The decisions were the decisions of a court, and I would say based on the evidence before the court in those particular instances.
I don't know to any great detail the specifics of the cases, but I do know that there have been instances in Canada where lawyers' files, in connection with the advice they provided relative to securing intellectual property rights, have been opened in the courts simply on the basis of the precedents established by earlier decisions.
This concerns me. It should concern the law societies. I'm surprised by the opposition to this, in that the principles involved seek to protect the administration of justice; they seek to protect access to justice.
Lawyers enjoy this particular characteristic with respect to their conversations or discussions with their clients, but it provides them with a unique position, which I believe is—