Civil Litigation

  • March 17, 2026

    N.W.T. releases feedback on changes to union rules for public sector workers

    The Northwest Territories has released feedback on possible legislative changes around how unionized public servants are represented.

  • March 17, 2026

    Fictitious case law a systemic problem in Canadian courts: 111 and counting

    In October 2025, a Federal Court associate judge ordered a lawyer to pay costs personally after the lawyer submitted two AI-generated cases that did not exist. The decision drew attention for good reason. But it also raised a harder question: how often is this happening across the country?

  • March 17, 2026

    DIVISION OF POWERS - Federal jurisdiction

    Appeals and cross-appeals arising from the first-ever invocation of the Emergencies Act, during the Freedom Convoy protests in early 2022. On Feb. 14, 2022, the Governor in Council issued a Proclamation declaring a public order emergency, followed by Emergency Measures Regulations and an Emergency Economic Measures Order.

  • March 16, 2026

    FCA orders RCMP review body to decide delayed appeals within 6 months

    The Federal Court of Appeal has ordered the RCMP External Review Committee (ERC) to issue findings in long-delayed disciplinary appeals within six months, ruling that the Federal Court erred in denying mandamus relief after concluding the delay was not unreasonable.

  • March 16, 2026

    Ontario privacy, access to information proposals spark concerns about transparency, oversight

    Ontario’s recently announced overhaul of its access to information and privacy framework has sparked backlash, with observers saying the proposed changes threaten transparency and oversight in the province.

  • March 16, 2026

    Court of Appeal for Ontario confirms stay where enforcement sought against non-party to arbitration

    In Sociedad Concesionaria Metropolitana de Salud S.A. v. Webuild S.p.A., 2026 ONCA 28, the Court of Appeal confirmed that enforcement proceedings in Ontario should be stayed based on forum non conveniens.

  • March 16, 2026

    Employers ignore mental health issues at their peril

    Employers who think they are being clever by rushing to dismiss an employee, or quickly accepting a resignation before the employee explicitly raises mental health accommodation, often create liability for themselves.

  • March 16, 2026

    How I learned to stop worrying and love the bot

    Over the past several decades, law became intertwined with numerous technologies that we simply incorporated into our workflow. We anticipate more creative destruction with generative AI, but with AI, we look into the mirror and sense the mirror looks back. Something more seems to exist than just the simple context window interface, and we tend to anthropomorphize. If all Roomba owners put googly eyes on their machine, most would believe the little guy was truly alive.

  • March 16, 2026

    CIVIL PROCEDURE - Appeals - Cross-appeals - Fresh evidence

    Appeals by the Owners, Strata Plan KAS 1886 (Strata) from an order dismissing two petitions seeking recovery of unpaid strata fees from Odin Zavier and Gordon Lemon (respondents). Cross-appeals by respondents seeking costs if the appeals were dismissed.

  • March 13, 2026

    Feds reboot new police powers, obligations to give police & CSIS ‘lawful access’ to digital data

    Following public outcry and stiff political opposition to its sweeping “strong borders” omnibus bill (Bill C-2), the minority Liberal government has migrated the expanded “lawful access” powers and new obligations for electronic service providers to assist police and CSIS investigators from C-2 into standalone legislation (Bill C-22).