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Ceci est une photo de Stephanie Sugar

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Stephanie Sugar is a Partner in our litigation group. She works with the National Retail and Consumer Markets Group, and practices in the area of consumer protection and regulation, with a focus on complex commercial litigation, class actions defence, and franchise law. She has been counsel on cases before the Supreme Court of Canada, the Federal Court and all levels of Ontario’s Courts, and is also involved with professional regulation and discipline matters. 

Stephanie is the author of Franchise Law in Canada, a book that is national in focus detailing the developing legal principles in franchise law arising from the expansion of provincial regulations, and considering the intersections between the statutory regimes and common law.

Recent Cases

  • Keatley Surveying v. Teranet Inc. - defending successful summary judgment against a certified class action in a copyright infringement claim at the Supreme Court of Canada
  • Darmar Farms v. Syngenta Canada Inc. - defending the successful motion by Syngenta to have a statement of claim struck pre-certification
  • Suzuki Foundation et al. v. Minister of Health et al - successfully defending a judicial review seeking to challenge registrations of neonicotinoid pesticides

Receiving her JD from the University of Western Ontario in 2012, and an LLM in 2016, Stephanie’s graduate work focused on the tensions and interaction between law and policy arising from the increasing shift towards consumer protectionism. She teaches Advanced Contracts at Western University, and has been a Sessional Lecturer teaching Class Actions at Queen’s University.

Stephanie speaks at conferences, has written a number of articles and blogs on a variety of legal topics, and has received numerous awards for her contributions to her law school community and achievements in academics.

Book cover

Franchise Law in Canada par Stephanie Sugar

Le franchisage est un modèle d’affaires vaste et important au Canada, qui a connu une croissance notable au cours des deux dernières décennies. En réponse aux nombreuses préoccupations de l’industrie et des particuliers au sujet de l’absence de réglementation dans ce domaine, les provinces canadiennes ont commencé à développer des régimes législatifs détaillés au milieu des années 1990.

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