A Quebec Superior Court judge has rejected the request to stay the charges against a man accused of triple murder due to trial delay.

Shakti Ramsurrun is charged with three counts of first-degree murder in connection with fatal stabbings in Aylmer, Que. His estranged partner, 21-year-old Anne-Catherine Powers, her mother Louise LeBoeuf and her motherā€™s partner Claude Levesque, were all found dead in their home in May 2012.

Ramsurrunā€™s trial is scheduled to start in April, nearly five years after charges against him were laid.

Ramsurrunā€™s lawyer had argued that waiting so long for the trial was an unreasonable delay and that his clientsā€™ charges should be stayed as a result. The request was made in light of a landmark Supreme Court of Canada decision last year, which set out new deadlines for completing trials and guidelines for ā€œunreasonableā€ delays.

that trials should be completed within 30 months in superior courts and 18 months in provincial courts.

The ruling, known as the ā€œJordan decision,ā€ also said that the Crown can challenge the notion that a trial delay is unreasonable by demonstrating "exceptional circumstances.ā€

The judge who ruled on the delay in Ramsurrunā€™s case Thursday found that, due to the complexity of the case and other factors, the wait for the trial does not warrant a stay of the charges against him.

With files from The Canadian Press and CTVā€™s Kevin Gallagher