Law in Quebec

News about Quebec legal developments


Quebec

  • Quebec Court of Appeal sets clear guidelines over use of screening devices for breath samples

    Police officers who demand drivers to provide breath samples must have an approved screening device with them to be able to immediately conduct the test, ruled a full bench of the Quebec Court of Appeal, upending its own previous guidance that allowed delays depending on the circumstances.

    The long-awaited ruling sets clear obligations for police officers, falls in line with Supreme Court of Canada jurisprudence that asserts that delays cannot be justified for practical reasons given that the right to counsel is temporarily suspended, and is widely expected to have an sizeable impact on impending cases, according to criminal lawyers.

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  • Expert group recommends salary hike for provincially appointed judges

    Barely two weeks after the Quebec Justice Minister and the Chief Justice of the Court of Quebec publicly clashed over competing visions on how to deal with conjugal and sexual violence, a judicial compensation committee released a report recommending sizeable salary increases for the provincial judiciary, laying the groundwork for even further friction between the executive and the judiciary.

    A five-member blue-ribbon panel (pdf) of legal and financial experts recommended boosting the renumeration of Court of Quebec judges from the current $255,000 to $310,000 by July 2022, which would make them the third best paid provincially appointed judges, behind Ontario and Saskatchewan. The independent committee would have recommended a more significant increase “had it not been for the uncertainty created by the pandemic” on Quebec’ economy and public finances.

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  • Quebec Appeal Court provides guidance to notaries over duty to inform

    Quebec notaries can now heave a huge sigh of relief after the Court of Appeal found that their duty to inform depends on the circumstances and relationship they have with their client.
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  • Quebec enacts new corporate transparency framework

    A new corporate transparency law recently enacted by the Quebec government will compel all private corporations and partnerships, regardless of where it is registered or incorporated, who conduct business in the province to disclose the identity and some information of the beneficial owners of their shares in a publicly accessible database, a requirement that goes further than similar legislation passed by the federal government and other provinces.

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  • Report calls for paradigm shift to Quebec’s legal aid system

    An independent panel of experts is recommending sweeping reforms to Quebec’s administration of the legal aid system to simplify the process to seek legal aid and alleviate the administrative encumbrances faced by private sector lawyers who take on legal aid mandates.

    The experts, while affirming Quebec’s decentralized legal aid model because it ensures the independence of staff counsel and “respects” regional diversity, are nevertheless calling for a “paradigm” shift that would be anchored by the introduction of a secure digital platform to help establish a province-wide one-stop shop to receive, process and manage legal aid applications.

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  • Quebec introduces most consumer-friendly privacy law in Canada

    Quebec introduced sweeping changes to its privacy regime, making it the most consumer-friendly privacy law in Canada by giving individuals much greater control over their privacy while compelling private and public sector organizations to implement onerous prescriptive obligations that will be challenging to fulfil within two years, according to privacy experts.

    The major overhaul, heavily influenced by the 2018 European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), introduces new privacy rights such as data portability rights and the right to be forgotten, new accountability and governance requisites, and new rules for the outsourcing and transfer of information outside Quebec. It also institutes new mandatory breach notification requirements, mandatory privacy impact assessments, clarifies consent requirements for collection, use or release of personal information, and significantly raises potential fines for violations.

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  • Teen must provide DNA sample

    A Montreal teen found who plead guilty of to cyber theft discovered the long reach of section 487.05 of the Criminal Code.

    Under that provision, a judge has the power to order the taking of DNA samples from a person who’s been convicted of certain offences, so-called “designated offences.” It also allows a judge to issue a warrant to obtain DNA samples from a person suspected or accused of a designated offence.

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  • Two Quebec law faculties among top 100 worldwide

    Two Quebec law faculties have been rated as two of the best 100 in the world to study law by the Times Higher Education (THE) World University rankings.

    McGill University’s law faculty, headed by Robert Leckey, was ranked 17th worldwide, maintaining its hold in the global top 20 since THE began publishing rankings specific to law in 2017.

    The Université de Montréal’s law faculty was ranked 51st, climbing an impressive 42 spots.

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  • Homegrown cannabis restriction reinstated by Quebec Appeal Court

    A lower court ruling that struck down a provincial ban on homegrown cannabis was overturned by the Quebec Court of Appeal after it held that the province was acting within its jurisdiction over property and civil rights when it decided to regulate the market by creating a state monopoly to minimize the “harmful” effects of cannabis on health.

    Thanks to the Quebec Appeal Court ruling, Quebec along with Manitoba are the only provinces that still have in place a strict regulatory approach that bans residents from growing recreational cannabis at home in spite of the federal law, Cannabis Act, allowing individuals to grow up to four plants.

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  • Quebec ramping up services for victims of conjugal and sexual violence

    Victims of conjugal and sexual violence will have access to emergency financial assistance, the latest initiative the Quebec government introduced to help victims of gender-based violence.

    Over the past few months, the Quebec government has tabled a controversial bill to create a specialized tribunal for sexual and domestic violence, handed funding to a Montreal legal aid clinic to provide training for legal professionals, and boosted social and legal services to help victims of intimate partner and sexual violence.

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  • Adjudicator awarded $426,000 in damages

    A rental board adjudicator who was threatened to be fired by the Quebec government has been awarded $426,000 in damages after the Quebec Court of Appeal overturned a lower court ruling and held that he was unjustly forced to resign.

    In a ruling that clarifies the notion of consent, the Appeal Court issued a stern rebuke to the Quebec government, reminding it that only the Quebec Administrative Justice Council can remove an adjudicator from the bench. The Appeal Court also censured the provincial government for threatening to commit an illegal act and disregarding the principle of judicial independence.

    Louis-André Hubert, the ex-spouse of former Quebec Justice Minister Stéphanie Vallée, was appointed as an adjudicator in the fall of 2015. But shortly after his appointment, two unflattering newspaper articles were published about him. The Associate Secretary General in charge of the Secrétariat des emplois supérieurs asked him to resign, and warned him that if he did not the government would pass an order-in-council to revoke his appointment. Hubert resigned shortly thereafter but decided to bring the matter before the courts, arguing that his consent had been vitiated by fear.

    The trial judge dismissed his case, holding that it was “inconceivable” that Hubert as a lawyer did not know that the government could not revoke from the bench through an order-in-council. The trial judge, while acknowledging that the situation was difficult, held that Hubert acted freely and knowingly when he resigned.

    The Appeal Court overturned the lower court decision and found that “when the government indicated that it wanted to use a means that the law did not permit, any coercion that existed became illegitimate.” The application of Article 1403 of the Civil Code of Québec requires a finding that the government threatened to commit an illegal act and that this threat induced fear that vitiated the appellant’s consent.

    “Even though the order-in-council was not passed, the question of its legality opens the door to the application of art. 1403 C.C.Q. When OKthe government indicated that it wanted to use a means that the law did not permit, any coercion that existed became illegitimate,” held Quebec Court of Appeal Justice Dominique Bélanger in a unanimous decision in Hubert c. Procureur général du Québec, 2021 QCCA 1527.

    Whether the person being threatened recognizes the legality of the action that will be carried out is unimportant, added Justice Bélanger. What is relevant is that the senior civil servant threatened to use illegitimate means against Hubert, and it was the “very appearance” of this threat that created the fear that vitiated the consent.

    This “is the essence of abuse of power. It is the very manifestation of the threat whose purpose or means are illegitimate that creates the fear that vitiates consent,” added Justice Bélanger.

  • Quebec relaxes rules to insurance provisions over the duty to defend

    The Quebec government, concerned over the possibility that a growing number of head offices were contemplating leaving the province over rising costs of insurance premiums for big business, is relaxing a legislative provision that compels insurers to assume defence costs of insureds over and above the limits of insurance policies.

    The legislative amendment, welcomed by big business, will allow defence costs to be excluded from coverage or included in the limits of insurance only for certain ”categories of insurance contracts” and “classes of insureds.” This change may bring some insurance relief to public companies and large businesses who are struggling with rising premiums to obtain liability insurance, in particular coverage for directors and officers (D&O), in Quebec, according to insurance legal experts.

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  • Obligation to carry mobile phone does not exist, holds divided appeal court

    A divided Quebec Court of Appeal may have opened the door towards a positive obligation to carry a mobile phone when doing physical outdoor activities as a precaution against foreseeable risk or face the possibility of being held to account for a contributory fault, according to experts.

    In a ruling that examines the principles of contractual civil liability, a dissenting Quebec Court of Appeal judge held that a mountain biker who sustained injuries after he fell from a chairlift had committed a contributory fault by failing to have a cell phone when he embarked on the lift.

    “While it is a dissenting opinion, it will open the door to hold that it is a fault not to have a mobile phone,” remarked Patrice Deslauriers, a law professor at the Université de Montréal who teaches civil liability. “That goes too far. Will I now be obliged to check the status of the battery of the cell phone? We are not yet at a stage in society where we are obliged to carry with us a cell phone.”

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  • Aluminum maker discriminated against students rules Quebec appeal court

    Students who were paid less than casual and regular workers by an aluminum smelter even though they performed equivalent work were discriminated against on the basis of social condition, held the Quebec Court of Appeal.

    In a decision expected to have significant repercussions in the province’s labour landscape, the Quebec Court of Appeal clarified the burden of proof when challenging the discriminatory nature of a measure, held that students fall within the notion of “social condition” under the Quebec Charter of Human Rights and Freedoms, and confirmed that discriminatory claims under the Quebec Charter do not require additional evidence of discrimination stemming from prejudice, stereotypes or social context, according to experts. Social condition refers to the rank and place an individual occupies in society.

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  • Damages awarded to victims of conjugal violence

    A man who subjected his ex-wife to nine years of domestic violence was ordered by Quebec Superior Court to pay her nearly $47,000 in damages, the second time in less than a month that a Quebec court ordered an abusive spouse to pay damages for the violence they inflicted.

    In a decision welcomed by family law experts and advocates against family violence who believe it is the harbinger of an emerging trend, Quebec Superior Court Justice Gregory Moore held that recent amendments to the federal Divorce Act (Act) “underline the sensibility that the the courts and parties must demonstrate faced with this challenge” to society. Justice Moore awarded more than $1,900 in damages, $30,000 in non-pecuniary damages and $15,000 in punitive damages.

    “This is a developing trend because society in general rejects family violence, because there is heightened awareness by the courts over the issue of family violence, and because domestic violence is no longer viewed by the courts as being only a ground for granting divorce but as a possible cause of physical and psychological harm that must be compensated,” said Michel Tétrault, a family law expert who has written Droit de la famille.”

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Law in Quebec
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