The Complete Brief

  • April 30, 2026

    WILLS - Preparation and execution - Attestation - Undue influence, fraud and mistake

    Appeal by appellants (Bryan and Amadai) from a judgment dismissing their application challenging the validity of a May 19, 2022, will (the Fourth Will) said to be executed by the deceased, Reka, and from a costs order requiring each party to bear their own costs. Acting on an earlier will, Bryan applied for a certificate of appointment and collected a life insurance payout.

  • April 29, 2026

    CFIB says economic update doesn’t help shrinking number of SMEs

    The Canadian Federation of Independent Business (CFIB) has stated that measures announced in yesterday’s federal spring economic update were “not enough to halt the alarming loss of small businesses” across the country.

  • April 29, 2026

    Torys adds energy, Indigenous law partner in Calgary

    Torys has welcomed Jeremy Barretto as a partner in its infrastructure, energy and resources group in Calgary.

  • April 29, 2026

    Court stays order requiring township to issue fill permit pending appeal

    The Ontario Court of Appeal has granted a township’s motion for a stay of an order forcing it to issue a fill permit, ruling that denying the stay could render the municipality’s appeal moot.

  • April 29, 2026

    B.C. ministers urging federal government to bring in online harms bill, rules on AI chatbots

    B.C.’s attorney general is calling on Ottawa to take immediate action to protect the public — and especially young people — from online harm. In a letter addressed to the federal ministers responsible for AI and Canadian Heritage, B.C. Attorney General Niki Sharma says Ottawa should bring in online harms legislation that sets minimum safety standards for youth using the internet as soon as possible.

  • April 29, 2026

    Andrea Stevanovik joins Langlois as tax lawyer

    Langlois has added Andrea Stevanovik as a lawyer in its business law group.

  • April 29, 2026

    Law in the age of AI, two years on: A state of the union for 2026 and 2027

    In 2024, I opened a piece in this publication (Law in the age of AI: Balancing tradition and innovation in 2025) by imagining a courtroom where lawyers consulted artificial intelligence for real-time research, where blockchain verified documents in seconds and where disputes resolved themselves online. I called it “the reality unfolding in our legal system.”

  • April 29, 2026

    Sex assault appeal decision: Properly equipped jury must be accurately and sufficiently instructed

    Michael Morris was convicted of sexual assault, sexual interference and invitation to sexual touching by a jury in 2023. He was sentenced to 1,816 days (just short of five years, with credit for pretrial custody) in a penitentiary, plus ancillary orders.

  • April 29, 2026

    On the move to in-person motions in family court, I have been moved

    After reading rebuttals from Russell Alexander, Gary Joseph, Roslyn Tsao and Aaron Franks to my article on the recent return to in-person motions in Toronto’s family court, “The Zoom paradox: When a judge’s words and his court’s actions collide,” I have been moved.

  • April 29, 2026

    Quebec’s new religious accommodation framework: What private sector employers need to know

    On April 2, 2026, Bill 9, An Act respecting the reinforcement of laicity in Québec became law. While much of the public discussion has focused on the public sector implications, private sector employers should pay close attention: the legislation enacts a new Law promoting social cohesion and regulating accommodations for religious reasons (Loi favorisant le vivre-ensemble et encadrant les accommodements pour un motif religieux) that directly applies to them and fundamentally changes the rules governing religious accommodation in the workplace.

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