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

  • 2026-02-02 Felix Perez v. Samuel, 2026 ONCJ 53 (CanLII)
    Key Words: Procedure — Costs — Bad faith under Family Law Rules — Whether father acted in bad faith under subrule 24(10) — Conscious concealment of income and catch‑me‑if‑you‑can disclosure — Misstatements about employment and non‑compliance with trial directions — Full recovery basis and immediate payment mandated — Costs ordered on full recovery basis, payable immediately<br />Procedure — Costs — Quantum and proportionality — Reasonableness under subrule 24(14) in a half‑day hearing — Time spent, behaviour, rates and offers considered — Self‑represented attendances at First Appearance Court and case conferences addressed — Ability to pay weighed against unreasonable conduct — Costs fixed at $12,500 inclusive of fees, disbursements and HST<br />Family — Support enforcement — Director, Family Responsibility Office — Can costs be enforced as a support order under s. 1(1)(g) of the Family Responsibility and Support Arrears Enforcement Act, 1996? — All legal work attributable to child support issue — Characterisation of costs as support order confirmed — Enforceable by Director ordered
  • 2026-02-02 R. v. Rathore, 2026 ONCJ 51 (CanLII)
    Key Words: Criminal and statutory offences — Sentencing — Large-scale commercial fraud — What is the appropriate sentence for large-scale commercial fraud under s. 380? — Denunciation and general deterrence emphasized, R. v. Drabinsky cited — Range discussed with Plange and Davatgar-Jafarpour — Aggravating and mitigating factors assessed — Not a Ponzi scheme, but direct link to losses found — Penitentiary sentence of 5 years imposed<br />Criminal and statutory offences — Sentencing — Quantification of loss — How should the gross amount and outstanding loss be quantified for sentencing? — Investors misled as to value, risk of loss became actual — Gross amount at least $33.1 million, reductions for interest and civil recovery — Outstanding loss slightly more than $24.4 million established beyond reasonable doubt — Loss set at slightly more than $24.4 million<br />Criminal and statutory offences — Sentencing — Conditional sentence eligibility — Is a conditional sentence available in light of s. 380(1.1) of the Criminal Code? — Amount of loss far surpasses $1 million threshold — Minimum punishment of 2 years incarceration engaged — Conditional sentences of two years less a day not available — Conditional sentence unavailable<br />Criminal and statutory offences — Sentencing — Ancillary orders — What ancillary orders should be imposed, including fine in lieu, prohibition, DNA and restitution? — DNA order made — Fine in lieu of forfeiture of $12,200,000 each, 5-year default incarceration, 10 years to pay — Prohibition order under s. 380.2 for 10 years — Restitution to be determined and credited — Orders made
  • 2026-01-28 R. c. Makowe, 2026 ONCJ 40 (CanLII)
    Key Words: accusé — échantillons d haleine — alcool — affaiblie par l effet — doute raisonnable
  • 2026-01-28 Ontario Motor Vehicle Industry Council v. Jover, 2026 ONCJ 45 (CanLII)
    Key Words: Criminal and statutory offences — Provincial offences — Unregistered motor vehicle dealer — Whether the accused acted as a motor vehicle dealer when not registered — Advertising, undercover buyers, multiple sales over months — Offence under Motor Vehicle Dealers Act, s. 32 — Date, identity, jurisdiction and non‑registration proven — Pattern of trading established — Convictions entered on five counts, one acquittal<br />Statutory interpretation — Motor Vehicle Dealers Act — s. 5 exemption — Does the s. 5 exemption apply where vehicles were not used primarily for personal use? — Actual use rather than intention applied — Speed of listings and profit motive considered — Use incidental to trading for profit — Exemption inapplicable — Convictions entered<br />Statutory interpretation — Consumer Protection Act — ss. 14(1), 17(1), 116(1)(b)(ii) — Did the accused make false, misleading or deceptive representations? — Application to persons and not only suppliers — Inducement not required — Misstatements about ownership duration before and after sale — Elements of unfair practice proven — Conviction entered<br />Evidence — Credibility — Pattern of trading — Are the explanations for acquisitions and sales credible? — Undercover OMVIC and civilian testimony accepted — Accused’s statements inconsistent with records — Common sense assessment of rapid listings and profit — Pattern of trading for profit found — Convictions entered on five counts, one acquittal
  • 2026-01-27 R. v. Holder, 2026 ONCJ 42 (CanLII)
    Key Words: Criminal and statutory offences — Self-defence — Criminal Code, s. 34 — Whether the Crown disproved self-defence beyond a reasonable doubt — Air of reality established under Cinous — Khill framework for catalyst, motive and response applied — Elements not made out on the evidence — Self-defence negatived — Guilty of assault causing bodily harm<br />Criminal and statutory offences — Self-defence — Elements — Did the accused reasonably believe force was being used or threatened and act to protect? — Modified objective standard in Khill — Remote verbal threat I will kill you suka — No imminence and no weapon observed — Motive to protect not disproven — Belief of threat unreasonable — Guilty of assault causing bodily harm<br />Criminal and statutory offences — Self-defence — Reasonableness of response — s. 34(1)(c) — Was the act reasonable in the circumstances? — s. 34(2) factors assessed — Role in the incident and reckless escalation of risk — Disproportionate force while maintaining superior position — Community norms in Khill considered — Response unreasonable — Guilty of assault causing bodily harm<br />Evidence — Credibility and reliability — CCTV recording — Credibility framework applied including inconsistencies and corroboration — Independent balcony witness accepted — Video without sound and partial obstruction weighed — Photographs consistent with striking on the ground — Key testimony rejected where inconsistent with video — Findings of fact adverse to self-defence — Conviction entered
Ontario Court of Justice