Law in Quebec

News about Quebec legal developments


Public law

  • Mother denied shared custody because of cannabis use

    A mother of a three-year old child addicted to marijuana was denied shared custody after Quebec Superior Court held that her cannabis consumption compromised her parental skills.

    In a ruling widely expected by family lawyers to be among the first of many the courts will hand down following the legalization of cannabis, Justice Jérôme Frappier held that the mother’s cannabis’ addiction, coupled with her anxiety attacks, represented a “serious risk” because she would be unable to adequately respond to the needs of her child if she had shared custody. Justice Frappier awarded custody to the father, and granted the mother visitation rights two out of every three weekends but only if she is not under the influence of cannabis or any other drug in the presence of her child.

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  • Arctic freeze

    The Arctic Ocean, the smallest and shallowest of the world’s five oceans, is melting. Cursed by hostile weather and rough seas, the forbidding, remote and one of the least understood environments in the world is now beginning to open up under the weight of climate change. Navigation, not long ago unthinkable, is increasingly feasible. Large ships are beginning to explore the area in ways that Viking settlers and European merchants could only dream of.  Shrinking Arctic sea ice allowed last year a tanker carrying a cargo of liquefied natural gas to travel through the northern sea route for the first time without an icebreaker escort.

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  • Quebec ombudsman urges province to provide healthcare to Canadian children of parents with precarious immigration status

    Nine months ago Amnesty International and Doctors of the World launched a joint petition to request health coverage for children born in Quebec whose parents are beset by a precarious immigration status.

    The petition obviously went unheeded.

    The Quebec ombudsman too is now calling on the provincial healthcare administrator to cease its “restrictive” and “faulty” interpretation of the Quebec Health Insurance Act and regulations to deny children of parents with a precarious migratory status healthcare coverage even though they are born in Quebec.

    “The Quebec Ombudsman considers that the solution lies in applying the Act as written,” said an 18-page report by the Protecteur du Citoyen.

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  • Legal aid eligibility thresholds increased but lawyers still shunning cases

    The Quebec government increased legal aid eligibility thresholds by 6.67 per cent, but that’s not good enough, asserts to the Quebec Bar.

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  • Quebec expanding pilot program to prevent addicts convicted of crimes from reoffending

    A pilot program that began six years ago to help Montreal alcoholics and drug addicts convicted of crimes from reoffending will be expanded across the province, announced Quebec Minister of Justice Stephanie Vallée.

    The program, offered initially only to detainees while their cases were pending, will now be expanded to include people who are not detained while charged with a crime.

    The court-supervised drug treatment program was a success, said Chief Justice of the Court of Quebec Lucie Rondeau. According to figures, 235 people with an average age of 38 were admitted to the program since 2012 after being found guilty of assault, breaking and entering, mischief and uttering threats.

    “Despite their past, they were able to justify the treatment requirements (and) improve their psychological, physical and social condition,” said Chief Justice Rondeau. “They no longer consume, have a fixed address, a job or have returned to their studies.” Of the 235, 53 were able to meet the program’s objectives.

    Offenders seeking to take part of the court-supervised drug treatment program however must meet certain criteria. They must admit to the crime, have no previous violent crimes, and the Crown must agree that the offender does not represent a danger to society. On top of that, the offender is required to undergo drug testing and show up in court regularly to prove they are making progress. Sentencing is delayed until offenders have achieved their goals, all of which is supervised by five Court of Quebec judges in Montreal.

  • Quebec Court of Appeal voids bylaw forcing protesters to provide itinerary to police

    A City of Montreal bylaw that forced protesters to provide an itinerary to police ahead of time was struck down by the Quebec Court of Appeal after it ruled that it was arbitrary, excessive, and unreasonable.

    The appellate court ruling, described as a “significant administrative law case,” limits the discretionary powers a municipality can confer to police and sheds light on how the Charter protection of freedom of expression applies to demonstrations, according to civil rights lawyers.

    “The decision underlines that one cannot rely on police to apply a law correctly when it is so vague that it could lead to a constitutional violation,” noted Sibel Ataogul, a Montreal lawyer with Melançon Marceau Grenier & Sciortino who successfully plead the case. “This really changes the landscape in Montreal. Thousands of people were arrested under this statute because they had not properly advised the police. So it’s a huge deal.”

    In 2012, after weeks of student protests triggered by then Quebec Premier Jean Charest’s government to increase university tuition fees, former Montreal mayor Gérald Tremblay passed a controversial municipal bylaw, P-6, that amended existing regulations governing public order and made it illegal to wear masks or face coverings during demonstrations and to embark on a protest march without first sharing the route with police. The bylaw’s adoption spurred even further protests.

    After a legal challenge by Julien Villeneuve, a college philosophy teacher better known as “Anarchopanda,” a costumed mascot of Quebec’s 2012 student protests, Quebec Superior Court Justice Chantal Masse on June 2016 struck down the ban on masks, ruling that article 3.2 of the bylaw was unconstitutional – a decision that the municipality did not contest. In a 124-page decision, Justice Masse however held that article 2.1, which compelled demonstrators to share the itineraries with police, was constitutionally valid and equally valid under administrative law, with some nuances. She held that spontaneous, unplanned protests cannot be declared illegal because sharing an itinerary with authorities in advance was not feasible. But in planned protests, where people have been invited in advance to attend a demonstration, a route must be filed, as required by the bylaw, held Justice Masse.

    Villeneuve appealed, contending that that article 2.1 was vague and unreasonable, contrary to Justice Masse’s conclusion. Villeneuve also argued that Justice Masse, under the guise of interpretation, gave meaning to the article that it did not have and rewrote article 2.1, before examining its validity, thereby appropriating the role of the legislator. Moreover, Villeneuve maintained that article 2.1 breached article 3 of the Quebec Charter of Human Rights and Freedoms as well as articles 2b and 2c of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

    The Quebec Court of Appeal overturned the lower court decision, and voided article 2.1 of the bylaw. In a 36-page decision in Villeneuve c. Ville de Montréal 2018 QCCA 321 that was issued on March 2nd, Appeal Court Justice Geneviève Marcotte concluded that the trial judge erred and interpreted and gave meaning to article 2.1that the legislator did not.

    “It appears to me that article 2.1 has a reach that is as excessive and unreasonable as article 3.2 from an administrative law point, when we disregard the interpretation proposed by the trial judge,” said Justice Marcotte, a conclusion shared by Justices Paul Vézina and Marie-Josée Hogue.

    The wording of the article was imprecise and its scope far too large as it obliged citizens to give police the itinerary and exact place of “every assembly, parade or gathering on public property.” On top of that, though article 2.1 does not explicitly delegate or directly hand police discretionary powers to apply the regulation (of the bylaw), the broad scope of the article confers to police the discretion to determine what is an illegal demonstration under article 2.1, noted Justice Marcotte. The wording of the article does not specify any criteria or provide any indication that restricts the scope of the article, leaving it to police to establish the conditions, added Justice Marcotte.

    “This is a significant administrative law case because it narrows the powers of a municipality by saying that there has to be a reasonable amount of precision,” said Julius Grey, a well-known Montreal human rights lawyer. “There had been some jurisprudence in recent years that gave vast powers to municipalities and that interpreted the powers very broadly. There is a bit of a swing of the pendulum here.”

    The ruling also touches on constitutional issues. Justice Marcotte notes however that since article 2.1 was held to be invalid under administrative law, its analysis of the constitutional validity of the article was “less pertinent.” Still, Ataogul asserts that the ruling is “really important” in terms of constitutional law because “they say you cannot rewrite a provision completely as a constitutional remedy.”

    But Maxime St-Hilaire, a constitutional law professor Université Sherbrooke, is far from convinced or persuaded by the reasons. He contends that the decision does not “sufficiently or decisively” make the distinction between the limits of interpretations a judge can make and the limits of these modifications as a remedy. “The Court of Appeal suggests that there are limits to modification, notably when a judge adds to a text as a form of constitutional remedy,” said St-Hilaire. “But it does not indicate what the criteria are. There are no references, no criteria, no norms. A constitutional expert will have to wait for another ruling that will more directly broach the subject.”

    Ataogul nevertheless points out that the appellate court held that article 2.1 did not pass the “proportionality test” established by the landmark ruling by the Supreme Court of Canada in R v Oakes, [1986] 1 SCR 103. “The appeal court held that the scope of the article was so broad that it was not rationally connected to its objective,” said Ataogul. “It is very rare for the courts to target the rational connections. What’s interesting here is that the Court of Appeal interpreted this notion rather restrictively, and held that it must be rather direct. That is not something we have often seen.”

    The City of Montreal has said it not appeal the decision.

    This story was originally published in The Lawyer’s Daily.

  • Quebec Bar and Ombudsman want to make it easier for alleged victims of sexual assault

    The Quebec Bar and the Quebec Ombudsman want to make it easier for alleged victims of sexual assault to gain access to the legal system and are calling on the provincial government to follow in the footsteps of the overwhelming majority of Canadian provinces and eliminate the prescription period for civil actions in cases of sexual assault.

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  • Red zones violate rights of marginalized people, study says

    “Red zones ” or “no-go” orders, conditions of release imposed by police or the courts in bail or probation orders that prohibit an individual from entering or being found within a specific place or area, have become increasingly pervasive but are costly, ineffective and violate people’s rights, concludes a new study.

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  • Free legal advice provided this weekend by Young Bar of Montreal

    The Young Bar of Montreal will provide free legal advice by telephone this weekend. Volunteer lawyers and notaries will be available to answer questions on a wide range of subjects, from consumer to family law to labour to the management of estates.

    People can call the hotline at 1 844-779-6232 on Saturday, October 14th and Sunday, October 15th from 9:00 to 16:30.

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  • Ottawa given until Christmas to address sex-based discriminatory provisions in the Indian Act

    The federal government dodged a potential crisis that would have halted Indian status registrations after the Quebec Court of Appeal begrudgingly gave Ottawa until Christmas to address sex-based discriminatory provisions in the Indian Act and complete a bill that has been held up by the Senate.

    In a ruling that marks the first time a Canadian appellate court has been called upon to decide whether or not to extend yet again the suspension of a judicial declaration of constitutional invalidity of a legislative provision, the Quebec appeal court scolded the federal government for the “unacceptable delays” and the absence of administrative measures that would have mitigated the discrimination.

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  • Two Montreal protesters awarded $2,000 each in damages by Quebec appeal court

    Two protesters that occupied a public square in downtown Montreal won a partial victory after the Quebec Court of Appeal awarded them $2,000 each for moral and material loss because the police no longer had reason to keep them handcuffed and detained in the back of a police car to drive them to another part of the city.

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  • Ex-wife of wealthy businessman author of her own misfortune

    In the end she was done in by spite, and greed.

    She is the ex-wife of a wealthy Quebec businessman who had sought to maintain an exceptionally privileged and luxurious lifestyle, and fought tooth and nail. She hired and fired more than half a dozen lawyers all the while waging a relentless, and ultimately, vain legal battle to find hidden assets ostensibly stashed away by her husband. She frittered away about $4 million in legal and expert expenses, only for the case to be heard ex parte. She did not show up at trial nor was she was she represented by a lawyer.

    “The execution of said conclusion would put an end to a battle which lasted almost six years,” said the judge in language that would do proud to legalese aficionados. “It is time for the parties to go on with their separate lives,” the judge added more plainly.

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  • Supreme Court of Canada clarifies duty to consult

    The Supreme Court of Canada shed new light on the Crown’s constitutional duty to consult with Aboriginal communities and clarified the role and obligation of decision-making bodies in two separate decisons that has the potential of providing greater predictability for natural resources companies seeking regulatory approval.

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  • Appeal court postpones ruling that would have suspended Indian status registrations

    The Quebec Court of Appeal granted a safeguard order today that temporarily postpones a court ruling that would have suspended new Indian status registrations as of July 4th.

    Quebec Court of Appeal Justice Nicholas Kasirer granted the Attorney General of Canada leave to appeal from a June 27th decision that refused to extend for a second time the suspension of its August 3, 2015 judgment that found that the principal registration provisions of the Indian Act were invalid because it breached s.15 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

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  • New Indian status registrations in jeopardy

    A suspension on new Indian status registrations could begin new week unless the Quebec Court of Appeal issues a safeguard order that would temporarily suspend a ruling that ordered the federal government to correct discriminatory provisions in the Indian Act that infringe the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

    Quebec Superior Court Justice Chantal Masse dismissed a motion earlier this week to extend Parliament’s deadline for eliminating sex discrimination from the registration provisions in the Indian Act.  Ottawa had already received a couple of extensions.

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Law in Quebec
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