Law in Quebec

News about Quebec legal developments


Quebec Court of Appeal

  • Quebec lawyers and notaries lose battle against title insurers

    American-based title insurers do not practise law or provide legal opinions when drawing up, registering and discharging refinanced mortgages, the Quebec Court of Appeal held in a legal battle that pitted the insurers against the governing bodies of the Quebec legal and notary professions.

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  • Quebec Court of Appeal sanctions judge

    A Quebec judge who refused to hear a quarrel between neighbours and emphatically insisted that they negotiate a settlement before adjourning without cause a hearing over which he should have presided the same day has been sanctioned by the Quebec Court of Appeal.

    The 66-page ruling in Bradley (Re), 2018 QCCA 1145 reveals the need for the Quebec government to increase options available to the appellate court and the Quebec Judicial Council to deal with judicial misconduct of a provincially appointed judge, and for the council itself to enact changes to enhance procedural fairness, according to judicial ethics experts.

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  • Quebec appeal court rebukes trial judge over stereotypical attitudes towards sexual assault

    The Quebec Court of Appeal admonished a trial judge who acquitted a father accused of incest for holding biases and stereotypes over the way a sexual assault victim should behave.

    The appellate court, in a brief but unusually blunt and forceful six-page ruling, ordered a new trial against a father who allegedly assaulted his daughter for a 16-year period, from the age of nine until 25. She came forward in 2010 when she was an adult and while living with her parents.

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  • Quebec bill does not apply to Montreal police pension plan

    Montreal’s 4,500 men and women in blue literally heaved a huge sigh of relief after companion decisions by the Quebec Court of Appeal held that a bill introduced by the Quebec government does not apply to their defined pension plan.

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  • Naturopath found guilty of manslaughter by Quebec Court of Appeal

    In a highly unusual and exceptional decision, the Quebec Court of Appeal has overturned a Westmount naturopath’s acquittal and convicted her of manslaughter in the death of a patient that took place 10 years ago.

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  • Quebec Court of Appeal comes down harder on pedophile

    On December 2014 Cenan Rayo, a thirty-something Columbian native and the father of a ten-month old infant, sent an invitation on Facebook to a 12-year old girl to become his “friend.” Rayo, while not a family friend, knew the mother because they were part of a small Columbian community, and ran across each other in different places, including the local church. And so the girl who knew the man since she was five accepted the invitation.

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  • Investment counsellor fined $2.1 million

    Nearly 10 years after Quebec’s financial watchdog launched penal proceedings against an investment consultant, a Court of Quebec judge fined Denis Patry $2.1 million after being found guilty of 89 counts of securities violations.

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  • Videotron wins a partial victory in class action suit

    A Quebec telecommunications giant won a partial victory after the Quebec Court of Appeal reduced the amount of punitive damages it was ordered to pay in a class action suit from $1 million to $200,000.

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  • Sentenced reduced after trial judge gave inadequate reasons

    A 25-year old Quebecer who was sentenced to a 12-month prison sentence and 18 month’s probation after being found guilty of sexual interference had his sentenced reduced after the Quebec Court of Appeal held that the trial judge gave insufficient reasons during sentencing.

    In a ruling that underscores the importance for a trial judge to provide reasons, the Quebec appeal court held a judge may not, ex cathedra (from the chair), state that a sentence is reasonable.

    Alexandre St-Cyr, 19 years old at the time of his offense, was found guilty by Court of Quebec Judge Michel Mercier on June 2016 of touching a 14-year old for a sexual purpose – what is referred to under s. 151 of the Criminal Code as sexual interference.

    St-Cyr appealed the sentence, asserting that the judge failed to rule on the argument that the minimum sentence is cruel and unusual and that he gave insufficient reasons for the sentence.
    The appeal court gave him reason, holding that the trial judge’s decision did not comply with the duty to give reasons, imposed by both case law and s. 726.2 of the Criminal Code. “There was no analysis of the mitigating and aggravating factors considered by the judge to find that a 12-month prison sentence was appropriate,” held the appeal court in a unanimous decision in St-Cyr c. R., 2018 QCCA 768.

    Moreover, the appeal court held that a judge may avoid ruling on a question of constitutional validity or more specifically, on the minimum sentence when determining that the alleged violation does not apply to the case being heard. But a judge cannot set aside the debate to avoid the task of ruling on a constitutional question.

    “Given that the judge implied that he would have imposed a lighter sentence than the minimum one, but for the law, the judicial exercise required for him to set aside the constitutional argument had to be reasoned, which it was not,” added the appeal court.

    St-Cyr was handed a 90-day prison sentence to be serve intermittently and an 18-month supervised probation “given the objectives of deterrence and denunciation.”

  • Potential buyer entitled to back down from purchasing a $1.3 million home, rules court

    A Quebec man who backed out of a promise to purchase a $1.3 million home in Gatineau won his case after the Quebec Court of Appeal held that he was entitled to renege the agreement because the sellers failed to adequately inform the buyer and therefore vitiated his consent.

    The decision by the Quebec Court of Appeal clarifies the responsibilities of home sellers, underscores the importance of informed consent, provides guidance on the burden of proof faced by purchasers who no longer want to honour an agreement to purchase an immovable, and highlights once again that the courts are more open to action in nullity than a recourse seeking to cancel a sale.

    “The decision underlines the importance of the seller’s duty to inform the buyer, and their obligation to know what it is that they are selling,” said Jean Laflamme, a Gatineau lawyer who successfully plead the case in Guertin c. Parent 2018 QCCA 517, a decision issued on April 4th.

    The case dates back to March 2013 when Pierre Guertin promised to purchase a home located by the shores of the Gatineau River, but failed to show up at the notary’s office four months later to finalize the deal. Three days before the scheduled transfer of title, Guertin received a recent certificate of localization and discovered that the immovable he was planning to purchase was partly located in a zone with limitations imposed by a municipal by-law. It turns out that the property was located in an area where there was a risk of landslides and mass movements, and the municipal by-law limited construction he could undertake. The owners of the home, Martine Parent and Richard Ratté, sued for damages – and won their case before Court of Quebec Judge Patsy Bouthillette.

    The trial judge found that there was no objective risk in purchasing the immovable. Judge Bouthillette also held that the Guertin did not establish that the municipal by-law caused him actual and sufficient prejudice that could justify his decision not to sign the deed of sale. Judge Bouthillette concluded that Guertin simply tried to find a way to refrain from a transaction he no longer wanted to complete by invoking baseless pretexts. She ordered Guertin to pay nearly $63,000 in damages to the home sellers.

    In a majority decision, the Quebec Court of Appeal overturned the decision after finding that the trial judge committed “palpable and overriding” errors in establishing the chronology of facts and failed to take into account important facts entered in evidence. The appeal court found that Guertin had “valid reason” to breach his promise to purchase the immovable because he was armed with new information days before he was to sign the deed of sale. The appeal court pointed out that Guertin did not want incur the risk associated with purchasing an immovable located in a high-risk zone for mass movement. Had Guertin known, he would not have made an offer to purchase the property, noted the appeal court. And contrary to what the trial judge concluded, the appeal court held that the evidence revealed that Guertin was looking forward to moving into his new home – an error that the appeal court held to be clear and decisive. He had respected the pre-purchase conditions such as having the home inspected and obtaining financing for the home. He had also frequently visited the new home to talk to the sellers and notified utilities of his new address.

    The home sellers, even though they did not commit fraud by failing to disclose the risks involved with the immovable, breached their duty to inform, found the appeal court. They failed, with no malice, to provide Guertin with a certificate of location and geotechnical expert reports. They also omitted to tell him that public charges existed that limited the property right since July 2012 when the City of Gatineau enacted a municipal by-law that imposed restrictions on the property. The appeal court held that home sellers cannot invoke their lack of knowledge over the public charge to discharge them from the duty to inform.

    “Consent must be free and informed,” noted Quebec Court of Appeal Justice Claudine Roy, in reasons that Justice Geneviève Marcotte concurred with; Justice Mark Schrager dissented. “It can be tainted by error (as per article 1399 of the Civil Code of Quebec). The error must relate to the nature of the contract, the delivery of the service or any essential element that determined consent. The stability of the land or the immovable is an essential element of consent from a buyer.”

    Contrary to conflicting jurisprudence that held that a purchaser must subjectively or objectively prove that there is a risk to purchasing an immovable located in a high-risk zone, the appeal court held Guertin was not required to show that the fragility of the land currently affected the solidity of the immovable, noted Laflamme. Indeed, the appeal court held that the defect may be merely foreseeable. The risk of landslides and mass movement and the restrictions imposed by the municipality were “sufficient justification” to refuse the transfer of title, held the appeal court.

    “The finding by the appeal court that purchasers do not have to demonstrate subjectively or objectively that a risk exists advances the law,” said Laflamme. “What matters is that a risk exists. That’s what counts. And this reasoning would apply to an immovable regardless of its sale price.”

    According to François Beauchamp, a Montreal construction lawyer with De Grandpré Chait LLP who co-authored a book on contracts and services, the ruling demonstrates that courts are far more reticent to cancel a sale than an action in nullity.

    Justice Mark Schrager would have dismissed the appeal. He found that there a lack of evidence that demonstrated that the municipal by-law affected the intended use of the immovable in a significant manner.

    Guertin has launched a lawsuit against the real estate brokers who handled the botched sale. The suit is scheduled to be heard this November before Quebec Superior Court.

    The home was sold several months later to another buyer.

  • 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 Court of Appeal provides comprehensive guidance over Jordan in two rulings

    A Montreal man who was charged with killing his wife but whose case was the first Quebec murder case to be stayed following the landmark Jordan ruling will not face a new trial, the Quebec Court of Appeal ruled after issuing a concurrent and “very important” decision that clarifies and provides practical guidance on the application of the landmark Jordan decision.

    A five-member bench held that the Crown’s appeal was moot in the case of Sivaloganathan Thanabalasingham, charged with second-degree murder in July 2012 after his wife was found dead in the couple’s home with knife wounds to her neck in 2012, following his deportation on July 2017. He spent 56 months behind bars while awaiting trial, prompting Quebec Superior Court Justice Alexandre Boucher to stay the proceedings on April 2017. The Crown was in the process of appealing that decision when Thanabalasingham was ordered deported to Sri Lanka.

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  • Quebec Court of Appeal harmonizes securities law with other provinces

    The Quebec Court of Appeal eliminated a tactical advantage that could have emerged by launching national class actions in secondary market misrepresentation cases in the province after it held that Quebec securities rules were designed to be harmonized with provincial securities legislation across the country as a matter of substantive law.

    In a closely watched decision by class action and securities experts, the Quebec appellate court overturned a lower court ruling and found that parties seeking leave to launch an action for secondary market misrepresentations under the Québec Securities Act (Act) are not entitled to compel a public issuer defendant to disclose documents and information for the purpose of the leave proceedings.

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  • Terms of contract usurp good faith, holds Quebec Appeal Court

    Former employees of an asset management firm who claimed that they were unfairly bought out just before the company was sold lost a legal battle after the Quebec Court of Appeal held that the duty to act in good faith does not mean that a party to a contract must impoverish itself to enrich the other.

    In a ruling that will likely reverse a growing trend by the courts to broadly interpret the notion of good faith, the Quebec appeal court reaffirms that the terms of a contract determines the rights of parties and that it almost always trumps the duty to act in good faith, a finding that will reassure corporate lawyers and the business world alike, according to securities lawyers.

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  • Elderly pedophile to serve sentence in nursing home

    An elderly man who was found guilty of two counts of gross indecency will be allowed to serve his sentence of two years less one day of imprisonment in the community after the Quebec Court of Appeal held that it was “an exceptional case that required an exceptional solution.”

    In a decision welcomed by penal and elderly law experts, the Quebec Appeal Court yields pointed guidance over the sentencing of infirm elderly offenders at a time when Canada’s prison population is becoming greyer.

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Law in Quebec
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