Parking tickets tossed over court delays since Supreme Court's Jordan decision - Action News
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Ottawa

Parking tickets tossed over court delays since Supreme Court's Jordan decision

A Supreme Court of Canada landmark decision that has been used to toss out criminal charges including murder, child luring and sexual assault due to unreasonable delays is also being used to dismiss parking tickets in Ottawa.

Law professor says so-called Jordan decision should not apply to parking fines

A City of Ottawa bylaw officer issues a parking ticket in August 2017. More than $2,000 worth of Ottawa parking tickets were thrown out on one day in July because they took more than 18 months to go trial. It came after a Supreme Court of Canada decision that's been used on hundreds of criminal cases, but no one is tracking how many provincial offences have been tossed out. (Ashley Burke/CBC)

A Supreme Court of Canada landmark decision that has been used to toss out criminal charges including murder, child luring and sexual assault due to unreasonable delays is also being used to dismiss parking tickets in Ottawa.

On one day alone in July, an Ottawa justice of the peace threw out 14 parking tickets because it took too long for the cases to get to trial, CBC News has learned.

It happened more than a year after the Supreme Court of Canada's Jordan decisionset strict deadlines for trials.Delays beyond 30 months for Superior Court cases and 18 months at provincial courts violate the accused's charter right to be tried within a reasonable time.

This is just not the kind of offence in which Jordan was intended.- Blair Crew, University of Ottawa law professor

The City of Ottawa said it hasn't tracked how many regulatory charges have been tossed because of the Jordan decision, but added it's not unusual for defendants to want to fight parking infractions in person in court.

Blair Crew, a lawyer and part-time University of Ottawa law professor, saidthe Jordan ruling shouldn't apply toparking tickets.

"This is just not the kind of offence in which Jordan was intended," he said.

"The Jordan decision wasn't intended for the small regulatory offences, but rather was aimed at the true penal offences."

University of Ottawa law professor Blair Crew says sexsomnia as a legal defence is difficult to prove without medical evidence. (Jean Delisle/ CBC)

Not the same stressas criminal offence

Part of the rationale behind the Jordan decision is that the accused faces prejudice while they wait for a trial. It can be stressful with the threat of jail time hanging over their head, Crew explained.

For example, the Supreme Court of Canada threw out an accused drug dealer's case because he had to wait five years for a trial.James Cody's lawyer arguedhe was vilified in his community and lost his job.

It's a different story for someone caught speeding.

"In thepublic perception there's just not the same stigma attached to anyone that speeds, let alone anyone that parks in the wrong place," Crew said.

Manitoba Justice VicToews, who once served asStephen Harper's minister of justice,overturned a precedent-setting decision in Marchthat dismissed a traffic ticket because it took too long for the case to get to trial.

Toewsfoundthere was no evidence the 18-month wait was unreasonable.

Tickets totalledover$2Kin revenue

The 14 tickets tossed out at parking court in Ottawa on July 19 totalled more than $2,000 in lost parking revenue.
The City of Ottawa said court delays that led to 14 parking tickets being thrown out are rare. (CBC)

Parking infractions fall under the responsibility of the City of Ottawa, which said the prosecution unit agreed to stay the tickets because they exceeded 18-monthtime to trial. The tickets were originally issued between October2015 andJanuary2016.

"Such occurrences are rare," StuartHuxley, the city's senior legal council, wrote in a statement to CBC News.

The city declined CBC's request for an interview and provided written statements instead. City clerk and solicitor Rick O'Connor wrote that the city is aware of the Jordan decision.

"While this decision is in the context of criminal charges and not directly regulatory charges, the Ottawa Provincial Offences Court has not seen any significant issues relating to delays in prosecuting matters to trial, any more so than before the Jordan decision was issued," O'Connor wrote.

The city saidits provincial offences court has a relatively short time-to-trial average compared to other municipalities across Ontario. It hasadded additional court sessions this summer and fall to ensure the court schedule is running on time.

Timeline shouldn't be as strict

Legal experts have mixed reactions to the Jordan decision being used on tickets and fines.

Dalhousie University Prof. Stephen Coughlan, whohas spent the last 30 years studying the right to atrial in a reasonable time, said a time limit should apply to parking tickets,but not the strict 18-monthdeadline.

"It's a littlesurprising,"said Coughlan. "The actual stress caused by the fact that, 'Oh no I'mgoing to have go to trial overthis parking ticket,' is really not the same I would suspect as theft or assault."

Carissima Mathen, aUniversity of Ottawa law professor,feels differently.

"Why should very minor offences be languishing in thesystem for years, what is the social value in that?" she questioned.

"Especially if it means that courts are going to be having to devote resources to these cases as opposed to more serious offences."

Both provincial and Ottawa officials confirmed to CBC they are nottracking how many regulatory charges under the provincial offences act are thrown out because of the Jordan decision.

Did you have your parking ticket thrown out due to court delays? Email: ashley.burke@cbc.ca

Ticket under a windshield wiper
The city and province could not say how many parking tickets have been thrown out because of court delays since the Jordan decision because they are not tracking the numbers. (Ashley Burke/CBC)