In-House Counsel

  • March 17, 2026

    Court removes counsel over dual role in subrogated and coverage claims

    The Alberta Court of King’s Bench has removed a lawyer as counsel in subrogated actions brought in the name of an insured, finding that despite the absence of a solicitor-client relationship, his concurrent representation of the insurer against the insured created a substantial risk of impaired representation.

  • March 17, 2026

    SCC heard more cases in 2025 but still fewer than pre-pandemic; number expected to rise in 2026

    The Supreme Court of Canada heard more appeals last year than in 2024 and delivered its reserved judgments more quickly, but its hearings and output in 2025 were not yet up to pre-pandemic levels, according to the top court, which states it “expects to hear even more cases in 2026.”

  • 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

    Immigration petitions: Premium processing vs. ‘regular’ adjudication

    These days, to get a timely adjudication on any U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) petition, filers need to be looking at the possibility of paying the extra US$2,965 to the U.S. government for expedited adjudication, under the agency’s “Premium Processing” option. This is because “regular” adjudication typically takes months — and in some cases, years — for most case types. This means your entire immigrant or nonimmigrant process, and accordant status, can be held up by lengthy adjudication times, limiting work options and/or the ability to travel in the meantime.

  • 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

    Supreme Court of Canada’s surreal reasoning in Case and Loyer

    When a person tells you, “I had a dream last night,” most people understand exactly what that means. The speaker is about to recount the swirl of mental imagery, sounds and emotions experienced during sleep. The story of missing a train, falling from the sky or walking into a classroom naked is not understood as a report of reality but as an account of imagination. Dreams are, almost by definition, the mind untethered from the ordinary constraints of perception and memory. The Spanish surrealist painter Salvador Dalí described dreams as “hand-painted dream photographs.”

  • 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.