Announcement: Leadership Change at the British Columbia Law Institute 

The Board of Directors of the British Columbia Law Institute (BCLI) announces that Karen Campbell will be departing her role as Executive Director to join OKT Law. Since joining BCLI in 2020, Karen has provided the Institute with exceptional leadership through a period of renewal, growth, and increasing impact. During this time, BCLI has strengthened its position as an independent leader in law reform and deepened its engagement with legal professionals and community partners across Read more

Supreme Court Recognizes New Tort for Intimate Partner Violence

The Supreme Court of Canada’s decision in Ahluwalia v. Ahluwalia (2026 SCC 16) is a landmark development in Canadian family law and tort law. In recognizing a new tort of intimate partner violence, the Court held that existing torts, such as assault, battery, and intentional infliction of emotional distress, do not adequately capture the nature of coercive control that can arise in intimate relationships. The decision is significant not only because it establishes a new Read more

BCLI issues report curbing unnecessary litigation risk for directors and officers

BCLI has issued a new report aimed at injecting more clarity into an area of law where uncertainty creates unnecessary risk for directors and officers of being sued personally because of wrongs committed by their corporations. The Report on Non-Statutory Liability of Directors and Officers addresses a grey area where corporate law and the law of torts intersect, namely under what circumstances directors and officers share liability with the corporation for a common law tort. Read more

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