From: Enrichment - Restitution & Unjust
Enrichment Legal Issues <ENRICHMENT@LISTS.MCGILL.CA> on behalf of Lionel
Smith <0000026f93a2a9e6-dmarc-request@LISTS.MCGILL.CA>
Sent: Friday 5 January 2024 02:58
To: ENRICHMENT@LISTS.MCGILL.CA
Subject: [RDG] Jacob Ziegel 1927 - 2023
With apologies for cross-posting, I write to share the news of the
passing last month of Jacob Ziegel, who taught law for over four decades in
Canada. He was a leading voice in Canadian consumer and commercial law, and was
also a key organizer of outstanding academic events in private law more
generally.
For over four decades, Jacob was the convenor of the Annual Workshop of
Commercial and Consumer Law, which was the only annually recurring event in
Canada that was preoccupied not only with Commercial and Consumer Law, but with
private law more generally. I attended at least a dozen of these excellent
events, which were usually held at the Faculty of Law of the University of
Toronto, but also occasionally elsewhere. In my case, I was usually presenting
on aspects of restitution, trust law, and comparative law that related only
indirectly to commercial and consumer law, and I was thrilled to have a group
of interested interlocutors. Jacob’s expertise as an organizer, combined with
the generous support of his Faculty and of Toronto law firms, meant that the event
was well-funded and well-organized. I still remember my astonishment, as a
just-beginning professor in the early 1990’s, when I learned that the
conference would help to fund my travel even if I was not giving a
paper. Jacob knew the importance of this in a jurisdiction like Canada, when
faculties did not necessarily offer travel funding; my then employer, the
University of Alberta, is 3,000 km from Toronto. Perhaps like many others of my
vintage who were also on a budget, I quickly got to know the Holiday Inn and
the other inexpensive hotels around the Toronto faculty. Jacob always made a
point of having a high-profile international speaker; I recall, for example,
Sir Roy Goode and Andrew (now Lord) Burrows. And Jacob was also very careful to
try to ensure that the voice of Canadian civil law was represented at the
Workshop.
Through the Workshop and through his own scholarship, I got to know
Jacob’s deep concern for consumers and the protection of their interests.
Another recollection (my memory may be playing tricks on me) was learning from
a short note by Jacob in the Canadian Business Law Journal of his
dissatisfaction that the Ontario legislature had abolished the rule, inherited
from the Statute of Frauds of 1677 but with some adjustment of the monetary
threshold, that contracts for the sale of goods above a certain value needed to
be evidenced in writing to be enforceable. He thought it protected consumers,
and should not have been abrogated without proper consideration of this
function. He was also a leading commentator in many fields outside of consumer
law, including insolvency and perhaps especially lending secured on personal
property.
I knew Jacob for a long time, but I did not know him as well as some
list members may have. From the obituary
that was published in the Globe and Mail, I learned that Jacob was born in
Germany and left that country before the war on a Kindertransport, and
that his parents died in the Holocaust. Before his many years at the Law
Faculty of the University of Toronto, he taught also at the University of
Saskatchewan, McGill University and Osgoode Hall Law School of York University.
For decades, Jacob was not only the guiding spirit of the Annual Workshop of
Commercial and Consumer Law, but also of the Canadian Business Law Journal.
It is good to know that the Journal continues to be an outlet for
scholarship in business law and in all areas of private law.
May he rest in peace, and may we keep his memory alive in our hearts.
Lionel
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