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Assault cases in personal injury law pose stark realities for victims seeking compensation. While fault may seem obvious, recovery is often complicated by insurance exclusions, limited defendant assets, and legal boundaries between criminal and civil remedies. Intentional torts like assault often trigger exclusions in liability policies, and plaintiffs cannot simply rebrand assaults as negligence to secure coverage. Practical recovery typically depends on identifying a covered third party—most often a bar, club, or other occupier—whose failures (overserving, inadequate security, poor ejection practices, thin staffing, or lack of training) made violence foreseeable. Ontario law emphasizes foreseeability and control: occupiers owe a duty to keep entrants reasonably safe, but social hosts generally do not. Successful claims hinge on proving prior incidents or operational lapses and linking those failures to the injury; where staff use excessive force, vicarious liability can attach under modern Supreme Court tests. Joint and several liability can let plaintiffs collect from an insured defendant even if the primary assailant is judgment‑proof. Real-world enforcement problems—empty bank accounts, exempt social benefits, rented premises—mean many civil wins are symbolic unless tied to a solvent, insured party. Early triage, candid client communication, and meticulous evidence-gathering (CCTV, logs, staffing records, POS alcohol data) are essential.

Assault Cases in Personal Injury:

Hard Truths on Liability, Insurance, and Recovery
by Shawn Patey ~ Mediator
I handled my share of barroom brawl cases back in practice, including one that still sticks with me, involving an after-hours club, licensed and insured on paper, but serving well past closing. A fight erupted. My young client was badly hurt. I really wanted to help him.

The bar’s liability insurer refused to defend because operating after hours breached the policy conditions.

That file, and others, taught lessons most assault claimants learn the hard way. Fault can be crystal-clear and recovery still brutally difficult.

Why Assault Claims Are Different

An assault is an intentional tort. And while a standard homeowner’s personal-liability coverage typically follows the insured off-premises (often on a worldwide basis, so location alone doesn’t defeat coverage), the intentional/criminal-act exclusion does. Plaintiffs sometimes try to plead “negligence” around an assault to force coverage, but courts look through the label to the true nature of the claim. The Supreme Court closed the door on that tactic in Non-Marine Underwriters, Lloyd’s of London v. Scalera, 2000 SCC 24[1], holding that intentional sexual assault can’t be re-packaged as negligence to trigger a duty to defend.

This is also where expectations must be reset about criminal vs. civil outcomes. A successful criminal prosecution punishes the offender. It doesn’t pay the victim tort damages. Restitution can be ordered in criminal court, but it isn’t a substitute for pain-and-suffering or income loss in a civil action. If the assaulter has no assets and no insurance responds, a civil “win” can be a moral victory and little else.

Where Recovery Can Come From: Bars, Clubs, and Other Occupiers

From my experience, most people who go around assaulting others are often impecunious and uninsured. In my firm, they were called “losers”, but I digress.

The real target is usually a covered occupier—the bar, club, or premises operator whose systems or staff decisions increased the risk of violence. Ontario’s Occupiers’ Liability Act RSO 1990, c O.2[2] imposes a duty on occupiers to take reasonable care to keep entrants reasonably safe having regard to the circumstances.

Commercial-host decisions about alcohol service remain foundational. In Jordan House Ltd. v. Menow, 1973 CanLII 16 (SCC)[3], a hotel that overserved a visibly intoxicated patron and exposed him to obvious danger was held liable.  The Supreme Court refined the analysis in Stewart v. Pettie, 1995 CanLII 147 (SCC)[4]. There is a duty, but foreseeability and control are everything. Where risk to others is reasonably apparent, staff must act (cut service, intervene, arrange transport) . By contrast, social hosts usually owe no duty to third parties injured by a guest, per Childs v. Desormeaux, 2006 SCC 18[5].

Fights inside venues shift the lens from “overservice” to operations and security. Proprietors can remove patrons but only with reasonable force. Excessive force creates direct and vicarious liability. That proposition traces to Mann v. Balaban, 1969 CanLII 5 (SCC)[6]. Courts are, however, reluctant to pin liability for sudden, unforeseeable attacks when a plaintiff can’t show warning signs or systemic shortcomings. In Da Silva v. Gomes, 2018 ONCA 610[7], an organizer wasn’t liable for an impulsive on-field punch in recreational soccer as there was no proven breach of standard of care, and therefore no causation.

I see a couple of takeaways for venue cases. Plaintiffs win by proving foreseeability (prior incidents, escalating tensions, overservice) and operational missteps (thin staffing, no floor walkthroughs, slow response, dangerous ejections, poor training). If staff themselves use unlawful force, vicarious liability can attach when the wrongdoing is closely connected to assigned duties—see the Supreme Court’s modern framework in Bazley v. Curry, 1999 SCC 35[8], and the limiting case Jacobi v. Griffiths, 1999 SCC 36[9].

Joint and Several Liability: The Plaintiff’s Lifeline

Ontario’s Negligence Act RSO 1990, c N.1[10] keeps joint tortfeasors jointly and severally liable for indivisible harm. If you prove even modest fault on a covered occupier alongside the assaulter, the plaintiff can collect 100% from the insured party and leave contribution fights for later.

In assault litigation, that’s often the difference between paper judgment and real money.

The Enforcement Reality No One Likes To Hear

Many assault cases I brought for civil damages were undefended. You obtain default judgment and then confront an empty cupboard. Garnishing wages is only possible if the defendant is actually employed, and even then the Wages Act RSO 1990, c W.1[11] limits what can be taken. Social-assistance benefits such as Ontario Works and ODSP are generally exempt from seizure or garnishment under provincial law and program directives. You also can’t lien a rented apartment because the debtor doesn’t own the land. You can register a writ of seizure and sale of land, but if the assaulter owns no real property (and many don’t), that remedy has no teeth. That’s why the covered occupier matters so much.

A Word On “Random Street Violence” and Foreseeability

Another hard truth. Even catastrophic injuries from stabbings or shootings in public places can yield no recovery if you can’t link the event to a foreseeable risk a defendant ought reasonably to have addressed. Without indicators like prior incidents, credible threats, or known hazards on the premises, courts are loath to impose a duty to anticipate an out-of-the-blue criminal act. That’s not defeatism. It’s the current law’s boundary lines[12].

What Actually Has To Be Proven Against a Bar or Venue

The plaintiff’s story must do more than recount a fight. You need evidence that foreseeable risk existed in the specific circumstances and that reasonable systems—staffing, training, floor monitoring, safe ejection practices—were missing or ignored, and that those failures caused or materially worsened the harm. Where staff force is the issue, tie it to enterprise risk under Bazley/Jacobi.

Closing the Loop: Candour With Clients

Assault files require blunt triage. The assaulter’s liability is usually the easy part. Collection is the problem. Early focus should be on insured defendants—the bar, the commercial occupier, the employer of an over-zealous bouncer—and on building a paper trail, including incident logs, staffing schedules, training materials, CCTV, point-of-sale alcohol data, and ejection reports.

Clients deserve plain talk. Some cases with righteous facts won’t pay unless you can lawfully tie in a party with coverage.

1. https://www.canlii.org/en/ca/scc/doc/2000/2000scc24/2000scc24.html
2. https://www.canlii.org/en/on/laws/stat/rso-1990-c-o2/latest/rso-1990-c-o2.html
3. https://www.canlii.org/en/ca/scc/doc/1973/1973canlii16/1973canlii16.html
4. https://www.canlii.org/en/ca/scc/doc/1995/1995canlii147/1995canlii147.html
5. https://www.canlii.org/en/ca/scc/doc/2006/2006scc18/2006scc18.html
6. https://www.canlii.org/en/ca/scc/doc/1969/1969canlii5/1969canlii5.html
7. https://www.canlii.org/en/on/onca/doc/2018/2018onca610/2018onca610.html
8. https://www.canlii.org/en/ca/scc/doc/1999/1999canlii692/1999canlii692.html
9. https://www.canlii.org/en/ca/scc/doc/1999/1999canlii693/1999canlii693.html
10. https://www.ontario.ca/laws/statute/90n01
11. https://www.canlii.org/en/on/laws/stat/rso-1990-c-w1/latest/rso-1990-c-w1.html
12. See, e.g., Rankin (Rankin’s Garage & Sales) v. J.J., 2018 SCC 19 (duty turns on reasonably foreseeable harm; no duty where the risk to the plaintiff isn’t reasonably contemplated on the facts); Childs v. Desormeaux, 2006 SCC 18 (no positive duty to prevent third-party wrongdoing absent special circumstances creating proximity; foreseeability alone is not enough); Da Silva v. Gomes, 2018 ONCA 610 (sudden, impulsive assault—no liability against organizers without evidence of foreseeability or a systems breach causally linked to the harm).

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