Articles 2023

Today
Today

Welcome to a New WLF Year!

  • September 20, 2019
  • Richa Sandill, Chair

Our 2019-2020 Chair, Richa Sandill, welcomes the section and introduces WLF's exciting plans, events and programs for the year.

Women Lawyers Forum, Student Forum

Blaney's Appeals: Ontario Court of Appeal Summaries (September 9 - 13 2019)

  • September 19, 2019
  • John Polyzogopoulos

It was a fairly busy week at the Court of Appeal, with the Court releasing twelve civil decisions, nine criminal and provincial offences decisions, and one Ontario Review Board decision. Areas of law covered this week included agreements of purchase of sale of land, limitation periods, automobile insurance, personal injury, family, estates, contracts, employment and vexatious litigants.

Civil Litigation, Student Forum

Blaney's Appeals: Ontario Court of Appeal Summaries (September 3 – 6 2019)

  • September 18, 2019
  • John Polyzogopoulos

Topics covered this week included stay pending appeal in a high conflict child relocation/custody dispute, dismissal for delay, a dismissal of a challenge to capacity to execute powers of attorney for care and property, and striking pleadings in a limitation period context.

Civil Litigation, Student Forum

Is S. 320.31(9) a Soules Survivor?

  • September 16, 2019
  • Alan D. Gold

Alan Gold discusses the impact of changes to drinking, drugs and driving offence legislation - specifically, how new statement admissibility legislation stacks up next to existing jurisprudence.

Criminal Justice, Student Forum

Non-Competition Clauses in Employment Contracts

  • September 16, 2019
  • Andrea Sanche and Farhad Shekib, lawyers at Ricketts Harris LLP

Non-competition clauses in employment contracts present a conflict between two long-standing common law principles: discouraging restraints on trade and respecting freedom of contract. To make the terms enforceable, employers need to ensure they are drafted carefully, clearly and as narrowly as possible. Employees should similarly take caution before agreeing to a non-compete provision. Read on for more insight on non-solicitation clauses to assist your clients in the future.

Student Forum, Young Lawyers' Division
To Adjudicate or Not?  The New Adjudication Regime is Just Around the Corner

To Adjudicate or Not? The New Adjudication Regime is Just Around the Corner

  • September 16, 2019
  • Nora Kharouba, Fasken Martineau DuMoulin, LLP

The long-awaited introduction of the interim adjudication regime under Ontario’s Construction Act (“Adjudication Regime”) is just around the corner. The first of its kind in Canada, the Adjudication Regime takes effect on October 1, 2019, and promises to bring efficiency and timeliness to the resolution of disputes in the construction industry.

Construction and Infrastructure Law, Student Forum

Reflections on Defeat and the Value of Experience

  • September 13, 2019
  • Jonah Waxman, Lawrence, Lawrence, Stevenson LLP

Losing is a part of litigation. A big part. The adage goes that a lawyer who wins 100 per cent of their cases is a lawyer doing their other clients a disservice by not pushing the difficult matters to trial. Read on for insights from Jonah Waxman on the value of experience that comes from defeat.

Student Forum, Young Lawyers' Division

Two Cups of Tea: 1.9 Million Risk Statelessness in India

  • September 12, 2019
  • Tahir Khorasanee, Wakelin & Associates

In an interview with Tahir Khorasanee, Mr. Syed Zulfiqar Bukhari, an entrepreneur who is presently Special Assistant to the Prime Minister of Pakistan for Overseas Pakistanis & Human Resource Development and Chairman of the National Tourism Coordination Board (NTCB) and the Pakistan Tourism Board, brings attention to a humanitarian crisis in India that risks depriving more than a million people of statehood.

Student Forum, Young Lawyers' Division

Case Comment: Blake v. Blake, 2019 ONSC 4062

  • September 04, 2019
  • Katherine Thornton, Glaholt LLP,

Blake v. Blake is an important cautionary tale for all lawyers: read all of the articles that your firm publishes. A judge may make a factual inference that you know about the case your firm wrote about, especially if you practice in a specialized firm.

Construction and Infrastructure Law, Student Forum