Law Asked on December 12, 2020
I’m Plaintiff in Small Claims Court case in Ontario Canada. Defendant filed Defence. If we don’t settle after Settlement Conference, then we Trial. I read Charter Basics | Your Right to Silence
What is the Right to Silence?
In the Canadian legal tradition, the right to silence is a subset of the larger principle against self-incrimination. It is closely related to the rules governing confessions and is also enshrined under section 7 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.At its most basic, the right to silence means that absent any legal obligation to the contrary, no one is obliged to speak to the police or respond to police questioning1. For accused or detained people, this is a Constitutionally protected right. The right to silence means that a detainee has the right to choose whether or not to speak or give a statement to the police2. Regardless of what the police might say, an accused person has absolutely no obligation to assist the State with an investigation or prosecution.
In my honest opinion, Defendant’s lawyer lied some parts of Defence. I looked up Defendant’s lawyer at Law Society of Ontario website, and his record and history are not clean. I don’t want him or public know my employment or what I do everyday. I know people have falsely accused at workplace or like debt collectors, harass you at work or employer.
I don’t duplicate
Can I refuse to tell Settlement Conference Deputy Judge my employment or daily life?, because here I ask about Trial, not Settlement Conference.
Can non-witnesses legally refuse to answer questions from judge?, because that question is New Zealand law. I ask Ontario Canada.
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