Supreme Court ruling could change how human rights law is applied in Quebec
MONTREAL — After Marco Ayotte’s uncle used a homophobic slur toward him in July 2018 and said he should kill himself, Ayotte didn’t just fume about a vulgar, insensitive relative. He filed a complaint with the Quebec’s human rights commission.
In April, the province’s human rights tribunal, which hears cases brought by the commission, ruled that the comments made by Norman Tremblay, Ayotte’s uncle, showed “a lack of humanity” and amounted to discrimination. It ordered Tremblay to pay more than $10,000 dollars in damages.
That case was the latest in a series to be singled out in a recent Supreme Court of Canada decision as examples of overreach by the human rights tribunal. The Supreme Court ruling, which could change the way discrimination cases are decided in Quebec, has been described as a victory for free speech but also as a decision that sets back human rights law in the province by decades.
Montreal-based constitutional lawyer Julius Grey, who successfully argued the Supreme Court case, said the ruling clarifies what constitutes discrimination and is part of a series of rulings limiting the expanding jurisdiction of Canadian administrative tribunals.