Generally, a court will not hear a judicial review petition before a tribunal has rendered its final decision: ICBC v. Yuan, 2009 BCCA 279 at para. 24. The prematurity principle is aimed at letting the tribunal get on with its work, and preventing fragmented and piecemeal proceedings with all the attendant costs and delays associated with premature forays into court. The principle is also aimed at avoiding the waste associated with hearing an interlocutory judicial review when the applicant for judicial review may ultimately succeed at the end of the administrative process.
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