Supreme Court of Canada
Kelly v. The King, (1916) 54 S.C.R. 220
Date: 1916-11-07
Thomas Kelly Appellant;
and
His Majesty the
King Respondent.
1916: October 10 13; 1916; November 7.
Present: Sir Charles Fitzpatrick C.J. and
Davies, Idington, Duff and Anglin JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF APPEAL FOR
MANITOBA.
Criminal law—Indictment—Separate counts—Verdict—Conspiracy—Extraditable
offence—Inadmissible evidence—Conviction—Inconsistency—Irregularity of
procedure—Charge to jury—Address of counsel—Substantial wrong or miscarriage—New
trial—"Criminal Code," s. 1019—Penalty.
On an indictment containing several counts,
including charges for theft, receiving stolen property and obtaining money
under false pretences, in respect of which the person accused had been extradited
from the United States of America, evidence was admitted on behalf of the
Crown, for the purpose of shewing mens rea, which involved participation
of the accused in an alleged conspiracy. The principal objections urged against
a conviction upon the charges mentioned were (a) that by the
manner in which the trial had been conducted the jury may have been given the
impression that the accused was on trial for conspiracy, a non-extraditable
offence; (b) that misstatements and inflammatory observations had been
made by counsel for the Crown in addressing the jury; and (c) that, in
his charge, the trial judge had failed to correct impressions which may have
been thus made on the minds of the jury or to instruct them that portions of
the evidence admitted in regard to other counts ought not to be considered by
them in disposing of the charge of obtaining money under false pretences.
Held, that, as
there was sufficient evidence to support the verdict of the jury on the charge
of obtaining money under false pretences, quite apart from the irregularities
alleged to have taken place at the trial, no substantial wrong or miscarriage
had been occasioned and there could be no ground for setting aside the
conviction or directing a new trial under the provisions of section 1019 of the
Criminal Code.
Judgment appealed from (11 West. W.R. 46),
affirmed.
[Page 221]
APPEAL from the judgment of the Court of
Appeal for Manitoba,
upon a reserved case submitted by Mr. Justice Prendergast, the presiding judge
at the trial of the appellant who was convicted upon four of the counts of the
indictment preferred against him.
The accused was tried on five counts of an
indictment, in substance as follows: (1) Theft of money, valuable securities
and other property, belonging to the King, in the right of the Province of
Manitoba; (2) unlawfully receiving money, valuable securities or other property
belonging to the King which had been embezzled, stolen or fraudulently obtained
by means of a conspiracy between the accused and others to defraud the King,
the accused then knowing the same to have been so embezzled, etc., by means of
said conspiracy; (3) a count similar to the second count, but naming two
additional co-conspirators; (4) obtaining moneys by false pretences from His
Majesty for the accused and others; (5) unlawfully receiving moneys of His
Majesty which had to the knowledge of the accused been obtained by false
pretences with intent to defraud.
The jury acquitted the accused on the third
count, but brought in a verdict of guilty on all the others.
The issues raised on the present appeal are
stated in the judgments now reported.
The questions reserved for consideration by
the Court of Appeal for Manitoba, with the answers ordered to be returned
thereto by that court were as follows:—
"1. Was I right in refusing to quash the
whole indictment on the motion of counsel for the accused upon the grounds
urged by them in their argument before me? A. Yes.
[Page 222]
"2. Was I right in refusing to
quash the first count in the indictment upon the motion of counsel for the
accused upon the grounds urged by them in their argument before me? A. Yes.
"3. Was I right in refusing to quash the
second count in the indictment upon the motion of counsel for accused upon the
grounds urged by them in their argument before me? A. Yes.
"4. Was I right in refusing to quash the
fourth count in the indictment upon the motion of counsel for the accused upon
the grounds urged by them in their argument before me? A. Yes.
"5. Was I. right in refusing to quash
the fifth count in the indictment upon the motion of counsel for the accused
upon the grounds urged by them in their argument before me? A. No.
"6. If any of the said counts should
have been quashed or otherwise dealt with by me, either before or during the trial,
has there been a mis-trial of the accused on any other count or counts by
reason of the admission of evidence upon such count or counts as should have
been quashed or otherwise dealt with by me? A. No.
"7. Was I right in my charge to the jury
on the first count of the indictment as to theft or was my charge insufficient
in law so as to be prejudicial to a fair trial of the accused? A. To the first
part of question preceding the word 'or'—Yes; to remainder of question—No.
"8." Was I right in my charge to
the jury on the fourth count of the indictment as to what constituted the
offence of obtaining money by false pretences or was my charge insufficient in
law so as to be prejudicial to a fair trial of the accused? A. To first part of
question preceding the word 'or'—Yes; to remainder of question—No.
[Page 223]
"9. Was I right in admitting evidence as
to acts, conduct, admissions, conversations and facts relating to some one or
more of those named in the second count, namely: Rodmond P. Roblin, Walter H.
Montague (since deceased), James H. Howden, George R. Coldwell, R. M. Simpson
and Victor W. Horwood, to which the accused was not a party, and, if I have
erred, was the same prejudicial to a fair trial of the accused? A. To first
part of question down to and including the word 'party'—Yes; to remainder of
question—No.
"10. Was there evidence upon which a
jury could properly convict the accused—(a) On count Number 1; (b)
On count Number 2; (c) On count Number 4; (d) On count Number 5.
A. Yes.
"11. The jury having found the accused
Thomas Kelly not guilty on the third count in the indictment, and evidence
having been admitted on said count upon the trial, was the admission of such
evidence prejudicial to a fair trial of the accused on the remaining four
counts in the indictment upon which he was found guilty? A. No.
"12. Was I right in permitting the
affidavits on production of Thomas Kelly, Lawrence Kelly and Charles Kelly,
Exhibits 62 and 63, in a civil action of the Attorney-General of Manitoba
against Thomas Kelly & Sons to be put in evidence in the manner disclosed
by the record against the accused Thomas Kelly, and, if not, was the same
prejudicial to a fair trial of the accused? A. To first part of question down
to words 'and, if not'—Yes; to remainder of question—No.
"13. Was I right in the admission of
certain documents (as so called secondary evidence) at the instance of the
Crown, and, if so, was the admission of such documents or of any other exhibits
filed prejudicial
[Page 224]
to a fair trial of the said Thomas Kelly as
set out in Schedule 'D'? A. To first part of question down to and including the
word 'Crown'—Yes; to remainder of question—No.
"14. Was any evidence admitted or
allowed to be given which should not have been admitted or allowed to be given
and which was prejudicial to a fair trial of the said Thomas Kelly, in regard
to the matters set out in Schedule 'E'? A. No.
"15. Was I right in my comments upon the
statement of the accused to the jury, with respect to it not being-made under
oath, and, if so, was this prejudicial to a fair trial of the accused or a
violation of the "Canada Evidence Act?" A. To first part of question
down to and including the word 'oath'—Yes; to remainder of question—No.
"16. Similarly were any of the
observations of counsel for the Crown so inflammatory or improper as to
prejudice the fair trial of the accused or to be a violation of the
"Canada Evidence-Act?" A. The first part of this question 'Were any
of the observations of counsel for the Crown so inflammatory or improper as to
prejudice the fair trial of the accused?' is not a question of law that may be
reserved for the Court of Appeal under the Criminal Code. To the second part of
the question—No.
"17. Was there in any respect, on my
part, either a failure to direct the jury or an inaccurate direction to the
jury with regard to the difference between a statement made by the accused to
the jury and an address made on his behalf to a jury; or as to the weight that
a jury is entitled to attach to the statements of the accused which are not
made under oath or as to pointing out evidence favourable to the accused or in
regard to correcting any mis-statements as to law or fact made
[Page 225]
by the Crown counsel during the trial or any
addresses to the jury? A. No."
The majority of the Court of Appeal for
Manitoba, upon the rendering of the judgment appealed from, by which the above
answers were returned, consisted of His Lordship Chief Justice Howell and their
Lordships Justices Perdue and Cameron. Their Lordships Justices Richards and
Haggart dissented and were of opinion that there should be a new trial and that
such new trial should be upon the fourth count of the indictment only.
Dewart K.C. and
Harding for the appellant (Sweatman with them. The inflammatory
and improper observations of counsel for the Crown to the jury afford ground
for a new trial. In Pritchard's Practice of the Quarter Sessions, p. 22, it is
laid down that prosecuting counsel addressing the jury ought to confine
themselves to the simple statement of the facts expected to be proven; where
prisoner has no counsel they should particularly refrain from stating any
facts, proof of which may appear doubtful. Even where the prisoner has counsel,
they should refrain from invective or appealing to the prejudices or passions
of the jury, it being neither in good taste or right feeling to struggle for a
conviction as is done in a civil court: Reg. v. Thursfield, per Gurney B. See
also Archbold's Criminal Pleading, (24 ed.,) pp. 219-220; Reg. v. Holchester; per Blackburn, J.; Reg.
v. Berens;
Reg. v. Webb;
Rex v. Webb;
Ibrahim v. The King,
at p. 616.
[Page 226]
We take objection to the comments and
directions, or lack of directions, by the learned trial judge, particularly
regarding theft and false pretences and the failure of the accused to testify.
See Rex v. Hill
and Reg. v. Coleman,
per McMahon J., at page 108. The trial judge failed to point out facts
favourable to the accused: Rex v. Dinnick; Rex v. Richards; Rex v. Totty; Reg. v. Parkins; Rex v. Beauchamp; Reg. v. Mills.
The learned trial judge failed to clearly
point out to the jury the difference between the offences of theft and
receiving and conspiracy and obtaining by false pretences, and what evidence
was admissible under each offence charged, what evidence affected each count,
and that evidence involving conspiracy could not affect the counts for theft or
false pretences. He should have pointed out the inconsistency of a verdict on
all four counts.: Rex v.Wong On;
Reg. v. Paul,
per Hawkins J., at p. 211.
There was wrongful admission of evidence in
several respects, more especially relating to earlier events and to later
conspiracies: Reg. v. Blake;
Reg. v. Barry.
The admission of evidence, under the second count, upon a general charge of
conspiracy relating to persons other than the accused; and of evidence under
count three, relating to a conspiracy in which the sons of the accused were
joined as parties, altogether apart from the question as to the admissibility
of evidence of subsequent conspiracies, were admissible
[Page 227]
only upon a charge of conspiracy to defraud.
That charge should not have been preferred and evidence tending to prove it was
clearly prejudicial to a fair trial on the remaining counts of the indictment.
This evidence was not admissible under the other counts and the jury should
have been so directed. The view that, by holding that there was ample evidence
of some offence and, consequently, no substantial wrong or miscarriage occurred
cannot prevail; the court cannot be the judge of what may have influenced the
minds of the jury where evidence of an important character was improperly
admitted: Allen v. The King;
Bray v. Ford;
Makin v. Attorney-General of New South Wales, at pages 69-70.
The first count, which charges theft, is bad
for duplicity: sec. 853, sub-sec. 3, Criminal Code; Halsbury, Laws of England,
vol. 9, p. 340; Reg. v. Lamoureux,
at p. 103; Archbold (24 ed.), pp. 75, 76, 81, 84; Rex v. Molleur; Rex v. Michaud; The judge should have
charged the jury as to what constitutes theft, explained the nature of colour
of right, that taking must be against the will of the owner, and also that
these elements were lacking in the case.
The second count is bad for duplicity or for
triplicity; both conspiracy and receiving are charged, an earlier conspiracy
"theretofore," and a later receiving. It confuses charges for
receiving what had been embezzled, what had been stolen, and what had been
obtained by a conspiracy to defraud. See Halsbury, vol. 9, p. 678.
[Page 228]
Nowhere in the Extradition Treaty, signed at
Washington on 12th July, 1889, is conspiracy to defraud mentioned; by article
3, no person surrendered may be tried for any offence other than that upon
which he was surrendered. See also the "Extradition Act," R.S.C.,
1906, ch. 155, secs. 30 to 32; and R.S.C., 1906, ch. 142, secs. 22 and 23; In
re Gaynor and Greene.
As to count four, the judge did not explain
to the jury that the money in question was not parted with upon the strength of
any false representation made by the accused knowing it to be false. No payment
was made except by authority of contract or order-in-council. There can.be
no agency in crime: Reg. v. Butcher, at p. 19.
The practice adopted of including in one indictment
many different offences is vicious, because the evidence admitted upon any
count has a prejudicial effect against the prisoner on other counts, and
particularly so where different kinds of crimes are charged with an alternative
count of receiving: Per Hawkins J. in Reg. V. King, at p. 216.
The accused cannot be guilty of all four
offences as found by the jury. The conviction could only be on one of these
counts, but there is a specific verdict of guilty on each count: Reg. v.
Russett;
Rex v. Fisher.
He cannot be guilty of any two offences. The penalties vary. The whole
conviction is bad. One guilty of stealing goods as a principal cannot be
convicted of receiving them: Halsbury, vol. 9, page 678 (footnote n). To
be guilty of receiving stolen property
[Page 229]
it must have been taken by a person other
than the person accused of receiving: Reg. v. Lamoureux; Reg. v. Coggins; Reg. v. Perkins.
The indictment is also bad for duplicity.
Cyc, vol. 22, 376: "An indictment or information must not in the same
count charge the prisoner with the commission of two or more distinct and
separate offences and in case it does so it is bad for duplicity." The
jury having found the prisoner guilty of theft, four kinds of receiving and
false pretences, at the same time found him to be a conspirator. The Crown
deliberately went to trial upon an indictment defective and bad for duplicity,
triplicity and improper joinder, without considering the reservations made by
Mr. Justice Holmes' judgment in the Supreme Court of the United States. The
Crown should stand or fall by its own deliberate action. The conviction should
be quashed.
The object of a motion to quash before trial
is to preserve the rights of the accused at all stages, and particularly in the
event of a verdict against the accused. The Crown has the right to amend, to
sever, to elect which counts shall be proceeded upon—if necessary to prefer a
new indictment or new indictments. But the Crown did not do so and the accused
is entitled to the benefit of all the preliminary objections taken upon the
motion to quash the indictment. The indictment was preferred and found when
appellant was outside the Dominion of Canada, to the knowledge of the
Attorney-General of Manitoba. The motion that was made under section 898 of the
Criminal Code was absolutely necessary to preserve the rights of the accused as
to any defects. The
[Page 230]
objection then taken was that the indictment
had been preferred by the Attorney-General without legal authority. The
Attorney-General knowing that the accused was not in Canada, in his absence,
and while extradition proceedings were in progress, caused the indictment to be
laid. The Attorney-General had no right to avail himself of the power to prefer
an indictment in the absence of the accused and while he had himself undertaken
proceedings under the "Extradition Act." His consent to preferring
the indictment is not a mere formality: Reg. v. Bradlaugh.
J. B. Coyne K.C. and R. W. Craig K.C. for the respondent. The appeal to the
Supreme Court of Canada can only be based on the grounds as to which there was
a dissent in the Court of Appeal for Manitoba: Mcintosh v. The Queen; Eberts v. The
King;
Mulvihill y. The King;
See also Rice v. The King;
Gilbert v. The King.
The second count is not in contravention of the "Extradition Act" and
the treaty. It is in the exact terms of the Canadian warrant for Kelly's
apprehension, of the American complaint or information, of the American warrant
for his apprehension, and of the extradition commissioner's recommendation to
the Secretary of State; the accused was surrendered for trial on this charge.
As to conspiracy, see Russell on Crimes (7
ed.), pp. 146 and 191; Reg. v. Parnell, at p. 515; Taylor on
Evidence (10 ed.), sec. 591. The offence is complete when the agreement is
made: Reg. v. Connelly;
[Page 231]
Rex v. Parsons. If, therefore, two
persons pursue by their acts the same object, often by the same means, one
performing one part of the act and the other another part so as to complete it
with a view to the attainment of the common object they were pursuing, the jury
are free to infer that they had been engaged in a conspiracy to effect that
object: Reg. v. Murphy,
per Coleridge J.; Rex v. Cope; Rex v. Pollman at page 233.
A person concerned in any part of the
transaction alleged as conspiracy may be found guilty, though there is no
evidence that he joined in concerting a plan until some of the prior parts of
the transaction were complete: Rex v. Lord Grey; Rex v. Hammond; Stephen's Digest of
Evidence (4 ed.), pages 6 and 7.
See also Rex v. Wilson; Reg. v. Shellard; Reg. v. Blake.
The evidence is admitted on the ground that
the act or declaration of one is the act or declaration of all when united in
one common design. It is the principle of agency which, once established,
combines the conspirators together and makes them mutually responsible for the
acts and declarations of each: Wright, Criminal Conspiracy, p. 213, and pp.
212, 216; Russell on Crimes, p. 192; Roscoe, 355 at foot; Rex v. Johnston; Rex v. Nerlich; Reg. v. Jessop; Reg. v. Charles, at p. 502; Reg. v.
Desmond.
There is direct evidence of Kelly's part in
[Page 232]
tampering with witnesses, fabricating and
suppressing evidence, and upholding the fabricated evidence before the Public
Accounts Committee.
When a criminal act has been proved and it is
desired to connect the accused therewith it is relevant to shew that he had or
had not a motive for the act or means and opportunity of doing it or that he
had made preparations with that end in view or had threatened to do the act;
the subsequent conduct of the accused often furnishes still further cogent
evidence of guilt, e.g., possession of recently stolen property, flight,
or the fabrication or suppression of evidence: 13 Halsbury, pp. 447, 448;
Wigmore on Evidence, sec. 278; Moriarty v. London Chatham and Dover
Rway. Co..
The fabrication or suppression of evidence is none the less admissible because
the accused called others to his assistance. If conspiracy were the charge it
would not be necessary to set out the overt acts: Reg. v. Blake, at page 133; Rex
v. Hutchinson;
Reg. v. O'Donnell
Rex v. Gitt.
And if some overt acts were set out, the Crown would not be confined to
them, but might prove others: Reg. v. Stapylton, per Wightman J., at
p. 71.
Crown counsel's address was not an appeal to
prejudice, but a plain and decided statement of the evidence. There can be no
wrong done when statements are founded on evidence. The jury could not possibly
have come to any other conclusion than that of the guilt of the accused on the
evidence submitted irrespective altogether of the language of Crown counsel complained
of. This is not a question
[Page 233]
which can be reserved for the opinion of the
court of appeal: Rex v. Nerlich,
per Hodgins J. at p. 317; Rex v. Banks.
As to clause 15 of the reserved case and the
charge of trial judge regarding the statement of accused to the jury not being
made under oath. The accused had no right to make a statement. He had the right
to go into the witness-box and give his evidence on oath. There is a
distinction between the English and Canadian Acts. The former has a saving
section, negativing what would otherwise be the law, and providing that,
notwithstanding the fact that he may give evidence on oath, the accused may
still make an unsworn statement: Rex v. Krafchenko., at pp. 658, 659.
As to what would be considered comments, see Rex v. King, at page 434; and Rex v.
McGuire.
The remarks complained of do not constitute a comment prohibited by the
"Canada Evidence Act," section 4, sub-section 5: in Rex v. Hill and in Reg v. Coleman there was direct comment on
failure to testify. See Reg. v. Weir, at pages 269-271; Rex
v. Aho;
Rex v. Guerin.
The powers of the appellate court are stated
in the Criminal Code, secs. 1018, 1019 and 1020. Some substantial wrong or
miscarriage must have been occasioned at the trial. The court may give separate
directions as to each count and may pass sentence on any count unaffected by
any wrong or miscarriage which stands good, or may remit the case to the court
below
[Page 234]
with directions to pass such sentence as
justice may require. A new trial is not justified here under sec. 1019.
There was no reserve case submitted on
joinder of counts and argument on that point must be eliminated. Rex v. Hughes, at 454. There was
no dissent in the Court of Appeal on this point. There was no objection to
joinder before pleading, as required by the Code, sec. 898: Reg. v. Flynn. Counts may be
joined as in this indictment: Rex v. Lockett; Rex v. Seham
Yousry;
Reg. v. Poolman;
Rex v. Beauchamp;
Reg. v. Smith.
Under the Code, sec. 857, this is a matter in the discretion of the trial
judge, and is not subject to review. There was a conviction on counts 1, 2, 4
and 5. No question was reserved for the Court of Appeal as to whether such
verdict was inconsistent.
As to the charge on count 1 as to theft, and
as to colour of right. The fraudulent contracts constituted no colour of right:
Reg. v. Kenrick.
As for "against the will of the owner," there was no question as
to that in the evidence. The evidence was that the funds were wrongfully taken
and converted.
As to count 4, obtaining money by false
pretences, the statement of the law by the trial judge was sufficient to guide
the jury in reaching a verdict so long as there was evidence to convict on such
a charge.
The opinions of the Chief Justice and Davies
J. are delivered by Anglin J.
[Page 235]
Dewart K.C. and Harding for the appellant
J. B. Coyne
K.C. and
R. W. Craig K.C. for the respondent.
Idington J.—This appeal arises out of a reserved case in which the learned
trial judge had submitted to the court below seventeen questions. On the
hearing of that appeal two of the learned judges hearing it, dissented, on
points hereinafter referred to, from the judgment of the Court of Appeal.
Under the authorities cited in argument,
including Reg. v. McIntosh;
Rice v. The King;
Gilbert v. The King;
Curry v. The King;
Eberts v. The King,
at p. 26; Mulvihill v. The King,
and other cases cited in the reports of these decisions, I do not think
there can longer be a doubt that our jurisdiction to hear an appeal from a
court of appeal in a criminal case is bounded by the lines of clear dissent on
any point raised therein relative to any of the questions of law properly
involved in the submission of the reserved case.
A dissenting opinion relative to something
outside that which can properly be made part of a reserved case or fails to
bear upon the points of law properly involved in such case as reserved, can
form no part of what we are concerned with.
I respectfully submit that the expressions of
the dissents herein are, as I read them, not clearly confined within these
lines. For example: as regards the grounds taken relative to the questions
raised by the matter in the address of counsel for the Crown I doubt if such an
address can be in itself the subject of a reserved case. I shall presently deal
at length with that subject and the arguments founded on what for brevity's
sake I may call the conspiracy aspect of the case, when what I refer to will
more fully appear.
[Page 236]
I merely desire here to submit, respectfully,
that for want of that definite application of each dissent to the reserved
question it relates to, or what the exact grounds are intended to be covered
thereby, and as the dissents may have implied more than I might find appears,
in order to avoid mistakes, I shall proceed to deal consecutively with each
question in the whole reserved case. I am not, therefore, to be assumed as
departing from what I have just now said of the limits of our own jurisdiction
to act.
There is another boundary to our jurisdiction
expressed in the language of sec. 1019 of the Criminal Code, which is as
follows:—
1019. No conviction shall be set aside nor
any new trial directed, although it appears that some evidence was improperly
admitted or rejected, or that something not according to law was done at the
trial or some misdirection given, unless, in the opinion of the court of
appeal, some substantial wrong or miscarriage was thereby occasioned on the
trial: Provided that if the court of appeal is of opinion that any challenge
for the defence was improperly disallowed, a new trial shall be granted: 55-56
Vict. ch. 29, sec. 746.
Applying this section enables me, for my part,
to dispose of the case, without entering at length, and in minute detail, upon
some of the nice questions which may be involved in the dissenting opinions.
There was a motion made by counsel for the
appellant to quash the indictment, and refused by the learned trial judge.
The first six questions submitted concern the
validity of this refusal and raise the further question of whether or not, if
there be in any case an error therein, there was as a consequence thereof and
the admission of objectionable evidence a mistrial.
There are six counts in the indictment. The
sixth, which is for perjury, was, with the consent of the Crown, directed to
stand over and not to be tried with the others.
[Page 237]
The fifth has been disposed of by the Court of
Appeal.
The first and fourth are ordinary counts for
theft and false pretences, respectively, and I fail to see how any serious
question can have been raised as to them.
The second and third counts may be open to the
criticism that they are of doubtful import, but as the first and fourth counts
enabled the whole of the evidence to be given, which was properly admissible on
the trial, there cannot now, in face of the section quoted above, be any
question of serious import raised as to the validity of the learned judge's
refusal to quash.
The attempt to use the particulars delivered ten
days later than this motion to quash, illustrates how absurd this part of the
contention in the case is.
The complaint made that the learned trial judge
did not, in his charge, enter upon a specific attempt to deal in detail with,
and direct the jury as to, each of these counts, and what they mean and might
be held to imply, seems unfounded, for his mode of treatment left the appellant
without any ground of complaint in regard thereto. Had he done as suggested I
imagine there might have been some ground for suggesting that the minds of the
jury had been thereby confused.
The case was presented by him in his charge as
one of stealing, or receiving that stolen, or of obtaining by false pretences.
He wisely abstained from needlessly entering upon such a field of mystification
as we have had presented to us to deal with and hence his charge misled nobody.
There was at the close of the trial a distinct
question put by the foreman of the jury which led the learned judge to tell the
jury they could not bring in a verdict of guilty on both these second and third
counts,
[Page 238]
but must, if either included in a verdict of
guilty, select one or other thereof.
Their verdict was guilty on the first, second,
fourth and fifth counts.
There was, therefore, no substantial wrong or
miscarriage in the refusal to quash or in consequence thereof.
As to question 7, which is as follows:—
7. Was I right in my charge to the jury on
the first count of the indictment as to theft or was my charge insufficient in
law so as to be prejudicial to a fair trial of the accused?
There is raised thereby perhaps the most
important and difficult question in the reserved case.
The learned judge relied upon section 347 of the
Criminal Code and I think he was right in doing so. It is a most comprehensive
definition of theft and is as follows:—
347. Theft or stealing is the act of
fraudulently and without colour of right taking, or fraudulently and without
colour of right converting to the use of any person, any thing capable of being
stolen, with intent,—
(a) to deprive the owner, or
any person having any special property or interest therein, temporarily, or
absolutely, of such thing, or of such property or interest; or,
(b) to pledge the same or deposit it
as security; or
(c) to part with it under a
condition as to its return which the person parting with it may be unable to
perform; or,
(d). to deal with it in such
a manner that it cannot be restored to the condition in which it was at the
time of such taking and conversion.
2. Theft is committed when the offender
moves the thing or causes it to move or to be moved, or begins to cause it to
become movable, with intent to steal it.
3. The taking or conversion may be
fraudulent, although effected without secrecy or attempt at concealment.
4. It is immaterial whether the thing
converted was taken for the purpose of conversion, or whether it was, at the
time of the conversion, in the lawful possession of the person converting:
55-56 Vict., ch. 29, sec. 305.
"Anything capable of being stolen"
might not cover money in the bank to the credit of any person, but
[Page 239]
surely it does include a cheque to draw that
money. I think a cheque being an order for money is a valuable security within
the words of the indictment. Can it be said that the fraudulent means resorted
to in order to induce the Lieutenant-Governor and others to do those acts which
resulted in the preparation of the cheque and its due signature having preceded
its existence, therefore the appellant guilty with others in bringing those
acts about, can have acquired a colour of right to use it or convert it to his
use?
I think not, and that if the appellant by reason
of his fraudulent acts was not entitled to have received any of the cheques
issued to him, he had no right to convert them to his use.
They each remained the property of the Crown
recoverable by respondent, if so advised, from appellant at any instant until
passed into the hands of the bank without notice. The language of sub-sec. 4
seems clearly to bear this out and to cover just such cases as this.
The later sections dealing with what used to be
called embezzlement are in harmony with this view. The evident purpose of the
section, as a whole, was to make clear that the fraudulent nature of the
dealing was to be the test of whether or not the wrongful conversion was to be
treated as theft or not.
Counsel for respondent in their factum suggest
that the moneys had been stolen by the Minister and thereby there was a
conversion of the money to which appellant was a party as accessory and hence
he was liable as a principal.
My difficulty is in extending the section to a
theft of money in the bank for it contemplates a taking which could not, I submit,
be within the meaning of the section.
[Page 240]
The same counsel in, argument also submitted the
amendment to the English "Larceny Act" in 1861, section 70, aimed at
officers of the government, and that such amendment was introduced by the Act
introducing English law into Manitoba.
In my view it is not necessary to pass any
opinion upon this contention.
If appellant could be guilty of stealing the
cheques, then there is no need for prosecuting the inquiry.
The eighth question seems upon the evidence
hardly arguable.
Clearly there was an obtaining of money by false
pretences whatever may be said of the other charges as a matter of law.
The ninth question, which is as follows:
9. Was I right in admitting evidence as to
acts, conduct, admissions, conversations and facts relating to some one or more
of those named in the second count, namely: Rodmond P. Roblin, Walter H.
Montague (since deceased), James H. Howden, George R. Coldwell, R. M. Simpson
and Victor W. Horwood, to which the accused was not a party, and if I have
erred, was the same prejudicial to a fair trial of the accused?
raised at first, in argument, a doubt in my
mind, when it was urged by counsel for appellant that the moneys obtained had
all been obtained before the end of December, 1914, and the offences charged
had then been completed and much of the evidence here in question related to
later events.
It was alleged that what transpired later was in
fact nothing but evidence of a new conspiracy and neither had nor could have
had any direct relation to or be in any way a necessary result of the original
conspiracy.
If the facts would justify this or some such way
of looking at the admissibility of the later evidence I agree a grave question
would have arisen.
[Page 241]
It is, however, quite clear when one is enabled
by a knowledge of the evidence to grasp the actual situation that this
contention of appellant is hardly worthy of serious consideration.
The Crown alleges in fact the existence of a
conspiracy on the part of those named, or some of them, including the accused,
to use the opportunity of the erection of the public buildings—known as
Parliament Buildings—for the improper purpose of diverting funds ostensibly
voted by the legislature for that purpose, and the property of the Crown as
charged, into the hands of some one for the purpose of forming part of a
political campaign fund, or possibly dividing or distributing amongst them, or
some of them, moneys so diverted.
It matters not what the purpose was so long as
moneys were, from time to time during the progress of such works, to be
diverted from their proper purpose as designated by the legislature.
There was evidence that justified such an
inference and it was of such weight as to entitle the Crown to have the whole
relative thereto fully developed.
Touching the mere questions of admissibility of
such evidence the learned trial judge had to consider the nature of the charges
either as alleged in the pleadings or presented by counsel for the Crown, and
then the evidence already presented tending to support any such pretensions and
determine whether in view of all that had preceded such later developments
could reasonably be connected therewith.
In default of that being quite apparent from the
case as developed, learned trial judges often, for convenience sake, have to
rely upon the undertaking of the counsel presenting such like evidence that it
will be connected with that preceding or to follow in such
[Page 242]
a way as to be relevant to the issues in
question and maintain the contention put forward.
The mere technical questions of admissibility as
presented in the question does not therefore go very far.
If, however, it should in such case turn out
that the evidence could not be connected with other evidence in a way to form
an arguable case, the consequences would have to be dealt with effectively to
see that there was no miscarriage of justice. Here it is not merely the
admissibility as that is put in the question that might have been involved.
Not only was it contended that the evidence of
the later acts I have referred to were inadmissible, but also that the whole
evidence of conspiracy, or to put it in another and less controversial form, of
agreement to act together in pursuance of the common purpose of diverting a
part of the money appropriated for said buildings, so attacked was quite
inadmissible unless appellant was present.
I cannot assent thereto. Whatever our reason
will maintain as fairly inferable from the circumstances presented must be the
test. The accused, of course, must be so connected with those circumstances or
part thereof as to justify, by that test, the maintenance of the inference
argued for.
But, unfortunately for the appellant, his
connection with the later developments has been shewn in fact to be so intimate
and close that there is no need for straining the application of the principles
I am relying upon to bring home to him the desire to destroy evidence and
hinder its production and promote thereby the concealment of all that had
transpired which might tend to shew him and others as having designed by their
[Page 243]
co-operation to divert and to have succeeded in
diverting moneys from their destined purpose.
And the desire to destroy, when existent in some
bosoms, seems soon to produce destruction.
In each of the sections 69 and 70 of the
Criminal Code there has been formulated a legislative guide expressive of the
law which may be relied upon as an effective answer to all that has been put
forward or that may be implied therein, in any way, bearing upon the many
questions or many forms of the same question in contending against the use of
anything done by others unless clearly and expressly directed by him.
The second sub-section of said section 69, is as
follows:—
2. If several persons form a common intention
to prosecute any unlawful purpose, and to assist each other therein, each of
them is a party to every offence committed by any one of them in the
prosecution of such common purpose, the commission of which offence was, or
ought to have been known to be a probable consequence of the prosecution of
such common purpose: 55-56 Vict., ch. 29, sec. 61.
The general and comprehensive declaration of the
law binds and goes a long way to define what may be admitted in evidence in
cases of this kind.
It is but a deduction of that which in reason,
must necessarily open the way to the introduction of evidence, in order to lay
before the court those circumstances, from which it may be reasonable to infer
concurrence of action on the part of the accused in regard to what is in
question.
It is quite clear from the evidence that though
the moneys got had been paid before the end of December, 1914, yet the scheme,
as a whole, was far from complete, and had been only interrupted by steps in
the way of inquiry before a committee of the legislature, which seemed likely
to lead to an exposure that would prevent its full fruition. Hence it became
necessary
[Page 244]
for those concerned, actively led by the accused
as commander of the forces as it were, to destroy evidence and keep witnesses
out of the way. He had been paid far in excess of the work, done and was
proceeding with further execution of the work. That payment, however, was a
mere incident of all that had been planned.
I have no doubt that all that which was
introduced as evidence at the trial in the way complained of, in order to prove
concealment of a fraudulent purpose in relation to said payments, was properly
admissible and evidence from which proper inferences might be drawn tending to
establish that purpose and the character thereof.
I shall presently advert to another aspect of
this question of conspiracy and its bearing on the case.
Question. 10 seems, as put, hardly arguable.
Question 11 seems of the same nature and to call
for the same reply, for, as put, it does not indicate that there was any
evidence adduced which bore only upon the third count and could have an
improper bearing upon other counts.
Question 12 was hardly pressed before us and I
see no reason why such an affidavit should not be admitted under the
circumstances. Moreover, the objection has no support in the dissenting
opinions. On the contrary it is overruled in that of Mr. Justice Richards.
The same answer may be made as to questions 13
and 14 save that the learned judges dissenting made no observation anent same.
Question 15 is as follows:—
15. Was I right in my comments upon the
statement of the accused to the jury, with respect to it not being made under
oath, and if so, was this prejudicial to a fair trial of the accused or a
violation of the "Canada Evidence Act?"
[Page 245]
I desire to consider this and part of Question
17, together.
It seems difficult to understand how the proper
remark of the learned trial judge can be construed as an infringement of the
"Evidence Act."
It may be quite permissible for the accused,
when undefended, to state his version of what has been given in evidence in
order to bring home to the minds of the jurors the possibility that the
evidence as it stands or, either by reason of the way in which it has been presented
in the giving thereof or the summing up of Crown counsel may mislead, and by
his statement induce a reconsideration of anything so tending. Any misleading
construction put upon it to the detriment of the accused may thereby be cured.
When the accused in his address chooses to
present his version and adds thereby something in way of statement of fact
relevant to that which is properly before the jury, they are not only entitled
but bound to consider what the accused has said including his statement of alleged
fact.
But they, when considering same, can only
properly consider it in the way of an explanation which may induce them to turn
their minds towards the evidence which has been sworn to and see if as a whole
it can properly bear the interpretation which the statement of fact made by the
accused suggests as a possibility.
If on the evidence it cannot properly be so
understood their duty is to discard the statement entirely for it is not
evidence. That is in substance the effect of what the learned trial judge told
them and therefore, his charge is in that regard unobjectionable.
The learned judge undoubtedly erred as he
suggests, in allowing the accused to wander far beyond the issues
[Page 246]
and introduce topics and allege statements of
pretended fact which had nothing to do with the simple issues of fact properly
before the court. No one had the slightest right to do so, and above all things
to make charges against or to insult opposing counsel by dragging in something
as the accused did, which had nothing to do with the issues being tried.
If the accused dispensed with counsel, as quite
possibly he did, in hopes of being allowed to drag in by way of his address
something which was not permissible and what no counsel could or would venture
upon doing, it is to be regretted he was permitted the measure of success he
got.
As I gather from the learned judge's charge he
felt he had erred and tried to rectify it by pointing out that statements of
the accused in an address are not evidence and are not to be treated as such.
He would have erred if he had failed under such circumstances in making plain
as he did the law on the subject.
Question sixteen is as follows:—
16. Similarly were any of the observations
of counsel for the Crown so inflammatory or improper as to prejudice the fair
trial of the accused or to be a violation of the "Canada Evidence
Act?"
The question as presented does not, I incline to
think, put forward any question of law and hence is beyond that which we are
entitled to act upon. It is put forward, however, at great length and, if I may
be permitted to say so, given undue prominence.
We have presented in appellant's factum extracts
culled from an address which occupies twenty-five printed pages of the appeal
book. It is not difficult when such extracts are taken from their context to
try and create an unpleasant impression. Some of these extracts are unfair
presentations of what was intended.
The late Sir James Stephen, in his History of
the
[Page 247]
Criminal Law of England, vol. 1, p. 429, deals
with the question of Crown counsel addresses, and there says:—
It is very rare to hear arguments pressed
against prisoners with any special warmth of feeling or of language; one reason
for which no doubt is, that any counsel who did so would probably defeat his
own object.0 Apart, however, from this, it is worthy of observation
that eloquence either in prosecuting or defending prisoners is almost unknown
and unattempted at the bar. The occasion seldom permits of it, and the whole
atmosphere of English courts in these days is unfavourable to anything like an
appeal to the feelings—though, of course, in particular cases, topics of
prejudice are introduced.
Some few things said by counsel in summing up
perhaps transgress these traditions of the English bar.
But wherein exists the question of law raised?
It certainly does not appear in the question
sixteen or in these extracts as self evident.
I am not prepared to lay down as law that out of
a Crown counsel's address there cannot arise ground for a reserved case.
I can imagine a case (such as does not exist
here) of counsel misstating the law and the fact in such terms as to call for
the prompt interference of the trial judge, and for his rectification of any
wrong done thereby, by warning and directing the jury not to be misled thereby.
It is not the misstatements in the address which
alone can furnish ground for a reserved case upon a point of law, but those
coupled with failure on the part of the learned trial judge to see such errors
rectified, that, in my opinion, can constitute grounds for a reserved case. In
such event the least that should be required is a statement in the reserved
case concisely setting forth exactly what is complained of. A general
suggestion such as put in questions 16 and 17 does not satisfy what should be
required.
[Page 248]
It does not seem to me that we have here any
such definite statement of what is in question as the statute requires to be
set forth in a stated case reserved for the appellate court.
In any event we are here confined to what
appears in the dissenting opinions.
Mr. Justice Richards selects the criticism by
the Crown counsel of the failure of the accused to be defended by counsel. The
whole of the episode and real or affected resentment because a postponement of
more than two weeks for preparation by counsel was refused deserved severe
criticism. And I am not prepared to find any legal ground for interference
merely because the language in which it was couched might have been better
chosen, when the conduct in question deserved some observations from both Crown
counsel and the learned trial judge to have been passed upon it. A firm,
temperate rebuke was in order if respect for the bench is to be maintained.
Mr. Justice Richards further selects the
misstatement of the law by the Crown counsel as to the crimes charged in the
indictment, but, as I most respectfully submit, it may be my misfortune that my
own view rather accords with that in substance which I take it was intended to
be presented by the Crown counsel rather than what Mr. Justice Richards holds.
I hardly think we can make much of that complaint.
Again he selects the expression as to accused
thinking himself to be guilty. As I read the address it contains two pages of
evidence quoted by counsel attempting to demonstrate in a fairly arguable
manner that such is the inference to be drawn from the evidence quoted.
Counsel certainly on this occasion and others
should not have stated, as he did, his own opinion,
[Page 249]
instead of making a submission of his contention
for consideration by those addressed.
I am not prepared to hold that there was any
substantial wrong or miscarriage created either thereby or by the omission of
the learned trial Judge to specifically call attention to the error and warn
the jury against it.
The remaining passages, selected by Mr. Justice
Richards as the subject of observation, seem to me of the character which (as
Sir James Stephen remarks in the quotation above) would tend to defeat
counsel's object.
I am quite sure the matters with which they deal
could have been presented in a calm, lucid way that would have carried more
weight with the jury and had a crushing effect, if the evidence is to be
believed, beyond anything that is complained of.
And hence I fail to find that the omission of
the learned trial judge to specifically deal therewith in each phase thereof,
furnishes a reason to believe there has been any substantial wrong or
miscarriage.
I repeat it is only by virtue of such omissions
that a question of law can arise.
The learned trial judge's charge was fair and in
general terms covered all that is gathered thus from the address of counsel.
Mr, Justice Haggart assigns nothing further on
this question than that already referred to by Mr. Justice Richards.
In parting with this part of the case I think it
is due to Mr. Coyne to say that whatever may be said or thought of the error in
the mode of address used by his leader in summing up, he ought not to have been
attacked, as he has been, for he was doing no more
[Page 250]
than his duty in repudiating what accused
improperly dragged into the case.
I cannot think that under the circumstances the
granting of a new trial, by reason of anything that is thus complained of,
would conduce to the due administration of justice.
There remains for consideration the objection
taken by Mr. Justice Richards in one form, and by Mr. Justice Haggart in
another, relative to the charge of conspiracy alleged to be made in the second
and third counts of the indictment and all bearing thereupon or flowing
therefrom. These counts cannot, I submit, be held to be in law an indictment
for conspiracy.
They are, by the express language used, clearly
intended to be charges against the accused, of unlawfully receiving money,
valuable securities or other property, belonging to the respondent which had
been stolen by means of a conspiracy.
How can that be pretended to be a count framed
to charge a conspiracy? If nothing had been adduced in evidence but that
tending to establish a conspiracy and on the trial all reference to its
successful accomplishment had been omitted, would any court or judge listen
long to a prosecuting counsel professing to desire the charge of conspiracy to
be submitted on such a count to a jury and proposing to ask them to find the
accused guilty of conspiracy? I venture to think no judge could be got to
assent to such a proposition.
It seems to me this is the proper test to apply
to what is suggested and elaborately argued relative to the infringement of the
Extradition Treaty under which the accused was surrendered.
So tested, there is not a single ground upon
which
[Page 251]
in reason or authority the claim to exclude
evidence because it would tend to prove a conspiracy, can be maintained.
Again, suppose the words
by means of an unlawful conspiracy by
fraudulent means of Thomas Kelly aforesaid, Rodmond P. Roblin, Walter H.
Montague (since deceased), James H. Howden, George R. Coldwell, R. M. Simpson,
Victor H. Horwood and others unknown to defraud His Majesty
had been omitted from each of these second and
third counts and each then stood as a count in the ordinary form of obtaining
money or valuable securities, or property by false pretences, and it had been
attempted to prove exactly what has been proven and no one ever used the word "conspiracy"
but the facts were offered to conclusively establish the means whereby the
wrongs complained of had been accomplished, would any trial judge rule out any
of the evidence? On what ground could he?
The charge is, in this amended count I suggest,
that the money, or securities, or property had been theretofore stolen. The
means used is not stated in the amended form I suggest. How could the judge be
asked to reject the evidence? Would he listen to, or give effect to, the
argument that it had unexpectedly been disclosed that the accused was one of
those who had counselled the original crime of theft and therefore he could not
be convicted of unlawfully receiving that which he was an accessory to the
stealing of?
The fact is notorious that in many criminal
circles there exist men who act as fences. Could such a man secure his
acquittal on a charge of receiving stolen goods, by proving that he had
directed those usually doing the actual stealing and bringing him the goods, to
take these goods in question from some one he had pointed out?
[Page 252]
Such proof would constitute him a principal
liable to be found guilty of the theft.
Whoever supposed that because it had this or in
some such way developed that the man accused of receiving stolen goods was in
fact liable to be charged as a principal, he would be entitled to his
acquittal?
Since when has it been law that a man indicted
for a minor offence can claim acquittal on any such theory?
I have always supposed that the Crown was
entitled to prosecute for that of which a man was clearly guilty even if he was
suspected of being liable to be held for a higher or greater offence and a
diligent inquiry might produce evidence thereof.
Whatever might be the duty of a. Crown officer
under such circumstances can have no bearing upon the legal result.
The Crown is entitled to lay the charge for
whatever is deemed appropriate to the evidence at hand. And if tried for that
for which the Crown has so chosen to indict him, the accused can never again be
arraigned and tried for another offence upon the same facts.
Those apprehensive that the accused might suffer
wrong by reason of such a proceeding will be relieved by a perusal of those
parts of Archbold's Criminal Pleading, Evidence and Practice (22 ed.) pp. 150 et
seq. where the work deals with the subjects of autrefois acquit and autrefois
convict, and cites the numerous authorities on the subject.
So much for the possible wrong or miscarriage.
Moreover does it not seem idle to argue about
the wrong done by a suggested possibility of these counts containing more than
one charge, in face of the provisions for inserting in one indictment any
number of offences and only one or two, but none of these, are excepted from
being so dealt with.
[Page 253]
Then again we have the further provisions
contained in section 951, of which the first sub-section is as follows:—
951. Every count shall be deemed divisible;
and if the commission of the offence charged, as described in the enactment
creating the offence or as charged in the count, includes the commission of any
other offence, the person accused may be convicted of any offence so included
which is proved, although the whole offence charged is not proved; or he may be
convicted of an attempt to commit any offence so included.
This alone should be held to cover all the
objections revolving around these two counts and dispose of all except the
conspiracy question already dealt with and about to be referred to. Though the
section just quoted and others give wide scope for acting under in order to
relieve trials from the danger of being wrecked by some mere play upon words or
trifling frivolities so dear to the hearts of ancient pleaders now dead, the
duty remains to have it kept clear during the trial what the court is about to
try and is trying an accused for.
Not only as I submit was there no doubt in this
case in the minds of any one, but special pains were taken by counsel for the
Crown and the learned trial judge to make clear that there was no charge of
conspiracy made by the indictment, and the only reference made thereto was part
of the inducement in the pleadings explaining the means whereby the crimes
charged were accomplished. I imagine no juryman in Manitoba was ever stupid
enough to fail to understand what he was thus told.
To meet some points pressed upon us though not
open for action as I read the reserved case, I may add a few sentences and cite
some precedents covering things so urged or pointed at. Even the question of a
man being charged with receiving that which he might
[Page 254]
not only be charged with having stolen but was
in fact guilty of, is covered by authority in the case of Reg, v. Hughes.
There might have been raised a more arguable
case than some parts of this one on the ground of the verdict of guilty being entered
for both the theft and the receiving of that stolen inasmuch as the punishments
respectively assigned to such offences are not the same. Counsel for appellant
seemed to think some such question was raised and put it forward in several
ways. The case of Rex v. Darley
and other cases referred to in Chitty's Criminal Law (18 ed.), when dealing
with the law as it stood one hundred years ago, suggest the contention would
have been unavailing.
What could be dealt with in a practical common
sense fashion under the state of law then cannot surely furnish obstacles to
the execution of justice now in view of the effort made by the legislature to
remove such like barriers from the successful administration of justice and
reduce all that is involved to the simplicity so much to be desired.
The appeal should be dismissed.
Duff J.—There was, I think, no evidence to support a conviction on the
charge of theft. In each case the authorities having custody on behalf of the
Crown of the moneys paid to Kelly intended to pass the property in these very
moneys to Kelly. Except as to the contention advanced on behalf of the Crown to
which I am about to refer, it is sufficient to say that touching this branch of
the appeal I adopt the reasoning of Mr. Justice Richards.
The answer to the learned judge's reasoning put
[Page 255]
forward by counsel for the Crown appears in the
following extract from the factum:—
Mr. Justice Richards errs in holding that
count 1 of the indictment is negatived by the evidence. He apparently looks at
the count as charging Kelly with actually himself stealing or embezzling the
moneys. He apparently overlooks Kelly's position as an accessory before the
fact to misappropriation of the public funds by the ministers. If he does not
overlook this, then his view must be based on a restricted view of the
definition of theft in the Criminal Code, sec. 347, which would limit the
operation of that section to the taking of anything capable of being
stolen, all the cases cited by him being judgments dealing with the question of
the offence of larceny at common law. This leaves out of consideration theft by
conversion under this section, which is committed whenever a person already in
possession of personal property, with the owner's consent, fraudulently and without
colour of right converts it to his own use or to the use of any other person
than the owner of it with intent to deprive the owner of such property, or so
to deal with it that it cannot be restored. The contention of the Crown is, and
the evidence shews, that the cheques upon the funds of His Majesty the King in
the right of the Province of Manitoba, and the moneys subsequently paid on
those cheques were received under circumstances that constituted a theft or
embezzlement by Messrs. Roblin, Coldwell, Howden and Montague in combination
with Messrs. Kelly, Simpson and Horwood. To this Kelly contributed by being an
accessory before the fact, and is therefore in law a principal in the
commission of the offence, under sec. 69 of the Criminal Code, by reason of
which there is no longer any distinction between a principal and an accessory
before the fact.
See. Crankshaw, p. 72:—
"A principal may be the actual
perpetrator of the act, that is, the one who, with his own hands or through an
innocent agent, does the act itself; he may be one who, before the act is done,
does or omits something for the purpose of aiding some one to commit it; he may
be one who is present aiding and abetting another in the doing of it; or he may
be one who counsels or procures the doing of it, or who does it through the
medium of a guilty agent."
The assumption underlying this argument is that
the Ministers Roblin, Coldwell, Howden and Montague being in possession of
moneys of the Crown could be convicted of unlawful conversion of the moneys
under section 347 of the Criminal Code. When pressed for evidence that these
moneys were in the possession of these ministers in contemplation of law, that
is to say, within the meaning of the enactment
[Page 256]
relied upon, counsel were unable to point to any
evidence of such possession. The fallacy of the argument lies in taking it for
granted that the political (as distinguished from legal) control of the
machinery of administration which, subject in the last resort to the authority
of the Lieutenant-Governor, rested in the hands of these persons was equivalent
in law to such possession and that in putting such machinery in motion, which
they were able to do by falsifying the facts and thereby enabling Kelly to
procure the moneys in question, they were guilty of the criminal offence of
conversion within the contemplation of section 347.
The point may be illustrated by reference to the
moneys paid under authority of orders-in-council. It was argued that as these
ministers, or some of them, constituted a majority of the executive on whose
advice the orders were passed, their acts in procuring the passing of them, and
indirectly, by means of the orders, the issue of cheques payable to Kelly
amounted to "conversion" in point of law.
But in truth these moneys were the moneys of His
Majesty lawfully disbursable only on the order of His Majesty's representative,
the Lieutenant-Governor (acting it is true on the advice of his Executive
Council) and by the instrumentality of cheques signed by certain permanent
officials, one of them being the Auditor. The moneys were in the possession of
the Crown subject to disposition only by following a procedure prescribed by
law; and though the advice of the Executive was a necessary part of this
procedure, it was by no means the whole of it. Nor were the other essential
acts, such for example as the concurrence of the Lieutenant-Governor which in
these cases was obtained by deceiving him as to the facts of a character so
purely ministerial as to justify
[Page 257]
the conclusion that these moneys were in law
under the control of the ministers as depositaries. The truth is that, in law,
the function of these persons was advisory only, the effective executive acts
were the acts of others.
This is, of course, not to say that the conduct
of Roblin and his associates, regard being had to their obligations as holders
of high public office, was not (leaving out of view the law relating to
conspiracy and obtaining money under false pretences) such conduct as the law
notices and punishes as criminal under another head or other heads than theft.
The charge of receiving moneys knowing that such
moneys had theretofore been embezzled, stolen or fraudulently obtained also, in
my opinion, fails for the reason that up to the moment when the moneys in
question were "received" by Kelly they remained in possession of the
Crown and had not up to that moment been "obtained" by anybody not
entitled to have them. The appellant is consequently entitled to have the
conviction against him in respect of count No. 1 and count No. 2 quashed as
being unsupported by evidence.
Mr. Coyne, as counsel representing the Crown,
quite properly stated in the argument that the Crown submitted to the judgment
of the Court of Appeal being treated as if it provided under section 1020 of
the Criminal Code that the penalty should be limited to the lowest maximum,
penalty allowed by law to be imposed as the result of a conviction on the
first, second and fourth counts.
I have nevertheless expressed my opinion upon
the points above discussed because that, as I think, is due in strict justice
to the appellant. In a court of morals no difference may be perceptible between
the crime
[Page 258]
charged in the first count and that charged in
the fourth count; yet the law does (as the difference in severity of the
penalties attached to these crimes respectively demonstrates) regard the first
mentioned offence as much the graver and it is right I think to state my
opinion that of the graver offence he could not properly be convicted.
Before coming to the crucial questions relating
specifically to the conviction on count number four it is convenient to deal
with the objection (which might have been a formidable one if founded in fact)
that the trial as actually conducted was in truth a trial for conspiracy—a
non-extraditable offence. The objection has no sub-stratum of fact. The
officers of the Crown were entitled; and indeed it was their duty, in the
circumstances, to bring before the jury all facts legally admissible in
evidence which might tend to establish the fraud charged to the satisfaction of
the jury. The design and the concerted action in furtherance of it were rightly
proved and emphazised—not for the purpose of obtaining a conviction for
conspiracy as a substantive offence—but as establishing the responsibility of
Kelly for certain acts and as exhibiting the character and operation of the
dishonest scheme which, as the Crown alleged, disclosed the criminal intent
that was an essential ingredient in the offence charged under any of counts
one, two or four.
The appellant asks for a new trial in respect of
the fourth count of the indictment on the ground that the law was departed from
at the trial in (1) comments alleged to have been made on his failure to
testify on his own behalf; (2) the reception of inadmissible evidence; (3)
unfairness of the trial in respect of extreme
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and inflammatory observations by counsel for the
Crown.
As to the first of these grounds I can find
nothing, which, when fairly construed, amounts to such comment within the
meaning of the statutory prohibition.
As to the second ground (which was also put in
the form of an objection that the learned judge failed to point out to the jury
the evidence admissible under counts one and two that would not be admissible
under count four) the only exception requiring comment is that relating to
evidence of acts which were done after the last of the payments in question had
been made (December, 1914), and to which Kelly was not proved to be an
immediate party. Kelly it is said could not be held to be a party to these acts
indirectly or constructively by reason of the conspiracy proved to obtain these
moneys by fraud, as the object of that conspiracy was completely accomplished
when the last payment was made. This objection is not, I think, well founded.
These acts it was argued with a great deal of force (and I am inclined to think
the argument is sound) which were concerned with measures for the prevention of
discovery and disclosure were well within the original design. But be that as
it may there is sufficient evidence of concert in preventing discovery and
disclosure to establish a subsidiary conspiracy in which Kelly was involved
with that as its object; and acts done in furtherance of such a conspiracy would
be admissible in support of the charge of mens rea.
As to all these alleged grounds for granting a
new trial it should be observed that the jurisdiction of the court of Crown
cases reserved in Manitoba as well as the jurisdiction of this court in
criminal appeals is
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derived from statute and that in exercising that
jurisdiction both courts are strictly bound by the rule that no new trial can
be granted unless there has been some error, by which "some substantial
wrong or miscarriage" has been occasioned "on the trial" (Crim.
Code, sec. 1019).
The guilt of the appellant as regards the
offence charged by the fourth count (obtaining money by false pretences) is
demonstrated by evidence indisputably admissible No jury directing its
attention exclusively to that evidence could, unless bent upon not giving
effect to the law, have failed to find a verdict of guilty on that count.
In these circumstances there was obviously no
"miscarriage;" and assuming there was some technical
"wrong" there can be in my judgment no "substantial wrong"
from the admission of inadmissible evidence if it must be affirmed that
relatively to the whole mass of admissible evidence that which is open to
exception is merely negligible and that in the absence of it the verdict could
not have been otherwise. This conclusion is in no way inconsistent with the
acceptance of the criterion suggested in Makin's Case, at
pages 70 and 71. In such a case the impeached evidence cannot in any practical
sense be supposed "to have had any influence upon the verdict."
As to the ground numbered three upon which a new
trial is prayed it may be added that although some of the observations of the
learned Crown counsel were no doubt excessively heightened, it is impossible to
think that in the circumstances of this case the accused could suffer in
consequence of them. Such expressions could not deepen the effect of a bare
recital of the
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facts in the story which the officers of the
Crown had to put before the jury.
The opinion of the Chief Justice, Mr. Justice
Davies and Mr. Justice Anglin was delivered by
Anglin J.—Although the conviction of the appellant on three distinct counts
in an indictment—No. 1, for theft, No. 2 for receiving, and No. 4 for obtaining
money by false pretences—was upheld by a majority of the learned judges of the
Court of Appeal for Manitoba, the Chief Justice, as we understand with the
concurrence of Mr. Justice Perdue and Mr. Justice Cameron, said (35 West. L.R.
57):—
It is difficult to see how the accused
should for one crime be found guilty on the first, second and fourth counts.
That he has committed a crime seems by the evidence to be clearly established,
and it is perhaps best established under the fourth count.
I assume that the trial judge in
pronouncing sentence will consider that the accused was found guilty of but one
crime, and in considering the maximum sentence allowed by law I think he should
be guided by the lowest maximum fixed by law for either of the three crimes set
forth in the first, second and fourth counts.
This course being taken, I do not think
such substantial wrong or miscarriage was occasioned at the trial as would
justify a new trial under sec. 1019 of the Code.
There seems no necessity to interfere with
the finding of guilty on the inconsistent counts. He was certainly guilty of
one of them and as he will be punished on one only, I would follow the course
taken in Rex v. Lockett.
The formal judgment of the court, however, does
not direct that the penalty to be imposed shall be so limited; but Mr. Coyne,
while vigorously insisting that the conviction on all three counts should be
sustained, stated at bar in this Court that, as counsel representing the Crown,
he submitted to the judgment of the Court of Appeal being dealt with as if it
contained a provi-
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sion under section 1020 of the Criminal Code
limiting the penalty as indicated by the learned Chief Justice.
Having regard to all the circumstances of the
case, and especially to the possible embarrassment which may have been caused
by the trial together of five separate counts, and to the fact that the learned
trial judge, while he carefully defined each of the offences charged, deemed it
advisable to abstain from instructing the jury as to the facts in evidence
bearing upon each branch of the indictment, we think the position taken by
counsel for the Crown eminently proper and that "we ought to treat the
verdict as a verdict on the lesser charge," namely, that of obtaining
money by false pretences: Rex v. Norman, at page 343; Rex
v. Lockett.
On this charge we find no dissent in the Court
of Appeal on the two propositions; that the count itself was properly laid and
that there was sufficient evidence to justify conviction upon it. The appellant
urges as grounds for a new trial on this count, warranted by the opinions of
the two dissenting judges, (a) that the conduct of the case may
have given the jury the impression that the accused was on trial for
conspiracy—a non-extraditable offence; (b) alleged comment on the
failure of the accused to testify on his own behalf; (c) inflammatory
and improper observations of Crown counsel; (d) failure of the learned
trial judge to direct the attention of the jury to evidence favourable to the
accused and. to correct mis-statements of law by Crown counsel; and (e)
the reception of inadmissible evidence and the failure of the learned judge to
instruct the jury that certain evidence, though admissible on other
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counts, should not be considered in disposing of
the fourth count.
If ground (a) is covered by any
question in the reserved case, in view of the explicit and reiterated warning
given to the jury by the trial judge (emphasizing similar statements made to
them by counsel for the Crown and by the defendant himself) that "the
accused is not charged with conspiracy''—"What he is charged with is not
conspiracy"—and again, "Remember that it is not the direct charge he
is answering"—it is impossible to accede to the suggestion that the jury
may have been misled as to the offences really charged; (b) There was no
comment whatever on the failure of the accused to testify. His right to do so
was not mentioned during the trial. The learned judge merely discharged his
duty in warning the jury against treating the statement which he had allowed
the accused to make as the equivalent of sworn testimony; (c) Whether
there is any question of law reserved on this point is, to say the least,
questionable.
But without dwelling further on the several
grounds urged, and without determining that in regard to any of them there has
been such error in law as would, if "some substantial wrong or miscarriage
(had been) thereby occasioned on the trial" (Crim. Code, sec. 1019), have
entitled the appellant to a new trial, we are of the opinion that his guilt on
the fourth count has been established by uncontradicted evidence, of which the
admissibility upon that count has not been and could not be successfully
challenged, so complete and so convincing that in regard to that count a
substantial miscarriage on the trial is out of the question and the matters
complained of, whether taken singly or cumulatively, are "most unlikely to
have affected the
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verdict:" Ibrahim v. The King, at page 616, if indeed it
is not impossible that they could have had any influence upon it: Makin v.
Attorney-General of New South Wales.
So overwhelming is the proof furnished by the
evidence not excepted to, that no honest jury could have returned other than a
verdict of guilty of obtaining money by false pretences had the conduct of the
case been entirely free from all the alleged errors of omission and commission.
No substantial wrong was occasioned on the trial of the fourth count, and the
conviction upon it, is in our opinion, unassailable.
Since we also concur in the view of the learned Chief
Justice of Manitoba that the punishment of the appellant should not exceed the
maximum penalty which might be imposed had the conviction been upon the fourth
count alone, the questions raised as to the first and second counts, to use the
language of counsel for the Crown, have become academic. We therefore express
no opinion upon them.
Appeal dismissed.
Solicitors for the appellant: Richards,
Sweatman, Kemp & Fillmore.
Solicitor for the respondent: The
Attorney-General for Manitoba.