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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- New Decisions : Ontario Court of Justice

Ontario Court of Justice Recent Decisions
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2026-05-12 R. v. Tekeste, 2026 ONCJ 273 (CanLII)
Key Words: Criminal and statutory offences — Multiple convictions — Kienapple rule — Whether assault with a weapon must be stayed where aggravated assault involved the same knife — Elements substantially the same — Means of wounding with the knife found for aggravated assault — Conditional stay required to prevent multiple convictions — Assault with a weapon conditionally stayed<br />Criminal and statutory offences — Sentencing — Aggravated assault — Proportionality under s. 718.1 with deterrence and denunciation predominant — Serious home attack using two weapons and head strikes — Probation breaches and recent violent record aggravating — Harsh PSC, addictions, health and support mitigating — Fit penitentiary term determined at five years — Five-years jail imposed<br />Criminal and statutory offences — Sentencing credits — Pre-sentence custody — Application of s. 719(3) and R. v. Summers to calculate credit — Whether harsh PSC warrants additional deduction or mitigation — R. v. Marshall #1 clarifies Duncan credit as mitigating factor, not separate deduction — 377 days PSC equals 566 days credit — Harsh PSC considered in mitigation — Summers credit applied<br />Criminal and statutory offences — Consecutive or concurrent sentences — Totality — Whether probation breach sentences should be consecutive to aggravated assault — Totality principle applied per R. v. Ahmed and R. v. Jewell — Probation orders treated as aggravating in global fitness — Breach sentences made concurrent to reflect totality — Concurrent sentences ordered -
2026-05-11 R. v. R.B., 2026 ONCJ 269 (CanLII)
Key Words: Procedure — Jurisdiction — State-funded complainant’s counsel — Whether the Ontario Court of Justice has jurisdiction to appoint counsel funded by the state in s. 278 applications — Vertical stare decisis applied to R. v. Smith, 2026 ONSC 40 — Doctrine of jurisdiction by necessary implication relied on — Parallel to amicus appointments considered — Jurisdiction affirmed — Application granted<br />Procedure — Discretion — Test for appointment — Orders “as a matter of course” unless they would interfere with the proper administration of justice — Are there exceptional circumstances to refuse an order appointing complainant’s counsel? — No interference with administration of justice found — Counsel named, Attorney General to fund, fee disputes to court — Order appointing state-funded counsel granted<br />Statutory interpretation — Necessary implication — Criminal Code scheme — How do statutory context and separation of powers limit inferring authority to mandate provincial spending? — Absence of express counsel-appointment provisions contrasted with ss. 486.3, 672.24 and YCJA s. 25 — Federalism and Crown immunity considerations noted — Despite reservations, bound by Smith — Jurisdiction affirmed<br />Procedure — Practice — Crown applications process — What procedural expectations govern applications to appoint complainant’s counsel? — Form 1 Notice to complainant, accused and any independent agency sought to be bound — Application returnable on the record — Evidence of complainant’s informed choice required — Caution re s. 650 presence — Guidance provided -
2026-05-11 Children’s Aid Society of Toronto v. S.P., 2026 ONCJ 270 (CanLII)
Key Words: Child protection — Protection finding — Whether children are in need of protection under s. 74(2)(b)(i) — Risk of physical harm through failure to adequately care for, provide for, supervise or protect — Evidence of acute psychotic episode, substance use, inconsistent access and neglect — Flexible timing approach to protection findings applied — Children found in need of protection<br />Child protection — Necessity of order — Is intervention through a court order necessary to protect the children in the future under s. 101(1)? — Best interests under s. 74(3) considered, including needs, continuity and risk — Services provided and community options reviewed — Ongoing significant protection concerns established — Court order necessary<br />Child protection — Disposition and relocation — What disposition is in the children’s best interests, including relocation to Montreal and s. 122(5) extension? — Supervision order placing children with father assessed, Montreal CAS supervision available — CLRA s. 39.4 relocation factors considered — Extension of interim society care under s. 122(5) refused — Children placed with father in Montreal under supervision<br />Child protection — Access — What access orders for mother and sibling are in the children’s best interests under s. 104(1)? — Supervised access in society’s discretion with minimum monthly in-person and weekly virtual contact — Concerns with mother’s presentation and inconsistent attendance — Sibling relationship preserved on agreed terms — Supervised access ordered with specified minimums -
2026-05-11 King v. Wilson, 2026 ONCJ 271 (CanLII)
Key Words: Family — Child support — Imputation of income — Whether to impute income to payor under the Child Support Guidelines — Drygala v. Pauli test applied — Union wage evidence and vocational opinion considered — Income imputed using 65 percent of union annualised wage, with adjustments — Specific annual incomes fixed for 2022 to 2026 — Child support set accordingly — Income imputed<br />Family — Child support — Commencement and credits — What is the start date for child support — Voluntary payments after separation examined against Guideline obligation — Commencement fixed at October 1, 2022 — Payor’s payments exceeded Guideline amount for part of 2022 — Credits reflected in arrears calculations — Start date fixed<br />Family — Special or extraordinary expenses — Proportionate contribution — Determination of section 7 share and arrears — Reasonableness and proof of payment accepted — Recipient’s income partly imputed — Payor to contribute 58 percent prospectively and higher share for earlier years — Ongoing conditions for notice, after-tax calculation and proof of payment set — Arrears ordered<br />Family — Spousal support — Entitlement and quantum — Is spousal support payable for the first two years post-separation — Entitlement recognised but no ability to pay on imputed incomes — Recipient’s additional unreported income found — Child support priority and financial resources considered — Spousal support denied — Claim dismissed -
2026-05-08 R. v. Alexander, 2026 ONCJ 267 (CanLII)
Key Words: Criminal and statutory offences — Sentencing — Robbery and fail to stop — Fit sentence for a youthful first time offender — Degree of responsibility for assaultive behaviour but not firearm use — Denunciation and deterrence balanced with rehabilitation and guilty plea — s. 344(1)(b) and s. 320.17 considered — Probation and ancillary orders imposed — Sentence imposed<br />Criminal and statutory offences — Sentencing — Duncan/Marshall reduction — Whether harsh pre-sentencing custody warrants reduction — Maplehurst lock-downs and triple bunking quantified — R. v. Marshall, R. v. Duncan, R. v. Reid, R. v. Gorgievski applied — One-to-one methodology used without combined effect increment — Reduction fixed at 1.5 years — Reduction granted<br />Criminal and statutory offences — Sentencing — Summers credit — How to calculate credit for pre-trial custody — 419 days of custody at 1.5 basis — Credit computed as 1.7 years and deducted from custodial term — Post-reduction remainder identified as 9 months and 18 days — Credit applied<br />Criminal and statutory offences — Sentencing — Consecutive or concurrent terms — Should fail to stop be consecutive to robbery — Additional elements acknowledged but complete overlap with robbery circumstances — Three months imposed concurrent to robbery term — Concurrent sentence ordered