Décisions de la Cour

Une série de jugements de la Cour de justice de l’Ontario, pour la plupart rendus après le 1er avril 2004, sont affichés sur le site Web de CanLII. Ce site n’est pas une source exhaustive de jugements de la Cour de justice de l’Ontario. La version officielle des motifs de jugement est le document original signé ou l’endossement manuscrit dans le dossier de la Cour. S’il y a une question concernant le contenu d’un jugement, le document original dans le dossier de la Cour l’emporte.

Jugements ne sont disponibles que dans la langue dans laquelle ils ont été rédigés.

On peut obtenir des copies des jugements de la Cour de justice de l’Ontario en contactant les greffes respectifs. Des frais de photocopie sont requis. Les adresses et les numéros de téléphone de certains tribunaux sont disponibles sur le site web du ministère du procureur général. On peut consulter ces jugements en s’abonnant à un service comme LexisNexisMD, QuicklawMC et WestlawNextMD Canada.

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Cour de justice de l’Ontario – décisions récentes

  • 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
  • 2026-05-28 R. v. Barletta, 2026 ONCJ 300 (CanLII)
    Key Words: Rights and freedoms — Charter s. 9 — Investigative detention — Was the initial detention arbitrary where the accused was unresponsive in a running vehicle stopped in an intersection — Application of R. v. Mann to objectively concerning public safety circumstances — Handcuffing assessed contextually under R. v. Grant — Detention found lawful — Charter breach not established — Charter application dismissed<br />Criminal and statutory offences — Arrest — Reasonable grounds — Whether arrest for impaired operation met the Storrey standard on the totality of circumstances — Indicia included disorientation, red eyes, difficult to understand speech, unsteadiness, vehicle stationary through light cycles — Video context did not negate observations — Impermissible hindsight from breath results rejected — Arrest lawful<br />Rights and freedoms — Charter s. 10(a) and s. 10(b) — Right to be informed and to counsel — Whether reasons were conveyed without delay and meaningful access to counsel provided — Dynamic scene permitted brief delay in articulating reasons — Counsel of choice contacted and consulted after firearm discovery — No police interference — No breach of s. 10(a) or s. 10(b)<br />Evidence — Exclusion of evidence — Charter s. 24(2) — Should the loaded firearm be excluded if a breach were found — Grant framework applied to seriousness, impact, and adjudication on the merits — State conduct at low end, minimal impact, strong societal interest in reliable firearm evidence recognised in R. v. Omar — Evidence admitted
  • 2026-05-27 R. v. MacDonald, 2026 ONCJ 294 (CanLII)
    Key Words: Criminal and statutory offences — Impaired driving and provincial offences — Over 80 and impaired operation — Whether Charter application is determinative of the trial — Directed verdict on impaired operation granted — HTA suspended driving and permit counts conceded — Over 80 under s. 320.14(1)(b) fails after exclusion of breath evidence — Liquor and tobacco counts withdrawn — Over 80 charge dismissed, HTA counts guilty<br />Rights and freedoms — Detention and right to counsel — Initial stop for suspended driving — Whether failure to inform reasons and provide s. 10(b) rights breached Charter — Investigative detention triggered without clear and simple language — Mann, Bartle, Suberu applied — Arbitrary detention under s. 9 found — Rights to counsel not provided without delay — Charter breaches found<br />Rights and freedoms — Roadside screening — Forthwith requirement under s. 320.27 — Whether ASD demand not made immediately after reasonable suspicion — Odour of alcohol detected opened forthwith window — Quansah considered on immediacy — Delay unjustified where ASD present and no objective safety basis — ss. 8, 9 and 10(a), 10(b) infringed — ASD demand invalid<br />Rights and freedoms — Use of restraints — Handcuffing during ASD testing — Whether handcuffing rendered detention arbitrary and seizure unreasonable — No objectively grounded safety concerns — Virk applied on unjustified handcuffing — Psychological restraint escalated to physical restraint without necessity — s. 9 and s. 8 violations established — Charter breaches found<br />Evidence — Exclusion of evidence — Charter s. 24(2) — Whether breath samples should be excluded following multiple breaches — Grant and Le framework applied, Zacharias and Tim considered — Serious, cumulative and independent violations impacting protected interests — Reliability acknowledged but long term repute favours exclusion — Breath test results excluded, over 80 charge dismissed
  • 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
  • 2026-05-22 Clarington (Regional Municipality) v. 2845749 Ontario Inc., 2026 ONCJ 287 (CanLII)
    Key Words: Criminal and statutory offences — Provincial offences — Planning Act charge — Use other than a permitted use — Whether outdoor storage exceeded permitted accessory use — Site plan agreement limiting outside storage considered — Elements of offence under s. 67 established — Provincial Offences Court jurisdiction engaged — Convictions on both counts — Guilty of both counts<br />Municipalities — Zoning — Accessory use — Is outdoor storage of vehicles a permitted accessory use and to what extent — Definition of “Accessory Use” applied — No express prohibition in C6-8 zone — Site plan agreement restricting outside storage to 20 vehicles and annual clearing — Accessory use must remain subordinate and incidental — Outdoor storage capped at 20 vehicles<br />Criminal and statutory offences — Proof — Beyond a reasonable doubt — Whether the evidence proved use other than a permitted use — Numbers of vehicles stored outside on offence dates established — Accessory use exceeded and became a separate use — Site plan agreement non-compliance shown — Prosecution witnesses accepted limited accessory use only — Charges proven beyond a reasonable doubt — Convictions entered<br />Criminal and statutory offences — Defences — Due diligence — Whether reasonable care or reasonable mistake of fact established — Strict liability offence per R. v. Sault Ste. Marie and R. v. Pontes — Civic duty to ascertain obligations per Lévis v. Tétreault — Mistake of law barred by POA s. 81 and R. v. Raham — Non-specific inquiry and increased storage inadequate — Due diligence defence rejected<br />Procedure — Abuse of process — Multiple informations — Should the second charge be dismissed or stayed as unfair and punitive — Particulars and fairness concerns addressed — Stay a remedy of last resort per R v Brunelle — No prejudice to full answer and defence — Second charge for continuing land use not unfair — Dismissal or stay refused
Cour de justice de l’Ontario