Blog

Court of King's Bench of Alberta Indefinitely Suspends Judicial Dispute Resolution—What's Next?

Tyler McDonough and Graham Bowden
June 7, 2024
Social Media
Download
Download
Read Mode
Subscribe
Summarize

The Alberta Rules of Court require parties to an action before the Alberta Court of King’s Bench to participate in some form of alternate dispute resolution process before they can attend trial.

On June 6, 2024, the Court indefinitely suspended its Judicial Dispute Resolution (JDR) program. The JDR program gave parties an opportunity to schedule and participate in a negotiation process facilitated by a Justice and attempt to resolve all or part of a claim without incurring the time and cost of a trial.

JDRs have historically been an important resource for litigants that cannot, or do not want to, pay to retain a private mediator to satisfy the pretrial dispute resolution requirement.

Despite the suspension of the JDR program, the Rules still require that parties complete an alternate dispute resolution process before trial under Rules 8.4(3)(a) and 4.16. This will now require parties to pay for a private mediation or, where circumstances warrant, apply to the Court to waive the requirement under Rule 4.16.

We will continue to monitor how the Court approaches its mandatory dispute resolution processes going forward.

Social Media
Download
Download
Subscribe
Republishing Requests

For permission to republish this or any other publication, contact Erica Wirthlin at wirthline@bennettjones.com.

For informational purposes only

This publication provides an overview of legal trends and updates for informational purposes only. For personalized legal advice, please contact the authors.

Bill C 36 and Canadian Privacy Reform
Blog

Bill C-36 and Canadian Privacy Reform

June 18, 2026
J. Sébastien A. GittensRuth E. PromislowCaroline Poirier
& 4 more
Restricting Covenants in Federal Workplaces
Blog

Restricting Covenants in Federal Workplaces

June 11, 2026
Christine PlanteSara G. ParchelloTami Oguntona
Christine Plante, Sara G. Parchello & Tami Oguntona
Courts show Continued Commitment to Closely Scrutinizing Proposed Privacy Class Actions
Blog

Courts Continue Close Scrutiny of Privacy Class Actions

June 4, 2026
Nina ButzJackson Spencer
Nina Butz & Jackson Spencer