Law in Quebec

News about Quebec legal developments


Rulings

  • New murder trial ordered following judge’s inadequate instructions

    The Quebec Court of Appeal ordered a new trial of a man convicted of killing three people because the trial judge provided inadequate instructions to the jury over the weight that should be given to post-offence conduct and because he failed to warn the jury that the testimony of the prosecution’s expert went beyond the bounds of his expertise.

    The ruling, the second time in six years that the Quebec appeal court set aside a murder conviction and ordered a new trial because of testimony provided by psychiatrist Sylvain Faucher, highlights pervasive concerns about expert bias and examines the credence that should be given to post-offence conduct, according to criminal lawyers.

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  • Total amount of legal fees not necessarily covered by solicitor-client privilege rules Quebec appeal court

    The total amount of professional billings paid to lawyers working on a mandate for public bodies is not necessarily automatically protected by solicitor-client privilege ruled the Quebec Court of Appeal.

    In what is described as a precedent-setting ruling, the Quebec appeal court decision provides much-needed guidance and strikes a delicate balance between professional secrecy and public access to documents, according to legal experts.

    “The importance of this lies with the distinction the Quebec appeal court makes between professional secrecy and public access to documents regarding legal fees paid by public bodies to lawyers,” said Pierre Trudel, a former director of Université de Montréal’s Public Law Research Centre. “The decision provides helpful guidance over what should remain protected by professional secrecy and what should be accessible to ensure public access to documents.”

    But Bernard Pageau, who successfully plead the case, is under no illusions. Even if a leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada is not filed or if the decision is not overturned, Pageau expects the ruling to upend longstanding practices by Quebec public bodies and the provincial Access to Information Commission gradually and begrudgingly.

    “If it is a final decision, it will take some time before public bodies react and implement the changes,” said Pageau, the senior director of legal affairs at Québecor Média inc. “There may be public bodies that erroneously interpret the ruling or who will refuse (to grant access to documents) and we will end up having to bring the matter before the Quebec Access to Information Commission. But having a hearing before the Commission takes up to a year. That is a denial of democracy which prevents a citizen from exercising his democratic rights.”

    In a unanimous decision, the Quebec appeal court held that legal billings are prime facie protected by professional secrecy because it generally contains a description of accomplished tasks, services rendered and often advice given but the total amount of legal fees paid to a lawyer working on a mandate for public bodies, such as municipalities or school commissions, are not automatically covered by solicitor-client privilege.

    In a bid to reconcile the fundamental importance of privilege attached to the solicitor-client relationship with the principle of public access to documents, Trudel points out that Quebec appeal court Justice Paul Vézina introduced a two-step test. The first part of the test involves determining the “scope of the secrecy, that is whether the information is covered by solicitor-client privilege,” said Justice Vézina in a 19-page ruling in Kalogerakis c. Commission scolaire des Patriotes, 2017 QCCA 1253. Justices Robert Mainville and Denis Jacques (ad hoc) concurred with the August 22nd decision.

    If it is, then the second part of the test comes into play: “whether or not this is one of the rare cases where it is justified to dismiss and allow the disclosure of information that is otherwise inaccessible,” added Justice Vézina in a decision that overturned the judicial review by Quebec Superior Court Justice Suzanne Courchesne and restored a decision by Court of Quebec Justice Diane Quenneville in Kalogerakis c. Commission scolaire des Patriotes, 2014 QCCQ 4167.

    “With this decision, citizens and taxpayers will have more access to the total amount of legal fees disbursed by public bodies,” said Pageau. “There will be exceptions. It will always depend on whether disclosing the total amount will disclose confidential information. But now the burden of proof rests with public bodies to prove that.”

    The case dates back to 2010 when a journalist working for the tabloid Journal de Montréal sought to find out the amount that a Montreal suburb paid lawyers in a suit launched by a citizen. The newspaper also wanted to know how much four Quebec school commissions paid in legal fees in a class action suit that was filed against them. In both cases the Quebec Access to Information Commission refused to provide the information, holding that the amount of legal billings is information protected by solicitor-client privilege as per section 9 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. The Commission relied, as it has for more than a decade, on the decision Commission des services juridiques c. Gagnier, [2004] CAl 568 – a ruling that held that legal billings are automatically protected by professional secrecy. “Since 2004, we could obtain nothing,” said Pageau. “It was systematic. As soon as we made a request for an access to information document asking how much in legal fees was spent in a case, they would simply respond we cannot because it was covered by solicitor-client privilege.”

    The City of Terrebonne, a Montreal bedroom community, and the four school commissions argued that disclosing legal billings would reveal the financial means it has to defend itself and could compromise its ability to reach an out-of-court settlements.

    Justice Vézina dismissed the arguments as speculative and unconvincing. He said that disclosing the total amount of legal billings does not infringe solicitor-client privilege in these cases because it does not reveal the services or advice provided by lawyers.

    Just as importantly, Justice Vézina held that the objective of the province’s Act respecting Access to documents held by public bodies and the Protection of personal information is to spur “informed debate” and that cities and elected officials are accountable to voters.

    “Municipalities have public funds to manage, and it is in the public’s interest to know what kind of resources a municipality devotes to legal fees,” noted Trudel. “That can be an indicator of how a municipality is managed. That is of public interest.”

    Legal counsel for both the City of Terrebonne and the school commissions did not return calls.

    This article originally appeared in The Lawyer’s Daily, published by LexisNexis Canada Inc.

  • 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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  • Retailer ordered to pay $1 million in punitive damages in class action

    Canada’s largest discount furniture and appliance retailer was ordered to pay $2.36 million, including $1 million in punitive damages, to thousands of consumers after Quebec Superior Court found that it engaged in deceptive advertising and marketing with its popular “buy now, pay later” promotions.

    The ruling, one of a handful of Quebec class actions that was decided on its merits, represents a convincing victory for consumer’s rights and serves as a cautionary tale for business that rely on false and misleading advertising pitches to lure customers, according to legal experts.

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  • Quebec notaries and lawyers lose legal battle against title insurers

    The governing bodies of the Quebec legal and notary professions lost a suit against American-based insurers after Quebec Superior Court held that they did not overstep their bounds in preparing, registering and discharging mortgages on real estate.

    In an eagerly-awaited decision that highlights the growing impact of technology on the legal profession, Justice Chantal Chatelaine held that insurers that offer title insurance do not practice law, do not provide legal opinions, and do not prepare or draw up mortgages.

    “The importance of the case has to do with the obstacles which can be put in the way of modernization and efficiency,” remarked Simon Potter, Ad. E., a Montreal lawyer with McCarthy Tétrault LLP who successfully plead the case on behalf of FCT Insurance and First Canadian Ltd, part of the global company FAF International.

    “This case revolved around whether rules governing who could do certain acts could be done only by lawyers or notaries or whether they could also be done by people trying to make life easier for banks or their borrowing customers. The judgment doesn’t at all say that lawyers and notaries should be worried about losing the exclusivity or monopoly over things which the statutes make exclusive for them.”

    But François Brochu, the director of the master’s program in notarial law at the Université Laval, described the ruling as “explosive” as it provides yet more clear-cut evidence that technology is “muddying the waters” in the legal marketplace.

    The decision also has the potential to increase title defects in Quebec, added Brochu. At present, titles in Quebec are generally in “very good shape” because notaries have systematically corrected defects, asserted Brochu. That in turn explains why the province is an enticing market for title insurers as there is very little risk to them, said Brochu.

    “There is a risk that titles will deteriorate in Quebec because title insurance does not really solve problems,” said Brochu. “It lets defects remain in place until it bursts which in turn can lead to higher insurance premiums. That is a real fear because that is what has happened virtually everywhere where title insurance has been established.”

    Sylvain Lussier, Ad. E., a Montreal lawyer with Osler, Hoskin & Harcourt LLP, who too successfully plead the case for Chicago and FNF Canada, whose parent company is US-based Fidelity National Financial Inc., doesn’t buy it. He believes this case boils down to a turf war.

    “Instead of looking forward, professional orders look back and drape themselves around the notion of the protection of the public even though the public is very happy because it costs them less,” said Lussier. “Since title insurance came to Quebec, there have been no complaints by the public. It’s only about corporatism, to protect its members, which is not part of the duty of professional corporations.”

    In a comprehensive 63-page ruling, Quebec Superior Court Justice Chantal Chatelain dismissed that viewpoint just as she dismissed arguments by the Chambre des notaires and the Barreau du Québec that the insurance companies performed acts that should be restricted only to their members. Both professional corporations sought a declaratory injunction to halt the practice by title insurers of “controlling the entire process” of preparing and drawing up legal acts, including verifying claims to land and providing legal advice and consultations. They also argued that it was title insurers who determine and pay fees to the acting notary. In short, acting notaries working for title insurers were but a “smokescreen,” argued the two organizations.

    Justice Chatelain pointed out that the Chambre de notaires affirmed numerous times over a stretch of several years, from 2003 to 2008, that the services provided by title insurers was legal and legitimate. Only when there was a change of leadership did the Chambre shift its position, noted Justice Chatelain. She also noted that the Chambre’s or the Barreau’s investigating officer never brought penal charges against any title insurers for the illegal practice of the profession.

    Echoing findings made by the Court of Appeal of New Brunswick in Law Society of New Brunswick v. FCT Insurance Company, 2009 NBCA 22, Justice Chatelain found that title insurers do not draw up or prepare mortgages.

    “They provide a processing service that essentially consists of filing in the blanks of a form in an automated fashion, with the help of information obtained by lending institutions,” said Justice Chatelain in Chambre des notaires du Québec c. Compagnie d’assurances FCT ltée/FCT Insurance Company Ltd., 2017 QCCS 3388.

    She also dismissed the contention made by the Chambre and the Barreau that notaries working for these firms were exempted from analyzing and verifying the filled-out forms that they receive. In fact, Justice Chatelaine pointed out that notaries are required to examine the information contained in the deed, provide advice and explanations to the lender, and execute notarial acts.

    “The court essentially ruled that nothing that the companies were doing was covered by the exclusive practice provisions,” noted Potter.

    The Chambre and the Barreau are now examining the ruling, and declined to comment.

    This article originally appeared in The Lawyer’s Daily , thelawyersdaily.ca published by LexisNexis Canada Inc.

  • 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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  • New virtual currency targeted by Quebec financial watchdog

    The Quebec Financial Markets Administrative Tribunal issued a series of expansive ex parte orders prohibiting Dominic Lacroix and several of his companies from promoting and soliciting investors for a new virtual currency set to be launched.

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  • Telecom giants must pay millions following SCC’s refusal to hear appeals

    Telecommunication giants Bell Mobility and Rogers Communications must pay millions of dollars to clients who paid excessive cancellation fees after the Supreme Court of Canada refused to hear their appeals.

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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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  • Number of photo radar tickets issued in Quebec has dramatically plunged

    The number of photo radar tickets that have been issued has dramatically plunged over the past couple of months following two decisions that called into question the rules around the province’s use of the automated speed and red-light enforcement technology. (more…)

  • Ruling could lead lawyers to think hard before voicing concerns about legal system

    Quebec lawyers seem to have a knack for testing the limits of a lawyer’s ability to openly criticize the legal system.

    When Montreal criminal lawyer Gilles Doré wrote an acerbic letter to then Quebec Superior Court Justice Jean-Guy Boilard criticizing him for being pedant, cantankerous and petty, the case wound up before the nation’s highest court and was thought by many to have settled the issue.

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  • Ottawa tech firms not guilty of bid-rigging

    A group of Ottawa-based technology providers were found not guilty of 60 charges of bid-rigging and conspiracy to rig bids by a jury after an eight-month criminal trial in a case that provides guidance and brings greater clarity over the reach of Canadian bid-rigging laws.

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  • Quebec telecom company ordered to pay more than $3 million in punitive damages

    A Quebec telecommunications firm, Vidéotron Inc., has been ordered to pay more than $3 million in punitive damages to consumers who were charged extra when the Internet service provider unilaterally modified the terms of their so-called “Extreme High Speed” service, held the Quebec Court of Appeal.

    In a decision that examines the scope of contractual obligations, the appeal court held that a unilateral modification clause contained in the contract did not authorize Vidéotron to impose fees that “had not been agreed to in the initial contract or to modify goods and services described” in the contract. The unilateral clause in this case would have meant that consumers waived their rights conferred by sections 12 and 40 of the Quebec Consumer Protection Act (Act) – and that is prohibited by sections 261 and 262 of the Act.

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  • Former Montreal Crown prosecutor who filed a reprisal complaint wins partial victory

    A former Crown prosecutor who filed a reprisal complaint against the Public Prosecution Service of Canada before the federal Office of the Public Sector Integrity Commissioner partially won his case before the Federal Court of Canada.

    In a ruling that brings clarity to the role of the whistleblowing commissioner, the Federal Court held that the Integrity Commissioner does not have the charge to decide people’s credibility nor should he address thorny legal questions. Instead the commissioner’s role lies with determining on an objective basis whether reprisal complaints should be forwarded to the Public Servants Disclosure Protection Tribunal, added the decision in Agnaou c. Procureur générale du Canada 2017 CF 338.

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Law in Quebec
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