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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2025-11-05 R. v. Cappella, 2025 ONCJ 578 (CanLII)
Key Words: Criminal infractions — Aggravated assault — Defence of person — Accused struck complainant with a baseball bat, causing severe injuries — Whether the defence of person under s. 34 of the Criminal Code applied — Crown disproved reasonableness of the accused’s actions — Strike deemed disproportionate and unreasonable — Aggravated assault proven beyond a reasonable doubt — Criminal Code, s. 34<br />Criminal infractions — Attempted murder — Intent to kill — Accused struck complainant with a baseball bat — Whether the accused intended to kill — Crown failed to prove intent to kill beyond a reasonable doubt — Single blow and subsequent flight inconsistent with homicidal intent — Attempted murder not proven — Criminal Code, s. 229<br />Criminal infractions — Assault with a weapon — Self-defence — Accused struck and swung a baseball bat at complainant — Whether self-defence applied to strikes and swings — Crown failed to disprove self-defence for strikes during fight — Swing before fight deemed unreasonable and not justified by self-defence — Assault with a weapon partially proven — Criminal Code, s. 34<br />Criminal infractions — Uttering threats — Self-defence — Accused uttered death threats during confrontation — Whether self-defence applied to utterances — Crown failed to disprove that threats were defensive and proportionate to perceived threat — Uttering threats not proven — Criminal Code, s. 34<br />Criminal procedure — Burden of proof — Self-defence — Crown’s burden to disprove self-defence beyond a reasonable doubt — Reasonableness of accused’s actions assessed under s. 34 of the Criminal Code — Standard of proof clarified — R. v. Villaroman, 2016 SCC 33 -
2025-11-03 R. v. Armaleo, 2025 ONCJ 574 (CanLII)
Key Words: Criminal procedure — Standing to challenge warrants — Applicant sought to challenge TDR and tracking warrants issued in a drug trafficking investigation — Whether the Applicant had standing to challenge warrants based on alleged Charter breaches of a co-accused — Applicant lacked standing to argue another person’s Charter rights — Charter rights are personal and cannot be vicariously asserted — R. v. Edwards and R. v. Rowbotham applied<br />Rights and freedoms — Charter of Rights — Section 8 — Applicant argued breach of co-accused’s section 8 Charter rights impacted her own rights — Whether section 8 rights can be argued by someone other than the person whose rights were allegedly breached — Charter rights are personal and cannot be extended to another party — R. v. Edwards and R. v. Taylor affirmed<br />Evidence — Reasonable expectation of privacy — Applicant argued she had a reasonable expectation of privacy in the phone and phone number subject to TDR and tracking warrants — Evidence showed no joint use or control of the phone by the Applicant — Mere contact with the phone insufficient to establish a reasonable expectation of privacy — R. v. Marakah and R. v. Spencer distinguished — No reasonable expectation of privacy found -
2025-10-31 Ontario (Director, Family Responsibility Office) v. Petersoo, 2025 ONCJ 569 (CanLII)
Key Words: Family — Child support arrears — Default orders — Enforcement of child support obligations — Payor ordered to pay $85,382 in arrears and ongoing monthly child support of $7,151 — Did the court issue an appropriate default order under the Family Responsibility and Support Arrears Enforcement Act? — Court ordered arrears to be paid by February 27, 2026, with imprisonment for non-compliance — Section 41(10) of the Act governs enforcement powers<br />Evidence — Financial disclosure — Payor’s failure to provide financial disclosure — Payor did not file financial statements, tax returns, or business records — Did the payor establish a valid inability to pay arrears and ongoing child support? — Court found no valid reasons for non-payment due to lack of evidence and non-compliance with disclosure orders — Adverse inference drawn for failure to disclose<br />Family — Imprisonment for non-payment — Enforcement mechanisms — Imprisonment as a last resort — Factors considered include pattern of arrears, prioritization of self over children, and failure to comply with court orders — Should imprisonment be imposed to enforce child support obligations? — Court ordered imprisonment for non-payment to ensure compliance, balancing enforcement with fairness — Hennessy factors applied -
2025-10-30 Children’s Aid Society of Toronto v. T.S., 2025 ONCJ 566 (CanLII)
Key Words: Child protection — Temporary care and custody — Best interests of the child — Placement of children with mother, paternal grandmother, or Society care — Risk of harm, non-accidental injuries, and exposure to violence — Can children be adequately protected by supervision orders? — Statutory framework under Child, Youth and Family Services Act, 2017 — Least disruptive placement consistent with adequate protection<br />Family — Access arrangements — Supervised access for parents and extended family — Sibling access to mitigate separation impact — Exclusion of disruptive individuals from access — Balancing family integrity with children's emotional safety — Governing principles under Child, Youth and Family Services Act, 2017<br />Evidence — Risk assessment — Credible and trustworthy evidence — Medical findings of non-accidental injuries — Children's disclosures of harm and conflict — Compliance with supervision orders — Standard of proof for temporary care orders — Application of subsection 94(4) of the Child, Youth and Family Services Act, 2017<br />Family — Exclusion of individuals from access — Mother's partner excluded due to history of violence and non-compliance — Impact of adult conflict on children's emotional well-being — Necessity of exclusion to enforce supervision orders — Governing principles for access restrictions under Child, Youth and Family Services Act, 2017<br />Social welfare — Compliance with supervision orders — Consequences of non-compliance — Risk of placement in Society care — Court's expectations for parties to prioritize children's needs — Monitoring and reporting by Society — Framework for addressing non-compliance under Child, Youth and Family Services Act, 2017 -
2025-10-29 R. v. Narang, 2025 ONCJ 564 (CanLII)
Key Words: Constitution — Charter of Rights — Section 11(b) — Right to be tried within a reasonable time — Total delay of 29 months and 25 days in a summary conviction trial — Presumptive ceiling of 18 months exceeded — Does the delay violate the accused's Charter right to a trial within a reasonable time? — Framework from R. v. Jordan applied — Delay found presumptively unreasonable<br />Rights and freedoms — Charter remedies — Stay of proceedings — Unreasonable delay — Accused sought a stay of proceedings as a remedy for breach of section 11(b) of the Charter — Whether a stay is appropriate when the delay exceeds the presumptive ceiling and no exceptional circumstances exist — Charges stayed due to unreasonable delay<br />Criminal procedure — Delay apportionment — Defence, Crown, and court responsibility — Principles from R. v. Hanan applied — Contextual analysis of delay caused by defence unavailability, Crown inaction, and court scheduling — Delay apportioned equally between Crown and defence for certain periods — Crown and court failed to prioritize rescheduling after delay exceeded presumptive ceiling<br />Criminal procedure — Exceptional circumstances — Presumptive ceiling exceeded — Whether the Crown established exceptional circumstances to justify delay — No exceptional circumstances found — Routine drinking and driving case with no complexity or unforeseen events — Crown failed to take reasonable steps to mitigate delay<br />Criminal procedure — Rescheduling delays — Trial adjournment caused by defence conduct — Crown and court failed to secure earlier trial dates despite direction to prioritize case — Whether the Crown and court's inaction contributed to unreasonable delay — Court and Crown shared responsibility for delay beyond the presumptive ceiling