The defendant, a used car dealer, was charged with failing to comply with a Property Standards Order requiring removal of unlicensed vehicles from his residential property.
The defendant challenged the by-law on multiple grounds, including spelling of the word "license," the distinction between licensing and plating in Ontario, and the requirement to comply absent evidence of actual removal on the compliance date.
The court rejected all defenses, finding the by-law enforceable as written, that common usage supports the interpretation of "license" as referring to vehicle plates, and that the compliance date is merely a temporal marker rather than a single point of inspection.
The defendant's credibility regarding claimed compliance was found suspect given his stated opposition to the by-law and failure to appeal the order.
The court convicted the defendant, finding he failed to establish due diligence.