Supreme Court of Canada
In Re Henderson, [1930] S.C.R. 45
Date: 1929-06-14
In Re John
Henderson
In Re James
Stewart
In Re George
Broder
In Re Joe Go
Get
1929: June 4, 5; 1929: June
13, 14.
Rinfret J. in chambers. Mignault,
Newcombe, Lamont and Smith JJ.
Criminal law—Habeas corpus—Excise
Act, R.S.C. [1927], c. 60, ss. 127, 128, 176—Opium and Narcotic Drug Act,
R.S.C. [1927], c. 144, s. 4— Information—Sufficiency as to description of
informant—Whether informant authorized to act—Lack of evidence at trial—Order
for imprisonment and fine—Conviction invalid in part—Order imposing less than
minimum fine—Severance—Cost of conveying prisoner not mentioned in warrant—Criminal
Code, ss. 654, 735, 754, 1135.
Per Rinfret J.—Under section 654 of the Criminal Code,
any person, upon reasonable or probable grounds, may make a complaint or lay an
information against an accused person in respect of the offences, relating to
illicit distilling, mentioned in section 176 of the Excise Act; but even
if it should be inferred from the provisions of that Act taken as a whole that
officers of excise alone were competent to lay such information, it would not
be necessary, though perhaps desirable, to specify particulars of the informant
in the warrant of commitment. Moreover, the information laid against some of
the applicants, which describes the informant, as a customs and excise officer
acting " on behalf of His Majesty the King " was quite sufficient to
justify the magistrate in proceeding with the trial. R. v. Limerick
(37 C.C.C. 344) and R. v. Ed. (47 C.C.C. 196) dist.
Per Rinfret J.—On an application for habeas corpus,
a contention by the petitioner that no proof of the authority of the informant
was adduced at the trial does not raise a question of jurisdiction: if the
judge before whom the application is made is right in his view that the
magistrate had the right to enter on, and proceed with, the case, he had not to
consider the sufficiency of the evidence on which the former was convicted. R.
v. Nat Bell Liquors ([1922] 2 A.C. 128, at pp. 151, 152) foll.
[Page 46]
Per Rinfret J. Under sections 127 and 128 of the Excise
Act, a magistrate has the power both to imprison and fine the accused by
summary conviction and is not restricted to impose one penalty to the exclusion
of the other.
Per Rinfret J.—When the order of imprisonment is
absolute for a term and a further term is imposed in default of payment of a
fine and costs, the conviction and commitment of the inferior tribunal are
severable. Therefore, when a petitioner urges, as a ground for the issue of a
writ of habeas corpus, the illegality of the part dealing with the
further imprisonment, such application is premature before the expiration of
the term for which the conviction imposed an absolute order of imprisonment; up
to that time, the applicant cannot complain that he is illegally restrained of
his liberty.
Per Rinfret J.—Where a warrant of commitment contains a
valid order of imprisonment and also an order imposing a lighter fine than the
minimum imposed by the statute, this order being illegal, the portion providing
for imprisonment is nevertheless valid; and the illegal order can still be
remedied by applying the provisions of sections 754 and 1125 of the Criminal
Code.
Per Rinfret J.—A warrant of commitment requiring the
payment of the costs of conveying the accused to jail is not invalid for
failure to state the amount of these costs.
Per Rinfret J.—The word " penalties " in par.
2 of s. 4 of the Opium and Narcotic Drugs Act means the imprisonment and
the fine and does not include the costs. Therefore, a condemnation to a fine of
" two hundred dollars" will not be invalid as being a lighter fine
than the minimum ($200 and costs), imposed by section 4, par. (d) (b)2(?)
of that section. Moreover, nothing in the Act compels the magistrate to award
costs; and in such a case, section 735 of the Criminal Code, under which the
costs are in the discretion of the magistrate, would apply.
The judgments of Rinfret J.,
in chambers, rendered upon these four applications for habeas corpus,
were, on appeal, affirmed by the Court,
Held, that, in the cases of Henderson, Broder and Joe Go
Get, the warrant of commitment shewed a valid conviction, and even assuming it
to be defective because the amount of the costs is not stated, that would not
be a ground for discharging the prisoners on habeas corpus: Section
1121, Criminal Code.
Held, also, that, in the Stewart case, assuming the
defects alleged on behalf of the prisoner, he is not at present held under any
of the defective clauses, and the application is at best premature.
APPEAL from the judgments of
Rinfret J. dismissing petitions for a writ of habeas corpus.
The material facts, and the
grounds of the petitions are sufficiently set out in the judgments of Rinfret
J. now reported.
The appeal from the judgments was
dismissed.
The petitions were heard by
Rinfret J. on June 4, 1929.
[Page 47]
Stuart Henderson for the
applicants.
E. F. Newcombe K.C. for the Attorney-General for British Columbia.
P. D. Wilson, for the Minister of Justice and the Minister of
National Revenue.
On June 5, 1929, Rinfret J. gave
judgment as follows:
RINFRET J.:—
In re John Henderson.
In re John George Broder.
The applicant Henderson complains
that he is illegally detained in custody in Oakalla Prison Farm, a common gaol
for the county of Vancouver,
and prays for the issue of a writ of habeas corpus directed to W. G.
McMynn, the warden of the prison, and for his subsequent discharge.
The same relief has already been
refused by the late Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of British Columbia and
by Mr. Justice W. A. Macdonald, a judge of the same province.
According to the warrant of
commitment by reason of which he is held prisoner, Henderson was
convicted before H. O. Alexander, a stipendiary magistrate in and for the county of
Vancouver, for that he,
on December 5, 1928, at
Pocahontas Bay, in the county of Vancouver, unlawfully, without having a
licence under the Excise Act then in force, did have in his possession a still
suitable for the manufacture of spirits, without having given notice thereof as
required by the Excise Act, such still not having been a duly registered
chemical still of capacity not exceeding three gallons, as provided for in the
Excise Act, contrary to the form of statute in such case made and provided
and he was adjudged
to be imprisoned in the
common gaol for the said county of Vancouver at
Oakalla Prison farm, Burnaby, in the county of Westminster, in the province of British
Columbia, for the term of twelve
months,
and also that he shall
forfeit and pay the sum of
five hundred dollars ($500) to be paid and applied according to law and, in
default of payment of the said sum of $500, that he should be imprisoned in the
said common gaol for the county of Vancouver in the county of Westminster for a
further term of six months unless the said sum of $500 and the costs and
charges of conveying (him) to the said common gaol should be sooner paid.
[Page 48]
The warrant commanded the
constables or peace officers in the county of Vancouver to take and convey Henderson
to the common gaol at
Oakalla Prison Farm aforesaid and there to deliver him to the said keeper
thereof, together with this precept;
and commanded the keeper to
receive Henderson
into (his) custody in the
said common gaol and there to imprison him for the term of twelve months.
The warrant further commanded the
keeper to imprison Henderson
for the further term of six
months to commence at the expiration of the said term of twelve months awarded
by the sentence above set out unless the said sum of $500 and the costs and
charges of the commitment and of the conveying of the said Henderson *** to the
said gaol are sooner paid unto the said keeper or until he shall be otherwise
discharged in due course of law.
The application is based on a
number of grounds and I will endeavour to consider and determine them in the
order in which they are submitted to me:
1. The trial magistrate is
alleged to have been
without jurisdiction to try
the case and to take proceedings on the information sworn or to act thereon
because the informer
did not swear that he was an
excise officer or acting under instructions from the Minister of National
Revenue, and the proceedings were void ab initio, as no averment is
sufficient in excise cases.
There is authority in this court for
the proposition that, on the return of a writ of habeas corpus, the only
consideration which can be entered upon by a judge of the Supreme Court of
Canada is the sufficiency of the commitment. (In re Trépanier;
In re Sproule;
Ex parte McDonald.
In this case, however, the
applicant further complains that the magistrate neglected
to show in the warrant and
conviction that the proceeding by summary conviction was by virtue of the
authority of the Minister of National Revenue, Department of Excise, ss. 133
and 134 of the Excise Act.
And, in addition to a copy of the
warrant of commitment, the petitioner has filed before me, without objection
from the Crown, copies of the conviction, of the information and other papers
accompanied by an affidavit, to show the alleged want of jurisdiction.
[Page 49]
I find nothing in sections 133
and 134 of the Excise Act to the effect that the commitment must show
the proceedings to have been held
by virtue of the authority
of the Minister of National Revenue, Department of Excise.
The offence, of which Henderson
is stated in the warrant to have been convicted, is covered by s. 176 (e)
of the Excise Act where it is declared to be an indictable offence,
(although by force of section 127 of the Act, the penalty or forfeiture and the
punishment may be sued for and recovered or imposed by summary conviction). The
offence is not in terms one which is only cognizable upon the information of a
specified class of persons. All provisions of the criminal code relating to
indictable offences apply to it (see Interpretation Act, c. 1 of R.S.C.
1927). It may therefore be argued with great force that anyone, upon reasonable
or probable grounds, may make a complaint or layan information against an
accused person in respect of such offence. (Crim. Code, s. 654). There are
sections of the Excise Act giving special powers to inspectors and
officers appointed under it for the purposes of entry into buildings, or into
the premises of any dealer, of inspection and examination of apparatus, works,
stills, etc.; also, under the authority of a writ of assistance, for the
purpose of searching for, seizing and securing goods or things liable to
forfeiture under the Act and of arresting and detaining any person whom they
detect in the commission of any offence against the provisions of the Act. No
powers are stated to be required to lay an information in respect of an offence
under s. 176; and counsel for the petitioner was unable to point to any section
of the Act having that effect.
Should we, however, infer from
the provisions of the Excise Act taken as a whole that officers of
excise alone are competent to lay informations concerning offences against
section 176, even then it is not necessary, though perhaps desirable, to
specify particulars of the informant in the warrant of commitment (Paley on
Summary Convietions, 9th ed. p. 470). This would dispose of the argument that
the authority of the informant is not shown in the warrant of commitment.
Assuming however that "for
the purpose of an inquiry into the case of commitment" (which is the
extent of my
[Page 50]
jurisdiction under s. 62 of the Supreme
Court Act) I should go behind the warrant, I find in the information laid
against Henderson, and of which he himself filed a copy before me,
that the informant is therein described as a customs and excise officer acting
" on behalf of His Majesty the King ". The information was taken and
sworn before the stipendiary magistrate and, in my view, the oath of the
informant covered the particulars relating to his capacity and authority to
act. This was quite sufficient (Crim. Code 1128) to justify the magistrate in
proceeding with the trial, even if it be true that only an officer of excise
could lay the information.
I will say nothing of the fact
that, admittedly, this point was not taken at the trial.
I am not overlooking the
decisions in Rex v. Limerick, and Rex v. Ed.
In addition to what I have already said upon the points which they cover, I may
add that neither case was an application for habeas corpus. Rex v. Limerick
was a proceeding for the enforcement of the Inland Revenue Act and was
before the court on an order for certiorari. It was there made to appear
that the informant was not an officer of the department of Inland Revenue and,
at the hearing, the magistrate's jurisdiction had been challenged. In Rex v.
Ed,
a case was stated for the opinion of the court after the appellant was found
guilty in a prosecution under the Income War Tax Act, and
as stated by the magistrate,
it was not alleged in the information or shown in the evidence before him that
(the informant) was authorized by the Finance Department or any other
department of the Government to lay the information or otherwise to enforce the
provisions of the Income War Tax Act (Rex v. Ed.
).
Both cases are distinguishable
from the present one.
As to the contention that no
proof of the authority of the informant was adduced at the trial, I would say
that it does not raise the question of jurisdiction. If I am right in my view
that the magistrate had the right to enter on the case, I am not to consider
the sufficiency of the evidence on which he convicted. (In re Trépanier.
In the words of Lord Sumner, re Rex v. Nat. Bell Liquors,
[Page 51]
A justice who convicts
without evidence is doing something that he ought not to do, but he is doing it
as a judge, and if his jurisdiction to entertain the charge is not open to
impeachment, his subsequent error, however grave, is a wrong exercise of a
jurisdiction which he has, and not a usurpation of a jurisdiction which he has
not ***. To say that there is no jurisdiction to convict without evidence is
the same as saying that there is jurisdiction if the decision is right, and
none if it is wrong; or that jurisdiction at the outset of a case continues so
long as the decision stands, but that, if it is set aside, the real conclusion
is that there never was jurisdiction.
For all these reasons the
petitioner fails on the first ground of his application.
2. The second ground may be
stated as follows: The information was first laid before P. C. Parker,
stipendiary magistrate. It was afterwards withdrawn and a new information was
laid before H. O. Alexander, another stipendiary magistrate whose jurisdiction,
so it is contended, was barred by sections 85 (4) and 129 of the Excise Act.
Section 85 must be disregarded.
It has no application to this case, which is not a prosecution under its
provisions, but, as already stated, a proceeding by summary conviction under
sections 176 and 127 of the Act (as amended by c. 24 of 18-19 Geo. V).
Section 129 reads as follows:
129. If any prosecution in
respect of an offence against any provision of this Act is brought before a
judge of a county court, or before a police or stipendiary magistrate, or
before any two justices of the peace, no other justice of the peace shall sit
or take part therein: Provided, however, that in any city or district in which
there are more than one judge of a county court, or more than one police or
stipendiary magistrate, such prosecution may be tried before any one of such
judges or police or stipendiary magistrates.
It is not disputed that
Alexander, the stipendiary magistrate who tried the case, found the conviction
and signed the commitment, had jurisdiction territorially and otherwise to try
a case of this kind, but it is contended that he could " not sit or take
part therein ", because the prosecution was brought first before P. C.
Parker.
On the facts as stated, section
129 does not apply. The information laid before Parker having been withdrawn,
Alexander cannot be said to have sat or taken part in a prosecution brought
before Parker. But whatever the facts may have been, they are not apparent on
the face of the warrant of commitment and, under the well settled jurisprudence
of this court referred to in Ex parte McDonald
[Page 52]
my jurisdiction in the present
case "is limited to an inquiry into the cause of commitment, that is, as
disclosed by the warrant of commitment".
The second ground of attack
cannot therefore be entertained by me.
3. As a third ground for the
application, it is contended that the magistrate
had no power to imprison and
fine by summary conviction, but that he could only do one or the other.
Sections 127 and 128 of the Excise
Act afford a complete answer to this contention. The offence of Henderson
must be taken to have been his first offence, inasmuch as the commitment does
not shew otherwise. Under section 176, the penalty for a first offence is
a penalty not exceeding
$2,000 and not less than $200 and to imprisonment, with or without hard labour,
for a term not exceeding twelve months and not less than one month, and, in
default of payment of the penalty, to a further term of imprisonment not
exceeding twelve months and not less than six months.
Section 127 (as amended by c. 24 of
18-19 Geo. V.) reads in part as follows:
127. (1) Every penalty or
forfeiture incurred and any punishment for any offence against the provisions
of this Act, or any other law relating to excise, may be sued for and
recovered, or may be imposed (a) before the Exchequer Court of Canada or
any court of record having jurisdiction in the premises; or (b) if the
amount or value of such penalty or forfeiture does not exceed five thousand
dollars and such punishment does not exceed twelve months imprisonment with
hard labour, whether the offence in respect of which it has been incurred is
declared by this Act to be an indictable offence or not, by summary conviction,
under the provisions of the Criminal Code relating thereto, before a judge of a
county court, or before a police or stipendiary magistrate, or any two justices
of the peace having jurisdiction in the place where the cause of prosecution
arises, or wherein the defendant is served with process.
*****
(3) Any such pecuniary
penalty may, if not forthwith paid, be levied by distress and sale of goods and
chattels of the offender, under the warrant of the court, judge, magistrate, or
justices having cognizance of the case; or the said court, judge, magistrate,
or justices may, in its or their discretion, commit the offender to the common
gaol for a period not exceeding twelve months, unless the penalty and costs,
including those of conveying the offender to such gaol and stated in the
warrant of committal, are sooner paid.
Section 128 reads:
128. Any term of imprisonment
imposed for any offence against the provisions of this Act, whether in
conjunction with a pecuniary penalty or not, may be adjudged and ordered
(a) by the Exchequer
Court of Canada, or any court of record having jurisdiction in the premises; or
[Page 53]
(b) if such term of
imprisonment does not exceed twelve months, exclusive of any term of
imprisonment which may be adjudged or ordered for non-payment of any pecuniary
penalty, whether the offence in respect of which the liability to imprisonment
has been incurred is declared by this Act to be an indictable offence or not,
by summary conviction under the provisions of the Criminal Code relating
thereto by a judge of a county court, or by a police or stipendiary magistrate,
or any two justices of the peace having jurisdiction in the place where the
cause of prosecution arises, or wherein the defendant is served with process.
As will have been noticed,
section 127 alone was sufficient in this case to found jurisdiction in the
stipendiary magistrate; and section 128 applies when the term of imprisonment
is imposed " whether in conjunction with a pecuniary penalty or not."
4. The next contention in support
of the application is that the warrant of commitment is bad
in neglecting to state where
the defendant was found or the cause of prosecution arises.
The warrant states
that the said John Henderson
*** on December 5, 1928, at Pocahontas
Bay, in the county of Vancouver, unlawfully *** did have in his
possession a still, etc.
H. O. Alexander, before whom Henderson was
found guilty and was convicted, is " a stipendiary magistrate in and for
the said county of Vancouver."
The jurisdiction appears on the face of the proceedings. Moreover, courts would
take judicial notice of the " local divisions of their country."
(Taylor on Evidence, 10th ed., 17; Sleeth v. Hurlbert.)
Nor was it necessary, as urged by
counsel, that, at the time of the arrest, Henderson should have the still in his own actual possession
at Pocahontas Bay. Having possession includes as well having in
the custody of any other person or having in any place for the benefit or use
of one's self or of any other person (Criminal Code, s. 5).
5. Then it is contended that the
warrant is bad, "by neglecting to show to whom the fine is to be
paid," the words used being: " to be paid and applied according to
law."
The warrant shews that Henderson
is condemned to an imprisonment of twelve months and also to a fine of $500,
and to a further imprisonment of six months unless the said sum of $500 "
should be sooner paid." The further term of six months is
[Page 54]
to commence at the
expiration of the said term of twelve months awarded by the sentence above set
out unless the said sum of $500 and the costs and charges of the commitment and
of the conveying *** to the said jail are sooner paid unto *** the said keeper.
To avoid further imprisonment, Henderson
knows from the warrant that he must pay to the keeper. Assuming that he is
concerned with the subsequent appropriation of the fine, s.s. 133 and 134 of the
Excise Act make a complete and determinate disposal of it. If they did
not, art. 1036 of the Criminal Code would apply. So that the judgment can be
unequivocally carried into effect by reference to the Act alone (R. v. Seal
).
6. The last objection taken by
the petitioner is as to the question of costs. It is urged by him
that the conviction and
warrant do not comply with the statutes in regard to " costs of conveying
to gaol " or costs of " commitment."
Under s. 127 of the Excise
Act, the magistrate could
commit the offender to the
common gaol for a period not exceeding 12 months, unless the penalty and costs,
including those of conveying the offender to such gaol and stated in the
warrant of committal are sooner paid.
The adjudication in the warrant
now before me, in default of payment of the fine of $500, is that Henderson
should be imprisoned
for a further term of six
months unless the said sum of $500 and the costs and charges of conveying (him)
to the said common gaol should be sooner paid.
Then, in the operative part of
the warrant, the keeper is commanded to imprison him for the further term of
six months *** unless the said sum of $500 and the costs of the commitment and
of the conveying *** to the said gaol are sooner paid unto *** the said keeper.
But the further term of six
months is to commence (only)
at the expiration of the
said term of twelve months awarded by the sentence.
Henderson complains that:
(a) The costs of
commitment were not adjudged against him and that yet, under the warrant, he
will have to remain six months in prison, unless he pays them.
(b) The amount of the
costs which he must pay is not stated in the commitment.
Henderson was validly convicted on the 5th January, 1929. It was
then validly adjudged, for the offence of which he was legally found guilty,
that he should be im-
[Page 55]
prisoned for the term of twelve
months. It is not disputed that the punishment is perfectly good under the
statute. The term of twelve months will expire only on the 5th day of January,
1930. Until then he cannot complain that he is illegally restrained of his
liberty, nor kept in illegal confinement. The warrant of commitment is
sufficient for the keeper to retain him in gaol until the expiration of the
term of twelve months for which the conviction imposed an absolute order of
imprisonment.
Where the order of imprisonment
is absolute for a term and a further term is imposed in default of payment of a
fine and costs, the conviction and commitment of an inferior tribunal are
severable. This proposition has now been accepted by our courts. The court of
appeal for Ontario in The King v. Carlisle;
the Court of King's Bench (appeal side) of Quebec in La Commission des
Liqueurs de Québec v. Forcade;
and the Court of Appeal for British Columbia in Rex v. Fox ;
to which may be added the opinion of Mr. Justice Beck of the Court of Appeal
for Alberta in Rex v. Miller . I see
no reason to differ from these judgments.
Paley on Summary convictions (8th
ed. at p. 201) admits that an order is divisible and " may be quashed in
part ", and, as said in Rex v. Robinson,
quoted by Mr. Justice W. A. Macdonald in his judgment on a similar application,
there is no reason worthy of
the name to be found in the books why there should be any distinction in this
respect between an order and a conviction.
I therefore think that, so far as
concerns that portion of the warrant of commitment dealing with further
imprisonment in default of payment of fine and costs, the application is
premature. I do not want however to be understood as meaning that that part of
the commitment is invalid. The writ of habeas corpus is a prerogative
process available when " there is a deprivation of personal liberty
without legal justification " (Halsbury, Laws of England, vol. 10, p. 48).
Courts should not permit the use of this great writ to free criminals on mere
technicalities. It is
[Page 56]
the spirit of our Criminal Laws
and more particularly of our law on summary convictions that defects and
informalities be corrected so as " to prevent a denial of justice "
(Crim. Code 723, 753, 754, 1120, 1124, 1125 and 1129).
I have been referred to a number
of judgments holding a warrant of commitment invalid because it required
payment of conveyance to gaol and it did not state the amount of those costs. I
have noticed that none of the learned judges who have so decided took the
trouble of telling us at the same time how the magistrate, so as to insert the
amount in the warrant, could determine in advance the costs of conveyance. I
fully agree with what is said on that point by Murphy J. in Rex v. Wong.
A proper method—and there should be others—for the determination of those costs
is set out in Poulin v. City of Quebec
where Sir François Lemieux, at page 392, decides as follows:
By this petition for habeas
corpus (the petitioner) demands to be discharged on two main grounds, *** ;
secondly, because the
conviction should have stated the amount of conveying the petitioner to gaol.
This last ground is without
foundation.
The condemnation for the
costs includes the cost of conveyance, and these expenses, contrary to the
claim of the petitioner, should not, and could not, be included in the
conviction.
When the law permits
conviction for costs, it includes, not only the costs of the prosecution but
also those of carrying out the judgment of the conviction.
It is impossible for the
magistrate or the Recorder's Court, and it is not in a position to fix and
determine in advance the cost of conveyance. These costs are, or should be,
stated or certified by the officer who executes the commitment upon the back of
the commitment, which is the general practice and which was done in this very
case. The certificate authorizes the jailer to require payment of the amount if
the offender desires to be discharged from gaol.
In this case, I have, for the
above reasons, come to the conclusion that the objections fail to support the
application for the prisoner's release and the said application will therefore
be dismissed.
In the case of George Broder, the
conviction and the warrant of commitment are identical and for a similar
offence; the application is based on exactly the same grounds as that of John
Henderson and it will accordingly be dismissed for the same reasons.
[Page 57]
In re James Stewart
This is an application for habeas
corpus by James Stewart, formerly of the city of Vancouver and
at present imprisoned at Oakalla Prison Farm, Burnaby, county of
Westminster, province of British Columbia.
The offence for which Stewart was
convicted, the conviction and the warrant of commitment are similar to those in
the cases of John Henderson and George Broder. The grounds of the application
are the same, except one which I shall state presently. For the reasons already
given in dismissing the petitions of Henderson and Broder, to which I refer the
parties and their counsel, I think the similar objections raised in this case
fail to support the application for Stewart's release.
The other ground, which was
available neither to Henderson, nor to Broder, consists in the following:
It was adjudged by the
conviction, as appears by the warrant of commitment, that Stewart should be
imprisoned for the term of six months, and it was also adjudged that he should
forfeit and pay the sum of $100 to be paid and applied according to law; and it
was further adjudged that, in default of payment of the said sum, Stewart
should be imprisoned
for a further term of two
months, unless the said sum of $100 and the costs and charges of conveying
(him) to the said common gaol should be sooner paid.
The operative part of the warrant
of commitment is in the same terms, except that the keeper is commanded also to
exact " the costs and charges of the commitment", in addition to
those " of the conveying ", before he discharges the prisoner.
Under section 176 (d) of the Excise
Act, the offence of which Stewart was found guilty is an indictable offence
(though triable by summary conviction-s. 127) and made him liable to a penalty
not exceeding $2,000, and
not less than two hundred dollars, and to imprisonment, with or without hard
labour, for a term not exceeding twelve months and not less than one month,
and, in default of payment of the penalty, to a further term of imprisonment
not exceeding twelve months and not less than six months.
As will have been perceived, the
absolute order of imprisonment for a term of six months is within the
limitation contained in the enactment. Stewart is now detained in
[Page 58]
gaol under a perfectly good award
of imprisonment and the commitment, as well as the conviction, is a legal and
sufficient warrant for the gaoler to keep him in prison.
There seems to be no doubt
however that the magistrate had no power to impose less than the minimum fine
or to order imprisonment, in default of payment of fine and cos's, for a term
shorter than prescribed by the statute.
According to the Interpretation
Act (c. 1 of R.S.C. 1927, s. 28)
Every Act shall be read and
construed as if any offence for which the offender may be
(a) prosecuted by
indictment, howsoever such offence may be therein described or referred to,
were described or referred to as an indictable offence;
(b) punishable on
summary conviction, were described or referred to as an offence; and
all provisions of the
Criminal Code relating to indictable offence, or offences, as the case may be,
shall apply to every such offence.
By force of sections 1028 and
1029 of the Criminal Code the magistrate had no discretion to inflict a
punishment or to award a fine or a penalty outside the limitations contained in
s. 176 (e) of the Excise Act. And section 1054 of the same code
provides
that no one shall be
sentenced to any shorter term of imprisonment than the minimum term, if any,
prescribed for the offence of which he is convicted.
I think therefore that the
conviction for a fine of $100 and the adjudication of imprisonment for a
further term of two months, in default of payment of the fine and costs, were
bad and illegal.
Had Stewart, at the present time,
been kept in gaol because of his failure to pay the fine of $100 and costs, I
would not however have maintained the writ of habeas corpus. Applying
section 1120 of the Criminal Code, I would have made an order for the further
detention of Stewart and have directed the magistrate, under whose warrant he
is in custody,
to do such further act as
*** may best further the ends of justice.
And it may not be out of place to
draw the attention of the petitioner to the fact that by s. 1125 of the
Criminal Code,
the punishment imposed being
less than the punishment by law assigned to the offence stated in the
conviction or order
is treated as an irregularity
which may be dealt with in all respects as the court may do upon appeal under
section
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754 of the Code. Section 1125 has
reference to convictions removed by certiorari, but there is no apparent
reason why an order to a similar effect could not be made on habeas corpus
under s. 1120 of the code.
I am not however so deciding. In
my reasons for judgment on the similar petitions of John Henderson and George
Broder, I have explained why I thought that the conviction as made in this case
was severable. It consists first in an absolute order for the payment of a
fine. By the terms of the conviction and of the warrant, the term of two
months, in default of payment of the fine, is " to commence (only) at the
expiration of " the absolute term of imprisonment of six months. The
conviction and warrant are dated the 5th day of January, 1929. The six months
will expire only on the 5th day of July. In the meantime and at present a valid
case of detention is shewn, the petitioner is legally in gaol and he cannot
succeed in his present application. The application is therefore dismissed.
In re Joe Go Get
Joe Go Get, was, on the 23rd
January, 1929, convicted before Thos. McClymont, a police magistrate, for that
he
did have in his possession a
drug, to wit prepared opium, without lawful authority, contrary to the
provisions of section 4 (d) of the Opium and Narcotic Drug Act,
1923, and amendments thereto.
He was adjudged to be imprisoned
for the term of six months. He was also adjudged to forfeit and pay the sum of
$200, and he was further adjudged, if the said sum was not sooner paid, to be
imprisoned
for the additional space of
three months to commence at and from the expiration of the term of imprisonment
aforesaid.
Joe Go Get was imprisoned under a
warrant of commitment reciting the above conviction and now applies for his
release from custody by habeas corpus. He says his conviction, as
appears by the commitment, is incomplete and in improper form and contrary to
the Opium and Narcotic Act because:
1. The penalty imposed is less
than the minimum penalty which may be awarded under the Act.
2. There is no adjudication as to
costs, which is necessary in such an offence.
3. The conviction and warrant of
commitment do not " provide for costs and charges of commitment."
[Page 60]
The offence of which Joe Go Get
was found guilty is covered by section 4 (d) of the Opium and
Narcotic Drug Act, which made him liable
upon summary conviction, to
imprisonment with or without hard labour for any term not exceeding eighteen
months
and not less than six months, and
to a fine not exceeding
one thousand dollars and
costs and not less than two hundred dollars and coss.
Then paragraph 2 of section 4
says:
2. Notwithstanding the
provisions of the Criminal Code, or of any other statute or law, the court
shall have no power to impose less than the minimum penalties herein
prescribed, and shall, in all cases of conviction, impose both fine and
imprisonment; * * *
In the present case, no objection
is taken to the absolute term of imprisonment imposed, but the sum ordered to
be forfeited and paid as a fine is only two hundred dollars, and it is argued
that this was illegal and outside the jurisdiction of the magistrate because,
under the Act, the fine may not be less than two hundred dollars and costs. The
conclusion would be that either a fine for the minimum amount without costs is
below the penalty imperatively prescribed or that the conviction is bad because
it contains no adjudication as to costs.
I do not so understand the
statute, and I read it as Murphy J. did in Rex v. Wong Yet .
Section 4 (2) of the Opium and
Narcotic Drug Act must be applied
notwithstanding the
provision of the Criminal Code, or of any other statute or law.
For the determination of this
objection, I must therefore look only to the provisions of the Act. The Act
says that
the court shall have no
power to impose less than the minimum penalties herein prescribed.
I think the word " penalties
" means the fine and the imprisonment and does not include the costs. The
magistrate
shall, in all cases of
conviction, impose both fine and imprisonment.
He may not impose a fine alone,
or an imprisonment alone. He must not impose a term of imprisonment or a fine
outside the limitations contained in the enactment, but the costs remain in his
discretion. Applying this interpretation to the wording of the relevant section
4d (b), I would say that the magistrate could, as he has done in this case,
impose a fine of $200, without speaking of the costs. The
[Page 61]
words " not less than "
in the section apply to the " fine " only; and the " fine "
does not comprise " the costs." This is shown by section twelve of
the Act, whereby when " the conviction adjudges payment of a
fine," the sentence may direct that in default of payment of the fine
and costs, the person so convicted shall be imprisoned until
such fine and costs are paid, etc.
The limitation in s. 4 applies
therefore to the penalties, being the imprisonment and the fine, but not to the
total amount of fine and costs. The object of the enactment " according to
its true intent, meaning and spirit " is that the minimum fine may be
imposed, outside of the costs.
Nor do I think that an
adjudication as to costs is necessary for such an offence. There is no
provision making it so. The effect of section 4d (b) even were I to put
upon it the construction suggested by counsel for the petitioner, would not be
that costs must be ordered to be paid by the person found guilty, it would be
that the combined amounts of fine and costs may not be less than $200, a result
which to my mind only goes to strengthen the view I have expressed on the first
ground of this application.
Outside of section 4d (b),
no other sections of the Opium and Narcotic Drug Act were pointed to me
compelling the magistrate to award costs. In such a case the provisions of the
Criminal Code apply (Interpretation Act, s. 28, c. 1 of R.S.C., 1927).
In summary matters under the
Criminal Code, costs are in the discretion of the magistrate (s. 735) and, as
said by my brother Mr. Justice Duff in the Marino case (22nd August,
1927, not reported), I cannot
assume that the police
magistrate did not judicially consider and pass upon that question.
What I have just said also
applies to the costs and charges of commitment. I may add that I fail to see
what interest the petitioner may have of complaining on habeas corpus
that the warrant of commitment makes no mention whatever of those costs. The
only effect is that he will not have to pay them in order to escape restraint
of liberty.
The application is dismissed
without costs.
The appeal from the above
judgments was heard by the court, composed of four judges (s. 28 (2), Supreme
Court Act), on June 13, 1929.
[Page 62]
Stuart Henderson for the
appellants.
J. A. Ritchie K.C. for the Attorney General for British Columbia.
P. D. Wilson for the Minister of Justice and the Minister of
National Revenue.
On June 14, 1929, the court
delivered its judgment affirming the judgments of Rinfret J.
THE COURT.—In the cases of Henderson,
Broder and Joe Go Get, the warrant of commitment shews a valid conviction, and
even assuming it to be defective because the amount of the costs is not stated,
that would not be a ground for discharging the prisoners on habeas corpus :
Section 1121, Criminal Code. It is not necessary to express any opinion on the
question of severance. The appeals are dismissed.
In the Stewart case, assuming the
defects alleged on behalf of the prisoner, he is not at present held under any
of the defective clauses. The statute clearly contemplates that the proceedings
are not wholly void, for there are curative provisions which, in the meantime,
may be invoked. If these are not available to this court, they may nevertheless
conveniently be resorted to elsewhere, and, in the interests of justice, it
seems right that the Crown should not be deprived of its judicial remedies.
We think therefore that this
application is at best premature, and should be dismissed.
Appeals
dismissed.