Access to Justice Obtaining Legal Assistance Enables Truth and Just Decisions | Defend-it Legal Services
Helpful?
Yes No Share to Facebook

Access to Justice Obtaining Legal Assistance Enables Truth and Just Decisions


Question: How is access to justice evolving in Canada?

Answer: Access to justice in Canada is undergoing a transformative shift aimed at reducing the prohibitive costs and complexities deterring many individuals from seeking legal recourse. According to Hryniak v. Mauldin, [2014] 1 S.C.R. 87, this cultural shift prioritizes streamlined procedures that balance fairness and affordability. Innovative summary processes strive to decrease red tape, thereby making legal services accessible to all Canadians. Discover how Success.Legal can assist you in navigating these changes and securing a fair hearing for your case.


Understanding the Importance of 'Access to Justice'

An orderly, as opposed to chaotic, civilized democratic society requires a system of law that works for, and is seen as working for, the citizens of that society.  The citizens need to perceive that the justice system functions in a manner that supports, encourages, and enables the revealing of genuine truth and that the laws of society will be applied to the genuine truth.  Unfortunately, as stated in Hryniak v. Mauldin, [2014] 1 S.C.R. 87, obtaining the opportunity to obtain or receive a genuinely fair hearing where genuine truth is presented to a fact finder, such as a judge or jury, who then apply the law, is becoming more and more difficult in Canada.  Accordingly, legal cases wherein people are unable to afford adequate legal representation and unable to present the genuine truth may, and likely are, leading to injustice involving false facts, misapplication of the law, and unjust outcomes.  Specifically in Hyniak, the Supreme Court said:

[1]  Ensuring access to justice is the greatest challenge to the rule of law in Canada today.  Trials have become increasingly expensive and protracted.  Most Canadians cannot afford to sue when they are wronged or defend themselves when they are sued, and cannot afford to go to trial.  Without an effective and accessible means of enforcing rights, the rule of law is threatened.  Without public adjudication of civil cases, the development of the common law is stunted.

[2]  Increasingly, there is recognition that a culture shift is required in order to create an environment promoting timely and affordable access to the civil justice system.  This shift entails simplifying pre-trial procedures and moving the emphasis away from the conventional trial in favour of proportional procedures tailored to the needs of the particular case.  The balance between procedure and access struck by our justice system must come to reflect modern reality and recognize that new models of adjudication can be fair and just.

In effort of making access to justice available for Canadians, the system of justice itself is undergoing remodeling with 'summary processes' that attempt to reduce the volume of red tape, among other things, that impair the affordability of the representation that affects the capacity for many average Canadians to afford, and thereby access, justice.

Additional Information Resources

Need Help?Let's Get Started Today

NOTE: Do not send confidential information through the web form.  Use the web form only for your introduction.   Learn Why?
4
Defend-it Legal Services

490 Kingston Road, Suite 302
Pickering, Ontario,
L1V 1A4

P: (289) 275-3513
P: (833) 243-3336
E: admin@defendit.ca

Hours of Business:

09:00AM - 05:00PM
09:00AM - 05:00PM
09:00AM - 05:00PM
09:00AM - 05:00PM
09:00AM - 05:00PM
Monday:
Tuesday:
Wednesday:
Thursday:
Friday:

Closed on Weekends & Holidays

By appointment only.  Call for details.
Messages may be left anytime.

Law Society of British Columbia, Required Disclosure

Our services to you are not provided by a lawyer regulated by the Law Society of British Columbia.  As a result:

  1. We could be required to disclose to third parties your communications with us and any documents you provide in relation to our advice and assistance as such communications will not be subject to solicitor-client privilege; and
  2. We are not required to have professional liability insurance,
  3. There is no statutory complaint process in relation to the services that we provide and
  4. The Law Society of British Columbia has not evaluated or verified our competence, character, and/or fitness to provide the services.

For more information about the Law Society’s innovation sandbox visit https://lawsociety.bc.ca/sandbox.








Sign
Up

Assistive Controls:  |   |  A A A
Ernie, the AI Bot