WIC Radio Ltd v Simpson

WIC Radio Ltd v Simpson (2008) is a case on appeal from the Court of Appeal for British Columbia to the Supreme Court of Canada on defamation.

After CKNW radio talk show host Rafe Mair broadcast an editorial that compared family rights activist Kari Simpson to Adolf Hitler, the Ku Klux Klan, and former Alabama governor George Wallace, among others,[1] Simpson sued Mair and his employer, WIC Radio Ltd., for defamation.

A 2006 B.C. Court of Appeal decision written by then-justice Mary Southin, concluded that Mair defamed Simpson and couldn't rely on the defence of fair comment. In 2008, the Supreme Court of Canada ruled that Mair had, in fact, defamed Simpson.[2] However, the Supreme Court used this case to re-define defamation in Canada.[3] Because the old legal test no longer applied, the Supreme Court found for the appellants Mair and WIC Radio Ltd.[2]

The Supreme Court decision was regarded as likely to encourage public commentators to be more brave in criticizing public figures.[1]

WIC Radio Ltd v Simpson

Supreme Court of Canada

Hearing: June 27, 2007
Judgment: December 4, 2008
Full case name WIC Radio Ltd and Rafe Mair, Appellants v Kari Simpson, Respondent, with Canadian Civil Liberties Association, British Columbia, Civil Liberties Association and Canadian Newspaper Association, Ad IDEM/Canadian Media Lawyers Association, British Columbia Association of Broadcasters, RTNDA Canada/Association of Electronic Journalists, Canadian Publishers' Council, Magazines Canada, Canadian Association of Journalists and Canadian Journalists for Free Expression (Collectively "Media Coalition"), Interveners
Ruling Appeal succeeded
Court Membership
Reasons given
Unanimous reasons by Binnie, William Ian Corneil

References

External links


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