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In Canadian criminal law, the offence of corrupting morals of a child makes it illegal for an adult to engage in serious immoral or vice-related behaviour inside a child’s home in a way that endangers the child’s moral development or makes the home unfit for the child. This offence, linked to UCR Code 1365, is a summary conviction crime, meaning it is prosecuted in a lower court with lower maximum penalties than indictable offences. For anyone researching corrupting morals child Canada, this page explains how the law works, what conduct is caught, possible sentences, and common defences.
The Legal Definition
“Every person who, in the home of a child, participates in adultery or sexual immorality or indulges in habitual drunkenness or any other form of vice, and by doing so endangers the morals of the child or renders the home an unfit place for the child to be in, is guilty of…”
This wording comes from section 172 of the Criminal Code of Canada, historically titled “Corrupting children”. In plain English, a person commits this offence if they:
(1) are in the home of a child, and
(2) engage in adultery, sexual immorality, habitual drunkenness, or another form of vice, and
(3) by doing so, they either endanger the child’s morals or make the home an unfit place for the child.
The law is focused on protecting children from being exposed to serious, ongoing immoral behaviour in their own home environment. The home is assumed to be a place where a child should feel safe and properly guided in their development. The section does not criminalize every form of misbehaviour or one-time lapse in judgment; it targets patterns or types of conduct that are so serious that they could reasonably harm a child’s moral upbringing or make the home clearly unsuitable for a child to live in.
Key terms have particular meanings:
- “Home of a child” means a residence where a child lives, or potentially where a child regularly stays or visits. The conduct has to occur in that home, not just anywhere.
- “Adultery or sexual immorality” refers to sexual conduct that is socially and legally viewed as clearly inappropriate to expose to a child in their home setting, especially when it is obvious, repeated, or flaunted.
- “Habitual drunkenness” requires more than casual drinking. It suggests ongoing, regular intoxication that affects the home environment and the care of the child.
- “Any other form of vice” is a broad catch-all for similarly serious immoral behaviours (for example, ongoing drug abuse, chronic gambling that dominates the home environment, or other serious misconduct).
- “Endangers the morals of the child” means the conduct poses a real risk to the child’s moral or ethical development, not just that someone disapproves of the behaviour.
- “Renders the home unfit” means the behaviour is so serious that the home can no longer reasonably be considered a proper, safe environment for a child to live in.
Courts assessing this section look at all the circumstances: the nature and frequency of the conduct, the child’s presence or awareness, and how the behaviour affects the overall atmosphere of the home. The statute is designed to protect children before severe harm occurs, by criminalizing conduct that obviously threatens a healthy upbringing.
Penalties & Sentencing Framework
- Classification: Summary conviction offence only (no indictable election).
- Mandatory minimum penalty: None.
- Historical maximum penalty: Fine not exceeding $500 (older official texts).
- Modern context: Where the current text does not specify a penalty, general summary conviction limits in the Criminal Code may apply (up to 2 years less a day in jail and/or up to a $5,000 fine), but historical sources explicitly mention a $500 cap for this specific offence.
Because corrupting morals of a child is a summary conviction offence, it is prosecuted in provincial court, usually with simpler procedures, shorter limitation periods to lay the charge, and lower maximum penalties than indictable crimes. The statute historically capped the fine at $500, reflecting its origins as a low-level morality offence, although modern summary conviction rules allow for higher maximums unless a specific section provides otherwise.
There is no mandatory minimum sentence. This gives judges flexibility to tailor the sentence to the seriousness of the behaviour and any harm or risk to the child. In less serious cases, a discharge (absolute or conditional), probation, or a modest fine might be imposed. In more concerning situations, especially where the conduct is persistent, clearly immoral, and closely linked to harm to the child’s environment, a court could consider stronger penalties within the summary conviction framework, such as higher fines or short jail terms if permitted by the applicable penalty regime.
Sentencing will typically consider:
- the degree and duration of the adultery, sexual immorality, or vice;
- whether the child was present, aware, or directly exposed to the conduct;
- any evidence that the child’s behaviour or wellbeing has already been affected;
- whether the offender is a parent, caregiver, or other person in a position of trust;
- remorse, rehabilitation efforts (e.g., treatment for alcohol abuse), and steps taken to make the home safe.
Because this offence is less frequently prosecuted than more modern child-protection crimes (such as child pornography or sexual interference), there is relatively little case law on sentencing under this exact section. However, courts generally treat any offence that endangers a child’s development as serious from a moral standpoint, even when the legal maximum penalty is comparatively low.
Common Defenses
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No child in the home
One of the most direct defences is to show that, at the time of the alleged conduct, there was no child in the home. Section 172 specifically requires that the behaviour occur “in the home of a child”. If the residence is occupied only by adults, or if the accused reasonably did not know and had no reason to know that a child resided or regularly stayed there, this essential element may not be met. Similarly, if the child merely visited once and was not present or resident in a way that makes it their “home”, defence counsel may argue that the legal threshold is not satisfied. The Crown must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the place where the conduct occurred was properly characterized as the child’s home.
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No danger to the child’s morals / home not unfit
Another key defence focuses on the impact of the conduct. The section requires that the adultery, sexual immorality, habitual drunkenness, or other vice endanger the child’s morals or render the home unfit. It is not enough for the behaviour to be morally questionable in someone’s opinion; there must be a real, objective risk to the child’s moral development or the fitness of the home environment. Defence counsel may present evidence that the child was shielded from the behaviour (for example, it occurred privately and out of the child’s presence or awareness), that it was rare or isolated rather than habitual, or that it did not disrupt the child’s care, schooling, or emotional wellbeing. If the Crown cannot show a genuine risk or degradation of the home environment, this element of the offence fails.
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Type of conduct does not qualify
A further defence is that the accused’s conduct, even if proven, does not amount to “adultery, sexual immorality, habitual drunkenness, or any other form of vice” in the sense intended by section 172. The provision targets serious, vice-level behaviours, not every form of adult social activity or minor moral lapse. For example, moderate social drinking or non-explicit affection between adults is unlikely, on its own, to meet the threshold of “habitual drunkenness” or “sexual immorality”. Defence counsel can argue that the Crown is overreaching by treating ordinary, lawful adult conduct as criminal vice. They may point to the limited and historically moralistic scope of the section, and any absence of evidence that the conduct was persistent, extreme, or obviously immoral to a degree that would naturally influence a child’s moral development.
In all of these defences, the central strategy is to challenge whether the Crown has proven each essential element of the offence: the existence of a child’s home, the qualifying type of conduct, and the required level of risk to the child’s morals or the fitness of the home.
Real-World Example
Imagine a scenario where a couple frequently hosts loud, late-night parties in a small apartment where a 7-year-old child lives. At these parties, guests are often heavily intoxicated, engage in explicit sexual conduct in common areas, and openly use illegal drugs. The child is regularly at home during these events, can see and hear the behaviour, and has nowhere else to stay. Over time, the home environment becomes chaotic and unsafe, with little supervision of the child and no clear boundaries around substance use or sexual behaviour.
In this situation, police responding to complaints from neighbours might investigate the welfare of the child. If they find that this pattern of behaviour is ongoing and that the child is exposed to it, they could lay a charge under section 172 – corrupting morals of a child. A court would assess whether the behaviour constitutes “habitual drunkenness” or “other form of vice” and whether it realistically endangers the child’s morals or renders the home unfit. Evidence from child protection workers, teachers, or neighbours about the child’s behaviour, distress, or lack of proper care could be relevant. If the court finds all elements proven, the adults could be convicted, fined, placed on probation, and ordered to address substance abuse or other underlying issues.
Record Suspensions (Pardons)
Because corrupting morals of a child is a summary conviction offence, a person convicted of this crime in Canada may apply to the Parole Board of Canada for a record suspension (often called a pardon) after a waiting period. For summary conviction offences, the standard waiting period is five years from the date the sentence is fully completed. “Completion” includes paying any fines, finishing probation, and serving any custodial time if imposed. Once the five-year period has passed and all conditions are met, the individual can submit an application. If granted, the record suspension does not erase the conviction but sets it aside in federal criminal record checks, reducing the impact on employment, volunteering, and travel within Canada. However, because this offence involves the welfare of children, the Parole Board will carefully consider the risk to the public and any subsequent behaviour, especially if the applicant seeks positions involving trust over minors.
Related Violations
- Child pornography
- Child neglect
- Indecent acts
These related offences may be charged instead of, or in addition to, section 172 where the facts support more specific or more serious child-protection charges under Canadian law. For anyone examining corrupting morals child Canada, reviewing these related Criminal Code sections can provide a fuller picture of how Canadian law protects children from harmful environments and exploitation.

