In 1849, the Supreme Court of New Brunswick faced the issue of whether there was a public right to float logs on navigable streams. Not surprisingly, no general right was found in the English common law as large scale floating of lumber down rivers did not exist in England. “Yet in a young country like Canada, the right to float logs and timber was an economic necessity in many areas and some device had to be found to make the activity legal.” To find that legal device, the New Brunswick court turned to the United States, specifically to Maine, and adopted the principle of floatability from Wadsworth v. Smith . At a time when there was both necessity and shared circumstances, Canadian courts referred to Maine\u27s experience for guidance. O...
This article examines the history and development of prescriptive easements in Newfoundland and Labr...
The addition of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms represented a fundamental shift in Canadian gove...
A retrospective on the Gulf of Maine case and the contribution Maine\u27s lawyers made to it
In 1849, the Supreme Court of New Brunswick faced the issue of whether there was a public right to f...
Most modem Canadian corporate law statutes are similar to their United States’ counterparts, and dis...
Confederation with Canada in 1949 marked a drastic change in Newfoundland’s identity as it moved fro...
Newfoundland legal history has tended to focus on the period prior to the achievement of representat...
Disputes over the ownership of resources off both the east and west coasts of Canada have recently b...
While it is a truism that people shape resources, it is equally true that resources shape people. Th...
When the British acquired Canada in 1763, there were immediate schemes for the rapid anglicization o...
This paper examines some key aspects of the contemporary treatment of precedent in Canada, including...
Many accounts have been written of the events leading to Newfoundland\u27s union with Canada in 1949...
Comparative law may be entering its golden age in Canada. Particularly with the advent of the new Ca...
In many areas of Canadian law, the British influence has been pervasive, but in no area has it been ...
In his work The British Empire in America, published in 1708, the historian John Oldmixon observed c...
This article examines the history and development of prescriptive easements in Newfoundland and Labr...
The addition of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms represented a fundamental shift in Canadian gove...
A retrospective on the Gulf of Maine case and the contribution Maine\u27s lawyers made to it
In 1849, the Supreme Court of New Brunswick faced the issue of whether there was a public right to f...
Most modem Canadian corporate law statutes are similar to their United States’ counterparts, and dis...
Confederation with Canada in 1949 marked a drastic change in Newfoundland’s identity as it moved fro...
Newfoundland legal history has tended to focus on the period prior to the achievement of representat...
Disputes over the ownership of resources off both the east and west coasts of Canada have recently b...
While it is a truism that people shape resources, it is equally true that resources shape people. Th...
When the British acquired Canada in 1763, there were immediate schemes for the rapid anglicization o...
This paper examines some key aspects of the contemporary treatment of precedent in Canada, including...
Many accounts have been written of the events leading to Newfoundland\u27s union with Canada in 1949...
Comparative law may be entering its golden age in Canada. Particularly with the advent of the new Ca...
In many areas of Canadian law, the British influence has been pervasive, but in no area has it been ...
In his work The British Empire in America, published in 1708, the historian John Oldmixon observed c...
This article examines the history and development of prescriptive easements in Newfoundland and Labr...
The addition of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms represented a fundamental shift in Canadian gove...
A retrospective on the Gulf of Maine case and the contribution Maine\u27s lawyers made to it