Articles 2024

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Today

Ron Ellis Symposium, June 21, 2022: Highlights of an Extraordinary Career

  • October 20, 2022
  • Alec Farquhar

This article provides a summary of the recent Ron Ellis Symposium hosted by the Workers' Compensation Section of the OBA. The symposium highlighted the career and impact of Ron Ellis on Ontario's workers' compensation system and his importance within administrative law.

Student Forum, Workers' Compensation

Private Health Care in Canada is Back in the News

  • October 19, 2022
  • Janet Ozembloski, Anna Marrison, Heather Webster, Holly Ryan

Cambie Surgeries Corporation v British Columbia (Attorney General), 2022 BCCA 245 has brought the perennial subject of private health care once again to the fore. Though some patients may be deprived of the right to life and security of the person, allowing for private care would increase wait times even further for those who cannot access private care.

Health Law, Student Forum

Case Summary: Clarifying the Law of De Facto Expropriation

  • October 19, 2022
  • Alex Cockburn, articling student, Barriston LLP

Case summary of the Annapolis and Halifax saga, where the Supreme Court of Canada has the opportunity to consider the law of "de facto" expropriation.

Municipal Law, Student Forum

WSIAT Stakeholder Event: Highlights and Summary

  • October 16, 2022
  • Michael Edmonds

This article provides highlights and a summary of information shared by the WSIAT at its September 28, 2022 Stakeholder Event. Updates include announcements about upcoming changes to Tribunal process and practice with the Tribunal also providing a summary of several new and noteworthy decisions.

Student Forum, Workers' Compensation

It Doesn’t Have to be Issued by the Vendor: Tax Court Confirms Satisfactory Input Tax Credit Documentation

  • October 16, 2022
  • Randy Schwartz and Jesse Waslowski, McCarthy Tetrault LLP

Subsection 168(1) states that GST/HST tax is generally payable on the earlier of when the consideration for the supply is paid and when it becomes due, the latter of which generally falls on the invoice date. However, in CFI Funding Trust v. The Queen, the Tax Court of Canada held that an invoice issued by the supplier is not necessary to claim an input tax credit and to satisfy requirements of the Excise Tax Act (Canada) and the Input Tax Credit Information (GST/HST) Regulations.

Student Forum, Taxation Law

Is there a Place for “Abuse of the Act Read as a Whole” in the GAAR Analysis

  • October 16, 2022
  • Julia (Zhuying) Zhuo

The general anti-avoidance rule in section 245 of the Income Tax Act is essentially an interpretive rule. In Canada Trustco, the Supreme Court adopted a single, unified approach to the misuse or abuse analysis, which rejected “abuse of the Act read as a whole” as a separate test. In the recent GAAR Consultation paper, the Finance expressed concern over the unified approach and considered codifying the “scheme” approach in Copthorne to give more weight to “abuse of the Act read as whole.”

Student Forum, Taxation Law