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'I stood up for my rights against criminals on my property': Lawsuit dropped against landowner

Therural Alberta landowner who became a lightning rod for the debate overproperty rights learned Thursday that he's no longer being sued by a trespasser he shot, and has also dropped his suit against the other man.

New Alberta legislation that boosts protection for property owners was key factor, lawyers say

Eddie Maurice, centre, flanked by his wife, Jessica, and daughter Teal in 2018. Maurice said Thursday the case will have a lingering affect on his whole family, even after the lawsuit was dropped. (Jeff McIntosh/The Canadian Press)

Therural Alberta landowner who became a lightning rod for the debate overproperty rights learned Thursday that he's no longer being sued by a trespasser he shot, and has also dropped his suit against the other man.

"From the start of this, I stood up for my rights against criminals on my property," the landowner, Edouard(Eddie) Maurice saidin Calgary Thursday.

"I just hope in the end this inspires everyone that you're able to what you need to do if you believe in it and can stand up for what's right."

Mauricewas thrust into the national spotlight in Feb. 24, 2018, after he fired what he said were warning shots at two trespassers on his propertynear Okotoks, south of Calgary.

A bullet ended up in the arm of one of the intruders,Ryan Watson, but Maurice always insisted he hadn't aimed at them directly and the bullet must have ricocheted.

Watson was initially charged withtrespassing, mischief to property, theft under $5,000, possession of methamphetamine and failure to comply with probation. He was ultimately given a 45-day sentence for mischief and breaching probation but was released because of time served in pretrial custody.

Maurice was also charged, with aggravated assault, pointing a firearm and careless use of a firearm. He became a icon for the rights of property owners, with dozens of people routinely showingup at court hearings in support and anonline fundraising campaign exceeding its$50,000 goal.

A young boy and girl play with homemade stocks outside court in Okotoks, Alta., in March 2018 as people gather in support of Maurice while he was still facing charges in the shooting. (Jeff McIntosh/The Canadian Press)

Thecharges against Maurice were droppedin mid-2018 when a ballistics report supportedhis assertion that a ricochet bullet struck Watson and determined he had committed no crime.

Trespasser sues for 'emotional upset'

But that wasn't the end of the saga.

In September 2019, Watson filed a $100,000 statement of claim stating he has suffered "emotional upset, severe fatigue and insomnia."

He also claimedspecial damages including loss of income "in an amount to be proven at court."

People strain to hear an organizer in 2018 at one of the rallies in support of Maurice outside of the Okotoks courthouse. (Jeff McIntosh/The Canadian Press)

In October, Maurice filed a statement of defenceagainst Watson's claim and a counterclaim of $150,000.

Maurice's statement of defence deniedany liability for damages described in Watson's claim and his counterclaim said he was seeking damages for "mental distress, stress, anxiety and nightmares," for himself and his oldest daughter.

The landowner's counterclaim allegedMaurice's wife, Jessica, needed counselling and suffered a miscarriage and his family continuedto suffer mental stress. Maurice also sought wages lostwhile fighting criminal charges in court.

New Alberta law 'key' in lawsuit being dropped

The lawyers for both Maurice and Watson said new Alberta legislation was a key factor leading to Watson's lawsuit being dropped.

The United Conservative Party government's Bill 27 passed last November as theTrespass Statutes (Protecting Law-abiding Property Owners) Act increasedprotectionfor property owners from getting sued if they injured trespassers on their property, as well as increasing fines for trespassing and other measures.

It is an amendment to the Occupiers Liability Act, which has long been in place in Alberta.

Watson's lawyer, Devin Frank, said Thursday that the terms in the legislation wouldn't make it possible to get the facts "properly aired" in court.

Frank said the case would have been risky in terms of costs for Watson to continue pursuing it.

"If (Watson)brought a suit under this legislation, it would likely fail," Frank said, adding Watson could have even ended up paying for Maurice's legal fees.

Frank saidthe bill makes it so the homeowner can't have a civil case brought against them unless they have been criminally prosecuted which Maurice was not.

Scott Chimuk, Maurice's lawyer, said legislation played a "key" role in the case.

"We won," Chimuk said, adding the arguments and application for dismissal was done behind closed doors.

The claim against Maurice cannot be revived, he said.

Lasting impact on Maurice family

Meanwhile, the Maurice family opted to drop their counterclaim.

"Finally, we can just move on," Maurice said.

Maurice leaves court in Okotoks, Alta., in March 2018. He said he hopes Alberta's Bill 27 is one day implemented federally. (Jeff McIntosh/The Canadian Press)

However, he added the case has affected his whole family, including his children. He saidthey'll never fully go back to normal, especially with the attention the case has garnered that might follow them for the long term online.

He said he hopes Alberta's Bill 27 is one day implemented federally.

His wife, Jessica Maurice, said the family will continue to be advocates for landowners who defend their properties.

"We saw this from the beginning as an opportunity to make change because we knew it was a hot-button issue and a big topic for a lot of rural Albertans (and) Canadians," she said.

The shooting on the Maurices'property occurredweeks after a Saskatchewan farmer, Gerald Stanley,was foundnot guiltyof second-degree murder for killing a young Indigenous man, Colten Boushie, who had driven onto his property with a group of friends.

Maurice's case, like the Saskatchewan one before it, became a flash point in the ongoing debate around rural landowners' rights to defend their property and with what level of force, amid a rising tide of rural crime in the prairie provinces.

The Saskatchewan case also heightened tensions between Indigenous and non-Indigenous populations in many parts of the country.

  • Watch Maurice and his wife respond to the news of the dropped case

Rural landowners to keep advocating for property rights despite end of legal woes

5 years ago
Duration 0:59
Edouard Maurice who along with his wife, Jessica, became a lightning rod for the debate over property rights learned Thursday he's no longer being sued by a trespasser he shot, so has also dropped his countersuit.

With files from Colleen Underwood