Weilers LLP

If Your Wall Falls Down

October 10, 2024 By Brian Babcock Insurance policies cover fortuitous losses, but what does that mean? Lalani Properties International Inc. v. Intact Insurance Company is a very long Ontario Court of Appeal decision, which we have read so you don’t have to. One of the reasons it is so long is that it deals with […]

Weather and the Law

October 8, 2024 By Brian Babcock Weather- everybody talks about it, but no one does anything about it. In Thunder Bay weather can range from heat in the summer to extreme cold in the winter – with lots of thunderstorms, as the name implies. At Weilers LLP we cannot control the weather, but weather is […]

10 Ways To Save Waste Money On Your Lawsuit

October 3, 2024 By Brian Babcock Don’t tell your lawyer the truth. Don’t tell your lawyer the whole story up front. Don’t organize your documents before you bring them to your lawyer. Don’t bring all of the documents at one time. Don’t pay attention to the broad definition of documents on production- leave out electronic […]

The Best Defence…

October 1, 2024 By Jonathon Clark  The best defence may not always be a good offence, but it should tell a good story. So far our posts about story telling have focused on the Plaintiff side and the Statement of Claim. Now, we look at the Statement of Defence. It is much harder to tell […]

10 Things To Know About Injunctions

September 26, 2024 By Brian Babcock Did you listen to or read the news about encampments and injunctions and wonder what they were talking about? Here are 10 things you need to know about injunctions, except maybe in Quebec: Courts may order an injunction where it is “just and convenient” to do so. Injunctions are […]

Who Gets The Dog Part 2

September 24, 2024 By Brian Babcock We posted an article recently highlighting the issue of the risk of battles over dog ownership, focused on the case of Carvalho v. Verma, a particularly hard-fought battle. How hard fought? The court has now considered the costs of this application. Noteworthy is the fact that the two sides […]

Eight More Things To Know About Solicitor-Client Privilege

September 19, 2024 By Jonathon Clark  Solicitor-client privilege is of profound importance in our system of justice. Yet the rules of evidence governing privilege are complex. That makes the Superior Court decision in Quadrangle v. AG Canada, instructive. It makes several important points: Solicitor-client privilege applies to communications between a solicitor and client directly leading […]

Expert Evidence In Applications

September 17, 2024 By Brian Babcock Applications are an alternative form of proceeding. An application may be commenced rather than an action where there are unlikely to be factual disputes. Evidence in applications usually takes the form of affidavits. But what about expert evidence? The Ontario Court of Appeal, in 1000029174 Ontario Inc. v. Miculinic […]

Put Your Best Foot Forward

September 12, 2024 By Jonathon Clark  If confronted by a motion for summary judgment, you must “put your best foot forward.” A motion for summary judgment is an alternative to having your lawsuit resolved through a trial. Prior to 2008, when the rule was amended, summary judgment was rarely available. Under the amendment to the […]

What Is Civil Litigation?

September 10, 2024 By Jonathon Clark  Tell someone who asks, “what type of law do you practice?” that you practice civil litigation, and you expect a blank stare, or perhaps to be asked “what is that?” “Civil litigation” is lawyer speak, not common language that most of the public understands THE ELEVATOR PITCH VERSION? An […]