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.
Subscribe to the RSS Feed for Ontario Court of Justice Decisions
- New Decisions : Ontario Court of Justice

Ontario Court of Justice Recent Decisions
-
2026-03-23 R. v. Andriano, 2026 ONCJ 159 (CanLII)
Key Words: Procedure — Disclosure in POA matters — Whether additional first-party disclosure should be ordered — Relevance assessed to the charge and reasonably possible defences — FOI-obtained documents support potential defences and Charter application — Duty to furnish field notes, memoranda, investigators files engaged — Order to search records and disclose without impeding pending Charter dates — Disclosure ordered<br />Evidence — Crown disclosure — Threshold of relevance under Stinchcombe — Does the low threshold of usefulness to the defence govern POA disclosure — Stinchcombe, R. v. Taillefer and R. v. Duguay, and R. v. Egger applied — Relevance favours disclosure of inculpatory and exculpatory information — Little information exempt from duty — Disclosure ordered<br />Procedure — Onus — Accused’s initial onus to justify disclosure — Whether the defendant established a basis to obligate the Crown to search, review, and argue exclusion — R. v. Gateway Industries Ltd considered — Initial fishing concerns overcome by FOI materials and demonstrated relevance — Basis for court-ordered disclosure established — Disclosure ordered<br />Procedure — Prosecution response — Effect of failure to oppose disclosure — Whether the Crown’s non-response indicates no opposition — Initial opposition contrasted with no reply to renewed motion — Court infers no opposition and proceeds on relevance and onus findings — Order for production issued — Disclosure ordered -
2026-03-20 McNamara v. McNamara, 2026 ONCJ 157 (CanLII)
Key Words: Procedure — Costs — Case conferences — Family Law Rules, r. 17(18) — Whether costs may be awarded where the applicant did not attend and did not serve a conference brief — Unproductive conference found — Respondent entitled to costs — Costs payable forthwith under r. 17(18)(a) — Costs ordered<br />Procedure — Costs — Self‑represented litigants — Costs for lay litigant’s time and limited scope counsel — Whether the respondent may recover for own work and assisting counsel for this step — Guidance from Jordan v. Stewart and Browne v. Cerasa applied — Overlap with counsel’s work considered — Limited scope bill accepted for this step — Costs ordered<br />Procedure — Costs — Quantum — Reasonableness, proportionality and ability to pay — Subrule 24(14) factors considered, including behaviour, time spent, and legal fees — Reasonableness of positions assessed under Beaver v. Hill and Weber v. Weber — Applicant able to pay and should have expected costs for non‑attendance — Costs ordered -
2026-03-18 R. v. Chand, 2026 ONCJ 153 (CanLII)
Key Words: Procedure — Sentencing in absentia — Counsel of record — Should the court sentence the accused in his absence under s. 475? — Accused found to have absconded and necessity established — Counsel removed as counsel of record in absence of instructions, s. 475(4) noted — Appointment of amicus declined due to delay and limited assistance — Sentencing in absentia granted<br />Criminal and statutory offences — Sentencing — Aggravated assault — What is a proportionate sentence given a stated intent to kill? — Tourville range and appellate authorities considered — Unprovoked, frenzied knife attack with severe injuries treated as highly aggravating — Principle of restraint for first offender weighed with denunciation and deterrence — Four‑year custodial sentence imposed<br />Criminal and statutory offences — Restitution — Loss of income — Should restitution be ordered despite unknown present ability to pay under s. 739.1? — Bodily and psychological harm with pecuniary damages modest and readily ascertainable — Payment through the court office ordered with sufficient time for payment — Restitution ordered<br />Criminal and statutory offences — Ancillary orders — DNA, firearms prohibition, non‑communication — Should DNA and extended firearms prohibition under s. 109 be imposed? — Primary compulsory DNA offence established under s. 487.04(a) — Firearms prohibition extended beyond statutory minimum for public protection — Non‑communication during custody ordered under s. 743.21(1) — Ancillary orders imposed -
2026-03-16 R. v. Palmer, 2026 ONCJ 146 (CanLII)
Key Words: Criminal and statutory offences — Trial — Traffic stop leading to multiple counts — Inventory revealed distinctive satchel with loaded Glock and drugs — Accused’s spontaneous utterances admitted — Possession of loaded restricted firearm and over-capacity magazine proven — MDMA possession for the purpose of trafficking established — Cocaine and crack cocaine reduced to simple possession — Refusal to provide ASD sample proven — Findings of guilt entered<br />Rights and freedoms — Charter — Arbitrary detention — Did arrest under HTA s. 53 and detention breach s. 9? — Allegation of racial profiling considered under Le and Dudhi — ASD demand and inventory search challenged — Right to silence under s. 7 engaged and respected — Detention lawful and not arbitrary — No Charter breach established — Charter application dismissed<br />Evidence — Confessions — Voluntariness — Were the accused’s utterances to police voluntary and admissible? — Oickle framework applied, no promises threats or inducements — Multiple cautions given, operating mind found, no oppressive atmosphere — Spontaneous statements while detained recorded in officer’s notes — Adequate record for admissibility — Utterances admitted<br />Criminal and statutory offences — Possession — Firearms and drugs — Has the Crown proven knowledge and control of the satchel contents? — Distinctive satchel habitually used by the accused, identification cards in his name — Only available inference standard applied per Villaroman — Loaded restricted firearm and MDMA possession established — MDMA for purpose of trafficking proven — Cocaine and crack cocaine as simple possession — Findings of guilt entered<br />Criminal and statutory offences — Motor vehicle offences — Refusal of ASD demand — Was the ASD demand lawful and refusal proven? — Odour of alcoholic beverage detected, reasonable suspicion formed — Device available and demand made, immediate compliance required per R. v. Breault — Clear refusal after consequences explained — Offence established beyond a reasonable doubt — Finding of guilt entered -
2026-03-16 Tanner v. Meade, 2026 ONCJ 147 (CanLII)
Key Words: Procedure — Family Law Rules — Entitlement to costs — Presumption of costs to successful party under subrule 24(3) — Was the respondent the successful party on the motion and application? — Comparison with positions and outcome considered — Unreasonable litigation conduct addressed — Self‑represented status and limited means not determinative — Costs awarded<br />Procedure — Offers to settle — Full recovery — Subrule 24(12) and Rule 18(4) technical compliance — Does the offer to settle attract full recovery costs? — Court’s discretion to depart from full indemnity applied — Offer equal to or better than result obtained — Applicant failed to accept reasonable offer — Full recovery not ordered<br />Procedure — Costs assessment — Quantum — Subrule 24(14) factors and documentation under subrule 24(15) — Reasonableness and proportionality of rates and time — Ability to pay considered with unreasonable conduct — Importance not complex or difficult — Administrative fee and clerical rates reduced — Payment schedule ordered — Costs fixed at $4,500 payable monthly