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Torts

What did I just trip on?

A recent decision of Justice Mitchell of Ontario’s Superior Court of Justice has re-affirmed that a plaintiff in a slip and fall case is not required to pin point the exact cause or mechanism of the fall to succeed in establishing liability on a defendant. In Branton, the defendant was involved in...

Court’s in Session:

SCJ’s expanded virtual court operations and Corbett J. guidelines for remote hearings as set out in Ontario v. Ontario Association of Midwives, 2020 ONSC. To protect all court users during the COVID-19 crisis, all but urgent hearings in the Ontario Superior Court of Justice (SCJ) were suspended,...

SNOW…AND ICE, ICE, BABY

All right, stop, collaborate and listen… Snow arrived much earlier than many of us expected. It isn’t 12 Inches of Snow just yet, but it is a seasonal reminder to many AB claims examiners that a flurry of OCF-1s may soon appear on their desks. Consider this blog posting your Informer about snow,...

Wait – Let Me Grab My Purse!

In the recent LAT decision of S.B. and Aviva, a woman who sustained injuries after retrieving her purse from her car, closing the door, and then falling to ground did NOT meet the definition of "accident" as defined in the SABS. Instead the applicant’s fall in this case was considered to be an...

How long has that been leaking?

Ontario’s Court of Appeal recently addressed the issue of “discoverability” in a contractor negligence and public health authority claim. In Presley v. Van Dusen, 2019 ONCA 66, the homeowners retained a contractor to install a septic system in 2010.  After the installation was completed and...

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