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Presumption of resulting trust applies to gratuitous transfers to adult children and was not rebutted.
The appellant, an adult daughter, was made a joint account holder by her father with a right of survivorship.
Following the father's death, her siblings commenced litigation because she did not include the joint accounts in the distribution of the estate.
The trial judge applied a presumption of resulting trust and found no evidence that the father intended to gift the accounts to the appellant.
The Court of Appeal affirmed the decision.
The Supreme Court of Canada dismissed the appeal, holding that the presumption of resulting trust applied to gratuitous transfers to adult children and that the appellant failed to rebut the presumption on a balance of probabilities.
Presumption of resulting trust applies to gratuitous transfers to adult children; presumption of advancement limited to minors.
An ageing father gratuitously placed the bulk of his assets in joint accounts with his adult daughter.
Upon his death, the daughter claimed the balance through a right of survivorship, while her ex-husband claimed the assets formed part of the estate.
The Supreme Court of Canada held that the presumption of resulting trust applies to gratuitous transfers to adult children, limiting the presumption of advancement to minor children.
However, the Court found sufficient evidence that the father intended to gift the right of survivorship to his daughter, rebutting the presumption of resulting trust.
The appeal was dismissed.
Supreme Court restores Agency order requiring VIA Rail to retrofit rail cars for personal wheelchair accessibility.
The Council of Canadians with Disabilities filed a complaint with the Canadian Transportation Agency regarding VIA Rail's purchase of 139 Renaissance rail cars that were inaccessible to personal wheelchairs.
The Agency ordered VIA Rail to modify 30 of the cars to accommodate personal wheelchairs, finding that the inaccessible design constituted an undue obstacle.
The Federal Court of Appeal set aside the Agency's decision as patently unreasonable.
The Supreme Court of Canada allowed the appeal and restored the Agency's decision, holding that the Agency reasonably applied human rights principles, including the duty to accommodate to the point of undue hardship, within its statutory mandate under the Canada Transportation Act.
Appeal allowed and new trial ordered as trial judge's findings were insufficient to ground conviction.
The appellant appealed a decision of the Manitoba Court of Appeal that substituted a conviction for aggravated assault in place of an acquittal.
The Supreme Court of Canada agreed that defence of property under s. 41 of the Criminal Code alone could not justify the alleged aggravated assault.
However, the Court found that the trial judge's findings were insufficient to ground a conviction, as there was no finding of an intentional stabbing and the trial judge had reservations about the evidence's reliability.
The appeal was allowed, the conviction set aside, and a new trial ordered.
Arbitrator's reinstatement of police officer convicted of criminal offences was unreasonable; dismissal restored.
A municipal police officer was dismissed after pleading guilty to several criminal offences, including assault and firearms offences.
The union grieved the dismissal.
The arbitrator reinstated the officer, finding that the specific circumstances exception in the Police Act applied and that the automatic disqualification in the Cities and Towns Act was inapplicable.
The Supreme Court of Canada held that the Police Act provision prevails over the Cities and Towns Act in case of conflict.
However, the Court found the arbitrator's decision to reinstate the officer was unreasonable given the gravity of the offences and their impact on public confidence.
The appeal was allowed and the dismissal restored.
Supreme Court adopts 'identifiability' test for in rem jurisdiction over cargo under the Federal Courts Act.
The appellant commenced an action in rem against a cargo of coal and obtained a warrant to arrest the cargo to secure an arbitration proceeding for an alleged breach of a contract of affreightment.
The Federal Court of Appeal struck the claim and set aside the warrant based on binding precedent requiring a 'physical nexus' under s. 43(2) of the Federal Courts Act.
The Supreme Court of Canada allowed the appeal, rejecting the 'physical nexus' interpretation in favour of an 'identifiability' test, finding that the cargo was the subject of the action because it was designated in the contract alleged to be breached.
Publication ban on election results before all polls close is a justified limit on freedom of expression.
The appellant posted federal election results from Atlantic Canada on his website before polling stations had closed in other parts of the country, violating s. 329 of the Canada Elections Act.
He challenged the constitutionality of the provision, arguing it infringed his freedom of expression under s. 2(b) of the Charter.
The Supreme Court of Canada held that while the publication ban infringes freedom of expression, it is a reasonable limit demonstrably justified under s. 1 of the Charter.
The majority found that the ban serves the pressing and substantial objective of ensuring informational equality among voters and maintaining public confidence in the electoral system, and that the salutary effects of the brief delay in publication outweigh its deleterious effects.
Crown appeal allowed; accused's confession ruled voluntary as police inducements did not overbear his will.
The accused was arrested for multiple robberies.
During police interrogation, he offered to confess in exchange for lenient treatment for his girlfriend, who was also arrested.
The police officer denied being able to make a deal but allowed the accused to visit his girlfriend after a partial confession.
The trial judge admitted the statements as voluntary, but the Court of Appeal ordered a new trial.
The Supreme Court of Canada allowed the Crown's appeal and restored the convictions, finding that the trial judge properly applied the contextual approach to voluntariness and correctly concluded that the inducements were not strong enough to overbear the accused's will.
Temporal limits on same-sex survivor benefits under the Canada Pension Plan violate the Charter.
The federal government amended the Canada Pension Plan to extend survivor benefits to same-sex partners, but limited eligibility to those whose partners died on or after January 1, 1998, and precluded payments for months before July 2000.
A class action challenged these temporal limits.
The Supreme Court of Canada held that the temporal limits infringed section 15(1) of the Charter and were not justified under section 1.
However, the Court denied fully retroactive relief, finding that the prior exclusion of same-sex partners was based on a reasonable understanding of the law before the Court's landmark decision in M. v. H., and that the government acted in good faith.
The Court also held that estates do not have standing to advance section 15(1) claims.
IRPA security certificate scheme using secret evidence violates section 7 of the Charter.
The appellants, foreign nationals and a permanent resident, were detained under security certificates issued pursuant to the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act (IRPA).
They challenged the constitutionality of the IRPA's certificate scheme, which allows for detention and deportation based on secret evidence not disclosed to the named person.
The Supreme Court of Canada held that the procedure for determining the reasonableness of a certificate infringes section 7 of the Charter because it denies the named person the right to know the case to meet, and is not saved by section 1.
The Court also found that the lack of prompt review for the detention of foreign nationals infringes sections 9 and 10(c) of the Charter.
The Court struck down the offending provisions but suspended the declaration of invalidity for one year to allow Parliament to amend the law.
Contempt order reinstated; orders to secure support and post security are not for payment of money.
The appellant appealed a Court of Appeal decision that set aside a contempt order against the respondent.
The respondent had been found in contempt for failing to secure his support obligations with an irrevocable letter of credit and to post security for costs.
The Court of Appeal had held that the motions judge lacked jurisdiction under Rule 60.11 of the Rules of Civil Procedure because the orders were for the 'payment of money'.
The Supreme Court of Canada allowed the appeal, agreeing with the dissenting appellate judge that neither security order amounted to an order for the payment of money, and reinstated the contempt order.
The 'but for' test remains the primary test for causation in negligence actions.
The respondent was badly burned when he mistakenly poured hot water into the gasoline tank of an ice-resurfacing machine, causing an explosion.
He sued the manufacturer and distributor for negligent design.
The trial judge dismissed the action, finding the accident was caused by operator error and that the design was not a reasonably foreseeable cause of the confusion.
The Court of Appeal ordered a new trial, holding the trial judge erred in his foreseeability and causation analyses, specifically by not applying the 'material contribution' test.
The Supreme Court of Canada allowed the appeal and restored the trial judgment, clarifying that the 'but for' test remains the primary test for causation in negligence, and the 'material contribution' test applies only in exceptional circumstances where it is impossible to prove causation using the 'but for' test.
Post-hypnosis evidence is presumptively inadmissible as it fails the reliability test for novel scientific evidence.
The appellant was convicted of second degree murder.
At trial, the Crown relied on the testimony of a witness whose memory of seeing the appellant near the crime scene was refreshed through hypnosis, as well as similar fact evidence from a former girlfriend.
The Supreme Court of Canada allowed the appeal and ordered a new trial, holding that post-hypnosis evidence is presumptively inadmissible because it does not meet the reliability requirements for novel scientific evidence.
The Court also found that the similar fact evidence lacked sufficient probative value to outweigh its prejudicial effect, and the curative proviso could not be applied.
Police officer's conviction for obstructing justice upheld after failing to investigate fellow officer for impaired driving.
The appellant, a police officer, was convicted of obstructing justice under s. 139(2) of the Criminal Code for deliberately failing to gather evidence to lay an impaired driving charge against a fellow officer.
The appellant claimed he was exercising police discretion.
The trial judge rejected this explanation, finding the appellant acted out of favouritism.
The Court of Appeal upheld the conviction.
The Supreme Court of Canada dismissed the appeal, holding that while police possess discretion, it must be exercised honestly, transparently, and on valid grounds.
The trial judge's finding that the appellant acted with the specific intent to obstruct justice was reasonable and supported by the evidence.
A collective agreement's automatic termination clause is a significant factor in assessing the duty to accommodate.
The appellant hospital terminated the grievor's employment after a three-year absence due to illness, relying on an automatic termination clause in the collective agreement.
The union grieved the termination, arguing the employer failed in its duty to accommodate.
The arbitrator dismissed the grievance, finding the employer had accommodated the grievor beyond the collective agreement's requirements and that she remained totally disabled.
The Supreme Court of Canada allowed the appeal, holding that while a collective agreement cannot contract out of human rights legislation, a negotiated termination clause is a significant factor in assessing the employer's duty to accommodate and undue hardship.
Owner has no implied duty to investigate a tender bid that is compliant on its face.
The municipality issued a call for tenders for equipment and operators, specifying that all equipment must be 1980 or newer.
The successful bidder submitted a bid promising 1980 equipment, but the serial numbers provided corresponded to older equipment.
An unsuccessful bidder informed the municipality of this discrepancy before the contract was awarded, but the municipality did not investigate and awarded the contract to the successful bidder.
The unsuccessful bidder sued the municipality for breach of Contract A. The Supreme Court of Canada dismissed the appeal, holding that the successful bid was compliant on its face, the municipality had no duty to investigate the bid, and the municipality's obligations under Contract A ended once Contract B was formed.
Advance costs denied; case lacked special circumstances required for public funding of litigation.
The appellant, a bookstore catering to the gay and lesbian community, sought advance costs to fund litigation against Customs regarding the detention of four books and a systemic review of Customs' practices.
The Supreme Court of Canada dismissed the appeal, holding that the case did not meet the strict requirements for an advance costs award established in Okanagan.
The Court found that the four books appeal was too narrow to constitute special circumstances of public importance, and the systemic review was an unnecessary expansion of the litigation.
Ultra vires taxes are recoverable as of constitutional right.
Corporate taxpayers sought restitution of liquor user charges paid under legislation later held ultra vires as an unconstitutional indirect tax.
The Court held that recovery of ultra vires taxes is grounded in constitutional principles, not unjust enrichment, because the rule against taxation without legislative authority is a fundamental incident of democracy and the rule of law.
The Court rejected both any general Crown immunity from restitutionary claims and the passing-on defence in this context, and discarded protest and compulsion as a prerequisite for recovery against public authorities.
Recovery was limited by the six-year limitation period, compound interest was denied, and the appellants obtained restitution of charges paid on or after the limitation date with costs.
Provincial ban on night hunting is overbroad and inapplicable to aboriginals exercising treaty hunting rights.
The appellants, members of the Tsartlip Indian Band, were convicted under provincial wildlife legislation for hunting at night with an illuminating device.
They appealed, arguing the legislation infringed their right to hunt under the North Saanich Treaty of 1852.
The Supreme Court of Canada allowed the appeal, holding that the treaty right to hunt includes the right to hunt at night with illumination.
The Court found that while the province can regulate safety, the absolute prohibition on night hunting was overbroad and constituted a prima facie infringement of the treaty right.
Consequently, the provincial law could not be incorporated under s. 88 of the Indian Act and was inapplicable to the appellants.
Off-reserve bank accounts holding federal funding for Indian bands are not exempt from garnishment.
The appellant Indian band received federal funding under a Comprehensive Funding Arrangement (CFA), which was deposited into an off-reserve bank account.
The respondent creditor sought to garnish these funds to satisfy a consent judgment.
The band argued the funds were exempt from seizure under ss. 89 and 90(1)(b) of the Indian Act.
The Supreme Court of Canada held that the funds were not physically situated on a reserve under s. 89, rejecting a notional situs test.
Furthermore, the Court held that the word 'agreement' in s. 90(1)(b) is limited to agreements that flesh out treaty obligations.
Because the band failed to prove the CFA funds were ancillary to a treaty, the funds were not deemed to be situated on a reserve and were subject to garnishment.