Justice Centre granted intervener status in TWU v. Law Society of Upper Canada

Share this:

Justice Centre granted intervener status in TWU v. Law Society of Upper Canada

Share this:

The Benchers of B.C.’s law society, who not long ago affirmed and defended Canada’s free society by recognizing the Trinity Western University (TWU) law school, have now voted to rescind their approval.  Sadly, the majority of BC’s lawyers disagree that TWU law grads have a constitutional right to associate with each other under common values and aims, and to freely practice and live out their religious principles and doctrine.

This is a serious threat to our freedoms in Canada, which is why the Justice Centre has been relentless in its defence of freedom of association, freedom of conscience and freedom of expression, for TWU law grads, and for all Canadians.

The Justice Centre has been granted intervener status in the Ontario Superior Court’s hearing for Trinity Western University v. Law Society of Upper Canada as well as in the Nova Scotia Supreme Court, in Trinity Western University v. Nova Scotia Barristers’ Society  The Justice Centre will be arguing for freedom of association in both court cases. The Nova Scotia case will be heard this December, and the Ontario case in January. In both court cases, the Law Society has ignored the fact that TWU is a private institution whose students and staff voluntarily choose to abide by a “Community Covenant,” which includes a commitment to abstain from sexual relations outside of the marriage of one man and one woman.

Judge Nordheimer of the Ontario Superior Court of Justice accepted the Justice Centre’s application for intervener status, noting that “the Justice Centre concentrates its submissions on the freedom of association issue as it pertains to any group that espouses views that may be unpopular or controversial,” noting the Justice Centre intervention as “valuable to the court hearing this matter.”

The Justice Centre will argue for the Charter section 2(d) right to freedom of association, which the Ontario and Nova Scotia law societies are violating by demanding, as a requirement of entering the legal profession,   that law students abandon their freedom to associate with others at a Christian university that has a Community Covenant.

The decisions to be rendered by the courts in these cases will have a significant impact on the constitutional freedoms of all Canadians.

In September, the Justice Centre was granted intervener status in the Ontario Superior Court’s hearing for Trinity Western University v. Law Society of Upper Canada.  The Justice Centre will be arguing for freedom of association, which is under attack by the law societies of Ontario and Nova Scotia, and most recently, British Columbia.

In July, we were granted intervener status in the Nova Scotia Supreme Court in Trinity Western University v. Nova Scotia Barristers’ Society.  TWU was granted a judicial review of the April 2014 decision of the Barristers’ Society, that graduates of TWU law school cannot practice law in Nova Scotia because of TWU’s “Community Covenant”.

Justice Centre lawyers will argue that the Law Society and the Barristers’ Society violate Charter section 2(d) freedom of association rights by demanding, as a requirement of entering the legal profession in these provinces, that law students abandon their freedom to associate with others at a Christian university that has a Community Covenant.

These Court decisions will have a significant impact on the constitutional freedoms of all Canadians.

 

Read  “In Defence of the Free Society,” submitted to the law societies in Ontario, B.C. Manitoba, New Brunswick and Nova Scotia

 

Share this:

EXCLUSIVE: Jeffrey Evely disposing of ticket after constitutional win (Courtesy of Jeffrey Evely)

Crown withdraws $28,872.50 ticket issued under unconstitutional Nova Scotia “woods ban”

HALIFAX, NS: The Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms announces that the Crown has withdrawn the ticket issued to Jeffrey...
Frances Widdowson (Courtesy of Wyatt Claypool)

University of Victoria trespass case against Dr. Frances Widdowson stayed

VICTORIA, BC: The Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms announces that the trespass prosecution against Canadian academic Dr. Frances Widdowson...
Evan Blackman and his son at a hockey game (Courtesy Evan Blackman)

Father whose bank accounts were frozen under Emergencies Act appeals Freedom Convoy conviction

OTTAWA, ON: The Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms announces that lawyers funded by the Justice Centre will appear before...

Explore Related News

EXCLUSIVE: Jeffrey Evely disposing of ticket after constitutional win (Courtesy of Jeffrey Evely)
Read More
Frances Widdowson (Courtesy of Wyatt Claypool)
Read More
Evan Blackman and his son at a hockey game (Courtesy Evan Blackman)
Read More
EXCLUSIVE: Jeffrey Evely disposing of ticket after constitutional win (Courtesy of Jeffrey Evely)
Frances Widdowson (Courtesy of Wyatt Claypool)
Evan Blackman and his son at a hockey game (Courtesy Evan Blackman)
Canadian Identity and Culture Minister Marc Miller during a June 10 press conference on Bill C-34 (Photo credit: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld)