Digital Wills: How the Law of Wills Responds to the Electronic Era

This series examines and compares recommendations made in several BCLI reports and those made by the Law Commission of England and Wales. To read the other posts in the series click here. Until comparatively recently, a will written on anything but paper or another tangible surface would have been a bizarre concept. As technology continues to advance, however, the need grows for law to be current and responsive to technological development. Not unlike other areas of law, Read more

Will-Making Capacity: Part Two of the Wills Series

This series examines and compares recommendations made in several BCLI reports and those made by the Law Commission of England and Wales. To read the other posts in the series click here. This weeks’ blog post, and the second instalment of the “Wills Series,” considers the ways in which BCLI has approached the issue of capacity in the context of will-making, and will compare this to how the Law Commission has proposed law reform in this area Read more

Ontario Court of Appeal affirms strata corporation’s plan to manage parking through bylaw allowing allocation of spaces by lease

In Cheung v York Region Condominium, 2017 ONCA 633, the Ontario Court of Appeal affirmed a decision from last year on a suburban Toronto condominium’s “toxic parking situation.” The facts of the case, as summarized by the court, were: There are 34 units in this complex, of which the appellant owns three. She has leased her units to a very popular restaurant. The 162 parking spaces are common elements, and she says that she needs all of them: Read more

BC Supreme Court holds that a positive obligation in an easement is not binding on subsequent landowners

In The Owners, Strata Plan NWS 3457 v The Owners, Strata Plan LMS 1425, 2017 BCSC 1346, the Supreme Court of British Columbia considered “whether an obligation to pay certain expenses contained in an agreement registered against title to parcels of land can bind subsequent owners of the land.” Much like the court’s decision earlier this year in the Crystal Square case, the court in this case found little scope to hold that “such a positive obligation Read more