Kerry Lee McVey was raised in Dartmouth, Nova Scotia. While in high school, she was recognized with both the Lieutenant Governor's Medal and the Governor General's Medal for academic excellence and community involvement. (Canada.ca)
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Accused found guilty of assault causing bodily harm and impaired driving after property dispute.
The accused was tried on charges of assault causing bodily harm, impaired operation of a conveyance, and operating a conveyance with a blood alcohol concentration over the legal limit.
The charges arose after the accused crashed his ATV near the complainant's property and subsequently engaged in a physical altercation with the complainant over riding ATVs on the farmland.
The court rejected the accused's claim of self-defence, finding him to be the primary aggressor who struck the complainant unprovoked.
The court also rejected the accused's defence of post-driving alcohol consumption, finding his evidence of drinking after the incident implausible and contradicted by expert evidence.
The accused was found guilty on all three counts.
The court dismissed the summary conviction appeal, finding no Charter breaches during the impaired driving investigation in the ambulance.
The appellant was convicted of impaired operation of a motor vehicle, having a blood alcohol concentration exceeding the legal limit within two hours of operating a motor vehicle contrary to the Criminal Code, and operating a motor vehicle while licensed as a young driver with a blood alcohol concentration over zero contrary to the Highway Traffic Act.
The appellant appealed on grounds that the trial judge erred in law and misapprehended material evidence regarding: (1) his reasonable expectation of privacy in the ambulance; (2) when the officer detected an odor of alcohol; and (3) when the officer's grounds to issue a breath demand crystallized.
The appeal was dismissed.
The appellate court found no material misapprehension of evidence, no legal error, and that the trial judge's findings were reasonably available on the record.
A midtrial adjournment for a section 278.92 application was denied due to minimal probative value.
The defendant was charged with sexual assault and assault offences against three adopted children.
During a two-week judge-alone trial, midway through the cross-examination of the second complainant, defence counsel sought an adjournment to bring a section 278.92 application regarding text messages between the complainant and the defendant.
The court denied the adjournment request, finding that the probative value of the text messages was minimal and did not justify the significant disruption to the proceedings.
The court emphasized that section 278.92 applications should be brought pre-trial and that midtrial applications pose substantial risks to the administration of justice, particularly regarding the wellbeing of vulnerable complainants and the waste of scarce court resources.
The court upheld the Consent and Capacity Board's finding that the appellant lacked capacity to consent to antipsychotic medication.
The appellant appealed a Consent and Capacity Board decision upholding a finding of incapacity to consent to antipsychotic medication.
The appellant, a 64-year-old woman involved in ongoing employment litigation, attempted to cycle to British Columbia in winter without adequate preparation or training.
She was apprehended under the Mental Health Act and subsequently found incapable of consenting to treatment.
On appeal, the appellant challenged the CCB's decision on grounds of bias, procedural fairness, and misapprehension of evidence.
The court dismissed the appeal, finding the CCB's determination of incapacity was reasonable and supported by evidence of the appellant's impaired judgment and inability to appreciate the consequences of her decisions in the context of her mental illness.
The court granted default judgment, awarding substantial damages and a permanent injunction for a malicious online defamation campaign.
The plaintiffs, including a national not-for-profit HIV/AIDS and hepatitis C treatment information organization and its employees and board members, brought a defamation action against the defendant for an online libel campaign.
The defendant created profiles on his website labeling the plaintiffs as "groomers" and pedophiles, posted defamatory content on social media platforms, and left threatening voicemail messages at the plaintiffs' workplace.
The defendant's conduct was motivated by hatred stemming from the plaintiffs' association with the 2SLGBTQIA+ community.
The defendant failed to respond to the action and was noted in default.
The court granted default judgment, finding the statements were clearly defamatory, and awarded substantial general and aggravated damages.
A permanent injunction was issued requiring removal of all defamatory publications and prohibiting further defamatory statements.
The court ordered a child's return to Michigan under the Hague Convention.
The court granted an application under the Hague Convention for the return of a child wrongfully removed from Michigan to Ontario by her mother.
The judge found that Michigan was the child’s habitual residence immediately prior to removal, rejecting the argument that the child’s ties to her primary caregiver in Ontario were determinative.
The court also found that the mother had not established a grave risk of harm or intolerable situation if the child were returned, and ordered the child’s return to Michigan with undertakings to protect the mother and child’s interests pending further proceedings in Michigan.
The offender was sentenced to nine and a half years in prison with delayed parole eligibility for repeated sexual offences against two children.
The court sentenced B.B. for sexual offences against two child complainants, J.B. and F.T.G., including sexual assault, invitation to sexual touching, and making sexually explicit material available to a child.
The decision details aggravating and mitigating factors, the impact on the victims and their families, and the application of sentencing principles such as denunciation, deterrence, and the totality principle.
The court imposed a total sentence of nine and a half years, with extended parole ineligibility, and made several ancillary orders for public protection.
The accused was acquitted of first-degree murder and attempted murder due to insufficient circumstantial evidence.
The accused, O.W., was charged with first-degree murder and attempted murder in connection with a fatal shooting.
The Crown’s case was entirely circumstantial, relying on evidence of means, opportunity, motive, and post-offence celebratory conduct.
The central issue was the identity of the second shooter.
The court found significant gaps and inconsistencies in the evidence, particularly regarding motive and animus, and concluded that the Crown had not proven O.W.’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
O.W. was acquitted on both counts.
Hearsay statements identifying the accused in a prior shooting were excluded for lacking threshold reliability.
The court considered a Crown application to admit hearsay statements made by the deceased to a friend, Rebecca Guindon, identifying O.W. as the perpetrator of a prior shooting, in a trial for first-degree murder and attempted murder.
The application was dismissed.
The court found that the statements lacked sufficient procedural and substantive reliability to be admitted for their truth under the principled exception to the hearsay rule.
The court also rejected their admissibility under the "state of mind" exception, finding the statements incapable of supporting the inferences the Crown sought regarding motive or animosity between the deceased and O.W.
Application to admit discreditable conduct evidence in a judge-alone murder trial is granted.
The court considered the admissibility of discreditable conduct evidence in a judge-alone trial for first-degree murder and attempted murder.
The Crown sought to introduce evidence that the accused, O.W., threatened the deceased with a firearm on Instagram Live hours before the homicide, and a video showing O.W. associating with J.A. (the co-accused) who brandished a handgun.
The court found both pieces of evidence highly probative to issues of motive, animus, intent, and identification, and held that their probative value outweighed any prejudicial effect, especially given the reduced risk of prejudice in a judge-alone trial.
The application to admit the evidence was granted.
Application granted decision
The court considered whether a video-recorded statement by the complainant S.R., describing alleged sexual offences by A.G., was admissible under section 715.1 of the Criminal Code.
The defence argued the statement was not taken within a reasonable time of the alleged offences, as required by the section.
The court found that the delay in disclosure was adequately explained by the complainant’s circumstances and trauma, and that her memory was not so impaired as to undermine reliability.
The court also held that section 715.1 is not limited to child witnesses at the time of testimony, but applies if the complainant was under 18 at the time of the alleged offence.
The application to admit the statement was granted.
The court admitted the accused's post-arrest statement, finding he had an operating mind despite experiencing psychotic symptoms.
The court considered whether A.O.'s post-arrest statement to police was voluntary, given his mental health history and evidence of psychosis.
After reviewing the circumstances of the arrest, A.O.'s mental state, and the content of the police interview, the court found that A.O. had the capacity to understand what he was saying and that his statement could be used against him.
Section 11(b) application dismissed; net delay remained below the Jordan ceiling.
The defendant brought a motion for a stay of proceedings under s. 11(b) of the Charter in relation to assault, criminal harassment, sexual assault, and breach charges scheduled for jury trial.
The court applied the Jordan framework and attributed substantial delay to the defence arising from explicit waivers, changes of counsel, and limited availability of preferred and retained counsel.
The court also found that the adjournment of the original September 2024 trial dates flowed from exceptional circumstances created by late-breaking disclosure and the resulting need for multiple pretrial applications, despite diligent conduct by both Crown and defence.
Because the net delay remained below the presumptive ceiling even before accounting for exceptional circumstances, the application was dismissed.
The court dismissed a motion to strike a defamation claim and refused to remove the plaintiffs' counsel for an alleged conflict of interest.
The court denied the defendant’s motion to strike the plaintiffs’ defamation claim under Rule 21, finding the claim disclosed a reasonable cause of action and was not frivolous, vexatious, or an abuse of process.
The court also declined to remove the plaintiffs’ counsel for conflict of interest, refused to prohibit the defendant from bringing further motions without leave, and declined to order that a single judge be seized of all pretrial matters.
A litigation timetable was imposed by consent, and costs were awarded to the plaintiffs.
The court declared the respondent a vexatious litigant after she launched numerous meritless, conspiratorial lawsuits.
The Ottawa Police Services Board brought an application to have Deirdre Moore declared a vexatious litigant under section 140 of the Courts of Justice Act.
The court reviewed Ms. Moore’s extensive litigation history, including multiple meritless and repetitive claims, improper purposes, and abusive conduct both inside and outside the courtroom.
The court found that Ms. Moore’s conduct met the hallmarks of vexatious litigation and granted the application, prohibiting her from instituting or continuing proceedings without leave of the court, except for ongoing divorce proceedings.
The court also fixed costs against Ms. Moore.
The court granted a mandatory injunction requiring homeowners to remove an unapproved fence and shed that encroached on a homeowners' association's easement.
The court granted the application of the Sunset Lakes Owners Association (SLOA) for a mandatory injunction requiring the respondents, Todd and Erika Gingras, to remove a fence and shed that encroached on SLOA-owned property and an easement.
The decision addresses whether the respondents had approval to build, whether the structures constituted actionable encroachments, and whether the restrictive covenants were enforceable.
The court found that the respondents did not have approval, the structures substantially interfered with SLOA’s easement rights, and the restrictive covenants were valid and enforceable.
Costs were awarded to SLOA.
The court granted the Crown's application to allow the complainant to testify via CCTV.
This ruling addresses the Crown’s application for the complainant to testify via CCTV in a sexual assault and assault by choking prosecution.
The court grants the application, finding that the complainant’s concerns about testifying in the presence of the accused and before a jury are reasonably held and that testifying via CCTV will facilitate a full and candid account of her evidence.
The decision reviews the legislative amendments to section 486.2(2) of the Criminal Code, clarifies that necessity is no longer the standard, and emphasizes the importance of balancing the interests of the complainant and the accused’s right to a fair trial.
Charter application to exclude evidence dismissed as corrected ITO provided sufficient grounds for search warrant.
The applicant brought a Charter application under s. 24(2) to exclude a massager seized from his apartment, arguing the Information to Obtain (ITO) for the search warrant failed to disclose sufficient grounds, breaching s. 8.
The court reviewed the ITO, applying principles of excision and amplification to correct minor inaccuracies regarding the applicant's alleged sexual communications and use of the massager with the 11-year-old complainant.
The court found that even on the corrected record, there were overwhelming reasonable and probable grounds to believe offences had been committed and that the items sought would afford evidence.
The court stayed charges against a Freedom Convoy participant due to unreasonable delay exceeding the Jordan ceiling.
Randall Hillier, charged with multiple offences related to the "Freedom Convoy" sought a stay of proceedings under section 11(b) of the Charter, arguing his right to be tried within a reasonable time was violated.
The total delay was approximately 34 months and 28 days.
The court deducted 65 days for defence-caused delay (counsel's refusal to attend a pretrial conference) and 40 days for exceptional circumstances (Supreme Court's Haevischer decision requiring re-hearing of a motion).
The net delay of 31 months and 13 days still exceeded the 30-month Jordan ceiling, leading the court to grant the application and stay the charges.
Contract Relief granted
The plaintiff, a property developer, moved for default judgment against the defendant for failing to close on an Agreement of Purchase and Sale.
The defendant defaulted on deposit payments and did not respond to communications or defend the action.
The plaintiff terminated the agreement, remarketed the property, and resold it at a lower price due to a market downturn.
The court granted default judgment to the plaintiff for damages representing the shortfall from the resale, plus legal and real estate fees, after finding the defendant breached the agreement and the plaintiff made reasonable efforts to mitigate losses.
Costs were also awarded to the plaintiff.