Every area of law where Azimi Law can represent you.
Comprehensive navigation of statutory accident benefits (SABS) and tort negligence actions against liable third-party motorists.
Advocating against biased road assumptions to deliver maximum recovery for riders impacted by high-impact street collisions.
Navigating multi-layered corporate insurance structures unique to national freight carriers — preserving logbook and electronic logging data.
Representing pedestrians struck at intersection crossings — Ontario law places a reverse onus of negligence on the driver.
Recovering compensation for cyclists injured through driver negligence — dooring, intersection failures, and failure to share the road.
Navigating the layered insurance regimes of rideshare platforms — driver policy, Uber/Lyft commercial coverage, and SABS claims.
Holding public transit operators to their heightened duty of care — injuries from sudden stops, collisions, and platform incidents.
Recovering compensation for trauma on public or residential properties. Strict 10-day written notice required for municipal property claims.
Advocating for victims under strict provincial liability laws — no one-bite rule in Ontario. Covering physical scarring and psychological trauma.
Holding manufacturers and retail distributors legally responsible for structural flaws or dangerous product faults causing physical injuries.
Pursuing complex legal claims against healthcare practitioners for operational deviations falling below minimum standards of care.
Identifying third-party tort liability beyond the WSIB bar — holding contractors, owners, and equipment manufacturers accountable.
Pool owners owe a duty of care to all visitors under Ontario's Occupiers' Liability Act — we hold negligent operators accountable.
Pursuing negligence claims against restaurants and food manufacturers for E. coli, Salmonella, and Listeria outbreaks causing serious harm.
Retaining pain medicine specialists to build an evidentiary record that makes chronic pain, CRPS, and fibromyalgia claims withstand insurer scrutiny.
Securing long-term medical and rehabilitation coverage for traumatic head injuries — retaining neuropsychologists and pursuing CAT designation.
Litigating for vehicle modifications, continuous attendant care, and adaptive equipment access following devastating spinal cord injuries.
Representing clients navigating extreme physical recovery from industrial explosions, chemical exposure, or thermal fires.
Compassionate representation for surviving family members to claim dependant losses, funeral expenses, and support under the Family Law Act.
Pursuing catastrophic impairment designation unlocking $1M+ in SABS benefits for traumatic amputations and prosthetics.
CAT designation unlocks up to $1M in medical/rehab and $1M in attendant care — far above non-CAT caps of $65,000 each.
Challenging LTD denials — navigating the own-occupation to any-occupation transition at the critical 24-month mark.
Maximising no-fault accident benefit entitlements — income replacement, medical rehabilitation, attendant care, and LAT proceedings.
Ontario's SABS system changes fundamentally on July 1, 2026 — affecting income replacement, rehabilitation, and CAT claim structures.
Holding insurers to their contractual obligations — pursuing bad faith claims across auto, property, life, and disability policies.
Protecting the bridge to LTD — challenging wrongful STD denials that can put the entire disability benefit stream at risk.
Representing plaintiffs and defendants across Ontario Superior Court, Divisional Court, and Small Claims.
Enforcing agreement terms or defending commercial entities against non-performance, asset damage, or financial liability.
Protecting professional reputations from false statements — including Anti-SLAPP motions under the Protection of Public Participation Act.
LTB hearing representation for landlords and tenants — evictions, maintenance, illegal lockouts, bad-faith renovictions.
Litigating or defending monetary claims and property damage actions capped at $35,000 in Ontario Small Claims Court.
Pursuing fair severance and common law reasonable notice — often far exceeding ESA statutory minimums.
Pursuing rescission, restitution, and damages under the Consumer Protection Act, 2002 for unfair practices and deceptive contracts.
Pursuing unpaid debts through Ontario courts — from demand letters through judgment enforcement via garnishment and writs.
Representing defendants in civil actions — uninsured drivers, coverage disputes, and insurer subrogation claims.
Full-service immigration litigation — Federal Court judicial review, RAD/IAD appeals, stays of removal, mandamus, PRRA, H&C, and detention reviews.
Full representation before the Refugee Protection Division — BOC preparation, country conditions evidence, and in-hearing advocacy.
Appealing negative RPD decisions before the RAD with written submissions, new evidence, and compelling legal analysis.
Full representation for removal order appeals, sponsorship refusals, and residency obligation matters.
Vigorous defence at tribunal hearings alleging criminal, security, or misrepresentation inadmissibility.
Emergency advocacy securing release of detained foreign nationals and PRs at the 48-hour, 7-day, and 30-day reviews.
Defending protected persons against Minister applications to revoke refugee status — both refugee protection and PR are at stake.
Challenging unreasonable immigration decisions under the Vavilov reasonableness standard — RPD, RAD, IAD, visa refusals, all IRCC decisions.
Compelling IRCC to make a final decision on unreasonably delayed PR, citizenship, permit, and visa applications.
Emergency Federal Court motions to halt imminent deportation — filed within hours of retention.
Defending against allegations seeking to strip valid Canadian citizenship — one of the most powerful statuses in Canadian law.
Judicial review of study permit, work permit, visitor visa, and PR refusals — 15 days inside Canada, 60 days outside.
Demonstrating country-of-origin risk to halt removal — timely filing triggers an automatic stay of removal.
Permanent residence on H&C grounds — establishment, best interests of children, and hardship of leaving Canada.
Challenging spousal, parental, and family class sponsorship refusals before the IAD with fresh evidence.
Challenging findings that a permanent resident failed the 730-day residency requirement.
Fighting deportation orders at the IAD — humanitarian grounds available even where inadmissibility is established.
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416-900-4128Mon–Fri 9 AM–5 PM · For urgent immigration matters, call directly.