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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2026-05-25 R. v. McSevney, 2026 ONCJ 288 (CanLII)
Key Words: Procedure — Electronic method — Remote trial — Provincial Offences Act, s. 83.1(2), s. 83.1(4) — Should the court permit a remote trial or require in-person attendance? — Interests of justice and fair trial assessed — Self-represented defendant, voluminous documentary evidence, time zone and technical limits — Crown seeking custody, most witnesses local — In-person attendance ordered — Application denied<br />Statutory interpretation — Provincial Offences Act — Interests of justice — Scope of discretion under s. 83.1 — What factors guide the exercise of s. 83.1 discretion? — Legislative gap noted, guidance drawn from Criminal Code s. 715.23 and R. v. Cowan, 2021 SCC 45 — Consideration of Noori and Zarwari on reasons and in-person preference — Discretion exercised to require in-person attendance<br />Procedure — Self-represented litigants — Complex documentary trial — Appropriateness of remote participation for a self-represented defendant — Limited ability to provide assistance remotely, technical challenges with digital disclosure — Reduced access to Duty Counsel, Officer in Charge and Crown during proceedings — Societal interest in an effective, expeditious trial — Remote participation not appropriate — In-person trial required -
2026-05-14 Toronto (City) v. Greene, 2026 ONCJ 279 (CanLII)
Key Words: Criminal and statutory offences — Provincial offences — Highway Traffic Act offence — Appeal from conviction for failing to stop at a red light, HTA, s. 144(18) — Part I proceeding under the POA — Whether conviction sustainable where reasons are inadequate and fair trial not ensured — Appellate jurisdiction under POA s. 135(1) and remedial powers under s. 138(1) — Appeal allowed, conviction vacated<br />Procedure — Reasons — Adequacy of reasons — Were the trial reasons adequate to permit meaningful appellate review? — Failure to address contradictory evidence on a key issue — Presumption of innocence and Crown burden not articulated — Authorities applied: R. v. G.F., R. v. W.D., R. v. Sheppard — Meaningful reasons required even in simple POA trials — Appeal allowed, conviction vacated<br />Procedure — Self‑represented accused — Duty to assist — Did the Justice of the Peace fail the duty to assist a self‑represented person, resulting in an unfair trial? — Guidance owed on trial process, burdens, right to call evidence — Authorities applied: R. v. Breton, R. v. P.D.C., R. v. Ivall, R. v. Jordan — Sarcastic remarks and lack of assistance noted — Appeal allowed, conviction vacated<br />Evidence — Documentary and real evidence — Photographs — Were the photographs properly admissible and capable of authentication in a POA trial? — Use in cross‑examination to impeach and for contradiction — No notarization requirement where accuracy proved by live testimony — Admission despite being taken the day after if accuracy testified to — Appeal allowed, conviction vacated<br />Procedure — Appeals — Remedies under the POA — What is the appropriate appellate remedy under the POA where a fair trial was denied? — Jurisdiction and powers under POA s. 135(1) and s. 138(1) to affirm, reverse, vary, or direct new trial — Crown submission that acquittal appropriate — Appeal allowed, conviction vacated -
2026-05-13 R. v. V.K., 2026 ONCJ 277 (CanLII)
Key Words: Criminal and statutory offences — Sentencing — Discharge under s. 730 — Whether a discharge is in the best interests of the accused and not contrary to the public interest — Denunciation and deterrence for violence against children and an intimate partner — Multiple incidents, breach of trust, statutory aggravating factors — Absence of guilty plea noted — Discharge refused<br />Criminal and statutory offences — Sentencing — Conditional sentence under s. 742.1 — Is a community sentence consistent with ss. 718 to 718.2 where assaults occurred in the family home? — Risk to community and proportionality assessed — Violence against intimate partner and children emphasised — Collateral employment and immigration consequences considered but insufficient — Conditional sentence refused<br />Criminal and statutory offences — Sentencing — Consecutive or concurrent terms — Should sentences run consecutively to reflect multiple victims and incidents? — Proportionality and totality applied to first-time offender — Gravity of conduct recognised while applying restraint — Global custodial term fixed — Concurrent sentences imposed<br />Criminal and statutory offences — Ancillary orders — Weapons prohibition and DNA order — Are orders under s. 110(1)(a) and s. 487.051 warranted for assault with a weapon and assault? — Primary and secondary designated offences identified — Privacy impact minimal post-conviction — Best interests of the administration of justice satisfied — Weapons prohibition for ten years and DNA order made -
2026-05-13 R. v. Navaratnam, 2026 ONCJ 278 (CanLII)
Key Words: Criminal and statutory offences — Identity — Proof beyond a reasonable doubt — Whether the Crown proved the identity of the culprit beyond a reasonable doubt — Eyewitness identifications by victims shortly after the offences — Arrest in tight temporal and geographical proximity to crimes — Single perpetrator inferred from trajectory and pattern — Defendant found guilty<br />Criminal and statutory offences — Assault with a weapon — Elements — Whether throwing rocks at an occupied vehicle constituted assault with a weapon — Rocks or stones thrown at vehicle windows where occupants were present — Threat to apply force and present ability established — Evidence of object striking victim’s leg accepted — Guilty of assault with a weapon<br />Evidence — Eyewitness identification — In-dock identification — Weight to be given to in-dock identification and eyewitness descriptions — Caution applied to in-dock identification and custodial show-up — Identifications made about 20 minutes after events not compromised by passage of time — Minor discrepancies in clothing descriptions not troubling — Identifications accepted<br />Evidence — Circumstantial evidence — Reasonable doubt — Whether circumstantial evidence supported the only reasonable inference of guilt — Standard from R. v. Villaroman and W(D) applied — Sequential mischief within confined area, early morning, defined trajectory — Similar behaviour supporting specific propensity — Only one inference available — Convictions entered -
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