Wednesday, February 12, 2020

The Law and Business Administration in Canada 15E Smyth Test Bank and Solution Manual

The Law and Business Administration in Canada 15E Smyth, Soberman, Easson & McGill ©2020  


The Law and Business Administration in Canada 15E Smyth, Soberman, Easson & McGill ©2020   Test Bank
The Law and Business Administration in Canada 15E Smyth, Soberman, Easson & McGill ©2020 Test Bank + Solution Manual

Test Bank and Instructor Solution Manual

The Law and Business Administration in Canada 15E Smyth Test Bank
  • Publisher: Pearson Canada; 15th edition (February 15, 2019)
  • Langue: English
  • ISBN-10: 0134841298
  • ISBN-13: 978-0134841298

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The Law and Business Administration in Canada  15/EJ.E. SmythDan SobermanAlex EassonShelley McGillISBN-10: 0135353726 • ISBN-13: 9780135353721©2020 • Cloth Bound with Access CardPublished 02/15/2019 • Instock
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Features

The text contains many features aimed at helping students understand, apply, and retain important concepts:
  • Cases: Real court decisions that demonstrate how judges create or apply a legal principle.
  • Illustrations: Simple factual scenarios that allow students to see a simple example the legal principle in action.
  • Checklists: Summaries that condense the text into a simple list of steps to follow when defining the law or applying a legal principle.
  • Ethical Issues: Descriptions of real events that present an ethical dilemma or demonstrate the link between law and ethics.
  • International Issues: Descriptions of real events that present an example of conflict of laws between jurisdictions.
  • Contemporary Issues: Current examples of situations that involve the legal principles of the chapter.
  • Strategies to Manage the Risk: A practical look at proactive ways a manager can address the legal issues presented in the chapter.

Table of Contents

PART 1 The Law in Its Social and Business Context
Chapter 1: Law, Society, and Business
Chapter 2: The Machinery of Justice
Chapter 3: Government Regulation of Business
PART 2: Torts
Chapter 4: The Law of Torts
Chapter 5: Professional Liability: The Legal Challenges
PART 3: Contracts
Chapter 6: Formation of a Contract: Offer and Acceptance
Chapter 7: Formation of a Contract: Consideration and Intention
Chapter 8: Formation of a Contract: Capacity to Contract and Legality of Object
Chapter 9: Contract Issues: Mistake and Misrepresentation
Chapter 10: Writing and Interpretation
Chapter 11: Privity of Contract and the Assignment of Contractual Rights
Chapter 12: The Discharge of Contracts
Chapter 13: Breach of Contract and Its Remedies
PART 4: Special Types of Contracts
Chapter 14: Sale of Goods and Consumer Contracts
Chapter 15: Bailment and Leasing
Chapter 16: Insurance and Guarantee
Chapter 17: Agency and Franchising
Chapter 18: The Contract of Employment
Chapter 19: Banking and Negotiable Instruments
PART 5: Property
Chapter 20: Intellectual Property
Chapter 21: Interests in Land and Their Transfer
Chapter 22: Landlord and Tenant
Chapter 23: Mortgages of Land and Real Estate Transactions
PART 6: Business Organizations: Their Forms, Operation, and Management
Chapter 24: Sole Proprietorships and Partnerships
Chapter 25: The Nature of a Corporation and Its Formation
Chapter 26: Corporate Governance: The Internal Affairs of Corporations
Chapter 27: Corporate Governance: External Responsibilities
PART 7: Creditors and Debtors
Chapter 28: Secured Transactions
Chapter 29: Creditors’ Rights
PART 8: The Modern Legal Environment for Business
Chapter 30: International Business Transactions
Chapter 31: Electronic Commerce
Chapter 32: Privacy 

About the Author(s)

J.E. Smyth
James Everil (Ev) Smyth (1920–1983) studied commerce at the University of Toronto, where he earned a B.A. and an M.A. He also became a Chartered Accountant and a Fellow of the Institute of Chartered Accountants. He taught at Queen’s University from 1946 to 1963, and then returned to the University of Toronto where he taught until 1983. He was an outstanding teacher and also served a term as head of the Department of Political Economy and then as head of the School of Business at the University of Toronto. He was the author of Introduction to Accounting Methods (Kingston: Jackson Press, 1951) and The Basis of Accounting (Toronto: Ryerson Press, 1954). In 1983, he was posthumously given the L.S. Rosen Award for Outstanding Contribution to Canadian Accounting Education by the Canadian Academic Accounting Association.
Dan Soberman
Dan Soberman (1929–2010) studied law at Dalhousie University and Harvard University. He began teaching at Dalhousie in 1955, and in 1957 moved to Queen’s University to help start the law faculty. He was dean of the faculty from 1968 to 1977, taught full-time until retirement in 1993, and continued to teach part-time there and in the School of Business until 1999. In the late 1960s, he was a member of the federal Business Corporations Task Force that drafted the Canada Business Corporations Act. In the autumn term of 2000, he was visiting professor at Kwansai Gakuin University in Japan. From 1977 until 2000, he was an adjudicator on human rights tribunals in Ontario and federally, and also acted as an arbitrator in labour disputes. He authored, or co-authored, chapters in various legal books and articles in law journals.
Alex Easson
Alex Easson (1936–2007) studied law in England, at Oxford University and the London School of Economics. Prior to coming to Canada, he practised law as a solicitor in London and taught at the University of Southampton. He was appointed professor of law at Queen’s University in 1976 and remained at Queen’s until he retired from full-time teaching in 2000. He then concentrated on his consulting practice, working principally for international organizations such as the IMF and the OECD, and specializing in international taxation, foreign investment, and economic reform. His work took him to more than forty countries on five continents. He authored, or co-authored, more than a dozen books, the most recent being Tax Incentives for Foreign Direct Investment (The Hague: Kluwer Law International, 2004). We at Pearson Canada appreciate his contributions to several editions of this highly acclaimed text.
Shelley McGill
Shelley McGill holds an LL.B. from the University of Western Ontario and an LL.M. from Osgoode Hall Law School at York University. She is a full professor of business law in the Lazaridis School of Business and Economics at Wilfrid Laurier University. Professor McGill teaches law to graduate and undergraduate business students. She is also a deputy judge of the Ontario Small Claims Court where she presides on a part-time basis. Prior to joining Laurier, Professor McGill was a partner in the Ontario law firm of Sims Clement Eastman. Her research focuses on consumer protection issues and is published in a variety of Canadian and international law journals, including the Canadian Business Law Journal and the American Business Law Journal.