Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Quebec (AG) v Kellogg's Co of Canada

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Citations
  
[1978] 2 SCR 211

Ruling
  
Appeal allowed

Quebec (AG) v Kellogg's Co of Canada

Full case name
  
Attorney-General of the Province of Quebec v. Kellogg’s Company of Canada and Kellogg’s of Canada Limited

Prior history
  
Judgment for Kellogg Company in the Court of Appeal for Quebec

Majority
  
Martland J., joined by Ritchie, Pigeon, Dickson, Beetz and de Grandpré JJ.

Dissent
  
Laskin C.J., joined by Judson and Spence JJ.

Quebec (AG) v Kellogg's Co of Canada is a leading constitutional decision of the Supreme Court of Canada on the pre-Charter right to freedom of expression. The Quebec Consumer Protection Act, which prohibited advertising to children through cartoons, was challenged by the Kellogg Company on the basis that it affected TV stations across the country. The Court held that the regulation of advertising is a matter within the authority of the province, and that the Act was valid law under the Property and Civil Rights power allocated to the province under section 92(13) of the Constitution Act, 1867.

Reasons of the court

Justice Martland found that the pith and substance of the legislation was the regulation of advertising which he identified as a matter allocated to the provincial government under the property and civil rights power. He noted that the regulation of advertising and was also part of a larger provincial scheme of regulating business practices, all of which fell within the purview of the provincial government. The encroachment upon the regulation of broadcasting was found to only be incidental to the primary subject of advertising, and so was valid.

Chief Justice Laskin, in dissent, disagreed with Martland and argued that the regulation must be read down to exclude the regulation of expression. He pointed out how in McKay v. The Queen (1965) the provincial law regulating signs was read down to exclude the regulation of federal voting signs. Likewise, in Johannesson v. West St. Paul (1952) a provincial law that regulated the zoning of aerodromes was not valid as it encroached on federal power to regulate air transportation.

References

Quebec (AG) v Kellogg's Co of Canada Wikipedia


Similar Topics