Supreme Court of Canada
Beattie v. The Queen, [1967] S.C.R. 474
Date: 1967-02-24
David Beattie Applicant;
and
Her Majesty The
Queen Respondent.
1967: February 20, 24.
Present: Cartwright, Ritchie and Spence JJ.
MOTION FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL
Criminal law—Leave to appeal—Whether
question of law—Whether magistrate properly exercised discretion as to sanity
of accused—Whether accused deprived of right to counsel—Criminal Code, 1953-54
(Can.), c. 51, ss. 524(1), 597(1)(b)—Canadian Bill of Rights, 1960 (Can.), c. 44.
The applicant was convicted of unlawfully
having in his possession an offensive weapon. His appeal was dismissed by the
Court of Appeal for British Columbia. On his application for leave to appeal to this Court, two grounds
were urged by his counsel: (1) that the magistrate should have directed that an
issue be tried to determine whether the accused, because of insanity, was
incapable of conducting his defence; (2) that the accused was deprived of his
right to counsel and to a fair trial.
Held: The
application for leave to appeal should be dismissed.
Under the provisions of s. 597(1)(b)
of the Criminal Code, leave to appeal to this Court may be granted on
any question of law alone. No question of law was involved in the determination
of whether the magistrate had properly exercised his discretion under
s. 524(1) of the Code. In any event, it appeared that the magistrate had
carried on an investigation. The sufficiency of that investigation as well as
the conclusion to which the magistrate came, are not matters involving a
question of law.
[Page 475]
There was no evidence that the applicant was
deprived of the right to retain and instruct counsel without delay or was
deprived of the right to a fair hearing.
Droit criminel—Permission d’appeler—Question
de droit—Le magistrat a-t-il exercé proprement sa discrétion concernant l’état
mental de l’accusé—L’accusé a-t-il été privé de son droit de retenir un
avocat—Code Criminel, 1953-54 (Can.), c. 51, arts. 524(1),
597(1)(b)—Déclaration canadienne des Droits, 1960 (Can.), c. 44.
Le requérant a été trouvé coupable d’avoir eu
illégalement en sa possession une arme offensive. Son appel fut rejeté par la
Cour d’appel de la Colombie-Britannique. Lors de sa requête pour permission
d’appeler devant cette Cour, deux motifs ont été soulevés par son avocat: (1)
le magistrat aurait dû ordonner que soit examinée la question de savoir si
l’accusé était, pour cause d’aliénation mentale, incapable de subir son procès;
(2) l’accusé a été privé de son droit de retenir un avocat et d’avoir un procès
équitable.
Arrêt: La
requête pour permission d’appeler doit être rejetée.
En vertu des dispositions de l’art. 597(1)(b)
du Code Criminel, la permission d’appeler devant cette Cour peut être
accordée sur toute question de droit strict. Aucune question de droit ne se
soulève dans la détermination de la question à savoir si le magistrat a exercé
proprement sa discrétion en vertu de l’art. 524(1) du Code. A tout événement,
il appert que le magistrat a fait une enquête. La suffisance de cette enquête
ainsi que la conclusion à laquelle le magistrat en est arrivé, ne sont pas des
sujets soulevant une question de droit.
Il n’y a aucune preuve que le requérant a été
privé de son droit de retenir et de constituer un avocat sans délai ou qu’il a
été privé de son droit à une audition équitable.
REQUÊTE pour permission d’appeler devant
cette Cour d’un jugement de la Cour d’appel de la Colombie-Britannique. Requête rejetée.
APPLICATION for leave to appeal from a
judgment of the Court of Appeal for British Columbia. Application dismissed.
F.A. Brewin, Q.C., for the applicant.
W.G. Burke-Robertson, Q.C., for the
respondent.
The judgment of the Court was delivered by
SPENCE J.:—This is an application for leave to
appeal from the Order of the Court of Appeal for British
Columbia made on November 18, 1966. By that Order the
said
[Page 476]
Court dismissed an appeal by this applicant from
a conviction by Magistrate D. Hume at Vancouver, on July 8, 1966, on the charge
that the accused unlawfully did have in his possession an offensive weapon, to
wit, a knife, for a purpose dangerous to the public peace, contrary to the form
of the statute in such case made and provided, and from his sentence upon such
conviction.
In this Court, the accused was represented by
counsel who urged two grounds of appeal:
Firstly, that the Magistrate ought to have
directed that an issue be tried to determine whether the accused, because of
insanity, was incapable of conducting his defence. Such an issue is provided
for in s. 524(1) of the Criminal Code.
Secondly, that the accused was deprived of his
right to counsel and his right to a fair trial, contrary to the provisions of
the Canadian Bill of Rights, Statutes of Canada 1960, c. 44.
As to the first ground of the application, after
consideration of the matter, I have come to the conclusion that the only
question involved is whether the magistrate properly exercised his discretion
to determine whether there was, in the words of the section, “sufficient reason
to doubt that the accused is, on account of insanity, capable of conducting his
defence”. Under the provisions of s. 597(1) (b) of the Criminal
Code, if leave is granted, an appeal to this Court may be taken on any
question of law alone. I am of the opinion that there is no question of law involved
in the determination of whether the magistrate had properly exercised his
discretion. It would appear that the magistrate did in fact carry on an
investigation to determine whether an issue should be directed. The sufficiency
of that investigation, and the conclusion to which the magistrate came, are not
matters involving a question of law.
As to the second ground, there is no evidence
that the applicant was deprived of the right to retain and instruct counsel
without delay or was deprived of the right to a fair hearing in accordance with
the principles of fundamental justice.
I would dismiss the application for leave to
appeal
Application dismissed.