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University of Saskatchewan, University Archives & Special Collections
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Law - Alumni Reunion - Banquet - Panel Discussion

Mr. Justice Emmett M. Hall speaks at the College of Law Alumni Reunion panel discussion during the official opening of the new Law Building. Two unidentified men are seated, listening to Justice Hall.

Bio/Historical Note: The Law and Commerce Buildings were designed and constructed as part of a single project between 1965 and 1967. The architect was John Holliday-Scott of the Saskatoon firm Holliday-Scott & Associates.

College of Law - M.I.A.B. Football Champions - Group Photo

Image of Men's Intramural Athletic Board (M.I.A.B.) football champions seated on bleachers. Team members: K.C. Prefontaine (Mgr), R. Evans, John Klebuc, R. Bell, Ian Disbery, K. Norman, M. Schulman, S. Cichan (Mgr), E. Marshall, M. Sihvan, E. Dietrich, P. Caron, G. Naylor, K. Andreychuk, E. Sojonky, D. Osborn, P. Hengen, A. Blott (coach), E. Ratushny, J. Ferguson (coach), M. Henderson, T. Ferguson, A. MacLean.

Estey Centre for Law and Economics in International Trade

Justice Willard ('Bud') Estey (left) poses with Janice MacKinnon, Minister of Saskatchewan Economic and Cooperative Development, and Ralph Goodale, federal minister of Natural Resources at the Centre's dedication. The Centre will help to counter aggressive and sometimes unfair trade policies of other nations.

Bio/Historical Note: Willard Zebedee "Bud" Estey, CC (1919-2002) was born in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. He was the son of James Wilfred Estey, a puisne justice of the Supreme Court of Canada, and Muriel Baldwin. He studied at the University of Saskatchewan earning a BA in 1940 and an LL.B in 1942. He joined the armed forces and fought during World War II, including acting as a Canadian Observer with US forces during the battle for Okinawa. Upon returning to Canada went to study at Harvard Law School and received a LL.M in 1946. From 1946 he taught at the University of Saskatchewan and then moved to Ontario the following year to practice law. In 1973 Estey was appointed to the Court of Appeal for Ontario and two years later was named Chief Justice of the High Court of Justice of Ontario. He became Chief Justice of Ontario in 1976. Estey was appointed to the Supreme Court of Canada in 1977 to replace Wilfred Judson. He drafted the first major judgment on the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, the Skapinker judgment, in 1984. That same year the University of Saskatchewan awarded an honourary Doctor of Laws degree. Estey retired from the Supreme Court of Canada in 1988. Estey was appointed a trustee of the Stanley Cup in 1984 on the nomination of Red Dutton, succeeding Clarence Campbell. In 1985, he was appointed as Commissioner of Inquiry into the collapses of the Canadian Commercial Bank and the Northland Bank, both of which had been closed by the Canadian government that year. Estey’s report, Report of the Inquiry into the Collapse of the CCB and Northland Bank, was issued in 1986. In 1990 he was made a Companion of the Order of Canada. Estey died in Toronto in 2002.

Bio/historical note: Appeared in the March 26, 1999 OCN.

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