Indigenous Fishing Rights Case
Summary
Cases involving indigenous groups suing the federal government for traditional fishing rights are typically held in the Federal Trial Court due to federal jurisdiction. For a second appeal in Alberta, the appropriate court is the Court of Appeal of Alberta. Further appeals may be taken to the Supreme Court of Canada, subject to specific legal criteria and the courts discretion to grant leave to appeal.Full Conversation
You sued a customer for $*,*. You wanted the case to go quickly, with lower legal fees. Unfortunately, the customer appealed, but lost. Now, you want a second appeal. Which court would you go to for this second appeal?
Question * options:
a)
the Alberta Court of Justice
b)
the Court of King's Bench
c)
the Federal Trial Court
d)
the Court of Appeal of Alberta
e)
the Federal Court of Appeal
f)
the Supreme Court of Canada
For a second appeal in Alberta, you would go to:
d) the Court of Appeal of Alberta
If further appeal is needed beyond this, the case could potentially be taken to the Supreme Court of Canada, but it depends on the specifics of the legal matter and whether the Supreme Court grants leave to appeal.