Author Archives: Alice Woolley

About Alice Woolley

LL.M. (Yale), LL.B. (Toronto), B.A. (Toronto). Professor. Member of the Alberta Bar. Please click here for more information.

Advocacy and Independence

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Case considered: Goold v. Alberta (Child and Youth Advocate), 2011 ABCA 63

Linda Goold was a lawyer on the roster of lawyers eligible to represent children through the Office of the Child and Youth Advocate. She was removed from the roster on January 15, 2008 due to allegations of unprofessionalism, and in particular allegations of persistent rudeness to caseworkers and others involved in the child welfare system. In addition, it was alleged that she did not comply with policies of the Legal Representation Service. Goold sought judicial review of this decision but her application was dismissed on the grounds of prematurity; she then sought review through the Office of the Child and Youth Advocate. By way of a letter dated October 3, 2008, Goold was advised that a review hearing would take place before the Advocate on October 30. In response to further correspondence from Goold, the Advocate advised that the process would allow her counsel to make submissions, and that he may have questions for her. On October 29, 2008 Goold advised the Advocate that she would not be attending the review hearing, requested a transcript and offered to answer questions in writing. The Advocate advised that given her non-attendance he would review her case by reviewing the documents before him, which included the affidavits prepared by Goold as part of her earlier judicial review application.

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The Continued Complexity of Administrative Law post-Dunsmuir

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Cases considered: Mitzel v. Alberta (Law Enforcement Review Board), 2010 ABCA 336; Calgary (City) v. Alberta (Municipal Government Board), 2010 ABQB 719

The Supreme Court’s judgment in Dunsmuir v. New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9, purported to identify a “more coherent and workable” approach to substantive judicial review (Dunsmuir at para. 32). Whether, as a general matter, Dunsmuir has achieved this ambition is uncertain. It does seem to have liberated courts from the formalistic analysis that was previously de rigueur in the standard of review analysis. On the other hand, it has left some significant questions unanswered, and in some respects has created new issues that did not exist formerly.

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Public Rights Trump Private Privilege

PDF version: Public Rights Trump Private Privilege  

Case considered: J.O. v. Strathcona-Tweedsmuir School, 2010 ABQB 559

In December 2006 the Strathcona-Tweedsmuir School expelled J.O. based on allegations that she had been seen having sex with her boyfriend in the women’s washroom at the Calgary Golf and Country Club. The allegations were “mistaken” (para. 41). J.O. was rather suffering the predictable consequences of teenage drinking and a long-car ride; she was drunk and sick, and her boyfriend was in the bathroom helping to clean her up.

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The True Bright Line Conflicts Rule

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Case considered: Kovac v. Opus Building Corp., 2010 ABQB 366

That a “lawyer must not represent opposing parties to a dispute” (Alberta Code of Professional Conduct, Ch. 6, Rule 1) may be the most obvious, best understood and least frequently violated rule on conflicts of interest. Sometimes lawyers have problems when a joint representation properly undertaken with consent, develops unanticipatedly into a dispute. One cannot readily imagine, however, circumstances in which a lawyer would file a statement of claim that seeks relief for a party, and from a party, both at the same time.

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Lawyer, Not Intervenor

Case considered: R. v. B.P., 2010 ABQB 204

PDF version: Lawyer, Not Intervenor

In R. v. B.P., 2010 ABQB 204, Madam Justice Strekaf denied intervenor status to the former lawyer for the appellant accused. The accused had entered a plea to a charge of possession of a weapon for a dangerous purpose. He sought to have the plea set aside on the basis of ineffective assistance by his trial lawyer, Mr. McAviney. Mr. McAviney sought intervenor status in the appeal on the basis that the argument for ineffective assistance of counsel gave him a “direct interest in the outcome of the case” (B.P. at para. 8). He suggested that the “real lis” of the appeal was between Mr. McAviney and the accused, rather than between the accused and the Crown.

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