Four professionals in a tense conference room meeting, with a young woman looking away as a colleague makes an accusation, representing a contract dispute or commercial fraud claim

Evidence in Contract Disputes: What Courts in Ontario and BC Rely On to Decide Cases

Date: June 11, 2026

Contract disputes in Ontario and BC are rarely decided on the basis of who tells the most convincing story. They are decided on evidence: documents, digital communications, financial records, and credible testimony that courts can evaluate, test, and weigh. A party with a strong factual position but poor evidence regularly loses to a party with a weaker position but better documentation. Understanding what evidence matters, how to preserve it, and what undermines credibility is as important as understanding the law.

This article explains what you must prove in a breach of contract claim, which categories of evidence courts rely on most heavily in Ontario and BC, the most common evidentiary mistakes that defeat otherwise strong claims, and what courts can do when the other party is hiding or destroying documents. For guidance on the damages framework that governs what you can recover, see our guide to breach of contract damages in Ontario and BC.

The four things you must prove
A breach of contract claim in Ontario and BC requires proof of four elements: a valid contract existed; you performed your obligations or were ready and willing to do so; the other party failed to perform; and you suffered quantifiable financial loss as a result. Courts require evidence on all four. The most common reason contract claims fail is not on breach but on damages.

Courts in both provinces apply the same evidentiary principles: evidence must be credible, contemporaneous where possible, documented rather than based on memory alone, and complete without unexplained gaps or alterations. Once credibility is damaged it is difficult to repair, and courts draw adverse inferences from gaps in documentation that a party would be expected to have produced.

Does the contract need to be in writing?

No. A contract does not need to be in writing to be enforceable in Ontario or BC. Oral agreements are binding where the essential elements of offer, acceptance, and consideration are present. Courts look at the entire course of dealings between the parties, including emails, texts, invoices, conduct, and oral evidence, to determine whether a contract was formed and what its terms were.

The practical challenge with verbal contracts is proof. A written contract eliminates disputes about what was agreed. An oral agreement may be just as binding in law but significantly harder to prove in court, particularly where the other side disputes the terms. Where a contract was formed partly in writing and partly verbally, courts piece together the full picture from every available source of evidence.

What evidence courts rely on most heavily

The contract and its terms Signed agreements, emails or texts showing offer and acceptance, purchase orders, statements of work, change orders, and project management logs. Courts look for the clearest contemporaneous statement of what was agreed. Where multiple documents exist, the court examines them together to determine the full contractual picture.
Digital communications Emails, texts, WhatsApp messages, Slack and Teams logs, and portal messages. These are often the most persuasive evidence in modern commercial disputes because they are created at the time events occur, are difficult to credibly alter without detection, and frequently contain admissions, acknowledgments, and contemporaneous records of what each party understood the agreement to require.
Performance evidence Invoices issued, delivery confirmations, completed work samples, timesheets, photos of work performed, subcontractor records, and emails confirming progress or completion. Courts need evidence that the plaintiff performed their own obligations, or was ready and willing to perform, before they can succeed on a breach claim against the defendant.
Evidence of the breach Missed payment records, failed transfer records, messages acknowledging delays or non-performance, emails walking back commitments, and records showing defective or incomplete work. Follow-up communications showing the plaintiff's attempts to address the breach often also demonstrate good faith and reasonableness.
Financial records proving damages Bank statements, outstanding invoices, replacement or repair costs, lost business records, and expert valuations for commercial losses. Courts cannot award compensation without evidence of the actual financial loss suffered. A strong liability case collapses without a documented damages case to support it.
Expert evidence Experts are often essential in cases involving construction defects, software or technical failures, professional service standards, share or business valuations, and delay analysis in commercial projects. Expert reports can make or break complex claims where the court needs specialized knowledge to evaluate the evidence.
Courts in Ontario and BC consistently prioritize evidence that is contemporaneous, meaning created at the time the relevant events occurred, over evidence reconstructed after the dispute has arisen. A document created the day of a meeting describing what was agreed is significantly more persuasive than an account of the same meeting prepared after litigation has begun. Build your evidentiary record in real time, not retrospectively.

Proving damages: the most common reason contract cases fail

Many contract claims that are strong on liability fail on damages. Courts cannot award compensation without evidence quantifying the actual financial loss suffered. A credible account of the breach without a documented damages case produces a judgment for nominal damages or no damages at all, which may be insufficient to justify the cost of the proceeding.

Evidence that supports a damages claim

  • Bank statements showing funds paid and not returned
  • Outstanding invoices for work performed and unpaid
  • Records of additional costs incurred to address the breach
  • Replacement supplier costs where the original party failed to perform
  • Lost contract records where third-party business was lost as a consequence
  • Expert valuations for complex commercial losses
  • Financial statements showing the impact on business performance

Common damages evidence mistakes

  • Claiming round-number losses without supporting records
  • Asserting lost profits without financial statements to support them
  • Failing to document mitigation steps taken after the breach
  • Mixing losses from the breach with pre-existing financial difficulties
  • Relying on expert evidence from an expert who lacks the necessary qualifications
  • Failing to quantify consequential losses with sufficient precision for a court award

For related guidance on how courts calculate damages, including expectation damages, reliance damages, and the duty to mitigate, see our guide to breach of contract damages in Ontario and BC.

Evidence that weakens your credibility

Just as strong evidence builds a case, certain evidentiary problems can undermine an otherwise sound position. Courts in Ontario and BC treat credibility as a threshold issue: a party whose documentary record appears altered, incomplete, or inconsistent loses credibility that affects the weight given to all their other evidence.

Altered or reconstructed documents

Altered screenshots, backdated documents, and reconstructed records are among the most damaging evidentiary problems a party can face. Courts regularly order forensic examination of digital records where authenticity is in doubt, and metadata can reveal when a document was actually created or modified. A party caught producing altered documents faces credibility consequences that extend to every other aspect of their case and may face cost sanctions.

Gaps in what should be a complete record

Where a party produces some communications from a period but not others, courts infer that the missing documents would not have helped their case. An email thread that stops abruptly before a significant event, a contract file that is missing the most recent version, or financial records that cover some periods but not others all raise questions. Courts draw adverse inferences against parties who cannot explain gaps in their documentary record.

Inconsistent evidence across the proceeding

Statements in affidavits, examinations for discovery, and trial testimony that are inconsistent with each other or with the documentary record are treated as credibility problems. Courts are experienced at identifying inconsistencies and they matter even where each individual statement seems plausible in isolation. Consistency across all evidence in the proceeding is essential to maintaining credibility throughout.

Exaggerated or unsupported loss claims

A damages claim that is not supported by the financial records produced, or that significantly exceeds what the documentary evidence can justify, damages credibility on the liability side of the case as well. Courts view exaggerated damage claims as an indicator of the party's overall reliability as a witness and as a source of documentary evidence.

In a contract dispute in Ontario or BC and concerned about gaps in your evidence or the other party's failure to produce documents?

Courts have broad powers to compel disclosure and to draw adverse inferences from missing or destroyed evidence. A litigation hold letter can preserve the obligation to retain documents once litigation is contemplated. Get legal advice on your evidentiary position before the other side's gaps become permanent.

Call: 1-800-771-7882 Get Advice on Your Contract Dispute

What courts can do when the other party hides or destroys evidence

Courts in Ontario and BC have broad powers to address evidence concealment and destruction. These remedies are available where a party fails to produce documents they are obliged to disclose, destroys documents after litigation has been contemplated or commenced, or otherwise manipulates the evidentiary record.

  • Compelled documentary disclosure: Courts can order a party to produce specific categories of documents, including financial records, communications, and internal records that they have refused or failed to disclose voluntarily.
  • Affidavit of documents: Both Ontario's Rules of Civil Procedure and BC's Supreme Court Civil Rules require each party to provide an affidavit listing all documents in their possession that are relevant to the issues in the proceeding, including documents that are adverse to their own case. A false or incomplete affidavit of documents has serious consequences.
  • Adverse inferences: Where relevant documents have been destroyed after the party knew litigation was contemplated, courts can draw an adverse inference: they assume the destroyed documents would have supported the other party's case. This inference can be determinative on contested issues.
  • Litigation hold letters: A formal notice from counsel that litigation is contemplated and that all relevant documents must be preserved. Sending a litigation hold letter creates a documented record of when the obligation to preserve arose and can be relied on if the other side later destroys evidence after receiving it.
  • Inspection orders: Courts can order inspection of business records, premises, or digital systems where there is reason to believe relevant documents exist and are not being produced voluntarily.

Dealing with a contract dispute in Ontario or BC and trying to build the strongest evidentiary case?

The evidentiary foundation of a contract claim is built before proceedings are commenced, not after. Get advice on what you need to gather, preserve, and present before the dispute escalates further.

Build the Strongest Case for Your Dispute Or call us: 1-800-771-7882

Practical takeaways

Contract disputes in Ontario and BC are decided on evidence, not on who tells the most convincing story. Courts prioritize contemporaneous, documented, and complete records over testimony alone.
A contract does not need to be in writing to be enforceable. Courts look at emails, texts, conduct, invoices, and oral evidence to determine whether a contract was formed and what its terms were.
Damages are the most common reason strong liability cases fail. Courts cannot award compensation without documentary evidence quantifying the actual financial loss. A credible breach without a documented damages case produces little or no recovery.
Altered documents, gaps in what should be a complete record, and inconsistent statements across the proceeding are the most damaging evidentiary problems a party can face. Courts draw adverse inferences and credibility findings that affect the entire case.
Courts in Ontario and BC have broad powers to compel disclosure, draw adverse inferences from destroyed evidence, and order inspection of business records. A litigation hold letter preserves the obligation to retain documents from the date it is sent.
Expert evidence is often essential in cases involving construction defects, technical failures, professional standards, business valuations, and complex damages. Expert reports can make or break claims where specialized knowledge is required to evaluate the evidence.

Frequently asked questions

What do you need to prove in a breach of contract case in Ontario and BC?

You must prove four elements: a valid contract existed; you performed your obligations or were ready and willing to do so; the other party failed to perform; and you suffered quantifiable financial loss as a result. Courts require documentary evidence on all four elements. The most common failure point is damages: courts cannot award compensation without evidence of the actual financial loss suffered.

Does a contract need to be in writing to be enforceable in Ontario and BC?

No. Oral agreements are binding where offer, acceptance, and consideration are present. Courts look at emails, texts, invoices, conduct, and oral evidence to determine whether a contract was formed and what its terms were. Written contracts are significantly easier to prove and enforce because they eliminate disputes about what was agreed.

What is the most important evidence in a contract dispute?

Courts prioritize evidence that is contemporaneous, credible, documented rather than based on memory, and complete. The most persuasive evidence is typically the contract or documents showing its terms, digital communications showing agreed deliverables and timelines, records proving performance of obligations, financial records quantifying the loss, and expert evidence where technical issues or complex valuations are involved.

What can courts do if the other party hides or destroys evidence?

Courts in Ontario and BC can order compelled documentary disclosure, require affidavits of documents under the Rules of Civil Procedure and Supreme Court Civil Rules, draw adverse inferences against parties who destroy evidence after litigation is contemplated, and order inspection of business records. A litigation hold letter from counsel preserves the obligation to retain documents from the date it is received.

How do courts assess damages in contract disputes in Ontario and BC?

Courts require documentary evidence of financial loss including bank statements, invoices, replacement costs, lost business records, and expert valuations for complex commercial losses. Damages cannot be awarded based on estimates or assertions: the plaintiff must prove both that loss was suffered and its amount. For claims involving lost profits or diminished business value, expert evidence from a business valuator is often necessary.

Dealing with a contract dispute in Ontario or BC and trying to understand your evidentiary position? Tell us what's happening.

Whether you are building a breach of contract claim, defending one, or trying to preserve documents before the other side destroys them, Achkar Law advises businesses and individuals across Ontario and British Columbia on breach of contract claims at every stage. We will assess your evidentiary position honestly and advise on the steps that give you the strongest position before proceedings are commenced.

Call us at 1-800-771-7882 or fill out the form below and we will be in touch.