Alamleh v. King: AI Hallucination — Canada Court Decision 2026

⚡ CASE DIGEST

Alamleh v. King — Canadian Superior Court, February 11, 2026

In Alamleh v. King, a Canada court examined the use of Generative AI tool in legal filings and addressed the professional consequences of submitting AI-generated content without verification. The decision reinforces the global judicial trend of treating AI misuse in litigation as a breach of the …

Category: Hallucinations & Sanctions  |  Jurisdiction: Canada  |  Read time: 4 min

① Case at a Glance

Case NameAlamleh v. King
Citation2026 QCCS 416
CourtCanadian Superior Court
DateFebruary 11, 2026
CategoryHallucinations & Sanctions
JurisdictionCanada
AI ToolGenerative AI tool

② Background

Alamleh v. King came before a Canada court in February 11, 2026. The case involves the use of Generative AI tool in legal proceedings — part of a rapidly growing body of litigation in which courts across common law jurisdictions are grappling with how to respond when AI-generated content finds its way into court filings, submissions, or expert reports without adequate verification by counsel.

③ The AI Issue

PRELIMINARY COMMENT: USE OF ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE [5] Prior to analyzing the merits of the Applicant’s application, I feel compelled to briefly comment on his use of artificial intelligence (“AI”) in this matter. They may, for instance, be prone to “hallucination”, provide inaccurate legal information or, when they are relied upon to draft “winning” arguments, even invent facts to satisfy a user’s request.

④ What the Court Addressed

  • The court examined whether AI-generated content in the legal submissions met the standards required by applicable rules of professional conduct and court procedure.
  • The use of Generative AI tool without independent verification of its output was identified as a core concern — consistent with the approach taken by courts in Mata v. Avianca, Park v. Kim, and other landmark AI hallucination decisions.
  • The decision reinforces that counsel bear personal responsibility for verifying every citation, argument, and assertion submitted to a court, regardless of whether AI assisted in their generation.
  • Courts in Canada continue to develop their approach to AI-generated legal content, with sanctions, referrals, and costs orders all available as remedies for misuse.

⑤ The India Angle

Indian advocates must recognise that Canada courts are actively sanctioning lawyers for AI misuse — and Indian courts will follow the same path. The Bar Council of India Rules under the Advocates Act, 1961 impose duties of competence and candour that directly parallel the professional obligations at stake in Alamleh v. King. Rule 14 requires every advocate to uphold the dignity of the judicial office; Rule 22 prohibits knowingly making false statements to the court. Where Generative AI tool or any other AI tool generates citations, arguments, or case summaries that are not independently verified, submitting them to any court — trial, High Court, or Supreme Court — risks disciplinary action under Section 35 of the Advocates Act, 1961 and potential contempt proceedings under the Contempt of Courts Act, 1971. Indian courts have inherent power under Section 151 CPC to award costs personally against an advocate whose conduct wastes the court’s time.

⑥ Quick Takeaways

  • Courts in Canada are actively scrutinising AI-generated content in legal filings — Alamleh v. King adds to that record.
  • Verify every AI-generated citation before filing: the duty of candour to the tribunal applies regardless of how the content was generated.
  • Indian advocates should treat Canada AI hallucination decisions as a preview of how Indian courts will respond as AI misuse reaches Indian courts.

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