Articles 2024

Today
Today
Head shot of authors Andrew and Tiffany

Why We Need to Implement Province-Wide Mandatory Mediation in Ontario

  • March 29, 2022
  • Andrew Monkhouse and Tiffany He, Monkhouse Law

For almost 20 years, mediation has been required in most civil litigation proceedings in Toronto, Ottawa and Windsor. Mandatory mediation has significantly reduced the time taken to resolve cases and increased litigant satisfaction. A provincial roll-out of mandatory mediation will alleviate the current backlogs in Ontario courts and address the province’s urgent need to increase access to justice.

Labour and Employment Law, Student Forum
Three Ways in Which What Happens at Mediation Doesn’t Necessarily Stay at Mediation

Three Ways in Which What Happens at Mediation Doesn’t Necessarily Stay at Mediation

  • March 29, 2022
  • Stuart Rudner, Rudner Law

While we generally refer to mediation as a confidential and without prejudice process, the truth is that there are three potential situations in which what happens at mediation can be referenced and relied upon. It is important that counsel are aware of these exceptions, and advisable that they ensure that mediations they participate in are governed by an agreement which rebuts them to the extent possible. My standard mediation agreement does so, but not all of them do.

Labour and Employment Law, Student Forum
Head shot photo of author Tiana Knight

Mentorship Goes Both Ways

  • March 28, 2022
  • Tiana Knight

A key aspect of mentorship is ensuring that you establish mutually beneficial professional connections and focus on maintaining those relationships throughout your career, rather than just seeking out how others can support you.

Student Forum, Young Lawyers' Division

Bill C-11’s Foundational Faults, Part Two: The Regulate-It-All Approach of Treating All Audio-Visual Content as a “Program”

  • March 25, 2022
  • Michael Geist

My first post on Bill C-11 focused on the virtually limitless reach of the CRTC’s jurisdictional power over audio-visual services. The expansive approach in Bill C-11 isn’t limited to its jurisdictional reach, however. Not only does the law have few limits with respect to which services are regulated, it is similarly over-broad with respect to what is regulated, featuring definitions that loop all AV content into the law by treating all AV content as a “program” subject to potential regulation.

Entertainment, Media and Communications Law, Student Forum

OBA Insurance Law Section – Spotlight Interview with Sandra LeBrun

  • March 24, 2022

In an interview with Insurance Law Section member-at large Harold Geller, Sandra LeBrun, in-house counsel at Aviva Trial Lawyers (Ottawa Office), talks about her career path, her involvement in the insurance bar and broader legal community, her most memorable court appearance, her advice for junior lawyers, and more.

Insurance Law, Student Forum

No Liability for Infringing Comparative Advertising

  • March 18, 2022
  • May M. Cheng

The Quebec Court of Appeal decision in Constellation Brands US Operations Inc. v. Société de vin internationale ltée 2021 QCCA 1664 has received a lot of attention for its discussion of when comparative advertising constitutes infringement and whether comparative advertising can depreciate goodwill. However, the case is noteworthy for its consideration of the court’s discretion to refuse to grant an accounting of profits after having found infringement, and this merits more discussion.

Entertainment, Media and Communications Law, Student Forum