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

  • 2026-04-08 Toronto (City) v. Allison, 2026 ONCJ 205 (CanLII)
    Key Words: Criminal and statutory offences — Provincial offences — Short‑term rentals — Charges under City of Toronto Municipal Code, Chapter 547 — Whether defendant carried on business without being registered and failed to include registration number in advertisement — Booking and deposit proven, advertisement not proven — Count 1 made out, due diligence rejected — Count 2 not made out — Conviction on count 1, second charge dismissed<br />Criminal and statutory offences — Strict liability — Due diligence — Whether due diligence defence negates liability for operating without registration — Knowledge application was “being processed” and no registration number issued — Alternatives included waiting for own registration number — Post‑offence steps treated as sentencing considerations — Reasonable mistake of fact not established — Due diligence defence rejected<br />Criminal and statutory offences — Advertising offences — Operator registration number — Whether actus reus proven for failure to include registration number in advertisement — No screenshot or proof of public notice — Compliance referral and listing number insufficient — Speculation about removed listing rejected — Actus reus not proven beyond a reasonable doubt — Charge dismissed<br />Statutory interpretation — Municipal licensing — Carrying on business — Meaning of “reservation” and “carry on the business” (City of Toronto Act, s. 86, Chapter 547) — Does a booking before registration amount to operating as an “operator”? — Reservation defined as a booking and commitment — Harmonious reading of text, context and purpose — Actus reus of operating without registration established<br />Evidence — Business records — Stay data — Admissibility and weight of Airbnb stay data and Salesforce records — Business records affidavits admitted after disclosure addressed — Records compared and identical — Officer’s testimony credible, hearsay exceptions applied — Proof of booking, operator ID and deposit accepted — Reliability of records confirmed — Records admitted
  • 2026-04-02 Ankrah v. Amponsah, 2026 ONCJ 197 (CanLII)
    Key Words: Procedure — Costs — Entitlement — Parenting time claim struck — Presumptive entitlement to costs under subrule 24(14) — Whether the applicant is entitled to costs as the successful party — Respondent failed to complete APCO intake despite multiple extensions — Presumption not rebutted — Costs awarded<br />Procedure — Costs — Quantum and conduct — Reasonableness and proportionality under subrule 24(14) — Whether unreasonable conduct justifies elevated costs — Respondent’s non-compliance and abandonment caused needless expense — Hourly rate reasonable — Time limited to parenting time issue — Amount the unsuccessful party could reasonably expect to pay — Costs fixed at $3,955<br />Procedure — Costs — Payee — Legal Aid Services Act, 2020, s. 12(1) — Should costs be payable directly to Legal Aid Ontario — Receipt of legal aid not a factor in assessing costs — Court declines to involve itself in internal legal aid arrangements — Applicant may assign costs to Legal Aid Ontario — Costs payable to the applicant<br />Procedure — Costs — Enforcement and payment terms — Ability to pay considered without excusing unreasonable conduct — Whether a payment schedule should be ordered — Limited means addressed through modest monthly payments with acceleration clause — Payments to remain in good standing or full amount becomes due — Monthly payment schedule ordered
  • 2026-04-02 R. v. Patel, 2026 ONCJ 200 (CanLII)
    Key Words: Criminal and statutory offences — Impaired operation and 80-plus — Elements and proof — Whether impairment and blood alcohol concentration offences made out — Evidence of slow driving, angled parking, slurred speech and bloodshot eyes — Certificate of a Qualified Breath Technician, s. 320.14(1)(a)(b) Criminal Code — R. v. Stellato applied to level of impairment — Findings of guilt entered<br />Rights and freedoms — Charter s. 7 — Self‑incrimination — Does section 7 shield the accused’s courtroom behaviour and words from later use? — Fitzpatrick described contextual self‑incrimination limits — Observations in open court not compelled, no duty to caution — Crown properly reported suspected impaired driving — No section 7 breach — Charter application dismissed<br />Rights and freedoms — Charter ss. 9 and 8 — Detention and arrest — Did police have reasonable grounds to detain and arrest for impaired operation? — Gardner affirmed highway safety purpose for stops — Macfie summarized reasonable grounds standard — Slurred speech, bloodshot eyes, angled parking and complaint supported arrest — No section 9 or 8 breach — Charter applications dismissed<br />Procedure — Charter applications — Summary dismissal — Should the Charter application be summarily dismissed as manifestly frivolous? — R. v. Haevischer set rigorous threshold and fairness rationale — Late, sparse materials but alternative adjournment available — Novel claims not obviously futile — Applications heard on merits — Summary dismissal refused
  • 2026-03-30 Milton (Town) v. Sidhu, 2026 ONCJ 178 (CanLII)
    Key Words: Municipalities — By-laws — Remediation orders — Municipal Act, 2001, s. 431 — Is a remediation order necessary and what scope is proper? — Purpose to correct the contravention emphasised — Terms requiring permit application, removal of fill, restoration, access for officials, notice to purchasers — Defendants’ topographical survey proposal not appropriate — Correcting the contravention required — Remediation order granted<br />Criminal and statutory offences — Sentencing — Regulatory offences — What is a fit monetary penalty given remediation costs? — Paramount objective of general deterrence applied, Cotton Felts considered — Costs of compliance treated as component of total penalty, R. v. Brown — Potential environmental harm aggravating, absence of harm neutral, Torroco Industries — Fine reduced by 25 percent — Fines of $7500 each imposed<br />Statutory interpretation — Municipal by-law — Exemptions — Does the s. 3.4(3) “maintenance” exemption apply? — Size increased and dimensions altered beyond maintenance — Disjunctive with by-law purpose and s. 2.3 prohibition — Definition of “site alteration” engaged — King v. 2424155 Ontario Inc. cited on interpretation — Exemption not mitigating — Exemption inapplicable
  • 2026-03-27 R. v. Xiong, 2026 ONCJ 174 (CanLII)
    Key Words: Rights and freedoms — Charter of Rights — Right to counsel, immediacy — Did police inform immediately upon arrest under s. 10(b)? — Eight-minute delay with no safety concerns — Purpose to mitigate legal jeopardy and psychological disadvantage — Authorities applied R. v. Debot, R. v. Suberu, R. v. Pino, R. v. Willier — Breach found<br />Rights and freedoms — Charter of Rights — Language and interpretation — Do special circumstances require a Mandarin interpreter for s. 10(b) information? — Objective indicators of limited English comprehension — Video shows non-understanding of cautions and breath demands — R. v. Vanstaceghem and R. v. Barros-DaSilva applied — Failure tantamount to not providing rights to counsel — Breach found<br />Evidence — Exclusion of evidence — Charter breaches — Should breath samples be excluded under s. 24(2)? — Grant framework applied, seriousness and impact weigh strongly — Reliability and societal interest considered with R. v. Tim and R. v. Harrison — Balancing favours dissociation from misconduct — Breath samples excluded
Ontario Court of Justice