Decisions

A collection of judgments of the Ontario Court of Justice, primarily released after April 1, 2004, is posted on CanLII. The CanLII website is not an exhaustive source of judgments of the Ontario Court of Justice. The official version of the reasons for judgment is the signed original or handwritten endorsement in the court file. In the event that there is a question about the content of a judgment, the original in the court file takes precedence.

Judgments are available in the language provided.

Copies of judgments of the Ontario Court of Justice can be obtained by contacting the respective court office where the matter was heard. A photocopy charge is payable. Judgments are also available on a number of subscription based services such as LexisNexis® QuicklawTM and WestlawNext® Canada.

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Ontario Court of Justice Recent Decisions

  • 2025-07-28 R. v. Akbari, 2025 ONCJ 398 (CanLII)
    Key Words: Criminal infractions — Hate-motivated threats — Sentencing — Accused convicted of uttering threats to bomb synagogues and kill Jewish people — Hate-motivated bias as a statutorily aggravating factor under section 718.2(a)(i) of the Criminal Code — Does the gravity of the offence and the harm caused to the Jewish community justify a custodial sentence? — Denunciation and deterrence prioritized in sentencing for hate-motivated offences<br />Criminal procedure — Kienapple principle — Multiple convictions for the same criminal act — Accused convicted of two counts of uttering threats arising from the same conversation — Should a conditional stay be entered on one count? — Distinct offences with separate targets justify two findings of guilt<br />Rights and freedoms — Hate crimes — Impact on targeted communities — Hate-motivated threats against Jewish people and institutions — Community Impact Statements highlighting fear, trauma, and harm to social cohesion — Do hate-motivated threats undermine the safety and pluralism of Canadian society? — Sentencing principles emphasize denunciation and deterrence to protect vulnerable communities
  • 2025-07-25 R. v. Glasman, 2025 ONCJ 397 (CanLII)
    Key Words: Criminal procedure — Arrest — Approved screening device — Officer failed to identify the specific model of the approved screening device used during the roadside test — Does the absence of a specific model number undermine the reliability of the test result and the grounds for arrest? — Officer's testimony and precedent from R. v. Gundy upheld the reliability of the device — No Charter breach established under sections 8 and 9<br />Evidence — Approved screening device — Reliability of evidence — Officer testified that the device was an approved screening device used across the province — Defence argued lack of specific model number undermined reliability — Court found no credible evidence to challenge the officer's assertion — Precedent from R. v. Gundy applied to uphold the reliability of the evidence<br />Rights and freedoms — Arrest — Grounds for arrest — Accused arrested for impaired driving rather than excess blood alcohol — Defence argued the arrest was unlawful under the Charter — Court found the officer had reasonable grounds for arrest based on the approved screening device result and the accused's condition — Arrest deemed lawful under sections 8 and 9 of the Charter<br />Rights and freedoms — Right to counsel — Section 10(b) of the Charter — Officer's comments about the inevitability of providing breath samples regardless of legal consultation — Defence argued comments interfered with the accused's right to counsel — Court found no breach as the accused was promptly provided access to duty counsel and spoke with counsel for ten minutes — No impact on the quality of access to counsel<br />Constitution — Charter remedies — Section 24(2) of the Charter — Defence sought exclusion of evidence based on alleged Charter breaches — Court found no breaches of sections 8, 9, or 10(b) — Evidence admitted, and the charge of operation over 80 mg of alcohol proven beyond a reasonable doubt
  • 2025-07-24 R. v. R.N., 2025 ONCJ 394 (CanLII)
    Key Words: Criminal procedure — Reasonable doubt — Presumption of innocence — Accused charged with gross indecency and sexual assault under the Young Offenders Act — Whether conflicting testimony of the accused and complainant left the court in a state of reasonable doubt — Framework from R. v. W.(D.) applied — Crown's burden of proof not met — Accused acquitted<br />Evidence — Credibility and reliability — Complainant testified to historical sexual abuse occurring over 40 years ago — Inconsistencies in dates and events attributed to trauma — Whether complainant's testimony was credible and reliable enough to establish guilt beyond a reasonable doubt — Court found complainant credible but identified reliability concerns<br />Evidence — Alibi — Accused presented evidence of foster care placement during part of the alleged offence period — Whether foster care placement diminished the opportunity to commit the offences — Alibi not determinative but raised reasonable doubt — Catholic Children's Aid Society records considered<br />Evidence — Inconsistencies — Complainant's difficulty recalling dates and events — Whether inconsistencies in testimony affected reliability of evidence — Court found inconsistencies did not undermine core allegations but contributed to reasonable doubt<br />Evidence — Emotional testimony — Accused emotionally denied allegations and described personal challenges, including hyperhidrosis and transient living conditions — Whether emotional testimony impacted credibility assessment — Court found accused's testimony plausible and consistent with evidence, contributing to reasonable doubt
  • 2025-07-22 R. v. Hunte-Green, 2025 ONCJ 391 (CanLII)
    Key Words: Criminal infractions — Indecent act — Public masturbation — Accused masturbated under clothing in a public elevator — Whether masturbating under one’s clothes in a public elevator constitutes an indecent act — Test for indecency under R. v. Labaye, 2005 SCC 80 — Harm to autonomy and liberty of others — Conduct incompatible with the proper functioning of society — Accused found guilty of committing an indecent act<br />Criminal procedure — Proof beyond a reasonable doubt — Accused charged with masturbating in a public elevator — Crown required to prove all essential elements of the offence beyond a reasonable doubt — Evidence of complainant deemed honest and reliable — Video evidence corroborated complainant’s observations — Trial judge satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that the accused masturbated under his clothing<br />Statutory interpretation — Indecent act — Interpretation of “indecent act” under the Criminal Code — Whether exposure of genitals is required to establish an indecent act — Application of R. v. Labaye, 2005 SCC 80 — Conduct causing harm to autonomy and liberty of others — Sexualized nature of conduct in confined space — Accused’s actions met the threshold for indecency<br />Evidence — Witness credibility — Complainant’s testimony — Complainant observed accused masturbating under clothing in a public elevator — Testimony supported by video evidence showing proximity and opportunity for observation — Trial judge found complainant credible and reliable — Evidence sufficient to establish guilt beyond a reasonable doubt
  • 2025-07-22 R. v. A.C., 2025 ONCJ 393 (CanLII)
    Key Words: Criminal infractions — Sentencing — Sexual interference — Offender pleaded guilty to two counts of sexual interference under section 151 of the Criminal Code — Offences committed against a minor over several years — What is the appropriate sentence considering the gravity of the offences and the principles of sentencing? — Sentence of six years imposed — Emphasis on denunciation, deterrence, and proportionality — Criminal Code, ss. 718, 718.01, 718.2<br />Criminal procedure — Ancillary orders — DNA order, section 161 order, section 109 order, and SOIRA order imposed — Offender convicted of sexual offences against a minor — Should ancillary orders be imposed to protect the public and ensure compliance with statutory requirements? — Ancillary orders granted, including a lifetime SOIRA order — Criminal Code, ss. 109, 161, 487.051<br />Evidence — Aggravating and mitigating factors — Offender's lack of remorse and failure to address pedophilia — Victim's vulnerability and significant impact of offences — How do aggravating and mitigating factors influence sentencing? — Aggravating factors, including abuse of trust and prolonged harm, outweighed limited mitigating factors — Criminal Code, s. 718.2<br />Statutory interpretation — Sentencing precedents — Relevance of R. v. Friesen and other case law — Supreme Court guidance on increasing sentences for child sexual offences — How should precedent cases and statutory principles guide sentencing? — Mid-to-upper single-digit penitentiary terms appropriate for sexual offences against children — Criminal Code, s. 718.2(b); R. v. Friesen, 2020 SCC 9
Ontario Court of Justice