Canadian Constitutional Law #11: Interjurisdictional Immunity Doctrine Friday, Nov 24 2006
1L and Canadian Constitutional Law and Constitutional Law and Erin Morgan and McGill Faculty of Law 5:41 am
We continue our study of the many, many doctrines of Canadian Constitutional theory with the Interjurisdictional Immunity Doctrine, which exempts certain federal undertakings (think Bell Canada) from provincial laws which are otherwise valid. In this podcast you will learn:
- where labour laws go to die.
- what a hopeless anglo sounds like when she tries to read the titles of french cases.
- why my spell-check doesn’t recognize Interjurisdictional as a word.
Commission du Salaire Minimum v Bell Telephone Co. of Canada (1966) “Bell #1″
McKay v the Queen (1965)
Commission de la Sante et de la Securite du Travail v Bell Canada (1988) “Bell #2″
Orden Estate v. Grail (1998)
R. v Pacific Railway (1995)
Irwin Toy Ltd v Quebec (1989)
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