S-6 , 45th Parliament, 1st session Monday, May 26, 2025, to present

A fourth Act to harmonize federal law with the civil law of Quebec and to amend certain Acts in order to ensure that each language version takes into account the common law and the civil law
Short title: Federal Law–Civil Law Harmonization Act, No. 4
Bill type
Senate Government Bill

Summary

Current status
At second reading in the Senate
Latest activity
Introduction and first reading on Tuesday, February 24, 2026 (Senate)

Progress

End of stage activity
Introduction and first reading, Tuesday, February 24, 2026
Chamber sittings
Sitting date Debates (Hansard)
Tuesday, February 24, 2026
Second reading
No activity
Third reading
Not reached

House of Commons

First reading
Not reached
Second reading
Not reached
Consideration in committee
Not reached
Report stage
Not reached
Third reading
Not reached

Details

Recorded votes

House of Commons

There are currently no recorded votes for this bill.

Senate

To view the complete list of standing votes that have taken place in the Senate, please refer to the Votes page of the Senate of Canada website.

Speaker's rulings and statements

There are currently no Speaker's rulings and statements.

Major speeches at second reading

There are currently no major speeches for this bill.

About

Legislative summary

A legislative summary is currently being prepared for this bill by the Parliamentary Information and Research Service of the Library of Parliament. Meanwhile, the following executive summary is available.

On 24 February 2026, Sen. Pierre Moreau introduced Bill S-6, A fourth Act to harmonize federal law with the civil law of Quebec and to amend certain Acts in order to ensure that each language version takes into account the common law and the civil law (Federal Law–Civil Law Harmonization Act, No. 4) in the Senate and it was given first reading.

Bill S-6 is the fourth in a series of enactments drafted in the course of the harmonization of federal statutes by the Department of Justice of Canada as a result of the coming into force of the Civil Code of Québec in 1994, which substantially changed the concepts, institutions and terminology of civil law. It amends 51 statutes, including the Acts governing financial institutions — the Bank Act, the Cooperative Credit Associations Act, the Insurance Companies Act and the Trust and Loan Companies Act — and other Acts including the Access to Information Act, the Financial Administration Act, the Interpretation Act and the Official Languages Act, in order to ensure that each language version takes into account the common law and the civil law.

More on this bill

From the Library of Parliament

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Further reading

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