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Judicial Discretion as Political Choice: The Supreme Court of Canada's Costs Awarding Power

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 August 2018

Abstract

This article analyzes an important discretionary power of the Supreme Court of Canada, the ability to award costs. With the use of an original data set, we explore trends in costs awarding in public interest litigation at the Supreme Court from 1970 to 2012. Our findings suggest that, over time, the Court has tended to favour nongovernment parties over government parties where the former are less likely to pay costs when they lose and more likely to receive costs when they win. In these cases, costs orders were more likely to benefit public interest litigants, such as nongovernmental organizations, than individual litigants and businesses. Together, these findings suggest a sensitivity to access to justice concerns when making costs orders, though some may argue that this sensitivity by the Court does not extend far enough.

Résumé

Cet article analyse l'important pouvoir discrétionnaire qu'a la Cour suprême du Canada d'allouer des dépens. En nous basant sur des données que nous avons réunies, nous étudions la répartition de l'allocation des dépens dans les causes d'intérêt public de 1970 à 2012 et les tendances qui s'en dégagent. Nous constatons qu'au fil du temps, la Cour a eu tendance à favoriser les parties non-gouvernementales plutôt que les parties gouvernementales, les premières payant moins souvent les dépens quand elles perdent et recevant plus souvent les dépens quand elles gagnent. Dans ces causes, l'allocation des dépens profitait plus souvent aux organisations non-gouvernementales qu'aux simples individus ou aux entreprises commerciales. Ensemble, ces résultats suggèrent que la Cour se soucie de la question de l'accès à la justice lorsqu'elle alloue les dépens. Certains soutiennent cependant que cette préoccupation ne va pas assez loin.

Type
Research Article/Étude originale
Copyright
Copyright © Canadian Political Science Association (l'Association canadienne de science politique) and/et la Société québécoise de science politique 2018 

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Footnotes

Acknowledgements: The authors thank Christopher P. Manfredi, Emmett Macfarlane, and Kate Puddister, as well as the journal’s anonymous reviewers and editors for their insightful comments and feedback. Both authors contributed equally to this article.

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