Only when there's an absence of merit and a court would take the position that it is a frivolous and vexatious case. That's the test that a court would usually apply to throw out a case. If an argument cannot meet that minimum standard, then it should be set aside. Otherwise, the Carter case tells us that if you were to apply that test to many of the cases that have been successful in the Supreme Court of Canada, they would not have received funding. The Supreme Court, in the Carter case, not only thought that it was a meritorious argument but gave it millions of dollars in funding for the litigation.
I'm saying it is a dark hole to go down that has no bottom. In other words, once you get into that area you are into the laws of men and women and not the rule of law. It is important for this committee to very clearly give direction to the decision-maker, so that the decision-maker is not making a decision based on what they think but rather on whether this case should ever go before a judge, because it's the judge's decision that really matters in these cases.