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SCC

Hodgkinson v. Simms (1994), 117 DLR (4th) 161, 95 D.T.C 5135, [1994] 3 SCR 377

Considered:   Lac Minerals Ltd. v. International Corona Resources Ltd., [1989] 2 S.C.R. 574; Burns v. ... The categories of fiduciary, like those of negligence, should not be considered closed.  ... The professional rules of conduct governing lawyers was considered in Granville Savings and Mortgage Corp. v. ...
SCC

Canada Deposit Insurance Corp. v. Canadian Commercial Bank, [1992] 3 SCR 558

Cases Cited                      Considered:    Sukloff v. A. H. Rushforth & Co., [1964] S.C.R. 459;  referred to:    Laronge Realty Ltd. v. ... "                      Finally, Harradence J.A. considered whether repayment to the respondents was nevertheless postponed pursuant to what are now s. 139 of the Bankruptcy Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. ... With respect to the accounting issue, they argue that they should be considered on a basis different from the other Participants because they were prohibited from controlling or attempting to control CCB.  ...
SCC

Jean Coutu Group (PJC) Inc. v. Canada (Attorney General), 2016 SCC 55, [2016] 2 SCR 670

In any event, the fact that PJC Canada admits it never initially considered the new transactions it now seeks to implement does not help its position, as the above discussion reveals. ... It found, instead, that rewriting the tax history of the transaction was “precisely what the parties were seeking to do” on the basis that they had considered and discarded the very same intermediate operations they later asked the Superior Court to recognize (ibid.). ... As Professors Lluelles and Moore put it: [translation] To distinguish it from the object of the obligations, the object of a contract could be described as “the juridical operation considered as a whole. . . .” ...
SCC

Northern Telecom Ltd. v. Cormier, [1988] 1 SCR 996

Cases Cited                      Considered: Communauté urbaine de Montréal v. ... He further considered that mandamus was not the proper remedy to obtain the relief sought under ss. 531, 174 and 175 of the Act and that the proper forum was the "Bureau de révision de l'évaluation foncière du Québec" (B.R.E.F.), which is responsible for considering complaints filed under ss. 124 et seq. of the Act.   7.                        ... Right, we considered the wording of s. 531, and after very pleasant and lengthy discussions we concluded that it was not necessary to amend the values as shown on the roll, for the purposes of giving effect to s. 531 as such.   ...
TCC

1378055 Ontario Limited v. The Queen, 2019 TCC 149

Accordingly, the residential rental activities carried on by 137ON were not commercial activities. [44]   Having considered the testimony of Mr. ... In Sagaz, the SCC suggested that one of the questions to be considered is “whether, at the expense of finality, fairness dictates that the trial be reopened.” [57] In my view, given the innocent and inadvertent oversight that occurred in compiling 137ON’s book of documents, it would be neither just nor fair to exclude the 2014 Invoices from the evidence to be considered in deciding these Appeals. [60]   Subsection 138(1) of the Rules also indicates that, if a hearing is to be reopened, it should be “upon such terms as are just.” ... They cannot succeed in that purpose unless they are considered to be mandatory requirements and strictly enforced. ...
FCTD

Ficek v. Canada (Attorney General), 2013 FC 430

Phelan” Judge FEDERAL COURT   SOLICITORS OF RECORD     DOCKET:                                          T-1933-11   STYLE OF CAUSE:                         ALICE FICEK                                                               and                                                               THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF CANADA       MOTION IN WRITING CONSIDERED AT OTTAWA, ONTARIO PURSUANT TO RULE 369     REASONS FOR ORDER AND ORDER:                                   PHELAN J.   ...
FCTD

Dhillon v. Canada (Chief Electoral Officer), 2019 FC 1290

Lafrenière" Judge   FEDERAL COURT SOLICITORS OF RECORD DOCKET: T-314-19   STYLE OF CAUSE: SATINDER DHILLON AND EMMET PIERCE IN HIS CAPACITY AS CHIEF AGENT v THE CHIEF ELECTORAL OFFICER, MAXIME BERNIER, CHRISTIAN ROY IN HIS CAPACITY AS CHIEF AGENT, AND THE PEOPLE'S PARTY OF CANADA   MOTIONS IN WRITING CONSIDERED AT OTTAWA, ONTARIO ORDER AND REASONS: LAFRENIÈRE J.   ...
SCC

Threlfall v. Carleton University, 2019 SCC 50, [2019] 3 SCR 726

Under that regime, an absentee’s continued existence was considered to be uncertain. An absentee was considered by the law to be neither living nor dead and could not inherit. ... No longer is an absentee considered to be neither alive nor dead (Ministère de la Justice, Commentaires du ministre de la Justice, vol. ...
TCC

Jaggi c. M.R.N., 2005 TCC 166

This would simply mean that I have found that the new factors not considered were not relevant. ... Wrights' Canadian Ropes Ltd., contends the respondent, unless the Minister has not had regard to all the circumstances of the employment (as required by subparagraph 3(2)(c)(ii) of the Act), has considered irrelevant factors, or has acted in contravention of some principle of law, the court may not interfere. ...
TCC

Lelievre and Falardeau v. M.N.R., 2003 TCC 55

  [36]     The whole of the evidence, the remuneration, the terms and conditions and the duration of the employment must be considered. ... Cases considered   Théberge v. Canada (Minister of National Revenue ‑ M.N.R.), [2002] F.C.J. ...

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