From: | Phillip Lister <phil77lister@gmail.com> |
To: | Harrington Matthew P. <matthew.p.harrington@umontreal.ca> |
CC: | obligations@uwo.ca |
Date: | 06/06/2014 22:17:09 UTC |
Subject: | Re: Human Tissue is Property in Canada |
Excellent. Thanks for
that.
It’s interesting the Ontario
court doesn’t mention it or J.C.M.
I`m updating a casebook so am
very grateful for these.
---------------------------------------------
Matthew P.
Harrington
Professeur
Faculté de
droit
Université de
Montréal
Montréal,
Québec
514.343.6105
matthew.p.harrington@umontreal.ca
----------------------------------------------
De
:
Angela Swan [mailto:aswan@airdberlis.com]
Envoyé : 6 juin 2014
11:12
À : Harrington Matthew P.; obligations@uwo.ca
Objet :
RE: Human Tissue is Property in Canada
Sperm
held in a super-freezer was held to be property, specifically “goods”, in Lam
v. University of British Columbia, 2013 BCSC 2094, so that the
Warehouse Receipt Act governed the contract between the donor and the
University.
Angela
Swan
From:
Harrington Matthew P. [mailto:matthew.p.harrington@umontreal.ca]
Sent: June-06-14 9:44 AM
To: obligations@uwo.ca
Subject: Human
Tissue is Property in Canada
This may be of tangential interest to members on this list,
but an Ontario trial court handed down a rather significant opinion concerning
property interests in human tissue. In Piljak’s Estate v. Abraham,
2014 ONSC 2893, a master in the superior court held that human tissue once
removed from the body should be considered chattel capable of being owned like
other personal property.
The decision was made in the context of a preliminary motion
in a malpractise case where the defendant sought an order in discovery to
examine “real or personal property” (under Rule 32.10). In deciding the
order, the court had to consider whether the tissue was, in fact,
property. The master concluded that the tissue was property but denied the
motion on other grounds.
Although American and UK courts have considered this issue in
several contexts, this appears to be the first Canadian case specifically
holding that body parts or tissue can be considered property.
For those who care, the CanLII cite is:
http://www.canlii.org/en/on/onsc/doc/2014/2014onsc2893/2014onsc2893.html
Regards.
---------------------------------------------
Matthew P.
Harrington
Professeur
Faculté de
droit
Université
de Montréal
Montréal,
Québec
514.343.6105
matthew.p.harrington@umontreal.ca
----------------------------------------------