For litigants raising a matter of public interest, the possibility of facing an adverse costs award if unsuccessful may act as a deterrent to pursuing their legal claim. The author evaluates a form of costs order called costs immunity, referred to as protective costs orders (PCOs) in the U.K., as a means of removing the deterrent effect of costs on public interest litigants. Part Iprovides an overview of costs law in Canada. Part // reviews the various types of costs orders employed by Canadian courts to facilitate access to justice in public interest litigation. Part Ill explores the English experience with PCOs in public interest litigation, tracking the development of PCOs at common law Part IV addresses the decision in Farlow v Hosp...
This article addresses persons who claim immunity from the compulsory jurisdiction of Canadian court...
Historically, the Supreme Court of Canada has avoided direct intervention in health care policy-maki...
The doctrine of interjurisdictional immunity holds that valid, generally worded legislation enacted ...
This article concerns the practice of excluding or limiting the liability in expenses of public inte...
This contribution examines the contours of costs jurisprudence since the foundational trilogy of Fer...
The public interest exception to Alaska\u27s loser-pays attorneys\u27 fees rule has been overruled, ...
Contingency Fee Agreements (CFAs) are now a fixed feature of the Ontario litigation landscape. Howe...
The author looks at emergence of class actions in Canadian litigation and considers the extent to wh...
How much does it cost individual Canadians to seek civil justice? This article compiles empirical da...
Access to justice continues to be a live issue in Canadian courtrooms. While state-sponsored initiat...
Over 200 Canadian decisions have now been read, analyzed, and added to the Self-Represented Litigant...
The cost of civil litigation is a key factor in determining the extent of access to justice. Followi...
At first blush, Caron is not a very interesting development in the advance costs jurisprudence. at b...
Where a plaintiff in a personal injury action can prove at trial that she has suffered an injury tha...
The conventional wisdom has been that the Canadian provincial Crowns are immune from the jurisdictio...
This article addresses persons who claim immunity from the compulsory jurisdiction of Canadian court...
Historically, the Supreme Court of Canada has avoided direct intervention in health care policy-maki...
The doctrine of interjurisdictional immunity holds that valid, generally worded legislation enacted ...
This article concerns the practice of excluding or limiting the liability in expenses of public inte...
This contribution examines the contours of costs jurisprudence since the foundational trilogy of Fer...
The public interest exception to Alaska\u27s loser-pays attorneys\u27 fees rule has been overruled, ...
Contingency Fee Agreements (CFAs) are now a fixed feature of the Ontario litigation landscape. Howe...
The author looks at emergence of class actions in Canadian litigation and considers the extent to wh...
How much does it cost individual Canadians to seek civil justice? This article compiles empirical da...
Access to justice continues to be a live issue in Canadian courtrooms. While state-sponsored initiat...
Over 200 Canadian decisions have now been read, analyzed, and added to the Self-Represented Litigant...
The cost of civil litigation is a key factor in determining the extent of access to justice. Followi...
At first blush, Caron is not a very interesting development in the advance costs jurisprudence. at b...
Where a plaintiff in a personal injury action can prove at trial that she has suffered an injury tha...
The conventional wisdom has been that the Canadian provincial Crowns are immune from the jurisdictio...
This article addresses persons who claim immunity from the compulsory jurisdiction of Canadian court...
Historically, the Supreme Court of Canada has avoided direct intervention in health care policy-maki...
The doctrine of interjurisdictional immunity holds that valid, generally worded legislation enacted ...