Punitive damages are a controversial remedy in Canadian and non-Canadian law. Some scholars have gone so far as to argue that punitive damages are entirely inconsistent with the goals and principles of private law and ought to be abolished. Notwithstanding these criticisms, the Supreme Court of Canada has treated punitive damages as a relatively uncontroversial private law remedy. However, the circumstances under which a court will consider awarding punitive damages have evolved with recent Supreme Court decisions. One example is the introduction of the independent actionable wrong requirement in Vorvis v Insurance Corporation of British Columbia. The independent actionable wrong requirement has been criticized as an incoherent and ineffect...
It has long been orthodoxy that punitive damages, because they are awarded in order to punish, are a...
The practice of using punitive damages to punish a tort defendant, in a single case brought by a sin...
A monetary remedy that is measured according to the gain to the defendant, rather than to the loss t...
In his interesting survey of "Recent Developments in the Canadian Law of Punitive Damages", Professo...
Punitive damages are private law's most controversial remedy. This book traces the development of th...
This Article examines the Supreme Court of Canada\u27s punitive damage awards in pure breach of cont...
The limitations on a punitive damage award depend on the conception of punitive damages. Is it a pri...
Punitive, or exemplary damages, have been recognized in the Anglo-American common law systems for tw...
After a comparative review of the law on punitive damages in the United Kingdom, Canada and the Unit...
Punitive damages are a species of non-compensatory damages. Their principal purpose is to punish the...
In Harris v. Digital Pulse Pty Ltd (2003) 56 NSWLR 298, the New South Wales Court of Appeal held tha...
Author's draft submitted to SSRN working papers series; last revised October 19, 2006The thrust of t...
Following the recognition by the House of Lords in AG v Blake of the gain-based remedy of an account...
In Philip Morris v. Williams, the Supreme Court held that the Constitution does not permit the impos...
An ‘agreed damages clause’ is a contractual provision whereby the parties agree on the damages one p...
It has long been orthodoxy that punitive damages, because they are awarded in order to punish, are a...
The practice of using punitive damages to punish a tort defendant, in a single case brought by a sin...
A monetary remedy that is measured according to the gain to the defendant, rather than to the loss t...
In his interesting survey of "Recent Developments in the Canadian Law of Punitive Damages", Professo...
Punitive damages are private law's most controversial remedy. This book traces the development of th...
This Article examines the Supreme Court of Canada\u27s punitive damage awards in pure breach of cont...
The limitations on a punitive damage award depend on the conception of punitive damages. Is it a pri...
Punitive, or exemplary damages, have been recognized in the Anglo-American common law systems for tw...
After a comparative review of the law on punitive damages in the United Kingdom, Canada and the Unit...
Punitive damages are a species of non-compensatory damages. Their principal purpose is to punish the...
In Harris v. Digital Pulse Pty Ltd (2003) 56 NSWLR 298, the New South Wales Court of Appeal held tha...
Author's draft submitted to SSRN working papers series; last revised October 19, 2006The thrust of t...
Following the recognition by the House of Lords in AG v Blake of the gain-based remedy of an account...
In Philip Morris v. Williams, the Supreme Court held that the Constitution does not permit the impos...
An ‘agreed damages clause’ is a contractual provision whereby the parties agree on the damages one p...
It has long been orthodoxy that punitive damages, because they are awarded in order to punish, are a...
The practice of using punitive damages to punish a tort defendant, in a single case brought by a sin...
A monetary remedy that is measured according to the gain to the defendant, rather than to the loss t...