This article examines a series of cases launched in the Nova Scotia courts following the Cumberland Rebellion of 1776. In these cases loyalists sued former rebels, including those granted amnesty by the authorities, for losses sustained during the rebellion. The article traces the history of the cases and places them in the context of post-rebellion government policy. It argues that such proceedings were without precedent and effectively took the place of official schemes of expropriation of rebel land and compensation to loyalists. It also suggests that the use of civil courts in this way prolonged and exacerbated the social and political tensions in a county badly split in its reactions to the American Revolution. Finally, it links this l...
The Court of Chancery in Nova Scotia enjoyed a history that may best be described as a progression f...
Until 1837, Upper Canada had no Court of Chancery. This omission forced stop-gap measures which in t...
In the previous portion of this article, Mr. Patterson attributed the American Revolution to the tyr...
The thesis primarily examines the legality of the courtsmartial that followed the 1838-1839 rebellio...
In a letter to Deputy Judge Advocate Charles Gould, dated 10 April 1762, General Thomas Gage, Comman...
Comments on the role of the first chief justice of Upper Canada, William Osgoode (1754-1824), on sha...
Historians have commonly portrayed the Pennsylvania backcountry as a lawless, violent region. Many h...
The performance of Nova Scotia\u27s thirty-seven attorneys general in the 234 years between 1749 and...
Given its primacy and exceptionality in the Nova Scotian context, Wilkie both exemplifies the judici...
Expressed in simplest terms Nova Scotia law, generally speaking, is an amalgamation of English commo...
In September 1788 a court found 114 men guilty of riotous assembly in the district of Ferryland the ...
This article is concerned with the structure of repressive governance, and how it has evolved histor...
History occupies a central place in aboriginal rights litigation. As a result, the circumstances and...
In 2016, Gerald Stanley shot 22-year-old Colten Boushie in the back of the head after Boushie and hi...
The Constitution Act 1791 created the preface for the 1837 Rebellion of both Upper and Lower Canada,...
The Court of Chancery in Nova Scotia enjoyed a history that may best be described as a progression f...
Until 1837, Upper Canada had no Court of Chancery. This omission forced stop-gap measures which in t...
In the previous portion of this article, Mr. Patterson attributed the American Revolution to the tyr...
The thesis primarily examines the legality of the courtsmartial that followed the 1838-1839 rebellio...
In a letter to Deputy Judge Advocate Charles Gould, dated 10 April 1762, General Thomas Gage, Comman...
Comments on the role of the first chief justice of Upper Canada, William Osgoode (1754-1824), on sha...
Historians have commonly portrayed the Pennsylvania backcountry as a lawless, violent region. Many h...
The performance of Nova Scotia\u27s thirty-seven attorneys general in the 234 years between 1749 and...
Given its primacy and exceptionality in the Nova Scotian context, Wilkie both exemplifies the judici...
Expressed in simplest terms Nova Scotia law, generally speaking, is an amalgamation of English commo...
In September 1788 a court found 114 men guilty of riotous assembly in the district of Ferryland the ...
This article is concerned with the structure of repressive governance, and how it has evolved histor...
History occupies a central place in aboriginal rights litigation. As a result, the circumstances and...
In 2016, Gerald Stanley shot 22-year-old Colten Boushie in the back of the head after Boushie and hi...
The Constitution Act 1791 created the preface for the 1837 Rebellion of both Upper and Lower Canada,...
The Court of Chancery in Nova Scotia enjoyed a history that may best be described as a progression f...
Until 1837, Upper Canada had no Court of Chancery. This omission forced stop-gap measures which in t...
In the previous portion of this article, Mr. Patterson attributed the American Revolution to the tyr...