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[[Category:Encyclopedia-Ontario Small Claims Court]]
[[Category:Ontario Small Claims Court]]


==RULES OF THE SMALL CLAIMS COURT==
==RULES OF THE SMALL CLAIMS COURT==
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<ref name="SCSMRules">O. Reg. 258/98: RULES OF THE SMALL CLAIMS COURT, <https://www.ontario.ca/laws/regulation/980258>, retrieved 2020-11-24</ref>
<ref name="SCSMRules">O. Reg. 258/98: RULES OF THE SMALL CLAIMS COURT, <https://www.ontario.ca/laws/regulation/980258>, retrieved 2020-11-24</ref>
==Cash Flow Recoveries Inc. v Crate, 2017 CanLII 9446 (ON SCSM)<ref name="Crate"/>==
In both motions, <b><u>the Plaintiff seeks an order allowing substituted service of the Claim on the Defendant by private message to the Defendant’s Facebook account.</b></u>
The Law
In considering this motion, I have reviewed several cases in which the court considered requests for similar orders, and I note that service via email, Facebook or other forms of social media are becoming increasingly common.  I take particular note of the decisions rendered in Van Nguyen v. Hart [2015] O.J. No. 1766; Eastview Properties Inc. v. Mohamed [2014] O.J. No. 4220 (OSCJ); and <i>Jewish Family and Child Services of Greater Toronto v. K.B. 2016 ONCJ 259 (CanLII), [2016] O.J. No. 2377 (OCJ)</i><ref name="CAS"/>.  As Justice Sherr notes in the latter decision, many such orders are not reported and are based on affidavit evidence which confirms the facts relating to the defendant’s social media or email account.  Citing <i>Burke v. Doe, 2013 BCSC 964</i><ref name="Burke"/>, the court notes with respect to such orders:
::“They reflect the reality of today’s methods of communication which are increasingly electronic.”[14]
Rule 8.01 of the Small Claims Court Rules provides that a Claim shall be personally served as provided in Rule 8.02 or by an alternative to personal service as provided in Rule 8.03.
In circumstances where impractical to effect service personally or by an alternative to personal service under Rule 8.03, Rule 8.04 allows the court to order substituted service.
(...)
Master Haberman, citing Master Dash in Chambers v. Muslim, 2007 CarswellOnt 6438, concludes that, under the Ontario Rules of Civil Procedure, the onus is on the Plaintiff “to show, on proper evidence, that the method they propose for substituted service will have “some likelihood” or a “reasonable possibility” of bringing the proceeding to the defendant’s attention.” [21]
He goes on to state:
::“This test is an important one as it brings an air of reality to the process. Unless the court is satisfied that there is a reasonable possibility that notice of a proceeding will reach a defendant when an order permitting substituted service as sought is signed, the point of the entire exercise is lost. The court should never pay lip service to these Rules and sign these orders, without any real expectation that they will achieve what is expected: to give a defendant notice of a proceeding. There is no basis to claim that our legal system is predicated on notice to defendants if we stray from it regularly and without justification. Ignoring rather than applying the Rules leads to a Kafka novel.” [22]
In his decision, Master Haberman notes that Plaintiffs too often rely on addresses for service which they know, or ought to know, are outdated and offer little or no prospect of being the Defendant’s current address.
Although the decision in Jewish Family and Child Services of Greater Toronto v. K.B. is a family court decision, it provides a useful checklist of criteria to be considered by a court in determining whether service via Facebook is a suitable option.  <b><u>In allowing the motion for substituted service by Facebook private message, Justice Sherr considered the following facts in the Applicant’s affidavit to be particularly relevant:</b></u>
<u>
::i. The Applicant had located a Facebook account in the same name as the person sought to be served.
::ii. The name was not a common name – increasing the likelihood that the Facebook account holder and the person sought to be served were one and the same.
::iii. The Facebook profile included photographs which indicated that the account holder and the person to be served were one and the same.
::iv. Prior to filing the affidavit, a representative of the Applicant exchanged private messages with the Facebook account holder which indicated that this account belonged to the party sought to be served.
::v. The exchange of messages on the Facebook account a short time before the motion date indicated that the Facebook account was still active. [6-13]</u>
In my view, the factors noted by Justice Sherr in granting the motion for substituted service by Facebook private message, while not intended to be exhaustive, are helpful in considering such motions in the Ontario Small Claims Court.  These factors, in my view, increase the likelihood of such substituted service being effective in bringing the notice of motion to the attention of the Defendant.
In addition to evidence to support the finding that the Facebook account holder and the person to be served are one and the same, it is equally important to have evidence of some recent activity on the account.  Facebook or other social media accounts, or other internet “addresses”, are as easily abandoned as physical addresses, if not more so.  Consequently, service of notice to an abandoned Facebook account is no more likely to give actual notice of a claim to a defendant than would mailing the claim to a physical address that is no longer occupied by the Defendant.
I also cite with favour Justice Sherr’s decision to order service via the private message feature on the Facebook account of the person to be served, to avoid unnecessary public exposure or embarrassment.  In ordering substituted service in the Jewish Family and Child Services of Greater Toronto v. K.B case, Justice Sherr also ordered that service be made from a different Facebook account than the one previously used by the Applicant to contact the party to be served, recognizing that the party to be served may now have blocked that account.
Analysis and Order
In the case before me, the Plaintiff’s affidavit evidence indicates that:
::i. Previous efforts to serve the Claim personally on the Defendant have failed;
::ii. The Defendant has changed his physical address at least once since the first attempts at service; and
::iii. The Plaintiff has located a Facebook account in the same name as the Defendant.
<b><u>The affidavit evidence does not support a finding that the Facebook account holder and the Defendant are one and the same.  By way of example, there is no evidence that the photos on the Facebook homepage are or appear to be photos of the Defendant.</b></u>
Furthermore, the affidavit evidence does not support a finding that the Facebook account in question is currently active.  Again, by way of example, there is no evidence of recent messages being exchanged or recent photographs or other postings to the Facebook account.
For the foregoing reasons, <b><u>I am not satisfied that service of the Claim by private message to the Facebook account identified in the motion materials would have a reasonable possibility of bringing the Claim to the attention of the Defendant.</b></u>  The motion is therefore dismissed.
<ref name="Crate">Cash Flow Recoveries Inc. v Crate, 2017 CanLII 9446 (ON SCSM), <http://canlii.ca/t/gxr6c>, retrieved on 2020-11-24</ref>
<ref name="CAS">Jewish Family and Child Service of Greater Toronto v. K.B., 2016 ONCJ 259 (CanLII), <http://canlii.ca/t/gr6ks>, retrieved on 2020-11-24</ref>
<ref name="Burke">Burke v. John Doe, 2013 BCSC 964 (CanLII), <http://canlii.ca/t/fxqw2>, retrieved on 2020-11-24</ref>
==Cash Flow Recoveries Inc v Stearns, 2015 CanLII 63993 (ON SCSM)<ref name="Stearns"/>==
The Plaintiff brings this motion ex parte requesting an order for substituted service of the Plaintiff’s Claim on the Defendants by email pursuant to Rule 8.04.
'''The Law'''
Rule 8.01 (1) of the Small Claims Court Rules provides:
::“8.01 (1) A plaintiff’s claim…shall be served personally as provided in rule 8.02 or by an alternative to personal service as provided in rule 8.03.”
Rule 8.03 sets out the alternatives to personal service and Rule 8.03 (7) permits service on an individual by sending a copy of the claim by registered mail or courier to the individual’s place of residence with verification of receipt by signature.  This is the method of service attempted by the Plaintiff in this instance, which method has failed.
The Plaintiff now seeks an order for substituted service by email pursuant to Rule 8.04 which provides:
::“8.04 Substituted Service – If it is shown that it is impractical to effect prompt service of a claim personally or by an alternative to personal service, the court may allow substituted service.”
'''Analysis and Decision'''
::While I am satisfied that, in appropriate circumstances, the authority exists for a Judge of the Small Claims Court to order substituted service by email under Rule 8.04, I am not satisfied that the facts of this case warrant such an order.
::<b><u>“Substituted service is the exception, and should not be necessary in most cases, particularly given the flexible methods of alternative service available as of right where personal service is impractical or problematic.”  Ontario Small Claims Court Practice 2015, Zucker and Winny (Carswell, 2015) at p. 590.</b></u>
::“Service”, in this context, means providing copies of the documents to the other parties in a court case.  It is obviously of critical importance to the fair administration of justice that a claim be received by the defendants.
<b><u>In this case, there appears to be no uncertainty as to the address at which the Defendants reside.  While they may not have been co-operative in responding to the Plaintiff’s pre-litigation collection efforts, this is not sufficient, in my view, to establish that the Defendants are actively attempting to evade service.  No attempt has been made by the Plaintiff to effect personal service under Rule 8.02.  I also note that a failed attempt of personal service under Rule 8.02 would still permit service by alternative permitted under Rule 8.03(2).</b></u>
Plaintiff’s motion for an order for substituted service is denied.
<ref name="Stearns">Cash Flow Recoveries Inc v Stearns, 2015 CanLII 63993 (ON SCSM), <http://canlii.ca/t/glk3b>, retrieved on 2020-11-24</ref>
==Eastview Properties Inc. v Wayne Mohamed, 2014 CanLII 52397 (ON SCSM)<ref name="Eastview"/>==
The Plaintiff has brought a Motion to request an Order validating Service of the Claim on the Defendant, Wayne Mohamed (the Defendant Mohamed), by email or in the alternative, an Order for Substituted Service by email or by Facebook private message.
[...]
Rule 8 of the Small Claims Court Rules provides that claims are to be served personally on all named Defendants.  There is provision for substituted Service where the Plaintiff has made reasonable steps to serve the Defendant personally and provides evidence that it is impractical to do so.
It is trite to state that a litigant should be personally made aware of claims within a timely manner.  Substituted service or validation of service is the exception rather than the rule. The exception applies only where the Plaintiff has shown that reasonable efforts have been made to serve a Defendant personally and that it would be impractical to serve by face-to-face or hand- delivered means.  Impractical is not a synonym for inconvenient.
Some decision makers have granted Orders for substituted service by using common and popular social media sites such as Facebook.  The Rules are silent regarding the service of Claims by email or electronic popular social networking sites.
<b><u>I am of the view that the Plaintiff may be allowed to substitute a method of service of a Claim on a Defendant if the Plaintiff can establish that the alternative method used would result in the Claim coming to the notice of that Defendant.  In this case, it seems likely that the Plaintiff will be able to make the Defendant Mohamed have notice of the Claim through use of the Facebook account.</b></u>
The Plaintiff and legal representatives have been diligent in trying to locate the Defendant Mohamed in order to make the latter aware of the Claim in a timely manner.
'''TERMS OF THE ORDER GRA NTED'''
An Order for Substituted Service of the Plaintiff`s Claim on the Defendant Mohamed is granted on the following terms:
::A) The Plaintiff may send a Facebook private message to the Defendant Wayne Mohamed.
::B) The Plaintiff shall be granted an extension of time of 3 months from the date of this Order for serving the Claim. An affidavit of Service should be filed with the Court setting out the steps taken to bring notice of the Plaintiff`s Claim to the Defendant Mohamed by using Facebook private message.
::C) The effective date of Service shall be the date that the private message was sent to the Defendant Mohamed via Facebook provided the Plaintiff files affidavit evidence that he was contacted by such means.
::D) No costs are ordered.
<ref name="Eastview">Eastview Properties Inc. v Wayne Mohamed, 2014 CanLII 52397 (ON SCSM), <http://canlii.ca/t/g8z5b>, retrieved on 2020-11-24</ref>
==Spiegel v Intact Insurance Company, 2015 CanLII 4892 (ON SCSM)<ref name="Spiegel"/>==
[...]
A just determination of the real matters in dispute would not occur if I gave effect to the Plaintiff’s argument on this service point. <b><u>While service by email was a technical breach of the Rules, in the circumstances I conclude that on the basis of Rule 2.01. I should not refuse to consider the Defendant’s submissions because they were served by email.</b></u>
If necessary, and in the alternative, <b><u>I conclude that the service by email should be permitted by virtue of an order for substituted service under Rule 8.04, and accordingly, even though it is after the fact, I order that service by email be authorized. Since the Plaintff was served by substituted service with the Defendant’s submissions, on this basis I should not refuse to consider the Defendant’s submissions.</b></u>
On the second issue the Plaintiff has a more legitimate concern. My previous endorsement, written at the end of the oral submissions, limited written submissions to the “deductible” issue discussed below. The Defendant’s written submissions went beyond the “deductible” issue and the Plaintiff objects to the broader scope of the Defendant’s written submissions. For the reasons set out below this objection is however moot, because on the broader issue of the limitation period, even after considering the Defendant’s further written submissions, I was not persuaded to adopt the Defendant’s position, and so I don’t see any need to accept the Plaintiff’s position on this procedural objection because the further articulation of the Defendant’s position did not have any practical impact on the Plaintiff. [5]
[...]
<ref name="Spiegel">Spiegel v Intact Insurance Company, 2015 CanLII 4892 (ON SCSM), <http://canlii.ca/t/gg7kh>, retrieved on 2020-11-24
</ref>


==References==
==References==

Latest revision as of 18:11, 13 December 2020


RULES OF THE SMALL CLAIMS COURT

8.01 (1) A plaintiff’s claim or defendant’s claim (Form 7A or 10A) shall be served personally as provided in rule 8.02 or by an alternative to personal service as provided in rule 8.03. O. Reg. 258/98, r. 8.01 (1).

Substituted Service

8.04 If it is shown that it is impractical to effect prompt service of a claim personally or by an alternative to personal service, the court may allow substituted service. O. Reg. 258/98, r. 8.04.

8.10 A person who has been served or who is deemed to have been served with a document in accordance with these rules is nevertheless entitled to show, on a motion to set aside the consequences of default, on a motion for an extension of time or in support of a request for an adjournment, that the document,

(a) did not come to the person’s notice; or
(b) came to the person’s notice only at some time later than when it was served or is deemed to have been served. O. Reg. 461/01, s. 9 (1).

[1]

Cash Flow Recoveries Inc. v Crate, 2017 CanLII 9446 (ON SCSM)[2]

In both motions, the Plaintiff seeks an order allowing substituted service of the Claim on the Defendant by private message to the Defendant’s Facebook account.

The Law

In considering this motion, I have reviewed several cases in which the court considered requests for similar orders, and I note that service via email, Facebook or other forms of social media are becoming increasingly common. I take particular note of the decisions rendered in Van Nguyen v. Hart [2015] O.J. No. 1766; Eastview Properties Inc. v. Mohamed [2014] O.J. No. 4220 (OSCJ); and Jewish Family and Child Services of Greater Toronto v. K.B. 2016 ONCJ 259 (CanLII), [2016] O.J. No. 2377 (OCJ)[3]. As Justice Sherr notes in the latter decision, many such orders are not reported and are based on affidavit evidence which confirms the facts relating to the defendant’s social media or email account. Citing Burke v. Doe, 2013 BCSC 964[4], the court notes with respect to such orders:

“They reflect the reality of today’s methods of communication which are increasingly electronic.”[14]

Rule 8.01 of the Small Claims Court Rules provides that a Claim shall be personally served as provided in Rule 8.02 or by an alternative to personal service as provided in Rule 8.03.

In circumstances where impractical to effect service personally or by an alternative to personal service under Rule 8.03, Rule 8.04 allows the court to order substituted service.

(...)

Master Haberman, citing Master Dash in Chambers v. Muslim, 2007 CarswellOnt 6438, concludes that, under the Ontario Rules of Civil Procedure, the onus is on the Plaintiff “to show, on proper evidence, that the method they propose for substituted service will have “some likelihood” or a “reasonable possibility” of bringing the proceeding to the defendant’s attention.” [21]

He goes on to state:

“This test is an important one as it brings an air of reality to the process. Unless the court is satisfied that there is a reasonable possibility that notice of a proceeding will reach a defendant when an order permitting substituted service as sought is signed, the point of the entire exercise is lost. The court should never pay lip service to these Rules and sign these orders, without any real expectation that they will achieve what is expected: to give a defendant notice of a proceeding. There is no basis to claim that our legal system is predicated on notice to defendants if we stray from it regularly and without justification. Ignoring rather than applying the Rules leads to a Kafka novel.” [22]

In his decision, Master Haberman notes that Plaintiffs too often rely on addresses for service which they know, or ought to know, are outdated and offer little or no prospect of being the Defendant’s current address.

Although the decision in Jewish Family and Child Services of Greater Toronto v. K.B. is a family court decision, it provides a useful checklist of criteria to be considered by a court in determining whether service via Facebook is a suitable option. In allowing the motion for substituted service by Facebook private message, Justice Sherr considered the following facts in the Applicant’s affidavit to be particularly relevant:

i. The Applicant had located a Facebook account in the same name as the person sought to be served.
ii. The name was not a common name – increasing the likelihood that the Facebook account holder and the person sought to be served were one and the same.
iii. The Facebook profile included photographs which indicated that the account holder and the person to be served were one and the same.
iv. Prior to filing the affidavit, a representative of the Applicant exchanged private messages with the Facebook account holder which indicated that this account belonged to the party sought to be served.
v. The exchange of messages on the Facebook account a short time before the motion date indicated that the Facebook account was still active. [6-13]

In my view, the factors noted by Justice Sherr in granting the motion for substituted service by Facebook private message, while not intended to be exhaustive, are helpful in considering such motions in the Ontario Small Claims Court. These factors, in my view, increase the likelihood of such substituted service being effective in bringing the notice of motion to the attention of the Defendant.

In addition to evidence to support the finding that the Facebook account holder and the person to be served are one and the same, it is equally important to have evidence of some recent activity on the account. Facebook or other social media accounts, or other internet “addresses”, are as easily abandoned as physical addresses, if not more so. Consequently, service of notice to an abandoned Facebook account is no more likely to give actual notice of a claim to a defendant than would mailing the claim to a physical address that is no longer occupied by the Defendant.

I also cite with favour Justice Sherr’s decision to order service via the private message feature on the Facebook account of the person to be served, to avoid unnecessary public exposure or embarrassment. In ordering substituted service in the Jewish Family and Child Services of Greater Toronto v. K.B case, Justice Sherr also ordered that service be made from a different Facebook account than the one previously used by the Applicant to contact the party to be served, recognizing that the party to be served may now have blocked that account.

Analysis and Order

In the case before me, the Plaintiff’s affidavit evidence indicates that:

i. Previous efforts to serve the Claim personally on the Defendant have failed;
ii. The Defendant has changed his physical address at least once since the first attempts at service; and
iii. The Plaintiff has located a Facebook account in the same name as the Defendant.

The affidavit evidence does not support a finding that the Facebook account holder and the Defendant are one and the same. By way of example, there is no evidence that the photos on the Facebook homepage are or appear to be photos of the Defendant.

Furthermore, the affidavit evidence does not support a finding that the Facebook account in question is currently active. Again, by way of example, there is no evidence of recent messages being exchanged or recent photographs or other postings to the Facebook account.

For the foregoing reasons, I am not satisfied that service of the Claim by private message to the Facebook account identified in the motion materials would have a reasonable possibility of bringing the Claim to the attention of the Defendant. The motion is therefore dismissed.

[2] [3] [4]

Cash Flow Recoveries Inc v Stearns, 2015 CanLII 63993 (ON SCSM)[5]

The Plaintiff brings this motion ex parte requesting an order for substituted service of the Plaintiff’s Claim on the Defendants by email pursuant to Rule 8.04.

The Law

Rule 8.01 (1) of the Small Claims Court Rules provides:

“8.01 (1) A plaintiff’s claim…shall be served personally as provided in rule 8.02 or by an alternative to personal service as provided in rule 8.03.”

Rule 8.03 sets out the alternatives to personal service and Rule 8.03 (7) permits service on an individual by sending a copy of the claim by registered mail or courier to the individual’s place of residence with verification of receipt by signature. This is the method of service attempted by the Plaintiff in this instance, which method has failed.

The Plaintiff now seeks an order for substituted service by email pursuant to Rule 8.04 which provides:

“8.04 Substituted Service – If it is shown that it is impractical to effect prompt service of a claim personally or by an alternative to personal service, the court may allow substituted service.”

Analysis and Decision

While I am satisfied that, in appropriate circumstances, the authority exists for a Judge of the Small Claims Court to order substituted service by email under Rule 8.04, I am not satisfied that the facts of this case warrant such an order.
“Substituted service is the exception, and should not be necessary in most cases, particularly given the flexible methods of alternative service available as of right where personal service is impractical or problematic.” Ontario Small Claims Court Practice 2015, Zucker and Winny (Carswell, 2015) at p. 590.
“Service”, in this context, means providing copies of the documents to the other parties in a court case. It is obviously of critical importance to the fair administration of justice that a claim be received by the defendants.

In this case, there appears to be no uncertainty as to the address at which the Defendants reside. While they may not have been co-operative in responding to the Plaintiff’s pre-litigation collection efforts, this is not sufficient, in my view, to establish that the Defendants are actively attempting to evade service. No attempt has been made by the Plaintiff to effect personal service under Rule 8.02. I also note that a failed attempt of personal service under Rule 8.02 would still permit service by alternative permitted under Rule 8.03(2).

Plaintiff’s motion for an order for substituted service is denied.

[5]

Eastview Properties Inc. v Wayne Mohamed, 2014 CanLII 52397 (ON SCSM)[6]

The Plaintiff has brought a Motion to request an Order validating Service of the Claim on the Defendant, Wayne Mohamed (the Defendant Mohamed), by email or in the alternative, an Order for Substituted Service by email or by Facebook private message.

[...]

Rule 8 of the Small Claims Court Rules provides that claims are to be served personally on all named Defendants. There is provision for substituted Service where the Plaintiff has made reasonable steps to serve the Defendant personally and provides evidence that it is impractical to do so.

It is trite to state that a litigant should be personally made aware of claims within a timely manner. Substituted service or validation of service is the exception rather than the rule. The exception applies only where the Plaintiff has shown that reasonable efforts have been made to serve a Defendant personally and that it would be impractical to serve by face-to-face or hand- delivered means. Impractical is not a synonym for inconvenient.

Some decision makers have granted Orders for substituted service by using common and popular social media sites such as Facebook. The Rules are silent regarding the service of Claims by email or electronic popular social networking sites.

I am of the view that the Plaintiff may be allowed to substitute a method of service of a Claim on a Defendant if the Plaintiff can establish that the alternative method used would result in the Claim coming to the notice of that Defendant. In this case, it seems likely that the Plaintiff will be able to make the Defendant Mohamed have notice of the Claim through use of the Facebook account.

The Plaintiff and legal representatives have been diligent in trying to locate the Defendant Mohamed in order to make the latter aware of the Claim in a timely manner.

TERMS OF THE ORDER GRA NTED

An Order for Substituted Service of the Plaintiff`s Claim on the Defendant Mohamed is granted on the following terms:

A) The Plaintiff may send a Facebook private message to the Defendant Wayne Mohamed.
B) The Plaintiff shall be granted an extension of time of 3 months from the date of this Order for serving the Claim. An affidavit of Service should be filed with the Court setting out the steps taken to bring notice of the Plaintiff`s Claim to the Defendant Mohamed by using Facebook private message.
C) The effective date of Service shall be the date that the private message was sent to the Defendant Mohamed via Facebook provided the Plaintiff files affidavit evidence that he was contacted by such means.
D) No costs are ordered.

[6]

Spiegel v Intact Insurance Company, 2015 CanLII 4892 (ON SCSM)[7]

[...]

A just determination of the real matters in dispute would not occur if I gave effect to the Plaintiff’s argument on this service point. While service by email was a technical breach of the Rules, in the circumstances I conclude that on the basis of Rule 2.01. I should not refuse to consider the Defendant’s submissions because they were served by email.

If necessary, and in the alternative, I conclude that the service by email should be permitted by virtue of an order for substituted service under Rule 8.04, and accordingly, even though it is after the fact, I order that service by email be authorized. Since the Plaintff was served by substituted service with the Defendant’s submissions, on this basis I should not refuse to consider the Defendant’s submissions.

On the second issue the Plaintiff has a more legitimate concern. My previous endorsement, written at the end of the oral submissions, limited written submissions to the “deductible” issue discussed below. The Defendant’s written submissions went beyond the “deductible” issue and the Plaintiff objects to the broader scope of the Defendant’s written submissions. For the reasons set out below this objection is however moot, because on the broader issue of the limitation period, even after considering the Defendant’s further written submissions, I was not persuaded to adopt the Defendant’s position, and so I don’t see any need to accept the Plaintiff’s position on this procedural objection because the further articulation of the Defendant’s position did not have any practical impact on the Plaintiff. [5]

[...]

[7]

References

  1. O. Reg. 258/98: RULES OF THE SMALL CLAIMS COURT, <https://www.ontario.ca/laws/regulation/980258>, retrieved 2020-11-24
  2. 2.0 2.1 Cash Flow Recoveries Inc. v Crate, 2017 CanLII 9446 (ON SCSM), <http://canlii.ca/t/gxr6c>, retrieved on 2020-11-24
  3. 3.0 3.1 Jewish Family and Child Service of Greater Toronto v. K.B., 2016 ONCJ 259 (CanLII), <http://canlii.ca/t/gr6ks>, retrieved on 2020-11-24
  4. 4.0 4.1 Burke v. John Doe, 2013 BCSC 964 (CanLII), <http://canlii.ca/t/fxqw2>, retrieved on 2020-11-24
  5. 5.0 5.1 Cash Flow Recoveries Inc v Stearns, 2015 CanLII 63993 (ON SCSM), <http://canlii.ca/t/glk3b>, retrieved on 2020-11-24
  6. 6.0 6.1 Eastview Properties Inc. v Wayne Mohamed, 2014 CanLII 52397 (ON SCSM), <http://canlii.ca/t/g8z5b>, retrieved on 2020-11-24
  7. 7.0 7.1 Spiegel v Intact Insurance Company, 2015 CanLII 4892 (ON SCSM), <http://canlii.ca/t/gg7kh>, retrieved on 2020-11-24