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
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2026-04-02 Ankrah v. Amponsah, 2026 ONCJ 197 (CanLII)
Key Words: Procedure — Costs — Entitlement — Parenting time claim struck — Presumptive entitlement to costs under subrule 24(14) — Whether the applicant is entitled to costs as the successful party — Respondent failed to complete APCO intake despite multiple extensions — Presumption not rebutted — Costs awarded<br />Procedure — Costs — Quantum and conduct — Reasonableness and proportionality under subrule 24(14) — Whether unreasonable conduct justifies elevated costs — Respondent’s non-compliance and abandonment caused needless expense — Hourly rate reasonable — Time limited to parenting time issue — Amount the unsuccessful party could reasonably expect to pay — Costs fixed at $3,955<br />Procedure — Costs — Payee — Legal Aid Services Act, 2020, s. 12(1) — Should costs be payable directly to Legal Aid Ontario — Receipt of legal aid not a factor in assessing costs — Court declines to involve itself in internal legal aid arrangements — Applicant may assign costs to Legal Aid Ontario — Costs payable to the applicant<br />Procedure — Costs — Enforcement and payment terms — Ability to pay considered without excusing unreasonable conduct — Whether a payment schedule should be ordered — Limited means addressed through modest monthly payments with acceleration clause — Payments to remain in good standing or full amount becomes due — Monthly payment schedule ordered -
2026-03-30 Milton (Town) v. Sidhu, 2026 ONCJ 178 (CanLII)
Key Words: Municipalities — By-laws — Remediation orders — Municipal Act, 2001, s. 431 — Is a remediation order necessary and what scope is proper? — Purpose to correct the contravention emphasised — Terms requiring permit application, removal of fill, restoration, access for officials, notice to purchasers — Defendants’ topographical survey proposal not appropriate — Correcting the contravention required — Remediation order granted<br />Criminal and statutory offences — Sentencing — Regulatory offences — What is a fit monetary penalty given remediation costs? — Paramount objective of general deterrence applied, Cotton Felts considered — Costs of compliance treated as component of total penalty, R. v. Brown — Potential environmental harm aggravating, absence of harm neutral, Torroco Industries — Fine reduced by 25 percent — Fines of $7500 each imposed<br />Statutory interpretation — Municipal by-law — Exemptions — Does the s. 3.4(3) “maintenance” exemption apply? — Size increased and dimensions altered beyond maintenance — Disjunctive with by-law purpose and s. 2.3 prohibition — Definition of “site alteration” engaged — King v. 2424155 Ontario Inc. cited on interpretation — Exemption not mitigating — Exemption inapplicable -
2026-03-27 R. v. Xiong, 2026 ONCJ 174 (CanLII)
Key Words: Rights and freedoms — Charter of Rights — Right to counsel, immediacy — Did police inform immediately upon arrest under s. 10(b)? — Eight-minute delay with no safety concerns — Purpose to mitigate legal jeopardy and psychological disadvantage — Authorities applied R. v. Debot, R. v. Suberu, R. v. Pino, R. v. Willier — Breach found<br />Rights and freedoms — Charter of Rights — Language and interpretation — Do special circumstances require a Mandarin interpreter for s. 10(b) information? — Objective indicators of limited English comprehension — Video shows non-understanding of cautions and breath demands — R. v. Vanstaceghem and R. v. Barros-DaSilva applied — Failure tantamount to not providing rights to counsel — Breach found<br />Evidence — Exclusion of evidence — Charter breaches — Should breath samples be excluded under s. 24(2)? — Grant framework applied, seriousness and impact weigh strongly — Reliability and societal interest considered with R. v. Tim and R. v. Harrison — Balancing favours dissociation from misconduct — Breath samples excluded -
2026-03-27 R. v. Jackson, 2026 ONCJ 175 (CanLII)
Key Words: Criminal and statutory offences — Sentencing — Firearms possession — Fundamental purpose and principle in s. 718 and s. 718.1 — Sentencing for firearms prioritising denunciation and general deterrence — Appropriate global notional sentence for multiple weapons related offences — Aggravating and mitigating circumstances assessed — Notional global sentence set at 12 years<br />Criminal and statutory offences — Sentencing ranges — Repeat s. 95 offender — Post‑2023 regime of a 14‑year maximum sentence — Whether range must be increased for s. 95 — New range for repeat s. 95 offender identified as 10 to 14 years — Parliament’s intention signalled in Bill C21 — Range increased<br />Criminal and statutory offences — Pre‑sentence custody — R. v. Summers credit and R. v. Duncan credit — What credit should be applied for harsh pre‑sentence custody conditions — 685 days at Toronto South Detention Centre found harsh, damp and unhygienic — One year Duncan credit plus 1,028 days Summers credit — 8.2 years to serve<br />Criminal and statutory offences — Consecutive and concurrent sentences — Totality — How to structure consecutive and concurrent terms without undue harshness — Combined sentence apportioned by count and concurrency — Court to hear Kienapple submissions — s. 109 order for life and DNA order — Sentence apportioned and ancillary orders made -
2026-03-26 Durham (Regional Municipality) v. Samaraweera, 2026 ONCJ 183 (CanLII)
Key Words: Criminal and statutory offences — Provincial offences — Speeding — Highway Traffic Act, s. 128 — Certified evidence trial — Whether speeding proved where prosecution filed only a Part I Certificate of Offence — Interaction of POA trial provisions and certified statements considered — Elements of speeding established beyond a reasonable doubt — Conviction entered<br />Evidence — Certified evidence — Provincial Offences Act, s. 48.1 — Is a Part I Certificate of Offence “certified evidence” proving facts absent evidence to the contrary? — Ordinary meaning of “certificate” and “certify” applied — Certificates contain certified statements admissible under s. 48.1(2)1 — Reliance on Regalado and Iagolnik — Certified statements accepted<br />Statutory interpretation — Conflict and coherence — POA s. 48.1 and HTA s. 205.21 — Does s. 48.1 apply to non-automated HTA offences? — Overlap not conflict, harmonious reading adopted — Revocation of O. Reg. 132/14 s. 1 supports availability for speeding — No exclusivity in HTA Part XIV.2 — Certified evidence available for HTA offences<br />Procedure — Fair trial safeguards — Cross-examination order — Does proceeding under s. 48.1 reverse the onus or impair full answer and defence, and does s. 49(4) provide a remedy? — Onus on prosecution preserved by s. 48.1(4) — Ability to seek officer attendance under s. 49(4) a valid safeguard — Fair trial preserved<br />Evidence — Sufficiency — Certified statements only — Whether the Certificate of Offence alone can establish speeding beyond a reasonable doubt under s. 48.1 — Section 46 and s. 48.1 read together — No obligation to call viva voce evidence — Absence of evidence to the contrary decisive — Certificate of Offence sufficient to prove offence