SUPREME
COURT OF CANADA
Between:
Attorney
General of Canada
Appellant
and
Federation
of Law Societies of Canada
Respondent
- and -
Criminal
Lawyers’ Association (Ontario), Canadian Civil Liberties Association,
Law
Society of British Columbia, Canadian Bar Association, Advocates’ Society,
Barreau
du Québec and Chambre des notaires du Québec
Interveners
Coram: McLachlin C.J. and LeBel, Abella, Cromwell, Moldaver,
Karakatsanis and Wagner JJ.
Reasons
for Judgment:
(paras. 1 to 117)
Partially
Concurring Joint Reasons:
(paras. 118 to 121)
|
Cromwell J. (LeBel, Abella, Karakatsanis
and Wagner JJ. concurring)
McLachlin C.J. and Moldaver J.
|
canada (a.g.) v. federation of law
societies, 2015 SCC 7, [2015] 1 S.C.R. 401
Attorney General of Canada Appellant
v.
Federation of Law Societies of
Canada Respondent
and
Criminal Lawyers’ Association (Ontario),
Canadian Civil Liberties Association,
Law Society of British Columbia,
Canadian Bar Association,
Advocates’ Society,
Barreau du Québec and
Chambre des notaires du Québec Interveners
Indexed as: Canada (Attorney General) v. Federation of Law
Societies of Canada
2015 SCC 7
File No.: 35399.
2014: May 13; 2015: February 13.
Present: McLachlin C.J. and LeBel, Abella, Cromwell, Moldaver,
Karakatsanis and Wagner JJ.
on appeal from the court of appeal for british columbia
Constitutional
law — Charter of Rights — Right to liberty — Fundamental justice — Search and
seizure — Solicitor-client privilege — Lawyer’s duty of commitment to client’s
cause — Whether Canada’s anti-money laundering and anti-terrorist financing
legislation, as it applies to legal profession, infringes right to be free of
unreasonable searches and seizures — Whether legislation infringes right not to
be deprived of liberty otherwise than in accordance with principles of
fundamental justice — If so, whether infringements justifiable — Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms, ss. 1 , 7 , 8 — Proceeds of Crime (Money
Laundering) and Terrorist Financing Act, S.C. 2000, c. 17, ss. 5 (i), 5 (j), 62 ,
63 , 63.1 , 64 — Proceeds of Crime (Money Laundering) and Terrorist Financing Regulations,
SOR/2002-184, ss. 11.1, 33.3, 33.4, 33.5, 59.4.
To
reduce the risk that financial intermediaries may facilitate money laundering
or terrorist financing, the Proceeds of Crime (Money Laundering) and
Terrorist Financing Act, S.C. 2000, c. 17 , and the Proceeds of Crime
(Money Laundering) and Terrorist Financing Regulations, SOR/2002-184,
impose duties on financial intermediaries, including advocates and notaries in
Quebec and barristers and solicitors in all other provinces. The legislation
requires financial intermediaries to collect, record and retain material,
including information verifying the identity of those on whose behalf they pay
or receive money. It puts in place an agency to oversee compliance, the
Financial Transactions and Reports Analysis Centre of Canada, and allows that
agency to search for and seize that material. It imposes fines and penal
consequences for non-compliance. Sections 5(i) and 5(j) of the
Act make professions specified in the Regulations subject to the record
keeping and verification requirements. Section 33.3 of the Regulations makes
legal counsel subject to the Act when receiving or paying funds or giving
instructions to pay funds other than in respect of professional fees,
disbursements, expenses or bail or when doing so on behalf of their employer.
Sections 33.4 and 33.5 of the Regulations impose record keeping requirements.
Section 59.4 of the Regulations imposes identification requirements. Section
11.1 of the Regulations sets out the information that must be collected and
retained in the course of verifying identity. Sections 62, 63 and 63.1 of the
Act provide for search and seizure powers. Section 64 provides limitations on
the search and seizure powers in relation to material for which
solicitor-client privilege is claimed.
The
Federation of Law Societies commenced a constitutional challenge to the
legislation as it applies to the legal profession. The application judge of the
Supreme Court of British Columbia held that the challenged provisions violate
s. 7 of the Charter and the infringement is not saved under s. 1 of the Charter .
She did not address whether the provisions infringe s. 8 of the Charter .
She read down ss. 5(i), 5(j), 62, 63 and 63.1 of the Act and s. 11.1
of the Regulations to exclude legal counsel and legal firms. She struck down s.
64 of the Act, and ss. 33.3, 33.4, 33.5 and 59.4 of the Regulations. The
British Columbia Court of Appeal dismissed an appeal.
Held:
The appeal should be allowed in part. That part of the application judge’s order
declaring that ss. 5(i) and 5(j) of the Act are inconsistent with
the Constitution of Canada and are of no force and effect to the extent that
the reference in those subsections to “persons and entities” includes legal
counsel and law firms should be set aside. Sections 5 (i) and 5 (j)
should be struck from that part of the application judge’s order declaring that
ss. 5(i), 5(j), 62, 63 and 63.1 of the Act are read down to
exclude legal counsel and law firms from the operation of those sections. The
appeal should otherwise be dismissed.
Per
LeBel, Abella, Cromwell, Karakatsanis and Wagner JJ.: Sections 5(i)
and 5(j) of the Act simply authorize the making of regulations
and do not on their own infringe the Charter .
Sections
62, 63 and 63.1 of the Act, to the extent that they apply to documents in the
possession of legal counsel and legal firms, and s. 64 of the Act infringe s. 8
of the Charter . These provisions have a predominantly criminal law
character rather than an administrative law character. They facilitate
detecting and deterring criminal offences, and investigating and prosecuting
criminal offences. There are penal sanctions for non-compliance. These
provisions authorize sweeping searches of law offices which inherently risks
breaching solicitor-client privilege. The expectation of privacy in
solicitor-client privileged communications is invariably high regardless of the
context and nothing about the regulatory context of the Act or the fact that a
regulatory agency undertakes the searches diminishes that expectation. The
principles governing searches of law offices set out in Lavallee, Rackel
& Heintz v. Canada (Attorney General), 2002 SCC 61, [2002] 3 S.C.R.
209, apply and these provisions do not comply with those standards.
Solicitor-client privilege must remain as close to absolute as possible. There
must be a stringent norm to ensure protection and legislative provisions must
interfere with the privilege no more than absolutely necessary. These
provisions wrongly transfer the burden of protecting solicitor-client privilege
to lawyers. Nothing requires notice to clients and a client may not be aware
that his or her privilege is threatened. There is no protocol for independent
legal intervention when it is not feasible to notify a client. A judge has no
discretion to assess a claim of privilege on his or her own motion. Unless the
search is of a lawyer’s home office, nothing requires prior judicial
authorization. Searches are not contingent upon proof that there are no
reasonable alternatives. The provisions allow warrantless searches,
which are presumptively unreasonable. Examining and copying
documents proceeds until privilege is asserted — an approach that greatly
elevates the risk of a breach of privilege. Claiming privilege requires
revealing a client’s name and address even though this information may be
subject to privilege. The search powers in ss. 62 , 63 and 63.1 as applied to
lawyers, along with the inadequate protection of solicitor-client privilege
provided by s. 64 , constitute a very significant limitation of the right to be
free of unreasonable searches and seizures.
Section
11.1 of the Regulations, to the extent that it applies to legal counsel and
legal firms, and the other provisions of the Regulations in issue in this
appeal infringe s. 7 of the Charter . The liberty interests of lawyers
are infringed because lawyers are liable to imprisonment if they do not comply
with the requirements of the Act and Regulations. It is not necessary to
determine whether the liberty interests of clients are infringed.
It
should be recognized as a principle of fundamental justice that the state
cannot impose duties on lawyers that undermine their duty of commitment to
their clients’ causes. Principles of fundamental justice have three
characteristics. They must be a legal principle; there must be significant
societal consensus that they are fundamental to the way in which the legal
system ought fairly to operate; and, they must be sufficiently precise so as to
yield a manageable standard against which to measure deprivations of life,
liberty or security of the person. The lawyer’s duty of commitment to the
client’s cause meets this test. First, it is a normative legal principle and a
basic tenet of our legal system. It has been recognized as a distinct element
of a lawyer’s broader common law duty of loyalty. Second, jurisprudence
demonstrates that the principle is sufficiently precise to
provide a workable standard. It does not countenance a lawyer’s involvement in,
or facilitation of, illegal activities and it is consistent with a lawyer
taking appropriate steps to ensure that his or her services are not used for
improper ends. Third, there is overwhelming evidence of a strong and
wide-spread consensus concerning the fundamental importance in democratic
states of protection against state interference with the lawyer’s commitment to
his or her client’s cause. The duty is fundamental to the solicitor-client
relationship and how the state and the citizen interact in legal matters. The
lawyer’s duty of commitment to the client’s cause is essential to maintaining
confidence in the integrity of the administration of justice.
Subject
to justification, the state cannot impose obligations on lawyers that undermine
their compliance with the duty, either in fact or in the perception of a
reasonable person. The legal profession has developed practice standards
relating to the subjects addressed by the Act and Regulations that are narrower
in scope. Although these standards cannot set the constitutional parameters for
legislation, they are evidence of a strong consensus in the profession as to
what ethical practice in relation to these issues requires. Viewed in this
light, the legislation requires lawyers to gather and retain considerably more
information than the profession thinks is needed for ethical and effective
client representation. This, coupled with the inadequate protection of
solicitor-client privilege, undermines a lawyer’s ability to comply with the
duty of commitment to the client’s cause. The lawyer is required to create and
preserve records not required for ethical and effective representation, in the
knowledge that solicitor-client confidences contained in these records are not
adequately protected against searches and seizures authorized by the
legislation. A reasonable and informed person, thinking the matter through,
would perceive that these provisions are inconsistent with the lawyer’s duty of
commitment to the client’s cause. The scheme taken as a whole limits the
liberty of lawyers in a manner that is not in accordance with the principle of
fundamental justice relating to the lawyer’s duty of committed representation.
The
infringements of ss. 7 and 8 of the Charter are not justified under s. 1
of the Charter . Sections 62, 63, 63.1 and 64 of the Act fail the minimal
impairment test. There are other less drastic means to pursue the objectives of
combating money laundering and terrorist financing. The provisions of the
Regulations in issue in this appeal fail the proportionality test.
Per McLachlin C.J.
and Moldaver J.: There is agreement with Cromwell J.’s reasons insofar as they
relate to s. 8 of the Charter . However, to the extent that the s. 7
interests of the lawyer are engaged, the lawyer’s duty of commitment to the
client’s cause lacks sufficient certainty to constitute a principle of
fundamental justice. The lawyer’s commitment does not provide a workable
constitutional standard because it will vary with the nature of the retainer
and other circumstances. Solicitor-client privilege has already been recognized
as a constitutional norm and breach of this principle of fundamental justice is
sufficient to establish the potential deprivation of liberty that violates s. 7
of the Charter .
Cases Cited
By Cromwell J.
Applied:
Lavallee, Rackel & Heintz v. Canada (Attorney General), 2002 SCC 61,
[2002] 3 S.C.R. 209; referred to: R. v. Malmo-Levine, 2003 SCC
74, [2003] 3 S.C.R. 571; Schachter v. Canada, [1992] 2 S.C.R. 679; Thomson
Newspapers Ltd. v. Canada (Director of Investigation and Research, Restrictive
Trade Practices Commission), [1990] 1 S.C.R. 425; R. v. Fitzpatrick,
[1995] 4 S.C.R. 154; R. v. Oakes, [1986] 1 S.C.R. 103; R. v. Kokesch,
[1990] 3 S.C.R. 3; Little Sisters Book and Art Emporium v. Canada (Minister
of Justice), 2000 SCC 69, [2000] 2 S.C.R. 1120; Canada (Attorney
General) v. Bedford, 2013 SCC 72, [2013] 3 S.C.R. 1101; Blencoe v.
British Columbia (Human Rights Commission), 2000 SCC 44, [2000] 2 S.C.R.
307; R. v. Rodgers, 2006 SCC 15, [2006] 1 S.C.R. 554; R. v. Mills,
[1999] 3 S.C.R. 668; Canadian National Railway Co. v. McKercher LLP,
2013 SCC 39, [2013] 2 S.C.R. 649; R. v. Gruenke, [1991] 3 S.C.R. 263; R.
v. McClure, 2001 SCC 14, [2001] 1 S.C.R. 445; Smith v. Jones, [1999]
1 S.C.R. 455; Anderson v. Bank of British Columbia (1876), 2 Ch. D. 644;
Finney v. Barreau du Québec, 2004 SCC 36, [2004] 2 S.C.R. 17; R. v.
D.B., 2008 SCC 25, [2008] 2 S.C.R. 3; R. v. Anderson, 2014 SCC 41,
[2014] 2 S.C.R. 167; Re B.C. Motor Vehicle Act, [1985] 2 S.C.R. 486; Canadian
Foundation for Children, Youth and the Law v. Canada (Attorney General),
2004 SCC 4, [2004] 1 S.C.R. 76; R. v. Neil, 2002 SCC 70, [2002] 3 S.C.R.
631; Rodriguez v. British Columbia (Attorney General), [1993] 3 S.C.R.
519; Andrews v. Law Society of British Columbia, [1989] 1 S.C.R. 143; Attorney
General of Canada v. Law Society of British Columbia, [1982] 2 S.C.R. 307; Pearlman
v. Manitoba Law Society Judicial Committee, [1991] 2 S.C.R. 869.
By McLachlin C.J. and
Moldaver J.
Referred
to: R. v. Malmo-Levine, 2003 SCC 74, [2003] 3 S.C.R. 571.
Statutes and Regulations Cited
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms,
ss. 1 , 7 , 8 .
Criminal Code, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-46, ss.
83.02 , 83.03 , 462.31 , 488.1 .
Proceeds of Crime (Money Laundering) and Terrorist Financing Act, S.C. 2000, c. 17, ss. 2 “legal counsel”, 3, Part 1, 5(i), (j),
6, 6.1, 7, 9, 9.1, 9.6, 10.1, 11, 62, 63, 63.1, 64, 65, 65.1, 74.
Proceeds of Crime (Money Laundering) and Terrorist Financing
Regulations, SOR/2002-184, ss. 1(2) “funds”,
“receipt of funds record”, 11.1, 33.3, 33.4, 33.5, 59.4, 64 to 67, 68, 69, 70.
Authors Cited
Council of Bars and Law Societies of Europe. Charter of Core
Principles of the European Legal Profession, in Charter of Core
Principles of the European Legal Profession and Code of Conduct for European
Lawyers, edition 2013, 5 (online:
http://www.ccbe.eu/index.php?id=32&L=0).
Federation of Law Societies of Canada. Model Rule on Client
Identification and Verification Requirements, adopted March 20, 2008, and
modified December 12, 2008 (online).
International Bar Association. International
Principles on Conduct for the Legal Profession, adopted May 28, 2011
(online: http://www.ibanet.org/Publications
/publications_IBA_guides_and_free_materials.aspx).
Mill, J. S. On Liberty and Considerations on Representative
Government, by R. B. McCallum, ed. Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1946.
Stewart, Hamish. Fundamental Justice: Section 7 of the Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms. Toronto: Irwin Law, 2012.
United Nations. Basic Principles on the Role of Lawyers, in Eighth
United Nations Congress on the Prevention of Crime and the Treatment of
Offenders: Havana, 27 August — 7 September 1990. U.N. Doc. A/CONF.144/28/Rev.1.
New York: United Nations, 1991, 118.
APPEAL
from a judgment of the British Columbia Court of Appeal (Finch C.J.B.C. and
Frankel, Neilson, Garson and Hinkson JJ.A.), 2013 BCCA 147, 41 B.C.L.R. (5th)
283, 335 B.C.A.C. 243, 573 W.A.C. 243, 359 D.L.R. (4th) 1, 48 Admin. L.R. (5th)
181, 297 C.C.C. (3d) 429, 2 C.R. (7th) 324, 278 C.R.R. (2d) 273, [2013] 5
W.W.R. 1, [2013] B.C.J. No. 632 (QL), 2013 CarswellBC 812 (WL Can.), affirming
a decision of Gerow J., 2011 BCSC 1270, 25 B.C.L.R. (5th) 265, 339 D.L.R. (4th)
48, 48 Admin. L.R. (5th) 285, 89 C.R. (6th) 80, 244 C.R.R. (2d) 129, [2012] 2
W.W.R. 758, [2011] B.C.J. No. 1779 (QL), 2011 CarswellBC 2436 (WL Can.). Appeal
allowed in part.
Christopher
Rupar and Jan Brongers, for the appellant.
John
J. L. Hunter, Q.C., and Roy W. Millen,
for the respondent.
Michal
Fairburn and Justin Safayeni, for the
intervener the Criminal Lawyers’ Association (Ontario).
Mahmud
Jamal, David Rankin and Pierre-Alexandre
Henri, for the intervener the Canadian Civil Liberties Association.
Leonard
T. Doust, Q.C., and Michael A. Feder,
for the intervener the Law Society of British Columbia.
Craig
A. B. Ferris and Laura Bevan, for the
intervener the Canadian Bar Association.
Paul
D. Stern and Robert A. Centa, for the
intervener the Advocates’ Society.
Raymond
Doray and Loïc Berdnikoff, for the
interveners Barreau du Québec and Chambre des notaires du Québec.
The
judgment of LeBel, Abella, Cromwell, Karakatsanis and Wagner JJ. was delivered
by
Cromwell J. —
I.
Introduction
[1]
Lawyers must keep their clients’ confidences and
act with commitment to serving and protecting their clients’ legitimate
interests. Both of these duties are essential to the due administration of
justice. However, some provisions of Canada’s anti-money laundering and
anti-terrorist financing legislation are repugnant to these duties. They
require lawyers, on pain of imprisonment, to obtain and retain information that
is not necessary for ethical legal representation and provide inadequate
protection for the client’s confidences subject to solicitor-client privilege.
I agree with the British Columbia courts that these provisions are therefore
unconstitutional. They unjustifiably limit the right to be free of
unreasonable searches and seizures under s. 8 of the Canadian Charter of
Rights and Freedoms and the right under s. 7 of the Charter not to
be deprived of liberty otherwise than in accordance with the principles of
fundamental justice.
II. Overview and Background
A.
Overview
[2]
There is a risk that financial intermediaries —
those who handle funds on behalf of others — may facilitate money laundering or
terrorist financing. To reduce that risk, Canada’s anti-money laundering and
anti-terrorist financing legislation imposes duties on financial
intermediaries, including lawyers, accountants, life insurance brokers,
securities dealers and others. They must collect information in order to verify
the identity of those on whose behalf they pay or receive money, keep records
of the transactions, and establish internal programs to ensure compliance. The
legislation also subjects financial intermediaries, including lawyers, to
searches and seizures of the material that they are required to collect, record
and retain.
[3]
Lawyers object to these provisions and the
Federation of Law Societies of Canada (“Federation”), supported by several
interveners, challenges them on constitutional grounds. The Federation says
that the scheme makes lawyers unwilling state agents. They are required to
obtain and retain information about their clients. They must do this within a
scheme that authorizes unreasonable searches and seizures and provides
inadequate protections for solicitor-client privilege. This, the Federation
argues, turns law offices into archives for use by the police and prosecution. The
provisions therefore violate both s. 7 and s. 8 of the Charter .
[4]
The British Columbia courts agreed with the
Federation that the provisions violate s. 7 of the Charter but they did
not address the s. 8 challenge.
[5]
The Attorney General of Canada appeals and the
Chief Justice has stated constitutional questions which I have reproduced at
the conclusion of my reasons. The issues raised by the appeal and my
resolution of them are as follows:
1.
Do the provisions infringe the s. 8 Charter
right to be free of unreasonable searches and seizures?
[6]
In my opinion, the search provisions in the
legislation do not provide the constitutionally required protection for
solicitor-client privilege and, as a result, infringe the s. 8 Charter
right to be free of unreasonable searches and seizures.
2(a). With respect to s. 7 of the Charter , do the
provisions limit lawyers’ and/or clients’ right to liberty?
[7]
The provisions limit the liberty interests of
lawyers. It is not necessary to decide whether clients’ liberty interests are
also engaged.
2(b). Is that limitation in accordance with the principles of
fundamental justice in relation to (i) solicitor-client privilege or (ii) the
independence of the bar?
[8]
The provisions, taken as a whole, interfere with
the lawyer’s duty of commitment to the client’s cause, which, I conclude, is a
principle of fundamental justice. Given my conclusion concerning s. 8 , there is
no need to conduct a separate analysis relating to the proposed principle of
fundamental justice relating to solicitor-client privilege.
3. Are any
limitations of rights under ss. 7 or 8 demonstrably justified as required by s.
1 of the Charter ?
[9]
The Attorney General failed to demonstrate that
these limitations of Charter rights are demonstrably justified in a free
and democratic society and they are therefore not saved by s. 1 of the Charter .
B.
The Legislation
[10]
The legislative scheme out of which this appeal
arises is complex and a good grasp of how its provisions affect lawyers and
clients is necessary in order to understand the issues on appeal.
[11]
Laundering the proceeds of crime and financing
terrorist activity are serious crimes: Criminal Code, R.S.C. 1985, c.
C-46, ss. 462.31 , 83.02 and 83.03 . The Proceeds of Crime (Money Laundering)
and Terrorist Financing Act, S.C. 2000, c. 17 , seeks to detect and deter
these crimes and to facilitate their investigation and prosecution: s. 3 . The
Act pursues these objectives in three main ways: by establishing record keeping
and client identification standards, by requiring reporting from financial
intermediaries, and by putting in place an agency to oversee compliance — the
Financial Transactions and Reports Analysis Centre of Canada (“FINTRAC”).
[12]
Regulations made under the Act particularize how
the legislative scheme applies to legal counsel: the Proceeds of Crime
(Money Laundering) and Terrorist Financing Regulations, SOR/2002-184. The
Act defines “legal counsel” to mean an advocate or a notary in the province of
Quebec and in every other province a barrister or solicitor: s. 2 . I will use
the term “lawyer” to refer to all legal professionals who are subject to the
regime. The relevant provisions of the Act and the Regulations are
set out in the Appendix. The rationale for requiring lawyers to comply with
client identification and record keeping requirements, according to the
Attorney General’s submissions, is to deter illicit transactions and, if such
transactions occur, to help establish a paper trail that, with the proper
judicial authorization, could be accessed by law enforcement: A.F., at para.
17. The record keeping requirements deter illicit transactions in at least two
ways. They help ensure that lawyers do not become unwitting dupes of clients
who wish to use them to facilitate illicit transactions and make it harder for
clients to engage in such activities through their lawyers.
[13]
Here is an overview of the most relevant
provisions of the Act and Regulations affecting lawyers.
(1)
Gathering Information to Verify Identity
[14]
Turning first to verification, the Act requires
lawyers to identify persons and entities on whose behalf they act as financial
intermediaries: s. 6.1; Regulations, s. 33.3. In summary, a lawyer must
verify the identity of persons or entities on whose behalf the lawyer receives
or pays funds other than in respect of professional fees, disbursements,
expenses or bail. There are detailed rules about how to do this verification
upon receipt of $3,000 or more. Briefly, verification requires presentation of
government-issued documents. Individuals must present proof of identity such as
passports or drivers’ licences. In the case of corporations, the lawyer must
obtain the corporation’s name and address, as well as the names of its
directors, by means of a record that confirms the corporation’s existence:
Regulations, s. 65. Other entities, such as partnerships, are identified by
records confirming their existence: Regulations, ss. 33.3, 33.4, 59.4
and 64 to 67.
[15]
This verification scheme also requires lawyers
to collect information which varies according to whether the transaction is
being conducted on behalf of a person, a corporation or some other entity:
Regulations, s. 11.1. For a corporation, this includes the names of all
directors and the names and addresses of certain shareholders: Regulations, s. 11.1(1)(a).
With respect to trusts, the names and addresses of all trustees, beneficiaries
and settlors are required: Regulations, s. 11.1(1)(b). The lawyer must
obtain “information establishing the ownership, control and structure of the
entity”: Regulations, s. 11.1(1)(d). The lawyer is required to ensure
accuracy of the information obtained (Regulations, s. 11.1(3)), and if he or
she is unable to either obtain or confirm the information sought, he or she
will be subject to other requirements: Regulations, s. 11.1(4).
(2)
Record Keeping
[16]
Section 33.4 of the Regulations provides that a
“receipt of funds record” must be created by a lawyer when $3,000 or more in
funds are received in a transaction, unless the amount is received from a
financial entity or public body. (“Funds” include cash, currency or securities,
or negotiable instruments or other financial instruments, in any form:
Regulations, s. 1(2).) The information required in the “receipt of funds
record” includes the name, address, date of birth, and nature of the principal
business or occupation of the person or entity from whom the amount is
received; the date of the transaction; the number of any account that is
affected by the transaction; the type of that account; the name of the account
holder and the currency in which the transaction is conducted; the purpose and
details of the transaction; the manner in which the funds were delivered if
they were delivered in cash (armoured car, in person, by mail, etc.); and the
amount and currency of funds received: Regulations, s. 1(2). Some information
does not have to be included where the funds are received from another lawyer’s
trust account: Regulations, s. 33.5. Section 33.4 also requires, where the
person or entity is a corporation, the lawyer to keep a copy of corporate
records relating to the power to bind a corporation in respect of transactions
with the lawyer.
[17]
The records must be kept for at least five years
after the completion of the transaction (Regulations, ss. 68 and 69) and the
Regulations mandate that they can be produced to FINTRAC within 30 days of a
request: s. 70.
(3)
Search and Seizure
[18]
FINTRAC has broad access to the information
which lawyers (and others) are required to collect, record and retain. Section
62(1) of the Act authorizes FINTRAC to “examine the records and inquire into
the business and affairs” of any lawyer. This includes the power to search
through computers (s. 62(1)(b)) and to print or copy records (s. 62(1)(c)).
Section 63.1 empowers FINTRAC to make requests for information to lawyers and
obliges lawyers to comply.
[19]
There are some protections for solicitor-client
privilege. Lawyers, when they are providing legal services, are not subject to
the reporting requirements that apply to other professions: Act, s. 10.1.
Nothing in the Act requires legal counsel to disclose any communication subject
to solicitor-client privilege: s. 11. Most significantly, s. 64 of the Act sets
up a procedure to protect against disclosure of privileged material in the
course of a search. It provides that where a lawyer claims a document in his or
her possession is subject to solicitor-client privilege it cannot be examined
or copied. However, this provision requires the lawyer to seal, identify and
retain the document and to claim privilege in court within 14 days. FINTRAC has
the authority under the regime to disclose to law enforcement information of
which it becomes aware under the search provisions if it suspects that it would
be relevant to investigating or prosecuting an offence arising out of a contravention
of the verification or record keeping obligations: Act, s. 65. Under very
recently amended provisions, law enforcement may only use this information as
evidence of a contravention of the verification, retention and reporting
obligations in Part 1 of the Act or for purposes related to compliance with
those provisions: s. 65(3). Finally, s. 65.1 of the Act allows FINTRAC to
disclose information to foreign state agencies analogous to FINTRAC for the
purposes of ensuring compliance with verification and record keeping
obligations.
(4)
The Challenged Provisions
[20]
It will be helpful to list and describe the
provisions that are challenged. The provisions fall into two groups, those
relating to verifying identity and record keeping and those relating to search and
seizure.
[21]
Sections 5(i) and 5(j) of the Act
make the professions specified in the Regulations subject to the
verification and record keeping requirements in Part 1 of the Act. Section
33.3 of the Regulations makes legal counsel subject to Part 1 of the Act
when receiving or paying funds or giving instructions to pay funds (other than
those received or paid in respect of professional fees, disbursements, expenses
or bail or when doing so on behalf of their employer). Section 33.4 of the
Regulations sets out the record keeping requirements. Section 33.5 of the
Regulations relaxes these requirements where funds are received from the trust
account of a legal firm or legal counsel. Section 59.4 of the Regulations imposes
the identification requirements. Section 11.1 of the Regulations sets
out the information that must be collected and retained in the course of
verifying identity.
[22]
Sections 62, 63 and 63.1 of the Act provide for
search and seizure powers. Section 64 provides limitations on the search and
seizure powers in relation to material for which solicitor-client privilege is
claimed.
C.
Judicial History
(1)
The Proceedings
(a)
Background
[23]
Lawyers first became subject to the Act in 2001
when they were required to report to FINTRAC “suspicious transactions”
involving their clients: s. 7 . The Federation, as well as several law
societies, launched constitutional challenges to the Act as a result. In 2002,
the Attorney General reached an agreement with the Federation to facilitate the
constitutional challenges by way of a national “binding test case” before the
courts in British Columbia. Interlocutory injunctions currently preclude the
Act from applying to lawyers. As a result, none of the regime’s anti-money
laundering requirements have been enforced against lawyers pending the outcome
of the case. In the interim, the Federation has encouraged Canadian provincial
and territorial law societies to adopt rules prohibiting lawyers from
conducting large cash transactions and requiring client identification,
verification, and record keeping measures when lawyers effect certain financial
transactions on behalf of clients.
[24]
The Attorney General contends that these
measures are insufficient to combat money laundering and terrorist financing.
He argues that criminal sanctions are needed to back up these requirements in
the case of non-compliance and that leaving enforcement to the law societies
risks a lack of uniformity.
(b)
British Columbia Supreme Court, 2011 BCSC 1270,
25 B.C.L.R. (5th) 265 (Gerow J.)
[25]
The application judge held that the challenged
provisions are contrary to s. 7 of the Charter . She concluded
that both lawyers’ and clients’ liberty interests are engaged by the Act
because it places both lawyers and their clients in jeopardy of potential
incarceration. She was of the view that solicitor-client privilege is a
principle of fundamental justice and that the recording and retention
requirements are contrary to this principle because they “result in having
lawyers’ offices turned into archives for the use of the prosecution” (para.
144).
[26]
Turning to whether this Charter
infringement could be justified under s. 1 , the judge concluded that the means
chosen were not proportionate to the objectives because regulation of lawyers
by law societies already provides effective and constitutional anti-money
laundering and anti-terrorist financing regimes. She found no proof that there
is a rational connection between the legislative objective and the infringement
of s. 7 , that the statutory regime interferes as little as possible with s. 7
rights, or that the salutary effects of the measures outweigh their deleterious
effects.
[27]
As a remedy, the application judge read down ss.
5(i), 5(j), 62, 63 and 63.1 of the Act and s. 11.1 of the
Regulations to exclude legal counsel and legal firms, and struck down s. 64 of
the Act and ss. 33.3, 33.4, 33.5 and 59.4(1) of the Regulations.
(c) British Columbia Court of Appeal, 2013
BCCA 147, 41 B.C.L.R. (5th) 283 (Hinkson J.A., Finch C.J.B.C. and
Neilson J.A. Concurring; Concurring in the Result, Frankel J.A., Garson J.A.
Concurring)
[28]
The Court of Appeal unanimously held that the
obligations imposed on lawyers by the provisions breach s. 7 of the Charter
and that they are not saved by s. 1 . Although the court found that the
provisions sufficiently protect solicitor-client privilege, it concluded that
“independence of the Bar” is a principle of fundamental justice and that the
provisions are not consistent with it. The Court of Appeal held that legal
advisors are placed in an unacceptable conflict of interest between clients’
interests, the state’s interests, and their own liberty interests, and that the
provisions turn some lawyers into agents of the state.
[29]
On the question of whether clients’ liberty
interests are engaged by the provisions, the Court of Appeal divided. Hinkson
J.A. (as he then was) (writing for a majority of the court on this point) held
that the clients’ liberty interests are engaged because the provisions
facilitate access to confidential information that may be disclosed to law
enforcement for any purpose including pursuing criminal charges. Frankel J.A.
(Garson J.A. concurring) held that clients’ liberty interests are not engaged
by these provisions because the causal connection between the provisions and
any potential loss of clients’ liberty is too remote.
[30]
The Court of Appeal unanimously held that the
limitation of s. 7 rights was not justified under s. 1 of the Charter
because the Attorney General failed to prove that the provisions are minimally
impairing. The rules of the professional governing bodies already provide
effective and constitutional anti-money laundering and
anti-terrorist financing regimes in relation to lawyers, law firms and
notaries across Canada.
III. Analysis
A.
Do the Provisions Infringe Section 8 of the
Charter ?
(1)
Introduction
[31]
The issue here is whether the search and
production provisions of the scheme infringe the right to be free from
unreasonable searches and seizures guaranteed by s. 8 of the Charter .
The relevant provisions are these. Section 62 provides that a person authorized
by the Director of FINTRAC may enter premises other than a dwelling-house,
examine the records required under the Act and, for that purpose, use any
computer system and reproduce any record. There is no warrant requirement.
Section 63 gives the same powers with respect to rooms in a dwelling-house
which the authorized person reasonably believes are being used to carry on a business,
profession or activity which is subject to the Act, but a warrant is required.
This provision implicates lawyers who have home offices. Section 63.1 permits
the authorized person to serve a notice that requires the person or entity
which is the subject of the inspection to provide information relevant to the
administration of the Act in the form of electronic data, a printout or
other intelligible output. Finally, s. 64 provides some protection of
solicitor-client privilege in the course of exercising these powers.
[32]
The Attorney General concedes that s. 62 and s.
63.1 authorize searches and seizures within the meaning of s. 8 . It is
self-evident that the same must be said about s. 63 . These provisions do not
simply require production of a particular type of document but permit an
authorized person to “examine the records and inquire into the business and
affairs of any person or entity [subject to the Act] for the purpose of
ensuring compliance with Part 1” (s. 62(1)), as well as to make and take away
copies (s. 62(1)(c)).
[33]
Neither of the British Columbia courts addressed
the s. 8 issue, but I have found it helpful to address it first. This is the
better approach to considering the constitutionality of the law office
inspection provisions, in my view. If these procedures constitute unjustified
and unreasonable searches and seizures, they are unconstitutional by virtue of
s. 8 and there is no need to undertake an independent s. 7 analysis depending
on a proposed principle of fundamental justice in relation to solicitor-client
privilege: Lavallee, Rackel & Heintz v. Canada (Attorney General),
2002 SCC 61, [2002] 3 S.C.R. 209, at paras. 34-35.
[34]
The Federation says that these provisions
violate s. 8 of the Charter , mainly because they permit the search of law
offices in ways that are not consistent with the principles set out by the
Court in Lavallee. The Attorney General, on the other hand, argues that
the searches and seizures authorized by the scheme are reasonable: they relate
to a limited class of documents for a narrow, regulatory purpose and there are
appropriate safeguards to protect solicitor-client privilege.
[35]
I respectfully do not accept the Attorney
General’s position. The regime authorizes sweeping law office searches which
inherently risk breaching solicitor-client privilege. It does so in a criminal
law setting and for criminal law purposes. In my view, the constitutional
principles governing these searches are set out in the Court’s decision in Lavallee,
and this scheme does not comply with them.
(2)
Protection of Solicitor-Client Privilege
[36]
A law office search power is unreasonable unless
it provides a high level of protection for material subject to solicitor-client
privilege: Lavallee. The Attorney General submits, however, that Lavallee
does not dictate the outcome here: the Court in that case was only
considering the question of what safeguards are constitutionally required in
situations where law enforcement officials are seeking evidence of criminal
wrongdoing, not as here, in connection with an administrative law regulatory
compliance regime.
[37]
I accept, of course, that when a search
provision is part of a regulatory scheme, the target’s reasonable expectation
of privacy may be reduced: Thomson Newspapers Ltd. v. Canada (Director of
Investigation and Research, Restrictive Trade Practices Commission), [1990]
1 S.C.R. 425, at p. 507; R. v. Fitzpatrick, [1995] 4 S.C.R. 154, at
para. 49. However, I do not accept the Attorney General’s contention
that this scheme may be properly characterized as “an administrative law
regulatory compliance regime”: A.F., at para. 111. Its purposes, as stated in
the Act and indeed as described by the Attorney General in his
submissions, are to detect and deter the criminal offences of money laundering
and terrorist financing and to facilitate the investigation and prosecution of
these serious offences: s. 3(a). The regime imposes penal sanctions on
lawyers for non-compliance. It therefore has a predominantly criminal law
character and its regulatory aspects serve criminal law purposes.
[38]
I also accept that, as Arbour J. noted in Lavallee,
“the need for the full protection of the privilege is activated” in the context
of a criminal investigation: para. 23. However, the reasonable expectation of
privacy in relation to communications subject to solicitor-client privilege is
invariably high, regardless of the context. The main driver of that elevated
expectation of privacy is the specially protected nature of the
solicitor-client relationship, not the context in which the state seeks to
intrude into that specially protected zone. I do not accept the proposition
that there is a reduced expectation of privacy in relation to solicitor-client
privileged communication when a FINTRAC official searches a law office rather
than when a police officer does so in the course of investigating a possible
criminal offence. While Arbour J. placed her analysis in the context of
criminal investigations (see, e.g., paras. 25 and 49), her reasons, as have
many others before and since, strongly affirmed the fundamental importance of
solicitor-client privilege. As Arbour J. put it:
It is
critical to emphasize here that all information protected by the
solicitor-client privilege is out of reach for the state. . . .
[A]ny privileged information acquired by the state without the consent of the
privilege holder is information that the state is not entitled to as a
rule of fundamental justice. [Emphasis added; para. 24.]
[39]
I see no basis for thinking that
solicitor-client communications should be more vulnerable to non-consensual
disclosure in the course of a search and seizure by FINTRAC officials than they
would be in the course of any other search by other law enforcement
authorities.
[40]
The Attorney General submits that the
information here is sought in aid of monitoring the lawyer’s activities, not
the client’s, and that there is protection against derivative use. But these
factors are entitled to little weight here. As discussed earlier, the
overriding purposes of this scheme are the prevention and detection of serious,
criminal offences. It has little in common with, for example, the competition
legislation at issue in Thomson Newspapers or the fisheries legislation
in Fitzpatrick. Moreover, I do not accept the Attorney General’s
submission that the broad scope of this search power is somehow limited by what
the “regulator” is “interested in reviewing”: A.F., at para. 107. The Act on
its face purports to give the authorized person licence to troll through vast
amounts of information in the possession of lawyers. As the intervener Criminal
Lawyers’ Association fairly put it, the Act gives authorized persons the power
“to roam at large within law offices, and . . . to examine and seize
any record or data found therein”: factum, at para. 23. The exercise of these
powers in relation to records in possession of lawyers creates a very high risk
that solicitor-client privilege will be lost.
[41]
In short, there is nothing about the regulatory
context here or the interests of the regulator which in any way takes this regime
out of the field of criminal law or diminishes in any way the very high
reasonable expectation of privacy in relation to material subject to
solicitor-client privilege. In my view, the Lavallee
standard applies to this regime.
[42]
The Lavallee analysis does not assume, of
course, that all records found in the possession of a lawyer are subject to
privilege and I do not approach this case on the basis that all the materials
that lawyers are required to obtain and retain by the Act are privileged. The Lavallee
standard aims to prevent the significant risk that some privileged material
will be among the records in a lawyer’s office examined and seized pursuant to
a search warrant. Similarly, in this case, there is a significant risk that at
least some privileged material will be found among the documents that are the
subject of the search powers in the Act.
(3)
The Lavallee Principles
[43]
Lavallee and its
two companion appeals concerned the constitutionality of s. 488.1 of the
Criminal Code . That section sets out a procedure to be followed when an
officer acting under the authority of any Act of Parliament is “about to
examine, copy or seize a document in the possession of a lawyer who claims that
a named client of his has a solicitor-client privilege” in respect of it. The
Court concluded that the section was unconstitutional because it suffered from
a number of deficiencies in relation to the constitutional level of protection
required by s. 8 in relation to solicitor-client privilege.
[44]
The core principle of the decision is that
solicitor-client privilege “must remain as close to absolute as possible if it
is to retain relevance”: Lavallee, at para. 36. This means that there
must be a “stringent” norm to ensure its protection, such that any legislative
provisions that interfere with the privilege more than “absolutely necessary”
will be found to be unreasonable: para. 36.
[45]
Lavallee is an
important authority because of the similarity of the schemes set up to protect
solicitor-client privilege under s. 488.1 of the Code, which was in
issue in that case, and s. 64 of the Act, which is in issue here. Section 64 of
the Act, like s. 488.1 , is engaged at the point at which the official is “about
to examine” material “in the possession” of a lawyer. Under both provisions,
the protective scheme applies at the point that the lawyer asserts that a
“named client” (or in the case of s. 64, a “named client or former client”)
“has a solicitor-client privilege” in respect of the material sought. Once that
claim is made, the material is sealed and preserved. (The mechanics of this
part of the two schemes differ; under the Code, the official seals the
documents and places the sealed package in possession of the sheriff for
safekeeping, while under the Act, the lawyer does the sealing and safekeeping.)
[46]
Both schemes require the official to give a
reasonable opportunity for a claim of solicitor-client privilege to be made
before examining or copying the material. Section 64(9.1) of the Act enhances
this protection somewhat by providing that the official is not to examine or
make copies of a document in the possession of a non-lawyer who contends that a
claim of solicitor-client privilege may be made by a lawyer without giving the
person a reasonable opportunity to contact that lawyer.
[47]
The processes under the two schemes for judicial
determination of the privilege issue are also similar. Under both schemes, the
lawyer may apply within 14 days to have a judge decide whether the material is
privileged. If no application is made, the Attorney General may apply to a
judge for an order directing the custodian of the material to deliver it to the
official. Under both schemes, any material that the judge finds to be subject
to solicitor-client privilege remains so. In the absence of an application,
however, the judge is obliged to direct the material to be turned over to the
official.
[48]
To return to Lavallee, the Court
identified specific constitutional infirmities in s. 488.1 , all flowing from
the fact that it failed to address directly the entitlement that the privilege
holder, the client, should have to protect the privilege. The absence of
provisions requiring notice to the holder of the privilege meant the client may
not even be aware that his or her privilege is threatened: para. 40. This
fundamental difficulty identified in s. 488.1 in Lavallee is not
meaningfully addressed by s. 64.
[49]
The Court in Lavallee found that two
further constitutional infirmities resulted from this. The first was that the
scheme wrongly transferred the burden of protecting the privilege from the
state to the lawyer. This was so because under the scheme only the lawyer could
assert the privilege and the client did not have to be given notice: para. 40.
Where notification was not feasible, there ought at least to be some
independent legal intervention, for instance in the form of notification and
involvement of the relevant Law Society: para. 41. As Arbour J. explained:
. . . since the right of the
state to access this information is, in law, conditional on the consent of the
privilege holder, all efforts to notify that person, or an appropriate
surrogate such as the Law Society, must be put in place in order for the
section to conform to s. 8 of the Charter . [para. 42]
[50]
Section 64 suffers from similar defects. The
initial claim of privilege may only be made by legal counsel, as was the case
under s. 488.1 . While under s. 64, legal counsel is required to provide the
client’s last known address to enable the official to “endeavour to advise the
client of the claim of privilege”, there is no requirement for notice to the
client, who is the holder of the privilege, and no protocol for independent
legal intervention where it is not feasible to notify the client. Moreover, as
we shall see, the lawyer’s obligation to identify the client in order to claim
the privilege is also problematic.
[51]
A second constitutional failing identified in Lavallee
relates to what happens when a claim of privilege has been made to the
official, but no application to court has been made by the client or the
lawyer. In those circumstances, the judge is required on the application of the
Attorney General to order the lawyer to make the material available to the
official. As Arbour J. explained:
. . . this mandatory
disclosure of potentially privileged information, in a case where the court has
been alerted to the possibility of privilege by the fact that the documents
were sealed at the point of search, cannot be said to minimally impair the
privilege. It amounts to an unjustifiable vindication of form over substance,
and it creates a real possibility that the state may obtain privileged
information that a court could very well have recognized as such. [para. 43]
[52]
Section 64(6) similarly denies discretion to the
judge to assess the claim of privilege on his or her own motion and therefore
has the same constitutional failing.
[53]
The Court in Lavallee also set out a
number of general principles that govern the legality of law office searches
designed in part to guide the legislative options that Parliament may wish to
address. These general principles, while not a checklist, were intended “to
reflect the present-day constitutional imperatives for the protection of
solicitor-client privilege”: para. 49. Two of these general principles are particularly
relevant here.
[54]
One of these principles is that, before
searching a law office, the authorities must satisfy a judicial officer that
there exists no other reasonable alternative to the search. Sections 62 and
63.1 do not require prior judicial authorization, let alone impose a statutory
requirement that there be no other reasonable alternative. However, s. 63 is
less problematic in this respect. It requires judicial pre-authorization to
search a lawyer’s home office, including demonstration that entry into the
dwelling-house is necessary for any purpose that relates to ensuring compliance
with Part 1 of the Act.
[55]
A second general principle in Lavallee is
that “all documents in possession of a lawyer must be sealed before being
examined or removed from the lawyer’s possession” unless otherwise specifically
authorized by a warrant: para. 49. In contrast, under s. 64, examining and
copying in a law office by the official stops only at the point at which a
claim of solicitor-client privilege is asserted by a lawyer on behalf of a
named client. Thus, examining and copying proceeds until there is a specific
assertion of privilege — an approach that greatly elevates the risk that
privileged material will be examined. Moreover, the name of the client may itself
be (although is not always) subject to solicitor-client privilege: para. 28.
In a situation in which it is, the Act requires the lawyer to breach
that privilege in order to claim the privilege attaching to the material sought
by the official. The same, in my view, may be said about the obligation of the
lawyer under s. 64(10) to provide the authorities with the latest known address
for the client.
[56]
Lavallee concerned law
office searches that were judicially pre-authorized and therefore addressed a
scheme that was, in that respect, different from the scheme that is in issue
here. Warrantless searches, such as those permitted under this scheme, are
presumptively unreasonable. Moreover, the judicial pre-authorization
requirement is, in itself, an important protection against improper search and
seizure of privileged material. However, I do not foreclose the possibility
that Parliament could devise a constitutionally compliant inspection regime
without a judicial pre-authorization requirement.
(4)
Summary
[57]
In my view, the search powers in ss. 62 , 63 and
63.1 as applied to lawyers, along with the inadequate protection of
solicitor-client privilege provided by s. 64, constitute a very significant
limitation of the right to be free of unreasonable searches and seizures
guaranteed by s. 8 of the Charter .
(5)
Is the Limitation Justified Under Section 1?
[58]
Section 1 of the Charter “guarantees the
rights and freedoms set out in it subject only to such reasonable limits
prescribed by law as can be demonstrably justified in a free and democratic
society”. In order for a limitation to be justified, it must serve and be a
proportionate response to a pressing and substantial objective: R. v. Oakes,
[1986] 1 S.C.R. 103, at pp. 138-39. The government has a difficult task in
seeking to uphold as reasonable provisions, such as those in issue here, which
have been found to authorize unreasonable searches: Lavallee, at para.
46; R. v. Kokesch, [1990] 3 S.C.R. 3, at pp. 18-19.
[59]
I accept, of course, that the objectives of
combating money laundering and terrorist financing are pressing and substantial
as both the application judge and the Court of Appeal held.
[60]
With respect to the proportionality analysis, the
appellant has the burden of proving that (i) the objective is rationally
connected to the limit; (ii) the limit impairs the right as little as possible;
and (iii) there is proportionality between
the effects of the limitation of the Charter right and the objective.
The rational connection does not impose a particularly onerous threshold: Little
Sisters Book and Art Emporium v. Canada (Minister of Justice), 2000 SCC 69,
[2000] 2 S.C.R. 1120, at para. 228. There is a logical and direct link between,
on one hand, the combating of money laundering and terrorist financing (in
which lawyers may unbeknownst to them be participating) and, on the other, governmental
supervision through searches conducted at law offices.
[61]
In my view, however, the justification fails the
minimal impairment test. There are other less drastic means of pursuing the
same identified objectives. The Court has previously outlined the sorts of
protections that are required in order to meet the constitutional standard of
protection for solicitor-client privilege: Lavallee.
[62]
I am therefore of the view that s. 64, and to
the extent that they operate in relation to lawyers’ offices, ss. 62, 63 and
63.1 of the Act, cannot be justified.
(6)
Remedy
[63]
With respect to ss. 62 , 63 and 63.1 , I would
follow the example of the application judge and read those provisions down to
exclude legal counsel and legal firms from the scope of their operation.
[64]
The correct approach to s. 64 is more
controversial. The Attorney General submits that the appropriate remedy is to read
into s. 64 the requirements that would render these provisions constitutionally
sound. I cannot accept this approach, however.
[65]
The Attorney General’s argument rests on the
premise that s. 64 (as it now stands) can only violate s. 8 to a “very limited
extent”: A.F., at para. 116. This is not the case in my respectful view, for
the reasons I have developed at length earlier. Moreover, “reading in” as a
constitutional remedy is generally not appropriate when there is a variety of
options that would render the provision constitutional: see Schachter v.
Canada, [1992] 2 S.C.R. 679, at pp. 705-7. In this case, there is such a
variety of legislative approaches available. As Arbour J. said in Lavallee,
at para. 48:
The need to ensure that
privilege holders are given a genuine opportunity to enforce the protection of
their confidential communications to their lawyers, at the time when they need
the protection of the law the most, cannot easily be met by a judicial
redrafting of the provision. Neither can the need to ensure that the courts are
given enough flexibility and discretion to remain the protectors of
constitutional rights and the guardians of the law. In my view, the process for
seizing documents in the possession of a lawyer is indeed a delicate matter,
which presents some procedural options that are best left to Parliament.
[66]
Applying this reasoning, reading in is not
appropriate to remedy the constitutional defects of s. 64.
(7)
Conclusion
[67]
I would declare that s. 64 is of no force or
effect and that ss. 62 , 63 and 63.1 should be read down so that they do not
apply to documents in the possession of legal counsel or in law office
premises.
[68]
I add this. The issues that would arise in the
event of a challenge to professional regulatory schemes are not before us in
this case. Different considerations would come into play in relation to
regulatory audits of lawyers conducted on behalf of lawyers’ professional
governing bodies. The regulatory schemes in which the professional governing
bodies operate in Canada serve a different purpose from the Act and Regulations
and generally contain much stricter measures to protect solicitor-client
privilege.
B.
Do the Provisions Violate Section 7 of the
Charter ?
[69]
There are two steps to the analysis under s. 7
of the Charter . The first is to determine whether the challenged
provisions limit the right to life, liberty or security of the person. If they
do, the analysis moves to the second step of determining whether that
limitation is in accordance with the principles of fundamental justice: Canada
(Attorney General) v. Bedford, 2013 SCC 72, [2013] 3 S.C.R. 1101, at para.
57; Blencoe v. British Columbia (Human Rights Commission), 2000 SCC 44,
[2000] 2 S.C.R. 307, at para. 47.
[70]
The Attorney General maintains that there is no
s. 7 violation here, but I respectfully disagree. These provisions limit the
liberty of lawyers in a way that is not in accordance with the principle of
fundamental justice in relation to the lawyer’s duty of commitment to the
client’s cause.
(1) Do the Provisions Limit Lawyers’ and/or Clients’ Right to Life,
Liberty or Security of the Person?
[71]
There is no dispute that these provisions engage
the liberty interests of lawyers. If lawyers do not comply with the Act’s requirements,
they are liable to prosecution and imprisonment. Section 74 provides that the
failure to comply with certain provisions of the Act (including the search
provisions) can lead to the imposition of a fine of up to $500,000 or
imprisonment of up to five years, or both. This includes failure to comply with
ss. 6 and 6.1 of the Act, which set out the general verification and record
keeping obligations. It also includes the failure of persons in charge of law
offices subject to searches to give FINTRAC “all reasonable assistance” during
a search conducted under the authority of s. 62 , as well as the failure to
comply with a request for documents made by FINTRAC under s. 63.1 .
[72]
Both the application judge and a majority of the
Court of Appeal found that this regime also limited the liberty of clients.
However, I do not find it necessary to decide this point. I have already
concluded that lawyers’ liberty interests are engaged by the challenged
provisions and it has not been suggested that the s. 7 analysis would be
different in relation to clients’ as compared to lawyers’ liberty interests.
(2) Is the Limitation Contrary to the Principle of Fundamental Justice
in Relation to Solicitor-Client Privilege?
[73]
I have already concluded that the search
provisions of the Act offend the s. 8 right to be free from unreasonable
searches and seizures and that they are unconstitutional and of no force
and effect as they apply to records in the possession of lawyers. This
conclusion makes it unnecessary to undertake an independent s. 7 analysis based
on a principle of fundamental justice in relation to solicitor-client privilege
in this case: see, e.g., Lavallee, at para. 34; R. v. Rodgers,
2006 SCC 15, [2006] 1 S.C.R. 554, at para. 23; and R. v. Mills, [1999] 3
S.C.R. 668, at para. 88.
(3) Is the Limitation Contrary to the Principle of Fundamental Justice
Relating to the Independence of the Bar?
(a)
The Court of Appeal’s Decision
[74]
The Court of Appeal found that the limitation of
lawyers’ liberty interests was not in accordance with what it concluded was a
principle of fundamental justice in relation to the independence of the bar.
While the Court of Appeal at times expressed the principle of the independence
of the bar in very broad terms, the crux of its reasoning rested on much
narrower grounds. The legislation, the court found, constituted state
interference with the lawyer’s duty of loyalty to the client: it places the
lawyer in a conflict of interest because
the legal advisor must choose
to conform to the Act and to the Regulations and thus, at the
very least, be in breach of his or her duty of loyalty acting both for the
client and for the State or, in order to respect his or her obligations to the
client, expose himself or herself to prosecution . . . they are
forced not only to keep but also to create archives for the State.
. . .
the Regime imposes conflicting interests and corresponding obligations on the
lawyer, regarding clients’ interests, state interests, and Lawyers’ liberty
interests. [paras. 122-23]
(b)
Positions of the Parties and Overview
[75]
The Federation, supported by several interveners,
maintains that the independence of the bar is a principle of fundamental
justice and that the scheme is contrary to that principle in two respects.
First, the scheme directly interferes with how lawyers deliver legal services
to clients because it requires lawyers, by threat of imprisonment, to prepare
records of the clients’ activities, relationships and details of their
transactions as part of a regime whose overall purpose is predominantly
criminal. This, it is argued, is direct government intervention in the way in
which the lawyer delivers legal services. Second, the lawyer is required to
retain that information so the lawyer’s office, as the Federation puts it,
becomes an archive for the use of the prosecution. This undermines the trust between
lawyer and client that is and must be at the foundation of the solicitor-client
relationship. The argument goes that the lawyer is being conscripted against
his or her clients by being required to obtain information from a client that
is not required in order to provide legal services and to act as a government
repository for that information.
[76]
As I understand these submissions, there are
really two versions of the principle that are being advanced, a broad one and a
narrow one.
[77]
According to the broad version, the independence
of the bar means that lawyers “are free from incursions from any source,
including from public authorities”: Court of Appeal reasons, at para. 113. The
narrower, more focused version, is anchored in concern about state interference
with the lawyer’s commitment to the client’s cause. This narrower version, as
I see it, boils down to the proposition that the state cannot impose duties on
lawyers that interfere with their duty of commitment to advancing their
clients’ legitimate interests. In my view, the narrower principle is the one
that is most relevant to this case: the central contention is that this scheme
substantially interferes with the lawyers’ duty of commitment to their clients’
cause because it imposes duties on lawyers to the state to act in ways that are
contrary to their clients’ legitimate interests and may, in effect, turn
lawyers into state agents for that purpose.
[78]
The Attorney General submits that there is no
principle of fundamental justice in relation to the independence of the bar. He
argues that the Court of Appeal’s broad definition of the independence of the
bar essentially places lawyers above the law. The principle of the independence
of the bar does not meet any of the three requirements that must be met by a
principle of fundamental justice. While an important state interest, the
independence of the bar is not a legal principle. There is no broad societal
consensus concerning the existence of this principle and it cannot be
identified with sufficient precision. The independence of the bar, says the
Attorney General, does not describe a justiciable standard.
[79]
The Attorney General submits that even if the
independence of the bar is a principle of fundamental justice, the scheme is
consistent with it. The Court of Appeal was wrong to conclude that the scheme
has the effect of turning at least some lawyers into state agents. This
conclusion, argues the Attorney General, is based on the Court of Appeal’s
misinterpretation of the nature of the obligations imposed on lawyers to
maintain financial records, the extent to which FINTRAC can access these
records through a compliance audit, and the prohibition on derivative use of
these records provided by s. 65 of the Act. The Attorney General notes that
lawyers are exempted from the Act’s reporting requirements that apply to
accountants and other professionals who act as financial intermediaries.
[80]
In my view, there is considerable merit in the
Attorney General’s submissions considered in relation to the broad notion of the
independence of the bar asserted by the Federation. However, I do not for the
purposes of this appeal have to finally determine that point. The narrower
understanding of the independence of the bar which relates it to the lawyer’s
duty of commitment to the client’s cause is the aspect of the lawyer’s special
duty to his or her client that is most relevant to this appeal.
[81]
The duty of lawyers to avoid conflicting
interests is at the heart of both the general legal framework defining the
fiduciary duties of lawyers to their clients and of the ethical principles
governing lawyers’ professional conduct. This duty aims to avoid two types of
risks of harm to clients: the risk of misuse of confidential information and
the risk of impairment of the lawyer’s representation of the client (see, e.g.,
Canadian National Railway Co. v. McKercher LLP, 2013 SCC 39, [2013] 2
S.C.R. 649, at para. 23).
[82]
The Court has recognized that aspects of these
fiduciary and ethical duties have a constitutional dimension. I have already
discussed at length one important example. The centrality to the
administration of justice of preventing misuse of the client’s confidential
information, reflected in solicitor-client privilege, led the Court to conclude
that the privilege required constitutional protection in the context of law
office searches and seizures: see Lavallee. Solicitor-client privilege
is “essential to the effective operation of the legal system”: R. v. Gruenke,
[1991] 3 S.C.R. 263, at p. 289. As Major J. put it in R. v. McClure,
2001 SCC 14, [2001] 1 S.C.R. 445, at para. 31: “The important relationship
between a client and his or her lawyer stretches beyond the parties and is integral
to the workings of the legal system itself” (emphasis added).
[83]
The question now is whether another central
dimension of the solicitor-client relationship — the lawyer’s duty of
commitment to the client’s cause — also requires some measure of constitutional
protection against government intrusion. In my view it does, for many of the
same reasons that support constitutional protection for solicitor-client
privilege. “The law is a complex web of interests, relationships and rules. The
integrity of the administration of justice depends upon the unique role of the
solicitor who provides legal advice to clients within this complex system”: McClure,
at para. 2. These words, written in the context of solicitor-client privilege,
are equally apt to describe the centrality to the administration of justice of
the lawyer’s duty of commitment to the client’s cause. A client must be able to
place “unrestricted and unbounded confidence” in his or her lawyer; that
confidence which is at the core of the solicitor-client relationship is a part
of the legal system itself, not merely ancillary to it: Smith v. Jones,
[1999] 1 S.C.R. 455, at para. 45, citing with approval, Anderson v. Bank of
British Columbia (1876), 2 Ch. D. 644 (C.A.); McClure. The lawyer’s
duty of commitment to the client’s cause, along with the protection of the
client’s confidences, is central to the lawyer’s role in the administration of
justice.
[84]
We should, in my view, recognize as a principle
of fundamental justice that the state cannot impose duties on lawyers that
undermine their duty of commitment to their clients’ causes. Subject to
justification being established, it follows that the state cannot deprive
someone of life, liberty or security of the person otherwise than in accordance
with this principle.
[85]
The analysis leading me to this conclusion
addresses three questions: (1) How do we recognize a principle of fundamental
justice? (2) Is the principle of commitment to the client’s cause such a
principle? (3) If so, is the limitation on lawyers’ liberty in this legislative
scheme in accordance with that principle?
[86]
Before addressing those questions, I should make
clear what is not in issue. While the Court of Appeal and the Federation
place great stress on independence of the bar as it relates to self-regulation
of the legal profession, I do not find it necessary or desirable in this appeal
to address the extent, if at all, to which self-regulation of the legal
profession is a principle of fundamental justice. As LeBel J. pointed out in Finney
v. Barreau du Québec, 2004 SCC 36, [2004] 2 S.C.R. 17, self-regulation is
certainly the means by which legislatures have chosen in this country to
protect the independence of the bar: para. 1. But we do not have to decide here
whether that legislative choice is in any respect constitutionally required.
Nor does the appeal require us to consider whether other constitutional
protections may exist in relation to the place of lawyers in the administration
of justice.
(c)
Recognizing Principles of Fundamental Justice
[87]
Principles of fundamental justice have three
characteristics. They must be legal principles, there must be “significant
societal consensus” that they are “fundamental to the way in which the legal
system ought fairly to operate” and they must be sufficiently precise so as “to
yield a manageable standard against which to measure deprivations of life, liberty
or security of the person”: R. v. Malmo-Levine, 2003 SCC 74, [2003] 3
S.C.R. 571, at para. 113, per Gonthier and Binnie JJ.; R. v. D.B., 2008
SCC 25, [2008] 2 S.C.R. 3, at para. 46, per Abella J.; R. v. Anderson, 2014 SCC 41, [2014] 2 S.C.R. 167, at para. 29,
per Moldaver J.
(d)
Is the Duty of Commitment to the Client’s Cause
Such a Principle?
(i)
Legal Principle and Sufficient Precision
[88]
These two elements of the test are conveniently
treated together.
[89]
Turning first to the definition of a legal
principle, the distinction is between, on one hand, a description of “an
important state interest” and “the realm of general public policy” and, on the
other, a “normative ‘legal’ principle” and “the basic tenets of our legal
system”: see Malmo-Levine, at paras. 112 and 114; Re B.C.
Motor Vehicle Act, [1985] 2 S.C.R. 486, at p. 503. Some examples help flesh
out this distinction.
[90]
The “harm principle”, unsuccessfully advanced as
a principle of fundamental justice in Malmo-Levine, was Mill’s theory to
the effect that “the only purpose for which power can be rightfully exercised
over any member of a civilised community, against his will, is to prevent harm
to others”: J. S. Mill, On Liberty and Considerations on Representative
Government (1946), at p. 8. However, the “best interests of the child”
principle and the presumption of reduced moral culpability of young persons
were found to be legal principles because they were not legal generalizations,
but rather recognized legal principles in both domestic and international law:
see Canadian Foundation for Children, Youth and the Law v. Canada (Attorney
General), 2004 SCC 4, [2004] 1 S.C.R. 76, at para. 9. Their manifestation
in various legal instruments, coupled with their longstanding use by various
legal institutions, qualified them as legal principles: ibid.; see also D.B.,
at paras. 47-60.
[91]
An important indicator that a proposed rule or
principle is a legal principle is that it is used as a rule or test in common
law, statutory law or international law. The duty of commitment to the client’s
cause has been recognized by the Court as a distinct element of the broader
common law duty of loyalty and thus unquestionably is a legal principle: McKercher,
at paras. 19 and 43-44; R. v. Neil, 2002 SCC 70, [2002] 3 S.C.R.
631, at para. 19.
[92]
While this standard is far from self-applying,
it has proven to be sufficiently precise to enable the courts to apply it in
widely divergent fact situations: see, e.g., McKercher, at paras. 43-44
and 55-56; Neil, at para. 19. This body of jurisprudence
demonstrates that this principle of commitment to the client’s cause is sufficiently precise to provide a workable standard in that it can
be applied in a manner that provides guidance as to the appropriate result: Rodriguez
v. British Columbia (Attorney General), [1993] 3 S.C.R. 519, at pp. 590-91,
per Sopinka J.; Canadian Foundation for Children, Youth and the Law, at
para. 11, per McLachlin C.J.; H. Stewart, Fundamental Justice: Section 7 of
the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms (2012), at p. 108.
[93]
Of course the duty of commitment to the client’s
cause must not be confused with being the client’s dupe or accomplice. It does
not countenance a lawyer’s involvement in, or facilitation of, a client’s
illegal activities. Committed representation does not, for example, permit let
alone require a lawyer to assert claims that he or she knows are unfounded or
to present evidence that he or she knows to be false or to help the client to
commit a crime. The duty is perfectly consistent with the lawyer taking
appropriate steps with a view to ensuring that his or her services are not
being used for improper ends.
[94]
I conclude that the lawyer’s duty of commitment
to the client’s cause is well entrenched as a sufficiently precise legal
principle and therefore satisfies the first and the third requirements of a
principle of fundamental justice.
(ii)
Sufficient Consensus That the Duty Is
Fundamental
[95]
Principles of fundamental justice find their
“meaning in the cases and traditions that have long detailed the basic norms
for how the state deals with its citizens”: Canadian Foundation for
Children, Youth and the Law, at para. 8, per McLachlin C.J. The duty of
commitment to the client’s cause is fundamental to how the state and the
citizen interact in legal matters.
[96]
Clients — and the broader public — must
justifiably feel confident that lawyers are committed to serving their clients’
legitimate interests free of other obligations that might interfere with that
duty. Otherwise, the lawyer’s ability to do so may be compromised and the trust
and confidence necessary for the solicitor-client relationship may be
undermined. This duty of commitment to the client’s cause is an enduring
principle that is essential to the integrity of the administration of justice.
In Neil, the Court underlined the fundamental importance of the duty of
loyalty to the administration of justice. The duty of commitment to the
client’s cause is an essential component of that broader fiduciary obligation.
On behalf of the Court, Binnie J. emphasized the ancient pedigree of the duty
and wrote that it endures “because it is essential to the integrity of
the administration of justice and it is of high public importance that
public confidence in that integrity be maintained”: para. 12 (emphasis added).
This unequivocal and recent affirmation seems to me to demonstrate that the
duty of commitment to the client’s cause is both generally accepted and
fundamental to the administration of justice as we understand it.
[97]
The duty of commitment to the client’s cause is
thus not only concerned with justice for individual clients but is also deemed
essential to maintaining public confidence in the administration of justice.
Public confidence depends not only on fact but also on reasonable perception.
It follows that we must be concerned not only with whether the duty is in fact
interfered with but also with the perception of a reasonable person, fully
apprised of the relevant circumstances and having thought the matter through.
The fundamentality of this duty of commitment is supported by many more general
and broadly expressed pronouncements about the central importance to the legal
system of lawyers being free from government interference in discharging their
duties to their clients. In Andrews v. Law Society of British Columbia,
[1989] 1 S.C.R. 143, McIntyre J. put it this way:
. . . in the absence of an
independent legal profession, skilled and qualified to play its part in the
administration of justice and the judicial process, the whole legal system
would be in a parlous state. [p. 187]
[98]
In Attorney General of Canada v. Law Society
of British Columbia, [1982] 2 S.C.R. 307, Estey J. wrote:
The independence of the Bar from the
state in all its pervasive manifestations is one of the hallmarks of a free
society. Consequently, regulation of these members of the law profession by the
state must, so far as by human ingenuity it can be so designed, be free from
state interference, in the political sense, with the delivery of services to
the individual citizens in the state, particularly in fields of public and
criminal law. The public interest in a free society knows no area more
sensitive than the independence, impartiality and availability to the general
public of the members of the Bar and through those members, legal advice and
services generally. [Emphasis added; pp. 335-36.]
[99]
Similarly, in Pearlman v. Manitoba Law
Society Judicial Committee, [1991] 2 S.C.R. 869, the Court took up the
theme in these words:
Stress was rightly laid on the
high value that free societies have placed historically on . . . an
independent bar, free to represent citizens without fear or favour in the
protection of individual rights and civil liberties against incursions from any
source, including the state. [p. 887]
(Citing
the Ministry of the Attorney General of Ontario, The Report of the
Professional Organizations Committee (1980), at p. 26.)
[100]
In Finney, the Court said this:
An
independent bar composed of lawyers who are free of influence by public
authorities is an important component of the fundamental legal framework of
Canadian society. [Emphasis added; para. 1.]
[101]
Various international bodies have also broadly
affirmed the fundamental importance of preventing state interference with legal
representation. The Basic Principles on the Role of Lawyers adopted by
the Eighth United Nations Congress on the Prevention of Crime and the Treatment
of Offenders state that “adequate protection of the human rights and
fundamental freedoms to which all persons are entitled . . . requires
that all persons have effective access to legal services provided by an
independent legal profession”: U.N. Doc. A/CONF.144/28/Rev.1 (1991), at p. 119.
Similarly, the Council of Bars and Law Societies of Europe’s Charter of Core
Principles of the European Legal Profession emphasizes lawyers’ “freedom . . .
to pursue the client’s case”, including it as the first of 10 “core principles”
(p. 5 (online)). The International Bar Association’s International
Principles on Conduct for the Legal Profession, adopted in 2011, also emphasize
committed client representation as the first principle governing lawyers’
conduct: “A lawyer shall maintain independence and be afforded the protection
such independence offers in giving clients unbiased advice and representation”
(p. 5 (online)).
[102]
I conclude that there is overwhelming evidence
of a strong and widespread consensus concerning the fundamental importance in
democratic states of protection against state interference with the lawyer’s
commitment to his or her client’s cause.
[103]
The duty of commitment to the client’s cause
ensures that “divided loyalty does not cause the lawyer to ‘soft peddle’ his or
her [representation]” and prevents the solicitor-client relationship from being
undermined: Neil, at para. 19; McKercher, at paras.
43-44. In the context of state action engaging s. 7 of the Charter , this
means at least that (subject to justification) the state cannot impose duties
on lawyers that undermine the lawyer’s compliance with that duty, either in
fact or in the perception of a reasonable person, fully apprised of all of the
relevant circumstances and having thought the matter through. The paradigm case
of such interference would be state-imposed duties on lawyers that conflict
with or otherwise undermine compliance with the lawyer’s duty of commitment to
serving the client’s legitimate interests.
(e)
Is the Scheme Consistent With This Principle?
[104]
The scheme limits lawyers’ liberty by punishing
with imprisonment the failure to comply with its requirements. Is this
limitation of liberty in accordance with the principle of fundamental justice
in relation to the lawyer’s duty of committed representation? In other words,
does this regime impose duties on lawyers, the performance of which in fact or
in the perception of a reasonable person undermines the lawyers’ ability to
comply with the duty of commitment to the clients’ cause?
[105]
To answer this question, we must look at the
scheme as a whole and in light of my conclusion that the search aspects of the
scheme inadequately protect solicitor-client privilege.
[106]
The profession has developed practice standards
relating to the subjects addressed by the scheme. The profession’s own activity
in this area recognizes that lawyers should take care that they not unknowingly
assist in, or turn a blind eye to, money laundering or terrorism financing.
These professional standards also underline the point that the lawyer’s duty of
commitment to the client’s cause cannot extend to in any way furthering the
client’s unlawful purposes.
[107]
The scheme requires lawyers to make and retain
records that the profession does not think are necessary for effective and
ethical representation of clients. The Federation’s Model Rule on Client
Identification and Verification Requirements (online), which has been
adopted by all law societies in Canada, contains a number of verification and
record keeping provisions similar to the requirements of the Act and
Regulations. However, the Model Rule is narrower in scope. A few illustrative
examples will make this point. The Model Rule does not impose verification
requirements when the lawyer is engaged in or gives instructions in respect of
an electronic funds transfer: r. 4. The lawyer is not always required to
identify the third party when engaged in or giving instructions in respect of a
funds transfer, as r. 6 provides that this should be done “where appropriate”.
There is no obligation under the Model Rule to establish an internal compliance
program, as is required under s. 9.6 of the Act. As a final example, the Model
Rule contains no equivalent of the scheme’s obligation to produce and retain a
“receipt of funds record” under s. 33.4 of the Regulations.
[108]
Professional ethical standards such as these
cannot dictate to Parliament what the public interest requires or set the
constitutional parameters for legislation. But these ethical standards do
provide evidence of a strong consensus in the profession as to what ethical
practice in relation to these issues requires. Viewed in this light, the
legislation requires lawyers to gather and retain considerably more information
than the profession thinks is needed for ethical and effective client
representation. This, coupled with the inadequate protection of
solicitor-client privilege, undermines the lawyer’s ability to comply with his
or her duty of commitment to the client’s cause. The lawyer is required to
create and preserve records which are not required for ethical and effective
representation. The lawyer is required to do this in the knowledge that any
solicitor-client confidences contained in these records are not adequately
protected against searches and seizures authorized by the scheme. This may, in
the lawyer’s correctly formed opinion, be contrary to the client’s legitimate
interests and therefore these duties imposed by the scheme may directly conflict
with the lawyer’s duty of committed representation.
[109]
I also conclude that a reasonable and informed
person, thinking the matter through, would perceive that these provisions in
combination significantly undermine the capacity of lawyers to provide committed
representation. The reasonable and well-informed client would see his or her
lawyer being required by the state to collect and retain information that, in
the view of the legal profession, is not required for effective and ethical
representation and with respect to which there are inadequate protections for
solicitor-client privilege. Clients would thus reasonably perceive that lawyers
were, at least in part, acting on behalf of the state in collecting and
retaining this information in circumstances in which privileged information
might well be disclosed to the state without the client’s consent. This would
reduce confidence to an unacceptable degree in the lawyer’s ability to provide
committed representation.
[110]
I conclude that the scheme taken as a whole
limits the liberty of lawyers in a manner that is not in accordance with the
principle of fundamental justice relating to the lawyer’s duty of committed
representation.
[111]
I emphasize, however, that this holding does not
place lawyers above the law. It is only when the state’s imposition of duties
on lawyers undermines, in fact or in the perception of a reasonable person, the
lawyer’s ability to comply with his or her duty of commitment to the client’s
cause that there will be a departure from what is required by this principle of
fundamental justice.
[112]
In light of my holding in relation to s. 8 of
the Charter , the scheme requires significant modification in order to
comply with the requirements of the right to be free from unreasonable searches
and seizures. Given that there are a number of ways in which the scheme could
be made compliant with s. 8 , I do not want to venture into speculation about
how a modified scheme could appropriately respond to the requirements of s. 7 .
However, it seems to me that if, for example, the scheme were to provide the
required constitutional protections for solicitor-client privilege as well as
meaningful derivative use immunity of the required records for the purposes of
prosecuting clients, it would be much harder to see how it would interfere with
the lawyer’s duty of commitment to the client’s cause.
[113]
The information gathering and record retention
provisions of this scheme serve important public purposes. They help to ensure
that lawyers take significant steps so that when they act as financial
intermediaries, they are not assisting money laundering or terrorist financing.
The scheme also serves the purpose of requiring lawyers to be able to
demonstrate to the competent authorities that this is the case. In order to
pursue these objectives, Parliament is entitled, within proper limits which I
have outlined, to impose obligations beyond those which the legal profession
considers essential to effective and ethical representation. Lawyers have a
duty to give and clients are entitled to receive committed legal representation
as well as to have their privileged communications with their lawyer protected.
Clients are not, however, entitled to make unwitting accomplices of their
lawyers let alone enlist them in the service of their unlawful ends.
(f)
Justification
[114]
I agree with the conclusion reached by the
application judge and the Court of Appeal (which was unanimous on this point)
that the scheme fails the proportionality test under s. 1 and is therefore not
a limitation that is demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society.
My conclusion is based on my view that it is the combination of the inadequate
protection of solicitor-client privilege and the information gathering and
retention aspects of the scheme that results in the s. 7 violation.
(4) Conclusion
[115]
I would agree with the application judge’s
decision that ss. 33.3, 33.4, 33.5 and 59.4 of the Regulations are of no force
and effect and that s. 11.1 of the Regulations should be read down so that it
does not apply to documents in the possession of legal counsel or in law office
premises.
IV. Disposition
[116]
To summarize, I conclude that the search
provisions of the Act infringe s. 8 of the Charter and that the
information gathering and retention provisions, in combination with the search
provisions, infringe s. 7 of the Charter . Sections 5(i) and 5(j)
of the Act provide that Part 1 of the Act applies to persons and
entities described in the Regulations and, in my view, do not on their own
infringe either s. 7 or s. 8 of the Charter .
[117]
I would allow the appeal in part with costs of
the appeal and the proceedings below to the Federation. I would set aside that
part of the application judge’s order declaring that ss. 5(i) and 5(j)
of the Act are inconsistent with the Constitution of Canada and are of no force
and effect to the extent that the reference in those subsections to “persons
and entities” includes legal counsel and law firms. I would strike ss. 5 (i)
and 5 (j) from that part of her order declaring that ss. 5(i), 5(j),
62, 63 and 63.1 of the Act are read down to exclude legal counsel and law firms
from the operation of those sections. I would otherwise dismiss the appeal and
answer the constitutional questions as follows:
1. Do ss. 5(i), 5(j), 62, 63, 63.1 or 64 of the Proceeds
of Crime (Money Laundering) and Terrorist Financing Act, S.C. 2000,
c. 17 , infringe s. 7 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms ?
Answer: With respect to ss. 62, 63, 63.1 and 64 of the Act, it
is not necessary to answer this question given the answer to question 5. With
respect to ss. 5(i) and 5(j) of the Act, the answer is no.
2. If so, is the infringement a reasonable limit prescribed by
law as can be demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society under s.
1 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms ?
Answer: It is not necessary to answer this question.
3. Do ss. 11.1, 33.3, 33.4 or 59.4 of the Proceeds of Crime
(Money Laundering) and Terrorist Financing Regulations, SOR/2002-184,
infringe s. 7 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms ?
Answer: With respect to s. 11.1 of the Regulations, to
the extent that it applies to legal counsel and legal firms, the answer is yes.
With respect to ss. 33.3, 33.4 and 59.4 of the Regulations, the answer is yes.
4. If so, is the infringement a reasonable limit prescribed by
law as can be demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society under s.
1 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms ?
Answer: No.
5. Do ss. 5(i), 5(j), 62, 63, 63.1 or 64 of the Proceeds
of Crime (Money Laundering) and Terrorist Financing Act, S.C. 2000, c. 17 ,
infringe s. 8 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms ?
Answer: To the extent that ss. 62, 63 and 63.1 of the
Act apply to documents in the possession of legal counsel and legal
firms, the answer is yes. With respect to s. 64, the answer is yes. With
respect to ss. 5(i) and 5(j), the answer is no.
6. If so, is the infringement a reasonable limit prescribed by
law as can be demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society under s.
1 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms ?
Answer: No.
7. Do ss. 11.1, 33.3, 33.4 or 59.4 of the Proceeds of Crime
(Money Laundering) and Terrorist Financing Regulations, SOR/2002-184,
infringe s. 8 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms ?
Answer: No.
8. If so, is the infringement a reasonable limit prescribed by
law as can be demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society under s.
1 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms ?
Answer: It is not necessary to answer this question.
The following are the reasons delivered by
[118]
The Chief
Justice and Moldaver J. — We have read the decision of
Cromwell J. and we agree with his reasons insofar as they relate to s. 8 of the
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms .
[119]
However, we respectfully disagree with the
approach taken by our colleague in his analysis of s. 7 of the Charter .
To the extent that the s. 7 interests of the lawyer are engaged, we do not
share our colleague’s view that the principle of fundamental justice that would
be offended is the lawyer’s commitment to the client’s cause. In our view,
this “principle” lacks sufficient certainty to constitute a principle of
fundamental justice: see R. v. Malmo-Levine, 2003 SCC 74, [2003] 3
S.C.R. 571, at para. 113. The lawyer’s commitment to the client’s interest
will vary with the nature of the retainer between the lawyer and client, as
well as with other circumstances. It does not, in our respectful opinion,
provide a workable constitutional standard.
[120]
Rather, we are inclined to the view that the s.
7 analysis would be better resolved relying on the principle of fundamental
justice which recognizes that the lawyer is required to keep the client’s
confidences — solicitor-client privilege. This duty, as our colleague explains
in his discussion of s. 8 , has already been recognized as a constitutional
norm. We note that in applying the norm of commitment to the client’s cause,
our colleague relies on breach of solicitor-client privilege. In our view,
breach of this principle is sufficient to establish that the potential
deprivation of liberty would violate s. 7 .
[121]
For these reasons, we would allow the appeal in
part in accordance with the disposition of our colleague.
APPENDIX
Proceeds
of Crime (Money Laundering) and Terrorist Financing Act, S.C. 2000, c. 17
2. The definitions in this section apply in this Act.
. . .
“legal
counsel” means, in Quebec, an advocate or a notary and, in any other province,
a barrister or solicitor. [am. S.C. 2010, c. 12, s. 1862 , eff. June 18,
2014]
. . .
3. The object of this Act is
(a)
to implement specific measures to detect and deter money laundering and the
financing of terrorist activities and to facilitate the investigation and
prosecution of money laundering offences and terrorist activity financing
offences, including
(i)
establishing record keeping and client identification requirements for
financial services providers and other persons or entities that engage in
businesses, professions or activities that are susceptible to being used for
money laundering or the financing of terrorist activities,
(ii)
requiring the reporting of suspicious financial transactions and of
cross-border movements of currency and monetary instruments, and
(iii)
establishing an agency that is responsible for ensuring compliance with Parts 1
and 1.1 and for dealing with reported and other information;
(b)
to respond to the threat posed by organized crime by providing law enforcement
officials with the information they need to deprive criminals of the proceeds
of their criminal activities, while ensuring that appropriate safeguards are
put in place to protect the privacy of persons with respect to personal
information about themselves;
(c)
to assist in fulfilling Canada’s international commitments to participate in
the fight against transnational crime, particularly money laundering, and the
fight against terrorist activity; and
(d)
to enhance Canada’s capacity to take targeted measures to protect its financial
system and to facilitate Canada’s efforts to mitigate the risk that its
financial system could be used as a vehicle for money laundering and the
financing of terrorist activities. [am. S.C. 2010, c. 12, s. 1863 , eff.
June 18, 2014; am. S.C. 2014, c. 20, s. 255 , eff. June 19, 2014]
5. This Part applies to the following persons and entities:
. . .
(i)
persons and entities engaged in a business, profession or activity described in
regulations made under paragraph 73(1)(a);
(j)
persons and entities engaged in a business or profession described in
regulations made under paragraph 73(1)(b), while carrying out the
activities described in the regulations;
. . .
6. Every person or entity referred to in section 5 shall keep and
retain prescribed records in accordance with the regulations.
6.1 Every person or entity referred to in section 5 shall verify, in
the prescribed circumstances and in accordance with the regulations, the
identity of any person or entity.
7. Subject to section 10.1, every person or entity referred to in
section 5 shall report to the Centre, in the prescribed form and manner, every
financial transaction that occurs or that is attempted in the course of their
activities and in respect of which there are reasonable grounds to suspect that
(a)
the transaction is related to the commission or the attempted commission of a
money laundering offence; or
(b)
the transaction is related to the commission or the attempted commission of a
terrorist activity financing offence.
9. (1) Subject to section 10.1, every person or entity referred to in
section 5 shall report to the Centre, in the prescribed form and manner,
(a)
any financial transaction, or any financial transaction within a class of
financial transactions, specified in a directive issued under Part 1.1 that
occurs or that is attempted in the course of their activities; and
(b)
any prescribed financial transaction that occurs in the course of their
activities.
(2)
Subsection (1) does not apply to prescribed persons or entities, or prescribed
classes of persons or entities, in respect of prescribed transactions, classes
of transactions, clients or classes of clients, if the prescribed conditions
are met.
(3)
Every person or entity referred to in section 5 shall establish and maintain a
list, in the prescribed form and manner, of their clients in respect of whom a
report would have been required under subsection (1) were it not for subsection
(2). However, a person or an entity may choose to report a client’s
transactions under subsection (1) instead of maintaining the list in respect of
that client. [am. S.C. 2010, c. 12, s. 1864 , eff. June 18, 2014]
9.1 Subject to section 9, every person or entity that is required to
make a report to the Centre under an Act of Parliament or any regulations under
it shall make it in the form and manner prescribed under this Act for a report
under that Act.
9.6 (1) Every person or entity referred to in section 5 shall establish
and implement, in accordance with the regulations, a program intended to ensure
their compliance with this Part and Part 1.1.
(2)
The program shall include the development and application of policies and
procedures for the person or entity to assess, in the course of their
activities, the risk of a money laundering offence or a terrorist activity
financing offence.
(3)
If the person or entity considers that the risk referred to in subsection (2)
is high, the person or entity shall take prescribed special measures for
identifying clients, keeping records and monitoring financial transactions in
respect of the activities that pose the high risk. [am. S.C. 2010, c.
12, s. 1865 , eff. June 18, 2014]
10.1 Sections 7 and 9 do not apply to persons or entities referred to in
paragraph 5(i) or (j) who are, as the case may be, legal counsel
or legal firms, when they are providing legal services.
62. (1) An authorized person may, from time to time, examine the
records and inquire into the business and affairs of any person or entity
referred to in section 5 for the purpose of ensuring compliance with Part 1 or
1.1, and for that purpose may
(a)
at any reasonable time, enter any premises, other than a dwelling-house, in
which the authorized person believes, on reasonable grounds, that there are
records relevant to ensuring compliance with Part 1 or 1.1;
(b)
use or cause to be used any computer system or data processing system in the
premises to examine any data contained in or available to the system;
(c)
reproduce any record, or cause it to be reproduced from the data, in the form
of a printout or other intelligible output and remove the printout or other
output for examination or copying; and
(d)
use or cause to be used any copying equipment in the premises to make copies of
any record.
(2)
The owner or person in charge of premises referred to in subsection (1) and
every person found there shall give the authorized person all reasonable
assistance to enable them to carry out their responsibilities and shall furnish
them with any information with respect to the administration of Part 1 or 1.1
or the regulations under it that they may reasonably require. [am. S.C.
2010, c. 12, s. 1882 , eff. June 18, 2014]
63. (1) If the premises referred to in subsection 62(1) is a
dwelling-house, the authorized person may not enter it without the consent of
the occupant except under the authority of a warrant issued under subsection
(2).
(2)
A justice of the peace may issue a warrant authorizing the authorized person to
enter a dwelling-house, subject to any conditions that may be specified in the
warrant, if on ex parte application the justice is satisfied by
information on oath that
(a)
there are reasonable grounds to believe that there are in the premises records
relevant to ensuring compliance with Part 1 or 1.1;
(b)
entry to the dwelling-house is necessary for any purpose that relates to
ensuring compliance with Part 1 or 1.1; and
(c)
entry to the dwelling-house has been refused or there are reasonable grounds
for believing that entry will be refused.
(3)
For greater certainty, an authorized person who enters a dwelling-house under
authority of a warrant may enter only a room or part of a room in which the
person believes on reasonable grounds that a person or an entity referred to in
section 5 is carrying on its business, profession or activity. [am. S.C.
2010, c. 12, s. 1882 , eff. June 18, 2014]
63.1 (1) For an examination under subsection 62(1), an authorized person
may also serve notice to require that the person or entity provide, at the
place and in accordance with the time and manner stipulated in the notice, any
document or other information relevant to the administration of Part 1 or 1.1
in the form of electronic data, a printout or other intelligible output.
(2)
The person or entity on whom the notice is served shall provide, in accordance
with the notice, the documents or other information with respect to the
administration of Part 1 or 1.1 that the authorized person may reasonably
require. [am. S.C. 2010, c. 12, s. 1882 , eff. June 18, 2014]
64. (1) In this section, “judge” means a judge of a superior court
having jurisdiction in the province where the matter arises or a judge of the
Federal Court.
(2)
If an authorized person acting under section 62, 63 or 63.1 is about to examine
or copy a document in the possession of a legal counsel who claims that a named
client or former client of the legal counsel has a solicitor-client privilege
in respect of the document, the authorized person shall not examine or make
copies of the document.
(3)
A legal counsel who claims privilege under subsection (2) shall
(a)
place the document, together with any other document in respect of which the
legal counsel at the same time makes the same claim on behalf of the same
client, in a package and suitably seal and identify the package or, if the
authorized person and the legal counsel agree, allow the pages of the document
to be initialled and numbered or otherwise suitably identified; and
(b)
retain it and ensure that it is preserved until it is produced to a judge as
required under this section and an order is issued under this section in
respect of the document.
(4)
If a document has been retained under subsection (3), the client or the legal
counsel on behalf of the client may
(a)
within 14 days after the day the document was begun to be so retained, apply,
on three days notice of motion to the Deputy Attorney General of Canada, to a
judge for an order
(i)
fixing a day, not later than 21 days after the date of the order, and a place
for the determination of the question whether the client has solicitor-client
privilege in respect of the document, and
(ii)
requiring the production of the document to the judge at that time and place;
(b)
serve a copy of the order on the Deputy Attorney General of Canada; and
(c)
if the client or legal counsel has served a copy of the order under paragraph (b),
apply at the appointed time and place for an order determining the question.
(5)
An application under paragraph (4)(c) shall be heard in private and, on
the application, the judge
(a)
may, if the judge considers it necessary to determine the question, inspect the
document and, if the judge does so, the judge shall ensure that it is
repackaged and resealed;
(b)
shall decide the question summarily and
(i)
if the judge is of the opinion that the client has a solicitor-client privilege
in respect of the document, order the release of the document to the legal
counsel, or
(ii)
if the judge is of the opinion that the client does not have a solicitor-client
privilege in respect of the document, order that the legal counsel make the
document available for examination or copying by the authorized person; and
(c)
at the same time as making an order under paragraph (b), deliver concise
reasons that identify the document without divulging the details of it.
(6)
If a document is being retained under subsection (3) and a judge, on the
application of the Attorney General of Canada, is satisfied that no application
has been made under paragraph (4)(a) or that after having made that
application no further application has been made under paragraph (4)(c),
the judge shall order that the legal counsel make the document available for
examination or copying by the authorized person.
(7)
If the judge to whom an application has been made under paragraph (4)(a)
cannot act or continue to act in the application under paragraph (4)(c)
for any reason, the application under paragraph (4)(c) may be made to
another judge.
(8)
No costs may be awarded on the disposition of an application under this
section.
(9)
The authorized person shall not examine or make copies of any document without
giving a reasonable opportunity for a claim of solicitor-client privilege to be
made under subsection (2).
(9.1)
The authorized person shall not examine or make copies of a document in the
possession of a person, not being a legal counsel, who contends that a claim of
solicitor-client privilege may be made in respect of the document by a legal
counsel, without giving that person a reasonable opportunity to contact that
legal counsel to enable a claim of solicitor-client privilege to be made.
(10)
If a legal counsel has made a claim that a named client or former client of the
legal counsel has a solicitor-client privilege in respect of a document, the
legal counsel shall at the same time communicate to the authorized person the
client’s latest known address so that the authorized person may endeavour to
advise the client of the claim of privilege that has been made on their behalf
and may by doing so give the client an opportunity, if it is practicable within
the time limited by this section, to waive the privilege before the matter is
to be decided by a judge.
65. (1) The Centre may disclose to the appropriate law enforcement
agencies any information of which it becomes aware under subsection (4) or
section 62, 63 or 63.1 and that it suspects on reasonable grounds would be
relevant to investigating or prosecuting an offence under this Act arising out
of a contravention of Part 1 or 1.1.
(2)
For the purpose of ensuring compliance with Part 1 or 1.1, the Centre may
disclose to or receive from any agency or body that regulates or supervises
persons or entities to whom Part 1 or 1.1 applies information relating to the
compliance of those persons or entities with that Part.
(3)
Any information disclosed by the Centre under subsection (1) may be used by an
agency referred to in that subsection only as evidence of a contravention of
Part 1 or 1.1, and any information disclosed by the Centre under subsection (2)
may be used by an agency or body referred to in subsection (2) only for
purposes relating to compliance with Part 1 or 1.1.
(4)
For the purpose of ensuring compliance with Parts 1 and 1.1, the Centre shall
receive information voluntarily provided to it by a person or entity — other
than an agency or body referred to in subsection (2) — relating to the
compliance with Part 1 or 1.1 of persons or entities referred to in section 5. [am.
S.C. 2010, c. 12, s. 1882 , eff. June 18, 2014; am. S.C. 2014, c. 20, s. 287 ,
eff. June 19, 2014]
65.1 (1) The Centre may enter into an agreement or arrangement, in
writing, with an institution or agency of a foreign state that has powers and
duties, similar to those of the Centre, with respect to verifying compliance
with requirements to identify persons or entities, keep and retain records or
make reports, or with an international organization made up of such
institutions or agencies and established by the governments of states, that
stipulates
(a)
that the Centre and the institution, agency or organization may exchange
information about the compliance of persons and entities with those
requirements and about the assessment of risk related to their compliance;
(b)
that the information may only be used for purposes relevant to ensuring
compliance with the requirements and to assessing risk related to compliance;
and
(c)
that the information will be treated in a confidential manner and not be
further disclosed without the express consent of the Centre.
(2)
The Centre may, in accordance with the agreement or arrangement, provide the
institution, agency or organization with information referred to in the
agreement or arrangement.
(3)
When the Centre receives information from an institution, agency or
organization under an agreement or arrangement, the Centre may provide it with
an evaluation of whether the information is useful to the Centre.
Proceeds
of Crime (Money Laundering) and Terrorist Financing Regulations, SOR/2002-184
1. . . .
(2)
The following definitions apply in these Regulations.
. . .
“receipt
of funds record” means, in respect of a transaction in which an amount of funds
is received, a record that contains the following information:
(a)
if the information is not readily obtainable from other records that the
recipient keeps and retains under these Regulations, the name of the person or
entity from whom the amount is in fact received and
(i)
where the amount is received from a person, their address and date of birth and
the nature of their principal business or their occupation, and
(ii)
where the amount is received from an entity, their address and the nature of
their principal business;
(b)
the date of the transaction;
(c)
the number of any account that is affected by the transaction, and the type of
that account, the full name of the person or entity that is the account holder
and the currency in which the transaction is conducted;
(d)
the purpose and details of the transaction, including other persons or entities
involved and the type and form of the transaction;
(e)
if the funds are received in cash, whether the cash is received by armoured
car, in person, by mail or in any other way; and
(f)
the amount and currency of the funds received.
11.1 (1) Every financial entity or securities dealer that is required to
confirm the existence of an entity in accordance with these Regulations when it
opens an account in respect of that entity, every life insurance company, life
insurance broker or agent or legal counsel or legal firm that is required to
confirm the existence of an entity in accordance with these Regulations and
every money services business that is required to confirm the existence of an
entity in accordance with these Regulations when it enters into an ongoing
electronic funds transfer, fund remittance or foreign exchange service agreement
with that entity, or a service agreement for the issuance or redemption of
money orders, traveller’s cheques or other similar negotiable instruments,
shall, at the time the existence of the entity is confirmed, obtain the
following information:
(a)
in the case of a corporation, the names of all directors of the corporation and
the names and addresses of all persons who own or control, directly or
indirectly, 25 per cent or more of the shares of the corporation;
(b)
in the case of a trust, the names and addresses of all trustees and all known
beneficiaries and settlors of the trust;
(c)
in the case of an entity other than a corporation or trust, the names and
addresses of all persons who own or control, directly or indirectly, 25 per
cent or more of the entity; and
(d)
in all cases, information establishing the ownership, control and structure of
the entity.
(2)
Every person or entity that is subject to subsection (1) shall take reasonable
measures to confirm the accuracy of the information obtained under that
subsection.
(3)
The person or entity shall keep a record that sets out the information obtained
and the measures taken to confirm the accuracy of that information.
(4)
If the person or entity is not able to obtain the information referred to in
subsection (1) or to confirm that information in accordance with subsection
(2), the person or entity shall
(a)
take reasonable measures to ascertain the identity of the most senior managing
officer of the entity; and
(b)
treat that entity as high risk for the purpose of subsection 9.6(3) of the Act
and apply the prescribed special measures in accordance with section 71.1 of
these Regulations.
(5)
If the entity, the existence of which is being confirmed by a person or entity
under subsection (1), is a not-for-profit organization, the person or entity
shall determine, and keep a record that sets out, whether that entity is
(a)
a charity registered with the Canada Revenue Agency under the Income Tax Act;
or
(b)
an organization, other than one referred to in paragraph (a), that
solicits charitable donations from the public.
(6)
This section does not apply in respect of a group plan account held within a
dividend reinvestment plan or a distribution reinvestment plan, including a
plan that permits purchases of additional shares or units by the member with
contributions other than the dividends or distributions paid by the sponsor of
the plan, if the sponsor of the plan is an entity whose shares or units are
traded on a Canadian stock exchange, and that operates in a country that is a
member of the Financial Action Task Force.
33.3
(1) Subject to subsection (2), every legal counsel and every legal firm is
subject to Part 1 of the Act when they engage in any of the following activities
on behalf of any person or entity:
(a)
receiving or paying funds, other than those received or paid in respect of
professional fees, disbursements, expenses or bail; or
(b)
giving instructions in respect of any activity referred to in paragraph (a).
(2)
Subsection (1) does not apply in respect of legal counsel when they engage in
any of the activities referred to in that subsection on behalf of their
employer.
33.4
Subject to subsection 62(2), every legal counsel and every legal firm shall,
when engaging in an activity described in section 33.3, keep the following
records:
(a)
a receipt of funds record in respect of every amount of $3,000 or more that
they receive in the course of a single transaction, unless the amount is
received from a financial entity or a public body; and
(b)
where the receipt of funds record is in respect of a client that is a
corporation, a copy of the part of official corporate records that contains any
provision relating to the power to bind the corporation in respect of
transactions with the legal counsel or legal firm.
33.5 A legal counsel or legal firm that, in connection with a
transaction, receives funds from the trust account of a legal firm or from the
trust account of a legal counsel who is not acting on behalf of their employer,
(a)
must keep and retain a record of that fact; and
(b)
is not required to include in the receipt of funds record that is kept in
respect of those funds
(i)
the number and type of any account that is
affected by the transaction, or
(ii)
the full name of the person or entity that is the holder of the account.
59.4
(1) Subject to subsections (2) and 62(2) and section 63, every legal counsel
and every legal firm shall, in respect of a transaction for which a record is
required to be kept under section 33.4,
(a)
in accordance with subsection 64(1), ascertain the identity of every person who
conducts the transaction;
(b)
in accordance with section 65, confirm the existence of and ascertain the name
and address of every corporation on whose behalf the transaction is conducted
and the names of the corporation’s directors; and
(c)
in accordance with section 66, confirm the existence of every entity, other
than a corporation, on whose behalf the transaction is conducted.
(2)
Subsection (1) does not apply in respect of a transaction for which funds are
received by a legal counsel or legal firm from the trust account of a legal firm
or from the trust account of a legal counsel who is not acting on behalf of
their employer.
64.
(1) In the cases referred to in sections 53, 53.1, 54, 55, 56, 57, 59, 59.1,
59.2, 59.3, 59.4, 59.5, 60 and 61, the identity of a person shall be ascertained,
at the time referred to in subsection (2) and in accordance with subsection
(3),
(a)
by referring to the person’s birth certificate, driver’s licence, provincial
health insurance card (if such use of the card is not prohibited by the
applicable provincial law), passport or other similar document; or
(b)
if the person is not physically present when the account is opened, the credit
card application is submitted, the trust is established, the client information
record is created or the transaction is conducted,
(i)
by obtaining the person’s name, address and date of birth and
(A)
confirming that one of the following entities has identified the person in
accordance with paragraph (a), namely,
(I)
an entity, referred to in any of paragraphs 5(a) to (g) of the
Act, that is affiliated with the entity ascertaining the identity of the
person,
(II)
an entity that carries on activities outside Canada similar to the activities
of a person or entity referred to in any of paragraphs 5(a) to (g)
of the Act and that is affiliated with the entity ascertaining the identity of
the person, or
(III)
an entity that is subject to the Act and is a member of the same association as
the entity ascertaining the identity of the person, and
(B)
verifying that the name, address and date of birth in the record kept by that
affiliated entity or that entity that is a member of the same association
corresponds to the information provided in accordance with these Regulations by
the person, or
(ii)
subject to subsection (1.3), by using one of the following combinations of the
identification methods set out in Part A of Schedule 7, namely,
(A)
methods 1 and 3,
(B)
methods 1 and 4,
(C)
methods 1 and 5,
(D)
methods 2 and 3,
(E)
methods 2 and 4,
(F)
methods 2 and 5,
(G)
methods 3 and 4, or
(H)
methods 3 and 5.
(1.1)
In the case referred to in paragraph 54.1(a), the identity of a person
shall be ascertained by a person or entity, at the time referred to in
subsection (2) and in accordance with subsection (3),
(a)
by referring to the person’s birth certificate, driver’s licence, provincial
health insurance card (if such use of the card is not prohibited by the
applicable provincial law), passport or other similar document; or
(b)
where the person is not physically present when the credit card application is
submitted,
(i)
by obtaining the person’s name, address and date of birth and
(A)
confirming that one of the following entities has identified the person in
accordance with paragraph (a), namely,
(I)
an entity, referred to in any of paragraphs 5(a) to (g) of the
Act, that is affiliated with the entity ascertaining the identity of the
person,
(II)
an entity that carries on activities outside Canada similar to the activities
of a person or entity referred to in any of paragraphs 5(a) to (g)
of the Act and that is affiliated with the entity ascertaining the identity of
the person, or
(III)
an entity that is subject to the Act and is a member of the same association as
the entity ascertaining the identity of the person, and
(B)
verifying that the name, address and date of birth in the record kept by that
affiliated entity or that entity that is a member of the same association
corresponds to the information provided in accordance with these Regulations by
the person,
(ii)
subject to subsection (1.3), by using a combination of any two identification
methods referred to in either Part A or Part B of Schedule 7, or
(iii)
subject to subsection (1.3), where the person has no credit history in Canada
and the credit limit on the card is not more than $1,500, by using a
combination of any two identification methods referred to in any of Parts A, B
and C of Schedule 7.
(1.2)
For the purposes of paragraphs (1)(b)(i) and (1.1)(b)(i), an
entity is affiliated with another entity if one of them is wholly-owned by the
other or both are wholly-owned by the same entity.
(1.21)
For the purposes of subparagraphs (1)(b)(i) and (1.1)(b)(i),
(a)
a financial services cooperative and each of its members that is a financial
entity are considered to be members of the same association; and
(b)
a credit union central and each of its members that is a financial entity are
considered to be members of the same association.
(1.3)
A combination of methods referred to in subparagraph (1)(b)(ii) or
(1.1)(b)(ii) or (iii) shall not be relied on by a person or entity to
ascertain the identity of a person unless
(a)
the information obtained in respect of that person from each of the two
applicable identification methods is determined by the person or entity to be
consistent; and
(b)
the information referred to in paragraph (a) is determined by the person
or entity to be consistent with the information in respect of that person, if
any, that is contained in a record kept by the person or entity under these
Regulations.
(2)
The identity shall be ascertained
(a)
in the cases referred to in paragraph 54(1)(a), subsection 57(1) and
paragraph 60(a), before any transaction other than an initial deposit is
carried out on an account;
(b)
in the cases referred to in section 53, paragraph 54(1)(b), subsection
59(1) and paragraphs 59.3(a), 59.4(1)(a), 59.5(a), 60(b)
and 61(b), at the time of the transaction;
(b.1)
in the case referred to in section 53.1, before the transaction is reported as
required under section 7 of the Act;
(b.2)
in the case referred to in paragraph 54.1(a), before any credit card is
activated;
(c)
in the cases referred to in paragraphs 55(a), (d) and (e),
within 15 days after the trust company becomes the trustee;
(d)
in the cases referred to in subsection 56(1) and paragraph 61(a), within
30 days after the client information record is created;
(e)
in the cases referred to in paragraphs 59.1(a) and 59.2(1)(a), at
the time of the transaction; and
(f)
in the case referred to in subsection 62(3), at the time a contribution in
respect of an individual member of the group plan is made to the plan, if
(i)
the member’s contribution is not made as described in paragraph 62(3)(a),
or
(ii)
the existence of the plan sponsor has not been confirmed in accordance with
section 65 or 66.
(3)
Unless otherwise specified in these Regulations, only original documents that
are valid and have not expired may be referred to for the purpose of
ascertaining identity in accordance with paragraph (1)(a) or (1.1)(a).
64.1
(1) A person or entity that is required to take measures to ascertain identity
under subsection 64(1) or (1.1) may rely on an agent or mandatary to take the
identification measures described in that subsection only if that person or
entity has entered into an agreement or arrangement, in writing, with that
agent or mandatary for the purposes of ascertaining identity.
(2)
A person or entity that enters into an agreement or arrangement referred to in
subsection (1) must obtain from the agent or mandatary the customer information
obtained by the agent or mandatary under that agreement or arrangement.
65.
(1) The existence of a corporation shall be confirmed and its name and address
and the names of its directors shall be ascertained as of the time referred to
in subsection (2), by referring to its certificate of corporate status, a
record that it is required to file annually under the applicable provincial
securities legislation or any other record that ascertains its existence as a
corporation. The record may be in paper form or in an electronic version that
is obtained from a source that is accessible to the public.
(2)
The information referred to in subsection (1) shall be ascertained,
(a)
in the case referred to in paragraphs 54(1)(d) and 60(e), before
any transaction other than the initial deposit is carried out on the account;
(a.1 )
in the case referred to in paragraph 54.1(b), before any credit card is
issued on the account;
(b)
in the cases referred to in paragraphs 55(b) and (d), within 15
days after the trust company becomes the trustee;
(c)
in the cases referred to in subsections 56(3) and 59(2) and paragraph 61(c),
within 30 days after the client information record is created;
(d)
in the case referred to in subsection 57(3), within 30 days after the opening
of the account; and
(e)
in the cases referred to in paragraphs 59.1(b), 59.2(1)(b), 59.3(b),
59.4(1)(b) and 59.5(b), within 30 days after the transaction.
(3)
Where the information has been ascertained by referring to an electronic
version of a record, the person or entity required to ascertain the information
shall keep a record that sets out the corporation’s registration number, the
type of record referred to and the source of the electronic version of the
record.
(4)
Where the information has been ascertained by referring to a paper copy of a
record, the person or entity required to ascertain the information shall retain
the record or a copy of it.
66.
(1) The existence of an entity, other than a corporation, shall be confirmed as
of the time referred to in subsection (2), by referring to a partnership
agreement, articles of association or other similar record that ascertains its
existence. The record may be in paper form or in an electronic version that is
obtained from a source that is accessible to the public.
(2)
The existence of the entity shall be confirmed
(a)
in the case referred to in paragraphs 54(1)(e) and 60(f), before
any transaction other than the initial deposit is carried out on the account;
(a.1 )
in the case referred to in paragraph 54.1(c), before any credit card is
issued on the account;
(b)
in the cases referred to in paragraphs 55(c) and (d), within 15
days after the trust company becomes the trustee;
(c)
in the cases referred to in subsections 56(4) and 59(3) and paragraph 61(d),
within 30 days after the client information record is created;
(d)
in the case referred to in subsection 57(4), within 30 days after the account
is opened; and
(e)
in the cases referred to in paragraphs 59.1(c), 59.2(1)(c), 59.3(c),
59.4(1)(c) and 59.5(c), within 30 days after the transaction.
(3)
Where the existence of the entity has been confirmed by referring to an
electronic version of a record, the person or entity required to confirm that
information shall keep a record that sets out the registration number of the
entity whose existence is being confirmed, the type of record referred to and
the source of the electronic version of the record.
(4)
Where the existence of the entity has been confirmed by referring to a paper
copy of a record, the person or entity required to confirm that information
shall retain the record or a copy of it.
66.1
(1) The prescribed persons or entities for the purpose of section 9.5 of the
Act are every financial entity, money services business and casino that is
required to keep a record under these Regulations in respect of an electronic
funds transfer referred to in subsection (2).
(2)
Subject to subsection (3), the prescribed electronic funds transfers to which
section 9.5 of the Act applies are those as defined in subsection 1(2), but
including transfers within Canada that are SWIFT MT 103 messages.
(3)
For greater certainty, subsection (2) does not apply in respect of
(a)
a transfer carried out using a credit or debit card, if the recipient has an
agreement with the payment service provider permitting payment by such means
for the provision of goods and services;
(b)
a transfer where the recipient withdraws cash from their account;
(c)
a transfer carried out by means of a direct deposit or a pre-authorized debit;
or
(d)
a transfer carried out using cheque imaging and presentment.
67.
Every person or entity that is required by these Regulations to ascertain the
identity of a person in connection with a record that the person or entity has
created and is required to keep under these Regulations, or a transaction that
they have carried out and in respect of which they are required to keep a
record under these Regulations or under section 12.1 of the Proceeds of
Crime (Money Laundering) and Terrorist Financing Suspicious Transaction
Reporting Regulations, shall set out on or in or include with that record
the name of that person and
(a)
if a birth certificate, driver’s licence, provincial health insurance card (if
such use of the card is not prohibited by the applicable provincial law),
passport or any other similar record is relied on to ascertain the person’s
identity, the type and reference number of the record and the place where it
was issued;
(b)
if a confirmation of a cleared cheque from a financial entity is relied on to
ascertain the person’s identity, the name of the financial entity and the
account number of the deposit account on which the cheque was drawn;
(c)
if the person’s identity is ascertained by confirming that they hold a deposit
account with a financial entity, the name of the financial entity where the
account is held and the number of the account and the date of the confirmation;
(d)
if the person’s identity is ascertained by relying on a previous confirmation
of their identity by an entity that is affiliated with the entity ascertaining
the identity of the person or an entity that is a member of the same
association — being a central cooperative credit society as defined in section
2 of the Cooperative Credit Associations Act — as the entity
ascertaining the identity of the person, the name of that entity and the type
and reference number of the record that entity previously relied on to
ascertain the person’s identity;
(e)
if an identification product is used to ascertain the person’s identity, the
name of the identification product, the name of the entity offering the
product, the search reference number and the date the product was used to
ascertain the person’s identity;
(f)
if the person’s identity is ascertained by consulting a credit file kept by an
entity in respect of the person, the name of the entity and the date of the
consultation;
(g)
if the person’s identity is ascertained from an attestation signed by a
commissioner of oaths in Canada or a guarantor in Canada, the attestation;
(h)
if the person’s identity is ascertained by consulting an independent data
source, the name of the data source, the date of the consultation and the
information provided by the data source;
(i)
if the person’s identity is ascertained by relying on a utility invoice issued
in the person’s name, the invoice or a legible photocopy or electronic image of
the invoice;
(j)
if the person’s identity is ascertained by relying on a photocopy or electronic
image of a document provided by the person, that photocopy or electronic image;
and
(k)
if the person’s identity is ascertained by relying on a deposit account
statement issued in the person’s name by a financial entity, a legible
photocopy or electronic image of the statement.
68. Where any record is required to be kept under these Regulations, a
copy of it may be kept
(a)
in a machine-readable form, if a paper copy can be readily produced from it; or
(b)
in an electronic form, if a paper copy can be readily produced from it and an
electronic signature of the person who must sign the record in accordance with
these Regulations is retained.
69. (1) Subject to subsection (2), every person or entity that is
required to obtain, keep or create records under these Regulations shall retain
those records for a period of at least five years following
(a)
in respect of signature cards, account operating agreements, account
application forms, credit card applications and records setting out the
intended use of the account, the day on which the account to which they relate
is closed;
(a.1 )
in respect of client credit files that are required to be kept under paragraph
14(i) and records that are required to be kept under paragraph 14(n),
14.1(g) or 23(1)(f), the day on which the account to which they
relate is closed;
(b)
in respect of client information records, certificates of corporate status,
records that are required to be filed annually under the applicable provincial
securities legislation or other similar records that ascertain the existence of
a corporation, and records that ascertain the existence of an entity, other
than a corporation, including partnership agreements and articles of
association, the day on which the last business transaction is conducted;
(b.1)
in respect of client credit files that are required to be kept under paragraph
30(a), records that are required to be kept under section 11.1,
paragraph 14(o), subsection 15.1(2) or section 20.1 or 31, lists that
are required to be kept under section 32 and records, other than client
information records, that are required to be kept under that section, the day
on which the last business transaction is conducted; and
(c)
in respect of all other records, the day on which they were created.
(2)
Where records that an individual keeps under these Regulations are the property
of the individual’s employer or a person or entity with which the individual is
in a contractual relationship, the individual is not required to retain the
records after the end of the individual’s employment or contractual
relationship.
70. Every record that is required to be kept under these Regulations
shall be retained in such a way that it can be provided to an authorized person
within 30 days after a request is made to examine it under section 62 of the
Act.
Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms
1. The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms guarantees the
rights and freedoms set out in it subject only to such reasonable limits
prescribed by law as can be demonstrably justified in a free and democratic
society.
7. Everyone has the right to life, liberty and security of the person
and the right not to be deprived thereof except in accordance with the
principles of fundamental justice.
8. Everyone has the right to be secure against unreasonable search or
seizure.
Appeal
allowed in part with costs.
Solicitor for the
appellant: Attorney General of Canada, Ottawa.
Solicitors for the
respondent: Hunter Litigation Chambers, Vancouver; Blake, Cassels &
Graydon, Vancouver.
Solicitors for the
intervener the Criminal Lawyers’ Association (Ontario): Stockwoods, Toronto.
Solicitors for the
intervener the Canadian Civil Liberties Association: Osler, Hoskin &
Harcourt, Toronto.
Solicitors for the
intervener the Law Society of British Columbia: McCarthy Tétrault, Vancouver.
Solicitors for the
intervener the Canadian Bar Association: Lawson Lundell, Vancouver.
Solicitors for the
intervener the Advocates’ Society: Stern Landesman Clark, Toronto; Paliare
Roland Rosenberg Rothstein, Toronto.
Solicitors for the interveners Barreau du Québec and Chambre des
notaires du Québec: Lavery, de Billy, Montréal.