Tuesday, April 14, 2026
ADVT 
National

Name Of 'Domestic Violence Court' Constitutional; Man Claimed Discrimination

The Canadian Press, 25 Apr, 2016 11:54 AM
    TORONTO — A man who argued the name of Ontario's domestic violence court caused him distress and violated his rights has had his constitutional challenge thrown out.
     
    In a decision released Monday, the province's top court ruled an appeal by Sean Foessl against an earlier ruling tossing the case was without merit.
     
    "Applications like this run the risk of trivializing the important rights protected by the charter," the Court of Appeal said in its ruling.
     
    Foessl, of Sudbury, Ont., was acquitted in January 2015 of two counts of breaching bail terms.
     
    Court records show police initially charged Foessl with assaulting his son after the boy's mother — his former domestic partner — complained. He was granted bail with a condition that he stay away from the woman's home.
     
    Evidence was that he did go to the house, but only after notifying police he needed to retrieve some belongings. He was charged with bail breach, and the prosecutor mistakenly assigned the case to the domestic violence court — which only deals with matters involving intimate partners — on the assumption that the victim was his former partner rather than his son.
     
    The case was then transferred to regular criminal court, where he was acquitted.
     
    Foessl then challenged the court's name on the grounds that it was discriminatory, caused him to suffer "serious state-imposed psychological harm," and amounted to cruel and unusual treatment.
     
     
    He argued he felt "intimidated, disadvantaged and stigmatized" while the case was before domestic violence court given that the alleged breach of bail did not involve or allege any violence. To back his argument, he filed an expert report from a psychologist, who said the man's feelings about the name were consistent with the "stigmas reported by several accused and incarcerated individuals" he had treated.
     
    In response, the Crown argued the specialized courts, part of the Ontario court of justice, were designed to respond to violence within intimate relationships, and the name was informally used throughout the system.
     
    Last August, Superior Court Justice Patricia Hennessy rejected his challenge.
     
    "The naming of 'DV Court' does not perpetrate any arbitrary disadvantage against the applicant or any other person or member of any group who appears there," Hennessy wrote.
     
    "The name simply and accurately reflects the scope of the work of the court to determine allegations of domestic violence."
     
    The Appeal Court said Hennessy applied the correct legal tests and her conclusions were supported by the record. It also ordered him to pay $2,000 in costs.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Halifax Teen Charged With Conspiracy To Commit Murder In High School Plot

    Halifax Teen Charged With Conspiracy To Commit Murder In High School Plot
    Police are accusing an 18-year-old man of plotting murder after officers found a bag of guns this month near a Halifax-area high school.

    Halifax Teen Charged With Conspiracy To Commit Murder In High School Plot

    New Brunswick To Rename Racially Charged 'Negro Brook Road,' Eight Other Landmarks

    New Brunswick To Rename Racially Charged 'Negro Brook Road,' Eight Other Landmarks
    The road, outside Sussex, N.B., is being renamed Harriet O'Ree Road.

    New Brunswick To Rename Racially Charged 'Negro Brook Road,' Eight Other Landmarks

    Police In Southern Alberta Investigate Facebook Post About Transgender Woman

    Police In Southern Alberta Investigate Facebook Post About Transgender Woman
    LETHBRIDGE, Alta. — Police in Lethbridge are investigating a complaint that an officer allegedly posted a comment on Facebook about a transgender woman attending a women's event.

    Police In Southern Alberta Investigate Facebook Post About Transgender Woman

    Rights Tribunal Awards B.C. Cop And Marijuana Advocate $20,000 For Hurt Dignity

    Rights Tribunal Awards B.C. Cop And Marijuana Advocate $20,000 For Hurt Dignity
    The British Columbia Human Rights Tribunal sided with Const. David Bratzer, saying his employer interfered with his rights as a citizen to freely express his views and ordered the award for injury to dignity, feelings and self-respect.

    Rights Tribunal Awards B.C. Cop And Marijuana Advocate $20,000 For Hurt Dignity

    Ontario Police Break Up 'Domestic Dispute' Between Man And Pet Parrot

    Ontario Police Break Up 'Domestic Dispute' Between Man And Pet Parrot
    Police in Brighton, between Toronto and Kingston, said they were originally called to a home at 8 p.m. on Tuesday after neighbours heard what they believed to be a domestic dispute.

    Ontario Police Break Up 'Domestic Dispute' Between Man And Pet Parrot

    As PM Trudeau Signs Un Climate Treaty, Now Comes The Hard Part: Respecting It

    As PM Trudeau Signs Un Climate Treaty, Now Comes The Hard Part: Respecting It
    UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau joined world leaders Friday to help formally ratify a global treaty on climate change.

    As PM Trudeau Signs Un Climate Treaty, Now Comes The Hard Part: Respecting It