10 total
Judicial review of OLRB decision upholding unpaid wage orders dismissed; Board's factual findings reasonable.
The applicant sought judicial review of an Ontario Labour Relations Board decision that upheld an employment standards officer's orders for unpaid wages to the individual respondents.
The applicant argued the respondents were never employees and raised issues of procedural fairness regarding witness coaching.
The Divisional Court dismissed the application, finding the Board reasonably relied on documentary evidence due to credibility issues on both sides, and held there was no basis to interfere with the Board's factual findings or its failure to address an alternative argument not raised before it.
The Court of Appeal dismissed the appeal regarding child therapy, property ownership, and pension equalization.
The Court of Appeal for Ontario dismissed the appeal of Aliamisse O. Mundulai from a final order in a family law dispute with Ying Huang.
The appeal concerned parenting, property, and financial issues following the parties' separation.
The court found no reversible error in the trial judge’s decisions regarding the child’s therapy, beneficial ownership of an office unit, and the treatment of the respondent’s pension for equalization purposes.
Costs were awarded to the respondent.
The Court of Appeal dismissed a motion to set aside a refusal to extend time for a panel review.
The Court of Appeal for Ontario dismissed a motion by Aliamisse O. Mundulai, who sought to set aside a decision refusing an extension of time to bring a panel review and to stay enforcement of certain paragraphs of a Superior Court order in a family law dispute.
The court found that the relevant rule (r. 63.01(1) of the Rules of Civil Procedure) applied, and that the moving party had not demonstrated irremediable hardship.
The responding party, Ying Huang, was awarded costs of $3,000.
The court granted summary judgment to enforce a renewed mortgage, finding its terms were not unconscionable despite high renewal fees.
The plaintiff, Resco Mortgage Investment Corporation, moved for summary judgment to enforce a defaulted mortgage against the defendant, Sandeep Kaur.
The defendant argued the renewed mortgage terms were unconscionable due to unequal bargaining power and an improvident bargain.
The court found no genuine issue requiring a trial, determining that the mortgage terms were not unconscionable as Resco did not act predatorily or take advantage of a power imbalance.
The court granted summary judgment for the plaintiff, allowing recovery of principal and interest, but disallowed certain default fees claimed by the plaintiff, and granted leave *nunc pro tunc* for the timing of the notice of sale and statement of claim.
Motion to set aside single judge's order dismissing extension of time to appeal denied.
The self-represented appellant brought a motion to a panel of the Divisional Court under s. 21(5) of the Courts of Justice Act to set aside an order of a single judge.
The single judge had dismissed her motion to extend the time to appeal a finding that her family law claims were statute-barred.
The panel found no error in the single judge's conclusion that the date of separation was res judicata and that the limitation period under s. 7(3) of the Family Law Act had expired.
The motion was dismissed with costs awarded to the respondent.
Motion for extension of time to appeal denied because the underlying equalization claim was statute-barred.
The self-represented appellant brought a motion for an extension of time to appeal a decision dismissing her claim for equalization of net family property.
The motion judge had dismissed the equalization claim because it was brought more than six years after the date of separation, rendering it statute-barred under s. 7(3) of the Family Law Act.
The Divisional Court found that while the appellant had a reasonable explanation for her delay in filing the appeal in the correct court, the proposed appeal lacked merit because the separation date was res judicata and the limitation period had clearly expired.
The motion for an extension of time was dismissed.
The appeal was dismissed for lack of jurisdiction because appeals involving a single payment under $50,000 belong in the Divisional Court.
This appeal was dismissed due to a lack of jurisdiction.
The Court of Appeal determined that the proper jurisdiction for an appeal involving a single payment of less than $50,000 is the Divisional Court.
The court granted a conditional discharge for sexual assault to avoid deportation and ruled SOIRA inapplicable.
The accused pleaded guilty to sexual assault.
The Crown sought probation while the defence sought a conditional discharge.
The court granted a conditional discharge for three years, finding it was in the accused's best interests and not contrary to the public interest.
The accused was a young man, recently arrived in Canada on a student permit, with no prior criminal record, who demonstrated remorse.
The court imposed ancillary orders including a weapons prohibition and DNA order.
The court declined to make a Sex Offender Information Registration Act order, finding that a conditional discharge does not constitute a sentence within the meaning of the applicable legislation.
Defendants held liable on $82,000 promissory note; non est factum defence rejected.
The plaintiff brought an action for $82,000 based on a promissory note signed by the defendants, his brother and his brother's family.
The funds were advanced to support the defendants' immigration to Canada, which involved an arranged marriage and various financial arrangements.
The defendants pleaded non est factum, claiming they did not understand the document because it was in English and they thought it was an immigration form.
The court rejected this defence, finding the document was explained to them in their native language and they signed it voluntarily.
The court also drew an adverse inference against the primary defendant who attended the trial but failed to testify.
Judgment was granted for the plaintiff with substantial indemnity costs.
Corporate veil pierced where cheque‑cashing operator was wilfully blind to fraud.
The plaintiffs, operators of cheque cashing and currency exchange businesses, sued a bank for breach of contract after the bank froze their accounts and reversed deposits arising from several fraudulent cheques.
The bank counterclaimed for overdraft balances and sought to enforce personal guarantees and personal liability against the principal of the companies.
The court held the bank acted within its contractual rights under the financial services agreements to reverse dishonoured deposits and debit the accounts.
Evidence showed the principal failed to respect the separate corporate identities, was wilfully blind to obvious indicators of cheque fraud, and used corporate accounts interchangeably for personal purposes.
The court pierced the corporate veil and imposed joint and several liability on the companies and their principal for the outstanding debts and overdrafts.