Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Crown Attorney appealed the decision directly to the New Brunswick Court of Appeal (the normal path would have been through the Court of Queen's Bench of New Brunswick) on 27 May. [55] Karen Selick, one of three lawyers retained by Comeau at the instance of the National Post's deputy comments editor, termed the appeal "a farce". [54]
"This is an Appeal and Cross-Appeal by special leave from a Judgment of the Court of Appeal for Ontario dated the 18th June 1912, setting aside the verdict of a Jury and the Judgment of the High Court of Justice for Ontario entered on the 24th November 1911, and directing that there should be a new trial of the action or that, in the event of ...
"The first question that arises on this appeal is whether the Supreme Court of Canada were right in holding that an order could be made for the issue of a writ of certiorari to remove into the Supreme Court of New Brunswick a distress warrant issued by the appellant under section 6 of the New Brunswick Liquor Exporters Taxation Act." Lord ...
[31] The Office of the Attorney General sought leave to appeal the decision directly to the New Brunswick Court of Appeal, [32] which dismissed the application in October 2016. [33] Leave to appeal was granted by the Supreme Court of Canada on May 4, 2017, [ 34 ] [ 35 ] When the application for leave was sought, it was welcomed by some ...
S. 70(1) of the BIA provides that bankruptcy orders and assignments take precedence over "all judicial or other attachments, garnishments, certificates having the effect of judgments, judgments, certificates of judgment, legal hypothecs of judgment creditors, executions or other process against the property of a bankrupt," [69] but that does ...
In addition to the $354.9 million judgment in the civil fraud case, Trump must pay $83 million in damages to writer E. Jean Carroll after a jury found he defamed her when he denied raping her in ...
In law, a motion to set aside judgment is an application to overturn or set aside a court's judgment, verdict or other final ruling in a case. [1] [2] Such a motion is proposed by a party who is dissatisfied with the result of a case. Motions may be made at any time after entry of judgment, and in some circumstances years after the case has ...
The new Common Schools Act therefore did not infringe any legal "right or privilege" possessed by anyone in New Brunswick at the time of Confederation and was constitutional. Maher v Town Council of Portland was the first case decided by the Judicial Committee under section 93 of the Constitution Act, 1867 .