Date: 20070118
Docket: T-639-05
Citation: 2007
FC 52
Ottawa,
Ontario, January 18, 2007
PRESENT:
THE HONOURABLE MR. JUSTICE HARRINGTON
BETWEEN:
GAÉTAN
PLANTE
Applicant
and
ATTORNEY GENERAL OF
CANADA
Respondent
REASONS
FOR ORDER AND ORDER
[1]
In 1982, Gaétan
Plante entered a restaurant bar and threatened the waitress at gunpoint. He was
subsequently convicted of armed robbery and sentenced to a term of imprisonment
of less than two years. He has been released a number of times since then and
his sentence has been increased continually for new offences committed in 1983,
1991, 1992 and 1997. Mr. Plante submits that he should be on parole until his
warrant expires June 3, 2007, but the National Parole Board (the Board) holds a
different view.
[2]
The
present application for judicial review relates to his detention. It should be
noted that inmates rarely serve out the entirety of their sentences, primarily
because the Board can grant conditional release when it believes that the
offender does not present an undue risk to society and that releasing him will
contribute to the protection of society by facilitating his reintegration
therein, as stated in section 102 of the Corrections and Conditional Release
Act, S.C. 1992, c. 20 (the Act).
[3]
However,
this is a case not of conditional, but rather of statutory release. In
accordance with section 127 of the Act, an offender is entitled to be released
after having served two thirds of his sentence. Nevertheless, under an
exception provided in the Act, the Board may order that an inmate will remain
in detention and serve his sentence in full. Mr. Plante is currently under such
an order. He appealed this order unsuccessfully to the Appeal Division of the
Board. In this case, he is seeking judicial review of the Appeal Division’s
decision dated December 11, 2003.
[4]
The
substance of Mr. Plante’s application is that the Board did not have
jurisdiction to order that he remain in detention on November 12, 2003 and that
he did not have an opportunity to defend his case before the Board, including
an opportunity to offer new evidence. Before addressing the facts and issues of
this application, it would be useful to review the underlying principles of
statutory release.
Offender’s right to release
[5]
When
offenders are eligible for statutory release under the following provision of
the Act, the Board does not have the same discretion as it does in the case of
conditional release to decide whether or not to release them:
STATUTORY
RELEASE
Entitlement
127. (1) Subject to
any provision of this Act, an offender sentenced, committed or transferred to
penitentiary is entitled to be released on the date determined in accordance
with this section and to remain at large until the expiration of the sentence
according to law.
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LIBÉRATION
D’OFFICE
Droit
du délinquant
127. (1) Sous réserve des autres dispositions de la
présente loi, l’individu condamné ou transféré au pénitencier a le droit
d’être mis en liberté à la date fixée conformément au présent article et de
le demeurer jusqu’à l’expiration légale de sa peine.
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Statutory release is a right granted by statute upon a
federal offender once he has served two thirds of his sentence, even if
conditional release has never been granted to him in the past.
[6]
In short,
statutory release is a right, not a privilege. The only grounds warranting the
Board’s interference are the issuance of parole conditions, revocation of
statutory release for non‑compliance with imposed conditions, and
issuance of a detention order where circumstances require it. Needless to say,
it would hardly be desirable for a right of the nature of statutory release to
be granted to offenders without regard to their criminal record or to their
overall conduct upon release. The public interest is at stake. Therefore, a
comprehensive system of exceptions is provided for in the Act under sections
129 et seq. Prior to the Act being passed, that is from 1985 to 1992,
these exceptions were provided for in sections 21.2 et seq. of the Parole
Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. P-2 (the PA).
[7]
The
following excerpt of the Act is the crux of the present application for
judicial review:
Detention during period of statutory
release
Review of cases by service
129. (1) Before the statutory release date of an offender who
is serving a sentence of two years or more that includes a sentence imposed for
an offence set out in Schedule I or II or an offence set out in Schedule I or
II that is punishable under section 130 of the National Defence Act,
the Commissioner shall cause the offender’s case to be reviewed by the
Service.
Referral of certain cases to Board
(2) After
the review of the case of an offender pursuant to subsection (1), and not
later than six months before the statutory release date, the Service shall
refer the case to the Board together with all the information that, in its
opinion, is relevant to it, where the Service is of the opinion
(a) in the case of an offender serving a sentence that includes a
sentence for an offence set out in Schedule I, that
(i) the commission of the offence caused the death of or
serious harm to another person and there are reasonable grounds to believe
that the offender is likely to commit an offence causing death or serious
harm to another person before the expiration of the offender’s sentence
according to law, or
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Maintien en
incarcération au cours de la période prévue pour la libération d’office
Examen de
certains cas par le Service
129. (1) Le commissaire fait étudier
par le Service, préalablement à la date prévue pour la libération d’office,
le cas de tout délinquant dont la peine d’emprisonnement d’au moins deux ans
comprend une peine infligée pour une infraction visée à l’annexe I ou II ou
mentionnée à l’une ou l’autre de celles-ci et qui est punissable en vertu de
l’article 130 de la Loi sur la défense nationale.
Renvoi à
la Commission
(2) Au
plus tard six mois avant la date prévue pour la libération d’office, le
Service défère le cas à la Commission — et lui transmet tous les
renseignements en sa possession et qui, à son avis, sont pertinents — s’il
estime que :
a) dans le
cas où l’infraction commise relève de l’annexe I :
(i) soit elle a causé la mort ou un dommage grave à une
autre personne et il existe des motifs raisonnables de croire que le
délinquant commettra, avant l’expiration légale de sa peine, une telle
infraction,
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[8]
As in the
case at bar, according to subparagraph 129(2)(a)(i) of the Act, before the
Board can rule on the merits of keeping the offender in custody during the
period normally provided for his statutory release, where one of his offences
is listed in Schedule I of the Act, the Correctional Service of Canada (the
CSC) must first form an opinion six months before the offender’s statutory
release date as to whether this scheduled offence “caused the death of or
serious harm to another person”
and, additionally, whether there are “reasonable grounds to believe that the
offender is likely to commit an offence causing death or serious harm to
another person before the expiration of the offender’s sentence according to
law.”
[9]
Thus, it
is only once the CSC has decided that the offender’s case meets these statutory
requirements can the Board review the case, and even then, only after
determining whether the CSC’s opinion that the matter ought to be referred to
Board was appropriate and had a rational basis. At that point, the Board can
address the actual issue before it, namely, whether or not to order the
detention of the offender, depending on whether or not it is satisfied that the
offender will commit, before the expiration of his sentence according to law
“an offence causing death or serious harm to another person.” Paragraph
130(3)(a) of the Act states as follows:
Decision of Board
130(3) On completion of the review of the case of an
offender referred to in subsection (1), the Board may order that the offender
not be released from imprisonment before the expiration of the offender’s
sentence according to law, except as provided by subsection (5), where the
Board is satisfied
(a)
in the case of an offender serving a sentence that includes a sentence for an
offence set out in Schedule I, or for an offence set out in Schedule I that
is punishable under section 130 of the National Defence Act, that the
offender is likely, if released, to commit an offence causing the death of or
serious harm to another person or a sexual offence involving a child before
the expiration of the offender’s sentence according to law,
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Ordonnance de la Commission
130 (3) Au terme de l’examen, la Commission peut, par
ordonnance, interdire la mise en liberté du délinquant avant l’expiration
légale de sa peine autrement qu’en conformité avec le paragraphe (5) si elle
est convaincue :
a) dans le
cas où la peine d’emprisonnement comprend une peine infligée pour une
infraction visée à l’annexe I, ou qui y est mentionnée et qui est punissable
en vertu de l’article 130 de la Loi sur la défense nationale, que le
délinquant commettra, s’il est mis en liberté avant l’expiration légale de sa
peine, soit une infraction causant la mort ou un dommage grave à une autre
personne, soit une infraction d’ordre sexuel à l’égard d’un enfant;
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Origins of this application
for judicial review
[10]
Mr. Plante
has been serving an aggregate sentence of 23 years, 11 months and 26 days since
December 19, 1982. As a result of several amendments to the PA and its
repeal following the passage of the Act in 1992, Mr. Plante has been eligible
for statutory release under section 127 of the Act since April 24, 2002.
[11]
However,
under section 129 of the Act, if the offender is serving a sentence of
imprisonment of two years or more that includes a sentence imposed for an
offence specifically set out in the Act, before releasing the offender, the
Commissioner must ensure that the CSC reviews the offender’s case. Then,
depending on the results of the investigation, the case may be referred to the
Board for a ruling on the keeping in detention of the offender. The second
referral procedure involves the CSC Commissioner referring the case to the
Chairperson of the Board, but that was not the procedure followed in the case
at bar.
[12]
As
mentioned above, Mr. Plante’s case was referred to the Board pursuant to
subparagraph 129(2)(a)(i) of the Act. While the applicant’s initial sentence of
imprisonment for armed robbery was less than two years, he was sentenced to
additional terms over the course of his incarceration. Indeed, in accordance
with subsection 139(1) of the Act, Mr. Plante is deemed to have been sentenced
to one sentence commencing at the beginning of the first of the sentences to be
served and ending on the expiration of the last of them to be served.
[13]
In this
case, if the CSC is of the opinion that the initial offence committed by the applicant
in 1982 caused serious harm to another person and that it has reasonable
grounds to believe that he will commit another such offence before the
expiration of his sentence according to law, it must refer the case to the
Board. The Act provides for other procedures for referring a case to the Board,
but they are not relevant for the purposes of this application.
[14]
Under
section 130 of the Act, the Board was required to inform Mr. Plante that his
case had been referred to it and review the case, making all such inquires in
connection with that review as it deemed necessary. Until the Board had
rendered its decision, Mr. Plante was not entitled to be released on statutory
release, as stipulated in subsection 130(2) of the Act.
[15]
When
carrying out this review to determine whether to issue a detention order, the
Board must consider all relevant factors, several of which are enumerated in
subsection 132(1) of the Act, in order to assess the likelihood that the
offender will commit, before the expiration of his sentence according to law,
an offence causing the death of or serious harm to another person. In this
case, the Board was satisfied that Mr. Plante, if released on statutory
release, would commit an offence likely to cause serious harm to another person.
[16]
In the
case at bar, Mr. Plante, who has been representing himself right up to the
hearing of the present application, brought to light a large number of facts
and issues that proved irrelevant in view of the real nature of the case. Here
are the facts that are definitely relevant.
[17]
Mr. Plante
was already granted statutory release in the past, which indicates that CSC
officials were of the opinion at one time that Mr. Plante had not caused
serious psychological harm to the waitress in the restaurant bar when he
committed the robbery in April 1982.
[18]
When
reviewing Mr. Plante’s case in the lead-up to his current statutory release
date, the CSC officials changed their mind and found that Mr. Plante had in
fact caused serious psychological harm to the waitress at the time of the
events in 1982. It should be pointed out that, before referring Mr. Plante’s
case to the Board for review, the CSC did not interview Mr. Plante.
[19]
On
receiving the referral of Mr. Plante’s case, the Regional Vice-Chairperson of
the Board wrote the following memorandum to the attention of “File”: [translation] After reviewing all of the
relevant information, I find that the referral was made in accordance with the
Act.” This was an ex parte decision in that Mr. Plante was not consulted
during the process leading to the referral of his case by the CSC to the Board.
[20]
To date,
Mr. Plante has strenuously objected to the fact that his case was referred to
the Board. He is of the view that the Board did not have jurisdiction to review
his case as it did because the offence committed in the restaurant bar had not
actually caused serious harm to another person, and as such, the referral was
unlawful. Accordingly, for the purpose of demonstrating that no serious
psychological harm had been caused, Mr. Plante hired a private detective to
question the waitress about the impact the events of 1982 had on her. The
Board’s response to Mr. Plante was that it had no responsibility in connection
with the legal requirement for the commission of an offence causing serious
harm. In the opinion of the Board, having determined that the CSC’s referral
was reasonable, the Board’s role was then confined to reviewing Mr. Plante’s
case pursuant to subsection 130(3) of the Act. Subsequently, it did not have to
determine in its review whether the sentence served by Mr. Plante included an
offence that caused death or serious harm. This was repeated in a letter from
the Board addressed to Mr. Plante reiterating the fact that it was the CSC’s
responsibility to determine whether serious harm had been caused at the time of
the initial offence.
[21]
Mr. Plante
then challenged the CSC, again with the same objective, namely, to have the
referral of his case to the Board reversed. The CSC refused, being of the
opinion that the results of Mr. Plante’s private investigation offered nothing
new in terms of the harm suffered by the victim of the 1982 offence.
[22]
Mr. Plante
did not attend the Board hearing: [translation]
“You refused to participate in the hearing, but stated that it was not a refusal.
[…] The Board was informed that you did not request the services of an
assistant and that no observer applied to attend the hearing.”
[23]
It is
important to emphasize that the Board’s decision to order detention is subject
to review on an annual basis, but the issue raised by this application is not
moot because Mr. Plante has clearly demonstrated his intention to initiate
a court action against what he is alleging to be an unlawful detention. It is
important to recall that, before bringing an action in damages against a
decision of a federal board or tribunal, a party must first apply for judicial
review of that decision (Canada v. Grenier, 2005 FCA 348).
Issues
[24]
I wish to
make it clear at the outset that this judicial review application does not concern
the validity of the reasons given by the CSC, the Board or the Appeal Division
of the Board with respect to the likelihood that Mr. Plante would cause the
death of or serious harm to another person if he were released prior to the
expiration of his sentence according to law. Regardless of the proper standard
of judicial review to be applied such circumstances, the opinions to the effect
that Mr. Plante would indeed commit such an offence in the future are
reasonable.
[25]
In my
view, the relevant questions before me, and their answers, are as follows.
[26]
Did the
Board have jurisdiction to accept the CSC referral on the basis that the
offender had caused serious psychological harm to the waitress? The answer is
in the affirmative.
[27]
Did Mr.
Plante have the right to make representations to the Board and to offer new
evidence to demonstrate that he had not caused serious psychological harm at
the time of the 1982 events? The answer is in the affirmative.
[28]
Was Mr.
Plante afforded a reasonable opportunity to exercise that right? The answer is
in the negative.
[29]
If he had
been afforded such an opportunity, would that have made a difference to the
outcome of the case? The answer to that question is not obvious. As the rules
of fundamental justice were breached in this case—even acknowledging that
compliance therewith might not have changed anything—the application for
judicial review must be allowed.
[30]
What is
the applicable standard of review? This application does not require any such
determination, since it concerns the rules of natural justice: issues involving
the rules of natural justice, and procedural fairness, for that matter, are
reviewable on the basis of correctness (Sweet v. Canada (Attorney General),
2005 FCA 51).
[31]
As for the
decisions of the Board’s Appeal Division, however, the applicable standard is
patent unreasonableness, unless the question raised is one of law, in which
case the correctness standard would apply. I rely here on the analysis done by
my colleague Madam Justice Tremblay‑Lamer in Costiuc v.
Canada (Attorney General), [1999] F.C.J. no. 241 (QL) and on that of Mr. Justice Décary of the
Federal Court of Appeal in Cartier v. Canada (Attorney General) (2002),
300 N.R. 362 :
[6] The Appeal Division’s function is to ensure that the NPB has
complied with the Act and its policies and has observed the rules of natural
justice and that its decisions are based on relevant and reliable information.
It is only where its findings are manifestly unreasonable that the intervention
of this Court is warranted.
Costiuc v. Canada
(Attorney General), supra
[9] I feel that, though awkwardly, Parliament in s. 147(5)(a)
[of the Act] was only ensuring that the Appeal Division would at all times be
guided by the standard of reasonableness.
Cartier v. Canada
(Attorney General), supra
Analysis
[32]
Although
the legislation concerning the issue of continued detention has been revisited
and corrected somewhat since, I am of the view that the decision of the
Honourable Associate Chief Justice Jerome (as he then was) in Bradford v.
Correctional Service of Canada (1988), 24 F.T.R. 179, is still opposite.
When Mr. Plante committed his initial offence, the provisions of the PA (now
repealed and replaced by the Act) relating to the commission of serious harm
used the phrase tort considérable instead of dommage grave in the
French version. Then, as now, the CSC could not refer a case like this one to
the Board unless it considered that the offence in question caused the death of
or serious harm to another person.
[33]
In Bradford,
Jerome A.C.J. noted that there was no obligation for the CSC to discuss the
referral of a case with the offender before proceeding, although such a
practice is on occasion observed informally. In this case, there were no
submissions made by Mr. Plante before his case was referred to the Board.
[1]
The Board
reasoned that its role with respect to the serious-harm issue was to determine
whether the CSC’s reasons in support of its assertion were rational. In Bradford,
Jerome A.C.J. agreed that the Board could not exercise
its jurisdiction without first having determined whether the CSC had a rational
basis for its referral. I am of the view that the Board’s decision to the
effect that the CSC had a rational basis for referring Mr. Plante’s case
because serious harm had been caused was reasonable.
[2]
However, Jerome A.C.J. found that the offender
should have the opportunity to make submissions on his own behalf, since the
Board must consider the seriousness of the offence in question when conducting
its detention review. The relevant factors in the Act are as follows:
Relevant factors in detention reviews
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Facteurs − cas général
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132.
(1) For the purposes of the review and determination of the case of an
offender pursuant to section 129, 130 or 131, the Service, the Commissioner
or the Board, as the case may be, shall take into consideration any factor
that is relevant in determining the likelihood of the commission of an
offence causing the death of or serious harm to another person before the
expiration of the offender’s sentence according to law, including
(a) a pattern
of persistent violent behaviour established on the basis of any evidence, in
particular,
(i) the number of offences committed
by the offender causing physical or psychological harm,
(ii) the seriousness of the offence
for which the sentence is being served,
(iii) reliable information
demonstrating that the offender has had difficulties controlling violent or
sexual impulses to the point of endangering the safety of any other person,
(iv) the use of a weapon in the
commission of any offence by the offender,
(v) explicit threats of violence made
by the offender,
(vi) behaviour of a brutal nature
associated with the commission of any offence by the offender, and
(vii) a substantial degree of
indifference on the part of the offender as to the consequences to other
persons of the offender’s behaviour;
(b) medical,
psychiatric or psychological evidence of such likelihood owing to a physical
or mental illness or disorder of the offender;
(c) reliable
information compelling the conclusion that the offender is planning to commit
an offence causing the death of or serious harm to another person before the
expiration of the offender’s sentence according to law; and
(d) the
availability of supervision programs that would offer adequate protection to
the public from the risk the offender might otherwise present until the
expiration of the offender’s sentence according to law.
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132. (1) Le Service et le commissaire,
dans le cadre des examens et renvois prévus à l’article 129, ainsi que la
Commission, pour décider de l’ordonnance à rendre en vertu de l’article 130
ou 131, prennent en compte tous les facteurs utiles pour évaluer le risque
que le délinquant commette, avant l’expiration légale de sa peine, une
infraction de nature à causer la mort ou un dommage grave à une autre
personne, notamment :
a) un comportement violent persistant, attesté par divers éléments,
en particulier :
(i) le nombre d’infractions
antérieures ayant causé un dommage corporel ou moral,
(ii) la gravité de l’infraction pour
laquelle le délinquant purge une peine d’emprisonnement,
(iii) l’existence de renseignements
sûrs établissant que le délinquant a eu des difficultés à maîtriser ses
impulsions violentes ou sexuelles au point de mettre en danger la sécurité
d’autrui,
(iv) l’utilisation d’armes lors de la
perpétration des infractions,
(v) les menaces explicites de recours
à la violence,
(vi) le degré de brutalité dans la
perpétration des infractions,
(vii) un degré élevé d’indifférence
quant aux conséquences de ses actes sur autrui;
b) les rapports de médecins, de psychiatres ou de psychologues
indiquant que, par suite d’une maladie physique ou mentale ou de troubles
mentaux, il présente un tel risque;
c) l’existence de renseignements sûrs obligeant à conclure qu’il
projette de commettre, avant l’expiration légale de sa peine, une infraction
de nature à causer la mort ou un dommage grave à une autre personne;
d) l’existence de programmes de surveillance de nature à protéger
suffisamment le public contre le risque que présenterait le délinquant
jusqu’à l’expiration légale de sa peine.
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Jerome A.C.J.
added at paragraph 14 of Bradford, supra: “It is apparent from
the above that the nature of the inmate’s crime will be examined in detail
during the course of a detention hearing. It is therefore entirely open to the
inmate to make submissions on that subject and to challenge any
characterization of the crime as serious or harm-causing.” Furthermore, he
wrote at paragraph 15 that the referral of a case by the CSC “[…] does not
finally determine any matter relating to the rights of the inmate.”
[36] In the
instant case, the Board clearly stated prior to Mr. Plante’s hearing that the
issue of whether serious harm was caused to the waitress in 1982 was closed.
The Board noted that it was not the proper forum for discussing the
reasonableness of the referral and that, therefore, new evidence in that regard
was irrelevant. The Board informed Mr. Plante, however, that it was up to
the CSC to determine whether or not it was opportune, in
light of the new information, to withdraw the referral; so Mr. Plante returned
to the CSC, which refused to withdraw its referral.
[37] What troubles me is that I consider the decision
of the CSC not to withdraw the referral on the basis of the submitted
investigation findings to be reasonable. All that can be said in
Mr. Plante’s favour is that the results of his inquiries from 2002
indicate that, despite the fact that the waitress was traumatized for almost
five years following the events of 1982, she is no longer traumatized now. That
information, however, does not in any way conflict with the police report on
the psychological trauma suffered by the waitress, considering, among other
things, the fact that she had to quit her job as a result of the robbery
committed against her. The investigations did not yield any new information
likely to lead the CSC to modify its preliminary decision to refer
Mr. Plante’s case to the Board. One fact remains: the Board’s review
process allows it to carry out any inquiries it deems appropriate in the
circumstances, and in accordance with section 147 of the Act, Mr. Plante was
entitled to appeal the Board’s decision:
Right of appeal
147(1) An
offender may appeal a decision of the Board to the Appeal Division on the
ground that the Board, in making its decision,
(a) failed to
observe a principle of fundamental justice;
(b) made an
error of law;
(c) breached
or failed to apply a policy adopted pursuant to subsection 151(2);
(d) based its
decision on erroneous or incomplete information; or
(e) acted
without jurisdiction or beyond its jurisdiction, or failed to exercise its
jurisdiction.
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Droit d’appel
147 (1) Le
délinquant visé par une décision de la Commission peut interjeter appel
auprès de la Section d’appel pour l’un ou plusieurs des motifs suivants :
a) la Commission a violé un principe de justice fondamentale;
b) elle a commis une erreur de droit en rendant sa décision;
c) elle a contrevenu aux directives établies aux termes du
paragraphe 151(2) ou ne les a pas appliquées;
d) elle a fondé sa décision sur des renseignements erronés ou
incomplets;
e) elle a agi sans compétence, outrepassé celle-ci ou omis de
l’exercer.
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[38] As Mr. Justice Binnie wrote in paragraph 102 of CUPE
v. Ontario (Minister of Labour), [2003] 1 S.C.R. 539:
The content of
procedural fairness goes to the manner in which the Minister went about making
his decision, whereas the standard of review is applied to the end product of
his deliberations.
[39] I find that Mr. Plante was given an opportunity to
be heard by the decision-making body whose duty it was to rule on his
detention, namely, the Board.
[40] As Mr. Justice Le Dain wrote in paragraph 23 of Cardinal
v. Director of Kent Institution, [1985] 2 S.C.R. 643 :
[(…)]I find it necessary to affirm
that the denial of a right to a fair hearing must always render a decision
invalid, whether or not it may appear to a reviewing court that the hearing
would likely have resulted in a different decision. The right to a fair
hearing must be regarded as an independent, unqualified right which finds its
essential justification in the sense of procedural justice which any person
affected by an administrative decision is entitled to have. It is not for
a court to deny that right and sense of justice on the basis of speculation as
to what the result might have been had there been a hearing.
[41] There are circumstances in which the Court will
not grant relief even where the rules of natural justice have been infringed.
The commercial law decision Mobil Oil Canada Ltd. v. Canada‑Newfoundland Offshore
Petroleum Board, [1994] 1 S.C.R. 202 is an
example of such a case: the Supreme Court held that the facts were exceptional
and that, ultimately, no other decision could have been rendered in the
circumstances. In fact, it was a case involving specific questions of law that
could lead to one answer only. That is not the case here, since the question
around the legal requirement for an offence causing serious physical or
emotional harm is a mixed question of law and fact.
[42] In the case at bar, it was warranted for the Board
to exercise its jurisdiction considering that there was a rational basis for
the CSC’s referral in that Mr. Plante had caused serious psychological harm to
one of the victims of the 1982 events. When Mr. Plante wanted to make his
submissions challenging the assertion that he had caused serious psychological
harm and when he wanted to adduce new evidence in that regard, the Board, which
has the authority to set its own procedure, was free to invite Mr. Plante to
come before it and make his arguments in an attempt to dissuade the CSC from
proceeding with the referral it had initiated. However, the Board demurred.
[43] As a result, what remedy did Mr. Plante have?
Following Bradford, supra, rather than proceed by way of judicial
review, the appropriate remedy was to make his arguments directly before the
Board. It should be noted that the various decisions taken to date in this case
all form part of the same decision-making process (Condo v. Canada (Attorney
General), 2004 FC 991). The Board is a specialized tribunal and, as such,
was in a better position to assess Mr. Plante’s defence. As the Supreme Court
held in Nova Scotia (Workers’ Compensation Board) v. Martin et al., [2003]
2 S.C.R. 504 at paragraph 56, it is desirable for courts to benefit
from a full record established by a specialized tribunal.
[44] In closing, I will repeat that the initial offence
of robbery is not the only offence for which Mr. Plante is currently serving a
sentence of imprisonment. In the review that led it to rule as it did, the
Board rightly considered some of Mr. Plante’s other offences. Under
subparagraph 129(2)(a)(i) of the Act, if the CSC had found that no serious harm
resulted from the events of 1982, it would then have been necessary for it to
consider the other offences committed by Mr. Plante to determine whether or not
they caused the death of or serious harm to another person. This a criterion of
the offence that must be met. And let us not forget as well that, pursuant to
subsection 129(3) of the Act, the offender’s case may be referred by the CSC
Commissioner to the Board Chairperson regardless of whether or not the offence
that was committed caused the death of or serious harm to another person.
[45] What needs to be remembered is that the referral
process provided for in sections 129 et seq. of the Act, with respect to
statutory release, is a system of exceptions directed by one single objective:
the protection of the public.
ORDER
THE COURT ORDERS that the application for judicial
review be allowed with costs. The matter is referred back to the National
Parole Board for reconsideration on the basis of the reasons above. Any request
for information and any consideration of any matter relating to the referral of
cases shall be confined to the question of “the commission of an offence
causing serious harm to another person.”
“Sean Harrington”
Certified
true translation
François
Brunet, LLB, BCL