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

  • 2026-01-09 R. v. Sarwar, 2026 ONCJ 14 (CanLII)
    Key Words: Criminal and statutory offences — Police powers — Investigative detention — Whether a person seated in the driver’s seat is “in charge of a motor vehicle” under s. 33 HTA — ALPR alert linked to unlicensed driver on a highway — Exiting the vehicle does not negate detention authority, R v Melmer applied — Detention lawful<br />Criminal and statutory offences — Arrest — Highway Traffic Act powers — Whether warrantless arrest under s. 217(2) HTA was authorised for continued refusal to identify under s. 33(3) — Multiple requests and warnings ignored, attempts to leave — Arrest executed after persistent non‑compliance — Arrest lawful<br />Criminal and statutory offences — Search incident to arrest — Vehicle search for identification — Whether search of the Honda Civic for identity documents was reasonably necessary and purposive — Common law incident search, R v Caslake, R v Nolet — Scope limited to locating driver’s licence, search ceased once found — Search upheld<br />Rights and freedoms — Charter rights — Right to counsel — Whether right to counsel was provided at the first opportunity following arrest — Advice read in cruiser, non‑responsive answers, Prosper warning given, no impediment by police — No evidence of a s. 10 breach — No Charter breach
  • 2026-01-09 R. v. Mehanathan, 2026 ONCJ 12 (CanLII)
    Key Words: Criminal and statutory offences — Impaired operation and 80 plus — Identification — Did the Crown prove operation beyond a reasonable doubt? — Complainant’s observations internally inconsistent and inconsistent with external circumstances — Circumstantial evidence, including rings and ICC video, insufficient to establish identity — Breath tests would be admissible notwithstanding Charter breach — Charge dismissed<br />Evidence — Identification — Reliability of eyewitness observations — Whether complainant’s fleeting and distant observations, later phone description of two rings, and absence of beard description can prove identity — Inconsistencies with ICC video and plaza movements — Circumstantial evidence does not bridge the gap — Identification not proven beyond a reasonable doubt — Charge dismissed<br />Constitution — Detention and arrest — Charter ss. 8, 9 — Were investigative detention, arrest and approved instrument demand supported by reasonable suspicion and reasonable grounds? — Plain intoxication and information available to officer sufficient if identity were proven — Grounds assessed in the alternative — Grounds established in the alternative<br />Constitution — Right to counsel — Charter s. 10(b) — Was there a breach by delaying advice during investigative detention? — Investigation not brief roadside, delay unexplained, advice provided only on arrest — Officer advised reason for detention under s. 10(a) — s. 10(b) breach found<br />Constitution — Exclusion of evidence — Charter s. 24(2) — Should breath tests be excluded for the s. 10(b) breach? — Breach not wilful or reckless, limited impact on protected interests — Society’s interest in adjudication on the merits considered — Admission would not bring administration of justice into disrepute — Breath test evidence admitted in the alternative
  • 2026-01-05 R. v. Bonaldo, 2026 ONCJ 1 (CanLII)
    Key Words: Criminal and statutory offences — Sentencing — Impaired operation causing death and bodily harm — Appropriate global sentence for impaired operation with failure to remain — Whether a consecutive sentence for failing to remain is warranted — Totality applied to avoid a crushing sentence — Denunciation and deterrence emphasised — Global eight-year penitentiary sentence imposed, including two years consecutive<br />Criminal and statutory offences — Aggravating factors — Statutory factors — Application of s. 320.22 and s. 718.1 — Whether post–Bill C‑46 denunciation and deterrence justify severe punishment — Blood alcohol concentration exceeding 120 mg per 100 mL treated as aggravating — Multiple victims considered — Moral blameworthiness high — Crown’s measured position accepted<br />Criminal and statutory offences — Ancillary orders — Driving prohibitions and DNA orders — Should an extended driving prohibition be imposed, and is a DNA order appropriate? — Statutory driving prohibition begins immediately with intent for ten years post custody — Attempt to flee after the accident considered — Eighteen-year driving prohibition and DNA order issued
  • 2026-01-05 R. v. J.M., 2026 ONCJ 2 (CanLII)
    Key Words: Evidence — Third‑party records — Sexual offence proceedings — Likely relevance — Whether the records are likely relevant under s. 278.5(1)(b) — Police occurrence reports relating to Mental Health Act apprehensions and restraining order — Motive to fabricate grounded in temporal connections — Collateral matters and immaterial contradictions excluded — Some records found not likely relevant — Application allowed in part<br />Evidence — Third‑party records — Sexual offence proceedings — Interests of justice — Whether production to the court is necessary in the interests of justice under s. 278.5(1)(c) — Balancing full answer and defence with privacy and dignity interests — Reliance on Mills and Quesnelle — Production for May 9, 2023 and August 6, 2024 reports ordered for inspection — Remaining reports to remain sealed — Application allowed in part
  • 2026-01-05 R. v. Garofalo, 2026 ONCJ 3 (CanLII)
    Key Words: Procedure — Criminal disclosure — Third‑party records — Whether Lidar maintenance records are likely relevant under O’Connor — Application of Stinchcombe duty and Gubbins to maintenance records — Mere assertion of relevance insufficient absent case‑specific evidence per Batte — Request found speculative and a fishing expedition — Disclosure of maintenance records denied — Motion dismissed<br />Evidence — Admissibility — Speed measurement devices — Whether a voir dire is required to admit Lidar evidence — Iagolnik applied to distinguish admissibility from weight — No need to prove general reliability of Lidar in every case — Officer may be cross‑examined within bounds of relevance — Request for voir dire dismissed<br />Evidence — Weight of evidence — Officer’s notes and training — Whether limited notes or recent training undermine reliability — Notes are testimonial aids, not evidence, per Neuman and Golubentsev — What matters is what the officer did, not how trained, per Beaver — Training materials and credentials not likely relevant — Challenge goes to weight at trial — Disclosure denied<br />Procedure — Costs — Criminal proceedings — Whether costs should be awarded for disclosure conduct — Costs reserved for marked and unacceptable Crown misconduct per Sault Sainte Marie — Adjournment is usual remedy for non‑disclosure per Dixon and Bjelland — Prosecution’s conduct not misconduct and disclosure addressed — Costs denied
Cour de justice de l’Ontario