Supreme Court of Canada
Children’s Aid Society v. Lyttle, [1973] S.C.R. 568
Date: 1973-02-28
Children’s Aid
Society of Metropolitan Toronto (Plaintiff) Appellant;
and
Ronald James
Lyttle, Sr. (Defendant) Respondent.
1972: November 15, 16; 1973: February 28.
Present: Fauteux C.J. and Abbott, Martland,
Judson, Ritchie, Hall, Spence, Pigeon and Laskin JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF APPEAL FOR
ONTARIO.
Infants—Custody—Illegitimate child
registered under father’s name—Maintained by father—Placed with Children’s Aid
Society by mother without father’s knowledge—Crown wardship proceedings—No
notice to father—Notice of intention to adopt given by prospective adopting
parents—Time for appealing wardship order expired—Order void as to father—Father
entitled to assert such nullity in custody proceedings—Adoption proceedings
stayed—The Child Welfare Act, 1965 (Ont.), c. 14, ss. 24(4), 31(3) [en.
1968-69, c. 9, s. 1(2)]
The respondent was the father of an
illegitimate child registered in his name whose mother left the respondent some
two years after the child’s birth. She took the infant with her, lived with
another man and had another child. During the cohabitation the mother and child
had been fully supported by the respondent. After the mother left, he continued
to evince his willingness and ability to support the child but the mother
refused that support and concealed her whereabouts.
Unknown to the respondent, she went to the
appellant children’s aid society and had the children admitted to care. An
application was made by the society for an order making the two children wards
of the Crown under s. 19(1)(b)(iii) of The Child Welfare Act, 1965
(Ont.), c. 14. No notice was given to the respondent. The mother later appeared
before a judge and requested that the children “be made the wards of the Crown
so that they may be considered for adoption” and the judge was informed that
the society was “supporting [the] request for Crown wardship of the children”.
An order was made accordingly and a notice of intention to adopt was given by
the persons to whom the children had been entrusted.
The respondent stated that it was only a
little more than six months later that he learned of his son
[Page 569]
having been given away to the society by the
mother. He was told that a wardship order had been made, that more than six
months had elapsed and there was nothing he could do about it. In order to
prevent an adoption order being made, he gave notice of an application to the
Supreme Court of Ontario: 1. for an order granting him custody of his son; 2.
for an order prohibiting the society and it’s director from consenting to his
son’s adoption; 3. in the alternative, for an order compelling the society to
disclose particulars of the persons seeking to adopt his son or compelling
these persons and the society to give him notice of any adoption proceedings.
This application was dismissed “without
prejudice to the applicant to take whatever steps he may deem appropriate to
question the order”. On appeal, this judgment was varied to provide for notice
to the present respondent of all adoption proceedings with the right of full
participation. The society’s appeal from that order was by leave of this Court.
Held (Abbott,
Judson, Hall and Pigeon JJ. dissenting in part): The appeal should be allowed and
the order of the Court of Appeal varied to provide that the custody application
proceed to a hearing and that the adoption proceedings be stayed pending final
disposition and abide the result thereof.
Per Fauteux
C.J. and Martland, Ritchie, Spence and Laskin JJ.: Section 31(3) of The
Child Welfare Act, 1965 (Ont.), c. 14, as enacted by 1968-69 (Ont.), c. 9,
s. 1, provides that “Where a child has been committed as a ward of the Crown,
the order…shall…remain in effect and the Crown wardship shall not be terminated
where the child has been placed in the home of a person who has given written
notice of his intention to adopt the child and the child is residing in the
home, until an adoption order is made…”. The Crown wardship order which
underlies the operation of this provision must be a valid one, that is, of a
court or judge having authority to make it.
Section 24(4) enjoins the presiding
judge from hearing or disposing of the wardship application “until he is
satisfied that the parent or other person having actual custody…and the
municipality…have had reasonable notice of the hearing or that every reasonable
effort has been made in the opinion of the judge to cause them to be notified”.
The effect of s.24(4) was to make the want of notice here a fatal
[Page 570]
defect and hence to make the wardship order a
nullity so far as the father was concerned. Alternatively, a requirement of
notice arose in the circumstances of this case, and the failure to give it or
to make reasonable efforts to that end brought the same result; the Crown
wardship order was void as to the father. The initiation of the adoption
proceedings did not preclude a direct attack upon the wardship order and the
father was entitled to assert the nullity of that order in the custody proceedings
he had taken.
Although the legislative policy in protection
of adopting parents, reflected in s. 31(3), goes a long way in clearing their
claim to a Crown ward, their interest at the point of a mere intention to adopt
was not so superior to that of a parent in the father’s position in this case
to warrant denial to him of an opportunity to prove his fitness for custody.
Per Abbott,
Judson, Hall and Pigeon JJ. (dissenting in part): The facts of this case
did not justify any departure from the usual rules followed in adoption
proceedings and make it proper to turn them into an alternative method of
challenging the wardship order. Any remedy to which the father might be
entitled was to be sought in attacking the wardship order and such attack must
be made directly and explicitly, not inferentially.
Accordingly, the adoption proceedings should
be stayed for a period of 30 days to allow the respondent an opportunity to
launch an attack against the wardship order.
[Mugford v. Children’s Aid Society of
Ottawa, [1969] S.C.R. 641; Prospective Adoptive Parents v. Mugford, [1970]
S.C.R. 261; Moshos v. Minister of Manpower and Immigration, [1969]
S.C.R. 886; Alliance des Professeurs Catholiques de Montréal v. Labour
Relations Board of Quebec, [1953] 2 S.C.R. 140; Perepolkin v.
Superintendent of Child Welfare (1957), 11 D.L.R. (2d) 417; R. v.
Sanders, [1968] 4 C.C.C. 156, affirmed [1970] S.C.R. 109, referred to.]
APPEAL from a judgment of the Court of Appeal
for Ontario,
varying a judgment of Hartt J. Appeal allowed, Abbott, Judson, Hall and Pigeon
JJ. dissenting in part.
[Page 571]
W.J. Smith, Q.C., and H.D. Wilkins for
the appellant.
B.M. Haines, for the respondent.
The judgment of Fauteux C.J. and Martland,
Ritchie, Spence and Laskin JJ. was delivered by
LASKIN J.—I have had the advantage of reading
the reasons for judgment prepared by my brother Pigeon and accept his statement
of the facts in their bearing on the issues in this appeal. The preliminary
question which lies at the heart of this case is whether the failure to give
the father notice of the wardship proceedings made the Crown wardship order
vulnerable. If not, then the father cannot interrupt the adoption proceedings
in the manner that he has attempted. If the answer is “yes”—and that is my
view—the further question arises even in that event whether there is any remedy
open to him through the present proceedings when the time prescribed by statute
for appealing against the wardship order has passed and when, moreover, there
is the statutory protection of a Crown wardship order under s. 31(3) of The
Child Welfare Act, 1965 (Ont.), c. 14, as enacted by 1968-69 (Ont.), c. 9,
s. 1, forbidding its termination when, as here, adoption proceedings have been
initiated, “until an adoption order is made”. Although the statute does not
spell out the position if an adoption order is not made, it appears to me to be
a reasonable conclusion that a parent may then apply under s. 31(1) of the
Act, also enacted by 1968-69 (Ont.), c. 9, s. 1, for an order terminating the
wardship.
In the present case, the adoption proceedings
had been properly set in motion within s. 31(3), and pursuant to ss. 70 and 72,
before the father learned that his child had been made a ward of the Crown. By
that time, the period provided for appealing against the Crown wardship order
had passed and there was no express provision in the Act for the father’s
participation in the
[Page 572]
adoption proceedings. He had recource to an
application for custody under The Infants Act, R.S.O. 1960, c. 187, and,
concurrently, sought an order to prohibit consent by the Director of Child
Welfare to the adoption of his child (the Director’s consent being alone
required under s. 73(3) of the Act in the case of the adoption of Crown
wards) or, alternatively, an order compelling disclosure of the identity of the
adopting parents or compelling notice to him of the adoption proceedings.
The dilemma confronting the Courts below and
this Court is whether the statutory policy reflected in s. 31(3) should prevail
in its literal terms, with the result that the father would have no status to
be heard in the adoption proceedings and, indeed, no right to custody under The
Infants Act, or whether the Court should give an equitable reading to the
adoption provisions of The Child Welfare Act so as to allow the father
to come in at that stage when he was ignored in the Crown wardship proceedings,
or whether the vulnerability of the wardship proceedings, by reason of the
failure to give him notice thereof, entitles him to make a collateral attack
upon the wardship order with the consequential result, if successful, of
aborting the adoption proceedings and clearing the way to have his application
for custody considered on the merits.
Hartt J., before whom the father’s application
came, dismissed it without written reasons, but the formal order of dismissal
was without prejudice to any steps the father might deem appropriate to
question the Crown wardship order. I take it that Hartt J. rejected collateral
attack upon that order and applied s. 31(3) strictly to foreclose any
participation of the father in the adoption proceedings. Collateral attack was
also rejected by the Ontario Court of Appeal which, speaking through Aylesworth
J.A., held that (1)
[Page 573]
there was no justification, in view of want of
notice to the father, for making the Crown wardship order; (2) the father could
apply to terminate the wardship if an adoption order was refused (and,
apparently, only if it was refused); and (3) to clear the way for that
possibility, the Court, acting under The Infants Act, as well as taking
into consideration the best interests of the child pursuant to s. 76(b) of The
Child Welfare Act, would make an order requiring notice to be given to the
father of all proceedings in connection with the adoption and entitling him to
participate fully therein. In the result, the appeal was dismissed subject to
variation of the order of Hartt J. in accordance with the Court of Appeal’s
conclusion as to notice and participation.
The history of the relevant provisions of The
Child Welfare Act, and especially of s. 31 and of s. 35 (repealed by
1968-69 (Ont.), c. 9, s. 2, following the judgment of this Court in Mugford v.
Children’s Aid Society of Ottawa), shows
the interconnection created by the Legislature between Crown wardship
proceedings and adoption proceedings respecting Crown wards.
Section 31(3), so far as material here, shows this clearly in the
following words thereof:
Where a child has been committed as a ward
of the Crown, the order…shall…remain in effect and the Crown wardship shall not
be terminated where the child has been placed in the home of a person who has
given written notice of his intention to adopt the child and the child is
residing in the home, until an adoption order is made…
In my view, the Crown wardship order which
underlies the operation of this provision must be a valid one, that is, of a
court or judge having authority to make it. What must be determined, therefore,
is whether the failure to give notice to the father of the Crown wardship
proceedings tainted the jurisdiction of the Court which granted the order, and,
if so, whether the order was a nullity with the consequent nullification
[Page 574]
of the dependent adoption proceedings, of which
cognizance could be taken on the father’s application herein.
I am of the opinion, as was the Ontario Court of
Appeal, that the father in this case was entitled to notice of the wardship
proceedings. This is so either under ss. 19(1)(e) (definition of
“parent”) and 24(4) or as a matter of common law entitlement. The record of the
wardship proceedings is bare of any reference to the father or of any effort to
notify him of the pending proceedings. Yet it shows that the child was
registered at birth in the name of the father who thus admitted paternity.
Section 24(4) enjoins the presiding judge
from hearing or disposing of the wardship application “until he is satisfied
that the parent or other person having actual custody…and the municipality…have
had reasonable notice of the hearing or that every reasonable effort has been
made in the opinion of the judge to cause them to be notified”. I do not think
that the disjunctive “or” in this case is a sufficient bar to the statutory
entitlement of one parent to notice simply because it has been given to the
other or given to a person, not being a parent, who has actual custody of the
child. If a parent (and, in accordance with s. 27(j) of The
Interpretation Act, now R.S.O. 1970, c. 225, this word in s. 24(4) includes
either or both parents) is known or is probably alive, he or she is entitled to
notice or to have reasonable efforts made to that end.
What s. 24(4) does is to ensure that notice will
be given or reasonable efforts made to give it to persons having a parental or
custodial interest in the child in respect of whom wardship proceedings are
instituted. The definition of “parent” at the time the proceedings herein were
taken is that found in s. 19(1)(e) of the Act of 1965 (there has since
been a revised definition which even more clearly covers the father
[Page 575]
in this case: see 1972 (Ont.), c. 109, s. 2)
which reads as follows:
“parent” means a person who is under a
legal duty to provide for a child, or a guardian or a person standing in
loco parentis to a child other than a person appointed for the purpose
under this Act.
The current Criminal Code, s. 197(1),
spells out a legal duty, and such a duty is also envisaged by s. 57(2) of The
Child Welfare Act, 1965, which, in respect of affiliation proceedings,
provides for the arrest of a putative father who is about to quit the
territorial jurisdiction of the Court so as to evade his obligations in respect
of the child. I cannot accept a construction of s. 24(4) that would spell
compliance by notification to one parent, or to a non‑parent in whose custody
the child happens to be, when both parents are known or are probably alive but
they may be living apart or are divorced without renunciation of claims to
custody of their child.
Moreover, if s. 24(4) be regarded as requiring a
literal interpretation, I would not construe it to exclude the right of a
parent to notice as a party interested in the fate of his child where the
parent’s existence is known or is probable according to available records or to
information of other interested parties. I would regard it as a duty of the
presiding judge to make the inquiry. The record in the present case as to the
wardship proceedings, if it is a complete account of the course of the inquiry
leading to the Crown wardship order, is frighteningly sparse. I need no statutory
warrant for applying here an elementary principle of natural justice. It is so
deeply rooted in our law as to require express words of exclusion before a
person with an interest in proceedings governed by statute may be shorn of it
without an opportunity to defend it.
[Page 576]
Failure to give notice where there is provision
therefor in statutory judicial proceedings or where it is imported as a
requisite in such proceedings has been held to abort the decision questioned
for want of notice: cf. Moshos v. Minister of Manpower and
Immigration, and
see L’Alliance des Professeurs Catholiques de Montréal v. Labour
Relations Board of Quebec. In
these two cited cases, the impugned decisions were attacked directly, in the
one case by appeal and in the other by prohibition proceedings with a claim of
nullity. It appears that Hartt J. had certiorari to quash in mind when
his formal order was without prejudice to any steps the father might take to
question the wardship order. I do not consider its appropriateness here when
the issues, as they arise under the order in appeal and under the application
brought by the father, are different. Nor need I concern myself with
jurisdictional error in relation to certiorari purposes alone in
assessing the vulnerability of the Crown wardship order in the present case. The
Child Welfare Act itself speaks clearly enough to me in its s. 24(4) to
make the want of notice here a fatal defect and hence to make the Crown
wardship order a nullity so far as the father is concerned. Alternatively, a
requirement of notice arose in the circumstances of this case, and the failure
to give it or to make reasonable efforts to that end brings the same result;
the Crown wardship order is void as to the father.
Of course, to say that an order is a nullity has
no effect per se unless proceedings are taken, by a person with
standing, to have it so declared or quashed or set aside or otherwise
superseded by relief against its operation. As has been aptly said, “it makes
no sense to speak of an act being void unless there is some person to whom the
law gives a remedy”: see Wade, ‘‘Unlawful Administrative Action: Void or
Voidable”
[Page 577]
(1967), 83 Law Q. Rev. 499, at p. 512.
What concerns me here is whether it is not too late to question the Crown
wardship order and whether, in any event, it can be questioned in proceedings
which do not attack it directly. I do not refer to timely appeal or review when
I speak of lateness because, in my opinion, a nullity gains no validity merely
because time has run in respect of procedures prescribed for challenging it. By
lateness here I have in mind supervening events which may reasonably be taken
to preclude a direct or a collateral attack. I postulate the situation of an
adoption order having been made before the father learns of the fate of his
child, but with all the parties involved in the wardship and adoption
proceedings having acted in good faith. There may be doubt in such a case
whether there would be any way in which the nullity of the wardship order as to
the father alone could be pressed to permit him to seek to reclaim his child.
It may be that the child’s status would have been altered beyond recall unless
it became again a child in need of protection and hence subject to wardship
proceedings.
That, of course, is not the present case. There
has been no conclusion to the adoption proceedings; indeed, so far as appears
from the record, the required consent of the Director of Child Welfare has not
yet been given, nor has any hearing taken place. The child is still a Crown
ward under an order which is a nullity as against the father. I do not regard
the mere initiation of adoption proceedings as alone foreclosing the father.
The pertinent inquiry is whether he may assert the nullity in the proceedings he
has taken.
I read the reasons of the Ontario Court of
Appeal as indicating an unwillingness to allow a collateral attack upon the
Crown wardship order even though that Court regards the order as unjustifiable
in the circumstances. Another
[Page 578]
reading of those reasons, especially in the
light of the order made by the Ontario Court of Appeal, is that the initiation
of the adoption proceedings has so overlaid the Crown wardship order as to
leave it beyond attack until the adoption proceedings are terminated fabourably
to the father. On the other hand, my brother Pigeon has proposed an order that
does not take this position. Rather, it is based on the view that the
initiation of the adoption proceedings does not preclude a direct attack upon
the Crown wardship order; and hence a stay of the adoption proceedings is
proposed to enable the father to challenge the order.
I adopt this position whose logic seems to me to
carry beyond the proposal for a stay of the adoption proceedings. In my view,
the father is entitled to assert the nullity of the Crown wardship order in the
custody proceedings that he has brought. The nullity of the order is as to him
and him alone; and since it stands in the way of his assertion of a parental
claim which it has purported to wipe out, multiplicity of proceedings will be
avoided if he is permitted to make his claim on the footing that an order which
is null as to him should not be allowed to obstruct him.
This is not a case of relying on another’s
position as a basis for asserting one’s own. It is one of pressing, before a
superior court of competent jurisdiction, an interest or claim against which
the only defence to its entertainment is an order in defeasance which is,
however, void as to the claimant. I see only a technical difficulty in any
refusal to hear the father’s application on the merits. All interested parties
can be brought before the Court; that is, the child, the mother and the
Children’s Aid Society. The interest of the adopting parents does not come into
play when the Crown wardship order upon which their interest depended turns out
to be a nullity against the father.
[Page 579]
It is difficult, if not impossible, in a case of
this kind, involving the welfare of a child, to make a decision that will
satisfy the conflicting interests of the various parties. Although the Courts
as well as the Legislature hold the best interests of the child to be
paramount, the determination of where those best interests lie cannot be an
arbitrary one, foreclosing a parent, not shown to be disqualified, from an
opportunity to show that he will and can serve his child’s best interests. The
legislative policy in protection of adopting parents, reflected in s. 31(3), is
a commendable one, but although it goes a long way in clearing their claim to a
Crown ward, their interest at the point of a mere intention to adopt is not so
superior to that of a parent in the father’s position in this case to warrant
denial to him of an opportunity to prove his fitness for custody.
I would, accordingly, allow the appeal without
costs, and would vary the order of the Ontario Court of Appeal to provide that
the appeal from the order of Hartt J. be allowed and that the custody
application proceed to a hearing. It follows too that I would direct that the
adoption proceedings be stayed pending the final disposition of the custody
proceedings and to abide the result thereof.
The judgment of Abbott, Judson, Hall and Pigeon
JJ. was delivered by
PIGEON J. (dissenting in part)—The
respondent, Ronald James Lyttle, is the father of a boy born December 13, 1965,
of one Molly Cox, a 15-year-old girl with whom he was then living as man and
wife. He formally acknowledged his paternity by having the boy registered as
bearing his name on December 24, 1965. Two years later, there was a separation.
The mother took the infant with her, lived with another man and
[Page 580]
had another child, a girl. During the
cohabitation the mother and child had been fully supported by the respondent.
After the mother left, he continued to evince his willingness and ability to
support the child but the mother refused that support and concealed her
whereabouts.
In 1970, unknown to the respondent, she went to
the appellant, The Children’s Aid Society of Metropolitan Toronto, and had the
children admitted to care on January 22. An application was made by the Society
to the Provincial Court (Family Division) for an order making the two children
wards of the Crown under s. 19(1)(b)(iii) of The Child Welfare Act,
1965 (the “Act”). No notice was given to the respondent. On March 19 and
April 6, 1970, Miss Cox appeared before a judge, she requested that the
children “be made the wards of the Crown so that they may be considered for
adoption” and the judge was informed that the Society was “supporting Miss
Cox’s request for Crown wardship of the children”. An order was made
accordingly and a notice of intention to adopt was given by the persons to whom
the children had been entrusted.
The respondent says that it was only a little more
than six months later that he learned of his son having been given away to the
Society by Miss Cox. He was told that a wardship order had been made, that more
than six months had elapsed and there was nothing he could do about it. In
order to prevent an adoption order being made, he gave notice on December 22,
1970, of an application to the Supreme Court of Ontario:
1. for an order granting him custody of his
son;
2. for an order prohibiting the Society and
its director from consenting to his son’s adoption;
3. in the alternative, for an order
compelling the Society to disclose particulars of the persons seeking to adopt
his son or compelling these persons and the Society to give him notice of any
adoption proceedings.
[Page 581]
This application was dismissed by Hartt J.
“without prejudice to the applicant to take whatever steps he may deem
appropriate to question the order” of Crown wardship.
On appeal, this judgment was varied to provide
for notice to the present respondent of all adoption proceedings with the right
of full participation. The present appeal from that order is by leave of this
Court.
In the oral judgment, Aylesworth J.A., after
reciting the facts, referred to subs.3 of s.31 of the Act, as enacted in 1969,
which is in the following terms:
(3) Where a child has been committed as a
ward of the Crown, the order under clause c of section 25 shall,
subject to section 34, remain in effect and the Crown wardship shall not
be terminated where the child has been placed in the home of a person who has
given written notice of his intention to adopt the child and the child is
residing in the home, until an adoption order is made under Part IV.
He then said:
The subsection precisely fits the
facts in the case at Bar. Although it may be suggested that the appellant sat
upon whatever rights he had as the putative but actually the acknowledged and
recorded father of the infant from the time of the wife’s departure with the
child from his abode until the end of 1969, a period of some approximate three
years, yet it would seem on the material that to a very large extent if not
wholly, he was lulled into a position of belief that his child was adequately
cared for, the mother, as I have said, assuring him whenever he caught up with
her of the fact, according to her, that the child was well taken care of. On
the other hand, it is abundantly plain, that the entire basis or justification
for the making of the Crown wardship order which now stands in the appellant’s
way, was completely lacking at the time the order was made. That is to say, the
fact of the position of the appellant with respect to the child and of the
appellant’s continued desire and ability to maintain that child was not
revealed by the mother to the Family Court, nor was there any inquiry so far as
the proceedings reveal, by the Family Court as to the parentage on the father’s
side of this child, or as to the ability or willingness of that male parent to
contribute to the support of the child. Thus,
[Page 582]
it would appear from the material that in
fact the child was not a child in need of protection, which is the very basis
and the only basis upon which a Crown wardship order may be founded.
It is apparent from the reference I have made to
the most recent amendment to s. 31 of the Child Welfare Act that if the
County Court Judge or the Supreme Court Judge before whom under s. 70 of the Child
Welfare Act the adoption proceedings will be heard, refuses to make the
adoption order, the way will be clear for the appellant to apply for
termination of the wardship order and presumably for custody of his child.
I have put it precisely in the language I have
used, because what we propose to do is to open the way for this appellant to
appear and be heard fully in the best interests of the child at any proceedings
respecting the current adoption application. It is apparent from the material,
as perhaps I have already made clear, that the appellant is able and willing to
support the child, admittedly, only one of the many factors which it will be
the duty of the tribunal hearing the adoption application to consider in the
discharge of that Court’s duty under s. 76 of the Child Welfare Act, which
is in part that no adoption order will be made unless it is considered in the
best interests of the child.
We consider that not only under the Infant’s
Act have we jurisdiction to make the order I propose be made but that
particularly, quite apart from that statute, in the best interests of this
infant, we have jurisdiction to make the proposed order and to see that natural
justice is done and the proceedings have the appearance of natural justice.
Accordingly, we order that the respondent in
this appeal notify the appellant of all proceedings respecting the current
application for adoption, and we further order that upon any hearing in those
proceedings the appellant be entitled to be present in person and to be
represented by counsel with the right of full participation in the proceedings
and of making such representations as the appellant may be advised respecting
the adoption application and as to whether or not, in the best interests of the
child, an order of adoption should be made upon that application.
In the above reasoning the crucial point is the
construction of s. 31(3). This was enacted by s.
[Page 583]
1 of c. 9 of the Statutes of Ontario 1968-1969,
assented to December 17, 1969. Section 2 of the same Act repealed s. 35 of
The Child Welfare Act, 1965, which section was the basis of the
decisions of this Court dated February 12 and November 17, 1969, in Mugford
v. Children’s Aid Society of Ottawa and Prospective
Adoptive parents v. Mugford. The
result of those decisions was to uphold a judgment based on s. 35 restoring to
his mother a child who had been made a ward of the Crown and had been entrusted
to the care of prospective adoptive parents. It is significant that the
amending statute repealed s. 35 which had just been held to authorize the
mother’s application as against s.31(1) which then contemplated an application
for terminating a wardship by a society only. As amended by s. 1 of the 1969
Act, s. 31(1) now reads:
(1) Subject to subsection 3, where a
child has been committed as a ward of the Crown, the children’s aid society
having the care of the child or a parent of the child may apply to a judge for
an order terminating the Crown wardship, and, if the judge is satisfied that
the termination is in the best interests of the child, he shall order that the
Crown wardship be terminated.
The opening words of this enactment clearly
indicate that the new subs. 3 was intended to restrict the right of the Society
and of the parents of the child to apply for the termination of a wardship
after a notice of intention to adopt has been given. The legislative intent is
obviously to protect the prospective adoptive parents from an application which
would result in the child being taken away from them. With respect, the result
of the construction put upon subs. 3 by the Court of Appeal is to frustrate
this legislative intent. In effect, the decision is: The parent cannot under
such circumstances apply for the termination of a wardship but we will allow
him to oppose any adoption proceedings so as to open the way for such an
application. The result of such an order is, not only to
[Page 584]
disclose the identity of the prospective
adoptive parents, but also to enable the parent to invite the judge hearing the
application for an adoption order to decline to make it so that the wardship be
terminated. In other words, by a different route, the same result as in Mugford
might be reached while the legislative changes were clearly intended to
make this impossible. No provision of The Infants Act was mentioned to
us which would tend to overbear those considerations.
By virtue of s. 73(3) it is for the Director
only to give consent to the adoption of a child who is a Crown ward. While s.
76 provides that the Court before making an adoption order must also be
satisfied that this will be in the best interests of the child, one must
consider that in the case of a Crown ward the parents’ duty of care has been taken
away from them and entrusted to the Children’s Aid Society and the Director.
Section 84 makes it clear that, in the discharge of this duty, they are to
arrange for adoption of the child if at all possible. To do this efficiently,
they have adopted a policy of secrecy towards the natural parents which is
fully in keeping with such legislative provisions as that adoption proceedings
shall be in chambers (s. 70(2)) and the papers shall be sealed up (s.
79(1)).
It does not appear to me that the facts of this case
justify any departure from the usual rules followed in adoption proceedings and
make it proper to turn them into an alternative method of challenging the
wardship order. In my view, Hartt J. was correct in holding that any remedy to
which the father might be entitled was to be sought in attacking the wardship
order. Unless this order is set aside, the respondent should not be allowed to
interfere with the adoption proceedings. The primary consideration is the
welfare of the child. If the respondent can show that he is able and willing to
take care of him
[Page 585]
properly and not disentitled to custody by
virtue of his past conduct or otherwise, then provided he can also succeed in
having the wardship order set aside, it could be held that it is better for
this boy to be brought up by his own father than by any adoptive parents.
However, if the wardship order stands, then the father should not be allowed to
have anything to say respecting the selection or fitness of the prospective
adoptants.
This does not mean that the provisions of the
Act limiting the time within which an appeal or an application to terminate a
wardship order may be made, should be given the absolute effect which the
Society has been contending for. Assuming a kidnapped infant had been brought
to the Society by a woman pretending it was her illegitimate child, a wardship
order had been obtained and six months had expired before the legitimate
parents discovered what had happened, surely no one would contend that the
Supreme Court of Ontario lacked jurisdiction to set aside an order obtained by
such a fraud or to declare it to be a nullity. It is quite true that, as
contended by counsel for the Society, the jurisdiction of the Provincial Court
under the Act is carved out of the Supreme Court jurisdiction but this carving
out leaves intact the supervisory jurisdiction. While I share appellant’s
anxiety to avoid the disruption of the bond between a child and his prospective
adoptive parents, this cannot go to the extreme of protecting a wardship order
from an attack on jurisdictional grounds by a parent whose conduct does not
disentitle him to such a relief.
The situation here is essentially the same as it
would be in habeas corpus proceedings. In Perepolkin v.
Superintendent of Child Welfare, Sidney
Smith J.A. said in a passage (at p. 420) that was relied on in R. v. Sanders:
[Page 586]
Where a person in custody applies for a habeas
corpus he is usually imprisoned under a conviction. Habeas corpus only
questions the authority for detention which is the gaoler’s warrant. If this is
invalid on its face and is not later cured the prisoner can obtain his release
on the habeas corpus alone. One ground of invalidity may be that it
recites a conviction which, as recited, is void on its face; but if the warrant
is valid on its face and recites a conviction valid on its face a habeas
corpus alone is useless. If the prisoner wishes to attack the conviction as
being invalid for reasons not shown on its face he must get rid of the
conviction by quashing it through certiorari proceedings. Sometimes,
however, a prisoner seeking release on habeas corpus issued a certiorari
to remove his conviction, not because he wanted the certiorari but
because the Court would not grant him a habeas corpus without it, once
it became apparent that he was imprisoned under a conviction.
This being so, I do not think that the wardship
order can be attacked collaterally. It is valid on its face and it should be
given full effect as long as it stands. Although this does not make it immune
to attack, such attack must be made directly and explicitly, not inferentially.
While it might still be possible to join such an attack to proceedings
initiated by respondent’s motion, it does not appear to me it would be proper
to send the case back to that end. Respondent’s counsel said in this Court that
the validity of the wardship order was not challenged.
However, an opportunity should be given to the
respondent to launch an attack against the wardship order if he thinks this can
succeed and reasonably expects to be able to show that he is a fit and proper
person to obtain custody of his child. To that end, I would order the Society
not to allow adoption proceedings to take place within the next 30 days. If the
respondent does not see fit to institute proceedings as above indicated in that
time, then he should realize that his duty for the welfare and happiness of
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his child is to refrain from any interference
with the adoption proceedings and any attempt to ascertain the identity of the
adoptive parents.
For the above reasons I would allow the appeal
without costs, reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeal and restore the
judgment of Hartt J. subject, however, to a direction to the Children’s Aid
Society of Metropolitan Toronto that an application for an adoption order of
Ronald James Lyttle is not to be heard until 30 days from this date have
expired.
Appeal allowed without costs, ABBOTT,
JUDSON, HALL and PIGEON JJ. dissenting in part.
Solicitor for the appellant: William J.
Smith, Toronto.
Solicitor for the respondent: Bruce
Haines, Toronto.