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Team Manitoba and coaches left to right: Michael Badejo (Fillmore Riley), coach; Deborah Yeboah (TDS), coach; Quinn Thomas, 3L; Talia David, 3L; Kira Wardrop, 2L; Kennedee Hills, 3L; Chimwemwe Undi (TDS), coach. Photo credit: Blessing Uja, BLSAC.

Team Manitoba and coaches left to right: Michael Badejo (Fillmore Riley), coach; Deborah Yeboah (TDS), coach; Quinn Thomas, 3L; Talia David, 3L; Kira Wardrop, 2L; Kennedee Hills, 3L; Chimwemwe Undi (TDS), coach. Photo credit: Blessing Uja, BLSAC.

Moot Report 2025: Team Manitoba wins 18th Annual Julius Alexander Isaac Moot

First team fielded by UM in BLSA-organized competition brings home cup

May 8, 2025 — 

The first Moot competition of the 2025 season was the 18th Annual Julius Alexander Isaac Moot, which took place January 30 – February 1, 2025 in Ottawa, hosted by the Black Law Students’ Association of Canada. The Moot is named in honour of Julius Alexander Isaac, late Chief Justice of the Federal Court, and the first Black judge to sit on the Federal Court of Canada.

For the first time in recent memory, the University of Manitoba Faculty of Law fielded a full team at the Isaac Moot, of which the Appellant team of Quinn Thomas (3L) and Talia David (3L) emerged as champions and brought the Isaac Moot Cup home to Winnipeg. Team members Thomas and Apara Grace (2L) were also both nominees for the “Spirit of the Moot” award, which goes to an individual who best exemplifies the late Justice Isaac’s passion for diversity and social justice by advancing the most innovative and compelling critical race theory argument.

Coaches Michael Badejo [JD/22] (Fillmore Riley), Deborah Yeboah (TDS), and Chimwemwe Undi [BA/16; JD/20] (TDS), worked with Thomas and David, Kira Wardrop (2L), Grace, (Respondent team), and team researcher Kennedee Hills (3L).

Thomas described the Moot as focusing on “an area of the law in which issues of equity and diversity arise and requires law students to incorporate elements of critical race theory into their arguments.”

A young woman with black curly hair in a pony tail in a black lawyer's robe speaks at a podium with microphone while her teammate listens. Other women listen behind her from the benches of a courtroom.

Talia David presents her argument for the Appellant team while her teammate Quinn Thomas listens. Fellow Manitoba team members Kennedee Hills and Kira Wardrop listen in the row behind. Photo credit: Blessing Uja, BLSAC.

The unique aspect of this Moot, Thomas explained, is that “allows students to explore both theoretical and doctrinal arguments in a way that few Canadian moots do. The thrust of a doctrinal argument must be rooted in reference to traditional legal authorities, whereas the thrust of a theoretical argument is normative – it concerns what Canadian law should be, not what it is.”

This year’s Moot problem required students to look at issues underlying the current test for racial profiling using as the foundation of the problem, the majority and dissent rulings of the Saskatchewan Court of Appeal in R v Ali, 2023 SKCA 127.

The 18th Annual Isaac Moot made history with the largest number of participants since the Moot first started in 2008. The Moot is entirely organized by the Black Law Students’ Association of Canada, and this year, 26 teams from 15 Canadian law schools and a first-ever team from the United States of America took part.

Judges for the final round, before whom Thomas and David had the opportunity to present oral submissions, were The Honourable Justice Mahmud Jamal, Supreme Court of Canada; Chief Justice Michael H. Tulloch, Ontario Court of Appeal; and Associate Chief Justice Aston J. Hall, Ontario Court of Justice.

Moot Champions with Final Round Judges, left to right: Talia David, Justice Mahmud Jamal (SCC); Chief Justice Michael H. Tulloch (OCA); Associate Chief Justice Aston J. Hall (OCJ); Quinn Thomas. Photo credit: Blessing Uja, BLSAC.

Moot Champions with Final Round Judges, left to right: Talia David, Justice Mahmud Jamal (SCC); Chief Justice Michael H. Tulloch (OCA); Associate Chief Justice Aston J. Hall (OCJ); Quinn Thomas. Photo credit: Blessing Uja, BLSAC.

For students wishing to compete in the Isaac Moot, no prerequisite courses are needed, and this year’s team described the experience as a ‘learn as you go’ endeavour. In a LinkedIn post, David thanked the team’s three coaches, saying, “Our growth over the past few months is largely due to their encouragement, feedback, and unwavering support. I am also very grateful for the guest judges who took the time out of their extremely busy schedules to attend our practices, our judges in the preliminary rounds of the Moot, and the rest of the Manitoba team. I also want to thank Professor Amar Khoday for taking the time to sit down with our team and have an open discussion about Critical Race Theory.”

Being paired with a team member who is a good partner was also an important factor to mooting success. David added in her post, “Lastly, I owe the biggest thank you to my co-counsel, Quinn Thomas. I am extremely fortunate to have been paired with someone who constantly pushed me, checked in on me, and with whom I was always completely in sync. I could not have asked for a better partner.”

Quinn Thomas and Talia David with the Isaac Moot Cup. Both women are smiling in black dresses holding a large silver cup-shaped trophy with gold filigree base and a sign that says Champions of the Julius Alexander Isaac Moot. They stand in front of a dark purple velvet curtain and a large silver and gold decorative stand topped with purple and white flowers.

Quinn Thomas and Talia David with the Isaac Moot Cup.

For more about this Moot, please read the Black Law Students’ Association of Canada Julius Alexander Isaac Moot Magazine.

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