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Official reporter of decisions
The Supreme Court Reports (S.C.R.) is the official reporter of the Supreme Court of Canada. Since the creation of the Supreme Court, all of its decisions have been published in the Reports, in both English and French. The first volume was published in 1877 containing the first case ever heard by the Supreme Court, Kelly v. Sullivan.
When the Supreme Court Act was passed in 1875, it required the Court to publish its own decisions rather than relying on private law reporters, an innovation not found elsewhere in the British Empire. This self-publishing model was intended to ensure that decisions would quickly reach legal professionals and lower court judges. Judgments published in the Supreme Court Reports were printed in the language in which they were delivered, either English or French, and were not translated.
Despite its promise, the Supreme Court Reports faced early criticism for numerous shortcomings, including errors, inconsistent editing and citations, a lack of uniform style, poorly written headnotes, and delays from decision to date of publication.
Another issue arose in the 1891 case Stephens v McArthur,[4] where the judgement affected the validity of every mortgage and bill of sale in the prairies. The Law Society of Manitoba requested a copy of the decision to print in the Western Law Times, but Justice Strong who wrote the majority opinion refused the request until the decision had been printed in the Supreme Court Reports.
The problems with the Supreme Court Reports continued into the 1890s with the Strong Court, however the retirement of the original Reporter Georges Duval in 1895, and replacement with Charles H. Masters and assistant report Louis William Coutlée led to an improvement in efficiency and reporting processes. The Department of Justice permitted the Reporter to print without inclusion of reasons from justices which were late with their reasons. In the 25th volume (1895), six decisions were reported without reasons for a justice, and two unanimous decisions were reported with no reasons. While this change increased efficiency, the quality of the reporting made the Reports unhelpful for the legal profession.
Initially, the reports were identified from 1 to 64, but from 1923 they have been identified by their year of publication. By 1975 the reporter started putting out two volumes a year, which increased to between 3 and 4 by 1990. Volumes from 1983 and later are also available in electronic format, hosted by LexUM at the Université de Montréal.
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