Articles 2021

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Today

The Rise and Fall of the Visa Officer Interview

  • January 28, 2019
  • M. Max Chaudhary, Barrister, Chaudhary Law Office

A brief overview of the history of the personal interview for economic applicants for permanent residence and its impact on decision making and procedural fairness.

Citizenship and Immigration Law, Student Forum

Brown Bag Lunch – January 15, 2019

  • January 24, 2019
  • Noah Weisberg and Chris Cieslik (articling student), Hull & Hull LLP

Highlights from the January 15, 2019 Brown Bag Lunch, including a discussion on filing Estate Information Returns, taxation of estate trustee compensation and the proposed changes to the Ontario Pension Benefits Act.

Student Forum, Trusts and Estates Law

Blaney's Appeals: Ontario Court of Appeal Summaries (January 14 – 18, 2019)

  • January 23, 2019
  • John Polyzogopoulos

Following are summaries of the civil decisions of the Court of Appeal for Ontario this past week. The Court released a number of decisions this week, including an important pronouncement on Construction Act trusts, and the ability of the provincial legislature to establish trust certainties, in The Guarantee Company of Canada v Royal Bank of Canada, 2019 ONCA 9.

Civil Litigation, Student Forum

The Guarantee Company of North America v. Royal Bank of Canada: return (or revenge?) of the statutory lien trust

  • January 22, 2019
  • R. Brendan Bissell

In the Star Wars movies, there are points where the Jedi seem to have wiped out the Sith (or vice versa) only to find out that the other has come back to life. Stakeholders, lawyers and insolvency professionals who had seen, or hoped for, the end of the statutory construction lien trust after bankruptcy might be forgiven for feeling like that after January's Court of Appeal for Ontario decision in The Guarantee Company of North America v. Royal Bank of Canada.

Insolvency Law, Construction and Infrastructure Law, Student Forum

Recent Taxpayer GAAR Victories

  • January 21, 2019
  • Gloria Wang

The author discusses two recent Tax Court of Canada cases considering the application of the general anti-avoidance rule, from which the taxpayers emerged victorious for various reasons.

Student Forum, Taxation Law