Vancouver Sun

$30M donor wants his name on all law degrees

- KEITH FRASER kfraser@postmedia.com twitter.com/keithrfras­er

Vancouver lawyer Peter Allard, whose $30-million donation to UBC resulted in the university renaming its law school the Peter A. Allard School of Law, says he was stunned to learn that name would not appear on all law degrees conferred by the university.

When he donated the money in 2014, one of the conditions was that Allard’s name would appear somewhere on the degree documents granted by the law faculty. But he learned after the agreement was made that master’s and PhD degrees in law are granted by UBC on the recommenda­tion of the faculty of graduate and post-doctoral studies, not the law school.

“I was surprised to learn that the L.L.M. and PhD degrees are granted by the Faculty of Graduate and Postdoctor­al Studies and not the Peter A. Allard School of Law, and I was dishearten­ed to be advised that therefore degree certificat­es do not reference the Peter A. Allard School of Law,” says a letter Allard wrote to UBC president Santa Ono in February 2017.

Allard says he met with Ono, who promised that he would look into the matter, but that nothing was done. Allard has now filed a petition in B.C. Supreme Court challengin­g a decision by an arbitrator that dismissed his claims regarding the degrees.

While the graduate law degrees do not mention the Peter A. Allard School of Law, since the 2015-16 academic year, UBC’s common law degrees have been conferred with reference to the law school.

In his ruling on the case, arbitrator Neil Wittman noted that the “most striking impression” in the case was that there was not any significan­t dispute as to the evidence and the witness statements and oral testimony did not reveal any serious issues of credibilit­y. But he said it was “perfectly clear” that neither party addressed the meaning of the words “degree certificat­es” that are included in the 2014 agreement and that no one at UBC told Allard of the distinctio­n involving the conferring of graduate law degrees.

He concluded that the proper interpreta­tion of the words “degree certificat­es” in the agreement mean those certificat­es or parchments granted upon the recommenda­tion of the Peter A. Allard School of Law and not otherwise.

“It follows that the claimants’ claim against UBC is dismissed,” the arbitrator said in the September ruling.

In the petition, Allard and the Allard Prize Foundation ask whether Wittman made several legal errors, including by failing to interpret the reference to degree certificat­es in the context of the 2014 agreement as a whole. The court petition seeks to appeal and overturn the arbitrator’s ruling in favour of Allard and the foundation.

Neither Allard, who graduated from UBC law in 1971 and practised law until 1993, nor his lawyer could be reached for comment.

UBC said in a statement that it was “pleased” to learn that the arbitrator upheld UBC’s “long-time understand­ing” of the 2014 gift agreement.

“Our understand­ing of the gift agreement with Mr. Allard was that degree certificat­es that previously bore the name Faculty of Law would bear the new name,” says the statement written by UBC counsel Hubert Lai. “Juris doctor (JD) degree certificat­es in law bear the new name.

“(Master’s and PhD) degree certificat­es never did bear the name of the Faculty of Law, and therefore they do not bear the new name.”

The statement adds that the university has “fully honoured” the gift agreement.

 ?? FILES ?? The name Peter A. Allard School of Law does not appear on all law degrees conferred by the university at the UBC.
FILES The name Peter A. Allard School of Law does not appear on all law degrees conferred by the university at the UBC.

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