Fundamental Justice
Fundamental justice
is a term in
Canadian
administrative law
that signifies those basic procedural rights that are afforded anyone or anybody facing an adjudicative process or procedure that effects fundamental rights. Used often in the area of Canadian administrative law with the analysis of a decision being
patently unreasonable
or otherwise being protected from
judicial review
. Compare:
due process
,
natural justice
,
Wednesbury unreasonableness
. Since the 1985
Supreme Court of Canada
decision in
Re B.C. Motor Vehicle Act
, the meaning of the words
fundamental justice
used at Section 7 of the
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms
(thus in a
constitutional law
context) has been greatly expanded and encompasses much more than mere procedural rights.
External links
Complete Decision - Re B.C. Motor Vehicle Act
Ombudsman of Ontario Fairness Standards
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