2015
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Statutory Tribunals Performing Judicial Review: Some Recent Decisions
Paul Daly December 22, 2015
I have written before about whether a statutory tribunal sitting on “appeal” from another body can exercise a judicial review jurisdiction — and Francophiles can read in greater detail in the latest issue of the Canadian Bar Review. The issue continues to arise with frequency before Canadian courts. In two recent decisions, appellate judges have […] Read more
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The Signal and the Noise in the Supreme Court of Canada’s Administrative Law Jurisprudence
Paul Daly December 20, 2015
I have been quiet recently, in part because I have been working and travelling, but also because the last month of Supreme Court of Canada cases has been discouraging. While academics, practitioners and lower-court judges try to establish coherent frameworks to understand the general principles of judicial review, the Court resolves cases one-by-one without, with […] Read more
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Clawbies 2015: Year in Review
Paul Daly December 20, 2015
That time of year again! Here are my nominations for this year’s awards. Pierre Trudel, Journal de Montréal: my polyvalent colleague has been blogging on current legal affairs in an unlikely venue, the website of the blue-collar Journal de Montréal. His posts are excellent, accessible entrées into the legal issue du jour and deserve a […] Read more
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Can This Be Correct? Kanthasamy v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2015 SCC 61
Paul Daly December 11, 2015
Another week, another underwhelming standard-of-review decision from the Supreme Court of Canada — this time in Kanthasamy v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2015 SCC 61. At issue here was the scope of the Minister for Citizenship and Immigration’s authority to waive statutory conditions for “humanitarian or compassionate” reasons, an authority expressly conferred by s. 25(1) […] Read more
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A Note on the Charbonneau Commission: Focus on Recommendations, Not Facts
Paul Daly December 8, 2015
Perhaps unsurprisingly media coverage of the Charbonneau Commission report (see my previous post) has focused on facts. Who was blamed — or not blamed — and why not? Why did Renaud Lachance disagree with France Charbonneau’s conclusion that there was a link between political party financing and the awarding of public contracts? Posing these questions […] Read more
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Conference: The Crown in the 21st Century – Deference or Drift?
Paul Daly December 6, 2015
From Michael Jackson and Philippe Lagassé: May I draw to your attention that registration is currently being accepted for the conference “The Crown in the 21st Century: Deference or Drift?” to be held at Government House in Victoria, BC, 14-16 January 2016. This will bring together leading authorities on the Crown from Canada, Australia, New […] Read more
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Unresolved Issues in Standard of Review: B010 v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2015 SCC 58
Paul Daly December 4, 2015
Although B010 v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2015 SCC 58 was billed in the initial summary as an administrative law case, there is precious little discussion of the general principles of standard of review in McLachlin C.J.’s decision for a unanimous Supreme Court of Canada. At issue was the interpretation of legislation designed to discourage […] Read more
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Section 96 in the 21st Century
Paul Daly December 2, 2015
There are lots of things on my to-blog list, which I hope to start striking items off soon, but until then here is the last installment of my draft paper on section 96 of the Constitution Act. Comments very welcome! Alternative methods of dispute resolution – alternative, that is, to the ideal-type of adversarial trials […] Read more
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Curiouser and Curiouser: Canadian Broadcasting Corp. v. SODRAC 2003 Inc., 2015 SCC 57
Paul Daly November 26, 2015
Another copyright decision from the Supreme Court of Canada, another discussion of the standard of review — the “prodigal child” of Canadian law (at para. 185)* — and, again, sharp disagreement between Rothstein and Abella JJ: Canadian Broadcasting Corp. v. SODRAC 2003 Inc., 2015 SCC 57. At issue was the application of the principle of […] Read more
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Final Report of Quebec’s Corruption Inquiry: Recommendation of a False Claims Act
Paul Daly November 24, 2015
There will be plenty of coverage in the coming days of the final report of the Charbonneau Commission, released this morning. This is the culmination of a lengthy inquiry into Quebec’s construction industry, which extended its tentacles to other spheres of public life. I had a miniscule part in the report. One of the 60 […] Read more