The Top #1 Mistake People Make When Hiring a Lawyer to Resolve a Dispute & How to Avoid It!

I’ve got a secret to tell you that shouldn’t be a secret. But it seems it is. So come in closer, and I’ll whisper it to you.

Before you initiate any legal process which you intend to hire a lawyer for, carefully evaluate if you might spend more on that lawyer than you are likely to benefit from that process!

That’s it. Simple, eh? Think everyone already knows and does that? Common sense would say yes, but I have three decades of legal experience that says NO.

THE PROBLEM OF SPENDING MORE ON CASES THAN THEY ARE WORTH

So what’s the problem? There are likely many reasons people violate this rule of nature:

  1. False hope that their case will quickly settle as soon as legal action is commenced, because the other side will be so intimidated by the strength of their case and not want to spend any money fighting them. It’s best to assume your case will never settle, and only consider it a bonus if it does.

  2. Overconfidence that because their cause is so just and to them easy to understand, that it will surely be super quick and cheap to vindicate themselves before any decision maker, resulting in recovering huge amounts of money or other valuable remedies.

  3. Inexperience with contentious legal processes, that always seem to take way more time and effort than even the most pessimistic of us would imagine could be possible.

  4. Underestimating how long it takes lawyers to accomplish anything, where only hourly rates are being compared, but there is no sense of what a ridiculous number of those hours might need to be invested into an adversarial process from start to finish.

  5. Failure of the client to push the lawyer for a non-binding estimate of fees and failure of the lawyer to volunteer such an estimate, because everyone is too scared to talk about worst-case scenarios that could lead to horrific legal costs.

  6. Failure of the lawyer to carefully assess all legal options and recommend the most proportionate process that is likely to maximize the cost-benefit ratio, instead pursuing the costliest legal route which permits the most remedies to be sought but possibly at an unaffordable price for the client that takes years longer than the quickest, cheapest option.

  7. Failure of both the lawyer and client to collaborate on figuring out how much a case might really be worth, prior to initiating any formal process.

DISPROPORTIONALITY HAPPENS OVER AND OVER AGAIN

Anonymized personal examples I can give you where I’ve witnessed other parties (who were always represented by experienced counsel) violating this rule include:

  • for a personal injury tort, even though the record damages for that particular type of case in all of Canadian history was about $100,000, the plaintiff sued for $88 million dollars, quickly using up likely more than $100,000 in legal time and getting nowhere, only to abandon the case;

  • for an employment contract dispute, even though the most the plaintiff could possibly recover was about $30,000, instead of pursuing the matter in Small Claims Court (with a limit of $35,000), the plaintiff commenced an action in Superior Court, quickly running up $60,000 in legal fees, eventually settling for half that amount of $30,000, but then appealing when they didn’t receive a costs award in their favour, where they ran up yet more fees, lost the appeal, and had costs awarded against them, leaving them much worse off than when they started;

  • for a construction dispute, even though the plaintiff’s damages might have at best amounted to $5,000, they sued numerous parties for $60,000 in Superior Court, despite their legal costs to end of trial likely being about double that amount;

  • for a land dispute where the plaintiff was being flooded by neighbours, the plaintiff proceeded by way of Civil Action for monetary damages (rather than Civil Application solely for injunctive relief to stop the flooding), naming a host of governments, big corporations and individuals as defendants (all of whom lawyered up), potentially running up a million dollars in legal fees fighting all these people to the bitter end when it was highly unlikely the plaintiff could afford those fees or that they would recover more than they were spending;

  • for a trespass dispute, where a very small telephone box was placed on the plaintiff’s leased land without an easement, the plaintiff sued in Superior Court for $250,000, with legal costs to trial likely being at least half that amount, but the realistic value of the case being more in the Small Claims Court range.

HOW TO AVOID THIS #1 MISTAKE & ALL THE MISERY THAT COMES WITH IT

Many legal problems don’t have simple solutions. But this one does, mainly focussed on obtaining a dose of reality through three principles:

  1. Collaborate with a lawyer prior to starting any process to conduct a harsh, blunt assessment of what your case might really be worth. If no case like yours in Canadian history has ever produced the results you desire, you likely aren’t going to be that precedent-setting case. At least with buying a lottery ticket, you do have a small chance. But when you think a $10,000 case is really worth $1 million, you have no chance. DO NOT hire the lawyer who only tells you what you want to hear, hire the one who tells you what you don’t want to hear as to what your case is worth, and how much it will cost.

  2. Ask your lawyer for a frank estimate of likely fees to case completion. If your lawyer won’t give you a non-binding rough cost estimate of fees to completion of your matter, find another lawyer. Lawyers aren’t obliged to give you an estimate, and such estimates can be unreliable. But there are basic realities that a one-day Small Claims Court trial occurring after 12 months total in court is going to cost a fraction of the price of a 10-day Superior Court trial occurring after 6 years total in court.

  3. Generally always prefer the quickest, cheapest legal process, even if it gets you a lot less than what you hoped for, than the longest, most expensive process that will supposedly get you everything you want. There is an excellent chance you might run out of money or get stuck in some procedural vortex for years in that complicated long expensive process, leading to no recovery at all.

Adversarial legal processes will always take longer and cost more than you would imagine is possible. Sometimes you won’t have a choice over participating in them if you are the defendant rather than the plaintiff. But where you do have a choice, carefully evaluate every option in advance asking yourself questions like (a) do I have a large enough budget to win this, (b) which lawyer will be most cost and results effective, (c) which is the cheapest, quickest legal process to use, and most importantly (d) am I likely to obtain a greater benefit from winning this case than the financial cost, time cost and hassle cost I’m going to incur from pursuing it?

Gordon S. Campbell is a lawyer who conducts civil and administrative litigation for clients in all Ontario and Federal Courts, including the Supreme Court of Canada. Read more about him here.

Why Canada Needs Criminal Pre-Charge Screening Everywhere in the Country

You throw a television remote control that you own at your living room wall in frustration. It’s not aimed at anyone. It breaks as the batteries fly out. You think, “well that’s unfortunate, but no big deal, I’ll just get a new one.”

Think it’s impossible to get criminally charged for that? Think again. I’ve seen exactly that charge as Criminal Mischief while serving as duty counsel at an Ontario courthouse, arising out of a domestic dispute where a woman was charged after police were called by the spouse.

Every Dropped Charge Diverts Scarce Resources from More Serious Charges with Stronger Evidence

What that charge meant was an enormous expenditure of scarce criminal justice system resources:

  • the court needed to process the charge, triggering a series of in-person court appearances for the accused at the courthouse (or by video);

  • a justice of the peace needed to preside over all the remand court appearances;

  • the police needed to arrange for the accused to attend at a detachment for fingerprinting, upload those prints and other particulars of the accused to their database systems, and then prepare Crown and disclosure briefs concerning the case;

  • a Crown prosecutor needed to review the evidence concerning the charge, screen it to decide upon an appropriate disposition, and conduct Crown Pre-Trials (CPTs) involving defence counsel and possibly Judicial Pre-Trials (JPTs) involving a judge to determine what should be done with the charge;

  • the police potentially had to respond to further disclosure requests from the defence for missing evidence - like an officer’s field notes, or a statement from a complainant;

  • many months down the road there would typically be a final court appearance, again involving effort by an already overloaded Crown prosecutor and justice of the peace, where either the charge would be dropped outright, or a peacebond would be entered into in exchange for the charge being dropped.

Is anyone in Canadian society really safer from this massive expenditure of public funds? Would we be better off devoting the same resources instead to more serious criminal allegations with a higher likelihood of conviction?

Everyone agrees that the criminal justice system is currently overloaded. Everyone agrees that changes must be made. While a common solution involves calls for simply spending more money on that under resourced system, we all know that public resources are scarce, and have to come from somewhere. An overloaded public healthcare system is also a reality, where it’s highly unlikely anyone will agree to cuts in healthcare simply to fund the justice system, and every Canadian’s tax burden is already high.

Three Decades Ago Pre-Charge Screening Was Supposed to Expand

There are few simple solutions to criminal justice challenges, except here I (and many before me) have a simple solution for everyone: pre-charge screening!

When I started serving as a Federal Crown Prosecutor in 1995, our office was abuzz with Federal pre-charge screening possibly being brought in, as the provinces of British Columbia, Quebec and New Brunswick had already brought in provincial charge screening for the charges that their prosecutors were responsible for. A full 30 years later, neither a single additional province nor the feds (who also administer the territorial criminal justice systems) have added to those operating mandatory screening at the pre-charge stage. It’s totally baffling as to why they haven’t done so.

Strict Prosecutor Tests for Charges Proceeding Mean Unmeritorious Charges Will Inevitably be Dropped Even if Laid By Police

All prosecutors are guided by the same two tests in Canada as to whether charges should proceed in court:

  1. is there a “reasonable prospect” of conviction, which is actually less than a probability standard (stated in a few jurisdictions as “reasonable likelihood” which would be a probability standard) based upon the available evidence and law?

  2. is it in the “public interest” to proceed with the prosecution?

If the answer to either of these questions is “no,” then the case can’t proceed. These very tests exist to preserve scarce justice system resources.

Thus regardless of what the police might think of a case, charges won’t proceed if the charges don’t meet those prosecutor tests. Those aren’t tests which the police are bound by (generally they just need reasonable and probable grounds of an offence), but why would one bother laying a charge that would simply get yanked by the prosecutor, however only months down the road after clogging up the already jam-packed criminal court system?

Pre-Charge Screening Saves Resources, it Doesn’t Use More Resources

There is a misconception by some that pre-charge screening would cost more money, because prosecutors would need to be assigned as screeners, working with the police to weed out unmeritorious potential charges. But that doesn’t take into account all the prosecutor time that would be saved by not getting stuck with cases for months prior to them being dropped.

To those doubters, I challenge you to test out such a system and collect data. Pre-charge screening could be rolled out in specific test jurisdictions - like part of a province - over say a 36 month period. Then the data could be examined as to whether the charges that are laid move more quickly through the system, or at least there is more prosecutor time available to prepare those remaining cases, and court dockets aren’t as jammed on a daily basis with charges that ultimately go nowhere. The fact that none of British Columbia, Quebec or New Brunswick have abandoned pre-charge screening after over three decades suggests they find value in it.

In 2023 I authored a paper called Smart Bail Initiatives: A Progressive Approach to Reforming Canada’s Bail System. The core takeaway is that data is key. We can’t keep tinkering with criminal legislation, or guessing at criminal justice solutions, without hard data to backup what does and does not work. The same is true for pre-charge screening. It would cost very little to test out in the majority of Canada - especially in Ontario where 38% of Canadians live - to see if it can make a difference.

Firm Secures Stay of Proceedings After Complex Rights & Treaty Trial for Two Indigenous Clients, with Superior Court Recognition of Host of Treaties & New Aboriginal Rights Test

Because it’s our duty to protect our clients’ privacy, I don’t usually post about cases where we’ve been successful in securing the exoneration of clients. However, as our clients chose to make this a test case and have extensively publicly spoken about it, I’m posting about the important Quebec Superior Court criminal decision of R. v. Derek White & Hunter Montour, decided just a few days ago on 1 November 2023 by the Honourable Justice Sophie Bourque.

There can be many paths to being exonerated in criminal proceedings, some lengthier and unfortunately more resource-intensive than others. To secure exoneration here against Excise Act charges, where the Crown was seeking many years imprisonment, ultimately a constitutional test case needed to be created. Seven years later, the Quebec Superior Court stayed all charges our clients were facing.

You can read the mammoth 440 page decision here: https://coursuperieureduquebec.ca/fileadmin/cour-superieure/Jugements_diffuses_sur_X/R._c._White_et_Montour.pdf

A lot of things need to align for any successful criminal trial decision (all of which happened here):

  1. the right issue(s);

  2. the right clients;

  3. the right evidence;

  4. sufficient resources;

  5. the right trial judge.

Few judges would have taken 20 (!) months to draft a decision like this. Her Honour Justice Sophie Bourque is the senior criminal judge on the Montreal Quebec Superior Court. She announced during our court appearance on 1 November 2023 that this would be her last major judgment, as she is retiring in December. It’s unfortunate that others in the future won’t further benefit from her wisdom.

The lesson for all those facing criminal proceedings is that you deserve a unique defence tailored to your specific circumstances, where you may need both patience and resources to see that defence through to its conclusion. There can never be any guarantees of success, however there are many ways in which to maximize criminal defence prospects of success, which in this case required a very significant team effort of lawyers and expert witnesses in order to give the court a sufficient legal and factual foundation to make the findings that it did.

How to Avoid Breaking the Bank on Civil Litigation Legal Fees & Still Win in Ontario & Federal Courts

"Keep out of Chancery ... it's being ground to bits in a slow mill; it's being roasted at a slow fire; it's being stung to death by single bees; it's being drowned by drops; it's going mad by grains."

Charles Dickens, Bleak House, March 1852

In a perfect world, we'd all be entitled to speedy, affordable civil justice. Someone wrongs you, and you get speedy, reasonable compensation for that wrong. Or someone falsely accuses you of a wrong, and you quickly get that accusation thrown out of court. Period.

As we live in a clearly imperfect world, we instead often get slow, outrageously expensive civil justice. Or no justice at all.

MOVING PAST THE DICKENS WORLD OF 200 YEARS AGO

Charles Dickens saw civil litigants being ground down by delays and legal fees working as a court reporter in England's Chancery courts starting in 1829. My 28 years of being called to the bar have taught me how Dickens' works continue to ring true almost 200 years later!

But it doesn't need to be that way. There are steps you can take to ensure your civil claim is adjudicated upon in a relatively timely and somewhat affordable way. Talk to your lawyer about the advisability of these steps in your case.

Lawyers generally aren't out to rip off clients on fees; they just sometimes don't sufficiently canvass all the civil litigation options by looking far enough down the procedural road in planning out a cost-benefit analysis prior to recommending a particular civil litigation step. They may be too focused on being exhaustive in the remedies they seek for you, or too fast on the trigger in trying to land a knockout blow early on in your case.

TOO EXHAUSTIVE COSTS YOU & CONFUSES THE COURT

Being too exhaustive means lawyers pick a very expensive civil litigation procedural route, that may five (or more) years down the road, after $200,000 in legal fees, get you what you want. Maybe. Or maybe not.

Too exhaustive also means the court could become confused about the nine remedies you are seeking, and wind up giving you numbers 6 and 7, but not numbers 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 8 and 9, while really all you wanted originally was numbers 1 and 2. Or perhaps give you nothing at all because your case, as presented by your exhaustive lawyer, is simply too complicated to comprehend easily.

Yes, it's a judge's job to figure out complex things. But judges are human. And even smart hard-working humans can become confused. Why increase the chances of such confusion if you can keep things simple?

I'm frequently approached by potential clients whose first message starts with the phrase: "I have a very simple case." No case is simple, but there are always ways to simplify the case you want to bring in order to speed up resolution and control costs.

TOO FAST COSTS YOU & MAY DELAY YOUR CASE

Being too fast means lawyers attempt what's often known as a summary judgment motion (or some similar interlocutory motion to have a case immediately decided prior to a trial), with that motion itself consuming large resources. However, the odds on such a motion are likely at best never better than 50-50, and even successful summary judgment motions in Ontario are overturned by the Court of Appeal about once in every three cases, after you've maybe spent $100,000 (or more) in fees just on the motion and appeal, only to be sent back to the trial court with nothing to show for your efforts, except two costs awards against you.

So you're rolling the dice gambling that you'll beat the odds (50-50, then 66.5-33.5, meaning you need to win twice, and in combination that means your overall odds are no better than 40-60 to start). And likely spending $100,000 in fees for the motion plus appeal in hopes you'll land a knockout blow, when in fact you're the one who probably will be knocked back, and you'll also be out $60,000 in costs (60% of the $100,000 in legal fees the other side likely spent fighting you) paid to the other side in Ontario's loser pay system. So you'll be $160,000 total in the hole, where if this was a Monopoly game you'd be returned to GO and not collect your $200.

From a speed perspective, there's a good chance you'll lose at least one to two years in the summary judgment and appeal process, putting your 5-year trial date even further away. In rushing to get a quick cheap win, you wind up with a slow, expensive stalemate.

BE REALISTIC ABOUT CASE VALUE & YOUR COSTS EXPOSURE

Now if your case is truly worth $10,000,000, then perhaps complex interlocutory civil motions would be proportional since it usually costs just as much to bring a summary judgment motion for a $10 million case, as it does for a $150,000 in value case. But most cases are never worth $10,000,000.

Plaintiffs (and their lawyers) might delude themselves into thinking they're worth that much. But unless it's high-stakes business litigation with truly provable damages at that quantum, civil litigation is rarely worth more than a few hundred thousand dollars in Canada. Canadian courts aren't big on punitive damages - unlike some of our southern neighbours - so you're only going to get back what you lost. And you don't get much for "pain and suffering" in Canada either. You need serious bodily injury, serious income loss, or serious business loss to get you beyond a few hundred thousand in damages, where you will always have the risk of your legal fees anywhere outside of Small Claims Court amounting to that same "few hundred thousand" range. Leading to an even when you "win" you really "lose" in the end result.

Even if your lawyer has taken your case on contingency and you think you have not a worry in the world about proportionality as to civil litigation legal costs, think again. That iffy summary judgment motion and appeal that you think you aren't paying for? If you lose it, you're be writing the other side a cheque for $60,000 in their legal costs. Read your retainer agreement - your lawyer's not on the hook for that; it's you. While if your lawyer had just avoided such a risky motion unless the odds were massively in your favour, you might not be at risk of any adverse costs award until the trial itself, which you may have a much greater chance of winning than the summary judgment motion.

LAWYERS MAY OVERLY FOCUS ON TACTICS, NOT STRATEGY

We were never taught civil litigation strategy in law school. Or even in bar school. We were only taught a bit about "civil procedure" (what the rules of court say you must or can do with the steps of a case) and "evidence" (what the law says proves a case at a trial or on a motion) and "advocacy" (how to persuade the court why your client should win).

This lack of education in strategy may lead to your lawyer focusing solely on short-term tactics: (1) how to get a case off the ground; (2) how to amass evidence to prove (or disprove) a case; (3) how to present a case to the court orally or in writing. Those tactics might be good enough to "win" the case, but perhaps not in a manner that is proportionate to the issues in dispute because either the timeline and/or the costs of the case are totally disproportionate to what is in dispute.

MY REAL-WORLD EXAMPLES OF TACTICS AT THE EXPENSE OF STRATEGY

I've seen lawyers:

  • start a $25,000-$50,000 in legal fees Civil Application in the Superior Court of Justice for the return of a dog, seeking a panoply of remedies, when they could have started an under $10,000 in fees Action in the Small Claims Court for the same fundamental goal: return of the dog;

  • start a $200,000 in fees five year Civil Action in the Superior Court of Justice for a dispute over a residential driveway, including low-value damages, when they could have started a $25,000-$50,000 in fees Civil Application in the Superior Court of Justice seeking exactly the same remedies without the damages, which might not be awarded anyway;

  • start a $200,000 in fees five-year Civil Action in the Superior Court of Justice for a dispute over $60,000 worth of alleged construction deficiencies in a residence, with a hope at best of recouping 60% of legal fees in costs against the losing party (meaning total victory equals $60,000 in damages plus $120,000 in legal costs would result in a net loss of $20,000 to the winning party), when the Plaintiff's lawyer could have started an under $10,000 in fees Small Claims Court Action for a total claim of $35,000 in damages and 15% of claim value in costs ($5,250), so that even after $10,000 in fees, a win would mean the Plaintiff would still be over $30,000 ahead in Small Claims Court even after forfeiting the difference between the $35,000 Small Claims Court maximum claim ceiling limit and the alleged $60,000 in damages;

  • bring a summary judgment motion in the Superior Court of Justice, win the motion partially, have the Court of Appeal overturn the motion, then have the Supreme Court of Canada refuse leave to appeal the reversal by the Court of Appeal, where even though the high-value claim might have justified the fees the ultimately unsuccessful motion-appeal-motion led to years of case delay and terrible legal costs against the moving parties who stood a better chance of winning a trial than a summary judgment motion.

All those bad results are a product of tactics over strategy. Of thinking along the lines of: I'm going to pursue an expensive procedure to claim as many remedies or as quick of a win as possible, without taking a cold hard look at the true cost-benefit ratio of those procedures.

ASK HARD QUESTIONS ABOUT THE NECESSITY OF EACH LITIGATION STEP

But one can't overly generalize. There may be a very valid reason to pursue an Action over an Application, to proceed in Superior Court rather than Small Claims Court, or to launch a summary judgment motion:

  • if you really need damages in Ontario, you need an Action (in either Superior or Small Claims Court), not an Application;

  • if your case is high value and you believe you have strong evidence supporting a summary judgment motion, it might be worth risking one.

But any client of a lawyer in civil litigation needs to ask their lawyer hard questions prior to authorizing any civil litigation step. The key question being: must I do this?

Some steps are mandatory:

  • drafting a statement of claim or defence;

  • engaging in documentary and oral discoveries;

  • setting a case down for trial if it hasn't already been decided or settled.

But many steps are optional, particularly any motions which can be very costly. You should anticipate Superior Court motion costs to range between $25,000 to $50,000 per motion. Small Claims and Court of Appeal motions will be much cheaper. Some motions may be essential. Some may not.

Ask your lawyer. Discuss the pros and cons. Asking hard questions is a key part of trusting your lawyer.

IN 2023 COURT OF APPEAL FOR ONTARIO CONTINUES TO WREAK HAVOC ON SUMMARY TRIAL JUDGMENTS

To reassure you that I'm not being overly dramatic here about the risks of procedural missteps in civil litigation breaking the bank, without anything to show for that broken bank, we're only 4.5 months into 2023 and already the Court of Appeal for Ontario - deciding a large proportion of all appeals in Canada - has set aside so many Summary Trial Judgments. Taking just the last month alone, the Court of Appeal has set aside four summary judgments:

  1. Land v. Dryden (Police Services Board), 2023 ONCA 207

  2. Truscott v. Co-Operators General Insurance Company, 2023 ONCA 267

  3. Quantum Dealer Financial Corporation v. Toronto Fine Cars and Leasing Inc., 2023 ONCA 256

  4. Pham v. Qualified Metal Fabricators Ltd., 2023 ONCA 255

These were all litigants who were hoping for knockout blows - as either plaintiffs or defendants - early in the civil litigation process, invested considerable resources in delivering what they hoped were knockout punches, only to have the Court of Appeal send them back to the locker room.

I'm not suggesting any lawyer did anything wrong here. The Supreme Court of Canada in the case of Hryniak v. Mauldin, 2014 SCC 7, [2014] 1 S.C.R. 87 actually encouraged these early knockout blows to cut back on litigation costs by stopping proceedings without trials. However, the problem appears to be that while the SCC stated sweeping principles in Hryniak about avoiding trials, the facts in Hryniak were pretty much a "no brainer" that the appellant had stolen $10 million from investors, which neither the Ontaro Superior Court nor the Ontario Court of Appeal hesitated over granting and upholding summary judgment. Few cases are that clear cut, leading to endless disagreement among judges as to what needs a trial and what doesn't.

PROPORTIONALITY OF CIVIL STEPS APPLICABLE THROUGHOUT CANADA

Your risks of being overturned on appeal from a pre-trial civil case determination are lower in provincial and territorial appellate courts outside Ontario and at the Federal Court of Appeal, but there are still real risks. I was taught by my mentors early in my career that the goal can never be to win at the trial court by any means possible; the goal must also be to survive all the appeals.

Likewise, outside Ontario, you won't always have the same choices of Application versus Action and Small Claims Court versus Superior Court. For instance, the Federal Court doesn't distinguish between Applications and Action - they are all the same procedure - and in Quebec, the Small Claims Court limit is only $15,000. But the principle of proportionality is equally applicable in every Canadian jurisdiction: don't pursue legally costly civil remedies and steps when you could live with less.

USE THE QUICKEST, CHEAPEST PROCEDURE AVAILABLE TO OBTAIN THE MINIMUM SATISFACTORY REMEDY

Cheated out of $50,000 in a contract? Sue in Ontario Small Claims Court for $35,000. With all the legal fees and time you save, you'll be ahead in the end unless you truly have a very high-value claim.

Your home driveway being illegally blocked by someone else who claims to own it, and think you're owed $50/day for every day of the last year it's been blocked ($18,250)? Bring an Application, not an Action, in the Ontario Superior Court of Justice to secure lifetime rights to the driveway, and don't pursue the $18,250 (except maybe in a later Small Claims Court claim). The Application might only cost you $25,000 in fees to finish and take under a year to a final order. The Action could cost you $250,000 in fees, and take over five years to a final order. All because you're pursuing that extra $18,250.

The Government of Canada wronged you, and you have the choice between commencing a $15,000 in legal fees Judicial Review and a $150,000 in fees civil action? You need to think long as hard as to why you need that action instead of the JR. The mere hope that you might squeeze some money out of the action in addition to other remedies won't justify it, if it might cost more to pursue than you'll potentially get back.

PROPORTIONALITY JUST AS IMPORTANT FOR DEFENDANTS AS PLAINTIFFS

If you're a defendant in a civil claim, you might be tempted to launch a counterclaim against the plaintiff(s). I'm actually a fan of the best defence is a good offence principle. But don't launch a weak counterclaim which could significantly drive up your legal costs and drag out the timelines to get rid of the case.

Likewise, summary judgment motions are just as tempting for defendants as they are for plaintiffs. Some defendants additionally like motions to strike, which are brought even prior to filing a defence. Then they bring a summary judgment motion after filing a defence if they lose the summary judgment motion. And then maybe bring a motion to compel a better affidavit of documents. Followed by a motion to compel certain answers on discoveries. And so on. And so on.

If you're a defendant with essentially unlimited resources, who really does not care that your legal fees will be out of all proportion to your true damages exposure, and you're going into the litigation with eyes open knowing that, then there may be nothing unethical in your lawyers bringing civil motion, after motion, after motion, hoping to either score a lucky knockout blow. Or at least wear down the other side.

But few defendants (other than governments) have unlimited resources. And most would rather spend those resources on things other than lawyers. A better holiday party? Enhanced employee bonuses? They all strike me as a better use of funds than pouring money into a legal black hole.

So defendants, just like plaintiffs, need to ask the same hard questions of their lawyers:

  • why are these legal steps necessary?

  • what are our true civil procedure options?

  • what is our true liability exposure?

  • will it be cheaper to settle than litigation?

  • what is the cheapest, most reliable way to bring the case to a final determination other than settlement?

There's no need in Canada to break the bank to win at civil litigation as either a plaintiff or defendant if you make careful proportional choices at every step down a litigation pathway. But one misstep off that path could still make you a character in a Charles Dickens novel of the mid-19th century. Only careful collaboration with your lawyer will avoid landing in a Bleak House.

Gordon S. Campbell represents civil applicants, plaintiffs, appellants, defendants and respondents throughout Ontario and Federal Courts, including at the Ontario Superior Court of Justice, Ontario Divisional Court, Court of Appeal for Ontario, Federal Court, Tax Court of Canada, Federal Court of Appeal and Supreme Court of Canada. Learn more at www.acmlawfirm.ca.

Why Criminal Appeals Are the Easiest of All Appeals to Win: Winning Your Right to a New Trial, Reduced Sentence or Acquittal

You should never approach your criminal defence with the attitude of: no big deal if I lose my trial, I can always appeal!

Your Best Chance of Acquittal is Always at Trial, Not Appeal

Your best shot at winning any criminal case being brought against you will always be at the trial court. Hopefully, your criminal defence lawyer will be able to convince the Crown prosecutor to completely drop your charges prior to trial. Or perhaps negotiate some kind of acceptable plea deal for you that involves lesser charges, or a minimal sentence.

But even if you’re forced to go to trial, because you are entitled to the presumption of innocence, and you’ll benefit from the very high criminal standard of “proof beyond a reasonable doubt” being required in order for a court to enter a conviction against you, your best chance for an acquittal on all or some charges, and your best chance for a reasonable sentence if you are convicted of anything, will be before the trial judge.

Your Odds are 1 in 3 of Winning a Criminal Appeal

However, if you are convicted of a crime you wish to continue to contest, you should know that appellate court stats in Canada give you about a 1 in 3 chance of success of some sort on appeal. Which really are pretty good odds.

That 1 in 3 doesn’t mean that you’ll necessarily be acquitted on appeal. Usually, it means you’ll receive a new trial (where unfortunately it’s always possible you’ll be convicted again, but hopefully not). Sometimes it means you’ll receive a reduced sentence on appeal. Occasionally it does in fact mean you’ll be totally exonerated by the appellate court.

Vast Majority of Appeals SCC Agrees to Hear Are Criminal Cases

Even if you have to fight your criminal case as high as the Supreme Court of Canada, your odds of getting the highest court in the land to hear your criminal appeal are way better than for any other kind of appeal.

In 2022, only 27% of all SCC leave to appeal applications involved criminal cases (124 leave applications in total). However, 65% of all appeals heard by the Supreme Court of Canada involved criminal cases (35 in total).

An Accused’s Appeal Doesn’t Raise Risk of a Crown Cross-Appeal

Do be aware that the Crown could appeal your acquittal or sentence, just like you can appeal your conviction or sentence, though Crown appeals aren’t all that common. Previously in Canadian history, criminal Crown appeals weren’t even permitted, with the principle being that the trial judge’s decision should always be deferred to. But in more recent decades, the Crown will from time to time choose to appeal acquittals where it is believed the acquittal was not legally and factually sound, or also choose to appeal sentences that are claimed to be inadequate.

But having previously conducted many criminal appeals for the Crown up to the level of the Supreme Court of Canada - both bringing the appeals on behalf of the Crown and defending against appeals brought by accused - I don’t believe that an accused bringing an appeal raises the risk of a cross-appeal by the Crown (to for example attempt to raise a trial sentence). Ultimately the Crown is required to act in the public interest, unlike private litigants who are certainly engage in tit for tat civil appeals.

Two Keys To Winning a Criminal Appeal is Be on Time & Hire Experienced Appellate Counsel

Typically you only have 30 days in which to appeal from the date of imposition of sentence. Even if you don’t have the money at the point to hire a lawyer, or are still trying to find a lawyer, you absolutely can’t miss that 30 days appeal window. It’s very strict. Far better to serve and file a very simple Notice of Appeal that you draft yourself in a timely way, where the appeal can later be fixed up by a lawyer, than to miss that 30 day deadline in hopes that your lawyer can later ask for an extension. Extensions are rarely granted.

Because the burden on an appeal will rest entirely upon you, unlike at trial when the burden of proof rested entirely upon the Crown, you absolutely need to hire an experienced appellate lawyer for your criminal appeal to stand a reasonable chance of success. Perhaps counterintuitively, appeals of very complex criminal cases where trials spanned many weeks will cost far less than the trial (because the appeal will only be one day in court, but may require many days or weeks of preparation). Whereas appeals of very simple criminal cases may cost more than the criminal trial (because there will be a cost for the transcripts of evidence, the appeal will still take a day in court, and drafting a complex factum of legal argument as well as analyzing the transcripts could take up more time than the entire trial required).

It’s always best to anticipate an adverse result at a criminal trial, and plan accordingly for an appeal well in advance of the trial verdict, regardless of how confident you might be about a positive trial outcome. That way you can budget for an appeal in advance, interview potential appellate lawyers (as many trial lawyers don’t do appeals), and even plan for a bail pending appeal application (as you don’t want to get stuck serving out your sentence while your appeal is pending).

Gordon S. Campbell is a criminal appellate lawyer who practices throughout Canada up to the level of the Supreme Court of Canada.

How to Win Your Family Law Appeal to the Ontario Court of Appeal or Divisional Court & How to Know if You Should Appeal

You often won't have a choice about going to Family Court at the trial level. Either you're the Applicant, petitioning the court for something (divorce, spousal support, child support, child custody), or you're the Respondent replying to an application for one of those things by your ex-partner. Sometimes you'll be happy with the outcome of your family law case at the trial level. But at other times you’ll be dissatisfied, either because you didn't get everything you asked for, or because the other side got some or all of what it asked for.

Compared to a trial where you had no choice but to show up, you'll always have a choice over whether to appeal a negative family trial court judgment to a higher court (unless you're forced to respond to an appeal by the other party to a case). The strategy to win a family law appeal is actually quite different than a winning family trial strategy, as trials are driven almost entirely by the facts (within a thin legal veneer spread on top), while appeals are driven by the law.

The questions you should be asking yourself in considering whether to appeal are:

HOW GREAT WILL BE THE IMPACT ON MY FAMILY?

In terms of impact of the family law trial judgment, a slightly too high (in your opinion) spousal support award against you would arguably have a much lesser impact than losing custody of your children to the other party. Because appeals are expensive, it may not be worth appealing over a smaller financial amount, but larger amounts of money, and child parenting time or decision making could all be worth appealing from an impact perspective.

HOW LONG-LASTING WILL BE THE NEGATIVE IMPACT?

The lasting effect of the impact of the trial judgment relates to whether this is a final or interlocutory (temporary) family court order, though even temporary orders can become the status quo that is later difficult to change. Final orders are usually more worthwhile appealing than temporary orders, because there is no more “case” after the final order.

SHOULD I JUST WAIT FOR A CHANGE IN CIRCUMSTANCES?

If you think circumstances will improve for you in the future (like you might be in a better psychological and financial position to care for your children), then you might want to just wait out a negative family court final order and reapply to the court later citing a change of circumstances, rather than pursuing an appeal. However, a change of circumstances motion can take longer and cost more than an appeal, so the balance of appeal versus waiting for a change must be carefully weighed.

WHAT ARE MY PROSPECTS OF SUCCESS ON A FAMILY LAW APPEAL?

Consider in as objective of a way possible where the "justice" of the matter appears to lie, and try your best to imagine how unjust to the outside objective observer the negative judgment in question would appear. No appellate court is going to care about you having to pay $550 per month in child support, when really you think the figure should have been $500. However, lots of courts might have sympathy for you losing complete custody of your children, when you had presented a viable parenting plan, and there are serious doubts about your ex-partner's ability to parent.

You will always have a three-judge panel hearing your appeal, rather than the one judge at trial, thus maximizing the prospects of obtaining a reasonable, rational decision from at least two of them (majority rules). However, you should realize that appellate courts generally defer to trial court findings of fact, because it is only the trial courts who hear the live evidence.

My experience has been that family appeals are the toughest appeals of all appeals to succeed on, where statistics say about 1 in 3 criminal appeals succeed, and 1 in 4 civil appeals have some success. Family appeal odds would, unfortunately, be lower than 1 in 4, but much will depend upon how the appeal is presented, and who are the judges hearing the appeal.

WHICH COURT WILL HEAR MY FAMILY LAW APPEAL?

In Ontario family law appeals are heard either by the Court of Appeal or the Divisional Court, but which court is the right court can be confusing to determine. Generally, final orders under federal legislation like the Divorce Act go to the Court of Appeal, final orders under provincial legislation like the Children’s Law Reform Act go to the Divisional Court, interlocutory (temporary) orders go to the Divisional Court and require an advance motion for leave (permission) to appeal. You don’t want to accidentally appeal to the wrong court. Family appeal jurisdiction is sufficiently complex that you should always get legal advice on where to appeal.

An application for leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada is also possible once you’ve exhausted all other levels of appeal. While only about one family case a year in Canada receives leave to appeal to the SCC, frankly not that many apply for leave because the odds are so low, so if you are able to sell your case as involving an issue of national public importance, it may be worth seeking leave to the SCC. Read more about the top four considerations for seeking leave to the SCC here.

DO I NEED A LAWYER FOR A FAMILY APPEAL?

Probably, if you wish to maximize your prospects of winning. While your legal fees finances may have been largely exhausted by trial proceedings, appeals are at least usually much less expensive for legal fees than most family trials.

Appeals involve a much more paper-based and technical process than family trials, thus anyone trying to undertake a family appeal by her or himself needs to be familiar with the rules of court, how to conduct legal research, how to prepare a factum of argument and book of authorities, and how to orally argue the case before the court. In theory, it's possible for a self-represented litigant to conduct a successful appeal, but you're going to have an uphill battle that from a legal argument perspective will be more challenging than the battle you fought before a trial family court.

HOW DO I WIN MY FAMILY APPEAL?

Winning a family appeal involves:

  1. convincing an appeals court there were clear errors of law in the trial judgment which affected the result;

  2. convincing an appeals court that the trial judge so misapprehended the facts as to rise to an error of law (because errors of fact alone aren’t appealable);

  3. convincing an appeals court that the trial judge exceeded her/his jurisdiction;

  4. most importantly, convincing an appeals court that the trial result was manifestly unjust, and that because of the already identified errors, the appeal court should wade into the matter in order to remedy that gross injustice.

How the foregoing is practically accomplished involves marshalling legal arguments based on compelling court decision precedents and presenting the facts from the trial after a careful analysis of all transcripts of the testimony and exhibits in a way that tempts the appellate court to “fix” the trial result. Appellate courts can’t change trial court results just because if they had been sitting as the trial judge, they would have decided differently. Rather, there need to be real significant tangible legal errors that were committed by the trial judge and which may have affected the result, in order for an appeal court to be able to change the result, which could involve the appeal court varying the trial judgment, sending the case back to the same trial judge for reconsideration, or sending it back to a different trial judge (which while common enough in criminal appeals, is rare in family appeals because appellate courts are very reluctant to subject parties to another trial).

Gordon S. Campbell practices family appeals law throughout Ontario before the Divisional Court and the Court of Appeal for Ontario. Learn more at www.acmlawfirm.ca.