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

  • 2026-06-04 R. v. Sharaf, 2026 ONCJ 318 (CanLII)
    Key Words: Rights and freedoms — Charter, s. 8 — State agency — Were hospital staff and a security guard acting as agents of the police? — Private actors not subject to the Charter absent governmental function — Cooperation and use of transfer form insufficient — R. v. Buhay, R. v. Daley, R. v. Auclair applied — Charter not engaged<br />Rights and freedoms — Charter, s. 8 — Reasonableness of search and seizure — Did police examination of a patient’s bag and seizure under Criminal Code s. 489(2) breach section 8? — Voluntary transfer from private party, diminished expectation of privacy — Limited inspection to ascertain nature of property — Reasonable grounds formed upon observing controlled substances — Search reasonable, seizure lawful<br />Rights and freedoms — Charter, s. 8 — Reporting obligations — Do deficiencies in the Report to a Justice and absence of a CDSA s. 12.1 report breach section 8? — Good faith completion of Report to a Justice, no material misrepresentation — Lack of admissible proof of Minister’s report filing — Technical breach found, seizure legality unaffected — Technical breach found<br />Evidence — Charter remedies, s. 24(2) — Exclusion of evidence — Should evidence be excluded for a minor administrative section 8 breach? — R. v. Grant framework applied — Breach minor and administrative, minimal impact on privacy — Reliable and probative physical evidence central to prosecution — Admission favours adjudication on the merits — Evidence admitted
  • 2026-06-02 R. v. Singh, 2026 ONCJ 314 (CanLII)
    Key Words: Rights and freedoms — Search and seizure — Breath demand delay — Whether breath samples were obtained in a manner that infringed s. 8 — “As soon as practicable” under Criminal Code, s. 320.28(1) — Application of Guenter and Deruelle — Delay alone does not render seizure unreasonable — Section 8 breach not established<br />Rights and freedoms — Arrest or detention — Right to counsel — Whether informational and implementation components under s. 10(b) were breached — Off-duty officer acting as state authority — Incomplete caution and roadside investigative questioning before confirmed consultation — Bartle, Manninen and Grant applied — Section 10(b) breaches established<br />Evidence — Admissibility — Exclusion of evidence — Whether iPhone video, screenshot and roadside statements should be excluded under s. 24(2) — Seriousness of Charter-infringing conduct and impact outweigh truth-seeking — Grant balancing applied, Strachan connection met — Evidence excluded under s. 24(2)<br />Criminal and statutory offences — Impaired operation — Elements — Whether operation or care and control and impairment to any degree proved — Unsafe movement in live traffic, odour of alcohol, red and watery eyes, slight unsteadiness — Boudreault and Stellato applied — Proof beyond a reasonable doubt established — Guilty of impaired operation
  • 2026-06-02 R. v. Ogbomo, 2026 ONCJ 312 (CanLII)
    Key Words: Criminal and statutory offences — Possession — Firearms and controlled substances — Did the Crown prove knowledge and control of the firearm, ammunition, cash, and cocaine in the bedroom? — Elements of constructive and joint possession, s. 2(1) CDSA, s. 4(3) Criminal Code, Terrence, Morelli — Occupancy not a presumption of possession, Lights — No forensic links, shared access, conflicting locations — Acquittals on remaining counts<br />Evidence — Circumstantial evidence — Villaroman standard — Is guilt the only reasonable inference on the totality of the evidence? — Gaps and alternative inferences considered logically — Social media posts linked cash to youths — Passport and clothing equivocal — Logic and common sense applied, Villaroman, Megill, Ali, Kruk — Acquittals on remaining counts<br />Evidence — Credibility — W.(D.) analysis — Should A.W.’s testimony claiming possession be accepted or raise reasonable doubt? — Motive to minimize accused’s involvement identified — Implausibilities undermined but residual doubt assessed on whole — Verdict not a choice between Crown and defence, A.J.K. referenced — Reasonable doubt remains on possession — Acquittals on remaining counts<br />Evidence — After-the-fact conduct — Flight — What weight to place on the accused’s flight during a loud, violent entry? — Multiple reasonable explanations unrelated to possession — Flight not more consistent with guilt than innocence — Limited probative value towards knowledge and control — Given little weight in circumstantial analysis — Acquittals on remaining counts
  • 2026-06-01 R. v. Toney, 2026 ONCJ 315 (CanLII)
    Key Words: Criminal and statutory offences — Sentencing — Conditional discharge — Should a conditional discharge under s. 730(1) be granted given denunciation, deterrence and rehabilitation? — First‑time offender, guilty plea, remorse, low risk to reoffend — Proportionality and public interest assessed — Twelve‑month probation imposed with discharge — Employment and parenting circumstances considered — Conditional discharge with probation ordered<br />Indigenous peoples — Sentencing — Gladue and Ipeelee — How do s. 718.2(e) Gladue factors inform the public‑interest analysis for a discharge? — Intergenerational trauma, child welfare involvement, socio‑economic disadvantage recognised — Cultural connection and restorative justice approach emphasised — Overincarceration context noted, different methodology applied — Gladue factors determinative<br />Criminal and statutory offences — Sentencing — Ancillary orders — Are ancillary orders required or appropriate on sentencing for assault with a weapon? — Primary designated offence triggers mandatory DNA order — s. 110 weapons prohibition for two years imposed — Victim fine surcharge waived to support dependants — Ancillary orders imposed
  • 2026-05-29 R. v. Lai, 2026 ONCJ 308 (CanLII)
    Key Words: Criminal and statutory offences — Impaired driving and 80+ — Roadside arrest and breath testing — Whether the defendant is guilty of operating over the legal BAC limit — Qualified breath technician obtained truncated BAC readings of 160 and 140 — Kienapple stay considered for related count — Conviction on over 80 entered — Guilty of operating over legal BAC<br />Criminal and statutory offences — Proof of impairment — Impaired driving — Has the Crown proven impairment of the ability to drive beyond a reasonable doubt — Unexplained single-car collision and odour of alcohol insufficient — No advancement beyond initial indicia — Consumption proved but impairment speculative — Acquittal on impaired driving<br />Rights and freedoms — Charter ss. 7, 8, 9 — Reasonable grounds — Did police have reasonable grounds to arrest and make a breath demand when relying on a colleague’s unexplained conclusion — Distinction between arrest and conscriptive breath demand emphasized, R. v. Beaver, 2022 SCC 54 — Roadside officer lacked independent grounds to demand breath — Breath demand by roadside officer unreasonable<br />Rights and freedoms — Charter ss. 7, 8, 9 — Qualified breath technician demand — Can a later QBT demand based on information available at roadside cure a groundless roadside demand — Curative function recognized, R. v. Guenter, 2016 ONCA 572 — QBT relied on indicia observed by first officer, not post-detention back-fill — No Charter breach<br />Evidence — Admissibility — Exclusion of evidence — Charter s. 24(2) — Should breath test results be excluded under Grant if a breach occurred — Technical, unintentional breach with minimal impact found, R. v. Grant — Strong societal interest in adjudicating impaired-related offences on their merits — Breath test evidence admitted
Ontario Court of Justice