An Act respecting judges of federal and provincial courtsJudges ActJudges20236
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J-1Short TitleShort titleThis Act may be cited as the Judges Act.R.S., c. J-1, s. 1InterpretationDefinitionsIn this Act,age of retirement of a judge or of an associate judge means the age, fixed by law, at which the judge or associate judge ceases to hold office; (mise à la retraite d’office)associate judge means an associate judge of the Federal Court or an associate judge of the Tax Court of Canada and includes a supernumerary associate judge; (juge adjoint)attorney general of the province, except where otherwise defined, means the minister of the Crown of the province who is responsible for judicial affairs; (procureur général de la province)Commissioner means the Commissioner for Federal Judicial Affairs referred to in section 73; (commissaire)common-law partner, in relation to an individual, means a person who is cohabiting with the individual in a conjugal relationship, having so cohabited for a period of at least one year; (conjoint de fait)Council means the Canadian Judicial Council established by subsection 59(1); (Conseil)county includes district; (comté)judge includes a chief justice, senior associate chief justice, associate chief justice, supernumerary judge and regional senior judge; (juge)Minister means the Minister of Justice of Canada; (ministre)prothonotary[Repealed, 2022, c. 10, s. 333]survivor, in relation to a judge or to an associate judge, means a person who was married to the judge or associate judge at the time of the judge’s or associate judge’s death or who establishes that he or she was cohabiting with the judge or associate judge in a conjugal relationship at the time of the judge’s or associate judge’s death and had so cohabited for a period of at least one year. (survivant)R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 2; 1990, c. 17, s. 27; 1992, c. 51, s. 2; 2000, c. 12, s. 159; 2002, c. 8, s. 82(E); 2014, c. 39, s. 316; 2017, c. 33, s. 2302022, c. 10, s. 3332022, c. 10, s. 3712023, c. 18, s. 1Application to associate judgesSubject to subsection (2), sections 26 to 26.3, 34 and 39, paragraphs 40(1)(a) and (b), subsection 40(2), sections 41, 41.2 to 42, 43.1 to 56 and 57, paragraph 60(2)(b) and Part IV also apply to an associate judge.Associate judge who made electionSections 41.2, 41.3, 42 and 43.1 to 52.22 do not apply to an associate judge who made an election under the Economic Action Plan 2014 Act, No. 2 to continue to be deemed to be employed in the public service for the purposes of the Public Service Superannuation Act.2014, c. 39, s. 3172022, c. 10, s. 3342022, c. 10, s. 3712022, c. 10, s. 3752023, c. 18, s. 2Judges and Associate JudgesEligibilityEligibility for appointmentNo person is eligible to be appointed a judge of a superior court in any province unless, in addition to any other requirements prescribed by law, that personis a barrister or advocate of at least 10 years’ standing at the bar of any province or has, for an aggregate of at least 10 years,been a barrister or advocate at the bar of any province, andafter becoming a barrister or advocate at the bar of any province, exercised powers and performed duties and functions of a judicial nature on a full-time basis in respect of a position held under a law of Canada or a province; andundertakes to participate in continuing education on matters related to sexual assault law and social context, which includes systemic racism and systemic discrimination, including by attending seminars established under paragraph 60(2)(b).R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 3; 1992, c. 51, s. 3; 1996, c. 22, s. 22021, c. 8, s. 1[Repealed, 1990, c. 17, s. 28][Repealed, 1992, c. 51, s. 4]Age of RetirementRetirement ageA judge of the Supreme Court of British Columbia who held the office of a judge of the County Courts of British Columbia on March 1, 1987 and on June 30, 1990 may retire at the age of seventy years.Retirement ageA judge of the Superior Court of Justice in and for the Province of Ontario who held the office of a judge of the District Court of Ontario on March 1, 1987 and on August 31, 1990 may retire at the age of seventy years.IdemA judge of the Supreme Court of Nova Scotia who held the office of a judge of the County Court of Nova Scotia on March 1, 1987 and on the coming into force of this subsection may retire at the age of seventy years.R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 8; R.S., 1985, c. 16 (3rd Supp.), s. 1; 1992, c. 51, s. 4; 1998, c. 30, s. 1SalariesSupreme Court of CanadaThe yearly salaries of the judges of the Supreme Court of Canada are as follows:the Chief Justice of Canada, $435,600; andthe eight puisne judges, $403,300 each.R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 9; R.S., 1985, c. 50 (1st Supp.), s. 4, c. 39 (3rd Supp.), s. 1; 2001, c. 7, s. 1; 2006, c. 11, s. 1; 2012, c. 31, s. 210; 2017, c. 20, s. 1962022, c. 10, s. 336Federal CourtsThe yearly salaries of the judges of the Federal Courts are as follows:the Chief Justice of the Federal Court of Appeal, $371,400;the other judges of the Federal Court of Appeal, $338,800 each;the Chief Justice and the Associate Chief Justice of the Federal Court, $371,400 each; andthe other judges of the Federal Court, $338,800 each.R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 10; R.S., 1985, c. 41 (1st Supp.), s. 1, c. 50 (1st Supp.), s. 4, c. 39 (3rd Supp.), s. 1; 2001, c. 7, s. 2; 2002, c. 8, s. 83; 2006, c. 11, s. 1; 2012, c. 31, s. 210; 2017, c. 20, s. 197; 2018, c. 12, s. 2972022, c. 10, s. 337Federal Court associate judgesThe yearly salaries of the associate judges of the Federal Court shall be 80% of the yearly salaries, calculated in accordance with section 25, of the judges referred to in paragraph 10(d).2014, c. 39, s. 318; 2017, c. 20, s. 1982022, c. 10, s. 371Court Martial Appeal CourtThe yearly salary of the Chief Justice of the Court Martial Appeal Court of Canada shall be $371,400.2017, c. 20, s. 1982022, c. 10, s. 338Tax Court of CanadaThe yearly salaries of the judges of the Tax Court of Canada are as follows:the Chief Justice, $371,400;the Associate Chief Justice, $371,400; andthe other judges, $338,800 each.R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 11; R.S., 1985, c. 11 (1st Supp.), s. 2, c. 51 (4th Supp.), s. 13; 2001, c. 7, s. 3; 2002, c. 8, s. 84(E); 2006, c. 11, s. 1; 2012, c. 31, s. 210; 2017, c. 20, s. 1992022, c. 10, s. 339Tax Court of Canada associate judgesThe yearly salaries of the associate judges of the Tax Court of Canada shall be 80% of the yearly salaries, calculated in accordance with section 25, of the judges referred to in paragraph 11(c).2022, c. 10, s. 3402022, c. 10, s. 371Court of Appeal for Ontario and Superior Court of JusticeThe yearly salaries of the judges of the Court of Appeal for Ontario and of the Superior Court of Justice in and for the Province of Ontario are as follows:the Chief Justice and the Associate Chief Justice of Ontario, $371,400 each;the 14 Justices of Appeal, $338,800 each;the Chief Justice and the Associate Chief Justice of the Superior Court of Justice, $371,400 each; andthe 212 other judges of the Superior Court of Justice, $338,800 each.R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 12; R.S., 1985, c. 41 (1st Supp.), s. 2, c. 50 (1st Supp.), s. 4, c. 39 (3rd Supp.), s. 1; 1990, c. 17, s. 29; 1998, c. 30, s. 2; 2001, c. 7, s. 4; 2006, c. 11, s. 1; 2012, c. 31, s. 210; 2017, c. 20, s. 200; 2018, c. 12, s. 2982021, c. 23, s. 2552022, c. 10, s. 341Court of Appeal and Superior Court of QuebecThe yearly salaries of the judges of the Court of Appeal and of the Superior Court in and for the Province of Quebec are as follows:the Chief Justice of Quebec, $371,400;the 19 puisne judges of the Court of Appeal, $338,800 each;the Chief Justice, the Senior Associate Chief Justice and the Associate Chief Justice of the Superior Court, $371,400 each; andthe 144 puisne judges of the Superior Court, $338,800 each.R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 13; R.S., 1985, c. 41 (1st Supp.), s. 3, c. 50 (1st Supp.), s. 4, c. 39 (3rd Supp.), s. 1; 1989, c. 8, s. 1; 2001, c. 7, s. 5; 2006, c. 11, s. 1; 2012, c. 31, s. 210; 2014, c. 20, s. 164; 2017, c. 20, s. 2012022, c. 10, s. 342Court of Appeal and Supreme Court of Nova ScotiaThe yearly salaries of the judges of the Nova Scotia Court of Appeal and the Supreme Court of Nova Scotia are as follows:the Chief Justice of Nova Scotia, $371,400;the seven other judges of the Court of Appeal, $338,800 each;the Chief Justice and the Associate Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, $371,400 each; andthe 23 other judges of the Supreme Court, $338,800 each.R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 14; R.S., 1985, c. 50 (1st Supp.), s. 4, c. 39 (3rd Supp.), s. 1; 1989, c. 8, s. 2; 1992, c. 51, s. 5; 2001, c. 7, s. 6; 2006, c. 11, s. 1; 2012, c. 31, s. 210; 2017, c. 20, s. 2022022, c. 10, s. 343Court of Appeal and Court of Queen’s Bench of New BrunswickThe yearly salaries of the judges of the Court of Appeal of New Brunswick and of the Court of Queen’s Bench of New Brunswick are as follows:the Chief Justice of New Brunswick, $371,400;the five other judges of the Court of Appeal, $338,800 each;the Chief Justice and the Associate Chief Justice of the Court of Queen’s Bench, $371,400 each; andthe 20 other judges of the Court of Queen’s Bench, $338,800 each.R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 15; R.S., 1985, c. 41 (1st Supp.), s. 4, c. 50 (1st Supp.), s. 4, c. 39 (3rd Supp.), s. 1; 2001, c. 7, s. 7; 2006, c. 11, s. 1; 2012, c. 31, s. 210; 2017, c. 20, s. 2032022, c. 10, s. 344Court of Appeal and Court of Queen’s Bench for ManitobaThe yearly salaries of the judges of the Court of Appeal for Manitoba and of Her Majesty’s Court of Queen’s Bench for Manitoba are as follows:the Chief Justice of Manitoba, $371,400;the six Judges of Appeal, $338,800 each;the Chief Justice, the Senior Associate Chief Justice and the Associate Chief Justice of the Court of Queen’s Bench, $371,400 each; andthe 31 puisne judges of the Court of Queen’s Bench, $338,800 each.R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 16; R.S., 1985, c. 41 (1st Supp.), s. 5, c. 50 (1st Supp.), s. 4, c. 39 (3rd Supp.), s. 1; 1989, c. 8, s. 3; 2001, c. 7, s. 8; 2006, c. 11, s. 1; 2009, c. 19, s. 1; 2012, c. 31, s. 210; 2017, c. 20, s. 2042022, c. 10, s. 345Court of Appeal and Supreme Court of British ColumbiaThe yearly salaries of the judges of the Court of Appeal for British Columbia and of the Supreme Court of British Columbia are as follows:the Chief Justice of British Columbia, $371,400;the 12 Justices of Appeal, $338,800 each;the Chief Justice and the Associate Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, $371,400 each; andthe 86 other judges of the Supreme Court, $338,800 each.R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 17; R.S., 1985, c. 41 (1st Supp.), s. 6, c. 50 (1st Supp.), s. 4, c. 39 (3rd Supp.), s. 1; 1989, c. 8, s. 4; 1990, c. 16, s. 15; 2001, c. 7, s. 9; 2006, c. 11, s. 1; 2012, c. 31, s. 210; 2017, c. 20, s. 2052021, c. 23, s. 2562022, c. 10, s. 346Court of Appeal and Supreme Court of Prince Edward IslandThe yearly salaries of the judges of the Court of Appeal of Prince Edward Island and of the Supreme Court of Prince Edward Island are as follows:the Chief Justice of Prince Edward Island, $371,400;the two other judges of the Court of Appeal, $338,800 each;the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, $371,400; andthe three other judges of the Supreme Court, $338,800 each.R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 18; R.S., 1985, c. 50 (1st Supp.), s. 4, c. 27 (2nd Supp.), s. 1, c. 39 (3rd Supp.), s. 1; 2001, c. 7, s. 10; 2006, c. 11, s. 1; 2012, c. 31, s. 210; 2015, c. 3, s. 125; 2017, c. 20, s. 2062022, c. 10, s. 347Court of Appeal and Court of Queen’s Bench for SaskatchewanThe yearly salaries of the judges of the Court of Appeal for Saskatchewan and of Her Majesty’s Court of Queen’s Bench for Saskatchewan are as follows:the Chief Justice of Saskatchewan, $371,400;the seven Judges of Appeal, $338,800 each;the Chief Justice and the Associate Chief Justice of the Court of Queen’s Bench, $371,400 each; andthe 33 other judges of the Court of Queen’s Bench, $338,800 each.R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 19; R.S., 1985, c. 50 (1st Supp.), s. 4, c. 39 (3rd Supp.), s. 1; 2001, c. 7, s. 11; 2006, c. 11, s. 1; 2012, c. 31, s. 210; 2017, c. 20, s. 207; 2018, c. 12, s. 2992021, c. 23, s. 2572022, c. 10, s. 348Court of Appeal and Court of Queen’s Bench of AlbertaThe yearly salaries of the judges of the Court of Appeal of Alberta and of the Court of Queen’s Bench of Alberta are as follows:the Chief Justice of Alberta, $371,400;the 10 Justices of Appeal, $338,800 each;the Chief Justice and the two Associate Chief Justices of the Court of Queen’s Bench, $371,400 each; andthe 70 other Justices of the Court of Queen’s Bench, $338,800 each.R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 20; R.S., 1985, c. 41 (1st Supp.), s. 7, c. 50 (1st Supp.), s. 4, c. 39 (3rd Supp.), s. 1; 1989, c. 8, s. 5; 2001, c. 7, s. 12; 2006, c. 11, s. 1; 2012, c. 31, s. 210; 2014, c. 20, s. 165; 2017, c. 20, s. 208, c. 33, s. 2312022, c. 10, s. 349Supreme Court of Newfoundland and LabradorThe yearly salaries of the judges of the Supreme Court of Newfoundland and Labrador are as follows:the Chief Justice of Newfoundland and Labrador, $371,400;the five Judges of Appeal, $338,800 each;the Chief Justice and the Associate Chief Justice of the Trial Division, $371,400 each; andthe 18 other judges of the Trial Division, $338,800 each.R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 21; R.S., 1985, c. 41 (1st Supp.), s. 8, c. 50 (1st Supp.), s. 4, c. 27 (2nd Supp.), s. 2, c. 39 (3rd Supp.), s. 1; 1989, c. 8, s. 6; 2001, c. 7, s. 13; 2006, c. 11, s. 1; 2012, c. 31, s. 210; 2017, c. 20, s. 2092021, c. 23, s. 2582022, c. 10, s. 350Supreme Court of YukonThe yearly salaries of the judges of the Supreme Court of Yukon are as follows:the Chief Justice, $371,400; andthe two other judges, $338,800 each.Supreme Court of the Northwest TerritoriesThe yearly salaries of the judges of the Supreme Court of the Northwest Territories are as follows:the Chief Justice, $371,400; andthe two other judges, $338,800 each.Nunavut Court of JusticeThe yearly salaries of the judges of the Nunavut Court of Justice are as follows:the Chief Justice, $371,400; andthe five other judges, $338,800 each.[Repealed, 2017, c. 33, s. 232]R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 22; R.S., 1985, c. 50 (1st Supp.), s. 4, c. 39 (3rd Supp.), s. 1; 1989, c. 8, s. 7; 1999, c. 3, s. 72; 2001, c. 7, s. 14; 2002, c. 7, s. 189; 2006, c. 11, s. 2; 2011, c. 24, s. 170; 2012, c. 31, s. 210; 2017, c. 20, s. 210, c. 33, s. 2322022, c. 10, s. 351Rounding of amountsA salary referred to in any of sections 9 to 22 that is not a multiple of one hundred dollars shall be rounded down to the next lowest multiple of one hundred dollars.R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 23; R.S., 1985, c. 5 (1st Supp.), s. 2, c. 11 (1st Supp.), s. 2, c. 41 (1st Supp.), s. 9, c. 50 (1st Supp.), s. 4; 1989, c. 8, s. 8; 1990, c. 16, s. 16, c. 17, s. 30; 1992, c. 51, s. 6; 2001, c. 7, s. 15Additional judgesNotwithstanding sections 12 to 22 but subject to subsections (3) and (4), where the number of judges of a superior court in a province has been increased by or pursuant to an Act of the legislature of the province beyond the number of judges of that court whose salaries are provided for by sections 12 to 22, a salary is payable pursuant to this section to each additional judge, appointed to that court in accordance with that Act and in the manner provided by law, from the time that judge’s appointment becomes effective and in the same manner and subject to the same terms and conditions as if the salary were payable under sections 12 to 22.Salaries fixedThe salary of a judge appointed in the circumstances described in subsection (1) is the salary annexed, pursuant to sections 12 to 22, to the office of judge to which the appointment is made.LimitSubject to subsection (4), the number of salaries that may be paid pursuant to this section at any one time shall not be greater than16, in the case of judges appointed to appeal courts in the provinces; and62, in the case of judges appointed to superior courts in the provinces other than appeal courts.[Repealed, 1992, c. 51, s. 7]Unified family courtsFor the purposes of assisting the establishment of unified family courts in the provinces, a further number of salaries not greater than 75 at any one time may be paid in the case of judges appointed to courts described in paragraph (3)(b)where the court has the jurisdiction of a unified family court; orwhere a request has been made by a provincial attorney general for the appointment to the court of judges to exercise the jurisdiction of a unified family court.Salary deemed payable under sections 12 to 22A salary payable to a judge under this section is deemed, for all purposes of the provisions of this Act, other than this section, and of any other Act of Parliament, to be a salary payable under sections 12 to 22.Definition of appeal courtIn this section, appeal court means, in relation to each of the Provinces of Ontario, Quebec, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Manitoba, British Columbia, Prince Edward Island, Saskatchewan, Alberta and Newfoundland and Labrador, the Court of Appeal of the Province.R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 24; R.S., 1985, c. 41 (1st Supp.), s. 10, c. 27 (2nd Supp.), s. 3; 1989, c. 8, s. 9; 1992, c. 51, s. 7; 1996, c. 30, s. 1; 1998, c. 30, s. 3; 2006, c. 11, s. 3; 2008, c. 26, s. 1; 2015, c. 3, s. 126; 2017, c. 20, s. 2112018, c. 12, s. 300Periodic Adjustment and Revision of SalariesAnnual adjustment of salaryThe yearly salaries referred to in sections 9 to 22 apply in respect of the twelve-month period beginning on April 1, 2020.Annual adjustment of salaryThe salary annexed to an office of judge referred to in sections 9, 10, 10.2, 11 and 12 to 22 for the twelve-month period beginning on April 1, 2021, and for each subsequent twelve-month period, shall be the amount obtained by multiplyingthe salary annexed to that office for the twelve month period immediately preceding the twelve month period in respect of which the salary is to be determinedbythe percentage that the Industrial Aggregate for the first adjustment year is of the Industrial Aggregate for the second adjustment year, or one hundred and seven per cent, whichever is less.Meaning of certain expressionsFor the purposes of this section,in relation to any twelve month period in respect of which the salary is to be determined, the first adjustment year is the most recent twelve month period for which the Industrial Aggregate is available on the first day of the period in respect of which the salary is to be determined, and the second adjustment year is the twelve month period immediately preceding the first adjustment year; andthe Industrial Aggregate for an adjustment year is the average weekly wages and salaries of the Industrial Aggregate in Canada for that year as published by Statistics Canada under the authority of the Statistics Act.R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 25; R.S., 1985, c. 16 (3rd Supp.), s. 2; 1993, c. 13, s. 10; 1994, c. 18, s. 9; 1998, c. 30, s. 4; 2001, c. 7, s. 16; 2006, c. 11, s. 4; 2012, c. 31, s. 211; 2014, c. 39, s. 319; 2017, c. 20, s. 2122022, c. 10, s. 352CommissionThe Judicial Compensation and Benefits Commission is hereby established to inquire into the adequacy of the salaries and other amounts payable under this Act and into the adequacy of judges’ benefits generally.Factors to be consideredIn conducting its inquiry, the Commission shall considerthe prevailing economic conditions in Canada, including the cost of living, and the overall economic and current financial position of the federal government;the role of financial security of the judiciary in ensuring judicial independence;the need to attract outstanding candidates to the judiciary; andany other objective criteria that the Commission considers relevant.Quadrennial inquiryThe Commission shall commence an inquiry on June 1, 2020, and on June 1 of every fourth year after 2020, and shall submit a report containing its recommendations to the Minister within nine months after the date of commencement.PostponementThe Commission may, with the consent of the Minister and the judiciary, postpone the date of commencement of a quadrennial inquiry.Other reportsIn addition to its quadrennial inquiry, the Minister may at any time refer to the Commission for its inquiry a matter mentioned in subsection (1). The Commission shall submit to that Minister a report containing its recommendations within a period fixed by the Minister after consultation with the Commission.Extension of timeThe Governor in Council may, on the request of the Commission, extend the time for submission of a report under subsection (2) or (4).Report of CommissionThe Minister shall table a copy of the report in each House of Parliament on any of the first ten days on which that House is sitting after the Minister receives the report.Referral to CommitteeA report that is tabled in each House of Parliament under subsection (6) shall, on the day it is tabled or, if the House is not sitting on that day, on the day that House next sits, be referred by that House to a committee of that House that is designated or established by that House for the purpose of considering matters relating to justice.Report by CommitteeA committee referred to in subsection (6.1) may conduct inquiries or public hearings in respect of a report referred to it under that subsection, and if it does so, the committee shall, not later than ninety sitting days after the report is referred to it, report its findings to the House that designated or established the committee.Definition of sitting dayFor the purpose of subsection (6.2), sitting day means a day on which the House of Commons or the Senate, as the case may be, sits.Response to reportThe Minister shall respond to a report of the Commission within four months after receiving it. Following that response, if applicable, he or she shall, within a reasonable period, cause to be prepared and introduced a bill to implement the response.R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 26; 1996, c. 2, s. 1; 1998, c. 30, s. 5; 2001, c. 7, s. 17(F); 2012, c. 31, s. 212; 2017, c. 20, s. 2132023, c. 18, s. 13NominationThe Judicial Compensation and Benefits Commission consists of three members appointed by the Governor in Council as follows:one person nominated by the judiciary;one person nominated by the Minister; andone person, who shall act as chairperson, nominated by the members who are nominated under paragraphs (a) and (b).Tenure and removalEach member holds office during good behaviour, and may be removed for cause at any time by the Governor in Council.Term of officeThe term of office for the initial members appointed to the Commission ends on August 31, 2003. The members subsequently appointed hold office for a term of four years.Continuance of dutiesWhere the term of a member ends, other than in the case of removal for cause, the member may carry out and complete any duties of the members in respect of a matter that was referred to the Commission under subsection 26(4) while he or she was a member.ReappointmentA member is eligible to be reappointed for one further term if re-nominated in accordance with subsection (1).Absence or incapacityIn the event of the absence or incapacity of a member, the Governor in Council may appoint as a substitute temporary member a person nominated in accordance with subsection (1) to hold office during the absence or incapacity.VacancyIf the office of a member becomes vacant during the term of the member, the Governor in Council shall appoint a person nominated in accordance with subsection (1) to hold office as a member for the remainder of the term.QuorumA quorum of the Commission consists of all three members.RemunerationThe members of the Commission and persons carrying out duties under subsection (4) shall be paidthe fees fixed by the Governor in Council; andsuch travel and living expenses incurred in the course of their duties while away from their ordinary place of residence as are fixed by the Governor in Council.CompensationThe members of the Commission and persons carrying out duties under subsection (4) are deemed to be employed in the federal public administration for the purposes of the Government Employees Compensation Act and any regulations made under section 9 of the Aeronautics Act.1998, c. 30, s. 5; 2003, c. 22, s. 224(E)2023, c. 18, s. 13Definition of judiciaryIn sections 26 and 26.1, judiciary includes associate judges.2017, c. 20, s. 2142022, c. 10, s. 3532022, c. 10, s. 371PersonnelThe Commission may engage the services of any persons necessary for the proper conduct of the Commission.PresumptionNo person engaged under subsection (1) shall, as a result, be considered to be employed in the federal public administration.1998, c. 30, s. 5; 2003, c. 22, s. 224(E)Costs payableThe Commission may identify those representatives of the judiciary participating in an inquiry of the Commission to whom costs shall be paid in accordance with this section.Entitlement to payment of costsA representative of the judiciary identified under subsection (1) who participates in an inquiry of the Commission is entitled to be paid, out of the Consolidated Revenue Fund, two thirds of the costs determined under subsection (3) in respect of his or her participation.Determination of costsAn assessment officer of the Federal Court, other than a judge or an associate judge, shall determine the amount of costs, on a solicitor-and-client basis, in accordance with the Federal Courts Rules.ApplicationThis section applies to costs incurred in relation to participation in any inquiry of the Commission conducted after September 1, 1999.2001, c. 7, s. 18; 2002, c. 8, s. 85; 2006, c. 11, s. 5; 2014, c. 39, s. 3202022, c. 10, s. 371Costs payable to representative of associate judgesThe Commission may identify one representative of the associate judges of the Federal Court and one representative of the associate judges of the Tax Court of Canada participating in an inquiry of the Commission to whom costs shall be paid in accordance with this section.Entitlement to payment of costsThe representatives identified under subsection (1) are entitled to be paid, out of the Consolidated Revenue Fund, 95% of the costs determined under subsection (3) in respect of their participation.Determination of costsAn assessment officer of the Federal Court, other than a judge or an associate judge, shall determine the amount of costs, on a solicitor-and-client basis, in accordance with the Federal Courts Rules.ApplicationThis section applies to costs incurred as of April 1, 2015 in relation to participation in any inquiry of the Commission.2014, c. 39, s. 321; 2017, c. 20, s. 2152022, c. 10, s. 3542022, c. 10, s. 371Special and Representational AllowancesAllowance for incidental expenditures actually incurredOn and after April 1, 2020, every judge in receipt of a salary under this Act is entitled to be paid, up to a maximum of $7,500 for each year, for reasonable incidental expenditures that the fit and proper execution of the office of judge may require, to the extent that the judge has actually incurred the expenditures and is not entitled to be reimbursed for them under any other provision of this Act.Allowance for incidental expenditures by associate judgesOn and after April 1, 2020, every associate judge is entitled to be paid, up to a maximum of $7,500 for each year, for reasonable incidental expenditures that the fit and proper execution of the office of associate judge may require, to the extent that the associate judge has actually incurred the expenditures and is not entitled to be reimbursed for them under any other provision of this Act.Additional allowance for northern judgesOn and after April 1, 2004, there shall be paid to each judge of the Supreme Court of Newfoundland and Labrador resident in Labrador and each judge of the Supreme Court of Yukon, the Supreme Court of the Northwest Territories and the Nunavut Court of Justice who is in receipt of a salary under this Act, in addition to the allowance provided by subsection (1), a non-accountable yearly allowance of $12,000 as compensation for the higher cost of living in Labrador and in the territories.Allowance — medical or dental treatmentIf a judge referred to in subsection (2) is required to travel for the purpose of receiving a non-elective medical or dental treatment that is required without delay and unavailable at or in the immediate vicinity of the place where the judge resides, the judge is entitled to be paid an allowance for reasonable expenses actually incurred while travelling for that purpose, to the extent that the judge may not be reimbursed for them under any other provision of this Act.Additional allowance — Federal Courts and Tax Court of CanadaThere shall be paid to every judge of the Federal Court of Appeal, the Federal Court and the Tax Court of Canada who is in receipt of a salary under this Act, in addition to the allowance provided by subsection (1), a non-accountable yearly allowance of $2,000 as compensation for special incidental expenditures inherent in the exercise of their office as judge.[Repealed, 2002, c. 8, s. 86]Continuance in force of subsection (3)Subsection (3) shall continue in force for so long as subsection 57(2) continues in force in relation to judges of superior courts in the provinces.IdemThe additional allowances described in subsections (2) and (3) are deemed not to be travel or personal or living expense allowances expressly fixed by this Act.Representational allowanceOn and after April 1, 2020, each of the following judges is entitled to be paid, as a representational allowance, reasonable travel and other expenses actually incurred by the judge or the spouse or common-law partner of the judge in discharging the special extra-judicial obligations and responsibilities that devolve on the judge, to the extent that those expenses may not be reimbursed under any other provision of this Act and their aggregate amount does not exceed in any year the maximum amount indicated below in respect of the judge:the Chief Justice of Canada, $25,000;each puisne judge of the Supreme Court of Canada, $15,000;the Chief Justice of the Federal Court of Appeal and each chief justice described in sections 12 to 21 as the chief justice of a province, $17,500;each other chief justice referred to in sections 10 to 21, $15,000;the Chief Justices of the Court of Appeal of Yukon, the Court of Appeal of the Northwest Territories, the Court of Appeal of Nunavut, the Supreme Court of Yukon, the Supreme Court of the Northwest Territories and the Nunavut Court of Justice, $15,000 each;the Chief Justice of the Court Martial Appeal Court of Canada, $15,000; andthe Senior Judge of the Family Court, and each regional senior judge, of the Superior Court of Justice in and for the Province of Ontario, $7,500.[Repealed, 2006, c. 11, s. 6]Judge acting in place of recipientWhere any justice or judge mentioned in subsection (6), other than a puisne judge of the Supreme Court of Canada, is unable to discharge the obligations and responsibilities referred to in that subsection or the office of that justice or judge is vacant, the judge who acts in the place of that justice or judge is entitled to be paid the representational allowance provided for that justice or judge.Definition of chief justiceIn this section, except in paragraphs (6)(a) and (c), chief justice includes a senior associate chief justice and an associate chief justice.R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 27; R.S., 1985, c. 50 (1st Supp.), s. 5, c. 27 (2nd Supp.), s. 4, c. 51 (4th Supp.), s. 14; 1989, c. 8, s. 10; 1990, c. 17, s. 31; 1992, c. 51, s. 8; 1993, c. 28, s. 78; 1996, c. 30, s. 2; 1998, c. 15, s. 29; 1999, c. 3, s. 73; 2000, c. 12, s. 168; 2001, c. 7, s. 19; 2002, c. 7, ss. 190, 277(E), c. 8, s. 86; 2006, c. 11, s. 6; 2012, c. 31, s. 213; 2017, c. 20, s. 216, c. 33, s. 2332022, c. 10, s. 3562022, c. 10, s. 371Supernumerary Judges and Associate JudgesFederal Courts and Tax CourtIf a judge of the Federal Court of Appeal, the Federal Court or the Tax Court of Canada notifies the Minister of his or her election to give up regular judicial duties and hold office only as a supernumerary judge, the judge shall hold the office of supernumerary judge of that Court from the time notice is given until he or she reaches the age of retirement, resigns or is removed from or otherwise ceases to hold office, or until the expiry of 10 years from the date of the election, whichever occurs earlier, and shall be paid the salary annexed to that office.Restriction on electionAn election may be made under subsection (1) only by a judgewho has continued in judicial office for at least 15 years and whose combined age and number of years in judicial office is not less than 80; orwho has attained the age of 70 years and has continued in judicial office for at least 10 years.Duties of judgeA judge who has made the election referred to in subsection (1) shall hold himself or herself available to perform such special judicial duties as may be assigned to the judgeby the Chief Justice of the Federal Court of Appeal, if the judge is a judge of that Court;by the Chief Justice or the Associate Chief Justice of the Federal Court, if the judge is a judge of that Court; orby the Chief Justice or the Associate Chief Justice of the Tax Court of Canada, if the judge is a judge of that Court.Salary of supernumerary judgeThe salary of each supernumerary judge of the Federal Court of Appeal, the Federal Court or the Tax Court of Canada is the salary annexed to the office of a judge of that Court, other than the office of a Chief Justice or Associate Chief Justice.R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 28; R.S., 1985, c. 16 (3rd Supp.), s. 3; 2002, c. 8, s. 87; 2006, c. 11, s. 7; 2018, c. 12, s. 3012023, c. 18, s. 13Provincial superior courtsIf the legislature of a province has enacted legislation establishing for each office of judge of a superior court of the province the additional office of supernumerary judge of the court, and a judge of that court notifies the Minister and the attorney general of the province of the judge’s election to give up regular judicial duties and hold office only as a supernumerary judge, the judge shall hold the office of supernumerary judge from the time notice is given until he or she reaches the age of retirement, resigns or is removed from or otherwise ceases to hold office, or until the expiry of 10 years from the date of the election, whichever occurs earlier, and shall be paid the salary annexed to that office.ConditionsAn election under subsection (1) may only be made by a judgewho has continued in judicial office for at least 15 years and whose combined age and number of years in judicial office is not less than 80; orwho has attained the age of 70 years and has continued in judicial office for at least 10 years.Duties of judgeA judge who has made the election referred to in subsection (1) shall hold himself or herself available to perform such special judicial duties as may be assigned to the judgeby the chief justice, senior associate chief justice or associate chief justice, as the case may be, of the court of which the judge is a member or, where that court is constituted with divisions, of the division of which the judge is a member; orin the case of a supernumerary judge of the Supreme Court of Yukon, the Supreme Court of the Northwest Territories or the Nunavut Court of Justice, by the Chief Justice of that Court.Salary of supernumerary judgeThe salary of each supernumerary judge of a superior court is the salary annexed to the office of a judge of that court other than a chief justice, senior associate chief justice or associate chief justice.Reference to attorney general of a provinceIn this section, a reference to the attorney general of a province shall be construed in relation to Yukon, the Northwest Territories and Nunavut as a reference to the Commissioner of that territory.[Repealed, 2017, c. 33, s. 234]R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 29; 1993, c. 28, s. 78; 1999, c. 3, s. 74; 2002, c. 7, s. 191, c. 8, s. 88(E); 2006, c. 11, s. 8; 2012, c. 31, s. 214; 2017, c. 33, s. 2342023, c. 18, s. 13Supernumerary associate judgesIf an associate judge notifies the Minister of his or her election to give up regular judicial duties and hold office only as a supernumerary associate judge, the associate judge shall hold the office of supernumerary associate judge from the time notice is given until he or she reaches the age of retirement, resigns or is removed from or otherwise ceases to hold office, or until the end of five years from the date of the election, whichever occurs earlier, and shall be paid the salary annexed to that office.Restriction on electionAn election may be made under subsection (1) only by an associate judgewho has continued in judicial office for at least 15 years and whose combined age and number of years in judicial office is not less than 80; orwho has attained the age of 70 years and has continued in judicial office for at least 10 years.Duties of associate judgeAn associate judge who has made the election referred to in subsection (1) shall hold himself or herself available to perform such special judicial duties as may be assigned to the associate judge by the chief justice or the associate chief justice of the court to which he or she is appointed.Salary of supernumerary associate judgeThe salary of each supernumerary associate judge is the salary annexed to the office of an associate judge.Deemed election and noticeFor the purposes of subsection (1), if an associate judge gives notice to the Minister of the associate judge’s election to be effective on a future day specified in the notice, being a day on which the associate judge will be eligible to make the election, the associate judge is, effective on that day, deemed to have elected and given notice of the election on that day.R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 30; R.S., 1985, c. 16 (3rd Supp.), s. 4; 1990, c. 17, s. 32; 1992, c. 51, s. 92022, c. 10, s. 3582022, c. 10, s. 3712022, c. 10, s. 375Chief Justice Continuing as JudgeElection of Chief or Associate Chief to change to duties of judge onlyIf the Chief Justice of the Federal Court of Appeal or the Chief Justice or Associate Chief Justice of the Federal Court or the Tax Court of Canada has notified the Minister of his or her election to cease to perform the duties of that office and to perform only the duties of a judge, he or she shall then hold only the office of a judge of the Federal Court of Appeal, the Federal Court or the Tax Court of Canada, as the case may be, and shall be paid the salary annexed to the office of a judge of that Court, until he or she reaches the age of retirement, resigns or is removed from or otherwise ceases to hold office.Restriction on electionThe Chief Justice of the Federal Court of Appeal or the Chief Justice or Associate Chief Justice of the Federal Court or the Tax Court of Canada may make the election referred to in subsection (1) only if he or she has continued in the office for at least five years or has continued in the office and another office referred to in this subsection for a total of at least five years.Duties of judgeThe Chief Justice of the Federal Court of Appeal or the Chief Justice or Associate Chief Justice of the Federal Court or the Tax Court of Canada who has made the election referred to in subsection (1) shall perform all of the judicial duties normally performed by a judge of the Federal Court of Appeal, the Federal Court or the Tax Court of Canada, as the case may be.Salary of judgeThe salary of the Chief Justice of the Federal Court of Appeal or the Chief Justice or Associate Chief Justice of the Federal Court or the Tax Court of Canada who has made the election referred to in subsection (1) is the salary annexed to the office of a judge (other than the Chief Justice) of the Federal Court of Appeal, a judge (other than the Chief Justice or the Associate Chief Justice) of the Federal Court or a judge (other than the Chief Justice or the Associate Chief Justice) of the Tax Court of Canada, as the case may be.R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 31; 2002, c. 8, s. 90; 2017, c. 20, s. 217(F); 2018, c. 12, s. 3022023, c. 18, s. 13Election of Chief Justice of the Court Martial Appeal Court of CanadaIf the Chief Justice of the Court Martial Appeal Court of Canada notifies the Minister of their election to cease to perform the duties of that office and to perform only the duties of a judge of the court on which they serve, they shall, after giving that notice, hold only the office of a judge and shall be paid the salary annexed to the office of a judge, until they reach the age of retirement, resign or are removed from or otherwise cease to hold office.2017, c. 20, s. 2182023, c. 18, s. 13Election to cease to perform duties of chief justice of provincial superior courtWhere the legislature of a province has enacted legislation establishing for each office of chief justice of a superior court of the province such additional offices of judge of that court as are required for the purposes of this section, and a chief justice of that court has notified the Minister and the attorney general of the province of his or her election to cease to perform the duties of chief justice and to perform only the duties of a judge, the chief justice shall thereupon hold only the office of a judge, other than a chief justice, of that court and shall be paid the salary annexed to the office of a judge, other than a chief justice, of that court until he or she reaches the age of retirement, resigns or is removed from or otherwise ceases to hold office.Restriction on electionA chief justice of a superior court of a province may make the election referred to in subsection (1) only if the chief justice has continued in the office of chief justice, senior associate chief justice or associate chief justice of a superior court of the province or a division thereof, or in two or more such offices, for at least five years.Duties of judgeA chief justice of a superior court of a province who has made the election referred to in subsection (1) shall perform all of the judicial duties normally performed by a judge, other than the chief justice, of that court.Salary of judgeThe salary of each chief justice of a superior court of a province who has made the election referred to in subsection (1) is the salary annexed to the office of a judge of that court, other than a chief justice.Definition of chief justice and chief justice of a superior court of a provinceIn this section, chief justice or chief justice of a superior court of a province means a chief justice, senior associate chief justice or associate chief justice of such a court or, where the court is constituted with divisions, of a division thereof.[Repealed, 1992, c. 51, s. 10]R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 32; 1992, c. 51, s. 10; 2002, c. 8, s. 91(E)2023, c. 18, s. 13Chief JusticeIf the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Yukon, the Supreme Court of the Northwest Territories or the Nunavut Court of Justice has notified the Minister and the attorney general of the territory of his or her election to cease to perform the duties of chief justice and to perform only the duties of a judge, he or she shall then hold only the office of a judge, other than the chief justice, of that court and shall be paid the salary annexed to the office of a judge, other than the chief justice, of that court until he or she reaches the age of retirement, resigns or is removed from or otherwise ceases to hold office.Restriction on electionA chief justice may make the election referred to in subsection (1) only if he or she has continued in that office for at least five years.DutiesA chief justice who has made the election referred to in subsection (1) shall perform all of the judicial duties normally performed by a judge, other than the chief justice, of the applicable court.SalaryThe salary of a chief justice who has made the election referred to in subsection (1) is the salary annexed to the office of a judge, other than the chief justice, of the applicable court.2012, c. 31, s. 216; 2017, c. 33, s. 2362023, c. 18, s. 13Early NoticeDeemed election and noticeIf a judge gives notice to the Minister and, if appropriate, to the attorney general of the province concerned of the judge’s election as provided in section 28, 29, 31, 31.1, 32 or 32.1 to be effective on a future day specified in the notice, being a day on which the judge will be eligible to so elect, the judge is, effective on that day, deemed to have elected and given notice of the election on that day under section 28, 29, 31, 31.1, 32 or 32.1, as the case may be.Reference to attorney general of a provinceIn this section, a reference to the attorney general of a province shall be construed in relation to Yukon, the Northwest Territories and Nunavut as a reference to the Commissioner of that territory.R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 33; 1992, c. 51, s. 11; 1993, c. 28, s. 78; 2002, c. 7, s. 192; 2017, c. 20, s. 2192023, c. 18, s. 13Travel and Other AllowancesSuperior courtsSubject to this section and sections 36 to 39, a judge of a superior court who, for the purposes of performing any function or duty in that capacity, attends at any place other than that at which or in the immediate vicinity of which the judge is by law obliged to reside is entitled to be paid, as a travel allowance, moving or transportation expenses and the reasonable travel and other expenses incurred by the judge in so attending.Where no allowanceNo judge is entitled to be paid a travel allowance for attending at or in the immediate vicinity of the place where the judge resides.R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 34; 1992, c. 51, s. 12; 2002, c. 8, s. 92[Repealed, 1992, c. 51, s. 13]Certain superior courts, where no allowanceNo travel allowance shall be paidto a judge of the Nova Scotia Court of Appeal or of the Supreme Court of Nova Scotia for attending at the judicial centre at which or in the immediate vicinity of which the judge maintains his or her principal office;to a judge of the Court of Appeal of Prince Edward Island or the Supreme Court of Prince Edward Island for attending at the city of Charlottetown; orto a judge of the Court of Appeal for British Columbia for attending at either of the cities of Victoria or Vancouver, unless the judge resides at the other of those cities or in the immediate vicinity thereof.Where place of residence approved by order in councilNothing in subsection (1) affects the right of a judge to be paid a travel allowance under subsection 34(1) if the judge resides at a place approved by the Governor in Council.R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 36; 1992, c. 51, s. 14; 2015, c. 3, s. 127Judges of Supreme Court of Nova ScotiaA judge of the Supreme Court of Nova Scotia who, for the purposes of performing any function or duty in that capacity, attends at any judicial centre within the judicial district for which the judge is designated as a resident judge, other than the judicial centre at which or in the immediate vicinity of which the judge resides or maintains his or her principal office, is entitled to be paid, as a travel allowance, moving or transportation expenses and the reasonable travel and other expenses incurred by the judge in so attending.R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 37; 1992, c. 51, s. 15Judges of the Superior Court of Justice of OntarioA judge of the Superior Court of Justice in and for the Province of Ontario who, for the purpose of performing any function or duty in that capacity, attends at any judicial centre within the region for which the judge was appointed or assigned, other than the judicial centre at which or in the immediate vicinity of which the judge resides, is entitled to be paid, as a travel allowance, moving or transportation expenses and the reasonable travel and other expenses incurred by the judge in so attending.R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 38; R.S., 1985, c. 11 (1st Supp.), s. 2; 1990, c. 17, s. 33; 1998, c. 30, s. 6Certificate of judgeEvery application for payment of a travel allowance shall be accompanied by a certificate of the judge applying for it showing the number of days for which a travel allowance is claimed and the amount of the actual expenses incurred.R.S., c. J-1, s. 21Removal allowanceA removal allowance shall be paid toa person who is appointed a judge of a superior court and who, for the purposes of assuming the functions and duties of that office, is required to move from his or her place of residence to a place outside the immediate vicinity of the place where the person resided at the time of the appointment;a judge of a superior court who, during tenure and for the purposes of performing the functions and duties of that office, is required to change the place of residence of the judge to a place other than that at which or in the immediate vicinity of which the judge was required to reside immediately before being required to change the place of residence of that judge;a judge of the Supreme Court of Newfoundland and Labrador resident in Labrador, the Supreme Court of Yukon, the Supreme Court of the Northwest Territories or the Nunavut Court of Justice who moves to a place of residence in one of the 10 provinces or in another territory during the period of two yearsbeginning two years before the judge’s date of eligibility to retire, orif no removal allowance is paid in respect of a move made during the period described in subparagraph (i), beginning on the judge’s date of retirement or resignation from office;a survivor or child, as defined in subsection 47(1), of a judge of the Supreme Court of Newfoundland and Labrador resident in Labrador, the Supreme Court of Yukon, the Supreme Court of the Northwest Territories or the Nunavut Court of Justice who dies while holding office as such, if the survivor or child lives with the judge at the time of the judge’s death and, within two years after the death, moves to a place of residence in one of the 10 provinces or in another territory;a judge of the Supreme Court of Canada, the Federal Court of Appeal, the Federal Court or the Tax Court of Canada who moves to a place of residence in Canada outside the area within which the judge was required to reside by the Act establishing that Court, during the period of two yearsbeginning two years before the judge’s date of eligibility to retire, orif no removal allowance is paid in respect of a move made during the period described in subparagraph (i), beginning on the judge’s date of retirement or resignation from office; anda survivor or child, as defined in subsection 47(1), of a judge of the Supreme Court of Canada, the Federal Court of Appeal, the Federal Court or the Tax Court of Canada who dies while holding office as such, if the survivor or child lives with the judge at the time of the judge’s death and, within two years after the death, moves to a place of residence in Canada outside the area within which the judge was required to reside by the Act establishing that Court.LimitationParagraphs (1)(c) and (d) apply only in respect ofa judge who resided in one of the 10 provinces or in another territory at the time of appointment to the Supreme Court of Yukon, the Supreme Court of the Northwest Territories or the Nunavut Court of Justice, as the case may be; ora judge of the Supreme Court of Newfoundland and Labrador resident in Labrador who at the time of appointment did not reside there.LimitationParagraphs (1)(e) and (f) apply only in respect of a judge who, at the time of appointment to the Supreme Court of Canada, the Federal Court of Appeal, the Federal Court or the Tax Court of Canada, as the case may be, resided outside the area within which the judge was required to reside by the Act establishing that Court.IdemA removal allowance referred to in subsection (1) shall be paid for moving and other expenses of such kinds as are prescribed by or under the authority of the Governor in Council and on such terms and conditions as are so prescribed.Expenses of spouse or common-law partnerWhere a removal allowance is payable to a judge of the Supreme Court of Canada, the Federal Court of Appeal, the Federal Court or the Tax Court of Canada under paragraph (1)(a), an employment assistance allowance shall be paid to the judge’s spouse or common-law partner up to a maximum of $5,000 for expenses actually incurred by the spouse or common-law partner in pursuing employment in the judge’s new place of residence.R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 40; R.S., 1985, c. 50 (1st Supp.), s. 6; 1989, c. 8, s. 11; 1992, c. 51, s. 16; 1999, c. 3, s. 75; 2000, c. 12, s. 160; 2002, c. 7, s. 193, c. 8, s. 93; 2006, c. 11, s. 9; 2017, c. 20, s. 220Meeting, conference and seminar expensesA judge of a superior court who attends a meeting, conference or seminar that is held for a purpose relating to the administration of justice and that the judge in the capacity of a judge is required by law to attend, or who, with the approval of the chief justice of that court, attends any such meeting, conference or seminar that the judge in that capacity is expressly authorized by law to attend, is entitled to be paid, as a conference allowance, reasonable travel and other expenses actually incurred by the judge in so attending.Expenses for other meetings, conferences or seminarsSubject to subsection (3), a judge of a superior court who, with the approval of the chief justice of that court,attends a meeting, conference or seminar that the judge in the capacity of a judge is not expressly authorized by law or is not required by law to attend but that is certified by the chief justice to be a meeting, conference or seminar having as its object or as one of its objects the promotion of efficiency or uniformity in the superior courts, or the improvement of the quality of judicial service in those courts, orin lieu of attending a meeting, conference or seminar referred to in paragraph (a) that is certified as provided in that paragraph, acquires written or recorded materials distributed for the purpose of, or written or recorded proceedings of, any such meeting, conference or seminar,is entitled to be paid, as a conference allowance, reasonable travel and other expenses actually incurred by the judge in so attending or the cost of acquiring the materials or proceedings, as the case may be.LimitationWhere the aggregate amount of conference allowances that have been paid under subsection (2) in any yearto the judges of the Supreme Court of Canada exceeds the product obtained by multiplying the number of judges of that Court by one thousand dollars, orto the judges of any other particular superior court exceeds the greater of $5,000 and the product obtained by multiplying the number of judges of that court by $500,no additional amount may be paid under that subsection in that year as a conference allowance to any judge of that court except with the approval of the Minister.DefinitionsFor the purposes of this section,chief justice of any court of which a particular judge is a member means the chief justice or other person recognized by law as having rank or status senior to all other members of, or having the supervision of, that court, but if that court is constituted with divisions, then it means the person having that rank or status in relation to all other members of the division of which the particular judge is a member; (juge en chef)superior court, in the case of a superior court constituted with divisions, means a division thereof. (juridiction supérieure)R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 41; R.S., 1985, c. 50 (1st Supp.), s. 7; 1992, c. 51, s. 17; 2002, c. 8, s. 942023, c. 18, s. 13Special Retirement Provision — Supreme Court of Canada JudgesRetired judge may continue to hold officeA judge of the Supreme Court of Canada who has retired may, with the approval of the Chief Justice of Canada, continue to participate in judgments in which he or she participated before retiring, for a period not greater than six months after the date of the retirement.Salary, etc.A retired judge participating in judgments shall receivethe salary annexed to the office during that period less any amount otherwise payable to him or her under this Act in respect of the period, other than those amounts described in paragraphs (b) and (c);an amount that bears the same ratio to the allowance for incidental expenditures actually incurred referred to in subsection 27(1) that the number of months in the period bears to twelve; andthe representational allowance referred to in subsection 27(6) for the period, as though the appropriate maximum referred to in that subsection were an amount that bears the same ratio to that allowance that the number of months in the period bears to twelve.No extra remunerationSection 57 applies with respect to a judge to whom this section applies.2001, c. 7, s. 20; 2006, c. 11, s. 10BenefitsLife insuranceThe Treasury Board shall establish, or enter into a contract to acquire, an insurance program for judges covering the following, on terms and conditions similar to those contained in the Public Service Management Insurance Plan and the public service management insurance directives that apply to executives:basic life insurance;supplementary life insurance;post-retirement life insurance;dependants’ insurance; andaccidental death and dismemberment insurance.AdministrationThe Treasury Board mayset terms and conditions in respect of the program, including those respecting premiums or contributions payable, benefits, and management and control of the program;make contributions and pay premiums or benefits, as required, out of the Consolidated Revenue Fund; andundertake and do all things it considers appropriate for the purpose of administering or supervising the program.Non-application of certain regulationsA contract entered into under this section is not subject to any regulation with respect to contracts made by the Treasury Board under the Financial Administration Act.Compulsory participationParticipation in basic life insurance under paragraph (1)(a) is compulsory for all judges.TransitionalA judge who holds office on the day on which this section comes into force may, despite subsection (4), elect, at any time within ninety days after that day,to participate in basic life insurance under paragraph (1)(a) but have his or her coverage under it limited to 100 per cent of salary at the time of his or her death; ornot to participate in basic life insurance.TransitionalSubject to subsection (7), on the coming into force of this section, judges shall no longer be eligible for coverage under any other life insurance program established by the Treasury Board.Supplementary life insuranceThose judges covered by supplementary life insurance on the coming into force of this section may have their coverage continued under the insurance program for judges, unless they have made an election under paragraph (5)(b).2001, c. 7, s. 20Health and dental care benefitsJudges shall be eligible to participate in the Public Service Health Care Plan and the Public Service Dental Care Plan established by the Treasury Board, on the same terms and conditions as apply to employees in the executive group.Health and dental care benefits for retired judgesJudges who are in receipt of an annuity under this Act shall be eligible to participate in the Public Service Health Care Plan and the Pensioners’ Dental Services Plan established by the Treasury Board, on the same terms and conditions as apply to pensioners.AdministrationSubject to subsections (1) and (2), the Treasury Board mayset any terms and conditions in respect of those plans, including those respecting premiums or contributions payable, benefits, and management and control of the plans;make contributions and pay premiums or benefits, as required, out of the Consolidated Revenue Fund; andundertake and do all things it considers appropriate for the purpose of administering or supervising the plans.2001, c. 7, s. 20Accidental death in the exercise of dutiesCompensation, within the meaning of the Government Employees Compensation Act, shall be paid to the dependants of a judge whose death results from an accident arising out of or in the performance of judicial duties, on the same basis as that paid to dependants eligible for compensation under that Act.Flying accidents causing deathRegulations made under section 9 of the Aeronautics Act apply with respect to a judge whose death results from an accident arising out of or in the performance of judicial duties.Death resulting from act of violenceCompensation shall be paid to the survivors of a judge whose death results from an act of violence unlawfully committed by another person or persons that occurs while the judge is performing judicial duties, on the same basis as that paid to the survivors of employees slain on duty within the meaning of the Public Service Income Benefit Plan for Survivors of Employees Slain on Duty, with any modifications that the circumstances require.ApplicationSubsections (1) to (3) apply to deaths that occur on or after April 1, 2000.2001, c. 7, s. 20DelegationThe Treasury Board may authorize the President or Secretary of the Treasury Board to exercise and perform, in such manner and subject to such terms and conditions as the Treasury Board directs, any of the powers and functions of the Treasury Board under sections 41.2 and 41.3 and may, from time to time as it sees fit, revise or rescind and reinstate the authority so granted.SubdelegationThe President or Secretary of the Treasury Board may, subject to and in accordance with the authorization, authorize one or more persons under his or her jurisdiction or any other person to exercise or perform any of those powers or functions.2001, c. 7, s. 20Annuities for JudgesPayment of annuitiesA judge shall be paid an annuity equal to two thirds of the salary annexed to the office held by the judge at the time of his or her resignation, removal or attaining the age of retirement, as the case may be, if the judgehas continued in judicial office for at least 15 years, has a combined age and number of years in judicial office that is not less than 80 and resigns from office;has attained the age of retirement and has held judicial office for at least 10 years; orhas continued in judicial office on the Supreme Court of Canada for at least 10 years and resigns from office.Grant of annuitiesThe Governor in Council shall grant to a judge an annuity equal to two thirds of the salary annexed to the office held by the judge at the time of his or her resignation, removal or attaining the age of retirement, as the case may be, if the judgehas continued in judicial office for at least 15 years and resigns his or her office, if in the opinion of the Governor in Council the resignation is conducive to the better administration of justice or is in the national interest; orhas become afflicted with a permanent infirmity disabling him or her from the due execution of the office of judge and resigns his or her office or by reason of that infirmity is removed from office.Prorated annuityIf a judge who has attained the age of retirement has held judicial office for less than 10 years, an annuity shall be paid to that judge that bears the same ratio to the annuity described in subsection (1) as the number of years the judge has held judicial office, to the nearest one tenth of a year, bears to 10 years.Duration of annuitiesAn annuity granted or paid to a judge under this section shall commence on the day of his or her resignation, removal or attaining the age of retirement and shall continue during the life of the judge.Definition of judicial officeIn this section, judicial office means the office of a judge of a superior or county court or the office of an associate judge.R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 42; 1998, c. 30, s. 7; 2002, c. 8, ss. 95, 111(E); 2006, c. 11, s. 11; 2014, c. 39, s. 3222017, c. 33, s. 2382022, c. 10, s. 3592022, c. 10, s. 371Annuity payable to supernumerary judgeIf a supernumerary judge, before becoming one, held the office of chief justice, senior associate chief justice or associate chief justice, the annuity payable to the judge under section 42 is an annuity equal to two thirds of the salary annexed, at the time of his or her resignation, removal or attaining the age of retirement, to the office of chief justice, senior associate chief justice or associate chief justice previously held by him or her.Annuity for former supernumerary judgeIf a supernumerary judge to whom subsection (1) applies is appointed to a different court to perform only the duties of a judge, the annuity payable to the judge under section 42 is an annuity equal to two thirds of the salary annexed, at the time of his or her resignation, removal or attaining the age of retirement, to the office of chief justice, senior associate chief justice or associate chief justice previously held by him or her.Annuity — election under section 31, 32 or 32.1If the Chief Justice of the Federal Court of Appeal or the Chief Justice or Associate Chief Justice of the Federal Court or the Tax Court of Canada, in accordance with section 31, or a chief justice of a superior court of a province, in accordance with section 32, or the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Yukon, the Supreme Court of the Northwest Territories or the Nunavut Court of Justice, in accordance with section 32.1, has elected to cease to perform his or her duties and to perform only the duties of a judge, the annuity payable to him or her under section 42 is an annuity equal to two thirds of the salary annexed, at the time of his or her resignation, removal or attainment of the age of retirement, to the office held by him or her immediately before his or her election.Annuity — election under section 31.1If the Chief Justice of the Court Martial Appeal Court of Canada, in accordance with section 31.1, has elected to cease to perform his or her duties as such and to perform only the duties of a judge, the annuity payable to him or her under section 42 is an annuity equal to two thirds of the salary annexed, at the time of his or her resignation, removal or attaining the age of retirement, to the office held by him or her immediately before his or her election, if he or she had continued in that office for at least five years or had continued in that office and any other office of chief justice for a total of at least five years.Annuity payable to chief justiceIf a chief justice is appointed to a different court to perform only the duties of a judge, the annuity payable to him or her under section 42 is an annuity equal to two thirds of the salary annexed, at the time of his or her resignation, removal or attaining the age of retirement, to the office of chief justice, if he or she had continued in that office for at least five years or had continued in that office and any other office of chief justice for at least five years.Definition of chief justice and chief justice of a superior court of a provinceIn subsections (2) to (2.2), chief justice or chief justice of a superior court of a province means a chief justice, senior associate chief justice or associate chief justice of that court, or, if that court is constituted with divisions, of a division of that court.Application of subsections (1) and (2)Subsections (1) and (2) are deemed to have come into force on April 1, 2012.R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 43; 1992, c. 51, s. 19; 2002, c. 8, s. 96; 2012, c. 31, s. 217; 2017, c. 20, s. 221, c. 33, s. 239; 2018, c. 12, ss. 303, 308Prorated Annuities — Early Retirement55 years of age and 10 years in officeA judge who has attained the age of 55 years, has continued in judicial office for at least 10 years and elects early retirement shall be paid an immediate annuity or a deferred annuity, at the option of the judge, calculated in accordance with this section.Calculation of amount of deferred annuityThe amount of the deferred annuity shall be two thirds of the amount of the salary annexed to the judge’s office at the time of the election multiplied by a fraction of whichthe numerator is the number of years, to the nearest one tenth of a year, during which the judge has continued in judicial office, andthe denominator is the number of years, to the nearest one tenth of a year, during which the judge would have been required to continue in judicial office in order to be eligible to be paid an annuity under paragraph 42(1)(a) or (b).Immediate annuityIf a judge exercises the option to receive an immediate annuity, the amount of that annuity is equal to the amount of the deferred annuity, reduced by the product obtained by multiplyingfive per cent of the amount of the deferred annuitybythe difference between sixty and his or her age in years, to the nearest one-tenth of a year, at the time he or she exercises the option.Second exercise of optionA judge whose option was to receive a deferred annuity may, between the date of that option and the date on which the deferred annuity would be payable, opt for an immediate annuity. An immediate annuity shall be paid to the judge from the date of the second option.Survivor’s annuityOn the death of a judge who has been paid an immediate annuity or a deferred annuity under subsection (1) or (4), the annuity paid to a survivor under subsection 44(2) shall be determined as if the judge were in receipt of a deferred annuity.DefinitionsThe definitions in this subsection apply in this section.deferred annuity means an annuity that becomes payable to a judge at the time that he or she reaches sixty years of age and that continues to be paid during the life of the judge. (pension différée)immediate annuity means an annuity that becomes payable to a judge at the time that he or she exercises an option to receive the annuity and that continues to be paid during the life of the judge. (pension immédiate)judicial office includes the office of an associate judge. (magistrature)2001, c. 7, s. 21; 2006, c. 11, s. 12; 2014, c. 39, s. 3232017, c. 33, s. 2402022, c. 10, s. 3602022, c. 10, s. 371Annuities for SurvivorsAnnuity for surviving spouseSubject to this section, if a judge of a superior court while holding office died or dies after July 10, 1955, the survivor of the judge shall be paid, commencing on July 18, 1983 or immediately after the death of the judge, whichever is later, and continuing during the life of the survivor, an annuity equal to one third ofthe salary of the judge at the date of the death of the judge, orthe salary annexed, at the date of death, to the office previously held by the judge of chief justice, senior associate chief justice or associate chief justice, if one of subsections 43(1), (1.1), (2), (2.1) or (2.2) would have applied to the judge if he or she had resigned, been removed or attained the age of retirement, on the day of death.Judge receiving annuitySubject to this section, if a judge who, before, on or after July 11, 1955, was granted or paid a pension or annuity under this Act or any other Act of Parliament providing for pensions or annuities to be granted or paid to judges, died or dies after July 10, 1955, the survivor of the judge shall be paidan annuity equal to one half of the pension or annuity granted or paid to the judge, commencing on July 18, 1983 or immediately after the death of the judge, whichever is later, and continuing during the life of the survivor; orif a division of the judge’s annuity benefits has been made under section 52.14, an annuity equal to one half of the annuity that would have been granted or paid to the judge had the annuity benefits not been divided, commencing immediately after the death of the judge and continuing during the life of the survivor.ProthonotariesNo annuity shall be paid under this section to the survivor of a prothonotary of the Federal Court if the prothonotary ceased to hold the office of prothonotary before the day on which this subsection comes into force.Limitation on annuity for survivorNo annuity shall be paid under this section to the survivor of a judge if the survivor became the spouse or began to cohabit with the judge in a conjugal relationship after the judge ceased to hold office.[Repealed, R.S., 1985, c. 39 (3rd Supp.), s. 2]R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 44; R.S., 1985, c. 39 (3rd Supp.), s. 2; 1992, c. 51, s. 20; 1996, c. 30, s. 3; 2000, c. 12, ss. 162, 169; 2001, c. 7, s. 22; 2002, c. 8, s. 97; 2006, c. 11, s. 13; 2014, c. 39, s. 324; 2017, c. 20, s. 2222017, c. 33, s. 242Election for enhanced annuity for survivorSubject to the regulations, a judge may elect to have the annuity to be paid to his or her survivor increased so that it is calculated as if the reference to “one half” in subsection 44(2) were read as a reference to “60%” or “75%”.Reduction of annuityIf a judge makes the election, the amount of the annuity granted or paid to the judge shall be reduced in accordance with the regulations as of the date the election takes effect, but the combined actuarial present value of the reduced annuity and the annuity that would be paid to the survivor must not be less than the combined actuarial present value of the annuity granted or paid to the judge and the annuity that would be paid to the survivor, immediately before the reduction is made.Election to take effect at time of retirementSubject to subsection (6), an election under this section takes effect on the date that the judge ceases to hold office.Death within one year after electionDespite anything in this section, when a judge dies within one year after the election takes effect, the annuity payable to the survivor remains that payable under subsection 44(2) and the amount representing the reduction that was made in the amount of the judge’s annuity under subsection (2) shall be repaid to the judge’s estate or succession, together with interest at the rate prescribed under the Income Tax Act for amounts payable by the Minister of National Revenue as refunds of overpayments of tax under that Act.RegulationsThe Governor in Council may make regulations respectingthe time, manner and circumstances in which an election is made, is deemed to have been made or is deemed not to have been made, is revoked or is deemed to have been revoked, or ceases to have effect, and the retroactive application of that making, revocation or cessation;the reduction to be made in the amount of a judge’s annuity when the election is made;the calculation of the amount of the annuity to be paid to the judge and the survivor under subsection (2);the time, manner and circumstances in which a reduction of a judge’s annuity may be returned and interest may be paid; andany other matter that the Governor in Council considers necessary for carrying out the purposes and provisions of this section.TransitionalA judge who is in receipt of an annuity on the day on which this section comes into force may make his or her election in accordance with the regulations, and the election takes effect on the day this section comes into force.Limitation on annuity to survivorDespite anything in this section, no election may be made under this section for the benefit of a spouse or common-law partner of a judge unless that person was the spouse or common-law partner at the date the judge ceased to hold office.2001, c. 7, s. 232017, c. 33, s. 243Annuity to be prorated between the two survivorsNotwithstanding section 44, if there are two persons who are entitled to an annuity under that section, each survivor shall receive a share of the annuity prorated in accordance with subsection (2) for his or her life.Determination of prorated shareThe prorated share of each survivor is equal to the product obtained by multiplying the annuity by a fraction of which the numerator is the number of years that the survivor cohabited with the judge, whether before or after his or her appointment as a judge, and the denominator is the total obtained by adding the number of years that each of the survivors so cohabited with the judge.YearsIn determining a number of years for the purpose of subsection (2), a part of a year shall be counted as a full year if the part is six or more months and shall be ignored if it is less.WaiverA survivor is not entitled to receive an annuity under section 44 or this section if the survivor has waived his or her entitlement to the annuity under an agreement entered into in accordance with applicable provincial law.2000, c. 12, s. 163Election for former judgesSubject to the regulations, a judge to whom an annuity has been granted or paid may elect to reduce his or her annuity so that an annuity may be paid to a person who, at the time of the election, is the spouse or common-law partner of the judge but to whom an annuity under section 44 must not be paid.Reduction of annuityIf a judge makes the election, the amount of the annuity granted or paid to the judge shall be reduced in accordance with the regulations, but the combined actuarial present value of the reduced annuity and the annuity that would be paid to the spouse or common-law partner under subsection (3) must not be less than the actuarial present value of the annuity granted or paid to the judge immediately before the reduction is made.Payment to person in respect of whom election is madeWhen the judge dies, the spouse or common-law partner in respect of whom an election was made shall be paid an annuity in an amount determined in accordance with the election, subsection (2) and the regulations.Death within one year after electionDespite anything in this section, when a judge dies within one year after making the election, the election is deemed not to have been made and the amount representing the reduction that was made in the amount of the judge’s annuity under subsection (2) shall be repaid to the judge’s estate or succession, together with interest at the rate prescribed under the Income Tax Act for amounts payable by the Minister of National Revenue as refunds of overpayments of tax under that Act.RegulationsThe Governor in Council may make regulations respectingthe time, manner and circumstances in which an election is made, is deemed to have been made or is deemed not to have been made, is revoked or is deemed to have been revoked, or ceases to have effect, and the retroactive application of that making, revocation or cessation;the reduction to be made in the amount of a judge’s annuity when an election is made;the amount of the annuity to be paid under subsection (3);the time, manner and circumstances in which a reduction of a judge’s annuity may be returned and interest may be paid; andany other matter that the Governor in Council considers necessary for carrying out the purposes and provisions of this section.2000, c. 12, s. 163; 2001, c. 7, s. 242017, c. 33, s. 244[Repealed, 1992, c. 51, s. 21]Lump Sum PaymentLump sum paymentWhere a judge dies while holding office, a lump sum equal to one sixth of the yearly salary of the judge at the time of death shall be paid to the survivor of the judge or, if there are two survivors, to the survivor who was cohabiting with the judge at the time of death, and if there is no survivor, to the estate or succession of the judge.1989, c. 8, s. 12; 2000, c. 12, s. 164Annuities for Surviving ChildrenDefinition of childFor the purposes of this section and sections 48 and 49, child means a child of a judge, including a child adopted legally or in fact, whois less than eighteen years of age; oris eighteen or more years of age but less than twenty-five years of age and is in full-time attendance at a school or university, having been in such attendance substantially without interruption since the child of the judge reached eighteen years of age or the judge died, whichever occurred later.Regulations respecting school attendanceThe Governor in Council may make regulationsdefining, for the purposes of this Act, the expression “full-time attendance at a school or university” as applied to a child of a judge; andspecifying, for the purposes of this Act, the circumstances under which attendance at a school or university shall be determined to be substantially without interruption.Annuity for surviving childrenIf a judge of a superior or county court dies while holding office, or a judge who was granted or paid an annuity after October 5, 1971 dies, an annuity shall be paid to each surviving child of that judge as provided in subsections (4) and (5).Annuity for children if survivorEach child of a judge described in subsection (3) shall be paidif the judge leaves a survivor, an annuity equal to one-fifth of the annuity that is provided for a survivor under subsection 44(1) or (2); andif there is no survivor or the survivor dies, an annuity equal to two-fifths of the annuity that is provided for a survivor under subsection 44(1) or (2).Maximum of annuities to childrenThe total amount of the annuities paid under subsection (4) shall not exceed four-fifths, in the case described in paragraph (4)(a), and eight-fifths, in the case described in paragraph (4)(b), of the annuity that is provided for a survivor under subsection 44(1) or (2).[Repealed, 2000, c. 12, s. 165]R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 47; R.S., 1985, c. 39 (3rd Supp.), s. 3; 1998, c. 30, s. 8(F); 2000, c. 12, s. 165; 2002, c. 8, s. 982017, c. 33, s. 246Apportionment of annuities among surviving childrenIf, in computing the annuities to be paid under subsection 47(3) to the children of a judge referred to in that subsection, it is determined that there are more than four children of the judge to whom an annuity shall be paid, the total amount of the annuities paid shall be apportioned among the children in the shares that the Minister considers just and proper under the circumstances.Children’s annuities, to whom paidIf an annuity under this Act is paid to a child of a judge, payment shall, if the child is less than 18 years of age, be made to the person having the custody and control of the child or, if there is no person having the custody and control of the child, to any person that the Minister directs and, for the purposes of this subsection, the survivor of the judge, except if the child is living apart from the survivor, shall be presumed, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, to be the person having the custody and control of the child.R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 48; 2000, c. 12, s. 1662017, c. 33, s. 2472023, c. 18, s. 13Regulations concerning Inheritance TaxesPayment of certain taxes out of C.R.F.The Governor in Council may make regulations providing for the payment out of the Consolidated Revenue Fund, on the payment of an annuity under this Act to the survivor or children of a judge or a retired judge, of the whole or any part of the portion of any estate, legacy, succession or inheritance duties or taxes that are payable by the survivor or children with respect to the annuity, as is determined in accordance with the regulations to be attributable to that annuity, and prescribing the amount by which and the manner in which the annuity in that case shall be reduced.R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 49; 2000, c. 12, s. 1692017, c. 33, s. 248(E)Judges’ Contributions toward AnnuitiesJudges appointed before February 17, 1975Every judge appointed before February 17, 1975 to hold office as a judge of a superior or county court shall, by reservation from the judge’s salary under this Act, contribute to the Consolidated Revenue Fund one and one-half per cent of that salary.Judges appointed after February 16, 1975Every judge appointed after February 16, 1975 to whom subsection (1) does not apply, shall, by reservation from the judge’s salary under this Act, contributeto the Consolidated Revenue Fund an amount equal to six per cent of that salary; andto the Supplementary Retirement Benefits Account established in the accounts of Canada pursuant to the Supplementary Retirement Benefits Act,prior to 1977, an amount equal to one-half of one per cent of that salary, andcommencing with the month of January 1977, an amount equal to one per cent of that salary.Adjustment of contributionsA supernumerary judge, a judge who continues in judicial office after having been in judicial office for at least 15 years and whose combined age and number of years in judicial office is not less than 80, a judge of the Supreme Court of Canada who has continued in judicial office on that Court for at least 10 years, or a judge referred to in section 41.1 is not required to contribute under subsections (1) and (2) but is required to contribute, by reservation from salary, to the Supplementary Retirement Benefits Account at a rate of one per cent of his or her salary.InterestInterest is payable on all contributions refunded as a result of the application of subsection (2.1) at the rate prescribed under the Income Tax Act for amounts payable by the Minister of National Revenue as refunds of overpayments of tax under that Act.Income Tax ActFor the purposes of the Income Tax Act, the amounts contributed by a judge pursuant to subsection (1), (2) or (2.1) are deemed to be contributed to or under a registered pension plan.Amounts to be credited to S.R.B. AccountWhere any amount is paid into the Supplementary Retirement Benefits Account pursuant to paragraph (2)(b), an amount equal to the amount so paid shall be credited to that Account.Definition of judicial officeIn this section, judicial office includes the office of an associate judge.R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 50; 1992, c. 51, s. 23; 1999, c. 31, s. 240; 2001, c. 7, s. 25; 2002, c. 8, s. 99; 2006, c. 11, s. 14; 2014, c. 39, s. 3252022, c. 10, s. 3612022, c. 10, s. 371Return of contributions if no annuityIf a judge has ceased to hold office otherwise than by reason of death and, at the time he or she ceased to hold office, no annuity under this Act was granted or could be paid to that judge, there shall be paid to the judge, in respect of his or her having ceased to hold that office, an amount equal to the total contributions made by him or her under subsection 50(1) or paragraph 50(2)(a), together with interest, if any, calculated in accordance with subsection (4).Return of contributions if annuityIf a judge to whom subsection 50(1) applies has ceased to hold office otherwise than by reason of death and that judge is granted or paid an annuity under this Act, there shall be paid to the judge in respect of his or her having ceased to hold that office an amount equal to the total contributions made by the judge under subsection 50(1), together with interest, if any, calculated in accordance with subsection (4), if,at the time the judge ceased to hold office, there is no person to whom an annuity under this Act could be paid in respect of the judge on his or her death; orat any time after the judge ceased to hold office but before his or her death, all persons to whom an annuity under this Act could be paid in respect of the judge on his or her death have died or ceased to be eligible to be paid an annuity.Death benefitWhere, on or at any time after the death of a judge who died while holding office, or the death of a judge who died after ceasing to hold office but to whom no amount has been paid under subsection (1) or (2), there is no person or there is no longer any person to whom an annuity under this Act may be paid in respect of the judge, any amount by whichthe total contributions made by the judge under subsection 50(1) or paragraph 50(2)(a), together with interest, if any, calculated pursuant to subsection (4),exceedsthe total amount, if any, paid to or in respect of the judge as annuity payments under this Act,shall thereupon be paid as a death benefit to the estate of the judge or, if less than one thousand dollars, as the Minister may direct.Interest on payments and amounts of contributionsWhere an amount becomes payable under subsection (1), (2) or (3) in respect of contributions made by a judge under subsection 50(1) or paragraph 50(2)(a), the Minister shalldetermine the total amount of contributions that have been made under that provision by the judge in respect of each year, in this subsection called a “contribution year”, in which contributions were made by the judge; andcalculate interest on the amount determined under paragraph (a) in respect of each contribution year, compounded annually,in respect of each contribution year before 1997,at the rate of four per cent from December 31 of the contribution year to December 31, 1996, andat the rate prescribed under the Income Tax Act for amounts payable by the Minister of National Revenue as refunds of overpayments of tax under that Act in effect from time to time, from December 31, 1996 to December 31 of the year immediately before the year in which the amount in respect of contributions made by the judge becomes payable, andin respect of the 1997 contribution year and each contribution year after 1997, at the rate mentioned in clause (i)(B) from December 31 of the contribution year to December 31 of the year immediately before the year in which the amount in respect of contributions made by the judge becomes payable.R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 51; 1998, c. 30, s. 9; 2002, c. 8, ss. 100(E), 111(E)2017, c. 33, s. 249(E)2023, c. 18, s. 13Diversion Under Financial Support OrderDiversion of payments to satisfy financial support orderIf a court in Canada of competent jurisdiction has made an order requiring a recipient of an annuity or other amount payable under section 42, 43, 43.1, 44, 44.1 or 44.2 or subsection 51(1) to pay financial support, amounts so payable to the recipient are subject to being diverted to the person named in the order in accordance with Part II of the Garnishment, Attachment and Pension Diversion Act.Payment deemed to be to former judgeFor the purposes of this Part, any payment made pursuant to subsection (1) shall be deemed to have been made to the former judge in respect of whom the payment was made.R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 52; 2000, c. 12, s. 167; 2017, c. 20, s. 224Division of Judge’s Annuity Benefits on Conjugal BreakdownDefinitionsThe following definitions apply in this section and in sections 52.11 to 52.22.agreement means an agreement referred to in subparagraph 52.11(2)(b)(ii). (accord)annuity means an annuity payable under section 42, 43 or 43.1. (pension)annuity benefit means an annuity or a return of contributions payable under section 51, and includes amounts payable to a judge under the Supplementary Retirement Benefits Act. (prestation de pension)application means an application made under subsection 52.11(1). (demande)court order means an order referred to in paragraph 52.11(2)(a) or subparagraph 52.11(2)(b)(i). (ordonnance)interested party, in relation to an application for division of a judge’s annuity benefits, means the judge or the spouse, former spouse or former common-law partner with whom those benefits would be divided under the application. (intéressé)judge includes a former judge who has been granted or paid an annuity. (juge)Minister[Repealed, 2023, c. 18, s. 3]prescribed means prescribed by regulation. (Version anglaise seulement)spouse, in relation to a judge, includes a person who is a party to a void marriage with the judge. (époux)2006, c. 11, s. 152017, c. 33, s. 250(E)2023, c. 18, s. 3Application for divisionA judge or a spouse, former spouse or former common-law partner of a judge may, in the circumstances described in subsection (2), apply in accordance with the regulations for the division of the judge’s annuity benefits between the judge and the spouse, former spouse or former common-law partner.When application may be madeAn application may be made under the following circumstances:where a court of competent jurisdiction in Canada, in proceedings in relation to divorce, annulment of marriage or separation, has made an order that provides for the annuity benefits to be divided between the interested parties; orwhere the interested parties have been living separate and apart for a period of one year or more and, either before or after they began to live separate and apart,a court of competent jurisdiction in Canada has made an order that provides for the annuity benefits to be divided between them, orthe interested parties have entered into a written agreement that provides for the annuity benefits to be divided between them.Notice to interested partiesThe Minister shall send to each interested party in accordance with the regulations a notice of the receipt of an application.2006, c. 11, s. 15Objections by interested partiesAn interested party who objects to the division of annuity benefits on any of the grounds described in subsection (2) may submit a notice of objection in writing in accordance with the regulations within 90 days after the day on which notice of the receipt of the application is sent to the interested party under subsection 52.11(3).Grounds for objectionThe grounds for objection are as follows:the court order or agreement on which the application is based has been varied or is of no force or effect;the terms of the court order or agreement have been or are being satisfied by other means; orproceedings have been commenced in a court of competent jurisdiction in Canada to appeal or review the court order or challenge the terms of the agreement.Documentary evidenceAn interested party who submits a notice of objection shall include with that notice documentary evidence to establish the grounds for objection.2006, c. 11, s. 15Approval of divisionSubject to subsections (2) and (3), the Minister shall, as soon as is practicable after the Minister is satisfied that an application meets the requirements of this Act, approve the division of annuity benefits in respect of which the application is made.When decision to be deferredWhen an interested party submits a notice of objection in accordance with section 52.12, the Minister shallif the objection is made on the grounds referred to in paragraph 52.12(2)(a) or (b), defer a decision on the application until the Minister is able to ascertain to his or her satisfaction whether those grounds have been established; andif the objection is made on the grounds referred to in paragraph 52.12(2)(c), defer a decision on the application until the final disposition of the proceedings on which those grounds are based.Refusal of divisionThe Minister shall refuse to approve the division of annuity benefits ifthe application is withdrawn in accordance with the regulations;a notice of objection has been submitted on grounds referred to in paragraph 52.12(2)(a) or (b) and the Minister is satisfied that those grounds have been established and constitute sufficient reason to refuse the division;a notice of objection has been submitted on grounds referred to in paragraph 52.12(2)(c) and the court order or agreement is of no force or effect as a result of the proceedings referred to in that paragraph;the period of cohabitation of the judge and the spouse, former spouse or former common-law partner cannot be determined under subsection 52.14(6); orthe Minister is satisfied, based on evidence submitted by any person, that it would not be just to approve the division.ExceptionNotwithstanding subsection (3), the Minister may approve the division of annuity benefits on the basis of an order of a court issued pursuant to any proceedings referred to in paragraph 52.12(2)(c).TransitionalThe Minister may approve the division of the annuity benefits even though the court order or agreement on which the application is based was made or entered into before the day on which subsection 52.11(1) comes into force.2006, c. 11, s. 15Division of annuity benefitsSubject to subsections (3) and (3.1), where the Minister approves the division of the annuity benefits of a judge, the spouse, former spouse or former common-law partner shall be accorded a share of the annuity benefits consisting ofan amount representing 50% of a proportion, determined in accordance with subsection (2), of the value of the annuity that is attributed, in accordance with the regulations, to the period subject to division; orif the terms of the court order or agreement on which the application for division is based provide for the payment to the spouse, former spouse or former common-law partner of a share of annuity benefits that is less than the amount determined under paragraph (a), that lesser share.Proportion of annuity valueThe proportion of the value of an annuity referred to in paragraph (1)(a) issubject to paragraph (b), the period subject to division divided by the judge’s number of years of service until the judge’s actual date of retirement or, in the case of a judge who has not yet retired, until the judge’s expected date of retirement determined in accordance with the regulations; orin the case of a judge who had resigned or been removed from office by reason of an infirmity, the quotient obtained by dividingthe period, measured to the nearest one tenth of a year, from the beginning of the period subject to division to the earlier of the end of the period of cohabitation and the judge’s expected date of retirement if the infirmity had not occurred, determined in accordance with the regulations,bythe judge’s number of years of service up to the judge’s expected date of retirement if the infirmity had not occurred, determined in accordance with the regulations.Return of contributionsSubject to subsections (3.1) and (4), if the Minister approves the division of the annuity benefits of a judge who was not eligible to be paid an annuity at the end of the period subject to division, the spouse, former spouse or former common-law partner shall be accorded a share of the annuity benefits consisting ofan amount equal to 50% of the contributions made by the judge under section 50 during the period subject to division plus 50% of any interest payable on those contributions; orif the terms of the court order or agreement on which the application for division is based provide for the payment to the spouse, former spouse or former common-law partner of a share of annuity benefits that is less than the amount determined under paragraph (a), that lesser share.Return of contributions — infirm annuitantSubject to subsection (4), if the Minister approves the division of the annuity benefits of a judge who had been granted an annuity by reason of an infirmity but was not otherwise eligible to be paid an annuity at the end of the period subject to division, the spouse, former spouse or former common-law partner shall be accorded a share of the annuity benefits consisting ofan amount equal to 50% of the contributions that would have been made during the period described in subparagraph (2)(b)(i) if the judge had continued in office, on the basis of the salary annexed to the office held by the judge at the time the judge ceased to hold office, plus 50% of any interest payable on those contributions; orif the terms of the court order or agreement on which the application for division is based provide for the payment to the spouse, former spouse or former common-law partner of a share of annuity benefits that is less than the amount determined under paragraph (a), that lesser share.Election by spouseA judge’s spouse, former spouse or former common-law partner who is entitled to be accorded a share of the judge’s annuity benefits under subsection (3) or (3.1) may elect in the manner prescribed by the regulations, in lieu of receiving that share, to receive — at the time the judge becomes eligible to be granted or paid an annuity, or at the time the judge would have become eligible to be paid an annuity had the judge not resigned or been removed from office by reason of an infirmity — a share of the annuity benefits for which the judge is or would have been eligible, determined as provided in subsection (1).Death or resignation of judgeIf an election has been made under subsection (4) and, before becoming eligible to be paid an annuity, the judge dies, resigns, is removed from office or otherwise ceases to hold office, the spouse, former spouse or former common-law partner shall instead be paid immediately the portion of the judge’s contributions to which the spouse was otherwise entitled under subsection (3) or (3.1).Determination of periods of division and cohabitationFor the purposes of this section and sections 52.15 and 52.16,a period subject to division is the portion of a period of cohabitation during which a judge held office under this Act, measured in years to the nearest one tenth of a year; anda period of cohabitation is the period during which interested parties cohabited, as specified by the court order or agreement on which an application for division is based or, if none is specified, as determined in accordance with the regulations on the basis of evidence submitted by either or both of the interested parties.Death of spouse, former spouse or former common-law partnerA share of annuity benefits that cannot be accorded under subsection (1) by reason only of the death of the spouse, former spouse or former common-law partner shall be paid to that person’s estate or succession.Adjustment of accrued benefitsWhere the Minister approves the division of a judge’s annuity benefits, the annuity benefits payable to the judge under this Act shall be adjusted in accordance with the regulations.Notice of divisionThe Minister shall send a notice of the division of annuity benefits in the prescribed manner to each interested party.2006, c. 11, s. 15; 2015, c. 3, s. 128(F); 2017, c. 20, s. 2252017, c. 33, s. 251(E)Transfer and payment of shareThe spouse’s, former spouse’s or former common-law partner’s share of a judge’s annuity benefits shall be accorded bythe transfer of the specified portion of that share to a retirement savings plan established for the spouse, former spouse or former common-law partner that is of the prescribed kind for the purposes of section 26 of the Pension Benefits Standards Act, 1985; andthe payment of the remainder of that share, if any, to the spouse, former spouse or former common-law partner.Calculation of specified portionFor the purpose of paragraph (1)(a), the specified portion of a spouse’s, former spouse’s or former common-law partner’s share of a judge’s annuity benefits isif that share consists of a portion of the judge’s contributions, that portion; orin any other case, the amount determined by the formula(A × B × C) / DwhereAis the share of the annuity benefits,Bis the period subject to division,Cis the defined benefit limit, within the meaning of regulations made under the Income Tax Act, for the calendar year in which the share is accorded, andDis the portion of the annuity that is attributed, in accordance with the regulations, to the period subject to division.Tax treatmentFor the purposes of the Income Tax Act, an amount transferred to a retirement savings plan in accordance with paragraph (1)(a) is deemed to be an amount transferred from a registered pension plan in accordance with subsection 147.3(5) of that Act.2006, c. 11, s. 15Further divisions precludedWhere a division of annuity benefits is made in respect of a period subject to division under section 52.14, no further divisions may be made under that section in respect of that period.2006, c. 11, s. 15Amounts transferred in errorWhere the amount transferred or paid in respect of a spouse, former spouse or former common-law partner, or paid to the estate or succession of a deceased spouse, former spouse or former common-law partner, under section 52.14 or 52.15 exceeds the amount that the spouse, former spouse or former common-law partner was entitled to have transferred or paid or the estate or succession was entitled to be paid, the amount in excess constitutes a debt due to Her Majesty in right of Canada by that spouse, former spouse or former common-law partner or that estate or succession.2006, c. 11, s. 15Amounts paid before adjustmentWhere an adjustment is made under subsection 52.14(8) and an amount is or has been paid to a judge that exceeds the amount to which the judge is or would have been entitled under this Act after the effective date of that adjustment, the amount in excess constitutes a debt due to Her Majesty in right of Canada by the judge and may be recovered at any time by set-off against any annuity benefit that is payable to the judge under this Act, without prejudice to any other recourse available to Her Majesty in right of Canada with respect to its recovery.2006, c. 11, s. 15Void transactionsAmounts that a spouse, former spouse or former common-law partner is or may become entitled to under section 52.14 are not capable of being assigned, charged, anticipated or given as security, and any transaction that purports to assign, charge, anticipate or give as security any such amount is void.Exemption from attachment, etc.Amounts that a spouse, former spouse or former common-law partner is or may become entitled to under section 52.14 are exempt from attachment, seizure and execution, either at law or in equity.2006, c. 11, s. 15Access of spouse, etc. to division of benefitsNotwithstanding any other provision of this Act, a court of competent jurisdiction may order, for any period that the court determines, that no action be taken by the Minister under this Act that may prejudice the ability of the spouse, common-law partner, former spouse or former common-law partner to make an application or obtain the division of the judge’s annuity benefits under this Act.2006, c. 11, s. 15Information for spouse, etc. re benefitsSubject to the regulations, the Minister shall, at the request of a spouse, common-law partner, former spouse or former common-law partner of a judge, provide that person with information prescribed by the regulations concerning the benefits that are or may become payable to or in respect of that judge under this Act.2006, c. 11, s. 15RegulationsThe Governor in Council may make regulationsrespecting the manner of making an application, the information that is to be provided in it and the documents that are to accompany it;prescribing the circumstances in which interested parties are deemed to have been living separate and apart for the purposes of paragraph 52.11(2)(b);prescribing circumstances in which a person may make an application or object to an application on behalf of another person, or may act on behalf of another person in proceeding with an application made by that other person;prescribing circumstances in which, the manner in which and the conditions under which the personal representative or the liquidator of the succession of a deceased judge or of a deceased spouse, former spouse or former common-law partner of a judge may make or object to an application or may proceed with an application that was made by or on behalf of the judge, spouse, former spouse or former common-law partner;when regulations are made under paragraph (c) or (d), respecting the manner in which and the extent to which any provision of this Act applies to a person referred to in that paragraph or in the circumstances prescribed by those regulations, and adapting any provision of this Act to those persons or circumstances;prescribing circumstances in which, the manner in which and the conditions under which a spouse, former spouse or former common-law partner of a judge may make an application after the death of the judge;respecting the notice of receipt of applications to be given to interested parties under subsection 52.11(3);respecting the withdrawal of applications;respecting the manner of submitting notices of objection under subsection 52.12(1);for determining the value of an annuity to be attributed to a period subject to division, for the purposes of subsection 52.14(1);for determining the expected date of retirement of a judge, for the purposes of subsections 52.14(2) and (3.1);respecting the actuarial assumptions on which the determinations made under paragraphs (j) and (k) are to be based;prescribing the manner in which a judge’s spouse, former spouse or former common-law partner may make an election under subsection 52.14(4), and respecting the notification of a judge of such an election;prescribing, for the purposes of paragraph 52.14(6)(b), the manner of determining the period during which interested parties cohabited;respecting the adjustment of the annuity benefits payable to a judge under subsection 52.14(8), including the determination of the effective date of the adjustment;generally respecting the division of the annuity benefits of a judge who resigns or is removed from office by reason of an infirmity;respecting the manner in which and the extent to which any provision of this Act applies, notwithstanding the other provisions of this Act, to a judge, to a spouse, former spouse, common-law partner or former common-law partner of a judge or to any other person when annuity benefits are divided under section 52.14, and adapting any provision of this Act to those persons;for determining the portion of an annuity to be attributed to a period subject to division, for the purposes of subsection 52.15(2);for the purposes of section 52.21, respecting the manner in which a request for information is to be made by a spouse, former spouse, common-law partner or former common-law partner of a judge, prescribing the information that is to be provided to that person concerning the benefits that are or may become payable to or in respect of the judge and specifying circumstances in which a request may be refused;prescribing remedial action that may be taken in prescribed circumstances in response to administrative error or the provision of erroneous information;prescribing any matter or thing that may be prescribed under sections 52.1 to 52.21; andgenerally for carrying out the purposes and provisions of sections 52.1 to 52.21 and this section.2006, c. 11, s. 15; 2017, c. 20, s. 226(F)Payment of Salaries, Allowances, Annuities and Other AmountsAmounts payable out of C.R.F.The salaries, allowances and annuities payable under Parts I to III and the amounts payable under sections 46.1, 51 and 52.15 shall be paid out of the Consolidated Revenue Fund.ProratingFor any period less than a year, the salaries and annuities payable shall be paid pro rata.Monthly instalmentsThe salaries and annuities payable shall be paid by monthly instalments.First paymentThe first payment of salary of any judge shall be made pro rata on the first day of the month that occurs next after the appointment of the judge.Legal representativesIf a judge resigns the office of judge or dies, the judge or his or her legal representatives are entitled to receive such proportionate part of the judge’s salary as has accrued during the time that the judge executed the office since the last payment.R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 53; 1989, c. 8, s. 13; 2002, c. 8, s. 111(E); 2006, c. 11, s. 162023, c. 18, s. 4Absence from Judicial DutiesLeave of absenceNo judge of a superior court shall be granted leave of absence from his or her judicial duties for a periodof six months or less, except with the approval of the chief justice of the superior court; orof more than six months, except with the approval of the Governor in Council.Notification of leave by chief justiceWhenever a leave of absence is granted under paragraph (1)(a), the chief justice of the superior court shall, without delay, notify the Minister and, in the case of provincial or territorial courts, the minister of justice or the attorney general of the province or territory.Notification of leave by MinisterWhenever a leave of absence is granted under paragraph (1)(b), the Minister shall, without delay, notify the chief justice of the superior court and, in the case of provincial or territorial courts, the minister of justice or the attorney general of the province or territory.Report by chief justice of absenceIf it appears to the chief justice of a superior court that a judge of the court is absent from the judge’s judicial duties without the approval required by subsection (1), the chief justice shall report the absence to the Minister.Absentee judge to reportWhenever a judge of a superior court is absent from the judge’s judicial duties for a period of more than 30 days, the judge shall report the absence and the reasons for it to the Minister.[Repealed, 2017, c. 33, s. 252]R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 54; 1992, c. 51, s. 24; 1996, c. 30, s. 4; 1999, c. 3, s. 76; 2002, c. 7, s. 194, c. 8, s. 101; 2012, c. 31, s. 218; 2017, c. 33, s. 2522023, c. 18, s. 13Extra-judicial EmploymentJudicial duties exclusivelyNo judge shall, either directly or indirectly, for himself or herself or others, engage in any occupation or business other than his or her judicial duties, but every judge shall devote himself or herself exclusively to those judicial duties.R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 55; 2002, c. 8, s. 102(E)Acting as commissioner, etc.No judge shall act as commissioner, arbitrator, adjudicator, referee, conciliator or mediator on any commission or on any inquiry or other proceeding unlessin the case of any matter within the legislative authority of Parliament, the judge is by an Act of Parliament expressly authorized so to act or the judge is thereunto appointed or so authorized by the Governor in Council; orin the case of any matter within the legislative authority of the legislature of a province, the judge is by an Act of the legislature of the province expressly authorized so to act or the judge is thereunto appointed or so authorized by the lieutenant governor in council of the province.Acting as statutory assessor or arbitratorSubsection (1) does not apply to judges acting as arbitrators or assessors of compensation or damages under any public Act, whether of general or local application, of Canada or of a province, whereby a judge is required or authorized without authority from the Governor in Council or lieutenant governor in council to assess or ascertain compensation or damages.R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 56; 1996, c. 10, s. 233AuthorizationNotwithstanding section 55, Madam Justice Louise Arbour of the Ontario Court of Appeal is authorized to take a leave from her judicial duties to serve as Prosecutor of the International Tribunal for the Prosecution of Persons Responsible for Serious Violations of International Humanitarian Law Committed in the Territory of the Former Yugoslavia and of the International Tribunal for Rwanda.ExpensesMadam Justice Louise Arbour may receive moving or transportation expenses and reasonable travel and other expenses, in connection with her service as Prosecutor, from the United Nations.Leave without payMadam Justice Louise Arbour may elect to take a leave of absence without pay for the purpose described in subsection (1), in which case she is not entitled to receive any salary or allowances under this Act for the duration of the leave, but may receive remuneration from the United Nations for her service as Prosecutor.Ceasing contributionsIf Madam Justice Louise Arbour elects to take a leave of absence without pay under subsection (3), she shall not continue the contributions required by section 50 for the duration of the leave and that section does not apply to her for the duration of the leave, which duration shall not be counted as time during which she held judicial office for the purposes of sections 28, 29 and 42.Deemed salary in event of deathFor the purposes of subsections 44(1) and (2), section 46.1 and subsection 47(3), if Madam Justice Louise Arbour dies while on a leave of absence without pay, she is deemed to be in receipt at the time of death of the salary that she would have been receiving if she had not been absent on leave without pay.1996, c. 30, s. 5Extra RemunerationNo extra remunerationExcept as provided in subsection (3), no judge shall accept any salary, fee, remuneration or other emolument or any expenses or allowances for acting in any capacity described in subsection 56(1) or as administrator or deputy of the Governor General or for performing any duty or service, whether judicial or executive, that the judge may be required to perform for or on behalf of the Government of Canada or the government of a province.ExceptionThe right of a judge to receive remuneration under any Act of the legislature of a province, other than for acting in any capacity described in subsection 56(1), is not affected by subsection (1), but no judge is entitled to receive remuneration under any such Act or Acts in an aggregate amount exceeding $3,000 per annum.Expenses exceptedIn the cases described in subsection (1), a judge may receive his or her moving or transportation expenses and the reasonable travel and other expenses incurred by him or her away from his or her ordinary place of residence while acting in any such capacity or in the performance of any such duty or service, in the same amount and under the same conditions as if the judge were performing a function or duty as such judge, if those expenses are paid in respect of any matter within the legislative authority of Parliament, by the Government of Canada, and in respect of any matter within the legislative authority of the legislature of a province, by the government of the province.R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 57; 2002, c. 8, s. 103(E)Canadian Judicial Council[Repealed, 2023, c. 18, s. 5]Constitution of the CouncilCouncil establishedThere is hereby established a Council, to be known as the Canadian Judicial Council, consisting ofthe Chief Justice of Canada, who shall be the chairperson of the Council;the chief justice and any senior associate chief justice and associate chief justice of each superior court or branch or division thereof; and[Repealed, 2017, c. 33, s. 253]the Chief Justice of the Court Martial Appeal Court of Canada.[Repealed, 2002, c. 8, s. 104][Repealed, 1999, c. 3, s. 77]Substitute memberEach member of the Council may appoint a judge of that member’s court to be a substitute member of the Council and the substitute member shall act as a member of the Council during any period in which he or she is appointed to act, but the Chief Justice of Canada may, in lieu of appointing a member of the Supreme Court of Canada, appoint any former member of that Court to be a substitute member of the Council.R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 59; 1992, c. 51, s. 25; 1996, c. 30, s. 6; 1999, c. 3, s. 77; 2002, c. 7, s. 195, c. 8, s. 104; 2017, c. 33, s. 2532023, c. 18, s. 6(E)Objects of CouncilThe objects of the Council are to promote efficiency and uniformity, and to improve the quality of judicial service, in superior courts.Powers of CouncilIn furtherance of its objects, the Council mayestablish conferences of chief justices and associate chief justices; andestablish seminars for the continuing education of judges, including seminars on matters related to sexual assault law, intimate partner violence, coercive control in intimate partner and family relationships and social context, which includes systemic racism and systemic discrimination.[Repealed, 2023, c. 18, s. 7][Repealed, 2023, c. 18, s. 7]Seminars related to sexual assault lawThe Council should ensure that seminars on matters related to sexual assault law established under paragraph (2)(b)are developed after consultation with persons, groups or organizations the Council considers appropriate, such as sexual assault survivors and persons, groups and organizations that support them, including Indigenous leaders and representatives of Indigenous communities; andinclude, where the Council finds appropriate, instruction in evidentiary prohibitions, principles of consent and the conduct of sexual assault proceedings, as well as education regarding myths and stereotypes associated with sexual assault complainants.R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 60; 1992, c. 51, s. 26; 2002, c. 8, s. 1052021, c. 8, s. 22023, c. 7, s. 22023, c. 18, s. 7Meetings of CouncilThe Council shall meet at least once a year.Work of CouncilSubject to this Act, the work of the Council shall be carried on in such manner as the Council may direct.By-lawsThe Council may make by-lawsrespecting the calling of meetings of the Council;respecting the conduct of business at meetings of the Council, including the fixing of quorums for such meetings, the establishment of committees of the Council and the delegation of duties to any such committees; andrespecting the processes and proceedings under Part IV.R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 612023, c. 18, s. 8Employment of counsel and assistantsThe Council may engage the services of any persons that it considers necessary for carrying out its objects and duties, and also the services of counsel to assist the Council in the processes and proceedings under Part IV.R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 622023, c. 18, s. 9Report — seminarsWithin 60 days after the end of each calendar year, the Council should submit to the Minister a report on the seminars referred to in paragraph 60(2)(b) on matters related to sexual assault law, intimate partner violence, coercive control in intimate partner and family relationships and social context, which includes systemic racism and systemic discrimination, that were offered in the preceding calendar year. The report should include the following information:the title and a description of the content of each seminar, its duration and the dates on which it was offered; andthe number of judges who attended each seminar.Tabling of reportThe Minister shall cause a copy of any report received to be tabled in each House of Parliament on any of the first 10 days on which that House is sitting after the Minister receives the report.2021, c. 8, s. 32023, c. 7, s. 3[Repealed, 2023, c. 18, s. 10][Repealed, 2023, c. 18, s. 10][Repealed, 2023, c. 18, s. 10][Repealed, 2023, c. 18, s. 10][Repealed, 2023, c. 18, s. 10][Repealed, R.S., 1985, c. 16 (3rd Supp.), s. 5][Repealed, R.S., 1985, c. 16 (3rd Supp.), s. 6][Repealed, 2023, c. 18, s. 10][Repealed, 2023, c. 18, s. 10][Repealed, 2023, c. 18, s. 10]Administration of Federal Judicial Affairs[Repealed, 2023, c. 18, s. 11]Commissioner for Federal Judicial AffairsCommissioner for Federal Judicial AffairsThere shall be an officer, called the Commissioner for Federal Judicial Affairs, who shall have the rank and status of a deputy head of a department and who shall be appointed by the Governor in Council after consultation by the Minister with the Council or such committee thereof as is named for the purpose by the Council.1976-77, c. 25, s. 17Duties and functions of CommissionerIt shall be the duty and function of the Commissioner, under the Minister, toact as the deputy of the Minister in performing all such duties and functions in relation to the administration of Part I as fall, by law, within the responsibility of the Minister;prepare budgetary submissions for the requirements of the Council;be responsible for any other administrative arrangements that are necessary to ensure that all reasonable requirements, including those for premises, equipment and other supplies and services and for officers, clerks and employees of the Council for the carrying out of its operations, are provided for in accordance with law; anddo such other things as the Minister may require in connection with any matter or matters falling, by law, within the Minister’s responsibilities for the proper functioning of the judicial system in Canada.Interpretation of subsection (1)It is hereby declared for greater certainty that such of the duties and functions of the Minister as are, by paragraphs (1)(a) to (d), subject to be performed by the Commissioner do not form part of the duties and functions assigned to the Minister by the Department of Justice Act.R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 74; 2002, c. 8, s. 108Registrar of the Supreme Court of CanadaDuties and functionsThe duties and functions described in paragraphs 74(1)(a) to (c) shall, in relation to the Supreme Court of Canada and the judges thereof, be carried out by the Registrar of the Court, who may, for that purpose, utilize the services of other persons on the staff of the Court.Registrar deemed deputy headThe Registrar of the Supreme Court of Canada shall, for the purposes of the Public Service Employment Act and other Acts of Parliament and for purposes relating to the duties and functions of the Registrar under this section, be deemed to be the deputy head of the portion of the federal public administration appointed under subsection 12(2) of the Supreme Court Act.R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 75; 2003, c. 22, s. 224(E)[Repealed, 2002, c. 8, s. 109]Commissioner’s StaffAppointmentThe officers, clerks and employees who are required by the Commissioner to carry out the Commissioner’s duties and functions under section 74 shall be appointed under the Public Service Employment Act.R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 77; 2002, c. 8, s. 110Commissioner is deputy headThe Commissioner and the officers, clerks and employees appointed under section 77 shall be a portion of the federal public administration that is separate from the Department of Justice and of which the Commissioner shall be the deputy head.R.S., 1985, c. J-1, s. 78; 2002, c. 8, s. 110; 2003, c. 22, s. 224(E)Conduct Review ProcessComplaints Concerning JudgesDefinitionDefinition of judicial officeIn this Division, judicial office includes the office of an associate judge.2023, c. 18, s. 122022, c. 10, s. 375Removal from OfficeJustificationFor the purposes of this Division, the removal from office of a judge is justified only if, for any of the following reasons, the judge’s continuation in office would undermine public confidence in the impartiality, integrity or independence of the judge or of their office to such an extent that it would render the judge incapable of executing the functions of judicial office:infirmity;misconduct;failure in the due execution of judicial office;the judge is in a position that a reasonable, fair-minded and informed observer would consider to be incompatible with the due execution of judicial office.2023, c. 18, s. 12RostersEstablishment of roster of judgesThe Council shall establish a roster of superior court judges who may be designated as members of a panel established under this Division. The judges on the roster must not be members of the Council.NumberThe number of judges on the roster is set at the discretion of the Council.RecommendationThe naming of a judge to the roster must be made on the recommendation of the Canadian Superior Courts Judges Association.TermA judge named to the roster remains on it for four years unless they cease to hold judicial office or request to be removed from the roster. When the four-year term ends, the judge may be renamed to the roster on the recommendation of the Canadian Superior Courts Judges Association.2023, c. 18, s. 12Establishment of lay personsThe Council shall establish a roster of lay persons who may be designated as members of a review panel or full hearing panel established under this Division.NumberThe number of persons on the roster is set at the discretion of the Council.ConditionsTo be named to the roster, a person mustnever have been admitted to the bar of any province or to the Chambre des notaires du Québec;never have worked as a paralegal in Canada; andmeet the other selection criteria established by the Council.Selection criteria made publicThe Council shall make public the selection criteria that it has established for the purpose of paragraph (3)(c).TermA person named to the roster of lay persons remains on it for four years unless they request to be removed from the roster or, in the opinion of the Council, they cease to meet the conditions set out in subsection (3). When the four-year term ends, the person may be renamed to the roster.2023, c. 18, s. 12Official languagesIn naming persons to the roster of judges and to the roster of lay persons, the Council shall take into account the fact that the proceedings of panels established under this Division will be in either or both official languages.2023, c. 18, s. 12DiversityThe Council shall name persons who reflect the diversity of the Canadian population to the roster of judges and to the roster of lay persons.2023, c. 18, s. 12Rosters available to publicThe Council shall make the roster of judges and the roster of lay persons available to the public.2023, c. 18, s. 12ComplaintsComplaintsComplaints may be made to the Council, in the form specified by the Council, in respect of a judge of a superior court for any reason referred to in paragraphs 80(a) to (d).Complaint by CouncilThe Council may make a complaint only if two of its members have reasonable grounds to believe that the public’s confidence in the impartiality, integrity or independence of the judge or of the judicial office of the judge could be undermined for any reason referred to in paragraphs 80(a) to (d).Anonymous complaintsA complaint may be made anonymously, but such a complaint may be dealt with only if two members of the Council have reasonable grounds to believe that the public’s confidence in the impartiality, integrity or independence of the judge or of the judicial office of the judge could be undermined for any reason referred to in paragraphs 80(a) to (d).2023, c. 18, s. 12Notice to complainantThe Council shall establish policies respecting the notifying of complainants of any decisions made under this Division.2023, c. 18, s. 12Screening OfficerDesignationThe Council may designate as a screening officer one or more persons, including a judge, who meets the criteria specified by the Council.2023, c. 18, s. 12Referral to screening officerThe Council shall refer every complaint to a screening officer, other than a complaint made by the Council itself or an anonymous complaint.2023, c. 18, s. 12Dismissal of complaintSubject to subsection (2), a screening officer may dismiss a complaint if they are of the opinion that itis frivolous, vexatious or made for an improper purpose or is an abuse of process;was not made for a reason referred to in paragraphs 80(a) to (d); ordoes not meet the other screening criteria specified by the Council.Screening criteria to be made publicThe Council shall make public the screening criteria that it has established for the purpose of paragraph (1)(c).RestrictionA screening officer shall not dismiss a complaint that alleges sexual misconduct or sexual harassment or that alleges discrimination on a prohibited ground of discrimination within the meaning of the Canadian Human Rights Act.2023, c. 18, s. 12Referral to CouncilIf a screening officer does not dismiss a complaint, they shall refer it to the Council for the designation of a reviewing member.2023, c. 18, s. 12Reviewing MemberDesignationIn the case of a complaint made by the Council itself or an anonymous complaint, or on receipt of a complaint referred to it under section 91, the Council shall designate one of its members to review the complaint.2023, c. 18, s. 12Written submissionsThe reviewing member shall give the judge who is the subject of the complaint an opportunity to make written submissions about the complaint within the time limit established by the Council for the purpose of this section.2023, c. 18, s. 12Dismissal of complaintThe reviewing member shall dismiss the complaint if they are of the opinion that it should be dismissed for any reason set out in paragraphs 90(1)(a) to (c) or that it is wholly without merit.Communication of dismissalIf the reviewing member dismisses the complaint, they shall inform the complainant in writing of their decision and the reasons for it.ExclusionThe reasons shall not include information that is confidential or personal, or that is not in the public interest to disclose.2023, c. 18, s. 12Referral to CouncilIf the reviewing member does not dismiss the complaint, they shall refer it to the Council for the establishment of a review panel.2023, c. 18, s. 12Notice of decisionThe reviewing member shall give notice of their decision to the judge who is the subject of the complaint and to the chief justice of the court of which the judge is a member.2023, c. 18, s. 12Provision of informationAfter the review panel is established, the reviewing member shall provide it with every document in their possession that relates to the complaint. The reviewing member may also provide the review panel with their observations about the complaint and their recommendations about how it should be resolved.2023, c. 18, s. 12Review PanelEstablishmentSubject to subsection (2), on receipt of a complaint referred to it under section 95, the Council shall establish a review panel consisting of the following persons designated by the Council to review the complaint:a member of the Council;a judge named in the roster of judges; anda person named in the roster of lay persons.Direction to review new complaintIf a complaint is referred to the Council under section 95 and a review panel established to review a previous complaint involving the same judge has not yet made a decision in respect of that complaint, the Council may direct the review panel to also review the new complaint.2023, c. 18, s. 12Written submissionsThe review panel shall give the judge who is the subject of the complaint and chief justice of the court of which the judge is a member an opportunity to provide written submissions within the time limit established by the Council for the purpose of this section.2023, c. 18, s. 12Basis of decisionsThe review panel shall make its decision only on the basis of the substance of the complaint, any information provided under section 97, any written submissions provided under section 99 and any other document that it considers relevant.2023, c. 18, s. 12Referral to CouncilThe review panel shall refer the complaint to the Council for the establishment of a full hearing panel if it determines that the judge’s removal from office could be justified.2023, c. 18, s. 12Dismissal of complaint or actionIf the review panel does not refer the complaint to the Council under section 101, it may dismiss the complaint or take one or more of the following actions if it considers it appropriate to do so in the circumstances:issue a private or public expression of concern;issue a private or public warning;issue a private or public reprimand;order the judge to apologize, either privately or publicly, by whatever means the panel considers appropriate in the circumstances;order the judge to take specific measures, including attending counselling or a continuing education course;take any action that the panel considers to be equivalent to any of the actions referred to in paragraphs (a) to (e);with the consent of the judge, take any other action that the panel considers appropriate in the circumstances.2023, c. 18, s. 12Notice of decision and reasonsThe review panel shall give notice of its decision and the reasons for it tothe judge who is the subject of the complaint;the chief justice of the court of which that judge is a member; andthe Council.Communication of dismissalIf the review panel dismisses the complaint, it shall inform the complainant in writing of its decision and the reasons for it.ExclusionThe reasons shall not include information that is confidential or personal, or that is not in the public interest to disclose.2023, c. 18, s. 12Request to establish panelIf the review panel takes any action under section 102, the judge who is the subject of the complaint may, within 30 days after the day on which the review panel sends the judge a notice informing the judge of its decision, request that the Council establish a reduced hearing panel to review the complaint.2023, c. 18, s. 12Provision of informationIf a reduced hearing panel or a full hearing panel is established in respect of a complaint that was before a review panel, the review panel shall provide to the presenting counsel in respect of the hearing panel all the information that was before it and the decision and reasons it provided under section 103.2023, c. 18, s. 12Hearing PanelsPresenting CounselDesignationWhen it establishes a reduced hearing panel or a full hearing panel, the Council shall designate one of its members to designate a lawyer of at least 10 years’ standing at the bar of any province to act as presenting counsel in respect of the hearing panel.RestrictionThe member of the Council who designates the presenting counsel shall not be designated as any of the following:a member of the reduced hearing panel or the full hearing panel;a member of any appeal panel established in respect of any decision of the reduced hearing panel or the full hearing panel.ReplacementThe presenting counsel may at any time be replaced by another presenting counsel designated in accordance with subsection (1).2023, c. 18, s. 12RoleThe role of the presenting counsel consists of preparing a statement of allegations against a judge who is the subject of a complaint before a reduced hearing panel or full hearing panel, as the case may be, and presenting evidence. The presenting counsel is also responsible for bringing an appeal and presenting arguments in an appeal.2023, c. 18, s. 12InstructionsThe presenting council shall take instructions from the Council member who designated them.Absence or incapacityIn the event of the absence or incapacity of the Council member who designated the presenting counsel, the Council may designate another Council member to give instructions to the presenting counsel.2023, c. 18, s. 12Standards of conductIn fulfilling their responsibilities, the presenting counsel shall conduct themselves in accordance with the standards and principles that govern the conduct of Crown prosecutors, with any modifications that may be necessary.2023, c. 18, s. 12Reduced Hearing PanelEstablishmentSubject to subsection (2), on receipt of a request made under section 104, the Council shall establish a reduced hearing panel consisting of the following persons designated by it to review the complaint to which the request relates:a member of the Council;a judge named in the roster of judges; anda lawyer of at least 10 years’ standing at the bar of any province.Direction to review new complaintIf a request is made under section 104 by a judge who has previously made a request under that section and the reduced hearing panel established in respect of the previous request has not yet made a decision in respect of the complaint to which the previous request relates, the Council may direct the reduced hearing panel to also review the new complaint.2023, c. 18, s. 12Decision and reasons not consideredIn considering the complaint, the reduced hearing panel shall not consider the decision of the review panel that caused the judge who is the subject of the complaint to make the request under section 104 or the reasons for that decision.2023, c. 18, s. 12Referral of complaint to CouncilThe reduced hearing panel shall refer the complaint to the Council for the establishment of a full hearing panel if it determines that the removal from office of the judge who is the subject of the complaint could be justified.2023, c. 18, s. 12Dismissal or actionsIf the reduced hearing panel does not refer the complaint to the Council under section 112, it may dismiss the complaint or take one or more of the actions referred to in paragraphs 102(a) to (g) if it considers it appropriate to do so in the circumstances.2023, c. 18, s. 12Notice of decision and reasonsThe reduced hearing panel shall give notice of its decision and the reasons for it tothe judge who is the subject of the complaint;the chief justice of the court of which that judge is a member;the Council; andthe presenting counsel.2023, c. 18, s. 12Decision and reasons made publicThe Council shall make public the reduced hearing panel’s decision and the reasons for it, as soon as feasible after receiving them, if the reduced hearing panel’s hearings were public. If they were not public, the Council shall make public as much of the decision and reasons as possible having regard to the reasons for holding the hearings, or part of them, in private.2023, c. 18, s. 12Right of appealThe judge to whom the complaint relates and the presenting counsel may respectively, within 30 days after the day on which the reduced hearing panel sends them a notice of its decision, file with the Council a notice appealing the decision.2023, c. 18, s. 12Full Hearing PanelEstablishmentSubject to subsection (3), on receipt of a referral of a complaint made under section 101 or 112, the Council shall establish a full hearing panel consisting of the following persons to review the complaint:two members of the Council who are designated by it;a judge named in the roster of judges who is designated by it;a person named in the roster of lay persons who is designated by it; anda lawyer who is a member of the bar of a province and who is designated in accordance with subsection (2).Designation of lawyerThe lawyer referred to in paragraph (1)(d) is to be designated by the Minister. However, if the full hearing panel is being established as the result of a request by the Minister under section 148 or the Minister does not designate a lawyer within 30 days after the day on which the Minister receives written notice from the Council that a full hearing panel is to be established, the lawyer is to be designated by the Council.Direction to review new complaintIf a complaint is referred to the Council under section 101 or 112, and a full hearing panel established to review a previous complaint or to consider a request made under section 148 involving the same judge has not yet made a decision in respect of the previous complaint or the request, the Council may direct the full hearing panel to also review the new complaint.2023, c. 18, s. 12Decision and reasons not consideredIn considering the complaint, the full hearing panel shall not consider the decision of the review panel or reduced hearing panel, as the case may be, that led to the establishment of the full hearing panel, or the reasons for that decision.2023, c. 18, s. 12Removal justifiedIf the full hearing panel determines, on a balance of probabilities, that the judge’s removal from office is justified, it shall make a decision to that effect.2023, c. 18, s. 12Dismissal or actionIf the full hearing panel determines, on a balance of probabilities, that the judge’s removal is not justified, it may dismiss the complaint or take one or more of the actions referred to in paragraphs 102(a) to (g) if the full hearing panel considers that it is appropriate to do so in the circumstances.2023, c. 18, s. 12Notice of decision and reasonsThe full hearing panel shall give notice of its decision and the reasons for it tothe judge who is the subject of the complaint;the chief justice of the court of which that judge is a member;the Council; andthe presenting counsel.2023, c. 18, s. 12Decision and reasons made publicThe Council shall make public the full hearing panel’s decision and the reasons for it, as soon as feasible after receiving the decision, if the full hearing panel’s hearings were public. If they were not public, the Council shall make public as much of the decision and reasons as possible having regard to the reasons for holding the hearings, or part of them, in private.2023, c. 18, s. 12Right of appealThe judge who is the subject of the complaint and the presenting counsel may respectively, within 30 days after the day on which the full hearing panel sends them a notice of its decision, file with the Council a notice appealing the decision.2023, c. 18, s. 12Rights of JudgeRightsThe judge who is the subject of a complaint that is before a hearing panel has the right to be heard, to cross-examine witnesses and to adduce evidence, in person or by counsel.2023, c. 18, s. 12Statement of allegation and noticeThe judge who is the subject of a complaint that is before a hearing panel is to be provided with a copy of the statement of allegations prepared by the presenting counsel and given reasonable notice of the subject matter and the date, time and place of the hearings.2023, c. 18, s. 12Salaries and AnnuitiesTime in judicial office and salaryFor the purposes of calculating an annuity under Part I, if a full hearing panel decides that the removal from office of a judge who is the subject of a complaint is justified, the day after the day on which the judge is given notice of the full hearing panel’s decision is the day to be used to determine the number of years the judge has been in judicial office and the salary annexed to the office held by the judge at the time of his or her resignation, removal or attaining the age of retirement unlessthe decision is set aside by a decision of the Supreme Court of Canada, or by the decision of an appeal panel if the appeal panel’s decision is final;the Minister’s response under subsection 140(1) provides that no action is to be taken to remove the judge from office; orthe matter of removal of the judge from office is put to one or both Houses of Parliament and is rejected by either of them.Contributions toward annuitiesNo reservations are to be made under section 50 from the judge’s salary in respect of the period that begins on the day after the day on which the judge is given notice of the full hearing panel’s decision, unless one of paragraphs (1)(a) to (c) applies, in which case the judge shall contribute an amount equal to the amount that would have been reserved from the judge’s salary had subsection (1) not applied.Salary increasesFor greater certainty, nothing in subsection (1) is to be construed as removing from the judge any entitlement to a salary increase that takes effect on or after the day on which the judge is given notice of the full hearing panel’s decision.2023, c. 18, s. 12GeneralPowersA hearing panel has all the powers vested in a superior court of the province in which the judge who is the subject of the complaint resides, includingthe power to summon before it any witness and require them to give evidence on oath, orally or in writing or on solemn affirmation if they are entitled to affirm in civil matters, and to produce any documents and evidence that it considers necessary; andthe power to enforce the attendance of any witness and compel them to give evidence.2023, c. 18, s. 12Rules of evidenceA hearing panel is not bound by any legal or technical rules of evidence and may receive and base a decision on evidence presented in its hearings that it considers credible or trustworthy in the circumstances of the case.2023, c. 18, s. 12Hearings publicA hearing panel’s hearings are to be public, but it may hold all or any part of its hearings in private if it considers doing so to be in the public interest.Prohibition of publicationA hearing panel may prohibit the publication of any information or documents placed before it, if it is of the opinion that such a publication is not in the public interest.2023, c. 18, s. 12AppealsAppeal PanelEstablishmentOn receipt of a notice of appeal filed under section 116 or 123, the Council shall establish an appeal panel consisting of the following persons designated by it:three members of the Council; andtwo judges named in the roster of judges.2023, c. 18, s. 12PowerThe appeal panel has all the powers vested in the court of appeal of the province in which the judge who is the subject of the complaint resides. It may, among other things, reverse, vary or affirm any decision of the reduced hearing panel or full hearing panel, as the case may be, and make any decision the hearing panel could have made.2023, c. 18, s. 12Hearings publicThe appeal panel’s hearings are to be public, but it may conduct all or any part of its hearings in private if it considers doing so to be in the public interest.Prohibition of publicationThe appeal panel may prohibit the publication of any information or documents placed before it if it is of the opinion that such a publication is not in the public interest.2023, c. 18, s. 12Right to make submissionsThe judge who is the subject of the appeal and the presenting counsel are each entitled to make oral and written submissions to the appeal panel.2023, c. 18, s. 12Nature of appealThe appeal is to be heard on the basis of the record of the hearing panel whose decision was appealed and on any submissions made by the judge who is the subject of the appeal and the presenting counsel. The appeal panel may, in exceptional circumstances, admit additional evidence or testimony if, in its opinion, it is essential in the interests of justice to do so.2023, c. 18, s. 12Notice of decision and reasonsThe appeal panel shall give notice of its decision and the reasons for it tothe judge who is the subject of the appeal;the chief justice of the court of which that judge is a member;the Council; andthe presenting counsel.2023, c. 18, s. 12Decision and reasons made publicThe Council shall make public the appeal panel’s decision and the reasons for it, as soon as feasible after receiving them, if the appeal panel’s hearings were public. If they were not public, the Council shall make public as much of the decision and reasons as possible having regard to the reasons for holding the hearings, or part of them, in private.2023, c. 18, s. 12Supreme Court of CanadaNotice of application for leave to appealThe judge who is the subject of a decision of an appeal panel and the presenting counsel may respectively, within 30 days after the day on which the appeal panel sends them a notice of its decision, file a notice of application for leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada.2023, c. 18, s. 12Right of attorneys generalIf leave to appeal is granted by the Supreme Court of Canada, the Attorney General of Canada and the attorney general of a province may intervene in the appeal.2023, c. 18, s. 12Report to MinisterReport with recommendationIf a full hearing panel is established in respect of a complaint, the full hearing panel shall, as soon as feasible after the earliest of the following, provide to the Minister a report setting out a recommendation, consistent with the final decision in respect of the complaint, as to whether or not the judge who is the subject of the complaint should be removed from office:the judge and the presenting counsel have both waived their rights under section 123 or 137,the time limit for exercising those rights has expired, andthe Supreme Court of Canada has not granted leave to appeal or, if it has, it has made a decision in respect of the appeal panel’s decision.Decisions and reasonsThe report must also set out the full hearing panel’s decision and any decision of the appeal panel and the Supreme Court of Canada, as well as the reasons, if any, for those decisions.Copy of reportThe full hearing panel shall as soon as feasible give a copy of the report to the judge, the presenting counsel and the Council.Report made publicThe Council shall make public as much of the report as it considers appropriate taking into account the extent to which the decisions and reasons set out in the report were made public.Absence or incapacityIn the event of the absence or incapacity of all three judges of the full hearing panel, the Council shall designate one of its members to assist the other members of the full hearing panel in preparing the report or, if the others are also absent or incapacitated, to provide the report.2023, c. 18, s. 12Minister’s responseThe Minister shall respond publicly to the report.InformationFor the purpose of responding publicly, the Minister may seek information from the full hearing panel on any matter that the Minister considers necessary.Obligation to provide informationThe full hearing panel shall provide the judge who is the subject of the report and the presenting counsel with any information that it provides to the Minister.Absence or incapacityIn the event of the absence or incapacity of all three judges of the full hearing panel, the Council shall designate one of its members to assist the other members of the full hearing panel in providing the information to the Minister or, if the others are also absent or incapacitated, to provide the information.2023, c. 18, s. 12GeneralIneligibilityIneligibilityA member of the Council and a judge named in the roster of judges is not eligible to be designatedas a reviewing member under section 92, or as a member of any panel established under this Division, in respect of any complaint involving a judge of the court of which they are a member; ormore than once under this Division in respect of the same complaint or the same judge.Subsections 86(2) and (3)A member of the Council who is referred to in subsection 86(2) or (3) whose belief led to the Council making a complaint in respect of a judge or to an anonymous complaint being dealt with is not eligible to be designated, in their capacity as a member of the Council or in any other capacity, as a reviewing member under section 92 or as a member of any panel established under this Division, in respect of the complaint.2023, c. 18, s. 12DesignationDesignation from roster of judgesThe Council may designate a judge named in the roster of judges to be a member of a panel established under section 98, 110, 117 or 130 instead of designating a member of the Council as the section in question requires.2023, c. 18, s. 12ImmunityImmunityA screening officer, a reviewing member or a member of a panel established under this Division shall have the same immunity as a judge of a superior court.2023, c. 18, s. 12Financial ProvisionsRegulationsThe Governor in Council may make regulations respecting the fees, allowances and expenses to be paid or reimbursed under section 146.2023, c. 18, s. 12GuidelinesSubject to the regulations, the Commissioner shall make guidelines respecting the fees, allowances and expenses to be paid or reimbursed under section 146.Incorporation by referenceThe guidelines may incorporate by reference any policy, guideline or directive of the Treasury Board or any federal department regarding fees, allowances or expenses, as it is amended from time to time.Obligation to justify differencesIf an amount provided for in the guidelines made under subsection (1) differs from the amount provided for in Treasury Board directives regarding fees, allowances and expenses, the Commissioner shall make the reasons for the difference available to the public unless the difference is attributable solely to compliance with the regulations.2023, c. 18, s. 12Amounts payable out of C.R.F.Subject to the regulations made under section 144 and the guidelines made under subsection 145(1), there shall be paid out of the Consolidated Revenue Fund all amounts payable in respect of the following:the expenses incurred by members of the Council and judges named in the roster of judges in the course of carrying out their duties under this Division or Division 2;the expenses incurred by and the allowances payable to panel members, other than judges, in the course of carrying out their duties under this Division or Division 2;the fees of and the expenses incurred by presenting counsel in the course of carrying out their duties under this Division or Division 2;subject to subsection (2), the fees of and the expenses incurred by lawyers representing judges who are the subject of a complaint under this Division or Division 2;the fees and expenses of lawyers and experts engaged by panels established under this Division or Division 2; andthe expenses incidental to the conduct of meetings and hearings under this Division or Division 2, including the renting of rooms, the recording and transcription of proceedings, translation services and security.RestrictionFees and expenses of lawyers representing judges may be paid only in respect of proceedings under this Division or Division 2 or in respect of appeals to the Supreme Court of Canada relating to those proceedings. For greater certainty, no payments to lawyers representing judges are to be made in respect of any judicial review of any decision made under this Division or Division 2.2023, c. 18, s. 12Independent review of financial provisionsWithin 18 months after the day on which the first report is submitted under section 160 and on every fifth anniversary of that day, the Council shall cause an independent review of the application of sections 144 to 146 to be conducted. The review is to be conducted by a person or body designated by the Commissioner in consultation with the Council.ReportThe person or body conducting the review shall provide a report of their findings and recommendations to the Minister, the chairperson of the Council and the Commissioner. The report shall include a finding on whether sections 144 to 146 have been applied in a manner consistent with best practices regarding financial controls.Report to be made publicThe Council shall make the report public with any redactions that the Commissioner and chairperson of the Council jointly consider necessary to protect confidential or personal information.2023, c. 18, s. 12Requests Concerning JudgesRequestThe Minister or the attorney general of a province may request that the Council establish a full hearing panel to determine whether the removal from office of a judge of a superior court is justified.2023, c. 18, s. 12EstablishmentSubject to subsection (2), on receipt of the request, the Council shall establish a full hearing panel in accordance with section 117 to consider the request.Direction to consider new requestIf a full hearing panel established to consider a previous request made under section 148 or to review a complaint made under section 101 or 112 involving the same judge has not yet made a decision in respect of the previous request or the complaint, the Council may direct the full hearing panel to also consider the new request.2023, c. 18, s. 12Application of sections 119 to 143Sections 119 to 143 apply, with any necessary modifications, in respect of the request and all proceedings arising from it.2023, c. 18, s. 12Requests Concerning Office HoldersRemoval from officeFor the purposes of this Division, the removal from office of a person appointed under an Act of Parliament to hold office during good behaviour, other than a judge, is justified only if, for any of the following reasons, the person’s continuation in office would undermine public confidence in the integrity of the person or of their office to such an extent that it would render the person incapable of executing the functions of their office:infirmity;misconduct;failure in the due execution of their office;the person has been placed in a position that a reasonable, fair-minded and informed observer would consider to be incompatible with the due execution of their office.2023, c. 18, s. 12RequestThe Minister may request that the Council establish a full hearing panel to determine whether the removal from office of a person referred to in section 151 is justified.2023, c. 18, s. 12EstablishmentOn receipt of the request, the Council shall establish a full hearing panel in accordance with section 117 to consider the request.2023, c. 18, s. 12Application of sections 119 to 125 and 127 to 143Sections 119 to 125 and 127 to 143 apply, with any necessary modifications, in respect of the request and all proceedings arising from it.2023, c. 18, s. 12Removal from officeOn receipt of a report provided under subsection 139(1) containing a recommendation that a person be removed from office, the Governor in Council, may, on the recommendation of the Minister, by order, remove the person from office if the person is a person who may be removed from office by the Governor in Council other than on address of the Senate or House of Commons or joint address of the Senate and House of Commons.Orders and reports laid before ParliamentIf an order is made under subsection (1), a copy of the order and a copy of the report relating to the order must be laid before each House of Parliament within 15 days after the day on which the order is made or, if either House is not then sitting, on any of the first 15 days on which that House is sitting.2023, c. 18, s. 12Leave of absence with salaryThe Governor in Council may, for any period that the Governor in Council considers appropriate, grant leave of absence to any person, other than a judge, whose removal from office is recommended because of infirmity in a report provided under subsection 139(1) and, if leave of absence is granted, the person’s salary is to continue to be paid during the period of leave of absence.2023, c. 18, s. 12GeneralPowers, rights and duties not affectedNothing in, or done or omitted to be done under the authority of, this Part affects any power, right or duty of the Senate, the House of Commons or the Governor in Council in relation to the removal from office of a judge or any other person.2023, c. 18, s. 12Decision finalA decision made by a member of the Council under any of Divisions 1 to 3 or by a member of a panel established under any of those Divisions is final and is not to be questioned or reviewed in any court other than provided for in this Part.2023, c. 18, s. 12Remote appearanceFor greater certainty, any proceedings or hearings under this Part may take place by remote appearance.2023, c. 18, s. 12Annual reportThe Council shall, within three months after the end of each calendar year, submit a report to the Minister setting out, in respect of the year, the number ofcomplaints received;complaints dismissed by a screening officer;complaints dismissed by a reviewing member;complaints reviewed by review panels, hearing panels and appeal panels; andcomplaints in respect of which any of the actions referred to in paragraphs 102(a) to (g) were taken.Report to be made publicAfter the annual report is submitted to the Minister, the Council shall make it public.2023, c. 18, s. 12RELATED PROVISIONS
— R.S., 1985, c. 50 (1st Supp.), s. 4(2)For the twelve month period commencing April 1, 1986 and for each twelve month period thereafter,section 25 of the Judges Act does not apply in respect of judges of county and district courts;the salary annexed to the office of Chief Judge and Associate Chief Judge of a county or district court shall be $5,000 lower than the salary annexed to the office of Chief Justice and Associate Chief Justice of the superior court of a province; andthe salary annexed to the office of judge of a county or district court, other than Chief Judge and Associate Chief Judge, shall be $5,000 lower than the salary annexed to the office of judge of the superior court of a province, other than a Chief Justice or Associate Chief Justice.
— R.S., 1985, c. 50 (1st Supp.), s. 5(3)ApplicationSubsections (1) and (2) apply in respect of the year commencing April 1, 1985 and subsequent years.
— R.S., 1985, c. 50 (1st Supp.), s. 7(2)ApplicationSubsection (1) applies in respect of the year commencing April 1, 1985 and subsequent years.
— R.S., 1985, c. 50 (1st Supp.), ss. 8(1) and (2)Where person ceased to hold office between April 1, 1985 and date of Royal Assent to this ActFor greater certainty, where a person ceased to hold office as lieutenant governor or as judge in the period commencing on April 1, 1985 and ending on the day preceding the day on which this Act is assented to,that person shall be paid the retroactive salary increment resulting from section 3 or 4 in respect of the period commencing on April 1, 1985 and ending on the day on which the person ceased to hold office;in the case of a lieutenant governor, any retroactive salary increment paid to the lieutenant governor pursuant to paragraph (a) shall, for the purposes of subsection 3(2) of the Lieutenant Governors Superannuation Act, be deemed to have been received by that person during the person’s term of office; andin the case of a judge, any annuity granted to or in respect of that judge is increased, as of the day it was granted, to reflect the higher salary annexed to the office held by the judge on the day on which the judge ceased to hold office.Where person deceasedWhere a person to whom a retroactive salary increment or a retroactive pension or annuity increment would be payable as a result of subsection (1) is deceased, that retroactive increment shall be paid as a death benefit to that person’s estate or, if less than one thousand dollars, as may be directed by the Secretary of State of Canada (in the case of a lieutenant governor) or the Minister of Justice (in the case of a judge).
— R.S., 1985, c. 27 (2nd Supp.), s. 12Transitional: other references to P.E.I. CourtA reference in any Act, other than in the provisions amended by the schedule to this Act, or in any document, instrument, regulation, proclamation or order in council, to the Supreme Court of Prince Edward Island shall be construed, as regards any transaction, matter or thing subsequent to the coming into force of this section, to be a reference to the Supreme Court of Prince Edward Island, Appeal Division, or the Supreme Court of Prince Edward Island, Trial Division, as the case may require.Transitional: other references to Newfoundland CourtA reference in any Act, other than in the provisions amended by the schedule to this Act, or in any document, instrument, regulation, proclamation or order in council, to the District Court of Newfoundland shall be construed, as regards any transaction, matter or thing subsequent to the coming into force of this section, to be a reference to the Trial Division of the Supreme Court of Newfoundland.
— R.S., 1985, c. 27 (2nd Supp.), s. 13Transitional: salary for P.E.I. CourtSubject to subsection (2), the salaries of the judges of the Appeal Division and Trial Division of the Supreme Court of Prince Edward Island are, on the coming into force of this section, the same as the salary annexed to the office of judge of the Supreme Court of Prince Edward Island, other than the Chief Justice thereof, immediately before this section comes into force.IdemThe salaries of the Chief Justice of Prince Edward Island and the Chief Justice of the Trial Division of the Supreme Court of Prince Edward Island are, on the coming into force of this section, the same as the salary annexed to the office of Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Prince Edward Island immediately before this section comes into force.Transitional: salaryNotwithstanding any other provision of this Act or the Judges Act, the person holding the office of Chief Judge of the District Court of Newfoundland immediately before the coming into force of section 2 of this Act shall continue to be paid the salary then annexed to that office until such time as the salary annexed to the office of judge of the Trial Division of the Supreme Court of Newfoundland exceeds that salary, at which time that person shall be paid the salary annexed to the office of judge of the Trial Division of the Supreme Court of Newfoundland.
— R.S., 1985, c. 39 (3rd Supp.), s. 1(2)The salary annexed to the office of a judge referred to in subsection (1) shall not be adjusted in accordance with section 25 of the said Act for the twelve month periods commencing April 1, 1986, April 1, 1987 and April 1, 1988.
— R.S., 1985, c. 39 (3rd Supp.), s. 2(2)TransitionalWhere, before the coming into force of this Act, payment of an annuity to the spouse or surviving spouse of a judge was suspended or ceased, on remarriage of the spouse or surviving spouse, pursuant to section 44 of the said Act, as that provision read from time to time, or any provision similar to that provision contained in any Act mentioned in subsection 44(2) of the said Act, payment of the annuity to the spouse or surviving spouse shall, subject to the said Act, be resumed on and with effect from the coming into force of this Act.
— R.S., 1985, c. 39 (3rd Supp.), s. 3(2)TransitionalWhere, before the coming into force of this Act, payment of an annuity to a child of a judge ceased, on marriage of the child, pursuant to paragraph 47(1)(b) of the said Act, payment of the annuity to the child shall, subject to the said Act, be resumed on and with effect from the coming into force of this Act.
— 1989, c. 8, s. 14Coming into forceSubsections 27(1) and (2) of the said Act, as enacted by section 10 of this Act, are applicable to the year commencing on April 1, 1989 and to subsequent years and, for greater certainty, apply to a judge therein described who ceased to hold office during the period commencing on that day and ending on the day preceding the day on which this Act is assented to.IdemParagraphs 40(1)(e) and (f) and subsection 40(1.2) of the said Act, as enacted by section 11 of this Act, shall be deemed to have come into force on April 1, 1988 and, for greater certainty, apply to a judge therein described who ceased to hold office during the period commencing on that day and ending on the day preceding the day on which this Act is assented to.
— 1990, c. 16, s. 24(1)Transitional: proceedingsEvery proceeding commenced before the coming into force of this subsection and in respect of which any provision amended by this Act applies shall be taken up and continued under and in conformity with that amended provision without any further formality.
— 1990, c. 16, s. 25Salary of Associate Chief JusticeThe salary of the Associate Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of British Columbia is, on the coming into force of this subsection, the same as the salary annexed to the office of the Chief Justice of that Court.Transitional: salaryNotwithstanding the Judges Act, the person who holds the office of Chief Judge of the County Courts of British Columbia immediately before the coming into force of subsection 15(2) shall continue to be paid the salary then annexed to that office until such time as the salary annexed to the office of judge of the Supreme Court of British Columbia exceeds that salary, at which time that person shall be paid the salary annexed to the last-mentioned office.
— 1990, c. 17, s. 45(1)Transitional: proceedingsEvery proceeding commenced before the coming into force of this subsection and in respect of which any provision amended by this Act applies shall be taken up and continued under and in conformity with that amended provision without any further formality.
— 1990, c. 17, s. 46Transitional: salaryNotwithstanding the Judges Act, a person who holds the office of Chief Judge or Associate Chief Judge of the District Court of Ontario immediately before the coming into force of section 30 shall continue to be paid the salary then annexed to that office until such time as the salary annexed to the office of judge of the Ontario Court (General Division) exceeds that salary, at which time that person shall be paid the salary annexed to the last-mentioned office.Transitional: annuityNotwithstanding the Judges Act, the Chief Judge and the Associate Chief Judge of the District Court of Ontario shall, on the coming into force of this subsection, be deemed to have made an election in accordance with section 32 of that Act for the purposes of subsection 43(2) of that Act, and if, at the time of their resignation, removal or attaining the age of retirement, they were holding office as judge of the Ontario Court (General Division), the annuity payable to them under section 42 of that Act shall be an annuity equal to two thirds of the salary annexed to the office of chief judge of a county court or, if there is no such office at that time, two thirds of the result obtained by subtracting five thousand dollars from the salary annexed at that time to the office of Chief Justice of the Ontario Court.
— 1992, c. 51, s. 67(1)Transitional: proceedingsEvery proceeding commenced before the coming into force of this subsection and in respect of which any provision amended by this Act applies shall be taken up and continued under and in conformity with that amended provision without any further formality.
— 1992, c. 51, s. 68Transitional: salaryNotwithstanding the Judges Act, a person who holds the office of Chief Judge of the County Court of Nova Scotia immediately before the coming into force of section 6 shall continue to be paid the salary then annexed to that office until the salary annexed to the office of judge of the Supreme Court of Nova Scotia exceeds that salary, at which time that person shall be paid the salary annexed to the last-mentioned office.Transitional: annuityNotwithstanding the Judges Act, the Chief Judge of the County Court of Nova Scotia shall, on the coming into force of this subsection, be deemed to have made an election in accordance with section 32 of that Act for the purposes of subsection 43(2) of that Act, and if, at the time of resignation, removal or attaining the age of retirement, is holding office as a puisne judge of the Supreme Court of Nova Scotia or the Nova Scotia Court of Appeal, the annuity payable under section 42 of that Act shall be an annuity equal to two thirds of the result obtained by subtracting five thousand dollars from the salary annexed at that time to the office of Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Nova Scotia.IdemWhere, before the coming into force of this subsection, an annuity has been granted to or in respect of a judge of a county or district court of any province pursuant to sections 42, 43, 44 and 47 of the Judges Act, payment of that annuity shall continue in accordance with those sections, as they read immediately before the coming into force of this subsection.
— 1996, c. 2, s. 1(2)ApplicationFor greater certainty, subsection 26(2) of the Act, as enacted by subsection (1), applies with respect to the report to be submitted by the commissioners appointed effective September 30, 1995.
— 1996, c. 30, s. 7Application of subsections 27(2) and (3) of the Judges ActFor greater certainty, payments of allowances made before the coming into force of this Act to judges of the Supreme Court of the Yukon Territory and the Supreme Court of the Northwest Territories under subsection 27(2) of the Judges Act and to judges of the Federal Court under subsection 27(3) of that Act, as those subsections read immediately before the coming into force of this Act, are authorized.
— 2002, c. 8, ss. 185(11), (12)InterpretationFor the purposes of subsections 31(1) and (2) of the Judges Act, as enacted by subsection 90(1) of this Act, any period during which a person holds the office of Chief Justice or Associate Chief Justice of the Federal Court of Canada is deemed to be a period during which he or she holds the office of Chief Justice of the Federal Court of Appeal or the Federal Court.For greater certaintyFor greater certainty, for the purposes of sections 31, 43 and 44 of the English version of the Judges Act, “Chief Justice” and “Associate Chief Justice” include “Chief Judge” and “Associate Chief Judge”, respectively.
— 2006, c. 11, s. 36Section 44.2 of the Judges ActSection 44.2 of the Judges Act, as enacted by section 163 of the Modernization of Benefits and Obligations Act, chapter 12 of the Statutes of Canada, 2000, and replaced by section 24 of An Act to amend the Judges Act and to amend another Act in consequence, chapter 7 of the Statutes of Canada, 2001, and the Optional Survivor Annuity Regulations, made by Order in Council P.C. 2001-1362 on August 1, 2001 and registered as SOR/2001-283, are deemed to have come into force on August 1, 2001.
— 2014, c. 39, s. 329SalaryDespite section 10.1 of the Judges Act, a prothonotary of the Federal Court is only entitled to be paid, in respect of the period beginning on April 1, 2012 and ending on the day on which this section comes into force, the difference between the salary described in that section 10.1 and any salary paid or payable to the prothonotary for the same period under the Federal Courts Act.
— 2014, c. 39, s. 330ElectionA prothonotary of the Federal Court who holds office on the day on which this section comes into force will continue to be deemed to be employed in the public service for the purposes of the Public Service Superannuation Act, as if subsection 12(5) of the Federal Courts Act was not repealed, if the prothonotary makes an election to that effect. The election must be made in writing, signed by the prothonotary, and sent to the President of the Treasury Board within six months after the day on which this section comes into force.Election irrevocableAn election made under subsection (1) is irrevocable.No election — no prior pensionable serviceIf a prothonotary does not make an election under subsection (1) and the prothonotary did not have any pensionable service to their credit for the purposes of the Public Service Superannuation Act before holding the office of prothonotary,the prothonotary ceases to be deemed to be employed in the public service for the purposes of that Act on the day on which this section comes into force;the prothonotary is not entitled to a refund of any contributions made by the prothonotary under that Act in respect of any period during which the prothonotary held the office of prothonotary;the prothonotary is not entitled to a return of contributions under subsection 12(3) of that Act in respect of any period during which the prothonotary held the office of prothonotary;the period during which the prothonotary held the office of prothonotary is not counted as pensionable service for the purposes of that Act;if the prothonotary made an election under subsection 51(1) of that Act, the election is deemed never to have been made; andsubsection 51(2) of that Act does not apply to the prothonotary.No election — prior pensionable serviceIf a prothonotary does not make an election under subsection (1) and the prothonotary had pensionable service to their credit for the purposes of the Public Service Superannuation Act before holding the office of prothonotary,the prothonotary ceases to be deemed to be employed in the public service for the purposes of that Act on the day on which this section comes into force;the prothonotary is not entitled to a refund of any contributions made by the prothonotary under that Act in respect of any period during which the prothonotary held the office of prothonotary;the period during which the prothonotary held the office of prothonotary before the day on which this section comes into force is not counted as pensionable service for the purposes of that Act, other than for the purposes of sections 12 and 13 of that Act;despite subsection 69(3) of that Act, for the purposes of section 69 of that Act, the retirement year or retirement month of the prothonotary is the year or month, as the case may be, in which the prothonotary was appointed to the office of prothonotary; andfor the purposes of Part II of that Act, the prothonotary’s salary is their salary in the public service on the day before the day on which they were appointed to the office of prothonotary, expressed in terms of an annual rate.
— 2017, c. 20, s. 227Tenure extensionDespite subsection 26.1(3) of the Judges Act, the term of office of the three members appointed under section 26.1 of that Act to the Judicial Compensation and Benefits Commission that began its inquiry on October 1, 2015 is extended to May 31, 2020.
— 2017, c. 33, s. 254Definition of senior judgeIn this section, senior judge has the same meaning as in subsection 22(3) of the Judges Act as it read immediately before the day on which subsection 232(4) of this Act comes into force.Rights preservedFor the purposes of the Judges Act, the years during which a senior judge of the Supreme Court of Yukon, the Supreme Court of Northwest Territories or the Nunavut Court of Justice has continued in office are deemed to be years during which a chief justice has continued in judicial office.
— 2021, c. 23, s. 253Section 65.1 of Judges ActSection 65.1 of the Judges Act does not apply to a judge whose removal from judicial office has been recommended by the Canadian Judicial Council before the day on which section 252 comes into force.
— 2022, c. 10, s. 372ProthonotariesFor greater certainty, every person who, immediately before the day on which this section comes into force, holds office as prothonotary of the Federal Court, supernumerary prothonotary of the Federal Court, prothonotary of the Tax Court of Canada or supernumerary prothonotary of the Tax Court of Canada continues in office as associate judge of the Federal Court, supernumerary associate judge of the Federal Court, associate judge of the Tax Court of Canada or supernumerary associate judge of the Tax Court of Canada, as the case may be.
— 2022, c. 10, s. 373Judges ActFor greater certainty, for the purposes of the Judges Act, nothing in section 371 of this Act affects the number of years during which a person who held office as prothonotary, as defined in that Act as it read immediately before the day on which this section comes into force, has continued in judicial office.
— 2023, c. 18, s. 14Ongoing inquiries and investigationsThe Judges Act, as it read immediately before the day on which this Act comes into force, continues to apply in respect of any inquiry or investigation commenced under that Act before that day.
— 2023, c. 18, s. 15Inquiry requested under subsection 63(1)If an inquiry has been requested under subsection 63(1) of the Judges Act before the day on which this Act comes into force and the inquiry has not commenced before that day, the request is deemed to be a request made on that day under section 148 of that Act, as enacted by section 12 of this Act.Complaint or allegation referred to in subsection 63(2)If a complaint or allegation referred to in subsection 63(2) of the Judges Act is made before the day on which this Act comes into force and an investigation into it has not commenced before that day, the complaint or allegation is deemed to be a complaint made on that day under subsection 86(1) of that Act, as enacted by section 12 of this Act.Inquiry requested under subsection 69(1)If an inquiry has been requested under subsection 69(1) of the Judges Act before the day on which this Act comes into force and the inquiry has not commenced before that day, the request is deemed to be a request made on that day under section 152 of that Act, as enacted by section 12 of this Act.
— 2023, c. 18, s. 16Notice of application for leave to appealIf a report made under section 65 of the Judges Act, as that section read immediately before the day on which this Act comes into force, contains a recommendation that a judge be removed from office, that judge may, within 30 days after that day, file a notice of application for leave to appeal the report to the Supreme Court of Canada and, if leave is granted, section 138 of that Act, as enacted by section 12 of this Act, applies with respect to the appeal.2022, c. 102023-06-222023, c. 182023-06-222023, c. 72023-05-272022, c. 102022-09-232022, c. 102022-06-232021, c. 232021-06-292021, c. 82021-05-062017, c. 33, s. 2372019-04-122017, c. 33, s. 2382019-04-122017, c. 33, s. 2402019-04-12