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Articles 1 - 7 of 7

Full-Text Articles in Law

Legal Procedure: Access To Justice: 1883 To 1983, Justice Gibson Nov 1984

Legal Procedure: Access To Justice: 1883 To 1983, Justice Gibson

Dalhousie Law Journal

The invitation to me, as present Chairman of the Law Commission for England and Wales, to take part in this centenary celebration of Dalhousie Law School was both an honour conferred on our Law Commission and a recognition of our shared heritage of the common law and of the spirit and endeavour of law reform shared by the legal systems of Canada and of the United Kingdom. Greater honour was done to my office and to me by the conferring of the Honorary Degree of Doctor of Laws of this great university in such distinguished company.' This particular honour I …


Lawyers, Courts, And The Rise Of The Regulatory State, R. C. B. Risk Nov 1984

Lawyers, Courts, And The Rise Of The Regulatory State, R. C. B. Risk

Dalhousie Law Journal

In 1883, when Dalhousie Law School was created, lawyers in England, the United States, and Canada stood at the edge of a watershed. Massive changes in the law began during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries - changes in doctrine, institutions, practice, and ways of thinking. I cannot imagine how I might describe these changes in one short paper, even if I understood them all. Instead, I have chosen to talk about one large strand, regulation, because it is an important feature of law in the twentieth century and because it offers an opportunity to consider some distinctive characteristics …


The Changing Common Law, Morton J. Horwitz Nov 1984

The Changing Common Law, Morton J. Horwitz

Dalhousie Law Journal

I am very pleased and honoured to have been asked to participate in this centennial celebration. For me, it underlines the common bonds between the people of Canada and of the United States, who, in spite of various stresses and strains, manage to live side by side in peace and mutual respect. May we continue to set an example for the rest of the world. Until I read John Willis' very interesting history of Dalhousie Law School, I had not fully realized that I am here simply as another link in a long-standing relationship between Dalhousie and Harvard Law Schools. …


Federal State Clauses And The Conventions Of The Hague Conference On Private International Law, H. Allan Leal O.C., Q.C. May 1984

Federal State Clauses And The Conventions Of The Hague Conference On Private International Law, H. Allan Leal O.C., Q.C.

Dalhousie Law Journal

Dean Read would have been pleased, I believe, with this year's events since Canada has ratified The Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction.' This is a first for Canada in its participation in The Hague Conference on Private International Law. Dean Read worked hard and effectively to promote Canada's participation in that Conference and he was the Atlantic regional representative on the Canadian delegation to the first plenary session attended by Canadian delegates in 1968. I had the honour to work with him at that time and to be closely associated with him for many years …


The Supreme Court Of Canada And "The Bowater's Law", 1950, Peter Neary Jan 1984

The Supreme Court Of Canada And "The Bowater's Law", 1950, Peter Neary

Dalhousie Law Journal

Many accounts have been written of the events leading to Newfoundland's union with Canada in 1949. None, however, details the diplomatic and legal controversy which developed in the months before union over the future status of Bowater's Newfoundland Pulp and Paper Mills Ltd. Settled by the Supreme Court of Canada in 1950, this tangled issue, arising from legislation dating back to 1915, produced important judicial insights into the constitutional position Newfoundland had assumed on becoming a Canadian province.


Greenwood Shopping Plaza Ltd. V. Beattie And Pettipas: Life Masquerading As A Contract Case, C. M. Arymowicz Jan 1984

Greenwood Shopping Plaza Ltd. V. Beattie And Pettipas: Life Masquerading As A Contract Case, C. M. Arymowicz

Dalhousie Law Journal

The Supreme Court of Canada held that the defendants in Greenwood Shopping Plaza Ltd. v. Beattie and Pettipas1 could not claim any benefit from a contract because they were third party beneficiaries thereto. Restated, the Court permitted the insurer of a building to reach through the landlord and the tenant, and recoup itself by saddling the tenant's employees with liability for negligently performing their jobs although it could sue neither landlord nor tenant. This result is so unpalatable to both business and labour that it will be avoided, and insurers will acquiesce. In this note I will, (a) by way …


The Origins Of Canadian Narcotics Legislation: The Process Of Criminalization In Historical Context, Neil Boyd Jan 1984

The Origins Of Canadian Narcotics Legislation: The Process Of Criminalization In Historical Context, Neil Boyd

Dalhousie Law Journal

The year 1972 saw a federal Commission investigating the non-medical use of drugs recommend repeal of the offence of possession of marijuana', an indication that state policy with respect to the social control of psychoactive substances was undergoing a thorough re-appraisal. It is not surprising, then, that the past decade should also have seen a considerable degree of academic interest in Canada's initial attempt to make criminal the citizen's desire to alter consciousness. A comprehensive review of this admirable collection of research reveals that Canada ought not to take pride in these initial efforts. The initial statute has been explained …