The respondent's dog bit four people, prompting the appellant medical health officer to issue an order requiring the dog to be euthanized.
After breaching an interim consent order that allowed him to keep the dog pending appeal, the respondent's appeal was dismissed and he was ordered to surrender the dog.
Instead, he sent the dog to the United States.
The appellant brought a motion for contempt, which the motion judge dismissed on the technicality that the respondent was asked to surrender the dog to the SPCA rather than the Humane Society as specified in the order.
The Court of Appeal allowed the appeal, finding it had jurisdiction because the dismissal of the contempt motion was a final order.
The Court held the motion judge erred by adopting a formalistic approach, as the respondent clearly breached the spirit and intent of the euthanasia order.