Lawyers
Martin U. Wissmath
Associate
Law Clerk
Martin Wissmath is an associate at Carters Professional Corporation. His practice area includes a focus on corporate law, employment law, privacy law and data protection law, as well as the developing fields of social enterprise and social finance. Martin provides clients with legal advice and services for their comprehensive business needs, involving for-profit and not-for-profit organizations, online and off-line risk and compliance issues.
Before joining the firm as an associate, Martin spent his articling year writing for Carters' Charity & NFP Law Update. Originally from beautiful British Columbia, Martin now calls Ontario home. He graduated from Osgoode Hall Law School in 2020 and was called to the Ontario Bar in 2021. In the years prior to entering law school, he enjoyed working as a journalist on staff with local newspapers in Alberta and B.C.
Before joining the firm as an associate, Martin spent his articling year writing for Carters' Charity & NFP Law Update. Originally from beautiful British Columbia, Martin now calls Ontario home. He graduated from Osgoode Hall Law School in 2020 and was called to the Ontario Bar in 2021. In the years prior to entering law school, he enjoyed working as a journalist on staff with local newspapers in Alberta and B.C.
- B.A University of British Columbia (2016)
- J.D. Osgoode Hall Law School at York University (2020)
- Ontario Bar (2021)
Publications
Ontario Court Enforces Negotiated Settlement Despite Unsigned Minutes of Settlement
“Subject to documentation” language will not, on its own, stop a binding settlement from forming once there is acceptance---
Read MoreProvincial Regulator Weighs in on AI Transcription Tools After Hospital Privacy Breach
In a letter dated October 27, 2025, the Information and Privacy Commissioner of Ontario (the “IPC”) addressed a self-reported breach---
Read MoreJurisdictional Ruling Opens Door for Canadian Copyright Claims Against AI Companies
In Toronto Star Newspapers Limited v. OpenAI Inc., decided on November 7, 2025, the Ontario Superior Court of Justice---
Read MoreAlberta Tribunal Upholds Dismissal of Vaccine-Mandate Religious-Belief Complaint
A recent Alberta ruling offers a useful example for employers across Canada on how tribunals approach religious-belief accommodation requests and---
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