Close X
Monday, November 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

Tenant Evicted Under 'Draconian' Pot Law Loses Bid To Be Allowed Back Home

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Oct, 2019 08:09 PM

    TORONTO - A legal tenant evicted from his Toronto apartment because the building was being used as an illegal cannabis store has lost his bid to be allowed to return while he challenges the constitutionality of the law that put him on the street.

     

    In his ruling, an Ontario judge decided that allowing Jeffrey Brodie to go back home could result in the unlicensed pot retailer, CAFE, resuming its illicit marijuana sales on the site.

     

    "I recognize that (Brodie) is in difficult circumstances," Superior Court Justice Peter Cavanagh wrote. "However, (he) has failed to discharge his onus....of satisfying me that if an order is made that entry to the premises cease to be barred, the use to which the premises will be put will not involve resumption of CAFE's illegal business."

     

    Under the province's Cannabis Control Act, police have the power to remove occupants and seal off a building used for illegal cannabis sales until related charges have been dealt with. An amendment that took effect in July closed a loophole that had barred officers from evicting residential tenants.

     

    Brodie, 42, argues the "draconian" law contravenes his charter rights in part because it allows eviction of law-abiding tenants, and the seizure of their belongings, without due process. It also forces evicted tenants to prove their innocence, he argues.

     

    Despite a series of charges, orders to cease operations and attempts to seal off the building, CAFE repeatedly returned to cannabis sales at the two-storey building on Harbord Street. In July, authorities placed concrete blocks to barricade the entrance. CAFE then moved its operations outside, but Brodie lost access to his second-floor apartment and most of his possessions.

     

    The tenant, who was not implicated in CAFE's activities and said he was unaware of them — evidence the court accepted — asked Cavanagh to let him back in. If allowed to return, he said he would not give CAFE keys to the building and would alert the city if the company resumed its business anyway.

     

    Cavanagh was unpersuaded. Brodie, the judge said, had offered little to show he could stop the company from selling cannabis illegally to the public given CAFE's determination to resume its operations on site.

     

    Brodie, who makes his living as a painter, recently told The Canadian Press he had been couch-surfing and sleeping in parks since his eviction.

     

    Cavanaugh expressed sympathy for Brodie's plight and said he could raise the impact of the building closure when his constitutional case is heard, likely in January. At the same time, the judge said Brodie had not made a strong enough case to be allowed back in until then.

     

    "The conditions proposed by (Brodie) are not sufficient to satisfy me that, if an order is made that the premises cease to be barred to (him), the use to which the premises will be put will not contravene (the act)," Cavanagh said.

     

    Brodie's lawyer, Selwyn Pieters, said his client was angry and frustrated by the situation, and he planned to appeal Cavanagh's re-entry ruling. It would have been untenable to put Brodie in the "impossible" position of being a legal tenant required to police how the rest of the building was being used, Pieters said.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Last Sable Island Horse In Captivity Dies At Wildlife Park In Nova Scotia

    Last Sable Island Horse In Captivity Dies At Wildlife Park In Nova Scotia
    HALIFAX - The last Sable Island horse in captivity has died.    

    Last Sable Island Horse In Captivity Dies At Wildlife Park In Nova Scotia

    Major Bridges May Close Monday As Extinction Rebellion Protest Planned

    HALIFAX - A group of environmental activists is planning to try and shut down some of Canada's busiest bridges on Monday by having protesters lie down in traffic lanes.

    Major Bridges May Close Monday As Extinction Rebellion Protest Planned

    Three Teens Plead Guilty In St. Michael's College School Sex Assault Scandal

    TORONTO - Three former students of a prestigious Toronto private school pleaded guilty Thursday in a sex assault scandal that rocked the all-boys Catholic institution last year.

    Three Teens Plead Guilty In St. Michael's College School Sex Assault Scandal

    Roger Taillibert, Designer Of Montreal's Olympic Stadium, Dead At 93

    MONTREAL - Roger Taillibert, the architect who designed Montreal's Olympic Stadium, has died at the age of 93.    

    Roger Taillibert, Designer Of Montreal's Olympic Stadium, Dead At 93

    Andrew Scheer Says He Is Personally 'Pro-Life,' But Would Not Reopen Abortion Debate

    OTTAWA - Andrew Scheer says he is personally against abortion, but promised again Thursday that a Conservative government under his leadership would not reopen the debate.    

    Andrew Scheer Says He Is Personally 'Pro-Life,' But Would Not Reopen Abortion Debate

    B.C. Woman Awarded Constitutional Right To Use The Term 'Death Midwife'

    B.C. Woman Awarded Constitutional Right To Use The Term 'Death Midwife'
    The college took Pashta MaryMoon to court claiming she violated the Health Professions Act to use the term midwife.

    B.C. Woman Awarded Constitutional Right To Use The Term 'Death Midwife'