Is there any case law supporting a plaintiff's argument that a fixed, certain and understandable offer must be outstanding down to the trial?

Ontario, Canada


The following excerpt is from Anand v. Belanger, 2012 ONSC 1166 (CanLII):

I do, however, find merit with the plaintiff's alternative argument. A fixed, certain and understandable offer must be outstanding down to the trial in order for there to be cost consequences under rule 49.10: Cass v. Muir, 1996 CanLII 11791 (ON SC), [1996] O.J. No. 5389 (Div. Ct.). This requirement is essential to promote certainty in the resolution of disputes. Parties must be able to evaluate offers reliably and decide with confidence whether to accept them, without doubt or ambiguity as to the result. Confusion as to the consequences of accepting or rejecting an offer serves neither side.

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