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

  • 2026-02-19 R. v. Ahmed, 2026 ONCJ 85 (CanLII)
    Key Words: Criminal and statutory offences — Criminal harassment — Elements — Whether the complainant’s place of residence was watched with continuous attention — Reasonableness of fear for safety assessed — Complainant harassed by surreptitious recordings, anxiety and time off work — Actus reus complete when recordings captured — Guilt proven beyond a reasonable doubt — Conviction entered<br />Criminal and statutory offences — Mens rea — Subjective awareness — Whether the accused would be subjectively aware that watching the complainant’s place of residence would cause her to be harassed — Discovery of the device of no moment — Surreptitious recording constituted prohibited conduct — Crown proved mens rea beyond a reasonable doubt — Conviction entered<br />Statutory interpretation — Criminal Code, s. 264(2)(c) — Meaning of “watching” — Whether continuous physical presence is required — Broad and purposive approach considering technological advancements — Surreptitious video device capturing visual imagery equals watching — Actus reus complete when recordings captured — Interpretation adopted rejecting contrary view — Conviction entered<br />Evidence — Circumstantial evidence — Inferences — Whether the only reasonable inference is that the accused would view the recordings he deliberately facilitated — R. v. Villaroman applied — Videos show intentional installation and adjustment — Credibility and reliability of complainant accepted — Proof beyond a reasonable doubt established — Conviction entered
  • 2026-02-19 Re Application for extension of a detention of seized items pursuant to s. 490 (2) of the Criminal Code, 2026 ONCJ 84 (CanLII)
    Key Words: Procedure — Seizure and detention — Criminal investigations — Criminal Code, s. 490(2)(a) — Whether to extend detention of seized property having regard to the nature of the investigation — Narrow inquiry focused on investigative needs, not police conduct — Authorities applied, Tennina, McNamara — Extensive multilingual records, devices, cryptocurrency seed phrases — Extension justified — Extension granted for nine months<br />Procedure — Seizure and detention — Duration of detention — Criminal Code, s. 490(3) — Whether a further nine‑month extension to the statutory maximum is warranted — Complex financial investigation involving cryptocurrency and translation of documents — Data extraction and tracing of funds required — Scope suggests nine months may be ambitious yet necessary — Extension granted for nine months<br />Procedure — Seizure and detention — Fairness of application — Criminal Code, s. 490(1)(a), s. 490(2)(a) — Do sealed warrants and absence of pre‑charge disclosure affect fairness of a s. 490(2) application — Disclosure right does not crystallize until proceedings instituted — Detailed application record provided ensured fairness — Sealing does not justify shortened detention — Extension granted for nine months<br />Procedure — Seizure and detention — Scope of inquiry — Criminal Code, s. 490(2)(a) — Are concerns about police conduct, pace, or manner of investigation relevant on a s. 490(2) application — Extraneous concerns immaterial, court does not encroach on investigative or prosecutorial discretion — Pace and quality beyond jurisdiction, per McNamara and Tennina — Extension granted for nine months
  • 2026-02-18 R. v. Luu, 2026 ONCJ 86 (CanLII)
    Key Words: Criminal and statutory offences — Sentencing — Fraud contrary to s. 380(1)(a) — Proportionality and objectives — What sentence is proportionate for breach of trust fraud, balancing denunciation, deterrence and rehabilitation — Rehabilitation attenuating denunciation and deterrence — Custodial sanction warranted yet tailored to present rehabilitation — Six-month conditional sentence imposed<br />Criminal and statutory offences — Conditional sentence — Availability under s. 742 — Is a conditional sentence available and appropriate for this offence — Not an excluded offence and no minimum sentence — Consistency with fundamental principles of sentencing satisfied — Community safety and restraint assessed — Conditional sentence imposed<br />Criminal and statutory offences — Multiple offences — Overlapping timelines — How post-plea conduct affects sentencing given reliance on R. v. Burke — Offending continued after guilty pleas with additional cheques cashed — Additional blameworthiness recognized while sentencing reflects current rehabilitation — Conditional sentence imposed<br />Criminal and statutory offences — Aggravating and mitigating factors — Breach of trust — Significant breach of trust, numerous transactions, little hope of restitution, prior similar frauds — Early guilty plea, accountability, family support, stable employment, addiction treatment and SMART facilitation — Factors balanced with emphasis on demonstrated rehabilitation — Conditional sentence imposed
  • 2026-02-17 Majlesi v. Damanpak-Rizi, 2026 ONCJ 81 (CanLII)
    Key Words: Family — Spousal support — Entitlement — Family Law Act, s. 30, subs. 33(8)-(9) — Whether the applicant is entitled on compensatory and non-compensatory grounds — Economic disadvantage and decline in standard of living established — Reasonable self-sufficiency efforts recognised — Bracklow v. Bracklow and Rioux v. Rioux applied — Entitlement recognised<br />Family — Imputation of income — Applicant — Whether income should be imputed to the applicant — Part-time work while attending college full-time — Reasonable career path toward self-sufficiency — Annual income of $12,000 used for analysis — No additional income imputed — No income imputed to applicant<br />Family — Imputation of income — Respondent — Whether income should be imputed to the respondent — Kohli v. Thom framework considered — Medical evidence accepted, no employability found — Gifts from parent imputed as income — $14,000 for 2025, $8,000 annually from April 2026 — Partial income imputed from gifts<br />Family — Spousal support — Quantum and duration — Ability to pay — Spousal Support Advisory Guidelines — Whether spousal support is payable now given inability to pay — Social assistance excluded from income under SSAG — Zero monthly range generated — No present ability to pay — Review permitted upon settlement or judgment from accident claim — Spousal support denied at present, review permitted
  • 2026-02-17 R. v. Owen, 2026 ONCJ 83 (CanLII)
    Key Words: Criminal and statutory offences — Sentencing — Possession of child sexual abuse and exploitation material — Criminal Code, s. 163.1(4) — What is a fit sentence under Pike and Friesen? — Denunciation and deterrence prioritised under s. 718.01 — Collection vast and depraved, including numerous videos — Absence of some aggravating features considered — Range situated below five years for first offender — Sentence of 28 months imposed<br />Criminal and statutory offences — Conditional sentence — Availability and fitness — Is a conditional sentence appropriate given M.M. and Pike? — Must first determine if sub‑two‑year sentence proportionate — Denunciation and deterrence would not be vindicated by community sentence — No exceptional circumstances rendering incarceration inappropriate — Conditional sentence unavailable<br />Criminal and statutory offences — Mitigation — Mental disorder and first offender — To what extent do mental health and lack of record reduce sentence? — No causal link between illness and offence established — Increased onerousness of custody acknowledged — Remorse and acceptance of responsibility credited — Principle of restraint applied to shortest effective term — Sentence reduced but custodial<br />Evidence — Exhibits — Viewing representative sample of CSAEM at sentencing — Should the judge view the images and what probative value? — P.M. and R.P.A. considered — Images uniquely convey gravity and harms beyond written description — Representative sample reviewed by court and sealed — Viewing appropriate and informative on gravity — Sentence confirmed
Ontario Court of Justice