History[edit]

Pre-Confederation to Confederation[edit]

Prior to Confederation, the predominantly English-speaking Canada West (which succeeded Upper Canada) and the predominantly French-speaking Canada East (which succeeded Lower Canada) each had a separate system of courts. During pre-Confederation negotiations, the creation of a national court had been contemplated to deal with matters relating to federal law.[1] The Constitution Act, 1867 thus provided under s. 101 that:

Organization[edit]

The Court consisted of a first-level trial court, known as the Federal Court of Canada – Trial Division, and an appellate Court, known as the Federal Court of Canada – Appeal Division (more commonly referred to as the Federal Court of Appeal).


The Trial Division had jurisdiction to hear judicial review of decisions of federal boards and tribunals, including most immigration matters, as well as jurisdiction in admiralty, intellectual property, and disputes involving the federal government.


The Appeal Division had jurisdiction to hear appeals of decisions of the Trial Division, as well as to determine applications for judicial review of decisions made by specific boards and tribunals, set out in section 28 of the Federal Court Act. Decisions of the Appeal Division could be appealed to the Supreme Court of Canada, but only if leave (permission) was granted by either court.


The court did not use juries so all matters were decided by judge alone: a single judge in the Trial Division and a panel of three judges at the appeal level. Some pre-trial steps such as motions were decided by prothonotaries, a role similar to a master in other courts. The judges and prothonotaries were appointed by the Cabinet of the federal government.

1920–1923

Sir Walter Gibson Pringle Cassels

1923–1942

Alexander Kenneth Maclean

1942–1964

Joseph Thorarinn Thorson

1964–1971 (subsequently Chief Justice of the Federal Court of Canada)

Wilbur Roy Jackett

Court system of Canada

Law of Canada

Stone, Arthur J. (PDF). McGill Law Journal. 47 (3): 511–558. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-10-20. Retrieved 2019-01-25.

"Canada's Admiralty Court in the Twentieth Century"

Ian Bushnell (1997). . Toronto: University of Toronto Press. p. 346. ISBN 0-8020-4207-4. Retrieved 2013-01-06.

The Federal Court of Canada: A History, 1875-1992

Louis Arthur Audette. The Practice of the Exchequer Court of Canada. Printed at the office of Thoburn. 1895. . Second Edition. Copeland-Chatterson-Crain. 1909. Google Books

Google Books

Robert Cassels. Manual of Procedure in the Supreme and Exchequer Courts of Canada. R Carswell. Toronto. 1877.

Internet Archive

(via the Internet Archive Wayback Machine)

Official web site as of October 2002

(restructuring the Court, effective July 2, 2003) (as originally enacted)

Courts Administration Service Act, S.C. 2002, c. 8