For those needing the
refresher, the Ontario Superior Court of Justice told us yesterday
that:
"There is no claim for pooping and scooping into the neighbour’s
garbage can, and there is no claim for letting Rover water the
neighbour’s hedge. Likewise, there is no claim for looking at the
neighbour’s pretty house, parking a car legally but with
malintent, engaging in faux photography on a public street,
raising objections at a municipal hearing, walking on the sidewalk
with dictaphone in hand, or just plain thinking badly of a person
who lives nearby."
The court noted, in the same vein, that:
"As I explained to Plaintiffs’ counsel at the hearing, a court
cannot order the Defendants to be nice to the Plaintiffs. Litigation
must focus on legal wrongs and legal rights – commodities which are
in remarkably short supply in this action. As my colleague Perell J.
put it in
High Parklane Consulting Inc. v Royal Group
Technologies Ltd., [2007] OJ No 107 (SCJ), at para 36, “[i]t
is trite to say that making a living is a stressful activity and
that much of life can be nasty and brutish. Tort law does not
provide compensation for all stress-causing and nasty conduct that
individuals may suffer at the hands of another…”"
See (for an entertaining read)
Morland-Jones v Taerk, 2014
ONSC 3061 available at
http://canlii.ca/t/g6wvd.
Stephen
--
Professor Stephen G.A. Pitel
Goodmans LLP Faculty Fellow in Legal Ethics 2013-14
Faculty of Law, Western University
(519) 661-2111 ext 88433