Family-size Class Warfare – Who Gets the Ranch?

Kenneth Jack probably had no idea he was setting up a future class war when he made his will calling for his estate to be divided equally amongst his children who survived him, but that’s what happened. Mr. Jack the Senior (“Mr. Jack”) made a will in 2006 and died in 2018. His will called for the residue of his estate to be divided equally among “my children then alive.”  A term in a will Read more

BC Supreme Court denies application for injunction in commercial dispute, finding plaintiff wouldn’t suffer irreparable harm and balance of convenience favoured defendant

Auora Climbing Inc. v Kilter, LLC, 2026 BCSC 290, was a dispute between two commercial parties involved in developing equipment and applications for climbing gyms: The parties have a longstanding relationship and worked together to develop the functioning of the App with Kilter’s climbing boards. The exact nature of their respective involvement is disputed. For a number of years, Aurora supplied Kilter with LED Kits without any difficulty; however, when Aurora decided to update its Read more

Injunction restrains MNR from deregistering Vancouver charity pending constitutional challenge

Coram Deo Foundation v Canada (Minister of National Revenue), 2026 BCSC 123, concerned a registered charity that had received a notice of deregistration from the Minister of National Revenue. With deregistration imminent, the charity applied to the BC Supreme Court for “an interim injunction enjoining the Minister from publishing the Notice, pending the outcome of an application by the Charity challenging the constitutionality of the decision of the Minister to revoke the charitable status of Read more

New BCLI Study Paper on a Current Issue in Construction and Property Law

BCLI has issued a new publication dealing with a growing issue in urban development. The Study Paper on Access to Neighbouring Land and Airspace for Construction-Related Purposes released in January 2026 looks at options to avoid disputes over access by developers to land and airspace surrounding a building site during construction projects, and to resolve them when they do arise. Building projects can be delayed or derailed and costs driven up when developers and neighbouring Read more

Injunction available to fill remedial gap in labour case: BC Court of Appeal

TELUS Communications Inc. v Telecommunications Workers Union, 2026 BCCA 5, was an appeal of a chambers judge’s decision, which “challenges an order granting an interim injunction against a federally regulated employer in the labour relations context. The injunction has since expired but legal questions arising from that proceeding will benefit from appellate consideration.” As the court noted, “the appeal is focused on three discrete legal issues: a) Does a Supreme Court judge have jurisdiction to Read more