Supreme Court of Canada
Leslie v. The Canadian Press, [1956] S.C.R. 871
Date: 1956-10-02
George A. Leslie
(Plaintiff) Appellant;
and
The Canadian Press (Defendant)
Respondent.
1956: June 18; 1956: October 2.
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF APPEAL FOR
ONTARIO.
Appeals—Ordering new trial on grounds of
misdirection, etc.—Whether substantial wrong or miscarriage occasioned—Burden
in this connection—The Judicature Act, R.S.O. 1950, c. 190, s. 28(1).
Where a new trial of a civil action is sought
on the ground of misdirection of the jury it is sufficient, under s. 28(1) of
the Ontario Judicature Act, for
the appellant to show that the misdirection may have affected the verdict; he
is not required to show that it actually did so. If thereafter the appellate
Court is in doubt as to whether it did or not, it is then for the respondent to
show that the misdirection did not in fact affect the verdict. Storry v.
C.N.R., [1941] 4 D.L.R. 169 at 174, disapproved.
Defamation—Defences—Justification—Fair and
accurate report of judicial proceeding—Charge to jury and jury’s
findings—Whether substantial wrong or miscarriage occasioned—The Judicature
Act, R.S.O. 1950, c. 190, s. 28(1).
An action for libel was based upon the
publication by the defendant of a newspaper account of the proceedings at a
trial. The defendant pleaded both justification and that the words complained
of constituted a fair and accurate report of proceedings in court. The jury
found that the words were a report of judicial proceedings, that they were
substantially true, but that they were not a fair and accurate report, and that
they were “harmful without intent”. On these findings the trial judge dismissed
the action.
[Page 872]
Held, the
judgment should be affirmed.
Per Kerwin
C.J. and Fauteux, Abbott and Nolan JJ. The trial judge’s directions to the jury
did not make clear the distinction between the question whether the statements
contained in the article were true and the question whether the article was a
fair and accurate report of a judicial proceeding. But the jury by their
answers had in fact distinguished between these questions, and the defendant
had clearly shown that no substantial wrong or miscarriage had resulted from
the misdirection; the appeal should therefore be dismissed under s. 28(1) of
the Ontario Judicature Act.
Per Rand J.:
Although the record of the previous trial, to which the report related, did not
of itself prove the truth of the matters stated, and could not be resorted to
for the purposes of the plea of justification, the plaintiff’s own evidence
supplied any inadequacy there might otherwise have been in this respect. There
was therefore evidence to support the jury’s finding on this plea, and that
finding was conclusive.
APPEAL by the plaintiff from the judgment of
the Court of Appeal for Ontario,
affirming the judgment of LeBel J., after a trial with a jury, dismissing the
action.
G.A. Leslie, plaintiff, appellant, in
person.
P.B.C. Pepper, for the defendant,
respondent.
The judgment of Kerwin C.J. and Fauteux, Abbott
and Nolan JJ. was delivered by
THE CHIEF JUSTICE:—This is an action for damages
for an alleged libel contained in a dispatch sent out by the defendant, The
Canadian Press, and appearing in a newspaper. On the first trial the case was
withdrawn from the jury, but the Court of Appeal for Ontario directed a new trial whereat the presiding judge, after having
received answers to questions put to the jury, dismissed the action. The Court
of Appeal affirmed that decision and the plaintiff now appeals to this Court.
The Canadian Press accepts responsibility for
the article in question which was printed in a newspaper published by one of
its subscribing members. That article reads:—
Toronto, June 12th,—(C.P.) George A.
Leslie, former house officer at the Royal York Hotel, used to take lengthy
trips in a certain elevator, “sometimes for 15 minutes, sometimes for a whole
hour.”
Catherine Ross, the elevator operator,
today told a court hearing a slander suit in which Leslie is plaintiff that
Leslie said he loved her and wanted her to go out with him.
Leslie is suing L.C. Parkinson, hotel
personnel manager, and the Canadian Pacific Railway, owner of the hotel, for
alleged slander by Parkinson. Parkinson denied the charge.
[Page 873]
Miss Ross said the manager told Leslie to
stay away from her and not talk to her, but Leslie persisted.
Miss Ross, who said that Leslie was on duty
during the times he rode in her elevator, used to ask her during the elevator
trips to go out with him.
“He didn’t like me snubbing him”, she said.
The questions put to the jury on the second
trial and their answers are as follows:—
1. Do you find the words complained of
(including those in the first paragraph) a report on judicial proceedings?
Answer “yes” or “no”. Answer: Yes.
2. Do yon find the words complained of substantially
true or false? Answer either “true” or “false”. Answer: True.
3. If your answer to Question No. 2 is
“false”, do you find the words complained of defamatory of the plaintiff?
Answer “yes” or “no”. Answer:
4. If your answer to Question No. 3 is
“yes”, do you find the words complained of are substantially a fair and
accurate report of the court proceedings in question? Answer “yes” or “no”.
Answer: No.
5. Do you find the defendant, in writing
this report, was actuated by malice? Answer “yes” or “no”. Answer:
Harmful without intent.
The directions of the trial judge to the jury
were not clear as to distinguishing between the questions whether the
statements contained in the article were true and whether the latter was a fair
and accurate report of the proceedings of one day at the trial of the earlier
action for slander, but the provisions of subs. (1) of s. 28 of The
Judicature Act, R.S.O. 1950, c. 190, require consideration. That
subsection enacts:—
28. (1) A new trial shall not be granted on
the ground of misdirection or of the improper admission or rejection of
evidence, or because the verdict of the jury was not taken upon a question
which the judge at the trial was not asked to leave to the jury, or by reason
of any omission or irregularity in the course of the trial, unless some
substantial wrong or miscarriage has been thereby occasioned.
The terms of a similar provision in England were before the House of Lords in Bray
v. Ford, and in
several cases in Ontario,
including the most recent one to which we were referred, Arland and Arland
v. Taylor . It was
there
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pointed out by Laidlaw J.A., speaking on behalf
of the Court, that in Storry v. C.N.R.,
Chief Justice Robertson had said at p. 174:—
In a criminal case...the appeal...is to be
allowed unless the Court is “of opinion that no substantial wrong or
miscarriage of justice has actually occurred” (s. 1014 (2) of the Criminal
Code). In a civil case the provision is that a new trial shall not be
granted on the ground of misdirection “unless some substantial wrong or
miscarriage has been thereby occasioned”... The burden is on the respondent in
the one case of showing that there was no substantial wrong or miscarriage of
justice, while in the other case the burden is on the appellant of showing that
there was some substantial wrong or miscarriage of justice.
As Laidlaw J.A. points out, this opinion is in
direct conflict with that expressed by Meredith C.J.C.P. in Gage v. Reid, which was apparently not referred to in
the Storry case, and it is also in conflict with the opinions in Anthony
v. Halstead, and White
v. Barnes.
Laidlaw J.A. had also in Temple v. Ottawa Drug Company Limited et al., expressed the view that “an appellant who
seeks a new trial on the ground of misdirection must at least establish a doubt
in the mind of the Court as to whether the misdirection occasioned a
substantial wrong or miscarriage”. There, and in the Arland case, he
found it unnecessary to determine whether the onus rested on the appellant to
show that such a result actually occurred. In Bray v. Ford the House of Lords had not set forth any
general rule. Bearing in mind the right of the plaintiff in such an action as
this to have the issues passed upon by the jury, I am of opinion that the
preferable rule and the one that should be adopted is that it is sufficient for
the complaining party to show that a misdirection may have affected a verdict
and not that it actually did so; and that, if an appellate Court is in doubt as
to whether it did or not, it is then for the opposite party to show that the
misdirection did not in fact affect the verdict.
[Page 875]
In the present case the defences set up by the
respondent were: (1) That the statements were true; (2) that they were not
defamatory; (3) that they constituted a fair and accurate report of judicial
proceedings and were therefore privileged. Counsel for the defendant addressed
the jury on all these defences and by their answers to questions 1 and 4 the
jury were in fact distinguishing between the report of the slander action in
the article complained of and the issue of the truth or falsity of the
statements contained in it. I have not overlooked the fact that the efforts of
counsel for the defendant had not succeeded in having the trial judge clarify
the position, or the circumstance that the plaintiff, although having
considerable experience in litigation, is not a lawyer and has acted for
himself throughout these proceedings. Upon consideration of the entire record I
am clearly of the opinion that the defendant has shown that no substantial
wrong or miscarriage has been occasioned.
The appeal should be dismissed with costs.
RAND J.:—This is an action for libel. It is
brought on what purports to be a news report of evidence given at a trial in
which the present plaintiff, the appellant, was suing one Parkinson and the
Canadian Pacific Railway Company for slander.
Three defences are pleaded: justification, a
fair and accurate report of a judicial proceeding, and that the words are not
defamatory. The finding of the jury on the first ground was against the
plaintiff; no answer was given to the third; and the second was found against
the respondent. The determining question is whether the first finding was
vitiated by the language of the charge or by a failure in proof.
That there was some confusion in the charge in
relation to the first two grounds is conceded. The attention of the trial judge
was drawn to it by Mr. Pepper but the correction exhibited the same
confounding of a fair and accurate account of what had taken place with the
truth of the facts
[Page 876]
to which the language related. In view of the
action of the jury on the second question, the precaution to rely on the first
plea appears to have been well advised.
The report, in the light of the jury’s action,
was a selection of items disclosed in the course of the trial and considered
newsworthy through what, apparently, was thought to be their “spiciness”, and
for the purposes of the second plea the record of the previous trial was put in
evidence.
At the same time the main witness in the former
case was called. She agreed that she had then been asked various questions and
had given the answers which had previously been read in court, but she was not
asked formally if the answers were true. In addition, she testified to certain
of the primary facts. The ground was taken before us that the previous record
of its own force could not be resorted to for the purposes of the plea of
justification and that the respondent must rely on the testimony given by the
witness alone.
On this view, which in the circumstances I
consider to be sound, was there a sufficient foundation for the finding on that
plea? On the testimony of the witness mentioned which was limited to what was
thought to be the main item I should have held it insufficient.
But any inadequacy in this respect was supplied
by the appellant himself. He admitted having made a remark to the effect of the
significant item reported. That remark which gives colour to the course of
conduct charged against him—of wasting his time in one of the hotel
elevators—can be interpreted in two ways: as evidence either of a generous
interest in the young woman operator—an interest in which the appellant’s wife
was said to have participated—or as a personal regard which led him to seek her
company.
Which interpretation was to be given it was a
question for the jury, to be found on a total of impressions and effects that
are denied to a Court in appeal. The jury, it is true, is not infallible: it
may have come to the wrong conclusion. The truth was hidden within the mind of
the appellant and it may be that only an imaginative discrimination could
appreciate the motivation for which he so strongly contended. But to the
possible frailty of judgment of the jurors all such controversies are subject.
[Page 877]
The apparent inability of the appellant to
realize the conclusive effect of the finding of justification is attributable
to the fact that this selective report had in it nothing of significance or of
serious interest to the reading public, and it was quite unnecessarily reported
only because of the character of its matter. But that inability, however
understandable, cannot affect the consequences of the verdict.
The appeal must, therefore, be dismissed with
costs.
Appeal dismissed with costs.
Solicitor for the defendant, respondent:
John J. Robinette, Toronto.