscores the potential for historic legislation to be interpreted in ways not originally envisioned, especially when new infrastructure changes the competitive and regulatory landscape.
What happens next
The next step is for the parties to exchange detailed evidence and legal briefs as required for a full trial. The judge’s decision does not comprise a finding on the merits: it simply establishes that the legal and factual issues cannot be resolved without a full hearing. Both sides will now prepare for a more extensive battle over historical rights, infrastructure law and governmental liability.