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Quebec Court of Appeal

Highest court in Quebec, Canada


Summary

Highest court in Quebec, Canada

FieldValue
court_nameQuebec Court of Appeal
imageCoat of arms of Quebec.svg
imagesize100px
captionThe provincial arms as used by the Quebec Court of Appeal
establishedMay 30, 1849,
jurisdiction
location
coordinates
typeAppointed by the governor general of Canada
authorityCourts of Justice Act
appealstoSupreme Court of Canada
termsMandatory retirement at age 75
positions22
budget
website
chiefjudgetitleChief Justice of Quebec
chiefjudgenameManon Savard
termstartJune 11, 2020
termend
chiefjudgetitle2
chiefjudgename2
termstart2
termend2
chiefjudgetitle3
chiefjudgename3
termstart3
termend3
division_map
division_map_size
division_map_alt

The Court of Appeal of Quebec (sometimes referred to as Quebec Court of Appeal or QCA; ) is the highest judicial court in Quebec, Canada. It hears cases in Quebec City and Montreal.

History

The court was created on May 30, 1849, as the Court of Queen's Bench () – or Court of King's Bench (Cour du Banc du Roi) depending on the gender of the current monarch serving as head of state first of the United Kingdom, then of Canada. The court's judges had jurisdiction to try criminal cases until 1920, when it was transferred to the Superior Court. In 1974, it was officially renamed the Quebec Court of Appeal.[[Image:Edifice Ernest-Cormier.jpg|thumb|left|[[Édifice Ernest-Cormier]], the Quebec Court of Appeal building on [[Notre-Dame Street]] in [[Old Montreal]].]]

Jurisdiction

Under the Code of Civil Procedure of Quebec and the Criminal Code, someone wishing to appeal a decision of either the Superior Court of Quebec or the Court of Quebec generally has 30 days to file an appeal with the Court of Appeal. Final judgments in civil cases are appellable as of right if the amount in dispute is at least $60,000 in dispute to be heard. The Court of Appeal will overrule a lower court decision if it is "incorrect" on a question of law or if a "palpable and overriding error" was made on questions of fact or mixed fact and law. The Court of Appeal almost never hears witnesses, and lawyers' oral and written submissions are kept to strict maximum lengths. A normal case will take several months from filing of an appeal to a decision by the Court of Appeal, but the court may hear an appeal within hours or days in an emergency.

Appeals of Court of Appeal decisions are heard before the Supreme Court of Canada in Ottawa, but only if leave to appeal is granted either by the Supreme Court of Canada or by the Court of Appeal. Notwithstanding this, in very limited circumstances, a decision of the Court of Appeal may be appealed to the Supreme Court of Canada as of right.

The ability of the Supreme Court of Canada, which has six of its nine justices from common law provinces and only three from the civil law province of Quebec, to overrule the Court of Appeal of Quebec has occasionally been raised as a political issue by Quebec nationalists, who contend that it erodes Quebec's distinctive legal culture.

Perhaps the most significant decision of the Court of Appeal was Morgentaler v R (1974), in which the Court of Appeal overturned a jury decision acquitting Montreal doctor Henry Morgentaler of performing an abortion, despite Morgentaler publicly admitting that he had done so. This was the first time in Canada that a jury acquittal had been replaced by a conviction, on appeal, rather than a new trial being ordered. The Court of Appeal was overturned by the Supreme Court of Canada in 1975. Subsequently, Parliament amended the Criminal Code removing the ability of provincial courts of appeal to substitute jury acquittals with convictions.

Composition

As a "Superior Court" under section 96 of the Constitution Act, 1867, Court of Appeal judges are appointed by the governor general of Canada on the advice of the prime minister of Canada (in practical terms the advice is always followed). Appointees must be members of the Quebec Bar, but need not have had previous experience as a judge. However, appointees almost always have some experience as a judge, usually on the Superior Court of Quebec. The quorum of the Court of Appeal of Quebec for appeals on the merits is generally three judges, but the court has also sat five judges in exceptional circumstances, and in one recent extremely exceptional case, the court sat seven judges. However, for Applications seeking leave to appeal and most other applications in the course of the proceeding, quorum is composed of only one judge of the Court of Appeal.

Originally, the court had four judges, including the chief justice. It is currently constituted of 22 judges, including the chief Justice. By statute, fifteen of the judges must reside in Montreal, while seven must reside in Quebec City.

Current judges

PositionNameAppointedNominated byPosition prior to appointment
Chief JusticeManon SavardApril 26, 2013
June 11, 2020Stephen Harper
Justin TrudeauQuebec Superior Court
JusticeMartin VauclairDecember 17, 2013HarperQuebec Superior Court
JusticeGeneviève MarcotteApril 10, 2014HarperQuebec Superior Court
JusticeMarie-Josée HogueJune 19, 2015HarperLawyer at McCarthy Tétrault
JusticePatrick HealyOctober 19, 2016J. TrudeauCourt of Quebec
JusticeSimon RuelJune 21, 2017J. TrudeauQuebec Superior Court
JusticeJocelyn F. RancourtJune 21, 2017J. TrudeauQuebec Superior Court
JusticeSuzanne GagnéNovember 29, 2017J. TrudeauQuebec Superior Court
JusticeGenevieve CotnamJune 26, 2018J. TrudeauCourt of Quebec
JusticeStephen HamiltonAugust 29, 2018J. TrudeauQuebec Superior Court
JusticeStéphane SansfaçonJanuary 31, 2019J. TrudeauQuebec Superior Court
JusticeMichel BeaupréMarch 8, 2019J. TrudeauQuebec Superior Court
JusticeBenoit MooreJune 22, 2019J. TrudeauQuebec Superior Court
JusticeGuy CournoyerOctober 1, 2020J. TrudeauQuebec Superior Court
JusticeSophie LavalléeOctober 1, 2020J. TrudeauProfessor of Law, Université Laval
JusticeChristine BaudouinNovember 19, 2020J. TrudeauQuebec Superior Court
JusticeFrédéric BachandNovember 19, 2020J. TrudeauQuebec Superior Court
JusticePeter KalichmanApril 27, 2021J. TrudeauQuebec Superior Court
JusticeLori Renée WeitzmanMay 31, 2023J. TrudeauCourt of Quebec
JusticeEric HardyOctober 10, 2023J. TrudeauQuebec Superior Court
JusticeJudith HarvieDecember 18, 2023J. TrudeauQuebec Superior Court
JusticeMyriam LachanceJune 18, 2024J. TrudeauQuebec Superior Court
JusticeChristian ImmerJanuary 27, 2025J. TrudeauQuebec Superior Court

Supernumerary judge

PositionNameAppointedNominated ByPosition Prior to Appointment
JusticeYves-Marie Morissette*November 7, 2002Jean ChrétienProfessor at McGill Law
JusticeFrançois Doyon*May 7, 2004Paul MartinCourt of Quebec
Assistant chief prosecutor
JusticeJulie Dutil*September 24, 2004MartinQuebec Superior Court
JusticeMarie-France Bich*September 24, 2004MartinProfessor at Universite de Montreal Faculty of Law
JusticeGuy Gagnon*September 27, 2009HarperCourt of Quebec
JusticeMark Schrager*June 13, 2014HarperQuebec Superior Court
JusticeRobert Mainville*July 1, 2014HarperFederal Court of Appeal

Former justices

  • Julien Chouinard (1974 – September 1979)
  • Claire L'Heureux-Dubé (1979 – April 1987)
  • Antonio Lamer (1978 – March 1980)
  • Louis LeBel (June 1984 – January 2000)
  • Morris Fish (June 1989 – August 2003)
  • Marie Deschamps (March 1992 – August 2002)
  • Jean-Louis Baudouin (May 1989 – 2008)
  • Richard Wagner (February 2011 – October 2012)
  • Clément Gascon (April 10, 2012 – June 9, 2014)
  • Joseph Nuss
  • J. Michel Robert

Chief Justice of Lower Canada

  • William Smith (judge, born 1728) 1791–1793
  • William Osgoode 1794–1801
  • John Elmsley 1802–1805
  • Henry Allcock 1805–1808
  • Jonathan Sewell 1808–1838
  • Sir James Stuart, 1st Baronet 1838–1841

Chief Justice of Canada East

  • Sir James Stuart, 1st Baronet 1841–49

Chief Justice of Court of Queen's Bench

  • Sir James Stuart, 1st Baronet 1849–53

References

References

  1. "History – Cour d'appel du Québec". Court of Appeal of Quebec.
  2. "Code of Civil Procedure, CQLR c C-25.01".
  3. "Housen v. Nikolaisen - SCC Cases".
  4. "In the matter: Reference to the Court of Appeal of Quebec pertaining to the constitutional validity of the provisions of article 35 of the Code of Civil Procedure which set at less than $85,000 the exclusive monetary jurisdiction of the Court of Québec and to the appellate jurisdiction assigned to the Court of Québec, 2019 QCCA 1492 (CanLII)".
  5. "Quebec Judicial Appointment Announced".
  6. "Quebec Judicial Appointments Announced".
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