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Full-Text Articles in Law
Tort In A Contractual Matrix, John G. Fleming
Tort In A Contractual Matrix, John G. Fleming
Osgoode Hall Law Journal
This article addresses one aspect of the interface between tort and contract: the way tort law is affected, whether by extending or contracting its reach, by the parties coming together against a contractual structure. Two basic situations are considered. The first concerns the effect of a contractual limitation clause on the tort liability of, or to, a third party such as a subcontractor's to the building owner. The second considers what effect to attribute to a plaintiff's failure to protect himself or herself in advance by contracting against the risk
Strict Products Liability Revisited, Denis W. Boivin
Strict Products Liability Revisited, Denis W. Boivin
Osgoode Hall Law Journal
This article examines the relationship between two concepts found throughout the law of products liability, defect and negligence. Traditional tort doctrine contends that, although they are sometimes used interchangeably, both concepts refer to quite distinct matters: the state of a product, on the one hand, and the nature of a manufacturer's conduct in supplying its products, on the other. The hallmark distinction between a standard of fault and one of strict liability, it is said, is that only the former requires proof of unreasonable care, whereas both require proof of a defect. Relying on developments in the United States and …
Back To The Future!: Is The "New" Rigid Choice Of Law Rule For Interprovincial Torts Constitutionally Mandated?, Jean-Gabriel Castel
Back To The Future!: Is The "New" Rigid Choice Of Law Rule For Interprovincial Torts Constitutionally Mandated?, Jean-Gabriel Castel
Osgoode Hall Law Journal
In the last few years, the Supreme Court of Canada has held that private international law rules applicable to the jurisdiction of Canadian courts and the recognition and enforcement of the judgments of sister provinces must conform to the demands of territoriality and the principles of order and fairness which flow from the existence of an implied Full Faith and Credit clause in the Canadian Constitution. More recently, the Court has decided that, with respect to choice of law, the ancient lex loci delicti rule is applicable to both interprovincial and foreign torts and that it admits no exceptions in …