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Aug 6, 2021 · In Grant Thornton LLP v. New Brunswick , 2021 SCC 31 , the Supreme Court of Canada addressed these fundamental questions about the law of discoverability, a topic that has not been considered by the Court for many decades.
Aug 17, 2021 · In Grant Thornton LLP v New Brunswick, the Supreme Court refined the discoverability rule to address this confusion, giving all litigants the ability to determine when a limitation period starts – and when it ends – with greater certainty: Plausible Inference of Liability.
Nov 9, 2021 · In its recent decision Grant Thornton LLP v New Brunswick, 2021 SCC 31, the Supreme Court of Canada clarified the standard to be applied when determining when a Plaintiff is deemed to have discovered their claim and therefore to have also triggered the commencement of the limitations period.
In Grant Thornton LLP v. New Brunswick , 2021 SCC 31, the Supreme Court of Canada clarified the role that the common law rule of discoverability plays in applying provincial limitations statutes, and the requisite standard of knowledge required to “discover” a claim under the common law standard.
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Jul 29, 2021 · In a unanimous decision released this morning in Grant Thornton LLP v. New Brunswick, the Supreme Court of Canada restored a judgment of the New Brunswick Queen’s Bench that dismissed as statute-barred a $50 million claim brought by New Brunswick against accounting firm, Grant Thornton LLP.
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Aug 6, 2021 · In its newest decision in Grant Thornton LLP v New Brunswick, 2021 SCC 31, a unanimous Court held that a limitation period will start running when “the plaintiff has knowledge, actual or constructive, of the material facts upon which a plausible inference of liability on the defendant’s part can be drawn.”