- Law societies - Aylward v. Law Society of Newfoundland and Labrador
- On Overcriminalization and the Gibson Guitar raid
- Federal court upholds Arizona’s late-term abortion law
- Zimmerman's wife pleads not guilty on perjury charge
- James Holmes Charged With 142 Counts
- Holmes charged with 24 counts of murder in Colorado movie theater shootings
- Norton Rose is world’s fastest-growing law firm
- Federal judge blocks enforcement of employer health insurance mandate for Catholic Colorado business owner
- Law Schools Bargain with Students to Fill Seats
- Lawyers have mixed reviews on Newmarket's new triage court - Law Times
- The legality of unpaid internships in Ontario
Tuesday, July 31, 2012
140Law - Legal Headlines for Tuesday, July 31, 2012
Posted by Rachel, Law Clerk and Office Manager on Tuesday, July 31, 2012 0 comments
Monday, July 30, 2012
140Law - Legal Headlines for Monday, July 30, 2012
- Review by iPhone J.D.: WiseLii -- search Canadian law (CanLII) on your iPhone
- WiseLii – a Mobile Legal Research Tool
- Scalia Suggests Women Have No Right to Contraception
- Scalia: 'Handheld Rocket Launchers' could be Constitutional
- One-stop shopping on St. Clair Avenue West, Toronto
- A Civil Union Ends in an Abduction and Questions
- Black Couple Banned From Marrying at Mississippi Church
- Video: Monkey custody battle in court
- Privacy regulators blast Google for Street View failure to delete improperly obtained data
- Chevron ordered to pay $19 billion in environment damages
- Fathers' rights organization calls for family law reform, presumption of shared parenting in Canada
- Mitt Romney's controversial Olympic past draws scrutiny
- Manitoba judge Lori Douglas disclosed nude photos, inquiry hears
- "Lori Douglas is not a victim"
- "Lori Douglas witchhunt to proceed"
- Moonlighting: The Mischievous In-House Lawyer
- Divorce Lawyers for Men
- 6th Circuit Says Ky. Bar Chilled Lawyer’s Free Speech; He Had a Right to Criticize Public Agency
- Future legal eagles mix school, work and rowing for a chance at Olympic glory
- Ex-Avalanche Steve Moore's lawsuit against Todd Bertuzzi delayed
Posted by Rachel, Law Clerk and Office Manager on Monday, July 30, 2012 0 comments
Workers’ Compensation Benefits Curtailed for Injured Antiques Aficionado
The names of the injured worker and his employer are not disclosed in the reported decision. However the details of the injury, treatment, ongoing physical and emotional difficulties, and expert opinions are each enumerated in detail. The worker had been employed since 1988 as a Division Crewman, performing general labour duties; but he worked primarily as part of an asphalt crew doing brush cleaning and traffic control. He was injured in October, 2005, when he lifted a steel ramp on the back of a truck. He stated that since his injury he has had pain in his low back and numbness in his left leg, and could not work at his job.
The worker was an antique car and machinery collector. He had been off work for a number of years, he had undergone extensive treatment and testing, and he was now being offered an alternate, less stressful position with the employer which he had begun pursuant to a back-to-work program. The worker claimed that the subsequent onset of migraines, and bowel and bladder problems were causally connected to the initial injury, and thus should be taken into consideration during a review of his case, and his application for additional benefits. In addition he claimed he was unable to fulfill the requirements of the newly offered job.
The appeals tribunal reviewed the prior decision of the Workers’ Compensation Board which found that these additional medical problems were not related to the injury, that the offer of an alternate position with the employer was reasonable and appropriate, and that the worker was not entitled to further treatment at a pain management clinic. The worker’s appeal of that decision was denied in its entirety by the Appeals Tribunal. The final two issues (offer of alternate employment and denial of ongoing treatment) are relevant to our discussion of the worker’s passion for antiques and should serve as a warning to those of us who are injured on one job, but carry on with another vocation, even if it’s a hobby.
Most of us have heard stories about insurance companies sending out private investigators to spy on people who have been injured in car accidents, to speak to their neighbours, and to otherwise dig up information which suggests that they are not as injured as they claim or are simply malingerers. Workers’ compensation boards have a similar right to test the veracity of the claims of injured workers by hiring investigators. And now, in the age of the internet, it’s much easier to find out how injured individuals are really spending their time while away from the workplace, ostensibly recovering.
The evidence at the appeals hearing disclosed that the antiques aficionado, while off work had been participating in events involving antique cars and machinery, including a plowing event. He stated that because of his condition he wasn’t able to participate in the festivities “to any great extent.” He said that he would still drive an antique car around, but not while taking medication.
The worker owned four antique cars and some antique trucks and tractors, and would work on their restoration. He said that his friends would help him out to some extent working on his cars, but admitted that he did spend time on his own in his home workshop. When asked about coming to work (the back-to-work program) with grease under his nails, he admitted to working at things at his shop and showing his son how to do mechanical things, such as replacing a bicycle chain. But in an effort to rehabilitate his testimony, he stated that the mechanical jobs he was doing around the house now took longer since he had difficulty concentrating since the accident. He also said that his doctors had told him to challenge the pain, and therefore that was why he’d been seen doing strenuous activities.
On cross-examination the worker admitted that he had also been spending time on eBay and Kijiji while at work. He had been conducting business on these two internet sites while at the work at the new position offered to accommodate him. He stated that he found the websites difficult to use.
The Appeals Tribunal decision noted all these activities that the worker had been engaging in while either off work entirely, or at the back-to-work program. Yet supposedly he was unable to return to his usual job duties because of ongoing medical issues and in fact new problems which, he alleged, arose as a result of the 2005 accident.
As indicated, the worker’s claims were denied in their entirety. His claim for further treatment at a pain management clinic was denied. The Tribunal determined that he was medically able to perform the duties of the alternate position that had been made available to him, and which he in fact had been working at.
The lesson to be learned is straightforward. If you’re an antiques collector or dealer and are attempting to advance claims arising out of an accident or injury, be careful. Whether it’s an insurance company, an employer, or a workers’ compensation board, each has means of delving into your day-to-day activities. A couple of decades ago those investigations were restricted to having private eyes looking into your comings and goings. While these investigations continue today, in the modern age of internet technology, sites like eBay, Facebook and other social media networks and websites make it much easier to determine if you’re in fact entitled to the benefits and entitlements you claim. Investigators can now go online rather than follow you around and speak to your neighbours.
Alvin Starkman received his Masters in Social Anthropology in 1978. After teaching for a few years he attended Osgoode Hall Law School, thereafter embarking upon a successful career as a litigator until 2004. Alvin, a good-standing member of the Law Society of Upper Canada, now resides with his wife Arlene in Oaxaca, Mexico, where he writes, leads small group tours to the villages, markets, ruins and other sights, is a consultant to documentary film production companies, and operates Casa Machaya Oaxaca Bed & Breakfast.
Posted by @wiselaw on Monday, July 30, 2012 0 comments
Labels: employment law, Nova Scotia Courts, workers compensation, wsib
Sunday, July 29, 2012
Introducing WiseLii, Canada's Mobile Legal Research Tool
WISELII is a free app that makes Canadian legal information, legislation, jurisprudence and searches instantly available on the iPhone mobile platform.
See our User Guide at the WISELII Home Page for more information on the app, with numerous screenshots.
WISELII is an independent project from Wise Law Office. It is in no way affiliated with CanLii or any Legal Information Institute.
We would like to express our thanks to CanLii, nonetheless, for its exceptional research tools and for permitting WISELII to access its data for this iPhone application.
For more on WISELII from the Financial Post, see: New free mobile app gives greater access to justice to all Canadians.
Posted by @wiselaw on Sunday, July 29, 2012 1 comments
Labels: legal profession, Wise Law Blog, Wise Law in the Media, Wise Law Office, WiseLii
Friday, July 27, 2012
140Law - Legal Headlines for Friday, July 27, 2012
- Changes Reportedly Make Skype Chats More Accessible to Police
- A tale of two epidemics: HIV and unjust criminalization - What do you think?
- Where's the safety net for tweeting Olympians?
- Bloomberg Law video: "Taking the Bar Exam: What It's REALLY Like"
- Police who tied prisoner with electrical cord on flight breached his rights, Ontario judge says
- “Ambush” caused Ottawa judge to withdraw from “House Negro” civil suit, lawyers say
- Lori Douglas inquiry "on brink of collapse"
- Ont. top court upholds jury's $100,000+ FLA awards for young children who lost their mother in MVA Canada
- B.C. court awards employee $573,000 in punitive damages: The most punitives ever in Canadian employment law
- Madoff trustee asks court to release over $2.5 billion for victims
- CBC: Justice Lori Douglas' lawyer calls for judicial council inquiry to fold over bias - fascinating update
- Justice Scalia on C-Span
- Most Mass Murderers Are Revenge Killers; Holmes Doesn’t Fit the Profile
- Justice Lori Douglas to testify today at inquiry into sex scandal
Posted by Rachel, Law Clerk and Office Manager on Friday, July 27, 2012 0 comments
Thursday, July 26, 2012
140Law - Legal Headlines for Thursday, July 26, 2012
- Husband of Justice Lori Douglas calls her 'victim' in sex scandal
- Justice Scalia Disputes Accuracy Of 'Leak'
- Corneau v Eriksen: Establishing Willful Non-Compliance in a Contempt Motion
- Scotland announces plans to legalize same-sex marriage
- Robert Scoble's Visit With Kevin O'Keefe and LexBlog
- Global Commission on HIV and the Law Report on Risks, Rights & Health
- Judge transfers custody of Michael Jackson’s children
- Judge Issues New Order Restricting Comments in James Holmes Case
- Toronto Star justice reporter Tracey Tyler dies at 50 after battle with cancer
- Class action lawsuit in Sunrise Propane explosion gets green light - MetroNews Canada
- eLawyering – Diverse ways of rendering legal services
- Some of the Toronto law bloggers who attended tonight's meetup at the Keg
- Sandra Day O’Connor: Conservatives show ‘lack of understanding’ of court system
Posted by Rachel, Law Clerk and Office Manager on Thursday, July 26, 2012 0 comments
Wednesday, July 25, 2012
140Law - Legal Headlines for Wednesday, July 25, 2012
- Judge Rules No Cameras for James Holmes Next Court Appearance
- Lawyer Blogs His ‘Island Paradise’ Life
- Veteran Ottawa lawyers appointed to Elliot Lake inquiry
- Justice Lori Douglas' husband tells Judicial Council posting nude photos online a 'sexual fantasy'
- Ont. Div. Ct overturns OHRT, holds managers/shareholders personally liable for discrimination damages
- Philadelphia Monsignor gets 3-6 years for sex-abuse cover-up
- Samsung tablet sale banned in Europe
- U of Illinois Law School Is Publicly Censured by the ABA, Fined for Misreporting Admissions Data
- German circumcision debate hits Austria
- South Dakota Patients Seeking Abortion Must Be Told of Increased Suicide Risk, Federal Appeal Court Rules
- Statistics Canada Reports Lowest Crimes Stats Since 1972
- The end of an era: LA says good bye to legal pot
- Expanded Paralegal Powers Coming to BC
- Florida takes Cuba business ban appeal to U.S. federal court
- This 'Jack Daniels' Cease-and-Desist Letter Should Be the Model for Every Cease-and-Desist Letter
- Why You Need a Social Media Will
Posted by Rachel, Law Clerk and Office Manager on Wednesday, July 25, 2012 0 comments
Tuesday, July 24, 2012
Developments in Access to Legal Information Online
- Lawline.com recently opened up its entire continuing legal education course catalogue for free access to lawyers. As its press release noted, this unlimited access "is a game changer for the legal industry and online education everywhere." I am hoping this model may be of interest to the Law Society of Upper Canada, which is amassing an impressive and growing catalogue of videotaped CPD programmes. Wouldn't it be useful for the LSUC to give members easy, on demand online access to archived CPD video and materials? My thought is that LSUC membership should include unlimited, free access to any video programmes and materials in "the LSUC vault" from one year after original presentation dates. The time has arrived for a CLE portal of this nature in Ontario.
- Congratulations are in order for our friend, Omar Ha-Redeye, who joined My Support Calculator as General Manager several months ago. (Omar is also continuing in his own, private law practice with Fleet Street Law). My Support Calculator is an essential new resource for Canadians who find themselves involved in the nation's family court system. Delivering quick, easy and free access to the child support and spousal support "numbers" that separated parents and spouses need to know, My Support Calculator is a near-godsend for Canada's unrepresented litigants - and the judges and counsel working with them.
Posted by @wiselaw on Tuesday, July 24, 2012 0 comments
Labels: access to justice, legal profession
140Law - Legal Headlines for Tuesday, July 24, 2012
- Toronto Law Blogger Meetup - Tomorrow night - Wednesday July 25 at 7 p.m. @ The Keg, 165 York Street, Toronto
- Former Murdoch newspaper execs charged in phone-hacking case
- “Divorce for Men” Lawyers: Sports Mags, Paternity Test Info and More
- Kodak loses patent lawsuit appeal against Apple and RIM
- Groia files notice of appeal of LSUC civility ruling
- Accuser targeted Manitoba judge Lori Douglas after separate complaint: testimony
- Family Matters with Justice Brownstone Episode Now Online
- Immovable Object, Meet Irresistible Force: Should CanLii anonymize litigants' names in reported decisions?
- Husband of Lori Douglas, Manitoba judge in sex scandal, set to testify
- Theater massacre suspect set to appear in court
- David Canton: Court protects hyperlink activity on Internet
Posted by Rachel, Law Clerk and Office Manager on Tuesday, July 24, 2012 0 comments
Monday, July 23, 2012
140Law - Legal Headlines for Monday, July 23, 2012
- Colorado Murder Gun Was Illegal Till 2004
- German circumcision row heading for new legal battle
- Kentucky Girl May Face Jail Time After Tweeting Names Of Guilty Rapists
- Federal judge dismisses largest US human trafficking case
- Calif. AG Supports Illegal Immigrant’s Quest for Law License
- Theaters ban masks in response to Colorado shootings
- Livent co-founder Myron Gottlieb granted day parole - CTV News
- Khadr's lawyer blasts Ottawa - Winnipeg Free Press
- Why NHL teams cry poor despite the league’s record growth
- Justice Scalia: Money Is Speech (Video)
- Justice Lori Douglas knew 'nothing' about alleged sex offer, Judicial Council inquiry told
- Guergis reputation damaged by cabinet peers, lawyer argues
- Georgia court declines to halt execution of mentally disabled death row inmate
- Mayor Rob Ford wants to force all convicted gun criminals out of Toronto
Posted by Rachel, Law Clerk and Office Manager on Monday, July 23, 2012 0 comments
Sunday, July 22, 2012
Scalia, Textualism and The Interpretive "Rule of the 18th Century Brits"
Justifying the Court's decision in Citizens United, Scalia contended "Thomas Jefferson would have said 'the more speech the better - that's what the First Amendment is all about," and claimed it is "utterly impossible" to separate speech from the money that facilitates the speech.
Then there was this fascinating exchange, as Scalia articulated his view on the limits of freedom of speech, as intended by the Framers:
Piers Morgan: Is there any limit, in your eyes. to freedom of speech? What are the limitations to you?
Justice Scalia: Oh. Of course. I am a textualist. And what the provision reads is "Congress shall make no law abridging the freedom of speech..."
So they had in mind a particular freedom.
What freedom of speech?
The right of freedom of speech that was the right of Englishmen at that time.Is Scalia truly contending that U.S. constitutional interpretation must ultimately be frozen in time - to be determined solely with reference to the rights and expectations of 18th century Brits?
If so, doesn't this pose a bit of a conundrum for America?
Having just overthrown the British in a bloody revolution, the textualists argue, the framers then opted to permanently tie the constitutional hands of American lawmakers to the sensibilities and statutes of the old men of another country, far away in distance and time - a country, in fact, from which America had just declared its independence.
British lawmakers, of course,would not have been handicapped by any parallel limitation on how their nation's laws could evolve and adapt, moving forward from the 18th century.
According to Scalia, then, while the British would have retained the luxury of interpretive constitutional modernity, America did not.
(Who won the American Revolution, again?)
Apparently, such "textualism" passes as an enlightened and persuasive point of view in conservative legal corners of the U.S.
Remarkable.
Video of the exchange is below:
- Garry J. Wise, Toronto
Saturday, July 21, 2012
Guns 'n Prayer
The 11th Circuit Court of Appeals says no, and upholds a ban.
Imagine that. Amen.
Friday, July 20, 2012
140Law - Legal Headlines for Friday, July 20, 2012
- Rose Boyko, former judge from Newmarket, honoured by Queen
- Must the Internet Be Accessible to People With Disabilities?
- Who are America’s Top 100 Entertainment ‘Power Lawyers’?
- Judge: Stripping naked at airport to protest TSA is protected speech
- B.C. Ct of Appeal blocks age discrimination challenge over Fasken's mandatory partner retirement policy
- Lawyers ask for Guantanamo trial to be televised
- Judges Must Warn New Jersey Jurors About Eyewitnesses’ Reliability
- LSBC gives law student with sketchy academic history a second chance
- Harper can't be shielded from facing defamation suit: Guergis's lawyer - Victoria Times Colonist
- UK consultant says most lawyers today don't have the right skills to service corporate clients effectively
- Legal Battles Erupt Over Tough Voter ID Laws (Ethan Bronner/New York Times)
- Sheriff Joe Arpaio Trial Opens in Phoenix
- Helena Guergis' lawyer says lawsuit "is not a fiction" in bid to keep case alive
- Massive spam botnet shut down, say experts
- Ontario, Law Commission highlights ageism in justice system - Toronto Star
- Spy glasses used by accuser in Justice Lori Douglas sex case
Posted by Rachel, Law Clerk and Office Manager on Friday, July 20, 2012 0 comments
Thursday, July 19, 2012
140Law - Legal Headlines for Thursday, July 19, 2012
- Lori Douglas and George Zimmerman: the gender/race matrix
- BC Jury awards $573,000 punitive damages to terminated employee (registration req'd)
- So You Married a Criminal: Perils of the 'Innocent' Spouse
- Sheriff Joe Arpaio: President Obama’s Birth Certificate Definitely Forged
- Michael Jackson’s siblings say his will was forged
- Elections Ontario Privacy Breach
- Boy Scouts of America affirm ban on gays
- Federal Court of Canada finds decision to withdraw from Kyoto Protocol legal
- Federal judge dismisses challenge to US health care contraception provision
- Justice Lori Douglas hearing: Manitoba judge's lawyer questions complainant
- Brooklyn Jewish Man Awarded $600,000 in Religious Discrimination Case
- For the First Time, Canadians Now Richer Than Americans (Meg Handley/US News)
- BC Court of Appeal to rule on mandatory lawyer retirement
- Pregnant new CEO for Yahoo! stirs debate on working moms
- Minnesota court upholds aiding suicide conviction - CBS News
- Legal aid earnings not wages: court - Canadian Lawyer Magazine
- 26 Months' Notice Of Termination Awarded To 65 Year Old Employee - Mondaq News Alerts (registration)
- Giving employees ultimatums not legally sound
- Michael Jackson's siblings attack estate executors
Posted by Rachel, Law Clerk and Office Manager on Thursday, July 19, 2012 0 comments