Reports of the Exchequer Court of Canada


Book Description

"[Vol. 1] contains all the leading Exchequer Court cases [1881-1888] hitherto unreported. The appendix comprises short notes of all the Exchequer Court cases [1876-1888] which have been published from time to time in the Reports of the Supreme Court of Canada."--Note, v. 1.




Reports of the Exchequer Court of Canada


Book Description

"[Vol. 1] contains all the leading Exchequer Court cases [1881-1888] hitherto unreported. The appendix comprises short notes of all the Exchequer Court cases [1876-1888] which have been published from time to time in the Reports of the Supreme Court of Canada."--Note, v. 1.




Dominion Law Reports


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The Federal Court of Canada


Book Description

This book is an authoritative history of the Federal Court of Canada. The judges' work in various areas of substantive law provides illustrations of the functioning of the Court in the adjudication of disputes.







Chief Justice W.R. Jackett


Book Description

Wilbur Roy Jackett, born in a small town in Saskatchewan in 1914, is inextricably connected to some of the most important developments in Canadian legal history. As a scholar, public servant, and jurist, he was a leading figure in Canadian law, serving during the governments of Mackenzie King, St Laurent, Pearson, Diefenbaker, Trudeau, and Clark. After graduating from the University of Saskatchewan's College of Law, Jackett was chosen as a Rhodes Scholar. He returned to Canada from Oxford not long before the outbreak of World War II and joined the ten-man Department of Justice as a junior lawyer. Through extraordinary hard work, rigorous legal analysis, and a bent for organisation, he eventually became Canada's eighth deputy minister of Justice. He left this position after three years to become general counsel for the Canadian Pacific Railway and was later appointed president of the Exchequer Court of Canada. He quickly revamped the level of service provided by the court to the legal profession and the public and was instrumental in both the creation of the Canadian Judicial Council and the design and creation of the new Federal Court of Canada. As the first chief justice of the Federal Court, he led the new court by example, moulding it into the most efficient and effective court in the country, despite opposition from provincial superior courts and the Supreme Court of Canada. After fifteen years on the Bench he retired in 1979 at the height of his judicial career, believing that this would help the Court develop. He continued to work in relative obscurity at what he loved best - solving legal problems - but never again appeared before the courts. Richard W. Pound is a senior partner at Stikeman, Elliott, chancellor of McGill University, and a member of the International Olympic Committee.







The Law Times Reports


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