Vancouver Sun

Legal community eyes ruling in appeal court

- MICHAEL MACDONALD

HALIFAX • Canada’s legal community is keeping a close watch on a Halifax courtroom, where a Christian university is under scrutiny for its policy on intimate relations among students, the head of Nova Scotia’s law society says.

Jill Perry, president of the Nova Scotia Barristers’ Society, said outside court Wednesday the case is the first of three involving Trinity Western University in British Columbia to reach the provincial appeal court level.

“Everybody’s watching Nova Scotia to see what happens,” Perry said on the first day of what is expected to be a three-day hearing before the Nova Scotia Court of Appeal.

The university’s plans to open a law school in Langley, B.C., have drawn criticism because students will be required to sign a so-called community covenant that forbids sex outside of marriage between a man and a woman.

In April 2014, the Nova Scotia law society amended its regulation­s to say the requiremen­t represents unlawful discrimina­tion against gays and lesbians. As a result, graduates of the law school would not be allowed to article or practise law in Nova Scotia.

In January, a Nova Scotia Supreme Court judge decided the law society exceeded its jurisdicti­on. Judge Jamie Campbell said the move also amounted to an infringeme­nt on religious freedom.

Law societies in Ontario and B.C. have also opposed granting accreditat­ion to Trinity law school graduates. Both of those cases will be dealt with by each province’s appeal court in June.

Inside the Halifax courtroom Wednesday, 20 lawyers shuffled through legal briefs before a five-judge panel.

Law society lawyer Marjorie Hickey told the panel that the lower court ruling failed to properly consider the broad nature of the Legal Profession Act, which says the purpose of the law society is to “uphold and protect the public interest in the practice of law.”

She said the self-governing body had far-reaching obligation­s beyond overseeing the qualificat­ions and conduct of its members.

As the gatekeeper of the legal profession, the law society must also seek to improve the administra­tion of justice, while keeping up with broader societal trends, Hickey said.

“There’s much more than bald words in this statute,” she said, adding that the law society has a long history of focusing on equality of opportunit­y.

Hickey cited a landmark report in 1991 that followed the wrongful conviction of Donald Marshall Jr., which led to sweeping changes aimed at eliminatin­g discrimina­tion in the justice system.

After a series of meetings and broad consultati­ons, the law society decided in 2014 that the university’s covenant was discrimina­tory because it violates the Charter of Rights and Freedoms and the Nova Scotia Human Rights Act, Hickey said.

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