Articles

The following articles are published by OBA Sections, including the Student Section. Members are encouraged to submit articles.

Editor: Cláudio Antônio Klaus Júnior 

Today
Today

Blaney's Appeals: Court of Appeal Summaries (December 16 – 20, 2019)

  • January 06, 2020
  • John Polyzogopoulos

Following are this week’s summaries of the civil decisions of the Court of Appeal for Ontario. In Sosnowski v. MacEwen Petroleum Inc., the Court appears to have unconvincingly dialed back how far the “appropriate means” test can go to extend the limitation period. In this case, the employee waited until he was acquitted of theft (which took six years, including appeals) before suing for wrongful dismissal (he had been fired for cause because of the alleged theft).

Civil Litigation, Student Forum

Multi-Parent Families: Considerations for Health Care Providers

  • January 06, 2020
  • Clancy Catelin, Rosen Sunshine LLP

Awareness and recognition of multi-parent families is growing, and in 2016 Canada took steps to recognize multi-parent families by enacting the All Families Are Equal Act ("EFCA"). The formal recognition of multi-parent families introduces with it various challenges and considerations for health care providers.

Health Law, Student Forum

Brown Bag Lunch - November 19, 2019

  • December 31, 2019
  • Rebecca Rauws, associate, and Celine Dookie, articling student, Hull & Hull LLP

Highlights from the November 19, 2019 Brown Bag Lunch, including discussions of Notice Connect's Will registry, minor children as beneficiaries of Henson trusts, the use of the phrase "children per stirpes," how a successor executor can be appointed, and a new approach to confirming the capacity of a potential testator client.

Student Forum, Trusts and Estates Law

Administration Bonds, Part 1 of 2: Dispensing with the Bond

  • December 27, 2019
  • Daniel Litsos, student-at-law, Macdonald Sager Manis LLP

In several common scenarios, an estate trustee may have to post a bond before the court will grant probate. Estate trustees routinely ask the court to waive the bond requirement, but the application process is more rigorous than many estates practitioners appreciate. Don't have your client's application needlessly rejected. This article, Part 1 of a two-part series, highlights common mistakes and oversights. Part 2 will explain how to obtain a bond, if it becomes necessary.

Student Forum, Trusts and Estates Law

Brown Bag Lunch - October 15, 2019

  • December 27, 2019
  • Rebecca Rauws, associate, and Sean Hess, student, Hull & Hull LLP

Highlights from the October 15 meeting of the OBA's Brown Bag Lunch program for estates and trusts practitioners, including discussion of common probate issues, insolvent estates, electronic estate-planning tools, and the purpose (or lack thereof) of survivorship clauses.

Student Forum, Trusts and Estates Law

Why Ontario’s Victim Compensation Bill Will Hurt Those It’s Designed to Help

  • December 18, 2019
  • Shiva Bakhtiary, Osler, Hoskin & Harcourt LLP

Victims of crime in Ontario will now get significantly less compensation and will no longer have their cases heard before an impartial adjudicator after Bill 100 amends the Compensation for Victims of Crime Act and dissolves the Criminal Injuries Compensation Board.

Administrative Law, Criminal Justice, Student Forum