Supreme Court of Canada
The
Queen v. Beaman, [1963] S.C.R. 445
Date:
1963-04-01
Her Majesty The Queen Appellant;
and
Hartley Beaman Respondent
1963: February 28, March 1; 1963: April 1.
Present: Taschereau, Fauteux, Abbott, Martland and Ritchie
JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE SUPREME COURT OF NEW BRUNSWICK, APPEAL
DIVISION.
Criminal law—Arrest—Escaping from lawful
custody—Assistant forest ranger making search of vehicle under Game Act—Whether
a "peace officer"—Whether escape constitutes escape from lawful
custody—The Game Act, R.S.N.B. 1952, c. 95—The Forest Service Act, R.S.N.B.
1952, c. 93, s. 7, as amended by 1960 (N.B.), c. 34—Criminal Code, ss.
2(30)(c), 29(2)(b), 110(a), 125(a), 434, 437.
The respondent was charged and convicted of escaping from
custody contrary to s. 125(a) of the Criminal Code. An "assistant
forest ranger" stopped a truck driven by the respondent and stated he was
going to search it. While the ranger returned to his car to get an axe to pry
open a door of the truck, the respondent commenced backing the truck. The
officer followed in his car. When the truck stopped after about half a mile,
the officer got out of his car, pulled out the truck's ignition key and told
the respondent that he was under arrest. The officer had no warrant.
The conviction was set aside by the Court of Appeal on the
ground that the Crown had failed to prove that the respondent was lawfully
arrested under the Game Act, and consequently that it could not rely on
the Act to support its contention that the respondent was in lawful custody at
the time of his escape. The contention of the Crown, which appealed to this
Court, was that the assistant forest ranger, being a deputy game warden under
the Game Act, was a peace officer under the Criminal Code.
Held: The appeal of the Crown should be dismissed.
The Game Act gives every game warden, including a
deputy as was ex-officio every assistant forest ranger, the powers of a
constable and therefore of a peace officer within the meaning of the Code. It
is true that these powers are limited to provincial laws and are conferred
solely for the purpose of the Game Act, nevertheless any person who wilfully
obstructs a game warden in the execution of his duties commits the indictable
offence of wilfully obstructing a peace officer in the execution of his duties
contrary to s. 110 of the Criminal Code.
However, in 1960, by an amendment to the Forest Service
Act, the words "assistant forest ranger" were deleted and
substituted by "district forest ranger" or "extension forest
ranger". The information described the arresting officer as an assistant
forest ranger, and the Crown's case was closed without any evidence to show
that, in 1961 at the time of the arrest, the officer held any of the positions
upon which the authority of a provincial constable or a game warden was
conferred by the statute then in force. Accordingly, the record failed to
disclose that the officer was a peace officer or that he had any authority to
stop a vehicle for search, or that the respondent in acting as he did committed
any offence for which he could be lawfully
[Page 446]
arrested without a warrant. The respondent was therefore not
proved guilty of escaping from lawful custody.
APPEAL by the Crown from a judgment of the Supreme Court
of New Brunswick, Appeal Division, setting aside the respondent's conviction.
Appeal dismissed.
L. D. D'Arcy, for the appellant.
Douglas E. Rice, for the respondent.
The judgment of the Court was delivered by
Ritchie J.:—This
is an appeal, brought with leave of this Court, from a judgment of the Appeal
Division of the Supreme Court of New Brunswick setting aside the conviction of
the respondent by the Magistrate for Albert County on the charge that, on the
1st day of December 1961, he did,
being in lawful custody, having been arrested without a
warrant by Assistant Forest Ranger Austin Goggin, escape from such custody
contrary to s. 125(a) of the Criminal Code.
The Appeal Division found that Austin Goggin was an
"assistant forest ranger" and that the respondent had escaped from
his custody, so that the only question remaining to be determined was
"whether the evidence established a lawful arrest". The circumstances
of the arrest are described in the decision appealed from in the following
terms:
The facts are Austin Goggin, accompanied by one Babin,
another Assistant Forest Ranger, while on game patrol during the evening of
December 1, 1961, was driving his car on a highway in the Flint Hill area of
the Parish of Elgin in the County of Albert. At about 8.00 p.m., Goggin and Babin
got out of the car and stopped a half-ton truck approaching them which was
being driven by the defendant who had seated beside him Mrs. Marjorie Robb and
her husband Irvine Robb, the owner of the truck, Mrs. Robb being in the centre.
After stopping the truck, Goggin and Babin told the
occupants they were going to search it. Goggin then went to his car to get an
axe to pry open a plywood door on the truck. While he was doing this, the
defendant commenced backing the truck. Goggin got in his car and followed. The
evidence is that after the truck had backed up on the road about one-half of a
mile it stopped and Goggin placed his car in such a position that the truck
could not pass if it attempted to move forward. He then got out of his car, ran
to the truck, and reaching in from the passenger side, turned off the ignition
switch and pulled out the key. At the same time Goggin said to the occupants
"You're under arrest." He had no warrant for the arrest of any of
them.
[Page 447]
Under the provisions of s. 19 of The Game Act, R.S.N.B.
1952, c. 95 (as amended), "every game warden" may, without warrant,
stop and search any vehicle for evidence of a violation of the provisions of
the Act, and s. 1(u) of the same Act provides that unless the context
otherwise requires "game warden" includes an ex officio deputy game
warden under The Forest Service Act.
On the assumption that "the Forest Service Act sets
forth that every assistant forest ranger is ex officio a deputy game warden
under The Game Act", Bridges J.A., who rendered the decision of the
Appeal Division, concluded that there was "no question but that Goggin and
Babin, as ex officio game wardens, had the authority to stop and search the
truck …", but he went on to hold that "the Crown failed to prove that
the defendant was lawfully arrested without a warrant under The Game Act and
cannot rely on such Act to support its contention that he was in lawful custody
at the time of his escape".
It was, however, contended by the Crown that in backing up
the truck after having been told of the proposed search, the respondent was wilfully
obstructing "a peace officer in the execution of his duty", contrary
to s. 110(a) of the Criminal Code, and was therefore committing
an indictable offence and subject to lawful arrest without a warrant by "any
one" who found him committing it (s. 437 of the Criminal Code).
Bridges J.A. found that by backing the truck as he did the
respondent wilfully obstructed Goggin and Babin in the execution of their duty,
but that, although he considered them to be "game wardens" under The
Game Act, they were not "peace officers" within the meaning of s.
110(a) of the Criminal Code, and that accordingly no offence had
been committed for which the respondent could have been lawfully arrested
without a warrant.
The application pursuant to which leave to appeal was
granted to this Court is limited to this latter finding as it is based upon the
following grounds:
1. The Court having found that the deputy game warden was wilfully-obstructed
in the execution of his duty was in error in holding that the said deputy game
warden was not a peace officer under s. 2(30)(c) of the Criminal Code.
2. That there is conflict in the judgment of the Supreme
Court of New Brunswick, Appeal Division, in the above noted case and the
[Page 448]
judgment of the Ontario Court of Appeal in Rex v. Smith, 1942,
3 D.L.R. 764.
Section 2(30)(c) of the Criminal Code provides
that:
A peace officer includes a police officer, police constable,
bailiff, constable or other person employed for the preservation and
maintenance of the public peace, or for the service or execution of civil
process.
The general powers and authority of a "game
warden" are described in s. 18 of The Game Act, which reads as
follows:
18. Every warden may and shall for the purpose of this Act,
exercise all the powers and authorities of a provincial constable and shall
have the same power to ask and require assistance in the performance and
execution of his duties as a peace officer or constable in the execution of his
duty as such, and every warden shall be ex officio a peace officer within the
meaning of any law for the protection of peace officers.
The decision of the Appeal Division that such a warden is
not a "peace officer" as defined by s. 2(30)(c) was expressed
by Bridges J.A. in one part of his decision in the following language:
This section (i.e., s. 18 of the Game Act) does not make a
warden a provincial constable, who comes within the definition of peace officer
under the Code. It only purports to give a warden the powers of such a
constable when enforcing the Game Act. These powers must, in my opinion, be
limited to provincial laws and cannot include the right to arrest for criminal
offences without warrant for, although the Province may appoint constables and
other law enforcement officers it cannot give them the authority to act in
criminal matters, such field of legislation belonging wholly to the Federal
Parliament.
With the greatest respect, it appears to me that this
passage is not altogether clear. In my view, the provisions of s. 18 of The
Game Act not only purport to give but do give to every "game
warden" the powers of a "constable" and therefore of a
"peace officer" within the meaning of ss. 2(30)(c) and 110 of
the Criminal Code. I agree that these powers are limited to provincial
laws and are conferred solely for the purpose of The Game Act but this
does not alter the fact that any person who wilfully obstructs a "game
warden" in the execution of his duties under that Act is committing the
indictable offence of wilfully obstructing a "peace officer in the
execution of his duties", contrary to s. 110 of the Criminal Code.
As has been observed, it is provided by s. 434 of the Criminal
Code that "any one may arrest without warrant a
[Page 449]
person whom he finds committing an indictable offence"
(the italics are mine), and it is accordingly apparent that the right to arrest
without a warrant under these circumstances is not conferred by any provincial
law or accorded to a "game warden" by virtue of The Game Act but
is a right which stems directly from the Criminal Code and is, by that
statute, conferred on every citizen.
The situation appears to me to be that although the sphere
of a game warden's authority is limited to the enforcement of a provincial
statute, he is, nevertheless, for that purpose and by that statute, clothed
with all the rights, powers and protections afforded to a peace officer by the Criminal
Code. With all respect, this does not in my view mean that the province is
giving to one of its law enforcement officers "the authority to act in
criminal matters" and I cannot see that this legislation gives rise to any
problem or conflict between the provincial and federal fields.
This appears to me to dispose of the question on which the
application for leave to appeal is based but it does not determine the matter.
The case for the Crown, and much of the decision of the
Court of Appeal, is predicated upon the assumption, stated by Bridges J.A.,
that:
The Forest Service Act sets forth that every assistant
forest ranger is ex officio a deputy game warden under The Game Act, and s.
1(u) of the latter states that in it, unless the context otherwise requires,
"warden" or "game warden" includes an ex officio game
warden under The Forest Service Act.
This was a true statement of the law until The Forest
Service Act was amended by c. 34 of the Laws of New Brunswick 1960.
As enacted by R.S.N.B. 1952, c. 93, s. 7 of The Forest
Service Act provided that:
Every district forester, assistant forester, forest ranger
and assistant forest ranger, has hereby conferred on him all the power and
authority of a provincial constable and of a seizing officer under the Crown
Lands Act, and he is also ex officio a deputy game warden under The Game Act
and a fishery guardian under The Fisheries Act.
The 1960 amendment to The Forest Service Act provided
for the employment of temporary officers and servants for the purpose of this
Act, and it also amended s. 7 as follows:
Section 7 of the said Act is amended by striking out the
words "assistant forester, forest ranger and assistant forest ranger"
in the first
[Page 450]
two lines thereof and substituting therefor the words
"district forester, assistant district forester, inspector, district
forester ranger, extension forest ranger and forest ranger".
Austin Goggin, who was the informant in this case, is
described in the Information as an "assistant forest ranger", he
testified that he was "an assistant forest ranger", and the Court of
Appeal made an express finding that he was "an assistant forest ranger".
It is conceivable that the 1960 amendment merely evidenced a
change in the title of "assistant forest ranger" to that of
"district forest ranger" or "extension forest ranger" but
the Crown's case was closed without any evidence being adduced to show that on
December 1, 1961, the informant held any of the positions upon which the
authority of a provincial constable or a game warden is conferred by the
statute then in force, and the time for explanations is now long past.
Accordingly, the record before us fails to disclose that
Austin Goggin was a "peace officer" or that he had any authority to
stop a vehicle for search, or that the respondent in acting as he did was
committing any offence for which he could be lawfully arrested without a
warrant.
It is true that it has been held on more than one occasion
that evidence of a person acting in an official capacity may, under certain
circumstances, raise a rebuttable presumption of his due appointment to that
office, but this is not a rule of universal application and certainly cannot
apply so as to clothe Austin Goggin with the authority of a "warden"
under The Game Act, since he has testified to the fact that he holds an
appointment which does not carry that authority with it.
In view of the above, I do not find it necessary to consider
the contention that the arrest was unlawful because the respondent was not
given notice "of the reason for the arrest", as required by s. 29(2)(b)
of the Criminal Code.
I would accordingly dismiss this appeal.
Appeal dismissed.
Solicitor for the appellant: L. D. D'Arcy,
Fredericton.
Solicitor for the respondent: D. E: Rice, Petitcodiac