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Disobeying an Order of the Court: When a judge or a justice of the peace makes an order, the law requires that you carry it out. Disobeying an order of the court is covered under s.127 (1) of the Criminal Code and you could be fined or sentenced to serve up to two years in jail on top of any penalty for the charge that brought you to court in the first place.
- Offence Wording
- Interpretation of The Offence
- Record Suspensions and Pardons
The wording "provided by law" in s. 127 (1) is limited to "statute law" and not of the common law. Violating a common-law peace bond does not amount to "disobeying a court order."
Convictions under s. 126 [disobeying a statute] or 127 [disobeying a court order] are eligible for record suspensions pursuant to s. 3 and 4 of the Criminal Records Act after 5 years after the expiration of sentence for summary conviction offences and 10 years after the expiration of sentence for all other offences. The offender may nothave the rec...
Section 127 (1) of the Criminal Code of Canada is an important provision that deals with the offence of disobeying a lawful order made by a court of justice or a person or body of persons authorized by law to make such orders. The section provides that any person who, without lawful excuse, disobeys a lawful order is guilty of an offence ...
Marginal note: Disobeying order of court 127 (1) Every one who, without lawful excuse, disobeys a lawful order made by a court of justice or by a person or body of persons authorized by any Act to make or give the order, other than an order for the payment of money, is, unless a punishment or other mode of proceeding is expressly provided by law, guilty of
Jun 18, 2024 · Disobeying a court order is criminalized under section 127 of the Criminal Code. Disobeying a court order is any defiance of an order made by a court or disobeying any type of order made by a person or body who is authorized to make such an order via a provincial or federal law or statute. Disobeying a court order is often only laid as a charge ...
A breach of a court order is to disobey or to fail to comply with. (fail to follow) a condition ordered by the court. The condition can be to do or not to do something as part of: a peace bond, a family law protection order (made in a family law case), a judicial interim release order (bail order),
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Sep 15, 2021 · penalties for disobeying a court order If you break a court order, it is a criminal offence taken very seriously by the court, and it will result in a breach charge being laid. Breaking court orders indicates to the Crown and Judges that an accused cannot follow the orders set by the court and cannot be trusted to abide by the conditions.