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Unconscionability

No “Rule of Uber”: Arbitration Clause Found Unconscionable in Uber Technologies v Heller

This summer, the Supreme Court of Canada ruled that Uber drivers can pursue their claim that they are employees in an Ontario court. In Uber Technologies Inc v Heller, 2020 SCC 16, a majority of judges held that a mandatory arbitration clause in Uber's driver contracts was unconscionable and thus invalid. The drivers’ proposed $400 […]

The Saga of Uber's Arbitration Clause Continues: Heller v Uber Technologies

The phrase “call an Uber” has become a ubiquitous part of modern parlance, just as the service itself has become a common feature of how people get from point A to point B. The ride-sharing service is now available in hundreds of cities around the world, and has transformed the personal transportation industry. But the […]

Singh v Trump: How ONCA Trumped Toronto Real Estate Developers Gone Wild

In 2009, fully oblivious to the housing market collapse in the United States, I thought it a good idea to get into the Toronto condo market. With down payment money borrowed from my parents, I signed an Agreement of Purchase and Sale in a development project that promised to create a whole new neighbourhood on […]