Category Archives: Mental Health

Residential Tenancies, Mental Disabilities, and Evictions

By: Jonnette Watson Hamilton

Case Commented On: AG obo ZG v FirstService Residential Alberta Ltd, 2022 AHRC 38 (CanLII)

PDF Version: Residential Tenancies, Mental Disabilities, and Evictions

This case concerns a challenge to an eviction from a rented condominium – a challenge claiming the eviction discriminated against a tenant’s child on the ground of mental disability. There is something wrong with this decision to confirm the Director’s dismissal of the tenant’s complaint. The conclusion that there was no reasonable basis in the evidence to proceed to a hearing does not follow from the facts that are recounted. This may simply be because all the relevant facts are not set out in the decision. But based on the facts that are summarized, the most plausible –perhaps the only possible – inference is that the tenancy was terminated because the tenant’s son had a mental disability that the landlord, building manager, and other residents of the condominium building thought meant the son would endanger them or their property in the future, and no accommodation was possible. Continue reading

Appellate Court Discusses Impact of Mental Health on Sentencing in Overturning Jail Term for Possession of Gun

By: Meryl Friedland

PDF Version: Appellate Court Discusses Impact of Mental Health on Sentencing in Overturning Jail Term for Possession of Gun 

Case Commented On: R v Fabbro, 2021 ONCA 494 (CanLII)

The Ontario Court of Appeal recently released R v Fabbro, 2021 ONCA 494 (CanLII), which addresses the sanction for a criminal offence committed during a mental health crisis. The facts of the case and grounds of appeal relate to a suicide attempt and suicidal ideation, which are discussed throughout this post. Mr. Fabbro’s charges related to possession of a firearm that he was using in an attempt to end his life. The sentencing judge decided that Mr. Fabbro should go to jail for two years for this. The Court of Appeal overturned the decision and substituted a conditional sentence order – colloquially, ‘house arrest’ or jail in the community. Continue reading