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Schulich School of Law, Dalhousie University

2005

Common law

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Law

The Property Status Of Fishing Licences, David G. Henley Oct 2005

The Property Status Of Fishing Licences, David G. Henley

Dalhousie Law Journal

The property status of a fishing licence has for a long time been undecided. The judicial decisions have varied significantly on whether a fishing licence is property at common law or pursuant to various statutory definitions. The significance ofthe issue lies primarily in the financial arena. It is most often the case that the preponderance of the value in a fishing enterprise lies with the fishing licence rather than in the vessel. It is not uncommon for a lobster licence to approach one million dollars in value.' When quota is allocated to groundfish licences, the value of the package can …


Tribunals Imitating Courts - Foolish Flattery Or Sound Policy?, David Mullan Apr 2005

Tribunals Imitating Courts - Foolish Flattery Or Sound Policy?, David Mullan

Dalhousie Law Journal

In his 2004 Horace E Read Memorial Lecture, David Mullan assesses the impact of the "due process explosion." To what extent has the evolution of Canadian law (both statutory and common) in the domain of procedural fairness been responsible for the phenomenon of excessive judicialization of the administrative process? Has the increase in the number of decision-makers subject to the obligation of procedural fairness and the growth in the parallels between tribunal and court processes affected adversely the interests of the administrative justice system and the public that it is meant to serve? The author suggests that there is a …