Amelia Phillips Robbins

Associate
P: 416-597-4886
F: 416-594-5091
Email    PDF    VCard
  • Called to the Bar of Ontario, 2010
  • J.D., University of Western Ontario, 2009
  • B.A. (Honours), (Trinity College), University of Toronto, 2004
Amelia Phillips Robbins  Photo ©2024 Blaney McMurtry LLP
 Overview

Amelia is a staunch advocate who represents clients in wide-ranging corporate-commercial litigation matters. She has appeared before the Superior Court of Justice and the Ontario Court of Appeal.

Amelia brings valuable business acumen to her private practice. After her call to the bar in 2010, she became an entrepreneur and over the course of six years, she designed, developed, built and sold a bespoke service offering for busy professionals, primarily serving Toronto, New York and Los Angeles markets.

In law school, Amelia earned some of Western Law’s most competitive placements, including the opportunity to complete her degree at the University of Hong Kong, Faculty of Law, and a prestigious position as a clerk at an international court where she assisted with the legal groundwork for CARICOM and its Single Market and Economy.

 Education
  • J.D., University of Western Ontario, 2009
  • B.A. (Honours), (Trinity College), University of Toronto, 2004
 Practice Areas  Called to the Bar
  • Called to the Bar of Ontario, 2010
 Assistant  Experience
    • Reported decisions include Bodkin v. Doe, 2021 ONSC 1852 (granted 100% of costs on the matter) and MacRae v. Maple Gold Mines Ltd., 2019 ONSC 7598 (defended against  summary judgment involving the interpretation of corporate stock option agreements)
    • Successful application for an injunction against a search engine provider for the removal of search results that were the subject of pending defamation litigation
    • Counsel before Ontario’s Court of Appeal

Recognition

 Memberships

Memberships

  • Law Society of Ontario
  • Canadian Bar Association
  • Ontario Bar Association
  • The Advocates’ Society
DISCLAIMER

Thank you for your interest in contacting us by email.

Please be aware that contacting us via e-mail does not mean that the firm is acting for the sender of the e-mail. People do not become clients unless and until the firm agrees to act and that representation will be confirmed in a retainer agreement or retainer letter, in accordance with our usual policies. Unless you are an existing client, no information provided in an e-mail will be considered confidential. We ask that you do not send us specific questions on any matter until you receive confirmation that we are able to represent you.