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61 Osgoode Hall L. J. 9 (2024)

handle is hein.journals/ohlj61 and id is 1 raw text is: 9

The Highest Suggestion in the Land:
Obiter Dicta and the Modern Supreme
Court of Canada
AMITPAL C. SINGH1
The Supreme Court of Canada is unlike any court of appeal in Canada. Many decades ago, the
Court shed the traditional mould of an error-correcting appellate court. The modern Court
is a jurisprudential overseer and its appeals are occasions for legal innovation. This essay
explores whether the distinction between non-binding obiter dicta and binding ratio decidendi
has any continued significance for the Court. In this essay, I argue that the modern orthodoxy
about the Court's institutional role obliterates any such distinction. This conclusion runs
contrary to the Court's own jurisprudence on this topic, which attempts to preserve the
distinction by remaking it in a modern image. The Court has settled on a spectrum view
about its obiter: the weight of obiter decreases as it moves away from dispositive ratio. I show
that the obiter-ratio distinction is rooted in a model of adjudication--dispute-resolution--
that the Court no longer adheres to, as is evinced by the muscular role of reference opinions
and other doctrinal developments. This descriptive argument is also a normative argument
against the modern orthodoxy about the Court's role as jurisprudential overseer: the fact
that the modern orthodoxy obliterates the obiter-ratio distinction is a reductio ad absurdum
against that orthodoxy.
1.  LLM Candidate, Yale Law School. JD (2021), University of Toronto Faculty of Law. I wish
to thank Jasman Gill, Manish Oza, Jim Phillips, Robert Sharpe, Kees Westland, and Andy Yu
for their generous comments on prior drafts of this paper. I am also grateful to the editors of
the Osgoode Hall Law Journal for their careful editorial work. All errors were made in obiter.

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