Supreme Court of Canada
Saunders v. The Queen, [1967] S.C.R. 284
Date: 1967-03-22
Raymond George
Saunders Appellant;
and
Her Majesty The
Queen Respondent.
1967: March 21, 22.
Present: Fauteux, Martland, Judson, Ritchie
and Hall JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF APPEAL FOR
SASKATCHEWAN
Criminal law—Motor vehicle—Care or control
while impaired—Car in a ditch and unable to move under own power—Whether car a
“motor vehicle”—Criminal Code, 1953-54 (Can.), c. 51, ss. 2(25), 222, 223.
The appellant was acquitted by a magistrate
on an impaired driving charge on the ground that the automobile was not a motor
vehicle within the meaning of s. 223 of the Criminal Code. At the
time of his apprehension, the appellant was in an impaired condition behind the
steering wheel of his car with the key in the ignition. The car was in a ditch
and could not move under its own power until it was extricated by a tow. The
Crown appealed by way of a stated case. The appeal was allowed and the case
remitted to the magistrate. A further appeal
[Page 285]
to the Court of Appeal was dismissed without
written reasons. The appellant was granted leave to appeal to this Court on the
following point of law: “Is an automobile, which cannot be set in motion by its
own power, by reason of conditions existing at the time of the alleged offence,
a ‘motor vehicle’ within the meaning of those words where they appear in the
phrase ‘care and control of a motor vehicle’ in section 223 of the Criminal
Code?”
Held: The
appeal should be dismissed.
The true object of the provisions of ss. 222
and 223 of the Code is to cope with and protect the person and the property
from the danger which is inherent in the driving, care or control of a motor
vehicle by anyone who is intoxicated or under the influence of a drug or whose
ability to drive is impaired by alcohol or a drug. The definition of motor
vehicle in s. 2(25) of the Code refers to the type, the nature and not the
actual operability or effective functioning of the particular vehicle. It is
therefore immaterial if a motor vehicle, at the time of the alleged offence,
cannot be set in motion by its own power by reason of internal or external
conditions.
Droit criminel—Véhicule à moteur—Garde ou
contrôle alors que la capacité de conduire est affaiblie—Véhicule dans un fossé
et incapable de se mouvoir de son propre pouvoir—L’automobile est-elle un
«véhicule à moteur»—Code criminel, 1953-54 (Can.), c. 51, arts. 2(25), 222,
223.
L’appelant a été acquitté, par un magistrat,
de l’offense d’avoir conduit une automobile alors que sa capacité était
affaiblie, pour le motif que l’automobile n’était pas un véhicule à moteur dans
le sens de l’art. 223 du Code criminel. Lors de son arrestation, les
capacités de conduire de l’appelant étaient affaiblies et il était assis au
volant de son automobile. La clef d’allumage était en place. L’automobile était
dans un fossé et ne pouvait pas se mouvoir de son propre pouvoir jusqu’à ce
qu’elle fut dégagée au moyen d’une remorque. La Couronne en appela par voie
d’un dossier imprimé. L’appel fut maintenu et le dossier renvoyé au magistrat. Un
appel subséquent fut rejeté sans motifs écrits par la Cour d’Appel. L’appelant
a obtenu permission d’en appeler devant cette Cour sur la question de droit
suivante: «Est-ce qu’une automobile, qui ne peut pas être mise en mouvement de
son propre pouvoir, en raison de conditions existantes au temps de l’offense,
est un «véhicule à moteur» dans le sens de ces mots dans la phrase «garde et
contrôle d’un véhicule à moteur» dans l’article 223 du Code criminel?»
Arrêt: L’appel
doit être rejeté.
Le véritable but des dispositions des arts. 222
et 223 du Code est de conjurer le danger et de protéger les personnes et la
propriété contre le danger qui est inhérent à la conduite, à la garde ou au
contrôle d’un véhicule à moteur par toute personne en état d’ivresse ou sous
l’influence d’un narcotique ou dont la capacité de conduire est affaiblie par
l’effet de l’alcool ou d’une drogue. La définition de véhicule à moteur dans
l’art. 2(25) du Code réfère au type, à la nature et non pas à la capacité
actuelle de manœuvrer ou au fonctionnement effectif
[Page 286]
du véhicule en question. Le fait qu’un
véhicule à moteur, lors de l’offense, ne puisse se mouvoir de son propre
pouvoir en raison de conditions internes ou externes, est sans importance.
APPEL d’un jugement de la Cour d’Appel de la
province de Saskatchewan, confirmant une décision du Juge Balfour. Appel rejeté.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Court of Appeal
for Saskatchewan, affirming a decision of Balfour J. Appeal dismissed.
Robert Carleton, for the appellant.
Serge Kujawa, for the respondent.
The judgment of the Court was delivered by
FAUTEUX J.:—The appellant was charged with
having, on the 6th day of October A.D. 1963, at Herbert District, in the
province of Saskatchewan, the care or control of a motor vehicle while his
ability to drive a motor vehicle was impaired, committing thereby the offence
described in s. 223 of the Criminal Code. To this charge, he pleaded not
guilty and was ultimately acquitted by Police Magistrate C.W. Vause.
Dissatisfied with this determination of the
case, as being erroneous in point of law, the Attorney General for the province
appealed to the Court of Queen’s Bench, by way
of a stated case. The relevant facts and grounds, as well as the question
submitted for the consideration of the Court, are set forth in the following
terms by the Magistrate:
In the early morning, 1.20 a.m., on the 6th
day of October, 1963, the accused was found in an automobile in the ditch on
the west side of the highway and off the travelled portion thereof. He was
asleep seated behind the steering wheel, the key was in the ignition switch,
and the ignition was turned off. The motor was not running but was capable of
running, as Constable Burch of the R.C.M. Police had attempted to drive the
automobile out of the ditch without success and later, after it had been
extricated by a tow, drove the automobile back to Swift Current, Saskatchewan.
The automobile was at right angles to the highway with the rear wheels in the ditch,
while the two front wheels were on the shoulder of the gravel road. The left
rear wheel of the automobile was completely clear and would spin freely. The
position of the vehicle in the ditch, plus that fact that it was, what is
commonly known as ‘high centered’,
[Page 287]
prevented movement of the automobile under
its own power, and it was absolutely necessary for it to be extricated from its
position in the ditch by means of a winch on a tow truck.
The evidence clearly indicated that the
accused was in an impaired condition at the time of apprehension.
There is no evidence to establish that the
accused did not enter or mount the automobile for the purpose of setting it in
motion.
Part of a case of beer was found in the
rear seat of the automobile.
No evidence was adduced to prove the
condition of the accused when his automobile left the highway. There was no
positive or reliable proof as to the length of time the automobile of the
accused had been in the ditch before the arrival of the police constables or
when or where he had consumed intoxicating liquor.
I found as a fact that the accused was in
an impaired condition at the time of apprehension by the R.C.M. Police.
I found as a fact that the accused had care
or control of the vehicle at the time of his apprehension.
I found as a fact that it was absolutely
necessary to have the vehicle extricated from its position in the ditch by
means of a winch on a tow truck.
I found as a fact that the vehicle in its
position in the ditch was not a danger to the public or property as
contemplated by Section 223 of the Criminal Code.
* *
*
CASE:
(1) The proceeding was questioned on one
ground, namely:
That I erred in my finding of law, namely:
that the automobile was not a motor vehicle within the meaning of Section 223
of the Criminal Code.
With respect to ground (1), in view of the
fact that I found the vehicle was not a danger to the public or property as
contemplated by Section 223 of the Criminal Code, due to its position in the
ditch and my finding of fact that it was absolutely necessary to have the
automobile extricated from the position in the ditch by means of a winch on a
tow truck, I was of the opinion that the vehicle was not a motor vehicle. I
came to the said conclusion based on the test of whether a vehicle is a motor
vehicle within the meaning of Section 223, as decided by Rex v. Thornton, 96
C.C.C. The test as stated in the said case was simply whether or not it did
constitute a danger such as was contemplated by Section 223.
The appeal was heard by Mr. Justice Balfour
of the Court of Queen’s Bench. In his reasons for judgment, the learned judge
referred particularly to and quoted extensively from the reasons of MacDonald
J.A., who delivered the judgment of the Court of Appeal for Alberta, in R.
v. Rye, and
from the reasons given by Ilsley C.J., and concurred in by the majority, in the
decision of the Court of Appeal for Nova Scotia, in R. v. Wolfe. On the authority of the
[Page 288]
decisions of these two Courts of Appeal,
Mr. Justice Balfour decided that the Magistrate, in the case at bar, did
err in his finding of law that the automobile was not a motor vehicle within
the meaning of s. 223 of the Criminal Code and hence remitted the
case to the Magistrate for determination in the light of this finding.
An appeal was then entered from this decision to
the Court of Appeal of the province of Saskatchewan. The Court, constituted of
Culliton C.J.A., Hall and Maguire JJ.A., dismissed this appeal, but did not
deliver any written reasons.
Appellant finally sought and obtained leave to
appeal to this Court on the following point of law:
Is an automobile, which cannot be set in
motion by its own power, by reason of conditions existing at the time of the
alleged offence, a ‘motor vehicle’ within the meaning of those words where they
appear in the phrase ‘care and control of a motor vehicle’ in
section 223 of the Criminal Code?
Having heard counsel for the appellant and
retired to further consider the matter, the Court then informed counsel for
respondent that it was not necessary to hear him and, indicating that reasons
for judgment would be later delivered, the Court dismissed the appeal.
In the consideration of the question, it is
appropriate to note that conditions, preventing an automobile to be set in
motion on its own power, are, according to their nature, conveniently
differentiated as being either internal, such as, for example, a lack of
gasoline, a mechanical breakdown or the like, or external, such as, for
instance, a loss of traction attributable to the miring of the automobile in
snow or mud. The above question, in the scope of which both internal and
external conditions are contemplated, has given rise to conflicting
judicial opinions in cases decided under the former Criminal Code, R.S.C.
1947, c. 36, as well as, though to a much lesser and decreasing degree, in
those decided under the new Criminal Code. Most of the cases are
reviewed in an article mentioned by Mr. Justice Balfour and written by
L.K. Graburn—cf. vol. 1 (1958-59) of The Criminal Law Quarterly,—and
little would be gained by discussing them here. Sufficient it is, I think, to
quote the provisions of s. 2(25) and the relevant parts of ss. 222 and
[Page 289]
223 of the Criminal Code and then
indicate and consider the nature and basis of the conflict.
2. In this Act,
(25) “motor vehicle” means a vehicle
that is drawn, propelled or driven by any means other than by muscular power,
but does not include a vehicle of a railway that operates on rails;
* *
*
222. Every one who, while intoxicated or
under the influence of a narcotic drug, drives a motor vehicle or has the care
or control of a motor vehicle, whether it is in motion or not, is guilty of…
223. Every one who, while his ability to
drive a motor vehicle is impaired by alcohol or a drug, drives a motor vehicle
or has the care or control of a motor vehicle, whether it is in motion or not,
is guilty of an indictable offence or an offence punishable on summary
conviction and is liable…
It should be noted that there was no definition
of motor vehicle, in the former Code, and that the present definition
was introduced with and at the time of the coming into force of the new Code,
to wit, on the 1st of April 1955.
Obviously, every one agrees that the true object
of the provisions of ss. 222 and 223 is to cope with and protect the person and
the property from the danger which is inherent in the driving, care or
control of a motor vehicle by anyone who is intoxicated or under the
influence of a drug or whose ability to drive is impaired by alcohol or a drug.
At this point, however, the unanimity ends and the conflict arises.
In one category of cases, it is held that since
protection against the above danger is the true and sole object of the
legislation, it follows that, if, when the involved automobile cannot be set in
motion by its own power by reason of conditions existing at the time of the
alleged offence, there is actually or potentially no such danger, then the
automobile cannot be said to be a motor vehicle within the meaning which
ought to be given to these words in the context of ss. 222 and 223 and, in such
circumstances, these sections have no application. This interpretation is
held to be unaffected by reason of s. 2(25) for, defining as it does, motor
vehicle as a vehicle that is drawn, propelled or driven by any means other than
by muscular power, this definition, it is said, contemplates a motor
vehicle actually free of internal or external conditions preventing it to move
by its own power.
[Page 290]
In the other category of cases, it is held that
the fact that a motor vehicle is not free of such conditions at the time of the
alleged offence, is entirely immaterial. That this is so, since at least the
introduction in the legislation of the statutory definition of motor
vehicle, is uncontrovertible for, it is said, the definition refers to the
type, the nature and not the actual operability or effective functioning of
this particular vehicle.
In my respectful opinion, the holding in the
latter category of cases is the correct one, and R. v. Rye, supra, and R.
v. Wolfe, supra, were rightly decided, as also were, amongst others, the
cases of R. v. Weaver and
R. v. Simpson, where
the lack of danger alleged and pleaded in defense, was related, in the first
case, to an internal condition, and in the second case, to an external
condition. The definition of a motor vehicle is in plain and
ordinary language. It contemplates a kind of vehicle, not its actual
operability or functioning. Its application is not confined to a portion of the
Code, it extends uniformly throughout. The definitions of the offences
mentioned in ss. 222 and 223 are also couched in a language that is plain and
simple and in which nothing, either expressed or implied, indicates an intent
of Parliament to exact, in every case, as being one of the ingredients of the
offences, the proof of the presence of some element of actual or potential
danger or to accept, as a valid defense, the absence of any. On the contrary,
these and the other related provisions of the Code manifest the determination
of Parliament to strike at the very root of the evil, to wit: the combination
of alcohol and automobile, that normally breeds this element of danger which
this preventive legislation is meant to anticipate.
We are unanimously of the opinion that the
question, upon which leave to appeal was granted, must receive an affirmative
answer and, for that reason, the appeal, as above indicated, was dismissed.
Appeal dismissed.
Solicitor for the appellant: D.C.
Wilkinson, Swift Current.
Solicitor for the respondent: The
Attorney General, Regina.