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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2025-10-03 R. v. Bustamante-Garzon, 2025 ONCJ 515 (CanLII)
Key Words: Criminal infractions — Sentencing — Home invasion robbery — Aggravating and mitigating factors — Accused participated in violent home invasion targeting a prominent artist — Victim assaulted, confined, and threatened with weapons — Stolen property valued at $6 million, with $3.6 million unrecovered — Accused’s youth, lack of criminal record, and early guilty plea considered — Sentence of five years imposed — Governing principles of deterrence and denunciation under ss. 718 and 718.2 of the Criminal Code<br />Criminal procedure — Pre-trial custody — Harsh conditions — Accused detained for 120 days in overcrowded and understaffed facility — Lockdowns and triple-bunking documented — Credit of eight months granted for pre-trial custody — State’s failure to meet minimum standards for incarceration considered in sentencing — Principles of fairness and proportionality in sentencing<br />Evidence — Role of the accused — Agreed Statement of Facts — Accused’s involvement in forced entry, initial assault, and preventing victim’s escape — Not the ringleader or wielder of weapons — Submissions by counsel based on victim’s statement and disclosure — Court accepted accused’s lesser role but emphasized his active participation in the robbery and confinement — Application of principles from R. v. Drepaul and other case law -
2025-10-02 R. v. Sajeevan, 2025 ONCJ 510 (CanLII)
Key Words: Criminal infractions — Voyeurism — Sentencing — Offender pleaded guilty to four counts of voyeurism under s. 162(1) of the Criminal Code — Offences involved surreptitious observation and video recording of female housemates in a private bathroom over six months — What is the appropriate sentence for the offender? — Principles of denunciation, deterrence, and proportionality emphasized — Custodial jail sentence imposed — Criminal Code, ss. 718, 718.1, 718.2<br />Criminal infractions — Conditional sentence orders — Sentencing principles — Whether a conditional sentence order (CSO) is appropriate for voyeurism offences — Court rejected joint submission for a CSO, finding it inconsistent with proportionality and public confidence in the administration of justice — Custodial sentence deemed necessary to address gravity of offences and offender's moral culpability — Criminal Code, s. 742.1<br />Citizenship and immigration — Collateral consequences — Sentencing considerations — Offender was a 20-year-old Indian citizen on a student visa — Court considered potential immigration consequences as a collateral factor but emphasized proportionality and seriousness of offences — Collateral consequences not sufficient to reduce custodial sentence — Criminal Code, s. 718.2<br />Criminal procedure — Ancillary orders — DNA and SOIRA orders — Whether ancillary orders should be issued for voyeurism offences — Court declined to issue DNA order due to lack of jurisdiction under s. 487.051 for summary conviction offences — SOIRA order not issued as intent to commit a primary offence was not established — Criminal Code, ss. 487.051, 490.011 -
2025-10-02 R. v. Thomas-Henry, 2025 ONCJ 511 (CanLII)
Key Words: Criminal infractions — Firearm offences — Discharging a firearm — Pointing a firearm — Careless use of a firearm — Discharging a firearm with intent to endanger life — Whether the accused was the shooter — Whether the firearm met the definition under s. 2 of the Criminal Code — Crown's burden to prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt — R. v. Villaroman framework for circumstantial evidence<br />Criminal procedure — Credibility and reliability of witnesses — Inconsistencies in testimony — Alcohol consumption and its impact on reliability — Whether inconsistencies were minor or material — Application of the reasonable doubt standard — Witnesses found credible despite minor inconsistencies — Testimony corroborated by physical evidence — R. v. Villaroman, 2016 SCC 33<br />Evidence — Firearm definition — Proof of firearm under s. 2 of the Criminal Code — Damage to van as evidence of firearm use — Lack of recovered firearm — Ammunition found in residence — Mid-range to long-range shot causing significant damage — Crown's failure to prove muzzle velocity under s. 84(3)(d) of the Criminal Code — R. v. Charbonneau, R. v. Dillon<br />Indigenous peoples — Incident occurring on Six Nations Reserve — Police investigation and arrest of accused on reserve — Context of Indigenous community and law enforcement interaction — No specific Indigenous legal principles applied in decision — (N/A)<br />Statutory interpretation — Dangerous operation of a motor vehicle — Driving while prohibited — Interpretation of "dangerous operation" under the Criminal Code — High-speed police chase — Failure to stop at stop signs — Vehicle crash due to excessive speed — Marked departure from reasonable driving standard — Criminal Code, s. 320.13<br />Transportation — Dangerous driving — Police pursuit — High-speed chase exceeding 150 km/h — Failure to stop at intersections — Vehicle rollover — Accused found as sole occupant of vehicle — Driving while prohibited — Evidence supporting dangerous operation conviction -
2025-10-01 R. v. Freedland, 2025 ONCJ 507 (CanLII)
Key Words: Criminal procedure — Firearm forfeiture — Public safety — Section 117.05 of the Criminal Code — Whether respondent's conduct and attitude toward firearm ownership meet the standard of responsibility and discipline required — Test for determining "legitimate concerns" about firearm possession — Balance of probabilities standard — Forfeiture of firearms and prohibition orders granted — Public safety as the primary objective of section 117.05 — Criminal Code, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-46, s. 117.05<br />Evidence — Admissibility — Hearsay evidence — Section 117.05 hearings — Whether evidence from prior criminal trial, including hearsay, can be admitted and relied upon — Lower evidentiary threshold compared to criminal trials — Requirement for evidence to be credible and trustworthy — Use of prior trial evidence to assess public safety concerns, not to infer criminal guilt — Criminal Code, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-46, s. 117.05 -
2025-10-01 R. v. R.B., 2025 ONCJ 508 (CanLII)
Key Words: Constitution — Charter of Rights — Right to be tried within a reasonable time — Section 11(b) of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms — Applicant alleged delay of 951 days exceeded the 18-month ceiling for provincial court matters — Was the delay presumptively unreasonable? — Framework from R. v. Jordan applied — Net delay found to be below the presumptive ceiling — Application dismissed<br />Rights and freedoms — Charter of Rights — Section 11(b) — Delay in criminal proceedings — Applicant alleged violation of right to trial within a reasonable time — Defence delay of 448 days attributed to counsel’s inaction — Did the Applicant’s inaction contribute to the delay? — Defence counsel’s responsibility to actively advance section 11(b) rights emphasized<br />Professional responsibility — Defence counsel — Timeliness of section 11(b) applications — Counsel failed to raise delay issue until shortly before trial — Inadvertence admitted by counsel — Did counsel’s failure to act promptly justify attributing delay to the defence? — Defence counsel’s duty to act proactively under R. v. Cody and R. v. J.F. applied<br />Criminal procedure — Pre-trial applications — Compliance with procedural rules — Section 11(b) application filed in violation of Criminal Rules of the Ontario Court of Justice and Chief Justice’s practice direction — Application served 12 days before hearing, contrary to 30-day requirement — Hearing set 20 days before trial, contrary to 60-day rule — Did procedural non-compliance justify summary dismissal? — Application allowed to proceed despite violations