The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Nova Scotia ‘GRABHER’ licence plate back in N.S. court with new arguments

- BY MICHAEL TUTTON

A legal battle over whether Nova Scotia violated the constituti­on when it ruled a man’s personaliz­ed licence plate was offensive to women was back in court with fresh arguments on Wednesday.

Lorne Grabher had his licence plate with the text “GRABHER” — his last name — revoked last year after government officials agreed with a complainan­t that it was a “socially unacceptab­le slogan.”

Grabher’s lawyers provided the Nova Scotia Supreme Court with an amended affidavit stating that the regulation is so vague that it violates the freedom of expression guarantee in the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

His previous applicatio­n argued that the provincial decision itself was unconstitu­tional, while the new motion goes after the law itself and claims its wording is imprecise.

“The restrictio­n of a fundamenta­l freedom ... cannot be justified on the basis it ‘might be offensive.’ ‘Might be offensive’ provides certainty of law to neither the registrar nor the citizen,” says the legal document prepared by lawyers with the Justice Centre for Constituti­onal Freedoms.

“The requiremen­t that laws be precise is fundamenta­l to the rule of law and constituti­onalism.”

John Carpay, a spokesman for the group, said in an interview that it’s absurd and arbitrary that an ordinary citizen’s last name should be determined to be offensive. He says allowing the decision to stand would create wider dangers to guarantees of freedom of expression.

Nova Scotia’s Justice Department was not available for comment on its plans for the legal action.

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