'Desperate gesture': Quebec group denounces Supreme Court move on historic decisions
A Quebec civil liberties group says it intends to push forward with legal action after the Supreme Court of Canada responded to its translation demand by simply removing thousands of unilingual English judgments from its website last week.
Droits collectifs Québec said the court's decision to delete the rulings doesn't resolve the issues it raised. "Our intention is to continue the proceedings which, in our eyes, are still relevant at this time, despite this somewhat desperate gesture made by the Supreme Court," Étienne-Alexis Boucher, the group's executive director, said in an interview.
The organization had gone to Federal Court alleging the high court's registrar — the court's administrative body — was not respecting the Official Languages Act. It was seeking a public apology, a judgment from the court, official translations of the English-only decisions within three years, and $1 million in exemplary damages to be shared with groups working to preserve the French language.
More than 6,000 decisions from before 1970, when rulings started to be systemically translated under the Official Languages Act, had been posted on the Supreme Court's website in English only.
On Friday, the registrar announced it was removing all pre-1970 judgments from the Supreme Court website, directing people to other online databases if they wished to consult them. The court's Chief Justice Richard Wagner said in June that the pre-1970 rulings were primarily of historical interest and the cost of translating them would be prohibitive.
The registrar said Friday that although the judgments were taken down, it would begin translating the "most historically or jurisprudentially significant" decisions from before 1970.
The Federal Court application involves decisions that were rendered between 1877 and the September 1969 entry into force of the Official Languages Act, which obliges federal institutions to publish content in English and in French. It came after the court failed to respond to a ruling from official languages commissioner Raymond Théberge declaring that decisions published on the court's website must be available in both official languages.
Théberge agreed that the law doesn't apply retroactively, but he said posting earlier decisions without translating them amounted to an offence under the act, and he gave the high court 18 months to correct the situation.
On Tuesday, Théberge said in a statement that he was aware of the Supreme Court's "new approach on publishing judgments on their website" and said his office will continue to monitor developments in the matter.
François Larocque, a University of Ottawa professor who researches language rights, said that under 2023 reforms to the Official Languages Act, the commissioner has the power to propose a compliance agreement if institutions don't follow his recommendations.
He said the removal of the unilingual decisions reflects short-term compliance.
"The spirit of the recommendation was something different … it was about making the entirety of the court's jurisprudence available to both legal audiences in Canada: the French and English legal audience," Larocque said.
"By removing all the decisions, essentially they're levelling down, right? Instead of making all the decisions available in both languages, you're just going to remove the offending ones and no one gets them on the Supreme Court website."
Larocque said access to translated versions are important, as some of the cases are still cited regularly as jurisprudence.
He said he "vehemently" disagrees with the chief justice's characterization that the rulings are just of historical interest. "Those decisions, even though they're not necessarily cited every day, are still important. They are the law of the land until they are explicitly overruled by a subsequent decision," Larocque said.
The decisions are also pedagogical tools for law professors and having them in French is important.
"I think that's the right way to view all those decisions as being part of the fabric of our legal system," Larocque said. "Everything the Supreme Court has ever done, I consider it to be important."
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 12, 2024.
— With files from Pierre Saint-Arnaud in Montreal.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Trump making 'joke' about Canada becoming 51st state is 'reassuring': Ambassador Hillman
Canada’s ambassador to the U.S. insists it’s a good sign U.S. president-elect Donald Trump feels 'comfortable' joking with Canadian officials, including Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.
Mexico president says Canada has a 'very serious' fentanyl problem
Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly is not escalating a war of words with Mexico, after the Mexican president criticized Canada's culture and its framing of border issues.
Quebec doctors who refuse to stay in public system for 5 years face $200K fine per day
Quebec's health minister has tabled a bill that would force new doctors trained in the province to spend the first five years of their careers working in Quebec's public health network.
Freeland says it was 'right choice' for her not to attend Mar-a-Lago dinner with Trump
Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland says it was 'the right choice' for her not to attend the surprise dinner with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau at Mar-a-Lago with U.S. president-elect Donald Trump on Friday night.
Canadians warned to use caution in South Korea after martial law declared then lifted
Global Affairs Canada is warning Canadians in South Korea to avoid demonstrations and exercise caution after the country's president imposed an hours-long period of martial law.
NDP won't support Conservative non-confidence motion that quotes Singh
NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh says he won't play Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre's games by voting to bring down the government on an upcoming non-confidence motion.
Calgary man who drove U-Haul over wife sentenced to 15 years
A Calgary man who killed his wife in 2020 when he drove over her in a loaded U-Haul has been sentenced to 15 years behind bars.
Speaker's ruling clears path for Trudeau's government to face successive tests of confidence in days ahead
After rallying his party's caucus and staffers on Parliament Hill Tuesday, NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh signalled that he's still not ready to help the other opposition parties trigger an early election, yet.
Opposition leaders talk unity following Trudeau meeting about Trump, minister calls 51st state comment 'teasing'
The prime minister’s emergency meeting with opposition leaders on Tuesday appears to have bolstered a more united front against U.S. president-elect Donald Trump’s tariff threats.