- Reaction score
- 0
- Points
- 110
FJAG said:Interesting.
The Ontario Court of Appeal just upheld the right of parties that had judgments in the US against Iran for terrorism to the tune of $1.7 billion, to pursue that judgment in Canada.
http://nationalpost.com/news/canada/ontario-court-upholds-1-7b-judgment-against-iran-for-sponsoring-terrorism-against-americans/wcm/9b8e075d-cbd0-4166-9080-16d9030547bf
https://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/national/us-judge-awards-134-million-in-suit-against-omar-khadr/article25242269/
The Khadr case should be easier as it doesn't involve a foreign state as a party and ought to work on ordinary reciprocal enforcement of foreign judgment principles. Regretfully, my guess is that the award will be structured by the Feds and Khadr's lawyers in such a way that it can't be garnished or seized.
I'd love to see Speers' family succeed here.
:cheers:
I don't think comity is going to fall in their favor here. A Canadian court cannot be expected to recognize a foreign judgment that is at odds with a judgment of the Supreme Court of Canada. Doing so, arguably, could amount to res judicata (rehashing/disputing facts that have already been judicially determined) and could undermine the doctrine of binding precedent.
Further, the foreign award is predicated on material facts that were, later, disputed in Canada; the material facts post-Canadian proceedings don't support the basis for that award.
I sympathize with the Speers family, but they knew (or their attorney should have honestly advised them) that Khadr's conviction was unsafe and susceptible to rectification. If, regrettably, justice for their loss fell out of their reach, it was only because government conduct on both sides of the border failed them.