Gillian Fournie

Total 72 Posts

Website

Gillian is a lawyer with de VRIES LITIGATION LLP. Her practice focuses on the area of trusts and estates litigation. More of Gillian's blogs can be found at https://devrieslitigation.com/author/gfournie/

Charitable Donations – What Do You Get in Return?

Each December, we are reminded that this is the season of giving. As we are encouraged to lend our support to worthy causes, it is helpful to understand the extent to which donors can control the use of their funds and oversee the direction of a charitable project. Meddling in other’s affairs can be costly, as seen in Fass v CAMH, 2018 ONSC 3386. The Faas Foundation and its founder….

Charitable Donations – What Do You Get in Return? Continue Reading »

Charitable Giving, Contracts, Estate Donations, Investments, Philanthropy/Charitable Giving

Unexpected Death? Apply for an Extension

Death is difficult to control. It has also proved impossible to avoid. However, married spouses are given greater options than the rest of us – they can choose to inherit their deceased partner’s estate under the Succession Law Reform Act or the Family Law Act. When a married spouse dies without a will, the default is that his or her estate will be distributed pursuant to the rules set out….

Unexpected Death? Apply for an Extension Continue Reading »

Estate Administration, Estate Litigation, Executors, Property, Spouse

CRA Keeps A-Knockin’ (and Can Come In)

Estate trustees be warned: you may be held personally liable for failure to pay the estate’s taxes and/or the tax arrears of the deceased. When estate trustees are advised of this fact by their lawyers, pains are taken to soften the blow. CRA tends to be more blunt. Following the death of a taxpayer, CRA may write directly to the estate trustee setting out the amount of arrears owing and….

CRA Keeps A-Knockin’ (and Can Come In) Continue Reading »

Canada Revenue Agency, Estate Administration, Executors, Liability, Tax Issues

Death, Delay, and Dismissal

There are numerous technical traps a lawsuit can fall into which will need to be corrected before the matter moves forward. Generally speaking, the current norms of practice are for the parties to sort out any technical deficiencies between themselves so court time can be devoted to arguing the substantive issues in dispute. The Rules of Civil Procedure support this approach (see, for example, Rule 2 of the Rules of….

Death, Delay, and Dismissal Continue Reading »

Costs, Estate Litigation, Real Estate

Limitation Periods – Not Available to Everyone

One of the first steps following the death of a loved one is to go through their paperwork. You never know what you will find – handwritten wills, love letters, bank statements, or written agreements confirming that the deceased is owed money. If the estate is owed funds, it is up to the estate trustee to collect. That may mean jumping into ongoing litigation to protect the estate’s interest in….

Limitation Periods – Not Available to Everyone Continue Reading »

Estate Litigation, Small Business

Privacy, the Rule of Law, and Apotex Inc.

The “rule of law” is a defining feature of western democracies. Briefly described, it is the insistence that all government action be based in law, and is contrasted with acts of tyranny, dictatorship, and arbitrary exercises of power. The central role that the rule of law plays in Canadian society is most clearly seen in the one-sentence preamble to the Constitution Act, 1982: “Whereas Canada is founded upon principles that….

Privacy, the Rule of Law, and Apotex Inc. Continue Reading »

Capacity Law, Estate Litigation, Family Conflict, Guardianship, In the News, Interest
Scroll to Top