February 27, 2026
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 Read more
February 6, 2026
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 Read more
January 9, 2026
Alberta Court of Appeal overturns mandatory injunction to transfer land
Scammell v Scammell, 2025 ABCA 425, was an appeal from a decision of a chambers judge “removing [the appellant] as co-trustee of the Scammell Family Trust, appointing her brother Randy Scammell as co-trustee in her place, and directing her to transfer three parcels of land to her brothers Randy and Read more
January 2, 2026
BC Supreme Court restrains City of Kelowna from terminating lease in the midst of real-estate-development dispute
350 Doyle Avenue Holdings Inc. v City of Kelowna, 2025 BCSC 2532, concerned an application “for an interlocutory or, alternatively, interim injunction preventing the defendant, the City of Kelowna . . ., from terminating a 99-year lease for property located in downtown Kelowna”. The case involved three conjoined actions over a large-scale Read more
October 1, 2025
NS Supreme Court denies injunction despite finding applicant had a strong prima facie case
In Court v Court, 2025 NSSC 303, the Supreme Court of Nova Scotia found that an applicant wasn’t entitled to a pre-trial injunction despite having a strong prima facie (= “at first sight”; based on a first impression) case. The Nova Scotia decision is an interesting example of how a Read more
















































