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Full-Text Articles in Law

Death To Semelhago!, Bruce Ziff Apr 2016

Death To Semelhago!, Bruce Ziff

Dalhousie Law Journal

In the 1996 decision of the Supreme Court of Canada in Semelhago v. Paramadevan, Justice John Sopinka stated that it is no longer appropriate to assume that specific performance will issue as a matter of course to enforce a contract for the sale of land. Before performance will be ordered, it must be proven (and not assumed) that common law damages for breach of contract will not suffice to do justice. In this article, Semel hago and the case law generated in its aftermath will be reviewed, and the policy arguments pertaining to the current law addressed. In short, it …


Limiting The Legal Liability Of Religious Institutions For Their Clergy: Cavanaugh V Grenville Christian College, M H. Ogilvie Apr 2016

Limiting The Legal Liability Of Religious Institutions For Their Clergy: Cavanaugh V Grenville Christian College, M H. Ogilvie

Dalhousie Law Journal

The purpose of this article is to explore the case law relating to the potential legal liability of ecclesiastical institutions for the conduct of their clergy and lay employees in the tort of negligence, vicarious liability and breach of fiduciary duty While a number of cases have resulted in findings of liability especially in those relating to the Indian residential schools, a recent decision from the Ontario Court of Appeal, Cavanaugh v. Grenville Christian College, suggests ways of thinking about the limits and scope of liability for institutions whose charitable purposes are occasionally betrayed by rogue persons over whom theymay …


Re Canada Post Corp And Cupw (105-95-00432), Innis Christie Mar 2001

Re Canada Post Corp And Cupw (105-95-00432), Innis Christie

Innis Christie Collection

The Union alleges a breach in the system the Employer has used to deal with bundles of "missorts" and specifically, in that the Employer provided inaccurate 050 forms for letter carrier and motorized mail carrier routes in Saint John. The Employer states that the passage used by the Union to support its allegation applies only to redirected mail, not to missorts.

The grievance fails. The Arbitrator is satisfied that the missorts were not incorrectly dealt with. The provision upon which the Union's argument depends does not apply to Saint John's unit.


Richards V International Association Of Heat & Frost Insulators & Asbestos Workers, Local 116, Innis Christie Mar 1978

Richards V International Association Of Heat & Frost Insulators & Asbestos Workers, Local 116, Innis Christie

Innis Christie Collection

A COMPLAINT having been made to the Construction Industry Panel of the Labour Relations Board (Nova Scotia) on November 15, 1977, pursuant to Section 52 of the Trade Union Act alleging a breach of Section 52(f), (g), and (h) of the Trade Union Act by the Respondents;


Inducing Breach Of Contract In Trade Disputes: Development Of The Law In England And Canada, Innis Christie Jan 1967

Inducing Breach Of Contract In Trade Disputes: Development Of The Law In England And Canada, Innis Christie

Innis Christie Collection

In the course of his judgement in the Posluns case Gale J., now the Chief Justice of the High Court of Ontario, thus defined the tort of inducing breach of contract. The Posluns case was an action by a stockbroker against the Toronto Stock Exchange, but it is in the context of trade disputes, especially in cases of picketing, that the tort of inducing breach of contract is significant in Canada. In the confused fact situations arising out of trade disputes Canadian courts have not always been as careful as was Gale J. to identify each of the elements of …