Hazelbrook v. Government of PEI, 2004 PESCTD 22 (CanLII)
This case was heard in the Supreme Court of Prince Edward Island (Trial Division).
The Community of Hazelbrook applied for judicial review of two decisions by the Minister of Fisheries, Aquaculture, and Environment. The first Ministerial decision approved the operation of an excavation pit in Hazelbrook, and the second approved the operation of a construction and demolition disposal site in Hazelbrook.
The Court determined that the standard by which the Minister's decisions should be reviewed was the standard of patent unreasonableness. The Court went on to find that both Ministerial approvals had been patently unreasonable; however, it held that the Judicial Review Act gave it a wide discretion to grant relief to the Minister. The Court chose to use that discretion, and it declined to declare that the approval processes were null and void.
To read about this case in the Prince Edward Island Court of Appeal, go to Hazelbrook v. Government of P.E.I, 2005 PESCAD 5 (CanLII).
View the Decision on CanLII: https://www.canlii.org/en/pe/pesctd/doc/2004/2004pesctd22/2004pesctd22.html
Disclaimer:
Case briefs in our Resource Library are drafted by law students who work or volunteer with East Coast Environmental Law, and East Coast Environmental Law does not guarantee their fullness or accuracy. Library users should not rely on case briefs as comprehensive accounts of the issues, facts, reasoning, or outcomes at stake in any given case.
If you require more detailed information about a court decision or legal issue, please consider using our Environmental Law Inquiry Service to request information from our staff.