Chapter 3 - Resolution of Disputes Flashcards
Alternatives to court action
Negotiation - parties work out dispute themselves
Mediation - neutral 3rd party assists in coming to resolution on their own
Arbitration - party makes a binding decision in the matter
Advantages of ADR
- parties maintain control of the situation
- less distraction
- lower costs
- preserves good will
disadvantages of ADR
- decisions do not follow precedent
- resolutions may not be enforceable
- no public record
disadvantages of mediation
- not the process to use where blame or liability for injury must be determined
- power imbalance - mediation may exacerbate the weakness of one party
Civil matters
two private persons use the court as a referee to adjudicate a dispute
Balance of probabilities
50+1%
criminal proceedings
govt pursues the matter and prosecutes the accused
must be convicted beyond a reasonable double
crown vs accused
beyond a reasonable doubt
95+1
provincial court
- lowest level
- criminal jurisdiction over the less serious criminal matters
superior court
- highest trail level court
- unlimited monetary jurisdiction in civil matters and deals with serious criminal issues
Draw outline of Canadas court system
slide 15
Appeal courts
will only consider a case when questions of law are in dispute not questions of fact
Supreme court of canada
-highest court in the country
- strictly appellate function
- nine judges appointed by govt of Canada
- decisions set binding precedent
Draw process of civil litigation
slide 19
limitation periods
must be brought within a relatively short period of time from event
pleadings
- notice of civil claim (plaintiff)
- response of notice of civil claim (defendant)
- counterclaim/defence to counterclaim
discovery
documents/records
examination for discovery: verbal exam of witnesses under oath
pretrail conference
meeting to determine which issues remain to be tried and whether the parties can resolve the dispute themselves
offer to settle
either party can make an official offer to settle - if accepted - the matter is ended
trial
plaintiff presents case
- burden of proof rests with plaintiff
- plaintiffs case and witnesses are presented first
- cross examination by defendants lawyer
- plaintiffs lawyer is prohibited from asking leading questions
Defendant presents case
damages
monetary compensation
general, special, punitive
general
pain and suffering or for future lost wages
special
reimburse the litigant for expenses or costs incurred before trial
punitive
not to compensate victim but rather punish the wrongdoer
other remedies
accounting
injunction
specific performance
declaration
enforcement of judgement
slide 30
regulatory bodies
executive brand of govt delegates to public admin and regulators
complaints usually heard by administrative tribunals
procedural fairness in tribunals
- from where did the tribunal derive its authority
- was the decision making process fair
- what recourse is there if there has been a failure in jurisdiction or procedure