2012
From Blogger
Vote Obama to Save Federal Regulations!
Paul Daly October 10, 2012
That is the message of Cass Sunstein’s contribution to a New York Review of Books symposium on the upcoming U.S. Presidential election. Sunstein headed up OIRA for three years under President Obama.An extract: Of course the law imposes constraints; judges cannot strike rules down simply because they dislike them. But there is no question that […] Read more
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Should Statutes be Interpreted in Light of Regulations?
Paul Daly October 3, 2012
A partial answer from the Nova Scotia Court of Appeal: yes.In McIntyre v. Nova Scotia (Community Services), 2012 NSCA 106, the applicant’s spouse had received a lump sum pension benefit, which meant that she had received an “overpayment” of benefits. There was no doubt that there had been an “overpayment” within the meaning of the […] Read more
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The Ontario Court of Appeal Provides Some Reasonableness Guidelines
Paul Daly October 1, 2012
In passing in its otherwise unremarkable decision in Pastore v. Aviva Canada Inc., 2012 ONCA 642, the Ontario Court of Appeal had something interesting to say about reasonableness. Feldman J.A. (with whom Rosenberg J.A. and Swinton J. agreed) commented as follows: [59] Again, applying the Dunsmuir test for reasonableness, the delegate engaged in a […] Read more
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Can Omar Khadr Apply for Habeas Corpus?
Paul Daly October 1, 2012
My colleague Stéphane Beaulac raises a question that has not (it seems) had any consideration: can Omar Khadr, now back in Canada, apply for habeas corpus? Khadr can apply for a conditional release next year, but perhaps he will not have to wait that long.Khadr can almost certainly apply for the Great Writ. The leading […] Read more
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Duties of Fairness in the Disposal of Municipal Buildings
Paul Daly September 29, 2012
At first blush, the result in North End Community Health Association v. Halifax (Regional Municipality), 2012 NSSC 330 is striking. A municipality’s decision to sell an old school to a property developer was held to be unlawful because it breached a duty of fairness to local non-profit organizations and because it was sold at less […] Read more
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Medical Marijuana and Fettering Discretion
Paul Daly September 20, 2012
One of the cardinal principles of administrative law is that a decision-maker should never fetter his or her discretion. A recent case involving a claim for reimbursement for medical marijuana illustrates the principle nicely: Heilman v The Workers’ Compensation Board, 2012 SKQB 361.A battery of pharmaceutical treatments were prescribed over the years for the applicant’s […] Read more
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Sean Rehaag on the Luck of the Draw
Paul Daly September 19, 2012
Osgoode’s twitter feed alerted me yesterday that Sean Rehaag has an interesting empirical analysis of judicial review determinations by the Federal Court on SSRN. His dataset includes leave determinations and determinations on the merits in refugee cases.The title of his working paper is “The Luck of the Draw? Judicial Review of Refugee Determinations in the […] Read more
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Towards a Right to Respond in Immigration Law?
Paul Daly September 17, 2012
You know when academics say, “Some of my best ideas come from students”? Sometimes, we mean it.A student I had a couple of years ago came to talk to me about procedural fairness in administrative law. “Why don’t you focus more on the right to respond? We talk about hearings, the right to counsel, and […] Read more
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Precedent and Administrative Law — Again
Paul Daly September 17, 2012
I have previously blogged about the place of precedent in modern Canadian administrative law. The basic idea is not difficult to grasp. In Canada there is no presumption that there is a “right” answer to any question of law or discretion that arises before administrative bodies. Accordingly, administrative bodies are not bound by their previous […] Read more
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The Constitution of Administrative Law
Paul Daly September 17, 2012
There is much interest in the United States these days in the “unwritten constitution”. Better late than never, those of us schooled in the Old World might mutter. Snark aside, one of the spin-offs is some interesting work on the place of administrative law in this unwritten constitution. Americans have long been troubled by the […] Read more