maucheung wrote:Hi Radar,
Thanks for your suggestion and I have the following questions.
Q1) My charge was on Apr 21, 2010 and I went to court plead not guilty on May 03, 2010. Wihich date will the court use to count
the days ? Since the trial day is March 29, 2011 and if they use May 03, 2010, it is not 11 months yet. Can I still file an
11B ?
Q2) If I am going to file an 11b, should I do it now ? Also, should I turn down any plea-bargain with the prosecutor ?
Q3) What happens if the Justice turn down my 11b application ? Does it mean I have to accept the charge (i.e. 3 points & $110
fine) ?
Q4) Since I am filing 11b, should I still apply for the disclosure ?
Please advise. Thanks.
Q5) Courts generally allow a maximum of 18 months between the date the offence was committed and the trial date. Is 11 months good enough to file 11b ?
Answers:
a1) Date of ticket, april 21 of 2010.
a2) you should submit the application for stay of proceedings (11b) at least 20 days before the trial. So you have plenty of time. But start preparing the form now.
There's a quick guide under the "Courts and Procedures" section.
a3) If the judge turns down your 11b motion then you will have to plead guilty or innocent.
a4) yes, ask for disclosure right away. See attached template.
a5)
The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedom states, in part:
Section 11: Any person charged with an offence has the right:
(b) – to be tried within a reasonable time (d) – to be presumed innocent until proven guilty according to the law….
The Supreme Court of Canada has provided a guideline of 8 to 10 months in a decision called Morin
and the same court spoke to an administrative intake period, for each court in a case called Askov.
Based on the guideline and the intake time, Courts are providing Stay of Proceedings for trials which
have taken 11 to 14 months to proceed, after the initial charge (s) was laid. In Toronto, at the old city
hall, Prosecutors are allowing cases of 14 months or longer to be stayed (in lay persons terms – to have
your charge(s) suspended or dismissed).
Read this: http://scopezoom.com/11b/application-fo ... edings.pdf
In order to submit an "Application for Stay of Proceedings" the Courts expect you to provide this application in a specific format which has all the essential ingredients of an Application for Stay pursuant to Section 11 (b) of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms. This is also referred to as a Constitutional challenge. In the case where your trial takes 11 to 14 months to proceed, after the initial charge, through no fault of your own, under section 24 (1)