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Debt and Federalism : Landmark Cases in Canadian Bankruptcy and Insolvency Law, 1894-1937

Part of the Landmark Cases in Canadian Law series
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The legal meaning of bankruptcy and insolvency law has often remained elusive, even to practitioners and scholars in the field, despite having been enshrined in Canada’s Constitution since Confederation.

Federal jurisdiction in this area must be measured against provincial powers over property and civil rights, among others.

Debt and Federalism traces changing conceptions of the bankruptcy and insolvency power through four landmark cases that form the constitutional foundation of the Canadian bankruptcy system: the 1894 Voluntary Assignments Case, Royal Bank of Canada v Larue in 1928, the 1934 Companies' Creditors Arrangement Act Reference Case, and the 1937 Farmers' Creditors Arrangement Act Reference Case.

Together, these decisions ultimately produced the bedrock for modern understandings of bankruptcy and insolvency law.

Thomas G.W. Telfer and Virginia Torrie draw on archival and legal sources to analyze the decisions from a historical and doctrinal perspective.

This astute book demonstrates that the legal changes introduced by these landmark cases underpin contemporary bankruptcy and insolvency law and scholarship.

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£53.60 Save 20.00%
RRP £67.00
Product Details
0774867280 / 9780774867283
Hardback
07/02/2021
Canada
284 pages, 7 photographs, 3 tables
140 x 216 mm