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Andre Aaron Gerrard v. Her Majesty the Queen
The appellant was convicted after trial before a judge alone of thirteen counts relating to various offences committed against his common law spouse. Applying the principles set out in R. v. W.(D.), [1991] 1 S.C.R. 742, the trial judge concluded that the complainant had not been motivated to lie, and that the evidence did not give rise to such an inference. The trial judge accepted the complainant’s evidence and found that it did not raise a reasonable doubt, and she rejected the appellant’s evidence and concluded that it also did not raise a reasonable doubt. A majority of the Nova Scotia Court of Appeal dismissed the appellant’s appeal and upheld the convictions. In the majority’s view, the trial judge did not misapply W.(D.) and she did not err in assessing the complainant’s credibility. In dissent, Bryson J.A. would have allowed the appeal and ordered a new trial.
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Gerrard, Andre Aaron
Law Firm / Organization
JTH Law
Lawyer(s)

Jonathan T. Hughes

Her Majesty the Queen
Law Firm / Organization
Not specified
Supreme Court of Canada
39874
Criminal law
Not specified/Unspecified