Legal Feeds Blog
Dispute over paralegals sitting past bar before court today
Marian Lippa, a director of the Paralegal Society of Ontario, will be making her case in her certiorari application before the Ontario Superior Court. She’s challenging a Newmarket, Ont., justice of the peace’s order banning paralegals from sitting past the bar, a decision she says “has diminished the view of paralegals as a profession before the courts.”
According to Lippa’s affidavit in the case, the events in question date back to June 10, 2010, when she was in court acting as agent for counsel Nicholas Charitsis and Rudy Covre. At the time, she said, there were a number of empty chairs past the bar. But when the Crown called her matter, justice of the peace Grainne Forrest allegedly chastised her for sitting past the bar and told her that from then on, she was to “sit in the body of the court and that counsel had precedence over paralegals.”
There are two primary issues at stake in the case. First is the question of whether paralegals can sit past the bar. Second is the issue of whether they must wait for lawyers to address their matters first before they can speak to the court.
For her part, Lippa argues Forrest’s actions have had a significant impact on her 14-year paralegal practice. “As trained and now regulated professionals, the effect of the order is to bring our work and services as paralegals into disrepute,” she stated in her affidavit.
“Although it may be personally insulting to paralegals to be treated this way, especially those who have been appearing before the courts for years, it is the public effect of the order that is more significant. Members of the public who are before the courts may feel that somehow their interests are not being protected as well as or with the same diligence as counsel when they appear with a paralegal.”
Lippa further noted that the issue has harmed her practice financially, especially given the difficulty of having to wait for lawyers to address their matters in court before she can go ahead with hers.
“As a result, Lippa Legal Services is no longer capable of handling the volume of criminal court appearances it did prior to June 2010,” she wrote. “This has had a significant impact on my business as a paralegal. Because appearances in the Ontario Court of Justice remand courtrooms now take up so much time, there is simply fewer matters that myself and the two other licensed paralegals can attend to in a day.”
At issue in the case is the Barristers Act that gives precedence in court to lawyers according to their seniority. The Paralegal Society of Ontario has also weighed in on a practice that it calls “archaic and discriminatory.”
The schism between lawyers and paralegals has been playing out for years, of course. The latest issue comes as the Law Society of Upper Canada takes yet another step at more fully integrating paralegals since it began regulating them in 2007. In fact, just last week it announced it was ending the Ontario Lawyers’ Assistance Program in its current form in order to launch a new service for members in crisis. The change extends the service to paralegals.
So with the law society taking steps over time to more fully integrate and include paralegals, should the courts and the government, through its lawmaking powers, follow suit?
News roundup — October 1, 2012
Manitoba's legal aid system slowed down by lack of private lawyers, Winnipeg Sun
Lawyer calls Canada's prostitution laws 'failed', The Globe and Mail
Former Vancouver Olympic chief threatens legal action against reporter, The National Post
United States
Gay 'conversion' therapy for minors banned, Reuters
Youth in California serving life sentences can now petition release after 25 years, Reuters
International
Appeal hearing rescheduled after Pussy Riot member fires lawyer, Reuters
71-year-old Cambodian rights activist given 20 years in jail, Reuters
Howling at the moon in Orlando
Photos: Jennifer Brown

(l to r) ACC Ontario chapter president Sanjeev Dhawan, senior legal counsel, Hydro One Networks; Sylvia Hermina, SVP operations, Laurel Hill; and David Salmon, SVP, national sales and marketing Laurel Hill.

(l to r) Paula Rietta, secretary of the Ontario ACC chapter and vice president legal and assistant secretary Ford Credit Canada Ltd. enjoys a moment at the ACC Canada party with Antonietta Marro, ACC Quebec chapter president and legal counsel at National Bank.

(l to r) Moushumi M. Khan, director legal & compliance, BRAC Centre, Bangledesh; Alan Ritchie, Mars Discovery District counsel; Jonathan Kielb, ACC Ontario chapter; Suzanne Cruse, pro bono counsel MoMath, New York, N.Y.

(l to r) Fordam Wara, senior legal counsel, litigation, International Air Transport Association, Montreal; and Kwarma Vanderpuye, SVP & general counsel SDD Global Solutions, New York.

The crew from Stikeman Elliott LLP (l to r): Justine Whitehead, Robert Carelli, Kim Roberts, Andrea Alliston, Adrian Lang, Samantha Horn, and Mario Paura.

(l to r) Nicole Broley, ACC Ontario chapter advocacy liaison and associate general counsel, Deloitte & Touche LLP shares a laugh with Steven Prisco, vice president & associate general counsel, Aramark and Alan Ritchie, counsel Mars Discovery District.

(l to r) Matt Fisher, corporate counsel, Metrontario Investment Ltd. and John Matheson, principal Strategy Corp.

(l to r) Joel Guralnick, general counsel for Vision Critical in Vancouver and vice president ACC B.C. chapter with Pierre Tellis, VP senior Canadian counsel and chief compliance officer, Canadian Stock Transfer; Dario Carnevale of Foley & Lardner LLP in Miami; and David Brilll, EVP & general counsel of AST in Brooklyn, N.Y.
Subscribe to Legal Feeds
Delivered by FeedBurner
Archive
Authors
-
Heather Gardiner
Recent items
-
Jennifer Brown
Recent items
-
Mallory Hendry
Recent items
-
Yamri Taddese
Recent items
-
Charlotte Santry
Recent items
-
Glenn Kauth
Recent items
-
Gail J. Cohen
Recent items
-
Karen Lorimer
Recent items




