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Court of Appeal of Alberta

The Court of Appeal of Alberta (frequently referred to as Alberta Court of Appeal or ABCA) is a Canadian appellate court that serves as the highest appellate court in the jurisdiction of Alberta, subordinate to the Supreme Court of Canada.

Court of Appeal of Alberta

1921

Alberta, Canada

Law Courts, Edmonton; Calgary Courts Centre, Calgary

  • Judicature Act
  • Court of Appeal Act

14 (in addition to chief justice of Alberta, supernumerary judges, and the judges of the Court of King's Bench of Alberta, who are ex officio members of the Court of Appeal)

Ritu Khullar

Jurisdiction and hierarchy within Canadian courts[edit]

The court is the highest in Alberta, Canada. It hears appeals from the Alberta Court of King's Bench, the Provincial Court of Alberta, and administrative boards and tribunals, as well as references from the Lieutenant Governor in Council (essentially the Alberta Cabinet). Some administrative appeals may bypass the Court of King's Bench, commonly orders made by professional discipline boards under the Medical Profession Act,[1] the Legal Profession Act,[2] but also under the Energy Resources Conservation Act.[3]


Appeals from the Court of Appeal lie with the Supreme Court of Canada, Canada's court of last resort. Other than certain criminal matters, appeals to the Supreme Court of Canada are heard only by leave of that court. Since the Supreme Court denies leave in most cases, the Court of Appeal is the final court for most matters originating in Alberta.


Unlike the Court of King's Bench, the Court of Appeal has no inherent jurisdiction and therefore requires a statute to grant it the power to hear a matter before a panel is convened. As a court of a province, it is administered by the provincial government. Hearings are held exclusively in Edmonton's Law Courts and the Calgary Courts Centre. Unlike other provinces (except Newfoundland and Labrador and Ontario), the Alberta Court of Appeal displays a different coat of arms than its lower courts: the coat of arms of Canada.

History[edit]

The court originated from the old Supreme Court of the Northwest Territories which was replaced by the Supreme Court of Alberta in 1907 (shortly after Alberta became a province in 1905). The new Supreme Court of Alberta comprised a trial division and an appellate division (essentially, brother justices of the Supreme Court sitting en banc with a quorum of three).


The second chief justice of Alberta, Horace Harvey, supported an independent appellate court designed only to hear appeals. The Judicature Act enacted these changes in 1919, and it was proclaimed in 1921.[4] It was not until 1979 that the court changed its name to the "Court of Appeal of Alberta" through the Court of Appeal Act,[5] at the same time that the Supreme Court Trial Division and the District Court were amalgamated and renamed the "Court of Queen's Bench of Alberta".

Composition[edit]

There are 14 official positions on the bench[6] including the chief justice of Alberta, who is the highest judicial officer in the province. At any given time there may be several additional judges who also sit as supernumerary justices.[6] As a Section 96 court, the justices are appointed by the federal government and may hold office until the age of 75. Some of the justices have elected supernumerary (part-time or semi-retired) status. Occasionally, justices of the Court of King's Bench of Alberta sit on appeals. This is done at the request of a justice of the Court of Appeal. When this happens, these justices are sitting ex officio, but they have the same powers and duties as other justices of the Court of Appeal.


Most cases are heard by a panel of three justices, although the chief justice may convene a larger panel in exceptional circumstances. A single justice presides over matters heard in chambers, usually interlocutory matters or applications for leave to appeal.

Association with the Northwest Territories[edit]

Justices of the Court of Appeal for the Northwest Territories are selected from the justices of the Court of Appeal of Alberta, Court of Appeal for Saskatchewan, and the judges and ex officio judges of the Supreme Court of the Northwest Territories. The current acting chief justice of Alberta, Frans Slater, is also the chief justice of the Northwest Territories. Hearings are held in Yellowknife, but may be heard anywhere in the territories or in Alberta.[7]

(1907–1910)

Arthur Lewis Sifton

(1910–1921, 1924–1949)

Horace Harvey

(1921–1924)

David Lynch Scott

(1950–1957)[19]

George Bligh O'Connor

(1957–1961)[20]

Clinton J. Ford

(1961–1974)[21]

Sidney Bruce Smith

(1974–1984)

William A. McGillivray

(1984–1991)[22][23][24]

James Herbert Laycraft

(1992–2022)

Catherine Fraser

(1996-2018)

Ronald Leon Berger

(2016–2017), elevated to the Supreme Court of Canada

Sheilah L. Martin

(1980–1990) elevated to the Supreme Court of Canada

William Alexander Stevenson

(1980–2004)

John Wesley McClung

(2014–2015) elevated to the Supreme Court of Canada

Russell Brown

Clifton D O'Brien (2005–2014)

[25]

David C McDonald (1995 - 1996)[27]

[26]

(1987–2015)

Jean E.L. Côté

(1991–1992), elevated to the Supreme Court of Canada

John "Jack" Major

(1994–2006)

Anne Russell

(1979–1997)

(Asa) Milton "Milt" Harradence

(1907–1921 en banc appeals)(1921–1926)

Charles Allan Stuart

(1997–2000)

Allen Borislaw Zenoviy Sulatycky

(1942–1944)

William Robinson Howson

(1926–1936)

Charles Richmond Mitchell

(1931–1940)

Alexander Andrew MacGillivray

(1931–1931)

William Legh Walsh

(1941–1946)

Albert Freeman Ewing

((1914–1921 en banc appeals)((1921–1928)

James Duncan Hyndman

(1907–1921 en banc appeals) (1921–1928)

Nicholas Dubois Dominic Beck

(1921–1942)

Alfred Henry Clarke

(1974–1980)

William Joseph Haddad

Neil C. Wittmann (1999–2004)[28][29][30][31]

[17]

Frank C. Ford (1936–1954)[33]

[32]

Harold Hayward Parlee (1945–1954)[35]

[34]

James Mitchell Cairns (1965–1977)

[36]

Carole M. Conrad (1992–2014)

[37]

John David Bracco (1987–19??)

[38]

Roger Philip Kerans (1980–1997)

[39]

Mary Margaret McCormick Hetherington (1985–2001)[41]

[40]

Willis O'Leary (1994–2006)

[42]

(1976–1997)[43][44]

Samuel Sereth Lieberman

Neil Douglas McDermid (1963–1986)[46]

[45]

James Boyd McBride (1957–1959)

[47]

Hugh John MacDonald (1957–1960)[49]

[48]

René Paul Foisy (1987–1999)

William George Morrow (1976–1979)[51]

[50]

Adelle Fruman (1998–2007)[53]

[52]

Horace Gilchrist Johnson (1954–1973)

[54]

William Alexander MacDonald (1944–1957)

Gordon Hollis Allen (1966–1978)

Joseph John Walter Stratton (1987–1995)

Arnold Fraser Moir (1973–1979)

Carlton Ward Clement (1970–1982)

Marshall Menzies Porter (1954–1969)

Howard Lawrence Irving (1985–1999)

Henry William Lunney (1928–1944)

William Robert Sinclair (1973–1979)

David Clifton Prowse (1972–1979)

Roger Hector Belzil (1981–1996)

E.W.S Kane (1961–1974)

Judiciary

Court System of Canada

Knafla, Louis A.; Klumpenhouwer, Richard (1997). . Calgary: Legal Archives Society of Alberta. ISBN 978-0-9681939-0-7.

Lords of the Western Bench: A Biographical History of the Supreme and District Courts of Alberta, 1876-1990

Mittelstadt, David (2014). (PDF). Calgary: The Legal Archives Society of Alberta. ISBN 978-0-9681939-5-2.

People Principles Progress: The Alberta Court of Appeal's First Century 1914 to 2014

Swainger, Jonathan Scott, ed. (2007). . Edmonton: University of Alberta Press. ISBN 978-0-88864-493-0.

The Alberta Supreme Court at 100: History & Authority

Edit this at Wikidata

Official website

Government of Alberta Justice and Attorney General Courts

by the late J.W. (Buzz) McClung, Justice of Appeal, n. d.

History of the Alberta Court of Appeal

People, principles, progress. The Alberta Court of Appeal's first century 1914 to 2014, Centennial Book, by David Mittelstadt, n. d.

Overview: