Close X
Thursday, December 12, 2024
ADVT 
National

French In The Courts: Groups File Complaint Against Quebec Chief Justice

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Apr, 2015 12:51 AM
  • French In The Courts: Groups File Complaint Against Quebec Chief Justice
MONTREAL — Francophone-rights activists have filed a complaint against the chief justice of the Quebec Superior Court.
 
The beef stems from a brouhaha involving one of his judges over a ruling written in English in a case where the evidence was heard in French and the accused was a unilingual francophone.
 
Superior Court Justice Karen Kear-Jodoin wrote her decision in English this year after both parties agreed in April 2014 they had no issue with it.
 
Defence attorney Frederic Allali later wrote a letter to Kear-Jodoin and copied Chief Justice Francois Rolland, complaining about the English-only judgment for his French-speaking client.
 
Rolland wasn't happy with the content and tone of Allali's letter and filed a complaint with the Quebec Bar.
 
The story spilled into the media and Rolland subsequently wrote a letter to the editor of a newspaper replying to a column by former Bloc Quebecois Gilles Duceppe on the matter.
 
Imperatif francais and Societe Saint-Jean-Baptiste said in their complaint that Rolland should not have publicly commented on a matter that was the subject of litigation.
 
The groups say they aren't happy with the English-only judgment.
 
"Imagine if, in English Canada, a judge dealing with two English parties rendered a judgment exclusively in French," Societe president Maxime Laporte told a news conference Friday. "Just imagine the outcry that would be created by such a situation."
 
Laporte concedes the parties initially agreed to Kear-Jodoin's request to write her judgment in English, but argues they did so because they didn't want to offend the judge.
 
The groups are also asking Culture Minister Helene David, who is responsible for the French Language Charter, whether she finds the situation "normal."
 
Allali says he's happy with the support but will leave it up to the Quebec judicial council to rule in the case.
 

MORE National ARTICLES

Mackay To Review The Case Of Convicted Quebec Judge Asking For New Trial

MONTREAL — Federal Justice Minister Peter MacKay says he'll carefully examine a request to review the case of the only Canadian judge ever convicted of first-degree murder.

Mackay To Review The Case Of Convicted Quebec Judge Asking For New Trial

U.S. Border Patrol Agent Fatally Shoots Man Near Town On U.S.-Canada Border

U.S. Border Patrol Agent Fatally Shoots Man Near Town On U.S.-Canada Border
SUMAS, Wash. — A U.S. Border Patrol agent fatally shot a man Tuesday afternoon near Sumas, Washington, near the border with British Columbia.

U.S. Border Patrol Agent Fatally Shoots Man Near Town On U.S.-Canada Border

New Rules For Tailings Ponds Based On Findings From Mount Polley Collapse

New Rules For Tailings Ponds Based On Findings From Mount Polley Collapse
VANCOUVER — The disastrous collapse of the Mount Polley mine tailings pond in B.C.'s Interior last year has spurred new provincial environmental requirements for similar operations.

New Rules For Tailings Ponds Based On Findings From Mount Polley Collapse

Judge Dismisses Challenge To Christian Law School After B.C. Reverses Approval

Judge Dismisses Challenge To Christian Law School After B.C. Reverses Approval
VANCOUVER — A B.C. Supreme Court judge has dismissed legal action over the plan for a controversial law school at a Christian university, saying the man's challenge is "moot."

Judge Dismisses Challenge To Christian Law School After B.C. Reverses Approval

Ontario Minimum Wage Rises To $11.25 starting Oct. 1

Ontario Minimum Wage Rises To $11.25  starting Oct. 1
TORONTO — Ontario's minimum wage will rise to $11.25 an hour starting Oct. 1, making it the second-highest rate in the country after the Northwest Territories.

Ontario Minimum Wage Rises To $11.25 starting Oct. 1

Case Of Ontario Man Accused Of Killing Two B.C. Girls In 1970s Goes To Trial

Case Of Ontario Man Accused Of Killing Two B.C. Girls In 1970s Goes To Trial
VICTORIA — The case of an Ontario man charged with first-degree murder in the historic deaths of two young girls in B.C. will go directly to trial.

Case Of Ontario Man Accused Of Killing Two B.C. Girls In 1970s Goes To Trial