2024

Renounce, Remove, or Pass Over – What’s the Difference?

Not everyone is well suited or willing to act as an estate trustee – the job can be onerous and family dynamics can make it especially challenging. As a result, the person named as an estate trustee in a will, or who has the first right to act as estate trustee under the Estates Act, […]

Advice to Beneficiaries, Advice to Executors and Trustees, Court Applications to Remove an Executor / Estate Trustee, Estate Administration, Estate Litigation, Estate Trustee During Litigation, Other Claims & Remedies Against Estates

Litigation en Français

Under the Courts of Justice Act, the official languages of the courts of Ontario are English and French.[1] A party to a proceeding who speaks French has the right to require that it be conducted as a bilingual proceeding, meaning: – The hearings that the party specifies shall be presided over by a judge or

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Orders for Contempt – Who, What, Where and How?

The notion of having an individual cited or declared in contempt of Court is something litigants may hear about, but the nuances of obtaining a contempt order are worth reviewing. Generally, a motion for contempt may be brought when a person has failed to comply with the terms of a Court order. In particular, Rule

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How Long Do You Have to Bring a Will Challenge?

In Ontario, most legal claims are subject to the basic two-year limitation period set out in Section 4 of the Limitations Act, 2002, SO 2002, c 24, Sch B (the “Limitations Act”).  This basic limitation period requires legal claims to be brought within two years of the day on which the claim is first discovered.

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