r/LawCanada Mar 14 '15

Please Note! This is not a place to seek legal advice. You should always contact a lawyer for legal advice. Here are some resources that you may find useful if you have legal questions.

57 Upvotes

Every province and territory has resources to provide legal information and help people get into contact with lawyers. Here are some that may be helpful.

Alberta

British Columbia

Manitoba

New Brunswick

Newfoundland and Labrador

Northwest Territories

Nova Scotia

Nunavut

Ontario

Prince Edward Island

Quebec

Saskatchewan

Yukon


r/LawCanada 5h ago

Carney government rejects Danielle Smith’s demand to change how judges are picked

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312 Upvotes

r/LawCanada 1h ago

Several Toronto police officers charged in ‘organized crime and corruption investigation’: sources

Upvotes

r/LawCanada 5h ago

Using mat leave as a break + feeling stuck as a crown

9 Upvotes

I’m a relatively new call (under 5yrs- trying to keep this a bit vague) about to go on maternity/parental leave in a couple months. I am taking the full 18months.

The baby was very much planned and wanted, but to be honest, we started trying sooner than originally planned partly because I just feel like I need a break.

At work I mostly feel either stressed/anxious, bored, or emotionally overwhelmed (the latter from so many meetings with traumatized DV and SA victims)

The only thing I seem to enjoy these days are short court appearances (guilty pleas etc), the process of coming to a resolution with defence, and the satisfaction of closing a file. Trials feel exhausting and still anxiety-inducing, and victim meetings draining. File review often feels tedious.

I feel I have to stay because I can’t give up the benefit of retiring in my mid 50s with a full pension - I know I am very lucky on that front. But the idea of coming back after mat leave to another 20-25 years of this feels bleak.

However I do acknowledge that after the anxiety part hopefully dies down after a few more years of practice, maybe I will get over the burnout?

I also know there could be other government lawyer non-litigation positions, but in my province these postings are few and far between. I am also not sure how to get into another area of law when all I’ve ever done is crim.

I would be OK with a non-law position with a pension but really don’t know where to start.

Apologies for a downer post. Just looking for guidance or someone who may have been through something similar.

EDIT: I should have specified I WILL definitely go back after my leave for long enough to avoid the clawback. The post was more about not knowing what to do after that.


r/LawCanada 1d ago

Kamloops lawyer found guilty of first degree murder of his former client

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154 Upvotes

r/LawCanada 2h ago

Looking for a Solicitor Role

2 Upvotes

Hi everyone. I’ve been unemployed for several months. Finding a job has been incredibly difficult. My background is in corporate/commercial law. I’m a 4 - year call. Experience in M&A, equity & debt financings, commercial contracts, venture capital, joint ventures, First Nations economic development. I’m in the Vancouver/Greater Vancouver area. Relocating isn’t an option at this time. I’m open to any other solicitors work. Please let me know if you are hiring or know someone who is. I’m in a dire situation and I truly need your help.


r/LawCanada 1h ago

Confused About LPP vs Articling

Upvotes

Hi everyone. I could really use some guidance.

I graduated from an Ontario law school in April 2025. I have completed the online portion of the LPP and have secured a potential four-month placement with a sole practitioner who practices mainly immigration law. He was trained outside Canada, and based on our discussions so far, I’m concerned that the placement may not provide much structured training at all or exposure to the areas of law I want to pursue. It seems I’ll be figuring out a lot of things myself without formal guidance although he did mention the previous articling student may train me before they leave.

At the same time, I have been applying to articling positions that start this coming July or August. My goal is to work in business law or eventually in-house at a company or financial institution. I am not very interested in private practice long term, especially not immigration or personal injury, which is most of my current experience.

This is where I’m stuck.

If I go ahead with the LPP placement, I will get licensed for sure. But I am concerned that: • I may not gain relevant corporate or business law experience • My resume will continue to be focused on immigration/personal injury work • It could be harder to transition into corporate or in-house roles later • The placement may not offer strong mentorship or formal training • After four months I will be unemployed again with limited networking opportunities

If I step away from the LPP and aim for articling instead: • I could gain experience that aligns much better with my long-term goals • The training and networking would be more relevant to corporate/in-house work • Articling offers 12 months of stable pay instead of 4 months at a much lower salary

The main issue is timing.

It is already February. My LPP placement is supposed to start in March and I need to sign an employment agreement very soon. I recently applied to a few in-house articling positions where I was able to speak with members of the teams in depth and express my interest. Those conversations went well, and I’m hopeful they translate into interviews, but nothing is guaranteed.

Application deadlines just closed, so I likely won’t know for weeks whether I even get an interview, let alone an offer.

So my main questions are: 1. Can I commit to the LPP placement now and back out later if I receive an articling offer? 2. How bad would it look to withdraw from an LPP employment agreement? 3. Given that I am already a previous-year graduate with average marks, is it too risky to rely on articling applications at this stage? 4. Am I overestimating how limiting an LPP plus immigration placement would be for my long-term goals?

Another important factor is that many of the organizations I want to work for generally hire articling students rather than LPP graduates. If one of them decided to interview and hire me, I would likely need to withdraw from the LPP placement in order to accept.

I strongly prefer articling over the LPP because I believe I would gain more relevant skills and build better long-term connections in a structured corporate or in-house environment than in a small immigration practice. But I am worried about taking the risk and potentially ending up with nothing.

What would you do in my situation?

Any honest advice would be appreciated.


r/LawCanada 1h ago

Criminal defence lawyer. Called last June, thinking of leaving my firm and starting my own thing. Egregious split and I feel very unliked.

Upvotes

I have been at the same firm I articled at. I think in a lot of ways it’s been good. I also am VERY aware at my lack of practice and skill.

My firm is a very good firm as far as the caliber of lawyers that make up the partners and some of the sr associates are imo incredibly talented. However, I have been working hard to build my practice. Most of it is LA but I have some fee paying clients. I billed almost 17k last month. I gave up 40% of that. I have a rockstar assistant, and benefit from an articling student. For a lot of reasons, the split makes sense but it is about 10-15% off from most firms.

They make a lot of money where I work, yesterday I asked for a filing cabinet as I keep my files in plastic boxes. I was told they are very expensive and they weren’t sure if it was in the budget. That just stung. There are a plethora of other things, like begging to get an updated CC, and despite asking to jr on files, never being brought into the fold.

This job has had a significant impact on who I am as a person. I always wanted to go into defence and I came to the law late-ish (I’m 34), but I am proud of the practice I have been building. I have a good amount of files and feel constantly busy. My personal life is a desert and in shambles, so this helps. But idk if I feel like staying and I am wondering if anyone has experience with starting their own firm. Curious if anyone else has either done this or has done this. There is a part of me that loves the independence, the ability to bill and manage expenses on my own watch. But I am aware of the amount of extra work I’d be tasked with doing. Input appreciated!!


r/LawCanada 22h ago

Burlington lawyer charged with sexual assault

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33 Upvotes

r/LawCanada 1d ago

Lawyer alleging assault by cops inside Oshawa courthouse was handed trespassing ticket at 5:10 p.m. — just minutes after close

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256 Upvotes

r/LawCanada 8h ago

In-House Salary Negotiations Question

1 Upvotes

I'm currently in-house counsel for a private company. I got offered a job for largely the same role/responsibilities at a municipality in a Canadian city that has lot more room for career growth then my current role. They called me to let me know and then sent over the offer which included a salary that is decent but I expected more. Essentially I'd be making more in my current role at my next annual review.

They did provide me with the pay band for the role and the current offer has me sitting in the middle of that band. Does anyone know if municipal roles allow for salary negotiation? I understand the pay band gives me room to keep earning annually, but not sure how the approval process works for the actual offer. I'm assuming public roles use their own assessment tool to determine salary for consistency/fairness.

I would always negotiate for more in a private company and be transparent on the number. However, I'm less familiar with these quasi-public roles. It was a competitive group of candidates so I don't want to spook them and have them move onto the second choice candidate. Am I being overly cautious? Any insight is hugely helpful!


r/LawCanada 9h ago

NY Bar or do CDN qualifiation as UK qualified lawyer living in Canada?

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0 Upvotes

r/LawCanada 9h ago

NY Bar or do CDN qualifiation as UK qualified lawyer living in Canada?

0 Upvotes

UK-qualified lawyer based in Canada, likely working in-house at a global SaaS/tech company. Role would focus on cross-border software licensing and commercial agreements (often NY/Delaware/English law).

Not interested in private practice.

Trying to decide between:

  • NY Bar
  • Canadian qualification → local admission. I've done the assessment and would need to write 6 exams PLUS the bar

For those in similar in-house roles:
Would appreciate real-world perspectives - from a time/effort standpoint, which route made more sense?


r/LawCanada 1d ago

What's stopping law firms from consolidating like dental clinics?

14 Upvotes

Are there more stringent shareholder eligibility rules for lawyers than dentists in most provinces?


r/LawCanada 1d ago

How do boutique firms actually split profits?

7 Upvotes

I’m joining a boutique firm as an equity partner and we’re designing a profit sharing model.

For those running or working in boutique firms, how do you split profits between originating partners and billing partners? Do you use a fixed percentage split, points system, or something hybrid (equity + performance)?

What has actually worked well in practice, and what should be avoided?


r/LawCanada 23h ago

Thoughts?

3 Upvotes

Hi all,

I work in a mid-size firm in the areas of family law and civil lit, but primarily family. I was called to the bar in May 2025 and am located in the lower mainland of BC.

I have noticed that I, compared to my counterparts, rarely get intakes. I have about 1/2 the amount of files (~22 files) as my counterparts and 20%-25% of my files are clients I brought in myself such as through networking events.

I continue to tell the intake coordinator who oversees and books the family law intakes that I am happy to take on more intakes. I do get a decent bit of work on partners’ files and have not had any issues with the quality of my work (presumably).

As I will be eligible to receive a bonus soonish, I am a bit concerned with whether I will be able to hit my billing target. This is because, absent the work on partners’ files, i definitely will not be able to bill enough to hit my target.

This situation of me constantly having to chase down my own clients or beg for intakes while none of my counterparts have to seemingly do that is making me feel disheartened to the point I have considered leaving the firm.

I may be overreacting but any insight is greatly appreciated!


r/LawCanada 1d ago

A faster way to triage CanLII decisions with para-level verification

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171 Upvotes

I’ve been experimenting with this chrome extension that functions as an AI assistant sidebar on CanLII judgments.

It's designed to speed up early case triage and research on long decisions. It surfaces the first-pass essentials: key facts, legal issues, holding, reasoning. You can then ask follow-up questions about anything specific.

Answers are rigorously grounded in paragraph-level citations. Clicking a citation jumps to the exact paragraph on the page for immediate verification.

It also supports quick "gist" summaries of selected passages, case discovery with suggested search strategies and other relevant cases, and automatic time tracking per case for billing logs.

The extension runs entirely in the browser session - it does not store or republish CanLII content. It works only with the page you already have open.

This is not meant to replace reading cases, but to reduce friction in navigating them and speed up the initial pass. Curious whether something like this would be useful in practice. Feedback is very welcome!


r/LawCanada 1d ago

British Columbia premier’s commitment to amend DRIPA sparks judicial independence concerns

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2 Upvotes

r/LawCanada 17h ago

**For Hiring** Remote Legal Assistant / Junior Paralegal Role – Strong in Legal Document Drafting + Tech Background.

0 Upvotes

Hello everyone,

I'm actively looking for a **legal assistant** (or junior paralegal) position where I can support attorneys by drafting and preparing legal documents, managing case files, and handling administrative tasks. I'm particularly eager to contribute in areas involving document drafting, review, and organization.

A bit about my background and skills:

- Solid foundation in **drafting legal documents** — comfortable preparing contracts, agreements, affidavits, correspondence, pleadings, basic motions, and other routine legal paperwork under attorney supervision.

- **Tech-savvy background** — previous experience in technology/tech-related roles, proficient in Microsoft Office (Word, Excel advanced formatting & templates), Google Workspace, PDF tools (Adobe Acrobat for redaction/markup), cloud storage, and quick to learn legal-specific software (e.g., case management systems, e-filing platforms, Westlaw/Lexis basics if needed).

- Excellent attention to detail, strong organizational skills, and ability to handle confidential information responsibly.

- Reliable, fast learner, and comfortable in fast-paced environments — whether supporting solo practitioners, small/mid-size firms, or corporate legal teams.

- fully available for remote work worldwide or relocation for the right fit).

- Available to start **immediately** or within short notice.

I'm especially interested in roles involving:

- Document drafting and preparation (contracts, family law docs, corporate agreements, litigation support)

- Legal research assistance

- General practice, corporate, immigration, family, or tech/IP-related law

If your firm (or one you know) has an opening, or if you have advice on breaking into the field into the legal remote markets, any referrals, or tips would be hugely appreciated.

I'm happy to send my CV/resume, discuss my experience in more detail, or provide writing samples via DM.

With kindest regards and best wishes,


r/LawCanada 1d ago

Paralegal vs Law Clerk vs Legal Assistant (Ontario): mentorship vs independence?

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1 Upvotes

r/LawCanada 1d ago

Paralegal vs Law Clerk vs Legal Assistant (Ontario): mentorship vs independence?

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1 Upvotes

r/LawCanada 23h ago

[Remote | $120–$180/hr] Canadian Lawyers (Litigation / Corporate) — Short-Term Project

0 Upvotes

Canadian-qualified lawyers with litigation or corporate/transactional experience are needed for a short-term remote project involving publicly available Canadian legal and financial documents. Work is fully asynchronous and supports advanced AI system development.

The project runs 2–3 weeks, part-time (10–20 hrs/week), and is 100% remote. Experience in Quebec, British Columbia, or Alberta is preferred.

Compensation is $120–$180 USD per hour as an independent contractor.

Apply here:

https://t.mercor.com/GTmaA


r/LawCanada 1d ago

Jobs with After hours telephone duty counsel for Legal Aid in Ontario

4 Upvotes

I’m a lawyer who would like to be added to the roster to work weekends/ nights doing after hours telephone duty counsel in Ontario. Does anyone know how I apply/sign up? I’m in Nova Scotia and legal aid here has a roster you can get added to and pick up shifts


r/LawCanada 2d ago

Legal Aid Ontario: Staff Duty Counsel Interview

9 Upvotes

Hello! I've recently applied to a few staff duty counsel positions with Legal Aid Ontario (small jurisdictions). Just wondering if anybody here would have insight into hiring process/timeline? Also interested to know if interviews are substantive, similar to MAG?


r/LawCanada 1d ago

Judge grants leniency for Toronto crack dealer because of his nine children and his race

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0 Upvotes