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Archive for December, 2013

Tips Tuesday

Here are excerpts from the most recent tips on SlawTips, the site that each week offers up useful advice, short and to the point, on technology, research and practice.

Technology

There was no tech tip this week.
Dan Pinnington

Research

CourtListener – Access to U.S. Decisions
Shaunna Mireau

Thanks to an intriguing post at Bob Ambrogi’s LawSites blog today’s tip is to check out CourtListener for access to US decisions. CourtListener is a core project of the Free . . .

Practice

Inbox Zero: Unsubscribing (And the Next-Best Option)
David Bilinsky & Garry Wise

Where do all these email . . . [more]

Posted in: Tips Tuesday

African Law Library

The tagline for the African Law Library is “Innovative access to law”. The service, which requires a registration for which there is no cost, links to documents published by the African Legal Information Institute and other collections, including suggestions for research projects and the ability to support communities of practice (workgroups).

The African Law Library uses the online platform of Globethics.net for the integration of a broad variety of document sources and participants profiles. It offers the following features:

  • Online library with documents that are full text, multilingual, from all countries in Africa;
  • Access to legal texts, selected
. . . [more]
Posted in: Legal Information

Don’t Ignore That Notice!

The case Medos Services Corporation v. Ridout and Maybee LLP 2013 FC 1006 is an example of what happens when the owner of a registered trade-mark ignores a Section 45 notice. 

As a basic premise a registered trade-mark must be used in order to maintain those rights and a procedure exists under Section 45 of the Trade-Marks Act to weed out dead wood from the Register. Upon receipt of such a notice the registered owner has 3 months to provide an affidavit or statutory declaration showing, with respect to each of the wares or services specified in the registration, whether . . . [more]

Posted in: Columns, Intellectual Property

An Interesting Approach to a Routine Motion

I have had the unfortunate experience of participating in lengthy undertakings and refusals motions. I think the only people who like these motions less than counsel are the Judges and Masters that have to hear them.

Often these motions are lengthy due to the fact that the moving party moves on nearly every outstanding undertaking and refusal without bothering to try to pare the list down to questions that are important.

In a recent decision, Justice Brown came up with a concept that may deter counsel from bringing refusal motions that are unnecessarily lengthy. Justice Brown advised counsel, before . . . [more]

Posted in: Practice of Law

A Checklist for Avoiding Conflicts on Lateral Lawyer Transfers

Lateral hiring of partners or associates occurs at firms of every size, and is becoming far more common. In addition to reviewing the transferring lawyer’s credentials and suitability, the transferring lawyer and firm will need to identify and deal with potential conflicts of interest that may arise with respect to clients at the transferring lawyer’s previous firm, and in particular, clients for whom the transferring lawyer worked.

This critical task is not as easy as it might seem on first thought. The hiring firm must have sufficient information to complete an internal conflicts check, while at the same time making . . . [more]

Posted in: Practice of Law, Reading: Recommended

Twitter Moot 2014 Scheduled for February

Auditions are currently open until December 6th for students who would like to participate in the third Twitter Moot taking place on Friday, February 28th. Unlike a traditional moot held in a courtroom type facility, a Twitter Moot takes place online via Twitter (hashtag #Twtmoot).

From the West Coast Environmental Law website:

On Friday, February 28th, 2014 at 10am PST (1pm EST), students from law schools across Canada will argue an appeal over Twitter about the duty of Canada’s governments to consult First Nations on mines development.

The appeal, to be heard before three judges of the

. . . [more]
Posted in: Education & Training, Education & Training: Law Schools, Technology: Internet

“Canadian International Lawyer” Calls for Submissions

Canadian International Lawyer, a journal published by the Canadian Bar Association’s section on international law, has put out a call for submissions in all the journal’s sections (articles, case commentary, practice notes, legal developments) for its two upcoming issues (summer 2014 and winter 2015). According to Noemi Gal-Or, the journal editor:

Articles should have a practice focus, relevant to Canadian international legal practitioners. Instructions to authors can be found [via email] at CIL@cba.org.

The journal is published twice annually with articles in English or in French and is available free to CBA members who have joined the international . . . [more]

Posted in: Announcements, Legal Information: Publishing

The Future of Legal Writing: Online and Short Form

In 1936, Yale law professor Fred Rodell wrote “[t]here are two things wrong with almost all legal writing. One is its style. The other is its content.”

Some things never change, but the growth of legal blogging over the past decade would give hope to even Professor Rodell that not all legal writing must suffer from these twin deficiencies. In fact, the good professor might even be persuaded to accept that short form legal writing through blogs serves as a valuable source of legal scholarship.

In the context of a for-credit tech law internship overseen by the University of Ottawa . . . [more]

Posted in: Legal Information: Publishing, Miscellaneous, Practice of Law: Future of Practice

Confessions of a Prosecutorial Defence Lawyer

Switch hitting. Going over to the dark side. Seeing the light. I’ve been the target of a lot of clichés since my decision several months ago to dip a toe into the waters of becoming a per-diem Crown Attorney. My motivation was a desire to gain a deeper understanding of the machinery that inexorably grinds our system forward inch by inch (and not by the laughable pay rate that has the dubious distinction of being the only legal remuneration to make Legal Aid funding appear moderately generous). After spending nearly fifteen years exclusively as a criminal defence lawyer, my . . . [more]

Posted in: Justice Issues

Summaries Sunday: SOQUIJ

Pénal: Le jury n'a pas été instruit sur une question importante qu'il devait trancher, à savoir si c'est le trouble mental ou l'intoxication qui a rendu l'intimé, reconnu non criminellement responsable en raison de troubles mentaux du meurtre de ses enfants, incapable d'un jugement rationnel; par conséquent, la tenue d'un nouveau procès est ordonnée sous l'accusation de meurtre au premier degré.
Posted in: Summaries Sunday