New & Notable: Officer's Unlawful use of Force doesn't mean you can Punch Him

In response to a disturbance on the Edmonton transit system, police officers searched for a male suspect of a generic description.  Carlan Met was nearby, and was the only male observed to be a loose match.  An officer requested to speak to him, but Mr. Met kept walking.  The officer tried again, to no avail.  Finally the officer grabbed Met’s arm in an attempt to stop him.

Met then threw what was described as a strong “haymaker” punch at the officer, which connected on the shoulder. Met was arrested for assaulting a police officer.

At trial he was convicted of simple assault, but acquitted of assault police.  The trial judge found that the officer was not acting in the lawful execution of his duty when he grabbed Met’s arm, so the latter was convicted only of the lesser assault.

On appeal, Met argued that he was acting in self-defence when punching the officer, and that the officer was not acting in the lawful execution of his duty in arresting Met, even after being punched: 2014 ABCA 157.

On the first point, the Alberta Court of Appeal deferred to the trial judge’s finding that the force of the punch was unreasonable, regardless of whether the officer’s unlawful initial contact was described more strongly as a “grab” or—in the more innocuous description of the trial judge—as a “placing of the hand”.

On the second point, the Alberta Court of Appeal held that, even though there was no initial arrest or detention that would justify the arm grab, and therefore no offence of “assault police” for which Met could be arrested, the punch still clearly gave the officer grounds for an arrest.  A conviction for an included offence (or no conviction at all) does not derogate from the lawfulness of the arrest: R v Biron, [1976] 2 SCR 56.

The appeal was dismissed.

JD

New & Notable: An Illegal Order is No Order at All

Siebenmorgen was convicted of two counts of possession of child pornography. At the time of sentencing the Crown asked that the offender be placed on the Sex Offender Information Registry for a period of 10 years; Rady J so ordered.  As it happens the Crown had inadvertently requested that the Court make an illegal order. Because the offender had been convicted of two counts of a designated offence the period of time he was to remain on the Registry was prescribed by law as life.

Section 490.012(4) provides that:

Failure to make order - If the court does not consider the matter under subsection (1) or (3) [at the time of sentencing], the court

(a) shall, within 90 days after the day on which it imposes the sentence or renders the verdict, set a date for a hearing to do so;

(b) retains jurisdiction over the matter;

(c) may require the person to appear by closed-circuit television or any other means that allows the court and the person to engage in simultaneous visual and oral communication, as long as the person is given the opportunity to communicate privately with counsel if they are represented by counsel.

Crown and defence agreed that pursuant to section 490.012(4) the court had the authority to correct the order. However, defence argued that instead of amending the illegal order the Court should stay one of the two counts.

First, Rady J considered that “strictly speaking, it is not the case that "the court did not consider the matter under subsection (1) or (3)" at the time of the original sentencing because an order was in fact made” [para 7].

Second, the Court considered the defence pitch for a stay. Rady J noted that as a general rule “there is no power to amend a judgment which has been drawn and entered, except in two cases: (1) where there has been a slip in drawing it up, or (2) where there has been an error in expressing the manifest intention of the court: Paper Machinery Limited v. J.O. Ross Engineering Corporation, [1934] S.C.R. 186” [para 13].

In dismissing the defence request the Court held that:

Having rendered a verdict and sentenced Mr. Siebenmorgen, I am of the view that the court is functus. What is being requested by Mr. Crawford is not the correction of an error or slip. Rather, the request is for a reconsideration of the sentence, in accordance with new submissions not made at the time of the sentencing hearing [para 16].

The SOIRA order was amended to a period of life as prescribed by the Criminal Code.

LT

New & Notable: Looking for Principles in all the Wrong Places

Singh drove while her blood-alcohol concentration was over 80. Singh’s only argument at trial was that the timing of the breath samples did not comply with the as soon as practicable requirement of section 258(1)(C)(ii).  The only time period in question was the 28 minutes that elapsed between the taking of the first and second samples. Singh argued that this time period exceeded the statutory minimum of 15minutes without any evidence to explain the delay.  The trial judge rejected this argument and held that there was no requirement for the Crown to explain every minute. Singh was convicted and appealed.

The summary conviction appeal judge allowed the appeal and expressly declined to apply the binding decision of the Court of Appeal in Vanderbruggen, 2006 CanLII 9039 (CA) because it “was not a case about unexplained delay between samples.”

The Ontario Court of Appeal restored the conviction and in so doing offered some interesting comments about how binding decisions of the Court must be read: R v Singh, 2014 ONCA 293 (CA).

First, “care must be taken to avoid reading unwarranted jurisprudential principles into a decision of the court rendered in” a brief endorsement” [@para 12]

To illustrate this point the Court pointed to the trial judge’s reliance on the Court of Appeal’s endorsement in Bulger. That decision was a four sentence oral endorsement which “does not articulate any proposition of law” [@para 11] nor does it contain “a recitation of the facts that would enable a reader to understand the overall circumstances of the case” [@para 10].

Second, the purpose of such a brief endorsement is “to simply pronounce a decision for parties who, having been present in court during the argument of the appeal, will understand the thrust of the court's reasoning”[@para 12]

Third, “[w]hen the court intends to articulate jurisprudential principles for the first time, it does so in a written judgment” [@para 12].

By way of example the Court highlighted Vanderbruggen as just such a case [@para 12].

The Court of Appeal concluded that the:

(…) trial judge drew and applied the correct principles from paras. 12-13 of Vanderbruggen. The requirement that the samples be taken “as soon as practicable” does not mean “as soon as possible”. It means nothing more than that the tests should be administered within a reasonably prompt time in the overall circumstances. A trial judge should look at the whole chain of events, keeping in mind that the Criminal Code permits an outside limit of two hours from the time of the offence to the taking of the first test. The "as soon as practicable" requirement must be applied with reason.

It is worth repeating that the Crown is not required to call evidence to provide a detailed explanation of what occurred during every minute that the accused is in custody. These provisions of the Criminal Code were enacted to expedite the trial process by facilitating the introduction of reliable evidence to prove an accused’s blood-alcohol level. Interpreting these provisions to require an exact accounting of every moment in the chronology from the time of the offence to the second test runs counter to their purpose. As Rosenberg J.A. said in Vanderbruggen, at para. 12, "The touchstone for determining whether the tests were taken as soon as practicable is whether the police acted reasonably" [@paras 14-15].

LT

New & Notable: Restrospective Application of new Self-Defence

Pandurevic was charged with first degree murder; Pandurevic sought to claim that he had acted in self-defence. The homicide took place in 2010 and Pandurevic’s trial commenced on April 8, 2013.

At the time of the offence the self-defence provisions found at sections 34-37 of the Criminal Code governed. On March 11, 2013 however, the Citizen’s Arrest and Self-Defence Act [hereafter the Act] came into force.  This new legislation repealed the old self-defence provisions and replaced them with a ‘new’ s.34 which is intended to apply in all instances where self-defence is raised.

Prior to the commencement of his trial Pandurevic brought an application for ‘directions from the court’ on whether the Act applied retrospectively. The Crown opposed the application.

MacDonell J found that despite the presumption that such changes in the law apply prospectively, this Act applies retrospectively: 2013 ONSC 2978.

First, MacDonell J noted that both the opinion of the judiciary and the academicians  was aptly captured by, then professor now, Justice Paciocco who referred to ss.34-37 as “the most confusing tangle of sections known to law” [at para 16].

The Parliamentary response to this criticism culminated in the enactment of  the Act which the Minister of Justice lauded as:

a simple, easy-to-apply rule for each defence. For decades criminal practitioners, the Canadian Bar Association, the Supreme Court of Canada, academics, and many others have criticized the law of self-defence primarily, but also the law of defence of property, as being written in an unnecessarily complex and confusing way. The complexity of the law is not without serious consequence. It can lead to charging decisions that fail to take into account the merits of the defences in particular situations. It can confuse juries, and it can give rise to unnecessary grounds of appeal, which cost the justice system valuable time and resources. The law should be clear and clearly understood by the public, the police, prosecutors, and the court. Bill C-26 meets those objectives. It makes the act more specific and simplifies it without sacrificing existing legal protections [para 18].

Second, MacDonell J referred to the “Technical Guide for Practitioners” [hereafter the Guide] published by the Department of Justice at the time the Act came into force.  The Guide states, inter alia, that:

the new defences extract from the old provisions the common core elements of each defence, and codify those core elements in a single simple framework that is capable of assessing a defence claim in any situation. The new laws give effect to the defences' underlying principles in a more transparent way; they will facilitate jury instructions and allow decision-makers to come to conclusions more easily and simply.

[...]

The intent of the new law is to simplify the legislative text itself, in order to facilitate the application of the fundamental principles of self-defence without substantively altering those principles [para 22].

MacDonell J thus concluded that:

When the provisions of the Citizen's Arrest and Self-defence Act are considered in the context of the circumstances leading up to and surrounding its enactment, it is plain that Parliament's aim was not to alter the essential nature of the defence of self-defence. The intention, rather, was to put an end to a situation that was an embarrassment to the rule of law. Parliament sought to substitute clarity and common sense for the incoherence, confusion and occasional absurdity that virtually every informed observer associated with the former statutory scheme, and to rid the administration of justice of the scandalous spectre of juries making decisions not because of the legal instructions they received but notwithstanding them.

When the purpose of the legislation is characterized in this way, it points firmly toward an intention that upon the coming into force of the amendments, judges and juries would immediately begin to assess claims of self-defence under the amended provisions regardless of whether the allegedly defensive acts occurred before or after March 11, 2013. That is, it points toward a retrospective application of the amendments [paras 23-24].

And that:

(...) to apply the amendments prospectively only would frustrate the remedial aims of the legislation by leaving in place for several more years the significant mischief that Parliament manifestly meant to eradicate [para 43].

LT

New & Notable: Conflating RPG and Proof Beyond a Reasonable Doubt

Early one summer morning, Justin Churko was seen by police driving into the parking lot of a bar in Yorkton, Saskatchewan. The officer noticed that Churko’s way of driving and his way of stopping were abnormal and that he was unsteady on his feet when he stepped out of his car. When the officer detected the odour of alcohol on Churko’s breath and noted that his eyes were bloodshot, the officer arrested Mr. Churko. Pursuant to a breath demand, breath samples were obtained which resulted in readings of .150 and .130. He was ultimately charges with impaired and over 80.

At trial, the defence alleged that Mr. Churko’s Charter rights had been violated. The defence asserted that while the officer testified that he had RPG to arrest Mr. Churko, the fact disclosed by the officer amount only to a reasonable suspicion and not the required reasonable and probable grounds to believe the accused was impaired and therefore arrest him. The trial judge accepted the defence position and acquitted the accused.

The summary conviction appeal court judge overturned the acquittal and entered a conviction against Mr. Churko as he determined that reasonable and probable grounds did exist.

On appeal to the Saskatchewan Court of Appeal, the found that there were no grounds to interfere with the decision of the summary conviction appeal court: R. v. Churko, 2014 SKCA 41.

The panel of the Saskatchewan Court of Appeal interestingly pointed out the significant differences between the RPG assessment required by the police officer and the standard of proof reserved for a trial on the merit and where the learned trial judge erred in the application of the RPG standard:

Whether the facts as a whole establish reasonable and probable grounds is a question of law. The principles surrounding such a determination has most recently been explained in R. v. Gunn, 2012 SKCA 80 (CanLII), 2012 SKCA 80, [2013] 1 W.W.R. 495. The reasonableness of the police officer’s belief must be considered by the trial court from the vantage point of whether the observations and circumstances articulated by the officer are rationally capable of supporting the inference of impairment which is drawn by the officer; however, the Crown does not have to prove the inferences drawn were true or even accurate. In other words, the factors articulated by the arresting officer need not prove the accused was actually impaired. This is so because that is the standard of proof reserved for a trial on the merits, a proof beyond a reasonable doubt.

In this case, the observations and circumstances as a whole articulated by the police officer and accepted by both the trial judge and the summary conviction appeal court judge are rationally capable of establishing an objective belief of impairment and therefore reasonable and probable grounds. The trial judge erred in the application of the burden on the Crown to establish reasonable and probable grounds and appeared to require that the facts articulated by the police officer “would reasonably lead to a conclusion that this man was driving while impaired by alcohol [emphasis added]” (para. 14). The summary conviction appeal court judge applied the correct standard of review and correctly concluded that the trial judge’s determination of lack of reasonable and probable grounds was in error [¶ 5-6] [Emphasis added].

BCH

New & Notable: Substance over Form, Safety Searches need that Respect

Geran Williams was walking down the street with a loaded handgun in his waist band. Not only loaded, the gun had a round in the chamber ready to fire. Williams happened to match the description of a person the police had received an anonymous tip about. The police approached him and ultimately found the gun. Williams sought, unsuccessfully, to exclude the gun at trial arguing there had been violations of his rights under sections 8 and 9 of the Charter. He appealed. The Court of Appeal dismissed his appeal: 2013 ONCA 772.

The call cam in shortly after 7 pm on July 10, 2008. The caller indicated that there was a black man wearing a black t-shirt and jeans, about 5'8" tall, with a baby face and hair in dreadlocks walking south at 1800 Martingrove. The caller then hung up. The police knew this area well - there was a history of gun and drug issues at this location.

Officers responded to the area within a few minutes. Some officers, first on scene, identified a male matching the description - although they could not see his face to confirm he had a baby face. Two officers approached that male - he was the appellant, Williams; he was in the group of other males. Officers asked Williams if he was armed, he did not respond. Instead, Williams bladed his body - others in the group did not react in this way. One of the officers then noted Williams make a movement toward his waist. The officers told him to put his hands up and turn around. He did neither. 

The officers then took control of Williams, grabbing his arm and lifting his shirt - the butt end of a handgun was seen and officers arrested Williams. Williams was convicted at trial and appealed.

On appeal two issues were raised. First, the detention. Williams argued that the officers did not have a reasonable suspicion justifying an investigative detention. The Court of Appeal rejected this argument. The standard for investigative detention was "reasonable suspicion" - a standard which the court noted should not be conflated with the more "exacting standard of reasonable belief" [para 22]. To determine this issue the court should look at the totality of the circumstances [para 24]; the mere fact an innocent explanation may be another reasonable interpretation is not fatal [para 24]. In this case the Court of Appeal held the detention was lawful:

The parties agreed at trial and in this court that, on its own, the anonymous tip was not sufficient to satisfy the reasonable suspicion standard.  That said, the tip remained a part, and an important part, of the circumstances that were relevant to a determination of the reasonable suspicion issue.  The tip was current, described the nature of the offence being committed, and contained sufficient particulars of the suspect to enable police to immediately focus on the appellant when they arrived minutes later. 

In our view, the combination of the anonymous tip and what occurred when the appellant encountered the police was capable of supporting a reasonable belief that the appellant might be connected to a gun crime as reported by the anonymous caller.  Nothing more was required [paras 26-27].

Second, Williams argued that the search was unreasonable. This argument was based on the position that lifting his shirt was more than was permissible for an investigative detention safety search. The Court of Appeal rejected that argument as well.  

The police were investigating a possible gun offence.  They apprised the appellant of their purpose.  They asked whether he was armed.  He did not answer their question, but “bladed”, turned away from them.  An officer told the appellant to put his hands up and turn around.  He refused.  The officers approached and took hold of both arms.  The appellant resisted.

One officer lifted the appellant’s baggy t-shirt.  A gun butt protruded from the waistband of the appellant’s pants.  The officer saw it and yelled “gun, gun, gun”.  The appellant was subdued, handcuffed, and placed under arrest. 

Strictly speaking, what occurred was not a pat-down search.  But what occurred was no more, and arguably less, intrusive than a pat-down search.  To characterize what occurred here as unreasonable is to sacrifice substance for form.  In no sense could this search be characterized as the functional equivalent of a strip search [paras 31-33].

DGM

New & Notable: High End & Fit

Jeffrey Narvie went to an acquaintance’s home to sell him a small amount of marijuana. The deal didn’t go as planned for either the buyer, who was attacked and robbed, or the seller, who was subsequently arrested. After a trial Narvie was found to have held a knife to the victim’s throat, robbing him of his cell phone and $230.

The Crown argued that Narvie, an aboriginal person from the Mi’Kmaq band in New Brunswick should be sentenced to 3-5years in custody. Narvie submitted that 12 months would suffice. The trial judge imposed a sentence of 4 years, which “included three six-month concurrent sentences for the counts of mischief, breach of probation, and possession of stolen property, as well as nine months for trafficking in marijuana,” [@para 9]. Narvie appealed on the basis that the sentence was demonstrably unfit: 2014 ABCA 145.

In fashioning the sentence the trial judge noted:

  • The lengthy related criminal record
  • The unfavourable pre-sentence report
  • Longstanding substance abuse issues
  • A lack of remorse
  • The principles in Gladue, 1999 CanLII 679 (SCC)

On appeal Narvie argued that the sentencing judge overlooked a number of mitigating factors including:

  • A 10year gap in Narvie’s criminal record
  • The prior attempts to overcome addiction issues
  • Employment in the year prior to the offences
  • The unsophisticated nature of the crimes
  • The absence of injuries to the victim [@para 10]

The Crown conceded that the 9 month sentence for trafficking was overly harsh given the small amount involved and that the offender’s related drug record was minimal. The Court imposed a sentence of 60 days concurrent on the trafficking offence.

In dismissing the remainder of the sentence appeal the Court held that:

While the robbery sentence may have been at the high end, we cannot say it was demonstrably unfit. We are satisfied it fell into an appropriate range, given all the facts present here. The test is not whether a lower or higher sentence might have been imposed. It is whether, in this case, the sentence for robbery was demonstrably unfit. We are not convinced that it was. [@para 13]

Furthermore, although the sentencing “judge may not have mentioned every single factor, (…) all the matters he is said to have overlooked were, in fact, put before him. He carefully considered the principles of sentencing and made no errors of principle” [@para 12].

LT

New & Notable: Safety Searches Post MacDonald

Tom Le was visiting a friend. He was in the backyard of the friend's residence hanging out. Le had some plans for that night; he hoped to sell some illegal drugs - he had them on his person for that reason. He also had a fully-loaded restricted firearm, namely a .45 calibre semi-automatic Ruger pistol. The gun was secured in a satchel that Le was wearing over his shoulder.

Le would later be arrested and charged with possession of that gun. At trial he sought to exclude the gun on the basis of alleged violations of his rights under sections 8 and 9. Campbell J dismissed his motion: 2014 ONSC 2033.

While Le was visiting his friend, the police happened to be in that same neighbourhood; they were looking for another man who was wanted for some violent offences. The police were directed to the house where Le was visiting. The police were also told that this residence was the source of some problems including suspected drug activity.

The police entered the backyard. Campbell J described what happened next as follows:

As the police officers were speaking to some of the young men, the accused, who had told the police he did not live in the residence, began behaving nervously, and was “blading” his body to the officer speaking to him so as to keep the satchel away from the officer.  The accused denied having any identification on his person and, when asked about his satchel, quickly fled from the area.  Two of the police officers quickly gave chase and were, eventually, able to tackle the running accused to the ground on a nearby street.  As they wrestled on the ground, with the two officers trying to subdue the accused, the police discovered the firearm in the satchel.  Subsequently, they discovered his illicit drugs [para 5].

At trial Le sought, inter alia, to exclude the evidence on the basis that his detention and the subsequent search violated sections 8 and 9 of the Charter. Campbell J rejected both arguments. 

First, Campbell J addressed whether the police were lawfully positioned when they first encountered Le. Relying on the implied invitation to knock and rejecting the assertion that the police had to attend at the front door - rather than walk straight into the backyard - Campbell J held that they were.

In the circumstances of the present case, the police officers clearly had a lawful reason to enter the backyard property and speak to the occupier.  They were pursuing an investigation of a wanted man who, they had been told, frequented that backyard area and had been seen hanging out there.  Further, the police had been told that the 84 Vanauley Walk address was a “problem” in relation to suspected drug trafficking.  In fulfilling their professional duties, the police were lawfully entitled to enter this backyard area in an effort to ascertain if any of the young men was an occupier of the residential premises there, and to pursue their investigations in relation to Mr. Jackson and potential drug trafficking.  There was no signage in the area that suggested the police were prohibited from entering the backyard, and no occupier of the premises ever expressly revoked their implied licence to enter the backyard area.  In short, the police officers were never trespassers in the backyard area of this address.  They entered lawfully pursuant to the implied licence doctrine, and remained there lawfully as they were never asked to leave by an occupier of the dwelling [para 70].

Second, Campbell J addressed the detention issue. In doing so he held that Le was not initially detained but, just prior to his flight, based on his conduct and the intervention of the police which then was directed at him, the police had the basis to detain him for investigative purposes and he was detained in law.

While the arrival of the police into the backyard area of 84 Vanauley Walk temporarily interrupted the conversations of the five young men, none of the police physically restrained the accused or made any demand or direction to him that interfered with his liberty.  The accused was not on his way anywhere, so the accused was not even “stopped” by the police or momentarily delayed on any journey. The accused was not subjected to any physical or psychological restraint by the police.  No police officer told him to do anything.  He was asked only for some identification.  A reasonable person in the position of the accused, at that point, would not have concluded that he had been deprived of the freedom to choose whether or not to co-operate with the police.  Indeed, the accused himself testified that he thought that he was free to leave the backyard area.  More particularly, the accused explained that he went to go inside the townhouse through the back door because he did not think he needed to remain in the backyard, as no police officer was talking directly to him.  According to the accused, it was only when Cst. O’Toole physically prevented him from going into the townhouse that “things changed” and he did not think he could leave.

In my view, the accused was only detained by the police when Cst. O’Toole asked him about the contents of his bag.  Cst. O’Toole may only have been inquiring about the bag as a way of asking whether the accused had any identification documents in his bag, but a reasonable person in the position of the accused, in those circumstances, might well interpret that inquiry as a tactical demand or direction in relation to the bag, which meant that the accused was no longer free to leave and had lost the freedom to choose whether or not to continue to cooperate with the police [paras 87-88].

Third, Campbell J addressed the search issue. In doing so, he concluded that in the circumstances the police had the basis to perform a pat-down - "safety search" - of Le during the investigative detention as there was a basis to believe he had a gun on his person [paras 94-97].

Notably, in undertaking this analysis Campbell J addressed the recent Supreme Court ruling in R v MacDonald, 2014 SCC 3 and whether it changed the standard for safety searches. Noting that whether the standard was reasonable grounds or reasonable suspicion, the officers had the requisite basis to search, Campbell J nonetheless offered the following interpretation of MacDonald.

There is some question whether the decision in R. v. MacDonald changes the legal threshold for lawful police “safety searches” from the traditional “reasonable suspicion” standard to a higher standard akin to the search warrant requirement of “reasonable and probable grounds.”  I do not read the R. v. MacDonald decision as having such an effect.  It is important to recall that, from its judicial inception in Terry v. Ohio, 392 U.S. 1, 88 S.Ct. 1868 (1968), the courts in the United States and Canada have long applied, in somewhat different language, the standard of “reasonable suspicion” to measure the constitutional permissibility of such “stop and frisk” searches.  The significantly higher standard of “reasonable and probable grounds” has never been the required threshold, for the sound functional reason that it would render such searches legally redundant and practically useless.  If a police officer possessed reasonable and probable grounds to believe a suspect was armed and dangerous, the suspect would invariably be arrested, not merely detained, and would be physically searched as incident to that arrest.  There would be little point in the existence of the police “safety search” power, which has been clearly recognized in the appellate court jurisprudence, if it provided no search powers beyond those already recognized as being incident to an arrest.  Moreover, if police officers are to lawfully conduct investigations in relation to detained (but not arrested) suspects, it only stands to reason that they must be given the lawful means of taking the necessary steps to protect themselves and others during the course of such investigations.  Otherwise, the police would be needlessly placed at serious risk in the performance of their important public duties.  See: R. v. Chehil2013 SCC 49 (CanLII), 2013 SCC 49, at para. 3, 20-24, 27; R. v. MacKenzie2013 SCC 50 (CanLII), 2013 SCC 50, at para. 74; R. v. Clayton and Farmer, at paras. 20, 28-30, 43-49, 81-84, 98, 103-104, 118, 123-126; R. v. Simpson 1993 CanLII 3379 (ON CA), (1993), 12 O.R. (3d) 182; 79 C.C.C. (3d) 482 (C.A.), at p. 202; Arizona v. Johnson, 129 S.Ct. 781 (2009), at p. 784; R. v. Crocker,2009 BCCA 388 (CanLII), 2009 BCCA 388, 275 B.C.A.C. 190, at paras. 62-72, leave denied: [2010] 1 S.C.R. viii; W.R. LaFave, Search and Seizure – A Treatise on the Fourth Amendment (2005, 4th ed.) at § 9.6(a); J.A. Fontana and D. Keeshan, The Law of Search and Seizure in Canada (2010, 8th ed.) at pp. 709-712.

In R. v. Mann and its progeny the courts have confirmed the existence of the police power to detain individuals for investigative purposes and, where the police have “reasonable grounds” to suspect the detainee is armed and dangerous, to conduct a brief frisk or pat-down search to ensure their own safety and the safety of the public as they conduct such investigations.  In my view, R. v. MacDonald is but an application of that well-established warrantless search power in a particular factual context, namely, where the search involves police entry of the confines of a private residence, where there is an increased expectation of privacy.  See: R. v. Zargar2014 ONSC 1415 (CanLII), 2014 ONSC 1415, at paras. 29-32.  Indeed, in R. v. MacDonald, the Supreme Court expressly purports to apply R. v. Mann in this factual context – not overrule it (or the many subsequent judgments that have clarified and applied it).  The confusion in relation to this legal threshold has arisen, it seems to me, from the use of the phrase “reasonable grounds” to describe the threshold of “reasonable suspicion” or “articulable cause,” as this same terminology is also used to describe the higher threshold of “reasonable and probable grounds.”  See: R. v. Mann, at paras. 33-35, 40-45, 63-64.  Accordingly, it is important to recall that, in this particular context, the term “reasonable grounds” is used to describe a threshold of reasonable suspicion, not a threshold of reasonable probability [paras 99-100].

In a recent issue of  Mack's Criminal Law Bulletin on Westlaw's CriminalSource, I discussed MacDonald. Therein I noted that MacDonald was not a case about investigative detention safety searches but rather non-detention searches - while it appeared that MacDonald imposed a standard of reasonable grounds for safety searches (not reasonable suspicion) that standard would only apply in the context of non-detention searches. For investigative detention safety searches the standard remained one of reasonable suspicion - MacDonald did not affect that.

Campbell J has interpreted MacDonald as not changing the standard at all. His reasons for so concluding are compelling. 

Going forward there will no doubt be other interpretations of MacDonald - likely until the Supreme Court again addresses this issue and explains what precisely they meant.

DGM

New & Notable: The Pull of Bail

Jeffery Norman was on the hook for a lot of money. He pledged $30,000 to secure his release on bail. Norman also had very generous parents who pledged significant amounts totalling $30,000 as sureties on their son’s release. All Norman had to do was abide by his release conditions. He did not and the Crown sought forfeiture of the pledged amounts: 2014 ONSC 2005.

Norman’s actions leading ultimately to this forfeiture hearing were violent and heinous. Norman had been convicted of manslaughter and sentenced to 8 years imprisonment, in addition to the 4 years of pre-sentence custody: [2005] OJ No 1073 (SCJ). While on parole Norman committed a serious, random and vicious act of violence on a complete stranger. The woman was jumped from behind, taken to the ground and repeatedly punched.  

As Trotter J pointed out “surprisingly, Mr. Norman was ordered released on bail (…) The learned justice of the peace ordered that Mr. Norman enter into a recognizance in the amount of $30,000.  He named two sureties under s. 515(2.1) of the Criminal Code and the amounts for which they would be liable:  Tonie Norman - $20,000 and Brian Norman - $10,000” [@para 5].

The conditions of release included a condition of house arrest which required Norman to be in his residence “at all times seven days a week except to go directly to and from and while at employment, counselling (including residential treatment), reporting to a parole office, medical emergencies, or in the direct company of either surety” [@para 6].

Norman denied the breach and testified at his trial that in fact he had been working during the day, was on his way to an AA meeting and had taken a circuitous route to get there to beat the 8:30pm traffic. In fact, although there was a meeting at the location Norman indicated, it was to take place entirely in Portuguese - a language neither spoken nor understood by Norman. In finding Norman guilty, Clements J aptly pointed out that Norman’s explanation simply “made no sense” [@para 10].

Norman declined to participate in the estreatment hearing; both sureties, Norman’s parents, opposed forfeiture and were represented by counsel.

Before turning to the specifics of Norman’s case, Trotter J, referred to a recent case from the Superior Court (Romania v Iusein, 2014 ONSC 623) and helpfully set out some of the governing principles. They are as follows:

  1. The onus is on the surety to show why forfeiture is not appropriate.
  2. The preeminent concern for the court is the preservation of the moral pressure or the pull of bail. “The real pull of bail, the real effective force that it exerts, is that it may cause the offender to attend his trial rather than subject his nearest and dearest who has gone surety for him to undue pain and discomfort.”
  3. Overemphasizing the surety’s lack of fault can undermine the pull opf bail and adversely impact the criminal justice system. The diligence of the surety, however is a relevant consideration.
  4. The estreatment judge has a wide discretion. There is no rule requiring total forfeiture. However, the vast majority of cases which involve a relatively small sum, nothing less than total forfeiture will usually suffice. [@para 20]

Turning to the facts before the court Trotter J noted that one of the sureties had effectively delegated her responsibilities to the second surety when she left the country on holidays. Prior to leaving on holidays Mrs Norman made arrangements wither her ex-husband. Before doing so however she consulted with counsel and received legal advice which she followed. Trotter J held that:

even though Mrs. Norman received advice that the proposed plan was legal, I have a difficult time seeing how anyone could have thought that it was wise. It was fraught with obvious risk. [i]n circumstances such as these, when a surety is unable to act (either permanently or temporarily), it is necessary that the bail situation be formally addressed.  This may achieved by making an application for variation on a bail review under s. 520 of Criminal Code.  Other options include making an application to substitute a surety (under s. 767.1), or by rendering the accused into custody (ss. 766 or 767): see R. v. Smith, 2013 ONSC 1341, per Dambrot J.  At the very least, the officer-in-charge or the prosecutor should be apprised of the situation. [@para 32]

In recognizing that Norman was apprehended before any real consequences flowed from the breach of the house arrest condition and that he received a criminal conviction for the same conduct, the Court ordered forfeiture of $10,000 of Norman’s $30,000 bond.

Notwithstanding the fact that Mrs Norman received legal advice prior to departing on her holiday, Trotter J found that: “she undermined the bail order by compromising her own ability to monitor her son’s behaviour” [@para 38]. As a result of the needless risks the public was exposed to the Court ordered $7,500 of the $20,000 bond to be forfeited [@para 38].

Trotter J had no sympathy for Mr. Norman Sr finding that:

he knew his son has a violent past and was facing a very serious offence of violence (while intoxicated). Jeremy Norman required intensive supervision. These types of conditions must be taken seriously by sureties. Mr. Norman (sr.) offered no real excuse for his lack of vigilance. He decided to put leisure activities ahead of his obligations as a surety. The only way to emphasize the importance of compliance in these circumstances is to order forfeiture in a substantial amount. Accordingly, I order Mr. Norman also to forfeit $7,500 for exposing the community to the risk of re-offending by his unsupervised son. [@para 39]

LT

New & Notable: Biting the Hand that Feeds - Animal Abuse and Self-Defence

On March 14th, 2013, Vernon Gladue killed his wife’s ten-pound shih-tzu— “Buttons”—by throwing her against a door frame, shooting it with a BB gun, and strangling it.  At issue was whether he had a “lawful excuse”, pursuant to section 445(1)(a) of the Criminal Code:

445. (1) Every one commits an offence who, wilfully and without lawful excuse,

(a) kills, maims, wounds, poisons or injures dogs, birds or animals that are not cattle and are kept for a lawful purpose…

Gladue, who had been drinking, had just got into a lengthy argument with his wife.  After about an hour, Gladue tried to kiss Buttons; who responded by biting Gladue’s upper lip, causing a minor bleeding.  The fatal attack ensued.

The next day, Gladue sent his wife some text messages, including: “... dog doesn't bite hand that feeds it an (sic) if it does its gone,” and “Dog bit me an (sic) lost ...” and “Because I've told you, any dog that bites its master am (sic) draws blood dies. You get it?”

The Court found that there was room for some physical response to being bitten: “Pulling the dog away and even dropping it would have been fully justifiable in the circumstances (even if it injured the dog)” [para. 87].  However, once Gladue’s actions were fuelled by anger and a clear intent to cause injury, his conduct went beyond any lawful excuse: 2014 ABPC 45.

Gladue also attempted to argue self-defence.  The Court, however, found that the self-defence provisions in the Criminal Code apply only to human assailants:

Speaking in non-legal terms, one may well be the victim of a dog's ‘assault’ and have to act in ‘self-defence’. That these terms may be utilized colloquially, however, does not mean that they take on the character or legal force of their Criminal Code counterparts [para. 102].

The Court found support in this interpretation from the cases of R. v. Greeley, [2001] N.J. No. 207 and R. v. Barr, [1982] A.J. No. 1021.

The Court also noted that the scope of “lawful excuse” extends even more broadly than “self-defence”.  For one example:

The owner of a pet dog who discovers that the dog suffers from a terminal illness would be justified in having the dog euthanized. Indeed, our society views that as a compassionate response to the dog's plight. The same cannot be said in the context of human beings, however. A parent who discovers that his child suffers from a terminal illness would not be justified in having the child euthanized. Our society would view that as murder.… The policy of our criminal law does not militate in favour of extending Criminal Code provisions relating to ‘Defence of Person’ to animals (or vice versa) for that reason [para. 105].

Similarly, a zookeeper would likely find a lawful excuse in shooting a grizzly bear that was approaching a human infant found within its enclosure.  Applied to humans in the “self-defence” context, the same conduct would likely not be permissible: consider a prison guard shooting an inmate that was approaching an infant found within his cell.

In further support of this dichotomy, the Court found that animals are “property”: the offence in question is found within Part XI of the Code, titled “Wilful and Forbidden Acts in Respect of Certain Property”.

Within the context of the Criminal Code, this separation makes good sense for several reasons.  As remarked by the Court: “I resist the temptation to consider how the defence of self-defence would apply to this case if it were legally available. Did Gladue assault or even sexually assault Buttons by his unwanted kiss?”

JD