In The News

Law Times on Ontario's Bill 161

January 8, 2020
Social Media
Download
Download
Read Mode
Subscribe
Summarize
Legal insights from Cheryl Woodin, Charlotte Harman and Katrina Crocker are included in Law Times' look at Ontario's Bill 161. They say the most significant change in the Smarter and Stronger Justice Act, 2019 is the introduction of a “predominance” requirement to the test for certification of a class action in Ontario.

“Historically, the lack of a predominance requirement is likely what has made Ontario (consistent with other provinces) a friendly jurisdiction for class actions that typically involve many individual issues, such as product liability and personal injury cases.”

Cheryl, Charlotte and Katrina wrote on Bill 161's Predominance Test to Alter the Landscape on Class Proceedings in Ontario in December 2019.
 
Social Media
Download
Download
Subscribe
Republishing Requests

For permission to republish this or any other publication, contact Bryan Canning at canningb@bennettjones.com.

For informational purposes only

This publication provides an overview of legal trends and updates for informational purposes only. For personalized legal advice, please contact the authors.

Latest Insights

See All Insights
Mixed-Use Mixed Signals Why Purchase Price Allocations Matter
Blog

Mixed-Use, Mixed Signals: Why Purchase Price Allocations Matter

February 27, 2026
Simon P. CrawfordDana TalucciHennadiy Kutsenko
Simon P. Crawford, Dana Talucci & Hennadiy Kutsenko
Private Equity Investment in Mining
Blog

Private Equity Investment in Mining

February 26, 2026
Leanne C. Krawchuk KCJames T. McClary
Leanne C. Krawchuk KC & James T. McClary
Placeholder
Blog

Inferring Materiality from Share Price Movement: Dziedziejko v Canopy Growth

February 25, 2026
Robert W. StaleyDoug FentonSophia DiNicolo
Robert W. Staley, Doug Fenton & Sophia DiNicolo