Supreme Court of Canada
McMartin v. The Queen, [1964] S.C.R. 484
Date: 1964-05-11
DAVID JAMES McMARTIN APPELLANT;
AND
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN RESPONDENT.
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF APPEAL FOR BRITISH
COLUMBIA
PRESENT: Taschereau
C.J. and Cartwright, Fauteux, Abbott, Martland, Judson, Ritchie, Hall and
Spence JJ.
Criminal law-Capital murder-Application by
defence to adjourn trial to obtain further medical evidence-Application
refused-Whether Court of Appeal right in refusing leave to adduce fresh
evidence of mental disorder on issue of planned and deliberate. Criminal Code,
1953-54 (Can.), c. 51, ss. 202A(2) (a), 589(1)(b).
The appellant was convicted on a
charge of capital murder of his common-law wife. He did not testify. The
evidence for the Crown was that he had quarrelled with his wife after she
returned to their house at 1:30 a.m. on the morning of October 11, 1962. When
the children left for school at 8:15 a.m., the wife was alive. Sometime after 9
a.m. the appellant was seen at the back of his house with an axe; about a
minute and a half later he was at his front gate and on his way to telephone
the police. When the police arrived, the wife was dead with severe lacerations
on the right side of the face and head. There was no evidence of any persons being
in the house between 8:15 am. and 9:30 a.m. other than the appellant and his
wife. The Court of Appeal affirmed the conviction and refused an application by
the appellant to introduce fresh evidence before it as to his mental condition
at the time of the crime. On appeal to this Court the Crown was called upon to
answer only the grounds (1) as to whether the trial judge should have granted a
defence motion for an adjournment in order for it to obtain and introduce
further medical evidence; and (2) as to whether the defence motion before the
Court of Appeal to adduce fresh evidence should have been granted.
Held: The appeal should be allowed, the conviction quashed and a new trial
ordered.
Per Taschereau
C.J. and Fauteux, Abbott, Martland, Judson, Ritchie, Hall and Spence JJ.: The
application for an adjournment of the trial appeared to have been directed to
the issue of insanity which was not pleaded at the trial. The question of
whether or not an adjournment
is to be granted rests in the
discretion of the judge who is trying the case, and the affidavit filed at the
hearing of this appeal did not contain sufficient information as to the
circumstances under which this application was made to justify the conclusion
that there was any error in principle in refusing the adjournment.
[Page 485]
The proposed evidence, which the
defence sought to introduce in the Court of Appeal, was not directed towards
proving that the appellant was legally insane at the time of the crime, but
rather towards showing that a psychiatric examination after the trial had
disclosed that he had long been suffering from a disorder of the mind which
manifested itself in impulsive, unpredictable and dangerous behaviour, and that
his long history of mental
disorder was a relevant circumstance proper to be considered, together with all
the other circumstances disclosed in the evidence, in determining whether or
not the murder was planned and deliberate on his part. It is recognized that
special grounds must be shown in order to justify the Court of Appeal in
exercising the power conferred upon it by s. 589(1) of the Criminal Code. The
evidence tendered on such an application was not to be judged and rejected on
the ground that it did not disprove the verdict as found by the jury, or that
it failed to discharge the burden of proving that the appellant was incapable
of planning and deliberation or that it did not rebut inferences which appeared
to have been drawn by the jury. It was enough if the proposed evidence was of
sufficient strength that it might reasonably affect the verdict of a jury, R.
v. Buckle, 94 C.C.C. 84, referred to. Under the present circumstances it could not be
said that the conduct of the appellant's counsel indicated lack of reasonable
diligence to obtain such evidence before the trial. The evidence in question,
like that in Regina v. More, [19631 S.C.R. 522, might have caused the jury to regard it as more probable that the accused's
final act was prompted by a sudden impulse rather than by consideration. It
should have been admitted by the Court of Appeal. Without the evidence of the
appellant's mental history and condition, it could not be said that all the
circumstances bearing on the question of whether the murder was planned and
deliberate have been passed upon by a jury.
CARTWRIGHT J.
agrees subject to a reservation regarding the applicability of the rule in
Hodge's case.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Court of Appeal
for British Columbia', affirming the conviction of the appellant for capital
murder and refusing leave to introduce further evidence. Appeal allowed and new
trial ordered.
H. A. D. Oliver, for
the appellant.
W. G. Burke-Robertson, Q.C., for the respondent.
The judgment of Taschereau C.J. and
Fauteux, Abbott, Martland, Judson, Ritchie, Hall and Spence JJ. was delivered
by
RITCHIE J.:-This is an appeal from a judgment of th( Court of Appeal
of British Columbia by
which that Court
[Page 486]
with Davey J.A.
dissenting, affirmed the conviction of the appellant for the capital murder of
Celestine Bob and unanimously refused an application made on his behalf to
introduce further evidence before it as to his mental condition at the time of
the crime.
The appellant did not
testify and no evidence was introduced on his behalf at the trial so that the
jury's verdict was of necessity based on the account given by the various Crown
witnesses of the circumstances surrounding the killing.
This account disclosed
that at about 1:30 a.m. on the morning of October 11, 1962, Celestine Bob
returned to the house near the settlement of Lillooet, B.C., where she and the
appellant had been living with their two children as man and wife for a number
of years; she was accompanied by a man named Stavast who appears to have given
her a lift in his car and who came into the house for half an hour and had a
glass of beer and a discussion or argument with the appellant about
"work". Marilyn Bob, a 14-year old child, testified that after Stavast
had left she heard the appellant and her mother "arguing about how come
that man took her home", but there is no evidence of any further incident
until after the two children left for school at 8:15, at which time they both
say that their mother was alive and the little boy, Percy Bob, says that he saw
her waving to them when they were waiting for the school bus. Sometime after 9
a.m., a man named Whitney, who was walking along the road behind and to one
side of the McMartin house, noticed the appellant at the back of his house pick
up an axe and knock a piece of wood from its blade, and about a minute and a
half later he encountered the appellant at his front gate; he was then
breathing heavily and asked Whitney to come with him to the shoemaker's who
appears to have had the only telephone in the immediate vicinity. On arriving
at the shoemaker's, the appellant telephoned to the police at Lillooet saying,
in part, "Come down as quick as possible and you'll find out for
yourself". As a result, Corporal Chiunyk of the R.C.M. Police drove at
once to the shoe-maker's and accompanied the appellant to his house where he
was shown the dead body of Celestine Bob with severe lacerations on the right
side of her face and head, and he then noticed an axe in a box in the corner of
the same room. The appellant declined to say anything until he saw his
[Page 487]
lawyer and when the
Corporal told him that he would have to take him into custody he replied,
"I am prepared". At the trial Dr. Clark testified that it was very
likely that the deceased had died as a result of blows from the axe found in the
room and that she had probably been hit when asleep.
For the purpose of this
case the relevant definition of capital murder is that contained in s. 202A(2)
(a) of the Criminal Code which reads as follows:
(2) Murder is capital
murder, in respect of any person, where (a) it is planned and deliberate on the
part of such person, .. .
In More v. The Queen, Cartwright J.
commented on these provisions as follows:
The evidence that the
murder was planned was very strong, but, as was properly pointed out to the
jury by the learned trial judge, they could not find the accused guilty of
capital murder unless they were satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt not only
that the murder was planned but also that it was deliberate. The learned trial
Judge also rightly instructed the jury that the word "deliberate", as
used in s. 202A(2)(a), means "considered, not impulsive".
Other meanings of the
adjective given in the Oxford Dictionary are "not hasty in decision",
"slow in deciding" and "intentional". The word as used in
the subsection cannot have simply the meaning "intentional" because
it is only if the accused's act was intentional that he can be guilty of murder
and the subsection is creating an additional ingredient to be proved as a
condition of an accused being convicted of capital murder.
In dissenting from the
opinion of the majority of the Court of Appeal in the present case, Davey J.A.,
would have ordered a new trial on the ground that, in light of the addresses of
counsel, the charge of the learned trial judge might have caused the jurors to
interpret the word "deliberate" as meaning "intentional"
and that they might thus have failed to apply the proper test in determining
whether the murder was "planned and deliberate" within the meaning
of those words as they are used in the above Section. Mr. Justice Davey was
also of opinion that the trial judge had erred in his directions to the jury as
to the evidence of deliberation.
Counsel for the
appellant adopted this reasoning of Davey J.A. and contended also that the
trial judge erred in relating the evidence of the witness Whitney to the day of
the crime as that witness had been unable to state the day of the week or month
on which the events he described took place.
[Page 488]
In this Court, however,
it was only considered necessary to call upon the respondent's counsel in
respect of the 6th and 12th grounds of appeal, and as I am unable to find any
errors of substance in the charge of the learned trial judge, I propose to
limit myself to a consideration of the issues raised by these grounds which are
set out in the notice of appeal as follows:
The Court of Appeal
failed to hold that the learned trial judge erred in failing to grant defence
counsel's motion for an adjournment to enable the defence to obtain and
introduce further medical evidence.
12. The Court of Appeal
erred in refusing to grant the appellant's motion to adduce fresh evidence
before it.
The record of
proceedings as contained in the Case on appeal in this Court makes no reference
whatever to defence counsel's motion for an adjournment, and the only source of
information as to what material the learned trial judge had before him on that
motion is contained in an affidavit of David Moffett which was filed at the
hearing of this appeal and which appears to have been used in support of the
application to adduce fresh evidence which was made to the Court of Appeal of
British Columbia.
This affidavit stated
that before the preliminary hearing Mr. Moffett, who represented the appellant
in the lower courts, suspected that the accused might be suffering from mental
illness and might have been legally insane at the time of committing the
offence, and that he asked the presiding magistrate for directions as to the
obtaining of a psychiatric report and wrote to the Attorney-General of British
Columbia requesting an examination of the accused to find out if he were
medically fit to stand trial or mentally ill at the time of the commission of
the offence. The last two paragraphs of this affidavit read as follows :
That in due course I
was advised and verily believed that the accused had been examined by Dr. J. W.
Thomas and I was not then aware that Dr. Thomas' terms of reference did not
include any examination of the accused with a view to ascertaining his sanity
or insanity at the time of the commission of the offence.
That shortly before the
date of Trial I became aware of the contents of Dr. Thomas' medical report and
thereupon applied to the learned presiding Judge at the Quennel assizes, the
Honourable Mr. Justice Ruttan, for an adjournment to enable a further
psychiatric examination to be carried out, which application was refused by the
said learned presiding Judge.
[Page 489]
The question of whether
or not an adjournment is to be granted rests in the discretion of the judge who
is trying the case, and the Moffett affidavit does not, in my opinion, contain
sufficient information as to the circumstances under which this application was
made to justify the conclusion that there was any error in principle in
refusing the adjournment.
This application, like
that which had earlier been made to the Attorney-General, appears to have been
directed to the issue of insanity which was not pleaded at the trial,
not-withstanding the fact that according to the report made to the Court of
Appeal by Ruttan J. the psychiatrist, Dr. J. W. Thomas, was in the court
throughout the proceedings and was not called by either the Crown or the
defence. It is difficult to understand what material defence counsel was able
to put before the trial judge on this issue, particularly in light of the fact
that medical evidence ultimately obtained for the defence did not bear on the
question of insanity at all.
The appellant's motion
for an order granting leave to call fresh evidence at the hearing of the appeal
stands, however, on a very different footing. The proposed evidence was not
directed towards proving that the appellant was legally insane at the time of
the crime, but rather towards showing that a psychiatric examination after the
trial had disclosed that he had long been suffering from a disorder of the mind
which manifested itself in impulsive, unpredictable and dangerous behaviour,
and that his long history of mental disorder was a relevant circumstance proper
to be considered, together with all the other circumstances disclosed in the
evidence, in determining whether or not the murder was planned and deliberate
on his part.
In addition to the
affidavit of Mr. Moffett, to which reference has been made, this application
was supported by the evidence of Dr. Gould and Dr. Tyhurst and by an affidavit
of the appellant which disclosed that Dr. Tyhurst first examined him after his
conviction and concluded by saying:
I am advised by my
legal advisers and verily believe that had the evidence of Dr. Tyhurst and Dr.
Gould been introduced at my trial it might reasonably have induced the jury to
change its view regarding my guilt.
[Page 490]
The jurisdiction of the
Court of Appeal to admit fresh evidence is to be found in s. 589(1) (b) of the Criminal
Code which reads, in part, as follows:
589. (1) For the
purposes of an appeal under this Part the court of appeal may, where it
considers it in the interest of justice,
(b) order any witness
who would have been a compellable witness at the trial, whether or not he was
called at the trial, (1) to attend and be examined before the court of appeal
.. .
It is clearly not in
the interests of justice that this privilege should be extended to an appellant
as a matter of course, and although the rules applicable to introducing fresh
evidence before the Court of Appeal in a civil case do not apply with the same
force to criminal matters, it is nevertheless recognized that special grounds
must be shown in order to justify the Court in exercising the power conferred
upon it by s. 589(1).
One of the grounds
advanced by Sheppard J.A. for rejecting the proposed evidence in the present
case was that it had not been shown that the diligence required by R. v. Martin,
had been exercised in
obtaining it at or before the trial. In R. v. Martin, supra, Bird J.A.
who delivered the decision of the majority of the Court of Appeal of British
Columbia said, in regard to the evidence sought to be introduced in that case:
No effort was then made
to procure McLeod's attendance at the trial, nor was application made for an
adjournment on account of his absence.
In these circumstances
it is reasonable to infer that the defence elected to proceed to trial without
that evidence. Indeed, I understood counsel for appellant to concede before us
that such was the case.
The Court of Criminal
Appeal in England refused such an application in what appears to me to be a
parallel case, viz., Rex v. Weisz, (1920) 15 Cr. App. R. 85, wherein the
Earl of Reading, C.J. said: "The appellant's legal advisers knew the case
they would have to meet, and no application was made to adjourn the trial ...
The policy was deliberate of resting the defence upon the evidence of the
accused ... and no precedent could be cited for calling a fresh witness in
those circumstances".
More recently, Bird
J.A. speaking on behalf of the same Court in R. v. Lalcatos appears to have adopted
the following interpretation of the requirements stated in Rex v. Martin,
supra:
.. that before fresh evidence will be admitted
by this Court, it must be shown: (a) At the time of the trial the accused
(appellant) either was not aware of the evidence proposed to be adduced or if
he then had knowledge
[Page 491]
of it that all
reasonable diligence had been exercised at or before the trial to adduce that
evidence; (b) That the evidence if adduced might reasonably have induced the
trial tribunal to change its view of the guilt of the accused.
It appears that in the
present case, Dr. Tyhurst knew nothing of the matter until after the trial and
although it may be said that further efforts could have been made before the
trial to find out whether the evidence he would be able to give after
examination might be relevant to the issue of planning and deliberation, it
must at the same time be remembered that the provisions of s. 202A(2) (a) only
became law in July, 1961, that the case of Regina v. More, supra, had
not been decided at the time of the preliminary hearing and the trial in
October and November of 1962, and that counsel then acting for the appellant
apparently did not appreciate the full significance of psychiatric evidence on
the issue of planning and deliberation. I am not prepared to say that this
indicated lack of reasonable diligence on his part.
Furthermore, unlike the
case of Rex v. Martin, supra and Rex v. Weisz, in the present case
efforts were made to obtain a psychiatric report from the Attorney-General and
a motion for an adjournment was made to the trial judge for the same purpose.
It is true that Ruttan J. exercised his discretion by refusing the appellant's
application, but this does not detract from the fact that an effort was made.
In all the
circumstances, if the evidence is considered to be of sufficient strength that
it might reasonably affect the verdict of the jury, I do not think it should be
excluded on the ground that reasonable diligence was not exercised to obtain it
at or before the trial.
Having heard the
evidence which was sought to be introduced in the present case, the Court of
Appeal dismissed the appellant's application, the majority of the Court (Bird, Davey
and Tysoe JJ.A.) resting their judgment on the ground expressed by Davey J.A.
in the concluding paragraph of his reasons for judgment in the following terms:
I would dismiss the
motion for leave to introduce evidence of appellant's alleged mental disorder,
because appellant relates it to no incident proximate in time to the killing
that could be said to rebut any inference of deliberation by showing that the
killing was the result of sudden passion or emotion aroused in a disordered mind
by the incident.
[Page 492]
As has been indicated,
the evidence thus rejected by the Court of Appeal included that of Dr. Tyhurst,
the Head of the Department of Psychiatry at the Vancouver General Hospital and
the Shaughnessy Veterans Hospital, who testified that the appellant had been a
patient in the psychiatric division of two hospitals as well as having been
admitted to one mental hospital in Alberta, and that his family history was
very disordered, his mother having committed suicide and family members having
been in mental hospitals. This witness went on to express the following
conclusion which he had reached after spending a good deal of time with the
appellant:
It is my conclusion
that he is a very unstable paranoid individual, who has a lifelong history of
personal instability, who responds impulsively and against his best interests
on slight provocation, and sometimes on none at all, actually, because of his
suspiciousness; that he is unpredictable and, I would say, dangerous, actually.
In rejecting this
evidence because it could not be related to any incident proximate in time to
the killing which might have aroused sudden passion or emotion in a disordered
mind, the Court of Appeal appears to me to have left out of account the fact
that the very evidence which was so rejected was to the effect that the
disorder in the mind of the appellant was such that he sometimes acted
impulsively, unpredictably and dangerously with no provocation at all.
The majority of the
Court of Appeal also appear to have considered it to be a necessary condition
for the admissibility of this evidence that it should be such as to "rebut
any inference of deliberation" by showing affirmatively that the killing
was the result of sudden passion or emotion. This thinking is also reflected in
the reasons for judgment of Sheppard J.A. who said:
There is no evidence
that the accused was in fact provoked, and in any event, there was ample time
between 2:00 a.m, and 9:00 a.m. for any passion to have cooled
As the result, there is
no evidence for the accused that the recurring paranoic condition referred to
by Dr. Tyhurst was operating to any extent at the time of the murder, and in
any event, assuming the condition had recurred, such condition does not
preclude the accused taking life by a murder planned and deliberate. Hence the
evidence does not disprove the verdict as found by the jury.
[Page 493]
Wilson J.A. expressed
himself even more forcibly in the same vein saying:
The attempt here is,
with the flimsiest evidence of provocation, to prove that this man was
incapable of planning and deliberation ...
and later in his
reasons:
Further, I do not think
the evidence of Dr. Tyhurst establishes that this man was incapable of planning
and deliberation, however unreasonable the result of such planning and
deliberation might appear to the reasonable man. I have no hesitation in
rejecting this evidence.
With the greatest
respect, it appears to me that the evidence tendered by the appellant on such
an application as this is not to be judged and rejected on the ground that it
"does not disprove the verdict as found by the jury" or that it fails
to discharge the burden of proving that the appellant was incapable of planning
and deliberation, or that it does not rebut inferences which appear to have
been drawn by the jury. It is enough, in my view, if the proposed evidence is
of sufficient strength that it might reasonably affect the verdict of a jury.
I would respectfully
adopt the following views expressed on behalf of the majority of the Court of
Appeal of British Columbia by Sloan C.J.B.C. in R.
v. Buckle,
where he said :
In my opinion the rule
to be applied in criminal cases in relation to the introduction of fresh
evidence and consequential relief which may be granted by the Court, is wider
in its discretionary scope than that applied by the Court in civil appeals. If
the newly-discovered evidence is in its nature conclusive, then the Court of
Appeal, in both civil and criminal cases, may itself finally deal with the
matter ... If, on the other hand, in a criminal case, the new evidence does not
exert such a compelling influence, but is however of sufficient strength that
it might reasonably affect the verdict of a jury, then, in my opinion, the
Court may admit that evidence and direct a new trial, so that such evidence
might be added to the scale and weighed by the trial tribunal in the light of
all the facts.
It is to be noted that
the reasons of Sloan C.J.B.C. in R. v. Buckle, supra, were expressly adopted on behalf of the Court of Appeal
of British Columbia by Bird J.A. in the recent case of R. v. Lakatos, at
page 391.
The bearing of
psychiatric evidence on the question of whether or not a murder was planned and
deliberate on the part of the accused was considered by this Court in More v. R.,
supra,
[Page 495]
where Cartwright J., speaking of the
medical evidence there tendered, said at p. 534:
The evidence of the two
doctors is not relied on by the defence as raising the question whether the
accused was legally sane. Its importance is that it would assist the jury in
deciding the question whether the accused's action in pulling the trigger,
which so far as this branch of the matter is concerned was admittedly the
intentional act of a sane man, was also his deliberate act. The question is one
of fact and its solution involves an inquiry as to the thinking of the accused
at the moment of acting. If the jury accepted the evidence of the doctors it,
in conjunction with the accused's own evidence, might well cause them to regard
it as more probable that the accused's final act was prompted by sudden impulse
rather than by consideration. On this question the accused was entitled to have
the verdict of a properly instructed jury.
In deciding whether or
not the evidence sought to be introduced in the present case falls within the
same category, it appears to me to be helpful to consider that evidence in
light of the charge of the learned trial judge.
As has been indicated,
the evidence identifying the appellant with the killing was entirely circumstantial
and in this regard Ruttan J. properly instructed the jury as to the rule in Hodges
case. In
dealing with the additional question of whether or not the murder was planned
and deliberate on the part of the appellant, he made the following comment:
As a final conclusion
from circumstantial evidence the Crown asks you to find that not only did the
accused commit this murder, but that the accused did it by planned and
deliberate actions. I shall explain to you in a moment the significance of that
last submission; briefly I will say that the ingredient of planning
and deliberate action makes a difference between a capital murder and a
non-capital murder.
And later in the same
paragraph he said:
I should point out to
you, I think it was Crown counsel suggested it was a deliberate action because
there were no less than six wounds found by the doctor. There were four
lacerations on one side in the same wound area and one below and one on the
other side of the face. Well, here is an illustration of two conclusions you
may draw from the same circumstances, because that might indicate to you that
the deed was committed in a frenzy and in a highly emotional state, delivering
six blows where one would do, which might suggest to you that it wasn't
planned, or deliberate. I just suggest this to you to illustrate the
circumstantial evidence that is so significant and important in this case, and
that you must consider in drawing your conclusions.
As I understand this
part of the charge, the learned trial judge was indicating to the jury that the
circumstances were not only consistent with
[Page 496]
the act having been
planned
and deliberate on the
part of the appellant, but were also consistent with the deed having been
committed "in a frenzy and in a highly emotional state ... which might
suggest .. . that it was not planned or deliberate". He was thus not
telling the jury that because the circumstances were consistent with lack of
planning and deliberation they must of necessity acquit the appellant, but
rather that the circumstances were consistent with two alternative
interpretations which must be weighed in the balance before a verdict could be
reached. There was, in my view, no error in this direction.
Under all the
circumstances, it appears to me that the evidence of Dr. Tyhurst, like that of
the doctors in More v. R., supra might have caused the jury "to regard
it as more probable that the accused's final act was prompted by sudden impulse
rather than by consideration".
For these reasons I am
of opinion that the evidence of Dr. Tyhurst should have been admitted by the
Court of Appeal in accordance with the practice outlined by Sloan C.J.B.C. in R. v. Buckle. I do
not, however, consider that there was any error in rejecting the evidence of
Dr. Gould which does not appear to me to bear upon the question here at issue.
It is not suggested
that the evidence in this case did not amply support the verdict of the jury.
There are many circumstances in addition to the way the blows were delivered
which are consistent with the murder having been planned and deliberate, but
the question raised by this appeal is whether, if the evidence of Dr. Tyhurst
had been before them, the jury would inevitably have reached the conclusion
which they did.
In my opinion, without
the evidence of the appellant's mental history and condition, it cannot be said
that all the circumstances bearing on the question of whether the murder was
planned and deliberate have been passed upon by a jury, and I would accordingly
allow this appeal, quash the conviction and direct that there be a new trial.
CARTWRIGHT J.:-I concur in the disposition of this appeal
proposed by my brother Ritchie and I agree with his reasons subject to one
reservation.
After quoting certain
passages from the charge of the learned trial judge to the jury my brother
Ritchie says:
As I understand this
part of the charge, the learned trial judge was indicating to the jury that the
circumstances were not only consistent with
the act having been
planned and deliberate on the part of the appellant, but were also consistent
with the deed having been committed "in a frenzy and in a highly emotional
state ... which might suggest ... that it was not planned or deliberate".
He was thus not telling the jury that because the circumstances were consistent
with lack of planning and deliberation they 'must of necessity acquit the
appellant, but rather that the circumstances were consistent with two
alternative interpretations which must be weighed in the balance before a
verdict could be reached. There was, in my view, no erorr in this direction.
For the reasons given
by me in the case of The Queen v. David Mitchell, judgment in which is
being given at the same time as in this case, I am of opinion that where the
evidence relevant to the issue whether or not a murder was planned and
deliberate on the part of the accused is entirely circumstantial it is
necessary for the trial judge to charge the jury on that issue in accordance
with the rule in Hodge's case. In so
far as the passage quoted from the reasons of my brother Ritchie indicates a
different view I am unable to agree with it.
I would dispose of the
appeal as proposed by my brother Ritchie.
Appeal allowed, conviction quashed and
new trial ordered.
Solicitors for the appellant: Oliver,
Millar & Co., Vancouver.
Solicitor for the respondent: R. D. Plommer,
Vancouver.
[ScanLII Collection]