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Right of appeal under Alberta’s Arbitration Act

November 2, 2022 | Emma L. Johnston, Jordon W. Magico

Commercial Litigation Communiqué

Introduction and overview Agrium v Orbis Engineering Field Services, 2022 ABCA 266 (Agrium v Orbis), is a case involving statutory interpretation of section 7(6) of Alberta’s Arbitration Act, RSA 2000, c A-43 (the “Act”). Section 7 of the Act allows […]

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Municipalities impose community benefits charges

November 2, 2022 | Thomas Sanderson, Justin McLarty, Jesse White, Safa Bajwa

Real Estate Report

Municipalities impose community benefits charges In the summer and fall of 2022, several Ontario municipalities have passed by-laws imposing Community Benefits Charges (“CBCs”) on new developments to pay for development-related capital costs under section 37 of the Planning Act. More […]

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Ontario Government tables legislation to prohibit strike or lockout

November 1, 2022 | Gillian Tuck Kutarna, Nadya Tymochenko, Renata Antoniuk

Morning Recess Education Law Newsletter

On October 31, 2022, the Ontario government introduced Bill 28, Keeping Students in Class Act, 2022. If passed, this legislation would prohibit CUPE workers (approximately 55,000 Ontario education workers, including educational assistants, custodians, librarians, and early childhood educators) from striking […]

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True sale principles from Canadian case law

November 1, 2022 | P. Jason Kroft, Ahmad Adam, Simon Igelman

Structured Finance and Securitization Communiqué

In many structured finance transactions, the commercial intention among the parties is to effect a transaction resulting in a purchase and sale between a buyer (the party contributing funds) and a seller (the party contributing revenue streams from financial assets). Whether […]

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Privacy Commissioners call on Health Industry to phase out use of traditional fax and unencrypted email in shift to digital healthcare

October 31, 2022 | Kathryn M. Frelick, Amanda Cutinha

Health Communiqué

On September 21, 2022, the Office of the Privacy Commissioner of Canada released a Joint Resolution of the Federal, Provincial and Territorial Privacy Commissioners and Ombudspersons with Responsibility for Privacy Oversight entitled Securing Public Trust in Digital Healthcare (the “Joint […]

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Tribunal rejects parent’s attempt to challenge school lesson on gender ideology

October 31, 2022 | Renata Antoniuk

Morning Recess Education Law Newsletter

The Ontario Human Rights Tribunal in N.B. v. Ottawa-Carleton District School Board, 2022 HRTO 1044 (CanLII) recently confirmed that including gender identity in lessons taught to grade one students is not discriminatory. To the contrary, existing legislative provisions serve to […]

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HRTO confirms it has concurrent jurisdiction with labour arbitrators

October 31, 2022 | Kayla Cockburn

Morning Recess Education Law Newsletter

This month, the Human Rights Tribunal of Ontario released a decision in Weilgosh v. London District Catholic School Board, 2022 HRTO 1194 confirming the approach of the Tribunal that it has concurrent jurisdiction with labour arbitrators over human rights claims by […]

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When will the incorporation of a new company be oppressive?

October 27, 2022 | Michael Kirk, KC, Ian Wilson

Commercial Litigation Communiqué

Introduction A recent decision of the Alberta Court of King’s Bench, Wisser v CEM International Management Consultants Ltd,[1] involved the Court imposing personal liability against the directors of a corporation for damages for wrongful dismissal pursuant to the oppression remedy […]

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Two insurers, a mutual policyholder, and the duty to defend

October 27, 2022 | James D. Bromiley, Giovanni Giuga

MT Insurance Law Blog

Ontario Court of Appeal upholds Application Judge’s treatment of Property Report Evidence In AIG Insurance Company of Canada (“AIG”) v Lloyd’s Underwriters (“Lloyd’s”) (2022 ONCA 699), the Ontario Court of Appeal was tasked with answering “whether two insurers have a […]

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Saskatchewan Court of Appeal rules that multiple proceedings are permitted in many circumstances

October 26, 2022 | Khurrum Awan, Nathanial Day

Class Actions Communiqué

Overview Saskatchewan’s Court of Appeal has held that while multiple or duplicative proceedings are generally undesirable, they are not prohibited. In the decision of Herold v Wassermann,[1] the Court set out the factors to be considered in determining whether an […]

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Disclaimer

This blog sets out a variety of materials relating to the law to be used for educational and non-commercial purposes only; the author(s) of this blog do not intend the blog to be a source of legal advice. Please retain and seek the advice of a lawyer and use your own good judgement before choosing to act on any information included in the blog. If you choose to rely on the materials, you do so entirely at your own risk.