Online Texts at the CCLA Library

If you’ve been into the CCLA Library in the last couple of weeks, you may have seen some new labels on various text books and looseleaf binders. As more and more of our print materials are either being replaced with or accompanied by an online version, we wanted to make it easy for library users to recognize what they can find on our computers. Here’s a quick run-down of the new labels, and what they mean:

ProView Thomson Reuters ProView

ProView is an online platform for reading legal texts that are published by Carswell. Quite a few of looseleaf binders that we subscribe to in print are also available on ProView, which makes it easier for you to search through content, and email or print excerpts for your research. The list of titles available on ProView is continually expanding, so something that’s not on there today could very well be next month. We’re working on a blog post to describe how to use ProView and a full list of what we have available in the library, so stayed tuned for that.

Westlaw WestlawNext Canada

Within the CCLA’s subscription to WestlawNext, we have both the CriminalSource and FamilySource add-on packages. Each of those services provides access to several popular Carswell looseleaf titles (and some titles that we had to cancel in print form years ago due to cost concerns). If there’s a WestlawNext sticker on a looseleaf you’re looking at, you want to access our Westlaw subscription on the computers to look at the e-version. My personal favourite? You can find Ewaschuck’s Criminal Pleadings and Practice in Canada on CriminalSource.

Quicklaw LexisNexis Quicklaw

For electronic access to several very popular text books published by LexisNexis (such as Sopkina on Evidence, as pictured here), you can turn to our Quicklaw subscription. Currently, we have texts in four different areas of law: criminal, family, employment, and general litigation.

For all of these online versions, you do need to come to the library in order to access them. Our licensing agreements do not currently allow for remote access, so you’ll need to be in the library, and on our computers. The upside to this, however, is we’re here to help! If you need any assistance in finding the e-titles on our Westlaw, Quicklaw, or ProView subscriptions, just let any of the library staff know and we can show you where to find them.

Recently Published Ottawa Decisions

Find below recently published Ottawa decisions, available for free through CanLII.org.

Family Matters

Marie Annette Josée Barbarie c. Daniel Binette (2016 ONCS 3585)
pension alimentaire — indemnisation pour les dépenses extraordinaires — directrices fédérales sur les pensions — reçus — portants
Juge R. Pelletier

Gamble v Longpre (2016 ONSC 3499)
separation agreement — father — spreadsheets — signed — value
Justice T. Ray

De Silva v De Silva (2016 ONSC 3471)
ex parte — costs — interim-interim — children — settle
Justice M. Shelston

Tajik v. Maharlouie (2016 CanLII 30896)
disclosure — lawyer — motion — undertakings — comply
Justice A. Doyle.

Cardinal v Thom (2016 CanLII 30894)
update — provide — dentist — conferences — audio
Justice M. Labrosse

Children’s Aid Society of Ottawa v H(K) (2016 ONSC 3010)
children — domestic violence — parenting — access — wardship
Justice M. Shelston

Civil Matters

Mroue v Mroue (2016 ONSC 2992)
arbitrator — estoppel — family-owned business — partners — scholar
Justice C. McKinnon

Eid v Canada (AG) (2016 ONSC 3612)
embassy — struck — intentional infliction of mental distress — negligent — malicious prosecution
Justice B. Warkentin

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Save the Date! HeadStart Ottawa 2016

If you will be taking on any articling students this summer or you’re starting the LPP, mark August 5, 2016 in your calendar! The CCLA Library is presenting a half-day session on legal research, designed exclusively for new articling and LPP students. Our annual program covers the research tools students have available (either through our Library or online) that will be vital to the research they will take on during their articling year.

The cost of the session will be $25.00, and will also include your student’s CCLA Membership for the articling term (which gives members 24/7 access to our library, among other great perks).

Also back this year will be our free Articling and LPP Student Luncheon. This luncheon will take place after HeadStart, and will be held in the CCLA Library. If your student won’t be able to make the session, they are still invited to lunch – we’d love to meet them!

Much more information and the opportunity to register your students will be coming, so watch for details later this month!

Upcoming Training: WestlawNext Canada

Join us on June 9, 2016 at noon in the CCLA Library for a WestlawNext Canada training session. This session will be one hour, and is absolutely free of charge.

For our Westlaw sessions, we like to bring in our local trainer Josée Provost. She is just so good that there’s no point in us trying to do better! If you haven’t really got the hang of the new Westlaw interface, or want to know more about the useful tools built into Westlaw such as the Canadian Abridgment, this is an excellent session for you to attend. If you are a learn-by-doing type, please feel free to BYOD (Bring Your Own Device) and Josée can give you a training password so that you can follow along with her during the session.

If you’d like to attend, please head over to our Event page and send us an RSVP.

If you can’t make it into the library, but still need some help, check out Carswell’s online learning tools. They have a whole bunch of short videos on how to use Westlaw. To give you a taste, here’s the video for one of my absolute favourite functions in Westlaw – noting up a statutory provision:

Recently Published Ottawa Decisions

Find below recently published Ottawa decisions, available for free through CanLII.org.

Family Matters

Yelle v Scorobruh (2016 ONSC 3300)
conference — child — father — urgent — parenting
Justice A. Doyle

The Children’s Aid Society of Ottawa v T.A (2016 ONSC 3190)
child — therapy — insight — baby — father
Justice R. Beaudoin

Wehbe v.Wehbe (2016 ONSC 3227)
costs — husband — wife — vesting — support
Justice A. Doyle

Kapteyn v Kapteyn (2016 ONSC 3097)
terminating event — scholarship — child support payable — motion to change — overpayment
Justice S. Corthorn

Civil Matters

Sproule v Tony Graham Lexus Toyota (2016 ONSC 2220)
holding companies — corporate — dealership — genuine issue requiring — common
Justice R. Maranger

University of Guelph Central Student Association, Canadian Federation of Students and Canadian Federation of Students-Ontario v University of Guelph (2016 ONSC 3189)
redactions — protected by solicitor-client privilege — precise basis for refusal — membership — settlement
Justice M. Labrosse

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How to Find Unreported Decisions

“I can’t find this case. I think it might be unreported.”

We get a lot of requests at the library for help in finding a specific case. Here are the steps to figuring out if the case is unreported, and what to do about it:

1. Have you checked CanLII, Quicklaw, and Westlaw? 

There is no one complete source for reported decisions. Finding decisions would be much easier if there were, but unfortunately there are some cases that Quicklaw will have, and Westlaw won’t, and vice versa. As the CCLA Library has both Westlaw and Quicklaw, you can always check with us to see if the case is available on any of these services. As always, there’s no charge for this. Sometimes the source you see noting the case will say it’s unreported – it’s still worth it to check. Cases have a way of showing up online well after they were declared “unreported,” and it’s an easy enough check to make before you go into the next steps.

2. Is it foreign? Only available in a print reporter?

This next step is another where it’s good to run it by us at the Library. Often times, people are actually looking for British cases and don’t realize it. Or, the case might be available, but only in old print reporters. We can quickly and easily check on these options for you.

3. The decision is truly unreported.

In the event that the decision you’re after is truly unreported, there are a few options:

  • Contact counsel from the case
    • This is an option that skirts the following process with the courts, if you’re comfortable doing this.
  • For Ottawa decisions:
    • The Ottawa Courthouse retains case files until the matter is closed. Contact the correct court (civil, family, or criminal) and request a copy.
    • After a period of time, case files are sent to the Records Centre of the Ministry of Government Services in Cooksville. The court here will recall that document for you – you cannot go to them directly.
    • You will need to pay a recall fee (currently $61.00) at the courthouse to bring the file back. There is also a viewing fee (currently $10.00) to look at the file once here. If you were a party to the file, you can view it for free (but still have the pay the recall fee). You may make a photocopy of the file at the counter (bring change: their copier accepts coins).
  • For decisions from elsewhere in Ontario:
    • The retention schedule for other courthouses may vary. If you need to get in touch with a courthouse in another area, you can find their phone numbers here.
    • The Ottawa courthouse cannot recall these files for you.

4.  Bonus! “I don’t know where this case was heard originally.”

This definitely comes up from time to time – a case is unreported, and you’re not sure where the decision was actually handed down, thus not being able to contact the courthouse. If you don’t know already and can’t figure it out from what you’ve been told or the context you found the case in, you can also come to us for help. Here is what we would check to see if you had available:

  • Judge’s name
  • Counsel’s name
  • Any news stories that might shed light on the location or other identifying information
  • Details from the Higher Court decision (if looking for the unreported Lower Court decision)

Related, here are a few links relevant to carrying out legal research with hard to find documents:

 

 

#ThrowbackThursday

Plaque

 

Credit: Ottawa Rubber Stamp and Engraving Ltd., Plaque: County of Carleton Courthouse, 1871, brass and paint, Bytown Museum, 2014.003.01.01.

This plaque was in place at the old Courthouse from 1871 to 1983. Anyone remember where it used to hang? We certainly wish we had this to put up in the library or lounge!

 

Preview: 2016 CALL/ACBD Conference

Next week, Jen and Brenda will be attending the 2016 CALL/ACBD Conference in Vancouver, BC. This is the leading professional development opportunity for legal information professionals in Canada, and is an excellent opportunity to meet and learn from other people working in firm, academic, government, and courthouse libraries across the country. It’s also where we learn about new products coming out from vendors, and notable legal developments.

Of all of the sessions coming up over three days, here are some of the topics we’re most excited for:

“Webinars: Doing it Right” – Brenda will be attending this pre-conference half-day session, which is timely and highly relevant to us here at the CCLA, since we’ve finally made the plunge into providing legal research webinars. She is very excited to get some great tips on how to make our webinars top notch.

“Everything You Ever Wanted to Know About US Legal Research But Were Afraid to Ask!: US Legal Research for Canadians” – There’s plenty we’d like to know but have been to afraid to ask, so this session is perfect! Currently, the only things Jen knows for sure about US law is that Louisiana follows a Civil Code (much like Quebec), and that you can find US decisions on Google Scholar. Ready to take lots of notes during this session!

“Research in the Real World” – This session is all about the collaborative program Research in the Real World that was conducted in Calgary, between academic, firm, and courthouse law librarians for summer students to develop practice-focused legal research skills. Sounds right up our alley!

“Computers in Legal Research” – Brenda is really excited to attend this discussion on the future of Watson-type AI in the legal world, and the extent to which computers might be capable of replacing lawyers in the future (and the inevitable Skynet uprising of course!).

Librarians love to live tweet events, so if you want to check in on the conference, look for #CALLACBD2016 on Twitter.

Recently Published Ottawa Decisions

Find below recently published Ottawa decisions, available for free through CanLII.org.

Family Matters

J.S.G. v E.M.G. (2016 ONSC 3038)
costs — father — offer to settle — sub-rule — parenting
Justice A. Doyle

Miller v Miller (2016 ONSC 3027)
matrimonial home — separation agreement — exclusive possession — realtor — listing
Justice A. Doyle

Van Westerop v Van Westerop (2016 ONSC 2977)
costs — outstanding — towards — motion — aided
Justice J. Mackinnon

Crowther v Pasian (2016 ONSC 2918)
father — child support — income — intentionally under-employed — post-secondary educational
Justice A. Doyle

Ng. v Charles (2016 ONSC 2946)
child — father — daycare — parenting agreement — interim-interim basis
Justice M. Shelston

De Silva v De Silva (2016 ONSC 2758)
father — children — ex parte — affidavit — interim-interim basis
Justice M. Shelston

Civil Matters

Best Theratronics Ltd. v Canadian Nuclear Laboratories Limited (2016 ONSC 3063)
arbitration — irreparable harm — balance of convenience — continue to supply — pellets
Justice G. Toscano Roccamo

Alan Clausi PC v Bullock (2016 ONSC 3033)
retainer — breach of fiduciary duty — master — damages — motion
Master C. MacLeod

Corbett v Odorico (2016 ONSC 2961)
offer — costs — proportionality — jury — disbursements
Justice C. Hackland

Fernandes v Goveas (2016 ONSC 2960)
overtime — vacations — amend judgments containing a slip — evidence — business
Justice J. Parfett

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Welcome (back) to Robeside Assistance!

Since we started posting Ottawa decisions round-ups in 2010, we’ve had hundreds of visitors to our blog every month. Recently, we started compiling blog posts from legal folks in the Ottawa area, which our readers have responded enthusiastically to as well. So thank you for reading!

Through all this, we’ve never found the name “CCLA Library Blog” to be very inspiring. We decided it was time for a facelift and a new name. Robeside Assistance is a phrase we’ve been toying around with for a long time, and it finally occurred to us that it was perfect for the blog. The CCLA Library is your courthouse library, and we’re here to help you in your legal research (whether you’re gowned or not, of course!). Legal research is expensive and time consuming. Let us assist you – save time, save money, and get access to some of the best legal research products on the market. We’ll use this space to talk about legal research and products, upcoming training, tips and tricks, and of course, the popular decisions and blogs compilations.

We’ll be sticking to a more regular publishing schedule, so feel free to subscribe to the blog by email, or follow us on Twitter to catch posts as they happen. We’ll also continue to include many of our posts in the CCLA News email newsletter every Wednesday.

Thanks for reading, and we hope you enjoy the new look and name of our site!