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

  • 2025-12-10 R. v. Beites, 2025 ONCJ 647 (CanLII)
    Key Words: Procedure — Adjournment — Post‑verdict Charter application — Should sentencing be adjourned to permit a s. 11(b) application after findings of guilt? — Trial management expectations set and reiterated on the record — Defence unequivocally declined to bring the application on the continuation date — Lateness contrary to the proper administration of justice — Adjournment refused<br />Rights and freedoms — Charter s. 11(b) — Timeliness of application — Does the defence’s tactical decision to await an acquittal comply with the duty to act proactively under J.F.? — Jordan framework requires parties to be accountable and proactive — MacLaughlin applied to post‑verdict request — Accused not acting in a timely manner — Application not heard<br />Procedure — Trial management — Discretion to refuse hearing — Is the court entitled to decline to hear a s. 11(b) application in these circumstances? — Defence possessed all relevant information and chose not to proceed — Opportunity to argue mid‑trial was provided and declined — Court resources and mitigation of delay considered — Application refused and sentencing to proceed
  • 2025-12-09 R. v. Smith, 2025 ONCJ 646 (CanLII)
    Key Words: Criminal and statutory offences — Firearms — Self-defence — Whether the Crown disproved self-defence under Criminal Code s. 34 — Did the accused reasonably apprehend harm before discharging toward an occupied place? — Catalyst and response elements assessed with Khill — Video showed no weapon, no aggression, no descent of stairs — Count 1 proven beyond a reasonable doubt — Conviction entered<br />Criminal and statutory offences — Firearms offences — Elements — Whether carrying a concealed weapon, possessing a weapon for a purpose dangerous to the public peace, and unauthorized possession of a loaded firearm were proven — Admissions of loaded handgun in satchel while conducting a drug deal — Elements under ss. 90(1), 88(1), 95(1) established beyond a reasonable doubt — Convictions entered<br />Evidence — Video recordings — Credibility assessment — Whether the surveillance videos undermine the accused’s account — No bulge, no item in hand, no aggressive gestures on entry video — Panic attack claim and “I have it” statement rejected — W.(D.) applied considering the whole of the evidence — Agreed facts and videos preferred over testimony — Accused’s testimony rejected<br />Evidence — Standard of proof — W.(D.) in self-defence — Whether the modified W.(D.) framework raises a reasonable doubt of lawful self-defence — Three-step analysis from Reid, Brown, Martin applied — Crown’s burden to disprove self-defence beyond a reasonable doubt maintained — Holistic assessment consistent with Khill — No reasonable doubt on self-defence — Defence rejected
  • 2025-12-05 R. v. Taylor, 2025 ONCJ 651 (CanLII)
    Key Words: Rights and freedoms — Detention and search — Arbitrary detention and ASD — Was the stopping of the accused near his residence arbitrary? — Whether the officer had a reasonable suspicion and whether the ASD demand was timely — Highway Traffic Act, s. 48, and R v Orbanski applied — No s. 9 breach and no s. 8 breach found — Charter breach not established<br />Rights and freedoms — Right to counsel — Advice and counsel of choice — Did Mr. Taylor have the right to advice from counsel from the moment stopped? — Whether counsel of choice unavailability and lack of diligence breached s. 10(b) — Roadside sobriety exception confirmed, multiple options offered including duty counsel — No s. 10(b) breach<br />Rights and freedoms — Remedies — Exclusion of evidence — The approved instrument demand not made as soon as practicable under s. 320.28(1) — Should the breath test evidence be excluded under s. 24(2)? — Breach arose largely from the accused’s conduct, minimal impact on protected interests, reliability high — Exclusion would bring administration of justice into disrepute — Breath tests admitted<br />Criminal and statutory offences — Impaired driving — 80+ — Mouth alcohol and tests outside two hours — Do ss. 320.31(1) and 320.31(4) make the readings conclusive and applicable to the offence window? — “Evidence to the contrary” barred, protocol satisfied, 5 mg per 30 minutes read‑back applied — Cell video did not undermine accuracy — Charge proved, finding of guilt
  • 2025-12-04 Children’s Aid Society of Toronto v. T.M., 2025 ONCJ 639 (CanLII)
    Key Words: Child protection — Disposition — Best interests — CYFSA, ss. 74(3), 101 — Whether extended society care or supervision order with the mother best protects the children — Weight given to consistent wishes and emotional safety — Parenting capacity and insight assessed — Society’s “give a chance” position rejected — Extended care ordered<br />Evidence — Hearsay — Children’s statements — State of mind and experiences — Admissibility of wishes as spontaneous utterances — Necessity and threshold reliability met for statements about visits — Weight disputed and addressed in best interests analysis — Children not called — Statements admitted and given significant weight<br />Child protection — Access — Children in extended care — CYFSA, ss. 104(1), 105(6) — Whether access with mother is beneficial and meaningful and impact on adoption — Children’s anxiety around calls considered — Cultural and identity factors balanced — Access limited to supervised virtual contact six times yearly — Access restricted<br />Child protection — Protection — Risk and needs — CYFSA, s. 101(1) — Ongoing need of protection based on mother’s mental health symptoms and lack of insight — Impact of relocation, conflict and inconsistent behaviour on children — Parenting supports noted but insufficient to mitigate risk — Continued need of protection found
  • 2025-12-03 R. v. El Achqer, 2025 ONCJ 632 (CanLII)
    Key Words: Rights and freedoms — Detention — Investigative detention — Whether the detention was arbitrary under s. 9 — Reasonable suspicion assessed on totality of circumstances — Nexus to recent or ongoing drug trafficking in Unit 1201 — Mann standard applied, necessity and brevity considered — Coordinated execution of warrants and risk of loss of evidence accepted — Section 9 claim dismissed<br />Rights and freedoms — Search and seizure — Seizure of information — Did asking “what apartment are you coming from” during detention constitute a s. 8 breach? — Detainee compelled to answer while under police control — Harris (ONCA) applied to non-consensual taking of information — Warrantless seizure of incriminating information found unreasonable — Breach found<br />Rights and freedoms — Right to counsel — Informational component — Whether delaying s. 10(b) until after entry was permissible — Suberu immediacy requirement applied — No officer or public safety concerns — Dynamic situation and preservation-of-evidence rationale insufficient — Accused uninformed for approximately six minutes during detention — Breach found<br />Evidence — Exclusion of evidence — Charter remedies — Whether drug and cash evidence was “obtained in a manner” that infringed the Charter — Valid search warrant unchallenged, discovery independent of breaches — Temporal and contextual link too remote, Strachan considered — Alternatively, Grant balancing favours admission given reliability and serious charges — Evidence admitted
Cour de justice de l’Ontario