128 total
The Court of Appeal upheld house arrest and curfew probation conditions that were imposed pursuant to a joint submission.
The appellant appealed his sentence for unauthorized use of credit card data, challenging the imposition of house arrest and curfew terms as conditions of probation.
The appellant argued these conditions were unreasonable and not authorized under section 732.1(3)(h) of the Criminal Code as they were punitive rather than rehabilitative.
The Court of Appeal acknowledged the traditional rehabilitative purpose of probation but noted the sentence resulted from a joint submission accepted by the sentencing judge.
The court declined to strike the conditions as illegal given the unique circumstances and the limited record before it, though it noted the sentencing judge should have articulated the basis for accepting the impugned terms.
Leave to appeal sentence was granted but the appeal was dismissed.
The court dismissed the sentence appeal for an unprovoked assault causing bodily harm, emphasizing deterrence and denunciation.
The appellant appealed his sentence of two years less one day imprisonment plus two years' probation following his guilty plea to assault causing bodily harm.
The Court of Appeal found no error in principle in the sentencing judge's reasons and determined the sentence was not demonstrably unfit.
The court noted that the appellant, then 23 years old, had sucker-punched a 55-year-old victim causing significant injury, and that such conduct must be both deterred and denounced.
The appeal was dismissed and the warrant of committal was amended to reflect the lesser but included offence.
The Court of Appeal upheld the appellant's firearms conviction, finding objectively reasonable grounds for his arrest following a suspected drug transaction.
The appellant appealed his conviction, arguing that there were no objective grounds for his arrest and that the gun found in his possession should not have been admitted into evidence.
The Court of Appeal upheld the trial judge's finding that there were both subjective and objective grounds for arrest based on a constellation of factors observed by the officers.
The conviction appeal was dismissed, and the sentence appeal was abandoned.
A youth's sexual assault convictions were quashed and a new trial ordered because the trial judge misapplied the burden of proof in a credibility contest.
A young person was convicted of sexual assault charges against his half-sister based on a two-witness credibility contest.
The trial judge found the complainant credible and rejected the appellant's denial, resulting in convictions.
On appeal, the Court of Appeal found that the trial judge misapplied the burden of proof by treating credibility assessments as determinative of guilt without properly applying the legal framework for assessing burden of proof in credibility-based cases.
The court quashed the convictions and ordered a new trial.
Conviction overturned due to trial judge's reliance on behavioural assumptions and failure to resolve inconsistencies.
The appellant was convicted of sexual assault following an alleged non-consensual sexual encounter outside a dance.
The trial judge found the appellant guilty based primarily on the complainant's post-occurrence emotional state and an assumption that young women would not consensually engage in sexual activity in the conditions described.
The Court of Appeal found the trial judge erred by relying on a behavioural assumption about young women, failing to consider that the complainant was upset before the alleged assault, and failing to resolve material inconsistencies in the complainant's evidence or grapple with exculpatory evidence supporting the appellant's version of events.
The appeal was allowed and a new trial was ordered.
The six-month limitation period for instituting summary conviction proceedings does not bar amendments that substitute one offence for another.
The Crown appealed a summary conviction appeal decision that had set aside convictions for firearms offences on the grounds that amendments to the information were statute-barred by the six-month limitation period in section 786(2) of the Criminal Code.
The respondent was charged with two hybrid firearms offences under section 86 of the Criminal Code.
The Crown elected to proceed summarily and sought to amend the information to substitute different offences that better conformed to the evidence at trial.
The summary conviction appeal judge found the amendments were barred by the limitation period.
The Court of Appeal held that amendments to an information do not constitute the institution of new proceedings and therefore are not restricted by the limitation period in section 786(2).
The court emphasized that proceedings are instituted by the laying of an information, not by amendments thereto.
The Court of Appeal dismissed the appeal, finding the appellant's guilty plea was voluntary, informed, and not the result of ineffective assistance of counsel.
The appellant appealed his conviction for fraud over $5,000, arguing that his guilty plea was neither voluntary nor fully informed due to ineffective assistance of counsel and his compromised mental state resulting from a prior motor vehicle accident.
The appellant pleaded guilty to a single count of fraud involving receipt of social services benefits to which he was not entitled over a period of more than four and one-half years.
He was sentenced to 12 months imprisonment to be served in the community and ordered to pay restitution of $52,027.36.
The Court of Appeal dismissed the appeal, finding that the plea was voluntary and informed, that the appellant had the requisite mental capacity to enter a valid plea, and that trial counsel's performance was not deficient.
The Court of Appeal upheld a sexual touching conviction, finding no reversible error in the trial judge's jury instructions regarding credibility and out-of-court statements.
The appellant appealed his conviction for sexual touching of a minor.
The trial proceeded on the basis of an acknowledged emotional intimacy between the appellant and the complainant, with the central issue being whether that intimacy extended to physical contact.
The appellant raised four grounds of appeal challenging the trial judge's jury instructions regarding the use of certain evidence, including out-of-court statements by the appellant, prior consistent statements by the complainant, and evidence of an uncharged incident.
The Court of Appeal dismissed all grounds of appeal, finding that while some instructions could have been more complete, the charge as a whole adequately conveyed the burden of proof and credibility issues to the jury, and no substantial wrong or miscarriage of justice resulted from the omissions.
The court dismissed the appellant's motion to compel witnesses on appeal because the proposed evidence was irrelevant to the trial judge's jurisdiction to issue a bench warrant.
The appellant appealed an order of Forestell J. concerning the jurisdiction of a trial judge to issue a bench warrant to compel the personal attendance of the accused in summary conviction proceedings.
The appellant filed a motion seeking to compel the attendance of three individuals to provide testimony regarding whether the appellant appeared in court on September 15, 2017.
The Court of Appeal dismissed the motion as the evidence sought had no relevance to the issue on appeal, which concerned the trial judge's jurisdiction to issue the bench warrant.
The court ordered the appellant to perfect her appeal by August 31, 2018, with no extensions permitted, and warned that failure to do so would result in dismissal of the appeal without further notice.
The Court of Appeal upheld convictions for child sexual offences and dismissed a fresh evidence application regarding sentencing.
The appellant was convicted of two counts each of sexual touching and invitation to sexual touching involving his then nine-year-old granddaughter.
He was sentenced to 30 months concurrent.
On appeal, the appellant challenged the trial judge's credibility findings regarding the grandmother's testimony and alleged inconsistencies between the complainant's and her mother's evidence regarding disclosure.
The appellant also sought leave to appeal the sentence based on fresh evidence regarding the victim impact statement.
The Court of Appeal dismissed all grounds of appeal, finding no palpable and overriding error in the trial judge's credibility assessments, no error in the trial judge's analysis of inconsistencies and collusion allegations, and that the fresh evidence was inadmissible and would not have affected the sentence.
The Court of Appeal upheld a sexual assault conviction, finding the trial judge permissibly used common sense in assessing credibility.
The appellant appealed a conviction for sexual assault entered by a trial judge sitting without a jury.
The appellant raised two grounds of appeal: first, that the trial judge erred in law by considering both parties' failure to climax as part of his credibility assessment; and second, that the trial judge failed to consider potential collusion between the complainant's family members who testified.
The Court of Appeal dismissed the appeal, finding that the trial judge's assessment of the evidence against common sense understanding of human behaviour was not an error, and that collusion was neither alleged at trial nor had any air of reality.
The court dismissed the appeal, finding video and DNA evidence sufficient to commit the accused to trial for robbery.
The appellant appealed a decision of the Superior Court of Justice dismissing his application for certiorari to quash a committal to trial for robbery.
The Court of Appeal upheld the lower court's decision, finding that the preliminary inquiry judge properly concluded there was sufficient evidence for a trier of fact to infer the appellant was the robber.
The video evidence of the robbery combined with DNA evidence linking the appellant to t-shirts worn during the robbery was found to be sufficient to support the committal.
The Court of Appeal upheld the appellant's convictions for break and enter and possession for trafficking, but stayed two lesser convictions under the Kienapple principle.
The appellant was convicted of theft over $5,000, break and enter, two counts of possession of property for the purpose of trafficking, and one count of possession of property obtained by crime.
He appealed his convictions on grounds that the trial judge failed to properly apply the W.(D.) test, applied stricter scrutiny to the defence case, provided insufficient reasons, and misapprehended evidence.
The appellant also argued that two convictions should be stayed under Kienapple as included offences.
The Court of Appeal dismissed most grounds of appeal but allowed the appeal in part, staying two convictions as included offences.
Historical sexual offence convictions stayed due to unreasonable delay caused by late Crown disclosure.
The appellant appealed his convictions for three historical sexual offence charges on the basis that the trial judge erred in denying two s. 11(b) Charter applications regarding unreasonable delay.
The first application was decided under the Morin test, and the second under the Jordan test.
The Court of Appeal found that the trial judge erred in calculating the delay period and in assessing the relevant factors.
The trial judge incorrectly attributed delay to the defence when much of it was attributable to Crown disclosure practices and procedural issues.
The properly calculated delay of over 17 months substantially exceeded the Morin guideline of 8-10 months for provincial trials.
The case was not complex, and the prejudice to the accused was not modest as the trial judge had found.
The appeal was allowed, convictions were set aside, and the proceedings were stayed.
Application for state-funded appellate counsel dismissed because the appointment was not necessary.
Application for appointment of counsel under s. 684 of the Criminal Code for an appeal of conviction and sentence.
The applicant was convicted of sexual assault causing bodily harm and forcible confinement following a two-day trial and sentenced to 48 months' imprisonment.
Legal Aid Ontario refused to fund the appeal based on lack of merit.
The applicant established lack of financial means but failed to meet the necessity threshold for appointment of counsel.
The court found that while some grounds of appeal were arguable, the applicant could effectively advance them without counsel, the record was manageable, and the court could properly decide the appeal without defence counsel assistance.
The Court of Appeal substituted a conditional discharge for a first offender convicted of assaulting police.
The appellant appealed a sentence imposed for assault against her child and assault of a police officer for the purpose of resisting arrest.
The summary conviction appeal court judge had upheld the sentence on the basis of deference to the trial judge.
The Court of Appeal found that deference was not owed because the conviction appeal was allowed on the assault charges, which were the sole focus of sentencing submissions, and the trial judge provided no reasons for the assault police charge.
The Court allowed the appeal and substituted a conditional discharge with a three-year probationary period, which had already been served in full.
Historical provider-stored texts were obtainable by production order without Part VI authorization.
The accused appealed convictions for firearms and drug trafficking offences, challenging production orders used to obtain historical text messages from a telecommunications provider.
The Court held the accused had standing under s. 8 of the Charter because he had a reasonable expectation of privacy in the electronic conversation records.
The majority concluded that seizure of already sent and received messages from provider storage was lawfully authorized by the production order regime and did not require a Part VI wiretap authorization.
A dissent would have treated acquisition of those messages as requiring Part VI authorization and would have excluded the evidence under s. 24(2).
Senders can retain section 8 privacy in texts on a recipient’s phone.
The Court allowed the accused’s appeal and held that, on the totality of circumstances, he had a reasonable expectation of privacy in text messages recovered from the recipient’s phone, giving him standing to challenge the search under section 8.
With standing conceded, the warrantless search was unreasonable, and the text-message evidence was excluded under section 24(2) because admission would bring the administration of justice into disrepute.
Without that evidence the convictions could not stand, and the curative proviso did not apply.
The court allowed the Crown's appeal and ordered a new trial on firearms charges because the trial judge applied the wrong test for a directed verdict.
The Crown appealed directed verdicts of acquittal on three firearms charges.
The trial judge had granted the respondent's application for a directed verdict, concluding that the evidence was insufficient for a jury to consider whether the respondent possessed an operational firearm.
The appellate court found that the trial judge made three errors of law: applying the wrong test for directed verdicts, improperly weighing competing inferences in favour of the respondent, and assessing the respondent's credibility when she was not entitled to do so.
The court allowed the appeal and ordered a new trial.
The presumption of identity under the Criminal Code applies to included offences.
The Crown appealed an acquittal on charges of impaired driving and driving over 80 milligrams of alcohol per 100 millilitres of blood.
The trial judge acquitted on both counts, finding the Crown could not prove impairment and could not rely on the presumption of identity in s. 258(1)(c) to establish the blood alcohol level at the time of driving.
The Crown sought to rely on the included offence of care or control over 80, but the trial judge rejected this, holding that s. 258(1)(c) applied only to the charged offence.
The summary conviction appeal judge upheld the acquittals on fairness grounds.
The Court of Appeal allowed the Crown's appeal on the included offence issue, holding that the presumption of identity applies to included offences and that it is not unfair to convict on an included offence arising from the same facts as the charged offence.