No Verdict on Motion to Dismiss Yet & Human Rights Tribunal Delivers Notice Again
- Leah Dyck
- Apr 26
- 2 min read

If you’ve been following along with my on-going legal proceedings, then you’ll know that last week I had two in-person hearings in front of Justice Suzan Fraser of the Superior Court of Justice, here at the Barrie Courthouse. On April 17, 2025, Justice Fraser heard my Application for leave to commence a derivative action against Barrie Housing, along with my Motion to Dismiss Barrie Housing’s defamation action against me. Although Justice Fraser did dismiss my derivative action, she reserved my Motion to Dismiss. In legal terms, reserving a decision in court means a judge doesn’t immediately deliver a verdict after hearing a case. Instead, she takes time to consider the matter and will issue a written decision at a later date. This allows her to fully analyze the evidence and legal arguments before reaching a conclusion.
On April 22, 2025, which was the Tuesday after the long Easter weekend, Justice Fraser uploaded the endorsement to dismiss my derivative action and to reserve my motion to dismiss, to case lines. Here’s the endorsement:
Human Rights Tribunal Delivers 2nd Notice of Application to Barrie Housing
Interestingly, half-an-hour after Justice Fraser’s endorsement was uploaded to case lines, the Human Rights Tribunal of Ontario (HRTO) delivered a Notice of Application to Barrie Housing (and myself) regarding my HRTO Application against Barrie Housing for reprisal. If you've been keeping up with what’s been going on, you’ll also know that Barrie Housing is trying to evict me through the Landlord and Tenant Board (LTB) for exposing its fraud scheme, and I’ve since filed an Application Form 1 with the HRTO, alleging reprisal. Barrie Housing has to respond by May 27, 2025. Here’s the Notice of Application:
I Updated the Ministry of the Attorney General
As you’re also probably aware, on February 18, 2025, I delivered my Notice of Intent to the Ministry of the Attorney General (MAG) to sue the Ministry of Municipal Affairs and Housing (MMAH) for a number of things, but the simpliest way to summarize the main reason is vicarious liability for Barrie Housing’s fraud scheme, since I told the MMAH about it on three separate occasions and it did nothing. Here’s the email I recently sent to the two lawyers at the MAG I’ve previously had correspondence with regarding my Notice of Intent:

The next day, on April 25, 2025, someone from Ottawa visited my website and viewed my post about Justice Fraser:

And this person used the Bing search engine to find it:

I just tried using Bing myself today (April 26, 2025), and searched for ‘Justice Suzan Fraser’ and my article about her was the third result in the Search Engines Results Pages (SERP).
I just thought this last bit was interesting.
Anyways, as soon as I hear back from Justice Fraser regarding her final decision, I’ll be sure to post it. A lot of people have been asking me if a decision has been made yet, so I just wanted to let everyone know that we're still waiting for a final verdict.
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