Non-profit group has public interest standing in mental-health law case: top court
OTTAWA — The Supreme Court of Canada says a not-for-profit organization has public interest standing to challenge mental-health law in a B.C. court, even though no individuals are plaintiffs in the case.
The court’s unanimous decision today comes six years after the Council of Canadians with Disabilities challenged the constitutionality of mental-health legislation in B.C. that allows non-consensual psychiatric care.
Two individual co-plaintiffs discontinued their claims, but the council hoped to continue in court without them.
A judge ruled the action should be dismissed on the basis that the council lacked public interest standing to pursue the challenge on its own.