
10th July 2026BY Qasim Nihang
Ontario Civil Litigation Delays: Motions & Timelines
Quick Answer: Can Motions Delay Your Ontario Civil Case?
Yes. In Ontario, either side in a civil lawsuit can bring motions — formal requests asking a judge to decide a procedural issue — and contested motions typically add weeks or months to a case. Interlocutory motions, discovery disputes, adjournments, and court scheduling backlogs are among the most common causes of delay. Ontario’s Rules of Civil Procedure set outer limits: under Rule 48.14, a civil action that is not resolved within five years is dismissed for delay, and a court can order a party who causes needless delay to pay costs. Proposed reforms under the Civil Rules Review may reduce motion-driven delay by routing most procedural disputes to case-managed directions conferences, but as of 2026 those broader changes are not yet in force.
This guide explains how delay happens in Ontario civil litigation, how to tell ordinary delay from deliberate stalling, and the practical steps you can take to keep your case moving.
Why Civil Cases in Ontario Drag On
If your lawsuit feels stuck, you are not imagining it. Civil cases in Ontario often move slowly, and much of that pace is built into the system rather than aimed at you personally.
Courts handle a heavy volume of cases, and each step (exchanging documents, questioning witnesses, booking hearings) takes time to schedule. On top of that, either party can raise procedural issues that pause progress while a judge sorts them out.
Some delay is normal and expected. Some of it, though, comes from an opponent who benefits from dragging things out. The good news is that Ontario’s rules give you tools to respond, and understanding how the process works puts more of the timeline back in your hands.
Quick Start: Pick Your Path
Not every reader is in the same position. Find the situation closest to yours and start there.
What a Motion Is and How It Causes Delay
Most motions that come up during a case are interlocutory, meaning they deal with a step along the way rather than the final outcome. Common examples include a motion to compel the other side to hand over documents, a motion to add a party, or a motion for summary judgment (a request to decide all or part of a case without a full trial).
Each motion follows a rhythm. The moving party prepares a sworn statement and written argument, the other side responds, a hearing date is booked, and the judge releases a decision. In a busy court region, simply finding an available date can take weeks.
Motions are a normal part of contract disputes and other civil claims. They become a problem mainly when one side files them repeatedly or without a real purpose.
How Much Time Does Delay Really Add?
The honest answer is that it depends on the cause. A single, straightforward motion may add only a month or two. A contested discovery dispute, a series of adjournments, or a wait for a trial date can add much more.
Court scheduling is usually the biggest factor. In high-volume regions like Toronto, trial dates are often booked a year or more in advance, so the gap between finishing preparation and actually being heard can dwarf any single motion.
The chart below shows how much time common delay points can typically add. These are general ranges, not promises, and every case is different.
Seeing the pattern helps you focus your energy where it counts. A minor motion may matter far less to your timeline than pushing to secure an early trial or mediation date.
Legitimate Delay Versus Deliberate Stalling
Telling the two apart matters, because Ontario courts treat them very differently. A party pursuing a fair process is exercising its rights. A party abusing the process risks cost penalties and, in serious cases, having its position struck.
The table below compares what normal procedure looks like against the warning signs of stalling.
| Legitimate procedure | Signs of stalling |
|---|---|
| A genuine motion (such as summary judgment) brought for a real purpose | Repeated motions with little or no merit |
| An occasional, reasonable request for more time | Serial extension and adjournment requests |
| One adjournment for a genuine scheduling conflict | Last-minute adjournments that repeatedly reset dates |
| Good-faith, complete document disclosure | Late, partial, or missing document production |
| Answering undertakings (promises to provide information later) on time | Ignoring undertakings and follow-up requests |
| Accepting service by email where appropriate | Refusing email service without a real reason |
If you recognize several stalling signals in your own case, that is worth raising with your lawyer, because there are specific responses available.
What Protects You From Endless Delay
The five-year rule is a firm backstop. Once you start a claim, the responsibility to move it forward generally rests with you as the plaintiff, so it is important not to let a file go quiet. Extensions are possible on consent or by court order, but they are not automatic.
Costs are another lever. If the other side forces unnecessary steps, a judge can order them to pay part of your legal expenses, which discourages games.
Mandatory mediation adds a third safeguard. Under Rule 24.1, most civil cases in Toronto, Ottawa, and Windsor must attend mediation, which often resolves disputes (including debt recovery and collection matters) long before a trial date arrives.
Step-by-Step: What to Do If Your Case Is Stalling
If you believe your case is being delayed, a calm, documented approach tends to work best. Here is a practical sequence.
- 1Keep a written record.Note every missed deadline, late document, and adjournment request. A clear timeline is persuasive if you later need to show a pattern to the court.
- 2Raise it with your lawyer early.Share your concerns and ask whether the delay is normal for your type of case or a sign of something more.
- 3Use scheduling tools.Your lawyer can request a case conference or a status hearing, where a judge helps set firm dates for the next steps.
- 4Consider a targeted motion.If the other side is withholding documents, a motion to compel can force production. If a file has stalled badly, a motion may address it directly.
- 5Watch the five-year clock.Make sure your own case does not drift toward the Rule 48.14 dismissal deadline.
- 6Weigh settlement or mediation.Sometimes the fastest path is a negotiated resolution rather than more court steps.
These same principles apply across civil matters, including construction lien litigation, where timing rules can be especially strict.
What Ontario’s 2026 Civil Rules Review May Change
It helps to separate what has changed from what is still on the table.
Already in force: as of February 1, 2026, new mandatory court forms and a rule requiring that a case be filed in a location with a rational connection to the dispute apply to new civil proceedings.
Still proposed: the Civil Rules Review has recommended a three-track system, an evidence-first model, fewer oral examinations, and directions conferences. A directions conference is a proposed case-management meeting with a judge that would sort out procedural disputes early, so fewer issues need a full formal motion. The review has also floated daily penalties for causing delay. These changes may begin rolling out in phases as early as mid-2026, but only if the government adopts them.
You can read more in our guide to the 2026 civil rule changes.
Common Mistakes That Slow Your Case Down
A few avoidable habits are behind much self-inflicted delay:
- Letting a file go quiet. Long gaps can push you toward the five-year dismissal deadline.
- Missing your own deadlines. Late documents can trigger extra steps and hearings.
- Treating every disagreement as a motion. Minor issues can often be resolved by letter or at a case conference for far less time and cost.
- Ignoring undertakings. An undertaking is a promise to provide information later; leaving them unanswered stalls the next stage.
- Waiting too long to get advice. Early legal guidance often prevents delay rather than reacting to it.
- Overlooking settlement windows. Passing up a reasonable early resolution can add months or years.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can the other side delay my lawsuit on purpose in Ontario?
How long can a civil case be delayed before it gets thrown out?
Does a motion always push back my trial date?
What can I do if the other party keeps filing motions against me?
How much does a motion cost in an Ontario civil case?
Will the new 2026 court rules make my case go faster?
What is a directions conference?
Is it faster to mediate or settle instead of going to court?
Getting Your Case Moving
Delay is one of the most frustrating parts of civil litigation, but it is rarely beyond your influence. Understanding how motions and scheduling work, recognizing genuine stalling, and using the protections already built into Ontario’s rules can help keep your case on track.
If your matter feels stuck, experienced guidance often makes the difference. Qasim Ali, Principal Lawyer at Nihang Law and our litigation team help clients across Toronto, Scarborough, and the broader Greater Toronto Area keep cases moving.
Is Your Ontario Lawsuit Stuck?
Talk through your options with a litigation team that serves Toronto, Scarborough, and the GTA. We can help you understand your timeline and next steps.
Contact Nihang Law
About the author
Qasim Ali
Principal Lawyer · Nihang Law Professional Corporation · Toronto & Scarborough, Ontario · Law Society of Ontario
Qasim Ali is the Principal Lawyer at Nihang Law Professional Corporation, serving clients across Toronto, Scarborough, and the broader Greater Toronto Area. He provides full-service legal representation across immigration, real estate, family law, criminal law, civil litigation, employment law, wills and estates, and business law.
Nihang Law is particularly recognized for its depth in immigration and real estate law — a combination that serves newcomers and growing families navigating both legal systems simultaneously.
Learn more about Qasim Ali →Sources & References
- Ontario Superior Court of Justice — Civil Rules Review: ontariocourts.ca/scj/areas-of-law/civil-court/civil-rules-review/
- Rules of Civil Procedure, R.R.O. 1990, Reg. 194 (Rules 20, 24.1 and 48.14): ontario.ca/laws/regulation/900194
- Limitations Act, 2002, S.O. 2002, c. 24, Sched. B: ontario.ca/laws/statute/02l24
- Civil Rules Review — Phase 2 Consultation Paper (2025): ontariocourts.ca/scj/files/pubs/Civil-Rules-Review-2025-phase-two-EN.pdf
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