SUPREME
COURT OF CANADA
Between:
Her
Majesty The Queen
Appellant
and
Yat
Fung Albert Tse, Nhan Trong Ly, Viet Bac Nguyen, Huong Dac Doan,
Daniel
Luis Soux and Myles Alexander Vandrick
Respondents
-
and -
Attorney
General of Canada, Attorney General of Ontario,
Attorney
General of Quebec, Criminal Lawyers’ Association (Ontario),
British
Columbia Civil Liberties Association and
Canadian
Civil Liberties Association
Interveners
Coram: McLachlin C.J. and LeBel, Deschamps, Fish, Abella, Rothstein,
Cromwell, Moldaver and Karakatsanis JJ.
Reasons for
Judgment:
(paras. 1 to 103):
|
Moldaver and Karakatsanis JJ. (McLachlin C.J. and LeBel,
Deschamps, Fish, Abella, Rothstein and Cromwell JJ. concurring)
|
R. v. Tse, 2012 SCC 16, [2012] 1
S.C.R. 531
Her Majesty The
Queen Appellant
v.
Yat Fung Albert Tse,
Nhan Trong Ly,
Viet Bac Nguyen,
Huong Dac Doan,
Daniel Luis Soux and
Myles
Alexander Vandrick Respondents
and
Attorney General of Canada,
Attorney General of Ontario,
Attorney General of Quebec,
Criminal Lawyers’ Association (Ontario),
British Columbia Civil Liberties
Association and
Canadian
Civil Liberties Association Interveners
Indexed as: R. v. Tse
2012 SCC 16
File No.: 33751.
2011: November 18; 2012: April 13.
Present: McLachlin C.J. and LeBel, Deschamps, Fish, Abella,
Rothstein, Cromwell, Moldaver and Karakatsanis JJ.
on appeal from the supreme court of british columbia
Constitutional law —
Charter of Rights — Search and seizure — Interception of private communications
— Police intercepting communications without authorization pursuant to s. 184.4
of Criminal Code on grounds interceptions were immediately necessary to prevent
serious harm to person or property and judicial authorization not available
with reasonable diligence — Whether s. 184.4 contravenes right to be free
from unreasonable search and seizure pursuant to s. 8 of the Charter — Whether
provision saved under s. 1 — Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, ss. 1
and 8 — Criminal Code, R.S.C. 1985, c. C‑46, ss. 184.4 , 185 , 186 ,
188 .
This appeal concerns the constitutionality
of the emergency wiretap provision, s. 184.4 of the Criminal Code .
In this case, the police used s. 184.4 to carry out unauthorized
warrantless interceptions of private communications when the daughter of an
alleged kidnapping victim began receiving calls from her father stating that he
was being held for ransom. Approximately 24 hours later, the police
obtained a judicial authorization for continued interceptions, pursuant to s. 186
of the Code. The trial judge found that s. 184.4 contravened the
right to be free from unreasonable search or seizure under s. 8 of the Charter
and that it was not a reasonable limit under s. 1 . The Crown has appealed
the declaration of unconstitutionality directly to this Court.
Held: The appeal should be dismissed.
Section 184.4 permits a peace
officer to intercept certain private communications, without prior judicial
authorization, if the officer believes on reasonable grounds that the
interception is immediately necessary to prevent an unlawful act that would
cause serious harm, provided judicial authorization could not be obtained with
reasonable diligence. In principle, Parliament may craft such a narrow emergency
wiretap authority for exigent circumstances. The more difficult question is
whether the particular power enacted in s. 184.4 strikes a reasonable
balance between an individual’s right to be free from unreasonable searches or
seizures and society’s interest in preventing serious harm. To the extent that
the power to intercept private communications without judicial authorization is
available only in exigent circumstances to prevent serious harm, this section
strikes an appropriate balance. However, s. 184.4 violates s. 8 of
the Charter as it does not provide a mechanism for oversight, and more
particularly, notice to persons whose private communications have been
intercepted. This breach cannot be saved under s. 1 of the Charter .
The language of s. 184.4 is
sufficiently flexible to provide for different urgent circumstances that may
arise, and it is far from vague when properly construed. While it is the only
wiretapping power that does not require either the consent of one of the
parties to the communication or judicial pre‑authorization, a number of
conditions and constraints are embedded in the language of s. 184.4 that
ensure that the power to intercept private communications without judicial
authorization is available only in exigent circumstances to prevent serious
harm. Police officers may only use this authority if they believe “on
reasonable grounds” that the “urgency of the situation” is such that an
authorization could not, with “reasonable diligence”, “be obtained under any
other provision of this Part”. Each of these requirements provides a legal
restriction on the use of s. 184.4. The provision imports an objective
standard — credibly based probability for each of the requirements. The
conditions incorporate implicit and strict temporal limitations and the onus
rests with the Crown to show, on balance, that the conditions have been met. As
time goes by it may be more difficult to satisfy the requirement that an
authorization could not have been obtained with reasonable diligence, the
situation is urgent or it is immediately necessary to prevent serious harm.
Section 188 provides a
streamlined process for obtaining a temporary authorization in circumstances of
urgency that can be accessed expeditiously with a view to limiting within
reason, the length of time that unauthorized interceptions under s. 184.4
may lawfully be continued. It permits a specially designated peace officer to
seek a 36‑hour wiretap authorization from a specially designated judge
where the urgency of the situation requires the interception of private
communications to commence before an authorization could “with reasonable diligence”
be obtained under s. 186 of the Code.
Section 188 should be construed
in a manner that promotes an efficient and expeditious result and effective
judicial oversight. Section 188 applications, which are designed to
provide short‑term judicial authorization in urgent circumstances may be
conducted orally as this would expedite the process and further Parliament’s
objective in enacting the provision. Even though applications may be conducted
orally and are less cumbersome and labour‑intensive than written
applications, they still take time, so the need for unauthorized emergency
interceptions under s. 184.4 remains.
Section 184.4 recognizes that
on occasion, the privacy interests of some may have to yield temporarily for
the greater good of society — here, the protection of lives and property from
harm that is both serious and imminent. The stringent conditions Parliament has
imposed to ensure that the provision is only used in exigent circumstances,
effect an appropriate balance between an individual’s reasonable expectation of
privacy and society’s interest in preventing serious harm. To that extent, s. 184.4
passes constitutional muster. In its present form however, s. 184.4
contains no accountability measures to permit oversight of the police use of
the power. It does not require that “after the fact” notice be given to
persons whose private communications have been intercepted. Unless a criminal
prosecution results, the targets of the wiretapping may never learn of the
interceptions and will be unable to challenge police use of this power. There
is no other measure in the Code to ensure specific oversight of the use
of s. 184.4. In its present form, the provision fails to meet the minimum
constitutional standards of s. 8 of the Charter . An accountability
mechanism is necessary to protect the important privacy interests at stake and
a notice provision would adequately meet that need, although Parliament may
choose an alternative measure for providing accountability. The lack of notice
requirement or some other satisfactory substitute renders s. 184.4 constitutionally
infirm. In the absence of a proper record, the issue of whether the use of the
section by peace officers, other than police officers, renders this section
overbroad is not addressed.
The objective of preventing serious
harm to persons or property in exigent circumstances is pressing and
substantial and rationally connected to the power provided under s. 184.4.
It is at the proportionality analysis of Oakes that the provision fails.
The obligation to give notice to intercepted parties would not impact in any
way the ability of the police to act in emergencies. It would, however,
enhance the ability of targeted individuals to identify and challenge invasions
to their privacy and seek meaningful remedies. Section 184.4 of the Code
is constitutionally invalid legislation. This declaration of invalidity is
suspended for 12 months to allow Parliament to redraft a constitutionally
compliant provision.
Cases Cited
Applied: Hunter v. Southam
Inc., [1984] 2 S.C.R. 145; R. v. Duarte,
[1990] 1 S.C.R. 30; R. v. Oakes,
[1986] 1 S.C.R. 103; approved: R. v. Riley (2008), 174 C.R.R. (2d)
250; considered: R. v. Riley (2008), 174 C.R.R. (2d) 288; R. v.
Godoy, [1999] 1 S.C.R. 311; R. v. Feeney, [1997] 2 S.C.R. 13; R. v.
Mann, 2004 SCC 52, [2004] 3 S.C.R. 59; referred to: Brais v. R.,
2009 QCCS 1212, [2009] R.J.Q. 1092; R. v. Deacon, 2008 CanLII 78109; R.
v. Moldovan, 2009 CanLII 58062; R. v. Zundel, [1992] 2 S.C.R. 731; Application
under s. 83.28 of the Criminal Code (Re), 2004 SCC 42, [2004] 2 S.C.R. 248;
R. v. Wiggins, [1990] 1 S.C.R. 62; R. v. Nova Scotia Pharmaceutical
Society, [1992] 2 S.C.R. 606; R. v. Kang‑Brown, 2008 SCC 18,
[2008] 1 S.C.R. 456; R. v. Prosper, [1994] 3 S.C.R. 236; R. v. Silveira,
[1995] 2 S.C.R. 297; R. v. Grant, [1993] 3 S.C.R. 223; R. v. Araujo,
2000 SCC 65, [2000] 2 S.C.R. 992; Smith v. Jones, [1999] 1 S.C.R. 455; Winnipeg
Child and Family Services v. K.L.W., 2000 SCC 48, [2000] 2 S.C.R. 519; R.
v. McCraw, [1991] 3 S.C.R. 72; R. v. Galbraith (1989), 49 C.C.C. (3d)
178; R. v. Laudicina (1990), 53 C.C.C. (3d) 281; R. v. Finlay and
Grellette (1985), 52 O.R. (2d) 632; Schachter v. Canada, [1992] 2
S.C.R. 679.
Statutes and Regulations Cited
Bill C‑30, An Act to enact the Investigating and Preventing
Criminal Electronic Communications Act and to amend the Criminal Code and other
Acts, 1st Sess., 41st Parl., 2011‑2012.
Bill C‑31, An Act to amend the Criminal Code, the
Corruption of Foreign Public Officials Act and the Identification of Criminals
Act and to make a consequential amendment to another Act, 2nd Sess., 40th
Parl., 2009.
Bill C‑50, An Act to amend the Criminal Code (interception
of private communications and related warrants and orders), 3rd Sess., 40th
Parl., 2010.
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms,
ss. 1 , 7 , 8 .
Criminal
Code, R.S.C. 1970, c. C‑34, s. 178.11(2)(a) [ad. 1973‑74, c. 50, s. 2].
Criminal Code, R.S.C. 1985, c. C‑46,
ss. 2 “peace officer”, 21, 22, Part VI [am. 1993, c. 40], 183,
184(1), 184.1 to 184.4 [ad. idem, s. 4 ], 185, 186, 188 [am. idem,
s. 8 ], 189, 195, 196, 722(4).
Protection of Privacy Act, S.C. 1973‑74,
c. 50.
Authors Cited
Canada. Senate. Standing Senate Committee on Legal and
Constitutional Affairs. Proceedings of the Standing Senate Committee on
Legal and Constitutional Affairs, No. 44, 3rd Sess., 34th Parl., June 2,
1993, p. 44:10.
Canada. Senate. Standing Senate Committee on Legal and
Constitutional Affairs. Proceedings of the Standing Senate Committee on
Legal and Constitutional Affairs, No. 48, 3rd Sess., 34th Parl., June 15,
1993, p. 48:16.
Driedger, Elmer A. Construction of Statutes, 2nd ed. Toronto:
Butterworths, 1983.
Sullivan, Ruth. Sullivan on the Construction of Statutes, 5th
ed. Markham, Ont.: LexisNexis, 2008.
APPEAL from a decision of the British
Columbia Supreme Court (Davies J.), 2008 BCSC 211, 235 C.C.C. (3d) 161, 180
C.R.R. (2d) 24, [2008] B.C.J. No. 1764 (QL), 2008 CarswellBC 1948, declaring
s. 184.4 of the Criminal Code to be unconstitutional. Appeal dismissed.
Trevor
Shaw and Samiran Lakshman, for
the appellant.
Simon R.
A. Buck and Dagmar Dlab, for
the respondent Yat Fung Albert Tse.
Brent V.
Bagnall, for the respondent Nhan Trong Ly.
Howard
Rubin, Q.C., and David Albert, for
the respondent Viet Bac Nguyen.
Kenneth S.
Westlake, Q.C., for
the respondent Huong Dac Doan.
Ian
Donaldson, Q.C., for
the respondents Daniel Luis Soux and Myles Alexander Vandrick.
Cheryl J.
Tobias, Q.C., and Nancy Dennison, for
the intervener the Attorney General of Canada.
Michal
Fairburn and Grace Choi, for
the intervener the Attorney General of Ontario.
Brigitte
Bussières and Gilles Laporte, for
the intervener the Attorney General of Quebec.
Joseph S.
Wilkinson and Fredrick
Schumann, for the intervener the Criminal Lawyers’ Association
(Ontario).
Roy W.
Millen and Laura M. Cundari, for
the intervener the British Columbia Civil Liberties Association.
Christopher A.
Wayland and H. Michael Rosenberg, for
the intervener the Canadian Civil Liberties Association.
The judgment of the Court was delivered
by
Moldaver and
Karakatsanis JJ. —
I. Overview
[1]
This appeal concerns the constitutionality of
the emergency wiretap provision, s. 184.4 of the Criminal Code, R.S.C.
1985, c. C-46 . The trial judge found that the provision contravened the right
to be free from unreasonable search or seizure under s. 8 of the Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms and that it was not a reasonable limit under
s. 1 (2008 BCSC 211, 235 C.C.C. (3d) 161). The Crown has appealed the
declaration of unconstitutionality directly to this Court.
[2]
Section 184.4 permits a peace officer to
intercept certain private communications, without prior judicial authorization,
if the officer believes on reasonable grounds that the interception is
immediately necessary to prevent an unlawful act that would cause serious harm,
provided judicial authorization could not be obtained with reasonable
diligence.
[3]
In this case, the police used s. 184.4 to carry out unauthorized
warrantless interceptions of private communications when the daughter of an
alleged kidnapping victim began receiving calls from her father stating that he
was being held for ransom. Approximately 24 hours later, the police obtained a
judicial authorization for continued interceptions, pursuant to s. 186 of the Code.
[4]
The trial judge, Davies
J., concluded
that the section breached s. 8 of the Charter due to the “total absence
of the
constitutional safeguards” generally found in other sections of Part VI of the Code.
Davies J. was particularly concerned about the lack of any requirement for
officers (i) to give notice to those persons whose communications had been intercepted and (ii) to report their use of s. 184.4 to
senior, independent law enforcement officials, the executive branch of
government or to Parliament.
[5]
In R. v. Riley (2008), 174 C.R.R. (2d)
250 (Ont. S.C.J.) (“Riley (No. 1)”),
Dambrot J. also considered the constitutionality of s. 184.4 and found that the
lack of any requirement for police to give notice to the targets of the
interception rendered the section constitutionally infirm. He read in the
notice provisions set out in s. 196 of Part VI.
[6]
Both judges were concerned that the provision
could be accessed by peace officers as defined in s. 2 of the Code. The
wide variety of people included in that definition raised concerns about
overbreadth.
[7]
Both judges also considered the availability of
judicial authorizations under other sections in Part VI of the Code;
they differed, however, in their views about the procedural requirements of s.
188 , a provision that addresses judicial authorization in urgent
circumstances. Because s. 184.4 is restricted to urgent situations that do not
permit officers, with reasonable diligence, to obtain an authorization under
any other provision of this Part, the availability of s. 188 bears significantly
upon the scope of the warrantless emergency wiretap provision in s. 184.4.
[8]
The key issue before us is whether the power
created in s. 184.4 of the Code strikes an appropriate constitutional
balance between an individual’s right to be secure against unreasonable
searches or seizures and society’s interest in preventing serious harm. The
main concerns raised by the parties relate to (1) the overbreadth of the
definition of peace officer; (2) the interrelationship between ss. 184.4 and
188 ; (3) the lack of notice to the object of the interception; and (4) the lack
of a reporting obligation.
[9]
The respondents also raised other Charter
challenges but the focus of the submissions and the decision below was on the
s. 8 analysis. The submission that s. 184.4 violates s. 7 of the Charter
because it is both vague and overbroad, is addressed below in the determination
of the scope of s. 184.4 .
[10]
For the reasons set out below, we have reached
the following conclusions. Section 184.4 contains a number of legislative
conditions. Properly construed, these conditions are designed to ensure that
the power to intercept private communications without judicial authorization is
available only in exigent circumstances to prevent serious harm. To that
extent, the section strikes an appropriate balance between an individual’s s. 8
Charter rights and society’s interests in preventing serious harm.
[11]
However, in our view, s. 184.4 falls down on the
matter of accountability because the legislative scheme does not provide any
mechanism to permit oversight of the police use of this power. Of particular
concern, it does not require that notice be given to persons whose private
communications have been intercepted. For this reason, we believe that s.
184.4 violates s. 8 of the Charter . We are further of the view that the
breach cannot be saved under s. 1 of the Charter . Accordingly, we would
declare the section to be unconstitutional. By way of remedy, we have
concluded that the declaration should be suspended for a period of 12 months to
afford Parliament sufficient time to bring the section into conformity with the
Charter .
[12]
In the absence of a proper record, we do not
address the issue of whether the use of the section by peace officers, other
than police officers, renders this section overbroad.
II. Issues
[13]
This appeal raises the following issues:
A. Is an unauthorized interception of private communications in
exigent circumstances constitutional?
B. What is the scope of s. 184.4?
C. What authorizations are available to police with reasonable
diligence in urgent situations? In particular, what is the scope of s. 188 ?
D. Does s. 184.4 lack accountability measures or specific
limitations, in breach of s. 8 of the Charter ?
E. If s. 184.4 breaches the Charter , is it saved by s.
1 ? If not, what is the appropriate remedy?
III. Analysis
[14]
Section 184.4 reads as follows:
184.4
A peace officer may intercept, by means of any electro-magnetic, acoustic,
mechanical or other device, a private communication where
(a) the peace officer believes on
reasonable grounds that the urgency of the situation is such that an
authorization could not, with reasonable diligence, be obtained under any other
provision of this Part;
(b) the peace officer believes on
reasonable grounds that such an interception is immediately necessary to
prevent an unlawful act that would cause serious harm to any person or to
property; and
(c) either the originator of the private communication or the
person intended by the originator to receive it is the person who would perform
the act that is likely to cause the harm or is the victim, or intended victim,
of the harm.
A. Is an Unauthorized Interception of Private Communications
in Exigent Circumstances Constitutional?
[15]
Section 8 of the Charter provides:
“Everyone has the right to be secure against unreasonable search or seizure.”
[16]
In the landmark decision Hunter v. Southam
Inc., [1984] 2 S.C.R. 145, this Court determined that a warrantless search
is presumptively unreasonable. The presumed constitutional standard for
searches or seizures in the criminal sphere is judicial pre-authorization: a
prior determination by a neutral and impartial arbiter, acting judicially, that
the search or seizure is supported by reasonable grounds, established on oath
(pp. 160-62 and 167-68). As Dickson J. noted, at p. 161:
I recognize that it may not be
reasonable in every instance to insist on prior authorization in order to
validate governmental intrusions upon individuals’ expectations of privacy.
Nevertheless, where it is feasible to obtain prior authorization, I would hold
that such authorization is a precondition for a valid search and seizure.
[17]
The importance of prior judicial authorization
is even greater for covert interceptions of private communications, which constitute
serious intrusions into the privacy rights of those affected. In R. v.
Duarte, [1990] 1 S.C.R. 30, La Forest J. explained, at p. 46:
. . . if the surreptitious recording of private
communications is a search and seizure within the meaning of s. 8 of the Charter ,
it is because the law recognizes that a person’s privacy is intruded on in an
unreasonable manner whenever the state, without a prior showing of reasonable
cause before a neutral judicial officer, arrogates to itself the right
surreptitiously to record communications that the originator expects
will not be intercepted by anyone other than the person intended by its
originator to receive them, to use the language of the Code. [Emphasis
in original.]
La Forest J. found that
“as a general proposition, surreptitious electronic surveillance of the
individual by an agency of the state constitutes an unreasonable search or
seizure under s. 8 of the Charter ” (p. 42).
[18]
However, there is a long line of authority from
this Court recognizing that the reach of s. 8 protection is legitimately
circumscribed by the existence of the potential for serious and immediate
harm. Exigent circumstances are factors that inform the reasonableness of the
search or authorizing law and may justify the absence of prior judicial
authorization. For example, in R. v. Godoy, [1999] 1 S.C.R. 311, where
the issue was whether the Charter precluded warrantless entry into
private premises in response to 911 calls, this Court stated: “. . . the
importance of the police duty to protect life warrants and justifies a forced
entry into a dwelling in order to ascertain the health and safety of a 911
caller” (para. 22). See also R. v. Feeney, [1997] 2 S.C.R. 13 (warrantless
entry into a home in hot pursuit), and R. v. Mann, 2004 SCC 52, [2004] 3
S.C.R. 59 (warrantless pat-down searches incidental to arrest to protect
officer and public safety). Thus, in principle, it would seem that Parliament
may craft a narrow emergency wiretap authority for exigent circumstances to
prevent serious harm if judicial authorization is not available through the
exercise of reasonable diligence.
[19]
The more difficult question is whether the
particular power enacted in s. 184.4 constitutes an unreasonable search or
seizure contrary to s. 8 of the Charter . Does s. 184.4 strike a
reasonable balance between an individual’s right to be free from unreasonable
searches or seizures and society’s interest in preventing serious harm?
B. What Is the Scope of Section 184.4?
(1) Approach
to Interpretation
[20]
The modern principle of statutory interpretation
requires that the words of the legislation be read “in their entire context and
in their grammatical and ordinary sense harmoniously with the scheme of the
Act, the object of the Act, and the intention of Parliament”: E. A. Driedger,
Construction of Statutes (2nd ed. 1983), at p. 87. Underlying this
approach is the presumption that legislation is enacted to comply with
constitutional norms, including the rights and freedoms enshrined in the Charter .
“For centuries courts have interpreted legislation to comply with common law
values, not because compliance was necessary for validity, but because the
values themselves were considered important. This reasoning applies with even
greater force to entrenched constitutional values”: R. Sullivan, Sullivan on
the Construction of Statutes (5th ed. 2008), at p. 461. Accordingly, where
legislation is permitting of two equal interpretations, the Court should adopt
the interpretation which accords with Charter values: R. v. Zundel,
[1992] 2 S.C.R. 731, at p. 771; Application under s. 83.28 of the
Criminal Code (Re), 2004 SCC 42, [2004] 2 S.C.R. 248, at para. 35.
[21]
In this case, the constitutional lens must take
into account the privacy interests of anyone whose communications may be intercepted,
and the interests of public safety, including the right to life, liberty and
security of the person who is in danger of serious harm. Lamer C.J. observed
in Godoy that “dignity, integrity and autonomy” are values underlying a
privacy interest; however, the interests of a person in need of police
assistance are “closer to the core of the values of dignity, integrity and
autonomy than the interest of the person who seeks to deny entry to police who
arrive in response to the call for help” (para. 19).
(2) Scheme of Part VI of the Act
[22]
Entitled “Invasion of Privacy”, Part VI of the Code
makes it an offence under s. 184(1) to intercept private communications.
Sections 185 and 186 set out the general provisions governing the application
and the granting of judicial authorizations for the interception of private
communications. Section 188 permits temporary authorizations (for up to 36
hours) by specially appointed judges, on the application of specially
designated peace officers, if the urgency of the situation requires
interception of private communications before an authorization could, with
reasonable diligence, be obtained under s. 186 .
[23]
In addition to the prerequisites for and
conditions of authorized interceptions, there are a number of after-the-fact
provisions that build accountability into the process. Section 195 requires an
annual statistical report to Parliament concerning the use of s. 186 and s. 188
authorizations and resulting prosecutions. Section 196 sets out the obligations
of the responsible Minister of the Crown to subsequently give notice in writing
to the person who was the object of the interception pursuant to a s. 186
authorization. Under s. 189, an accused must be given notice of any
interception intended to be produced in evidence.
[24]
When the first comprehensive wiretap legislation
in Canada, the Protection of Privacy Act, S.C. 1973-74, c. 50, came into
force in 1974, there was no emergency wiretap provision like s. 184.4.
Wiretaps were permitted without judicial authorization only with the consent of
a party, under then s. 178.11(2)(a) of the Code. Following the
constitutional challenge to that section in Duarte and R. v. Wiggins,
[1990] 1 S.C.R. 62, Parliament introduced the current Part VI in 1993, with a
number of additional provisions that permit interceptions in special situations
(S.C. 1993, c. 40).
[25]
Two of the new provisions introduced in 1993 are
specifically preventative in nature. Section 184.4 is the emergency power to
intercept for the purpose of preventing serious harm. Section 184.1 permits
interception with a person’s consent in order to prevent bodily harm to that
person. These are the only two sections that permit interceptions without a
specific time limit and without judicial authorization. In addition, s. 184.2
provides for judicial authorization with consent of one of the persons being
intercepted for up to 60 days; under s. 184.3 such authorizations can be obtained
by means of telecommunication. None of the interceptions under these special
sections is subject to the s. 195 reporting or the s. 196 notice requirements.
[26]
To summarize, Part VI sets out a broad spectrum
of wiretapping provisions. Sections 185 and 186 set out the standard
requirements for wiretapping. Section 188 permits designated officers to seek
authorizations from designated judges for interceptions limited to 36 hours
when the “urgency of the situation” requires it. Accountability requirements
apply to these powers. They do not apply to the special circumstance
provisions in ss. 184.1, 184.2 and 184.4 that involve consent or exigent
circumstances.
[27]
Section 184.4, the emergency power to intercept,
is the only section that does not require either consent of a party or
pre-authorization. However, it is clearly available only on an urgent basis to
prevent harm that is both serious and imminent. While s. 184.4 does not contain
a time limitation, each interception is limited to urgent situations where
there is an immediate necessity to prevent serious harm and judicial
pre-authorization is not available with reasonable diligence. As discussed
below, these prerequisites create strict inherent time restrictions.
(3) Intention of Parliament
[28]
It is clear from the overall context of the
provisions in Part VI of the Code that Parliament intended to limit the
operation of the authority under s. 184.4 to genuine emergencies. Evidence
before the Standing Senate Committee on Legal and Constitutional Affairs was
that this emergency power was necessary for “hostage takings, bomb threats and
armed standoffs”; to be used “only if time does not permit obtaining an
authorization”; and for “very short period[s] of time during which it may be
possible to stop the threat and harm from occurring”: Proceedings of the
Standing Senate Committee on Legal and Constitutional Affairs, No. 44, 3rd
Sess., 34th Parl., June 2, 1993, at p. 44:10. The Minister of Justice noted
that these are situations where “every minute counts” and that the provision
was “necessary to ensure public safety”: Proceedings of the Standing Senate
Committee on Legal and Constitutional Affairs, No. 48, 3rd Sess., 34th
Parl., June 15, 1993, at p. 48:16. The evidence filed before the trial judge
noted that kidnappings, child protection and hostage taking form a substantial
backdrop for the use of s. 184.4 by police.
(4) The Language of Section 184.4
[29]
The respondents submitted that the terms “the
urgency of the situation”, “reasonable diligence”, “unlawful act” and “serious
harm” were vague and overbroad.
[30]
For the reasons that follow, we disagree. While
s. 184.4 is sufficiently flexible to provide for different urgent circumstances
that may arise, it is far from vague when properly construed. As Gonthier J.
held for the Court in R. v. Nova Scotia Pharmaceutical Society, [1992] 2
S.C.R. 606, enactments are not expected to “predict the legal consequences of
any given course of conduct in advance” (p. 639). Rather, they are to provide
meaningful guidance about the circumstances in which they can be applied.
[31]
A number of conditions and constraints are
embedded in the language of s. 184.4. As noted by the trial judge, each of
these conditions significantly restricts the availability of this section. These conditions incorporate implicit and
strict temporal limitations.
[32]
Section 184.4(a) provides that peace
officers may only use this authority if they believe “on reasonable grounds”
that the “urgency of the situation” is such that an authorization could not,
with “reasonable diligence”, “be obtained under any other provision of this
Part.”
(a) “Reasonable Grounds”
[33]
Belief “on reasonable grounds” imports both a
subjective and objective element. The officers must have subjective belief in
the grounds justifying the actions taken and those grounds must be objectively
reasonable in the circumstances. The constitutional balance between the
reasonable expectation of privacy and the legitimate needs of the state in
detecting and preventing crime requires an objective standard — credibly based probability: Hunter v.
Southam, at pp. 166-68; R. v. Kang-Brown, 2008 SCC 18, [2008] 1
S.C.R. 456, at paras. 75-79.
(b) “Urgency of the Situation”
[34]
Davies J. construed the phrase “urgency of the
situation” as follows:
. . . the phrase “urgency of the situation”
cannot be read in isolation. It must be read in conjunction with the requirement
that the peace officer has reasonable grounds to believe not only that the
circumstances are exigent (by reason of an apprehension of the occurrence of
imminent serious harm under ss. 184.4(b)), but also with the requirement to
believe that prior judicial authorization could not be obtained with reasonable
diligence. [para. 157]
We agree with this
interpretation. As time goes by, it
may be more difficult to satisfy the requirement that an authorization could
not have been obtained with reasonable diligence, or that the situation is
urgent and the need is immediate.
(c) “Reasonable Diligence”
[35]
The term “reasonable diligence” is used in this
Court’s jurisprudence and is directly tied to other constitutional rights. This Court has
acknowledged that exigent circumstances could permit a warrantless search where
it is not “feasible” (see Hunter v. Southam, at pp. 160-61; R. v.
Silveira, [1995] 2 S.C.R. 297, at para. 94) or where it is “impracticable”
(see R. v. Grant, [1993] 3 S.C.R. 223, at p. 241) to obtain prior
judicial authorization. Davies J. noted that “reasonable diligence” under s.
184.4(a) of the Code should be construed to conform with the s. 8
Charter right to be free from “unreasonable” search or seizure (para.
163). He concluded that the only way to comply with the requirement of
“reasonable diligence” is to ensure that once s. 184.4 is being used, the
police take all necessary steps to obtain judicial authorization under Part VI
“immediately, and with the least delay possible in the circumstances” (para.
166).
[36]
In Riley (No. 1), Dambrot J. noted, at
para. 23, that the “reasonable diligence” requirement “increases in
significance as time goes on” and that in order to continue intercepting under
s. 184.4 once intercepting has begun, “the police are compelled to immediately
put in motion an effort to obtain judicial authorization with dispatch, if
that is possible, or risk being out of compliance with s. 184.4” (emphasis
added).
[37]
There are any number of reasons why judicial
authorization may not be feasible or may not be immediately available. The
urgency of the underlying unlawful act and potential harm may require the full
attention of the police. In addition, there may be logistical reasons such as
the availability of a judge or designated judge or designated police officer;
the time required to ready an application and access the judge; and the time
for the judge to consider the matter and reach a decision.
[38]
We do not say that police must proceed in every
case with an immediate application for judicial authorization. Each case will
depend on its own circumstances. However, if the police have not proceeded to
seek the appropriate authorization when circumstances allow, they risk
non-compliance if they continue intercepting under s. 184.4.
(d) “An Authorization . . . Under Any
Other Provision of This Part”
[39]
The requirement that an authorization not be
available raises the very real issue of the accessibility and availability of
judicial authorizations under Part VI of the Criminal Code . Davies J.
suggested that police must seek an authorization under s. 188 at the same time
they start preparing a s. 186 application. He contemplated an oral application
under s. 188 . In Riley (No. 2), Dambrot J. concluded that s. 188 was
not available without a written affidavit (para. 50).
[40]
The Crown seeks guidance for the police about
what steps are possible under the other provisions in the Code. This
issue also bears on the constitutional analysis of the impact of s. 184.4 upon
privacy interests. Obviously, the greater the availability of an authorization
under s. 188 , the more circumscribed the authority to proceed unauthorized
under s. 184.4. For the reasons set out below, we conclude that s. 188 is
available for urgent situations without the requirement of a written
affidavit. This does not, however, obviate the need for unauthorized emergency
interceptions under s. 184.4.
(e) “Immediately Necessary”
[41]
Section 184.4(b) authorizes wiretapping
if
the
peace officer believes on reasonable grounds that such an interception is
immediately necessary to prevent an unlawful act that would cause serious harm
to any person or to property; . . . .
[42]
In Riley (No. 1), at para. 17, Dambrot J.
observed that the “fundamental prerequisite to unauthorized interception is the
requirement that it be immediately necessary”. In his view, the phrase
“immediately necessary” connoted both a temporal and an analytical component.
We agree. This requirement ensures that unauthorized interceptions are
available only when there are reasonable grounds to believe that the threat of
serious harm is immediate and only when it is necessary to
prevent serious harm. Thus, the threat must be imminent and it must be likely
that interception will be an effective means of preventing the unlawful act.
[43]
However, the word “necessary” does not in our
view require that unauthorized interception is the only effective means — or even the most effective means
available to police. Section 184.4 is not available only as a last
resort. To conclude otherwise would be to introduce an element of uncertainty
that would undermine the effective use of this power by police to prevent
serious harm in exigent circumstances. In a kidnapping, for example, the
police may be able to pursue a number of additional effective investigative
means, such as canvassing possible witnesses or using dogs to follow a scent.
While the phrase “immediately necessary” ensures that this power is not
available unless there is an emergency, it does not require police to exhaust
all other investigative means. The section does not preclude police from
pursuing all effective means available to them if they otherwise meet the
strict conditions of s. 184.4.
[44]
This threshold differs from that found under s.
186 of the Criminal Code , which requires that there be “no other
reasonable alternative method of investigation, in the circumstances of the
particular criminal inquiry” (R. v. Araujo, 2000 SCC 65, [2000] 2 S.C.R.
992, at para. 29 (emphasis in original)). That is not surprising since s.
184.4 serves to prevent imminent serious harm, whereas s. 186 is an
evidence-gathering tool.
(f) “Unlawful Act”
[45]
In addressing the respondents’ vagueness
argument, the trial judge held that the “unlawful act” referred to in s. 184.4(b)
is limited to an offence enumerated in s. 183 of the Code (para. 175).
Davies J. reasoned that since the section requires as a precondition to its use
the reasonable belief that an authorization could not be obtained with
reasonable diligence, Parliament cannot have intended to allow the unauthorized
interception by the police of communications for which a judicial authorization
could not be obtained.
[46]
We disagree. There may be situations that would
justify interceptions under s. 184.4 for unlawful acts not enumerated in s.
183. We prefer the conclusion of Dambrot J. in Riley (No. 1) that the
scope of the unlawful act requirement is sufficiently, if not more,
circumscribed for constitutional purposes, by the requirement that the unlawful
act must be one that would cause serious harm to persons or property (para.
21). No meaningful additional protection of privacy would be gained by listing
the unlawful acts that could give rise to such serious harm. The list of
offences in s. 183 is itself very broad; however, Parliament chose to focus
upon an unlawful act that would cause serious harm. We see no reason to
interfere with that choice.
(g) “Serious Harm”
[47]
As noted by the appellant, the serious harm
threshold is a meaningful and significant legal restriction on s. 184.4 and is
part of this Court’s jurisprudence in a number of different contexts: see Smith v. Jones, [1999] 1 S.C.R. 455, at para. 86 (the test
for setting aside solicitor-client privilege on public safety grounds); Winnipeg
Child and Family Services v. K.L.W., 2000 SCC 48, [2000] 2 S.C.R. 519, at
para. 117 (the level of harm needed in cases of warrantless apprehension of
children without violating s. 7 of the Charter ); and R. v. McCraw,
[1991] 3 S.C.R. 72, at pp. 80-81 (the “grave or substantial” threshold required
for threats of serious bodily harm under former s. 264.1(1)(a) of the Code). As disclosed in the police affidavits filed at trial, this
threshold is also consistent with the police practice surrounding s. 184.4 and
its use for Criminal Code offences like kidnapping, hostage taking and
other serious offences.
[48]
In the application before the trial judge, the
Crown filed seven affidavits from police forces across Canada, representing
about 25,000 police officers regarding their practices under s. 184.4.
Although the affidavits demonstrate that police forces have varying
implementation policies, they reflect an understanding that this provision is
exceptional in nature. The trial judge found on the evidence that many forces
require, as a matter of policy, approval by very senior officers and that the
senior officers had exercised these powers responsibly (paras. 235-36).
(h) “Serious Harm . . . to Property”
[49]
The respondents argue that this power is
overbroad in scope because it could be used to justify the invasion of privacy
for serious harm to insignificant property. We disagree. The text and context
of the provision show that the assumption that underlies the respondents’
argument is not well founded. We adopt the statements of Dambrot J. in Riley
(No. 1):
Serious,
as it applies to property, implies not only a significant degree of harm, but
also harm to property of significance, such as a bridge, a building, or a home.
In each of these cases, if there is a significant degree of harm, then the harm
would inevitably have serious consequences. Neither the phrase “serious harm to
any person or to property”, nor the context, leave it open to wiretap without a
warrant to prevent an act that will likely have trivial consequences. [para.
20]
(5) Objects of the Interception: “the
Victim, or Intended Victim”
[50]
Section 184.4(c) further limits the scope
of emergency wiretapping by permitting the interception of a private
communication only if either the originator or the intended recipient of the
communication is “the person who would perform the act that is likely to cause
the harm or is the victim, or intended victim, of the harm”.
[51]
It is accepted that the perpetrator would
include aiders and abettors, as parties to an offence under s. 21 or s. 22 of
the Criminal Code . The trial judge in this case (paras. 180-85), as in Riley
(No. 1), at para. 29, found that victim or intended victim was restricted
to those who were direct victims of the serious harm.
[52]
The Crown seeks a broad and expansive
interpretation of “victim” or “intended victim” to include family members who
would be affected by the serious harm done to a relative. The Attorney General
of Ontario supports this interpretation and points to the definition of victim
for the purposes of victim impact statements in s. 722(4) of the Code
which includes “a person to whom harm was done or who suffered physical or
emotional loss as a result of the commission of the offence”.
[53]
The Crown argues that such a broad
interpretation is warranted because an overly narrow interpretation of the word
“victim” limits the potential effectiveness of s. 184.4 and the ultimate goal
of protecting the public. The Attorney General of Ontario argues that a narrow
interpretation would lead to the absurd situation where the communications of a
parent of a child could not be intercepted in urgent circumstances involving
the abduction of that child, in an effort to get the child back alive.
However, it is unnecessary to broaden the definition of victim in order to
address such a situation. In the case of a kidnapped child, the police may
well have reasonable grounds to believe that the abductor will call the parents
for ransom and could thus set up the capacity to intercept a call. Crown
counsel advised that in such circumstances, live monitoring of the parents’
communications would ensure that only those communications involving the
perpetrator or the victim are in fact listened to or recorded.
[54]
We agree with the trial judge that an
interpretation of victim to include those who suffer emotional loss if the
threatened harm were to materialize would cast the net too broadly. It would
introduce far more uncertainty and scope for the exercise of subjective
judgment by the police. Section 184.4(c) qualifies victim as the victim
or intended victim of the serious harm. Parliament narrowed the purview of the
provision in this way in an obvious recognition of the need to restrict the
invasion of privacy while permitting police to address threats of serious harm.
(6) The Breadth of the Definition of
“Peace Officer”
[55]
Section 184.4 authorizes a “peace officer” to
intercept private communications without judicial authorization in certain
narrowly prescribed emergency circumstances. A “peace officer” is defined in
s. 2 of the Criminal Code .
[56]
The definition of “peace officer” includes a
wide variety of people, including mayors and reeves, bailiffs engaged in the
execution of civil process, guards and any other officers or permanent
employees of a prison, and so on. Concern is expressed that the list of
persons who may invoke s. 184.4 is too broad and that this could lead to the
provision’s misuse, especially in the absence of any accountability
requirements. (See the reasons of Davies J., at paras. 234-37, and those of
Dambrot J. in Riley (No. 1), at para. 44.)
[57]
We, too, have reservations about the wide range
of people who, by virtue of the broad definition of “peace officer”, can invoke
the extraordinary measures permitted under s. 184.4. The provision may be
constitutionally vulnerable for that reason. That said, we lack a proper
evidentiary foundation to determine the matter. Any conclusion must await a
proper record. The case at hand involves police officers and no one questions
their right to invoke s. 184.4.
(7) Conclusion: Scope of Section 184.4
[58]
This is the only wiretapping power in Part VI
that does not require either consent of one of the parties to the communication
or judicial pre-authorization; however, Parliament incorporated objective
standards and strict conditions which ensure that unauthorized interceptions
are available only in exigent circumstances to prevent serious harm. The onus,
of course, rests with the Crown to show on balance that the conditions have
been met.
[59]
The provision imports an objective standard — credibly based probability for each of the
requirements embedded in the section. The conditions incorporate implicit and
strict temporal limitations. As time goes by it may be more difficult to
satisfy the requirement that an authorization could not have been obtained with
reasonable diligence, the situation is urgent or it is immediately necessary to
prevent serious harm. Only private communications in which the originator or
the intended recipient is either the perpetrator or the victim (or intended
victim) of the serious harm may be intercepted. We conclude that properly
interpreted the section is not vague or overbroad as it relates to police
officers and the prerequisites restrict the availability of this section to
genuine emergency circumstances.
C. What Authorizations Are Available to Police With
Reasonable Diligence in Urgent Situations? In Particular, What Is the Scope of
Section 188 ?
[60]
Section 188(1) and (2) provides:
188.
(1) Notwithstanding section 185, an application made under that section
for an authorization may be made ex parte to [a specially designated
judge by a specially designated peace officer] if the urgency of the situation
requires interception of private communications to commence before an
authorization could, with reasonable diligence, be obtained under section 186 .
(2) Where
the judge to whom an application is made pursuant to subsection (1) is
satisfied that the urgency of the situation requires that interception of
private communications commence before an authorization could, with reasonable
diligence, be obtained under section 186 , he may, on such terms and conditions,
if any, as he considers advisable, give an authorization in writing for a period
of up to thirty-six hours.
Section 186(1)(b)
reads as follows:
186.
(1) An authorization under this section may be given if the judge to whom the
application is made is satisfied
. .
.
(b) that other investigative
procedures have been tried and have failed, other investigative procedures are
unlikely to succeed or the urgency of the matter is such that it would be
impractical to carry out the investigation of the offence using only other
investigative procedures.
[61]
As we have explained, s. 184.4 is an emergency
provision. It does away with the need to obtain prior judicial authorization
in circumstances of dire emergency; it does not do away with the need to obtain
a judicial authorization altogether. On the contrary, as was pointed out
above, once s. 184.4 has been invoked, the police must, where possible, move
with all reasonable dispatch to obtain a judicial authorization under Part VI
of the Code.
[62]
Once the police have begun intercepting private
communications under s. 184.4, the speed with which they can obtain the
follow-up judicial authorization plays a role in assessing whether s. 184.4
passes constitutional muster. The importance of a process that enables the
police to move quickly is self-evident. By alleviating the need for prior
judicial authorization, s. 184.4 departs from the presumptive constitutional
standard that applies to searches or seizures in the criminal law domain.
Hence, the need for a process that can be accessed expeditiously with a view to
limiting, within reason, the length of time that unauthorized interceptions
under s. 184.4 may lawfully be continued. That, in our view, is
where s. 188 of the Code, properly interpreted, comes into play. It
provides a streamlined process for obtaining a temporary authorization in
circumstances of urgency.
[63]
The standard process that must be followed to
obtain a third-party wiretap authorization is set out in ss. 185 and 186 . In
broad terms, s. 185 requires, among other things, that an application be made
to a judge in writing and that it be accompanied by an affidavit. The
affidavit must address six identified matters, including the facts relied on to
justify the authorization; the particulars of the offence under investigation;
the type of private communications proposed to be intercepted; the names,
addresses and occupations of persons whose private communications may assist in
the investigation; the background and history of any prior applications and so
on.
[64]
The preparation of a s. 185 affidavit can be a
daunting, labour-intensive task. Leaving aside the time needed to collate the
pertinent information, the requirement that such information be reduced to
writing in the form of an affidavit can significantly increase the length of
the process, perhaps by hours, or even days. Added to this is the time a judge
may need to review and digest the contents of the affidavit once it has been
submitted. And if, after reading the affidavit, the judge is not satisfied,
further affidavit material may be required, adding more delay to an already
time-consuming and labour-intensive process.
[65]
That is the backdrop against which s. 188 of the
Code must be construed. The provision addresses situations where a
wiretap authorization is needed on an urgent basis. It permits a specially
designated peace officer to seek a 36-hour wiretap authorization from a
specially designated judge where the urgency of the situation requires the
interception of private communications to commence before an authorization
could “with reasonable diligence” be obtained under s. 186 of the Code.
While the section incorporates the so-called “investigative necessity”
requirements of s. 186(1)(b) of the Code, where the conditions of
s. 184.4 have been met, the police should have little difficulty satisfying the
third branch of the paragraph which contemplates emergency situations (see
Araujo, at para. 27).
[66]
For present purposes, a critical question that
arises in relation to s. 188 is whether the application seeking an
authorization and the information presented in support of it must be in
writing, as required under s. 185, or whether the process can be conducted
orally. The answer will help determine the amount of time needed to obtain a
s. 188 authorization.
[67]
The controversy arises from the opening words of
s. 188(1) which read as follows:
188.
(1) Notwithstanding section 185, an application made under that
section for an authorization may be made ex parte . . . .
[68]
In R. v. Galbraith (1989), 49 C.C.C. (3d) 178, the Alberta Court of Appeal held
that since s. 178.15 (now s. 188 as amended) made no mention
of the need for an affidavit, an emergency authorization could be granted on
the basis of viva voce evidence under oath, probably memorialized in
some way. The words “under that section”, in English, and “visée au présent article”, in French, were added subsequent to this
decision (S.C. 1993, c. 40, s. 8).
[69]
In Riley (No. 2), Dambrot J. considered
the issue and concluded, at para. 50, that in view of the addition of the words
“under that section” following Galbraith, oral applications were
not permitted under s. 188 ; rather, the process must be conducted in writing in
accordance with the requirements of s. 185. He reasoned, at para. 50, “that s.
188 does not create a separate emergency authorization, but merely modifies the
procedure for a s. 186 authorization in an emergency. If an emergency
application is still an application made under s. 185, then the affidavit
requirement in that section would appear to apply to it.”
[70]
In the instant case, Davies J. took a different
view of the matter. Although he did not analyse the issue, it is apparent from
his reasons at paras. 330 and 331 that he endorsed the practice of oral
applications under s. 188 . According to Crown counsel who appeared on behalf
of the appellant, oral applications under s. 188 are routine in British
Columbia and this method of proceeding has become standard practice.
[71]
In argument before this Court, no one supported
the view that applications under s. 188 must be in writing. On the contrary,
the broad consensus was that s. 188 applications should be conducted orally as
this would serve to expedite the process and further Parliament’s objective in
enacting the provision.
[72]
We think that is the correct approach. Section
188 is clearly designed to provide a short-term judicial authorization in
urgent circumstances. It should be construed in a manner that promotes an
efficient and expeditious result and effective judicial oversight. We do not
read the opening words of s. 188(1) as mandating a process under that provision
that mirrors the “in writing” process required under s. 185. It cannot be that
the reference to s. 185 is meant to incorporate all its requirements. Such an
interpretation is inconsistent with the purpose of a more streamlined process
and with the language of s. 188 . Importing all the requirements of s. 185
would make the opening words “[n]otwithstanding section 185” meaningless.
Beyond that, the words “under that section” are at best ambiguous and can
simply be interpreted as referring to the type of application (a third-party
wiretap application) contemplated by s. 185. Moreover, the French version
reads “visée au présent article” (under this section).
[73]
The fact that applications may be conducted
orally under s. 188 does not however obviate the need for unauthorized
emergency interceptions under s. 184.4. While oral applications may be less
cumbersome and labour-intensive than applications in writing, they still take
time. The notion that oral applications can be commenced and completed in a
matter of minutes, as the trial judge in the instant case seems to have
suggested,
is in our respectful view highly unrealistic.
[74]
Even with the benefit of an oral application, it
is impossible to predict with any accuracy the length of time that it will
take, in any given case, to collate the information needed to make a s. 188
application, convey it to a designated officer, locate a designated judge and
communicate the pertinent information to that judge. Whatever length of time
the process may take, measured against a standard of reasonable diligence,
precious time may be lost, thereby exposing people and property to precisely
the type of harm that s. 184.4 was enacted to prevent.
[75]
In short, we believe that applications under s.
188 may be made orally. The evidence in support of an oral application should
be given on oath or solemn affirmation. Moreover, like the court in Galbraith,
we believe that the proceedings should be memorialized, by way of a verbatim
recording or some other means. Doing so would ensure the existence of a full
and accurate record. It would also shed light on the facts and circumstances
that caused the authorities to invoke s. 184.4 in the first place, thereby
ameliorating a concern raised by several of the parties and interveners that s.
184.4 does not require any form of record keeping.
[76]
Some of the parties and interveners raised the
prospect of obtaining s. 188 authorizations by telephone or other means of
telecommunication, especially in circumstances where it would be impracticable
for the applicant to appear in person before a judge. We would not foreclose
that possibility. We can foresee situations, especially in remote areas of the
country, where many hours might be lost in travel time while a designated agent
makes his or her way to a designated judge. However, the issue was not fully
argued before us and we refrain from commenting further on it.
[77]
One final observation before leaving this
subject. Section 184.4 is preventative in nature. It seeks to prevent the
occurrence of offences that would cause serious harm to people or property.
When s. 184.4 is invoked, it will generally be the case that an offence has
been committed or is being committed. But that may not always be so. When no
offence has been or is being committed, s. 188 cannot be accessed. It
and s. 186 are evidence-gathering provisions and they can only be
invoked where there are reasonable grounds to believe that an offence has been,
or is being committed and that the proposed interceptions will afford evidence
of that offence. (See R. v. Finlay and Grellette (1985), 52 O.R. (2d)
632 (C.A.), at pp. 656-57, and Duarte, at p. 55.)
[78]
Hence, in those rare cases where s. 184.4 is
invoked but no crime has been or is being committed, s. 188 will be
unavailable. In such cases, the inability of the police to access s. 188
should not be viewed as an obstacle to the use of s. 184.4. (See Riley (No.
1), where Dambrot J. addresses this issue, correctly in our view, at paras.
24-27.)
D. Does Section 184.4 Lack Accountability Measures or
Specific Limitations, in Breach of Section 8 of the Charter ?
[79]
The respondents and several interveners
submitted that the particular power enacted in s. 184.4 constitutes an
unreasonable search or seizure contrary to s. 8 of the Charter , because
it lacks accountability measures that allow for oversight of police conduct.
Further, they variously submitted that a number of additional conditions or
limitations were required for constitutional purposes.
[80]
The issues raised include the following:
(i) The lack of a notice requirement;
(ii) The lack of a reporting requirement to Parliament;
(iii) The lack of a record-keeping requirement; and
(iv) The need to restrict the use that can be made of the
interceptions.
(1) The Lack of a Notice Requirement
[81]
Persons who have been targeted under s. 184.4,
including victims and suspected perpetrators, may never become aware that their
private communications have been intercepted. Section 184.4, in its present
form, contains no “after-the-fact” notice requirement. That distinguishes s.
184.4 emergencies from other emergency situations where a lack of prior
judicial authorization has not proved fatal for s. 8 purposes. Davies J.
recognized this distinction, correctly in our view, at para. 218 of his
reasons:
The interception of private
communications in exigent circumstances is not like situations of hot pursuit,
entry into a dwelling place to respond to a 9-1-1 call, or searches incidental
to arrest when public safety is engaged. In those circumstances, the person who
has been the subject of a search will immediately be aware of both the
circumstances and consequences of police action. The invasion of privacy by
interception of private communications will, however, be undetectable, unknown
and undiscoverable by those targeted unless the state seeks to rely on the
results of its intentionally secretive activities in a subsequent prosecution.
[82]
Accountability for police use of wiretapping
without judicial authorization is important for s. 8 purposes. In Hunter v.
Southam, Dickson J. explained that “[a] provision authorizing . . . an
unreviewable power would clearly be inconsistent with s. 8 of the Charter ”
(p. 166). In the context of Part VI of the Code, apart from
interceptions authorized under s. 184.1 ,
accountability is achieved by means of after-the-fact notice and reporting.
[83]
After-the-fact notice should not be viewed as
irrelevant or of little value for s. 8 purposes. In this regard, we agree with
the observations of the intervener Criminal Lawyers’ Association (Ontario):
.
. . notice is neither irrelevant to s. 8 protection, nor is it a “weak” way of
protecting s. 8 rights, simply because it occurs after the invasion of
privacy. A requirement of after-the-fact notice casts a constitutionally
important light back on the statutorily authorised intrusion. The right to
privacy implies not just freedom from unreasonable search and seizure, but also
the ability to identify and challenge such invasions, and to seek a meaningful
remedy. Notice would enhance all these interests. In the case of a secret
warrantless wiretap, notice to intercepted person stands almost alone as an
external safeguard. [Emphasis in original; footnote omitted; Factum, at para.
31.]
[84]
The jurisprudence is clear that an important
objective of the prior authorization requirement is to prevent unreasonable
searches. In those exceptional cases in which prior authorization is not
essential to a reasonable search, additional safeguards may be necessary, in
order to help ensure that the extraordinary power is not being abused.
Challenges to the authorizations at trial provide some safeguards, but are not
adequate as they will only address instances in which charges are laid and
pursued to trial. Thus, the notice requirement, which is practical in these
circumstances, provides some additional transparency and serves as a further
check that the extraordinary power is not being abused.
[85]
In our view, Parliament has failed to provide
adequate safeguards to address the issue of accountability in relation to s. 184.4.
Unless a criminal prosecution results, the targets of the wiretapping may never
learn of the interceptions and will be unable to challenge police use of this
power. There is no other measure in the Code to ensure specific
oversight of the use of s. 184.4. For s. 8 purposes, bearing in mind that s.
184.4 allows for the highly intrusive interception of private communications
without prior judicial authorization, we see that as a fatal defect. In its
present form, the provision fails to meet the minimum constitutional standards
of s. 8 of the Charter .
[86]
After-the-fact notice, such as that currently
found at s. 196(1), is one way of correcting this deficiency; it may not be the
only one. Other effective means are no doubt open to Parliament. We note,
however, that on three prior occasions, the government has introduced
legislation designed to incorporate a notice provision into s. 184.4, akin to
the notice provision found in s. 196(1) of the Code.
(2) The Lack of a Reporting Requirement to
Parliament
[87]
Section 195(1) of the Code requires that
reports of judicial authorizations granted under either s. 186 or s. 188 of the
Code be sent to Parliament. While other reasons may exist, one of the
purposes served by s. 195 is to apprise Parliament of the frequency with which
the police intercept private communications and the circumstances under which
such interceptions are made.
[88]
Section 184.4 requires no such reporting. The
trial judge found this to be a constitutional deficiency. In his view,
combined with the absence of a notice requirement, it eliminated without
justification “the constitutional safeguards necessary to balance the interests
of the state in preventing harm and prosecuting crime with its obligation to
protect s. 8 Charter rights” (para. 240, subpara. 4). While exigent
circumstances and the need to protect people and property from imminent serious
harm could justify granting the state greater leeway than normal “in the
invasion of privacy rights”, exigency could not be used “to excuse the elimination of those constitutional safeguards that
are not impacted by the imperatives of an emergency” (para. 240, subpara. 5).
[89]
Accountability on the part of those who
intercept private communications under s. 184.4 without judicial authorization
is an important factor in assessing the constitutionality of s. 184.4. As we
have explained, the lack of a notice requirement or some other satisfactory
substitute renders the provision constitutionally infirm. Added safeguards,
such as the preparation of reports for Parliament, would certainly be welcome.
As a matter of policy, a reporting regime that keeps Parliament abreast of the
situation on the ground would seem to make good sense. That said, we do not
see it as a constitutional imperative.
[90]
While we accept that the reporting requirements
in s. 195 of the Code can be described as a measure of accountability,
we adopt the view of Dambrot J. in Riley (No. 1), at para. 117, that “a
legislative reporting requirement such as s. 195 that does not provide for
active oversight of wiretapping generally, far less any particular use of the
wiretap provisions, cannot be a constitutional requirement of a reasonable
wiretap power within the meaning of s. 8 ”.
(3) The Lack of a Record-Keeping Requirement
[91]
The respondents and some of the interveners
submit that without a record-keeping requirement there is no ability to review
the decisions of the police to invoke the provision.
[92]
In our view, this is yet another aspect of
ensuring accountability. While we have concluded that an accountability
mechanism is necessary to protect the important privacy interests at stake, we
are satisfied that a notice provision would adequately meet that need. In
emergency situations of a kind that would justify the use of s. 184.4, the
police will be focussed on the emergency and it would be impractical to require
contemporaneous detailed record keeping in such situations.
(4) The Need to Restrict the Use That Can
Be Made of the Interceptions
[93]
It was submitted that s. 184.4 should include
restrictions similar to those in s. 184.1 limiting the permissible use of the
interceptions. Section s. 184.1 permits an agent of the state to intercept
communications if the agent believes on reasonable grounds that there is a risk
of bodily harm to a person who is a party to the communication and who consents
to the interception. Section 184.1(2) makes interceptions admissible in
evidence only in proceedings relating to bodily harm and s. 184.1(3) requires
that the interceptions be destroyed if they do not relate to bodily harm.
Obviously, Parliament struck a different balance with this provision. It
requires consent of one of the parties to the communication and imposes
restrictions upon its use. Further, it does not contain many of the conditions
set out in s. 184.4, including the unavailability of judicial
pre-authorization. As discussed above, Parliament has built in a number of
conditions to ensure that s. 184.4 is used only in exigent circumstances to
prevent serious harm. While a statutory restriction on the use that can be
made of the interception is not necessary for constitutional purposes, we make
no comment on the admissibility of intercepted communications relating to
matters that would not have justified the use of s. 184.4.
IV. Conclusion
[94]
Section 184.4 is an emergency provision. It
allows for extreme measures in extreme circumstances. It recognizes that on
occasion, the privacy interests of some may have to yield temporarily for the
greater good of society — here,
the protection of lives and property from harm that is both serious and
imminent. Parliament has included stringent conditions to ensure that the
provision is only used in exigent circumstances. In our view, these conditions
effect an appropriate balance between an individual’s reasonable expectation of
privacy and society’s interest in preventing serious harm. To that extent, s.
184.4 passes constitutional muster.
[95]
In its present form however, s. 184.4 contains
no accountability measures. That, in our view, is fatal and constitutes a
breach of s. 8 of the Charter .
A. Section 1 Analysis
[96]
We must now address whether the provision is
justified under s. 1 of the Charter . R. v. Oakes, [1986]
1 S.C.R. 103, established the two questions that must be answered: (1) Does the
impugned provision serve a pressing and substantial objective?; and (2) Are the
means used to meet the objective proportional to the limit on the right?
[97]
In our view, there is little doubt that the
objective of preventing serious harm to persons or property in exigent
circumstances is pressing and substantial. We also find that this objective is
rationally connected to the power provided under s. 184.4.
[98]
It is at the proportionality analysis that the
provision fails. The obligation to give notice to intercepted parties would
not impact in any way the ability of the police to act in emergencies.
It would, however, enhance the ability of targeted individuals to identify and
challenge invasions to their privacy and seek meaningful remedies.
Parliament’s goal of preventing reasonably apprehended serious harm could still
be achieved by implementing this accountability mechanism.
[99]
Because the provision fails to satisfy the
second stage of the Oakes test, we conclude that s. 184.4 is unconstitutional.
B. What is the Appropriate Remedy?
[100]
With respect to remedy, Lamer C.J. considered
the means available to cure a breach of s. 52 of the Constitution Act, 1982
in Schachter v. Canada, [1992] 2 S.C.R. 679. One such remedy
involves reading in; another involves the suspension of the declaration for a
period of time.
[101]
While reading in a notice requirement may be one
available option, it is not appropriate given our additional concern about the
breadth of the term “peace officer”. In light of the record before us, we have
not reached any conclusion as to the constitutionality of s. 184.4 as it
applies to “non-police” peace officers. However, given that the section may be
invoked by a wide variety of people, we do not foreclose the possibility that
it may be vulnerable for that reason. Parliament may also wish to include a
reporting requirement into the provision.
[102]
For these reasons, we believe that the appropriate
remedy is to declare s. 184.4 unconstitutional and leave it to Parliament
to redraft a constitutionally compliant provision. In doing so, Parliament may
wish to address the additional concerns we have expressed about the provision
in its present form. We would suspend the declaration of invalidity for a
period of 12 months to afford Parliament the time needed to examine and redraft
the provision.
[103]
We declare that s. 184.4 of the Code as
enacted is constitutionally invalid legislation and suspend this declaration of
invalidity for a period of 12 months. We therefore dismiss the appeal but set
aside subparas. 1 through 6 of the trial judge’s order, found at para. 454 of
his reasons.
Appeal dismissed.
Solicitor for the
appellant: Attorney General of British Columbia, Vancouver.
Solicitors for the respondent Yat
Fung Albert Tse: Wilson, Buck, Butcher & Sears, Vancouver.
Solicitor for the respondent Nhan
Trong Ly: Brent V. Bagnall, Vancouver.
Solicitor for the respondent Viet
Bac Nguyen: Howard Rubin, Q.C., Vancouver.
Solicitor for the respondent Huong
Dac Doan: Kenneth S. Westlake, Q.C., Vancouver.
Solicitors for the respondents
Daniel Luis Soux and Myles Alexander Vandrick: Donaldson’s,
Vancouver.
Solicitor for the intervener the
Attorney General of Canada: Attorney General of Canada, Vancouver.
Solicitor for the intervener the
Attorney General of Ontario: Attorney General of Ontario, Toronto.
Solicitor for the intervener the
Attorney General of Quebec: Attorney General of Quebec, Sainte‑Foy.
Solicitors for the intervener the
Criminal Lawyers’ Association (Ontario): Lacy Wilkinson, Toronto;
Stockwoods, Toronto.
Solicitors for the intervener the
British Columbia Civil Liberties Association: Blake, Cassels &
Graydon, Vancouver.
Solicitors
for the intervener the Canadian Civil Liberties Association: McCarthy
Tétrault, Toronto.