Stephen Corrington is an Associate in the Commercial Litigation and Caribbean & Offshore Practice Groups at WeirFoulds LLP. He is called to the Bar in Ontario, Jamaica and Saint Lucia.
Stephen is a civil and commercial litigator with experience advising clients on multi‑jurisdictional disputes in Canada and across the Caribbean. His practice encompasses a broad range of matters, including corporate disputes, contentious trust and estate litigation, and defamation proceedings.
Stephen received his Bachelor of Laws from the University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus in Barbados and his Legal Education Certificate from the Norman Manley Law School in Jamaica.
Before joining WeirFoulds, Stephen served as a Judicial Law Clerk and then as the Executive Legal Assistant to the Chief Justice of the Eastern Caribbean Supreme Court. In these roles, he provided legal research support to the Chief Justice and Justices of Appeal and drafted legal opinions and judgments relating to matters before the Court of Appeal arising from several Eastern Caribbean states. During his tenure at the Court, Stephen also assisted with the revision of the Civil Procedure Rules 2000, a significant project that aimed to modernise civil practice across the Eastern Caribbean.
Stephen Corrington is an Associate in the Commercial Litigation and Caribbean & Offshore Practice Groups at WeirFoulds LLP. He is called to the Bar in Ontario, Jamaica and Saint Lucia.
Stephen is a civil and commercial litigator with experience advising clients on multi‑jurisdictional disputes in Canada and across the Caribbean. His practice encompasses a broad range of matters, including corporate disputes, contentious trust and estate litigation, and defamation proceedings.
Stephen received his Bachelor of Laws from the University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus in Barbados and his Legal Education Certificate from the Norman Manley Law School in Jamaica.
Before joining WeirFoulds, Stephen served as a Judicial Law Clerk and then as the Executive Legal Assistant to the Chief Justice of the Eastern Caribbean Supreme Court. In these roles, he provided legal research support to the Chief Justice and Justices of Appeal and drafted legal opinions and judgments relating to matters before the Court of Appeal arising from several Eastern Caribbean states. During his tenure at the Court, Stephen also assisted with the revision of the Civil Procedure Rules 2000, a significant project that aimed to modernise civil practice across the Eastern Caribbean.