It has long been assumed that Parliament has unlimited power to enact legislation cancelling valid contracts and denying compensation to any persons affected. This paper challenges that conventional wisdom. The author argues that the principle of the rule of law requires that governments be accountable in the ordinary courts for wrongful actions of government officials. This principle is undermined if government is absolved from any liability for breach of a fairly bargained and valid contract. Thus, legislation purporting to abrogate contracts and deny compensation is invalid, since it violates the implied limits on legislative authority associated with the rule of law. The author also explains how protecting contractual expectations in th...
This paper explores the uses and abuses of relying upon legislative fact evidence to prove a violati...
This thesis examines why the British central government can make contracts without statutory power. ...
The law of contract modifications poses an analytical paradox: Modifications should be presumptively...
It has long been assumed that Parliament has unlimited power to enact legislation cancelling valid c...
Assessments of “reasonableness” are central to adjudicating claims under several Charter rights and ...
This rejoinder to the foregoing critiques of the author\u27s book, The Limits of Freedom of Contract...
Examines the grounds on which the Prime Minister's prorogation of Parliament was found unlawful, and...
In the Constitution Act, 1982, the federal government and the provinces made a bargain regarding Sen...
Constitutional authority for the development and implementation of the rules of court lies with both...
The text of the Charter separates the rights conferred from reasonable limits which may justifiably ...
In its celebrated prorogation judgment, the Supreme Court made novel and controversial use of the pr...
Fifteen years ago, in Babcock v. Canada (A.G.), the Supreme Court of Canada held that section 39 of ...
Parliamentary sovereignty is one of the most fundamental rules of the UK constitution. It holds that...
The absence of a knowledge requirement is a novel and astonishing feature of unconscionability in Ca...
This article investigates the role of courts and legislatures in the design and enforcement of labou...
This paper explores the uses and abuses of relying upon legislative fact evidence to prove a violati...
This thesis examines why the British central government can make contracts without statutory power. ...
The law of contract modifications poses an analytical paradox: Modifications should be presumptively...
It has long been assumed that Parliament has unlimited power to enact legislation cancelling valid c...
Assessments of “reasonableness” are central to adjudicating claims under several Charter rights and ...
This rejoinder to the foregoing critiques of the author\u27s book, The Limits of Freedom of Contract...
Examines the grounds on which the Prime Minister's prorogation of Parliament was found unlawful, and...
In the Constitution Act, 1982, the federal government and the provinces made a bargain regarding Sen...
Constitutional authority for the development and implementation of the rules of court lies with both...
The text of the Charter separates the rights conferred from reasonable limits which may justifiably ...
In its celebrated prorogation judgment, the Supreme Court made novel and controversial use of the pr...
Fifteen years ago, in Babcock v. Canada (A.G.), the Supreme Court of Canada held that section 39 of ...
Parliamentary sovereignty is one of the most fundamental rules of the UK constitution. It holds that...
The absence of a knowledge requirement is a novel and astonishing feature of unconscionability in Ca...
This article investigates the role of courts and legislatures in the design and enforcement of labou...
This paper explores the uses and abuses of relying upon legislative fact evidence to prove a violati...
This thesis examines why the British central government can make contracts without statutory power. ...
The law of contract modifications poses an analytical paradox: Modifications should be presumptively...