Judicial discretion Courts may exercise their discretion and decide not to hear an application for judicial review. In order for the court to proceed with an application for judicial review, the issue being appealed must be public in nature. Certain Crown actors are immune from judicial review. The scope of what is public is broad, and the decisions of private, or semi-private entities are sometimes determined to be sufficiently public as to undergo judicial review. An application for judicial review does not automatically stop the administrative proceedings. In order to halt the proceedings, if they are ongoing, the applicant must also apply for a
stay of proceedings.
Grounds Certain grounds for judicial review are laid out in s. 18.1(4) of the
Federal Courts Act. This section of the act also transfers authority over judicial review against any federal body from the provincial superior courts to the federal courts.
Standard of review The standard of review is the degree of scrutiny applied by the courts to administrative action. Standard of review exists in two forms: correctness, and reasonableness. A third standard,
patent unreasonableness, was abolished in
Dunsmuir v New Brunswick. The framework for judicial review was revised in
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) v Vavilov, which "conclusively closes the door on the application of a contextual analysis to determining the applicable standard, and in doing so streamlines and simplifies the standard.” All decisions are now presumed to be held to a standard of reasonableness. This presumption can be rebutted in two ways: 1) through clear legislative intent; or, 2) if the rule of law requires that the standard of correctness be applied. The
rule of law can require that the standard of correctness be applied in regards to constitutional questions, general questions of law of central importance to the whole legal system, and questions regarding jurisdictional boundaries between administrative bodies. When applying the correctness standard, the court carries out its own statutory analysis and arrive at its own understanding of how the issue should be decided. "Even where a court has determined that a decision is unreasonable or procedurally unfair, it retains the power to refuse to grant a remedy, or to grant a remedy subject to conditions . . . [The] reviewing court that has quashed an administrative decision [may] "remit the matter to the decision-maker for reconsideration with the benefit of the court's reasons" . . . Remitting the matter will "most often" be the appropriate course of action, as "the legislature has entrusted the matter to the administrative decision maker, and not the court, to decide.""
Limits "When an applicant brings an application for judicial review, a judge must consider the application: that is, at a minimum, the judge must determine whether judicial review is appropriate. If, in considering the application, the judge determines that one of the discretionary bases for refusing a remedy is present, they may decline to consider the merits of the judicial review application. The judge also has the discretion to refuse to grant a remedy, even if they find that the decision under review is unreasonable." == Legislation ==