Nca Syl Lab Us Admin 2017
Nca Syl Lab Us Admin 2017
Nca Syl Lab Us Admin 2017
Administrative Law
World Exchange Plaza 1810 - 45 O'Connor Street Ottawa Ontario K1P 1A4
Tel: (613) 236-1700 Fax: (613) 236 - 7233 www.flsc.ca
Administrative Law
NATURE OF THE COURSE
Administrative Law is the body of law regulating the ways in which government operates.
It is about the rules and limits that apply to not only the operations of the Crown, Cabinets,
Ministers, government departments, and municipal corporations but also the various
administrative tribunals and agencies deployed by governments for the carrying out of
governmental functions of all kinds. It is concerned with the procedures by which all these
various instruments of government operate, the jurisdictional and substantive limits on
their mandates, and the remedial structures that exist to ensure that decision-makers of
various kinds act in accordance with the rule of law. As well, throughout the materials,
candidates are encouraged to reflect upon the divide between public law and private law
and, in particular, the circumstances under which governmental authorities of various
kinds or in various capacities are subject not to the special regime of Administrative Law
principles and remedies but to the private law rules of contract, tort, restitution and the like.
Some regard Administrative Law as simply a subset of Constitutional Law and, to the
extent that, for example, the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms and other
constitutional and other quasi-constitutional enactments (such as the Canadian Bill of
Rights) serve to place limits or constraints on the way in which public decision-makers act,
there is overlap between this subject and that in Constitutional Law. However,
Administrative Law is not about the policing of the divide between federal and provincial
jurisdiction enshrined in the Constitution Act, 1867 and the other statutes that constitute
the Canadian constitution. Nor does it concern itself in detail with the constitutional
incidents of the Crown, Parliament and the various legislative assemblies, or the executive
branch.
3. The remedial framework within which the superior courts, both federally and
provincially, exercise their review powers.
Some of you will bring to this subject some knowledge of Administrative Law acquired
during your legal studies in other jurisdictions. Sometimes, that knowledge will be useful
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even if the applicable case law is different. However, be very cautious in the deployment of
knowledge gained elsewhere. There are some very distinctive aspects of Canadian public
law that do not find analogues or exact parallels in other common law or British
Commonwealth jurisdictions.
In answering the examination in this course, you act at your peril if you automatically start
applying the principles and the case law from the jurisdiction of your initial legal training.
CASEBOOKS
The assigned material on which candidates will be examined are:
and
Detailed page assignments are outlined below in the study guide. These page
assignments should be taken seriously. Do not assume that you will be able to pass this
subject by simply reading one of the supplementary texts from the list below or even notes
based on or provided by various courses and websites that offer assistance in preparing
for NCA exams.
OBJECTIVES
Candidates should master these materials and the principles of Administrative Law
embodied in the various segments of the course to the extent necessary to enable them to
answer problem-type questions on a three-hour, open book final examination. Samples
are available online at the NCA website.
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complex facts, to relate the law as identified to the salient facts, and to reason towards a
conclusion in the form of advice to a client or the likely judgment of a court confronted by
such a problem. Since administrative law usually involves powers bestowed on
administrative decision-makers by statute, students will often be required to read and
understand statutory provisions provided on the exam that empower administrative actors.
SUPPLEMENTARY TEXTS
Candidates wishing to consult texts for further clarification and elaboration of the various
principles of Administrative Law are directed to the following. Please be attentive,
however, to the fact that Administrative Law changes often with new Supreme Court
cases. These publications may be out of date in several instances on a number of subject
matter issues.
Your principal objective, therefore, should be to learn from the assigned readings.
David J.M. Brown and John M. Evans, Judicial Review of Administrative Action in Canada
(a looseleaf service).
David Phillip Jones and Anne S. de Villars, Principles of Administrative Law (Toronto:
Carswell, 6th ed., 2014).
Guy Rgimbald, Canadian Administrative Law (Toronto: LexisNexis Canada, 2nd ed.,
2015)
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Study Guide
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(One word of warning: CB, p.22 outlines a high level
description of grounds of judicial review in administrative law.
It is, of course, correct, but it is very much at the highest level
the actual way in which grounds of review tend to be applied is
a little different. For instance, courts speak of procedural
fairness and, in the area of substantive review, they talk about
errors of law, fact and discretion (and now, once again,
occasionally jurisdiction). It is these concepts that are
important in putting administrative law into practice.)
To this list, you must also add the Charter of Rights and
Freedoms (section 7 is really the only provision that matters for
our purposes) and (for federal administrative decision-makers),
the Canadian Bill of Rights. More on those later.
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trigger question is in the legislation itself. So too with the
general statutes about procedure they contain their own
triggers. So you need to be careful to read that legislation if it
applies to your decision-maker. (And a word of warning:
make sure the statute does apply to your decision-maker.
Ask: could a provincial general procedural statute ever apply
to a federal administrative decision-maker?)
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more than this boiled down to its essence, it can be a
decision that is sufficiently general, and not particular to or
focused on a reasonably narrow subset of persons. Exactly
what this means you need to contemplate in looking at the
readings. And you need to appreciate that the general rule
no procedural fairness where decision is legislative in nature
is itself subject to exceptions.
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concretely, what is the content of these procedural obligations?
Within these two classes, there are many details, and you still
need to understand what does it mean in practice to have a
right to be heard and what does it mean in practice to have a
right to an unbiased decision-maker.
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need to explore which procedural entitlements are owed and
whether they have been met, but if you pay no heed to the
sorts of circumstances that give rise to these specific
entitlements, you may end up with an implausible laundry list of
procedural rules that you say should apply when they really
dont. An uncritical laundry list is not satisfactory analysis and
does not generate more marks.
In this part, we deal with an area that has elements of both the
right to be heard and the right to an unbiased decision-maker:
institutional decision-making. You need to understand the
concept of subdelegation. The delegatus non potest delegare
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concept sounds like a pretty potent bar on an administrative
decision-maker sub-delegating powers to another actor, but
there are so many circumstances where sub-delegation is
permissible that, really, sub-delegation tends to be important
only when certain functions are sub-delegated that offend
procedural rules. The concept of he or she who hears is an
example, tied to the right to be heard. This is an issue that
becomes complicated when large, multi-member boards are
asked to make decisions that are consistent when they hear
similar cases, but in panels with less than full membership.
Another issue for these big boards, when they try to make
consistent decisions, is when and where bias concepts are
offended.
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analysis it is usually assessed on a correctness standard,
with any question of deference left to tests such as that set out
in Baker. So please do not confuse the approach you apply for
substantive review, using a standard of review test, with that
which you apply for procedural review, where you do not
employ this same test.
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variables and pay no heed first to the defaults.
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Today, this form of relief is generally codified or provided for in
primary legislation or Rules of Court. This section concentrates
on one of the issues associated with judicial review: standing,
or the question of who gets to bring a judicial review
application. It also deals with venue: which court one goes to.
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