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Good faith requires a party to a contract whose actions or words
have created a false impression in the mind of a counterparty to
take positive steps to correct it, the Supreme Court of Canada
recently held in
C.M. Callow Inc. v Zollinger, 2020 SCC
45. If a party to a contract remains silent when it becomes aware
it has caused a counterparty to misapprehend a matter directly
connected to the performance of the contract or the exercise of a
contractual right, that party may be liable for a breach of the