Bad judgment : the case of Mr. Justice Leo A. Landreville

Type
Book
ISBN 10
0802008364 
ISBN 13
9780802008367 
DDC
343.713 
Category
Osgoode Society  [ Browse Items ]
Publication Year
1996 
Pages
xii, 232 pages 
Subject
Canadian Biography 
Abstract
"Bad Judgment is a quintessential fall-from-grace story about a man from humble beginnings who rose to the top of the legal profession, only to be removed from the bench because of his bad judgment, the intolerant attitudes of the elite bar, and political necessity. What did Leo Landreville really do? And why were some of the most famous lawyers and politicians in Canada in the 1960s determined to end his judicial career? Landreville was appointed one of Her Majesty's justices in 1956. After moving from Sudbury to Toronto to take up his job at Osgoode Hall, he and his wife moved into the newly built and very fashionable Benvenuto Place and joined the best clubs. But his elevated status was to be short-lived. As it turned out, he had accepted a stock option from Northern Ontario Natural Gas when NONG obtained the gas franchise in Sudbury and he was the mayor. Soon after settling into his chambers at Osgoode Hall, he exercised the option and pocketed $117,000, without having laid out a cent. Landreville was not the only politician to benefit from his dealings with NONG. The 'Gas Scandal, ' as it was called, brought an early end to the careers of three provincial Conservative cabinet ministers and bruised the reputation of the Liberal leader, another beneficiary. Landreville was charged with municipal corruption and conspiracy, but he managed to beat the accusations. When the Law Society of Upper Canada convened a special committee, found the judge guilty of misconduct, and called upon the minister of justice to have him removed, the Landreville affair began. The character assassination of Landreville soon became a national sport, and the judge found himself under investigation by a royal commission. A joint parliamentary committee then recommended that Landreville be removed from the bench. Instead, he resigned in disgrace. Bad Judgment is a probing account of judicial independence and of what should be done when the conduct of judges is brought into question. A veritable 'Who's Who' of Canadian legal and political history, it provides an inside look at the workings of the judiciary, the Law Society of Upper Canada, and the Ontario and federal governments in their attempts to deal with a growing scandal that threatened to bring the administration of justice in Canada into disrepute." - Voila 
Description
Content:
Foreword
Acknowledgements
Prelude
Northern Ontario Natural Gas
The honorable Leo Landreville
Scandal
The police come calling
Trials and tribulations
A kangaroo court
Canadian gothic meets the Mambo King
'Pleading for my honour'
Vindication?
Conclusion
Notes
Index 
Biblio Notes

Includes bibliographical references and index.  
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