SUPREME
COURT OF CANADA
Between:
Regent
Nolet and John Vatsis
Appellants
and
Her Majesty The
Queen
Respondent
Coram: McLachlin C.J. and Binnie, LeBel, Deschamps, Fish,
Abella, Charron, Rothstein and Cromwell JJ.
Reasons for
Judgment:
(paras. 1 to 55)
|
Binnie J. (McLachlin C.J. and
LeBel, Deschamps, Fish, Abella, Charron, Rothstein and Cromwell JJ.
concurring)
|
______________________________
R. v. Nolet, 2010 SCC 24, [2010] 1 S.C.R. 851
Regent Nolet and John Vatsis Appellants
v.
Her Majesty The Queen Respondent
Indexed as: R. v. Nolet
2010 SCC 24
File No.: 33032.
2009: December 14; 2010: June 25.
Present: McLachlin C.J. and Binnie, LeBel,
Deschamps, Fish, Abella, Charron, Rothstein and Cromwell JJ.
on appeal from the court of appeal
for saskatchewan
Constitutional law — Charter of Rights — Search and
seizure — Warrantless searches conducted in conjunction with random roadside
stop — Police officer finding regulatory violations after random stop of truck
of accused and discovering large amount of cash bundled in small bills during
search of truck cab while looking for truck’s documents — Accused subsequently
arrested for possession of proceeds of crime — Search of truck trailer two
hours after arrest revealing hidden compartment with large quantity of
marijuana — Additional documentation relevant to provincial offences discovered
next day during inventory search of truck cab — Whether truck stopped for
legitimate highway purposes — Whether “predominant purpose” test is applicable
to invalidate regulatory search when police look in truck cab expecting to find
evidence of criminal activity as well as contraventions of commercial trucking
regulations — Whether police had reasonable and probable grounds to arrest
accused — Whether long‑haul truckers have reasonable expectation of
privacy in truck cab — Whether searches of truck infringed constitutional
rights of accused to be secure against unreasonable search and seizure — If so,
whether evidence gathered during these searches should be excluded — Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms, ss. 8 , 24(2) — The Highways and Transportation
Act, 1997, S.S. 1997, c. H‑3.01, s. 63(5)(b).
Constitutional law — Charter of Rights — Arbitrary
detention — Random roadside stops — Whether random stop of truck of accused by
police related to legitimate highway purposes — Whether random stop infringed
constitutional rights of accused not to be arbitrarily detained — Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms, s. 9 — The Highway Traffic Act, S.S. 1986,
c. H‑3.1, s. 40.
Police — Powers — Search powers — Warrantless
searches conducted in conjunction with random roadside stop — Police officer
finding regulatory violations after random stop of truck of accused and
discovering large amount of cash bundled in small bills during search of truck
cab while looking for truck’s documents — Accused subsequently arrested for
possession of proceeds of crime — Search of truck trailer two hours after
arrest revealed large quantity of marijuana in hidden compartment — Additional
documentation relevant to provincial regulatory offences discovered next day
during inventory search of truck cab — Whether police search powers exercised
in manner that infringed right of accused to be secure against unreasonable
search and seizure — Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, s. 8 .
The accused were travelling along the Saskatchewan
portion of the Trans‑Canada Highway in an empty commercial tractor‑trailer
truck licensed in Quebec when they were stopped by an RCMP officer engaged in a
random check under the provincial Highways and Transportation Act (“H&TA”).
The officer noticed an expired fuel sticker on the outside of the truck and,
after requesting the vehicle registration, noted that it was not registered for
commercial driving in Saskatchewan. These constituted provincial regulatory
offences. The logbook also did not correspond to the stops listed in the
proffered bills of lading. The officer was given permission to inspect the
trailer. It was empty, but it “didn’t appear right” to the officer. Being
alone, he decided not to enter the trailer but to pursue the issue of the
defective trucking documents. He advised the accused that he would be
inspecting the truck cab, but did not seek consent for the search. He
found a small duffle bag immediately behind the driver’s seat in the sleeping
compartment. As relevant documents were often kept in that manner, and as, at
a touch, it appeared to contain paper, he opened it to find $115,000 bundled in
small denominations. As this was typical of drug transactions, he immediately
placed the accused under arrest for possession of the proceeds of crime. The
officer summoned back‑up and a roadside search of the trailer confirmed
the likelihood of a hidden compartment. The truck was then driven to the
nearest RCMP detachment where, about an hour and a half later, a hidden
compartment containing 392 pounds of marijuana was found. The following
day, during an inventory search of the contents of the truck cab, a different
officer discovered considerable additional documentation relevant to the H&TA
offences. The accused were charged with trafficking, possession of marijuana
for the purposes of trafficking, and possession of proceeds of crime. The
trial judge concluded that the searches were unreasonable, excluded the money and
the marijuana, and acquitted the accused. In a majority decision, the Court of
Appeal found no infringement of the Charter , set aside the acquittals
and ordered a new trial.
Held: The appeal should
be dismissed.
The courts must proceed step by step through the
interactions of the police and the accused from the initial stop onwards to
determine whether, as the situation developed, the police stayed within their
authority, having regard to the information lawfully obtained at each stage of
their inquiry. Such information as it emerges may entitle the police to
proceed further, or, as the case may be, require them to end their enquiries
and allow the vehicle to resume its journey.
If the Charter is violated, it makes little
difference that the police in searching the truck had in mind multiple
purposes. A valid regulatory purpose, whether predominant or not, would not
sanitize or excuse a Charter violation.
Random roadside checks of vehicles for highway traffic
purposes must be limited to their intended purpose and cannot be turned into an
unfounded general inquisition or an unreasonable search.
Here, the random stop was directly related to legitimate
highway purposes and was valid. As such, this initial stop under s. 40 of
The Highway Traffic Act did not violate s. 9 of the Charter .
The H&TA power of search and seizure was then properly invoked
because the officer quickly obtained reasonable grounds to believe that the
accused were operating the truck in various violations of the H&TA.
At the time the officer began to investigate the truck cab, it was within his
statutory authority to search for further evidence related to H&TA
offences. In these circumstances, the continued detention of the accused was
not arbitrary, and the search for relevant papers was authorized by
s. 63(5)(b) of the H&TA and, at least initially, was not
unreasonable.
While much of the debate on the appeal focussed on
whether the search of the duffle bag was or was not covered by s. 63(5),
this inquiry is important but not sufficient. A distinction must be drawn
between the existence of a police power and the further issue of whether a
power, otherwise legal, is exercised in violation of s. 8 of the Charter ,
having regard to a trucker’s reasonable expectation of some privacy in the
sleeping area of the cab, including the space behind the front seats where the
duffle bag with the money was found. While the accused did not testify about
their subjective belief, a court may presume that individuals would expect a measure
of privacy in what, for a long‑distance trucker, suffices as a temporary
mobile home. Even rudimentary living quarters are subject to an objectively
reasonable expectation of privacy. In the case of truck cabs, the level of
expectation is necessarily low. Commercial trucking is a highly regulated
industry and commercial drivers are well aware of the police authority to
conduct random stops and to search a vehicle for evidence of infractions.
The trial judge found, and the accused contend, that the
officer’s search of the duffle bag should be attributed predominantly to his
interest in illegal criminal activity and, as such, fell outside any valid
regulatory purpose. The question, however, is not which purpose is predominate
or subordinate. As long as there is a continuing regulatory purpose on which
to ground the exercise of the regulatory power, the proper issue is whether the
power was exercised in such a way as to violate s. 8 of the Charter
by infringing the reasonable expectations of privacy of the accused.
In this case, as events progressed from the police stop
to the initial regulatory search of the cab, there was no police invasion of
the minimal privacy interest that existed. The officer did not proceed
immediately to open the duffle bag without some preliminary evaluation of its
likely relevance to the regulatory search. He pushed down on the outside of
the bag and felt and heard what seemed like paper, suggesting the existence of
items connected to the H&TA inquiry. In the circumstances, it was
not unreasonable, given the very limited privacy interest of the accused, for
the officer to open the bag. At that point, the cash was in plain view.
The arrest for possession of the proceeds of crime was
also valid. While the discovery of a large sum of cash may not on its own
constitute objective, reasonable and probable grounds to arrest for possession
of proceeds of crime, the factual elements of this case, viewed cumulatively
rather than in isolation, provided objective support for the officer’s
subjective belief that he had reasonable and probable grounds to make the
arrests.
The seizure of the marijuana was Charter ‑compliant
as the search was incidental to a valid arrest for possession of the proceeds of
crime. The officer was justified in searching the vehicle in which the cash
was found for evidence of the criminal activity to which the money related.
The trial judge correctly found an absence of “exigent circumstances”, but the
justification for the warrantless search was the link between the location and
purpose of the search and the grounds for the arrest, not exigent
circumstances. The lapse of about two hours between the roadside arrest and
the search of the trailer’s secret compartment is not significant and did not
undermine the close causal and spatial connection between the arrest and the
search. The truck was impounded in the RCMP yard. This delay resulted in
no prejudice to the accused. In these circumstances, no distinct and separate
demonstration of reasonable and probable grounds was required.
The inventory search of the cab later in the morning
was, however, invalid. That search was pursuant to RCMP administrative
procedures rather than incidental to the arrest of the accused. As a result,
it did not meet the requirements of a warrantless search, and the fruits of the
“inventory” search were thus harvested in breach of s. 8 . Nevertheless,
the evidence ought not to be excluded under s. 24(2) of the Charter .
The RCMP officers would have discovered it had they continued the regulatory
search. In any event, the subsequent inventory search for administrative
purpose of an impounded truck that has already been searched previously to
discover evidence of a crime is a technical breach with a minimal impact on Charter ‑protected
interests.
Cases Cited
Distinguished: R. v.
Harrison, 2009 SCC 34, [2009] 2 S.C.R. 494; R. v. Ladouceur, 2002
SKCA 73, 165 C.C.C. (3d) 321; Brown v. Durham Regional Police Force
(1998), 43 O.R. (3d) 223; R. v. Jarvis, 2002 SCC 73, [2002] 3 S.C.R.
757; referred to: R. v. Mellenthin, [1992] 3 S.C.R.
615; R. v. Collins, [1987] 1 S.C.R. 265; R. v. Caslake, [1998] 1
S.C.R. 51; Dedman v. The Queen, [1985] 2 S.C.R. 2; R. v. Hufsky,
[1988] 1 S.C.R. 621; R. v. Ladouceur, [1990] 1 S.C.R. 1257; R. v.
Harris, 2007 ONCA 574, 87 O.R. (3d) 214; R. v. Orbanski, 2005 SCC
37, [2005] 2 S.C.R. 3; R. v. Edwards, [1996] 1 S.C.R. 128; R. v.
Tessling, 2004 SCC 67, [2004] 3 S.C.R. 432; R. v. Kang‑Brown,
2008 SCC 18, [2008] 1 S.C.R. 456; Johnson v. Ontario (Minister of Revenue) (1990),
75 O.R. (2d) 558; R. v. Belnavis, [1997] 3 S.C.R. 341; R. v. Annett (1984),
17 C.C.C. (3d) 332, leave to appeal refused, [1985] 1 S.C.R. v; R. v. Law,
2002 SCC 10, [2002] 1 S.C.R. 227; R. v. Sewell, 2003 SKCA 52, 175 C.C.C.
(3d) 242; R. v. Feeney, [1997] 2 S.C.R. 13; R. v. Perello, 2005
SKCA 8, 193 C.C.C. (3d) 151; R. v. Franks, 2003 SKCA 70, 176 C.C.C. (3d)
488; R. v. Marin, [1994] O.J. No. 1280 (QL); R. v. Jacques, [1996]
3 S.C.R. 312; R. v. Golden, 2001 SCC 83, [2001] 3 S.C.R. 679; R. v.
Rao (1984), 12 C.C.C. (3d) 97; Cloutier v. Langlois, [1990] 1 S.C.R.
158; R. v. Caprara (2006), 144 C.R.R. (2d) 287; R. v. Chubak,
2009 ABCA 8, 243 C.C.C. (3d) 202; R. v. Grant, 2009 SCC 32, [2009] 2
S.C.R. 353.
Statutes and Regulations Cited
Canadian Charter of Rights
and Freedoms, ss. 1 , 8 , 9 , 24(2) .
Dangerous Goods Transportation Act, S.S. 1984‑85‑86, c. D‑1.2.
Highway Traffic Act,
S.S. 1986, c. H‑3.1, s. 40(8), (9).
Highways and Transportation Act, 1997, S.S. 1997, c. H‑3.01, ss. 63(5), (6), 64(1), (2),
(3), 66(1), 69(1).
Motor Carrier Act, S.S. 1986, c. M‑21.2, s. 32.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Saskatchewan Court of
Appeal (Jackson, Smith and Wilkinson JJ.A.), 2009 SKCA 8, 320 Sask. R. 179, 444
W.A.C. 179, 183 C.R.R. (2d) 138, 245 C.C.C. (3d) 419, 74 M.V.R. (5th) 1, [2009]
4 W.W.R. 604, [2009] S.J. No. 40 (QL), 2009 CarswellSask 39, setting aside
the acquittals of the accused and ordering a new trial. Appeal dismissed.
Mark Brayford, Q.C.,
and Glen E. Luther, for the appellants.
Douglas G. Curliss
and Mark Covan, for the respondent.
The judgment of the Court was delivered by
[1]
Binnie J. — This appeal is
concerned with police search powers incident to random stops under the
Saskatchewan Highways and Transportation Act, 1997, S.S. 1997, c. H-3.01
(“H&TA”), and, in particular, whether the police conduct in this
case amounted to an abuse of their statutory stop and search powers so as to
render evidence of drug dealing and the “proceeds of crime” inadmissible under
s. 8 or s. 9 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms .
[2]
The appellants were travelling eastward along the Saskatchewan portion
of the Trans-Canada Highway with a passenger (now deceased) in an empty 53-foot
commercial tractor-trailer unit licensed in Quebec. When pulled over by an
RCMP officer in a “spot check”, it emerged the truck’s registration was not
prorated to include the province. The appropriate fuel sticker had expired.
The appellant Nolet produced a logbook that was incomplete but indicated that
the truck normally operated east of the Manitoba border. One discovery led to
another and in the end the police found $115,000 in cash in the truck and 392
pounds of marijuana, valued at somewhere between $1.1 million to $1.5 million,
concealed in a secret compartment in the trailer. The appellants were charged
in a multi-count indictment alleging (1) trafficking, (2) possession of
marijuana for the purposes of trafficking, and (3) possession of proceeds of
crime in excess of $5,000. The trial judge found Charter breaches and
excluded the evidence (2006 SKQB 393, 283 Sask. R. 159 ). She acquitted the
appellants. The Court of Appeal, Jackson J.A. dissenting in part, reversed
(2009 SKCA 8, 320 Sask. R. 179 ).
[3]
Clearly random checks of vehicles for highway purposes must be limited
to their intended purpose and cannot be turned into “an unfounded general
inquisition or an unreasonable search”: R. v. Mellenthin, [1992] 3
S.C.R. 615, at p. 624.
[4]
Nevertheless, roadside stops sometimes develop in unpredictable ways.
It is necessary for a court to proceed step by step through the interactions of
the police and the appellants from the initial stop onwards to determine
whether, as the situation developed, the police stayed within their authority,
having regard to the information lawfully obtained at each stage of their
inquiry. Analysed in this way, I believe the majority reached the correct
conclusion. I would dismiss the appeal.
I. Facts
[5]
On February 16, 2004, a little after 11:00 p.m., the appellants and
passenger Marc Blain were stopped by an RCMP officer engaged in a random check
under the H&TA. The appellant Vatsis was driving the
Quebec-licensed commercial tractor-trailer unit. Nolet was in the passenger seat.
Blain, now deceased, was behind the front seats in a sleeping compartment. The
officer noticed the expired IFTA fuel sticker on the outside of the vehicle.
Driving without a current sticker is a provincial offence. He requested the
driver’s licence, logbook (which should indicate, e.g., whether the drivers had
been too long on the road) and vehicle registration. The documents produced by
Vatsis listed Nolet as a co-driver. Blain was not mentioned (it was later
explained that he was just a passenger). Nolet told the officer they were now
travelling empty having unloaded cargo in Edmonton and Moose Jaw. These stops
were not recorded in the logbook, which equally did not correspond to the stops
listed in the proffered bills of lading covering the westbound portion of the
trip. There seemed to the officer to have been some fiddling with the odometer
numbers.
[6]
The failure to prorate the vehicle registration for commercial driving
in Saskatchewan is also a provincial infraction. Questioned about the
registration, Nolet said that the vehicle did not usually go any further west
than Ontario. A commercial vehicle without the requisite permits can
immediately be prohibited from further travel within the province (s. 66(1) of
the H&TA).
[7]
The officer asked whether he could inspect the trailer. Nolet agreed.
The trailer was empty. The police officer thought it “looked odd” but “at that
point I couldn’t put my finger on it . . . it didn’t appear right” (A.R., vol.
2, at p. 178).
[8]
The officer, being alone, decided not to enter the trailer but to pursue
the issue of defective trucking documents. He testified as follows:
A. I determined that there were a number of concerns with this
vehicle and its documents. I returned to the tractor with Mr. Nolet. I
advised them that I would be inspecting the interior of the tractor amongst
other things, documents as well.
Q. And what was the nature of the documents you hoped to obtain
from the interior of the tractor?
A. I had hoped to obtain documents to confirm or
dispute the contents of the log books, . . . previous bills of ladin[g],
tickets, those types of documents. I also wanted to see if they were running
with multiple log books, whether or not the third person, Mr. Blain had a log
book, whether there was another log book for Mr. Vatsis. Hopefully finding
older log books, those were the sorts of documents that I was interested in.
[A.R., vol. 2, at pp. 179-80]
[9]
The officer did not seek consent from the appellants for this search —
he testified it was because the occupants had cooperated so far. Immediately
behind the driver’s seat in the sleeping compartment, he found a small Roots
blue and white duffle bag. The officer testified that when he touched the bag
its contents crackled like paper, so he opened it, assuming (he said) it
contained old logbooks or travel documents. He testified that in his
experience “often truck drivers will collect or keep various documents over
long periods of time in a bag or in a box similar to that size I suppose, so I
would be expecting to find documents in a briefcase or a bag or a box or even
loose amongst the various areas of the tractor” (A.R., vol. 2, at pp. 181-82).
However the duffle bag contained money — $115,000 — bundled in small denominations,
mainly $20 bills. The officer testified that in his experience this sort of
packaging of cash was typical of drug transactions and he immediately placed
the appellants and Blain under arrest for possession of the proceeds of crime.
Nine minutes had elapsed since the initial stop.
[10] Police
back-up was summoned. The trailer was inspected again. At this point the
officers discovered that the interior measurement of the trailer was about
three feet shorter than the exterior length, indicating the presence of a
hidden compartment. The officers directed the appellants to drive the rig
about 10 kilometres to the nearest RCMP detachment, where they arrived just
before midnight.
[11] About
an hour and a half later, the officers opened up the hidden compartment. It
contained 392 pounds of packaged cannabis marijuana valued at between $1.1 and
$1.5 million (C.A., at para. 1).
[12] The
following day around 1:00 p.m., RCMP Corporal Caroline Houston of the
Integrated Proceeds of Crime Unit made an inventory of the contents of the
tractor-trailer pursuant to the policy of the RCMP Seized Property Management
Directorate. She discovered considerable additional documentation relevant to
the H&TA offences, including factory decals, registration papers and
permits for different companies, etc. (C.A., at paras. 6 and 48-50). This
paraphernalia when applied to the exterior would make the truck look like “a
completely different truck” (A.R., vol. 3, at p. 87).
[13] At no
time during this series of inspections, searches and seizures did the police
obtain a search warrant.
II. Relevant
Statutory Provisions
[14]
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms
8. Everyone has the right to be secure against unreasonable
search or seizure.
9. Everyone has the right not to be
arbitrarily detained or imprisoned.
The Highway
Traffic Act, S.S. 1986, c. H-31
40 . .
.
(8) A peace
officer who:
(a) is
readily identifiable as a peace officer; and
(b) is in the
lawful execution of his or her duties and responsibilities;
may require
the person in charge of or operating a motor vehicle to stop that vehicle.
(9) A person in charge of or operating a motor vehicle shall, when
signalled or requested to stop by a peace officer pursuant to subsection (8),
immediately bring that vehicle to a safe stop.
The Highways
and Transportation Act, 1997, S.S. 1997, c. H-3.01
63 . .
.
(5) Where the
peace officer or the person appointed by the minister has reasonable grounds to
believe that a vehicle is being operated in contravention of . . . a regulation
made pursuant to clauses 69(1)(v) to (oo), the peace officer or person
appointed by the minister may:
(a) request
or signal to the person in charge of or operating the vehicle to stop the
vehicle;
(b) search
the vehicle for evidence of an offence; and
(c) seize
anything that may be evidence of an offence.
(6) The
person in charge of or operating a vehicle, when requested or signalled to stop
pursuant to subsection (5), shall:
(a)
immediately bring the vehicle to a safe stop;
(b) permit
the peace officer or the person appointed by the minister to search the
vehicle; and
(c) provide
any information that the peace officer or person appointed by the minister
requires in the fulfilment of his or her duties pursuant to this Act or the
regulations.
64(1)
Where a justice of the peace or judge of the Provincial Court of
Saskatchewan is satisfied by information on the oath of a peace officer or a
person appointed by the minister that there are reasonable grounds to believe
that an offence against this Act has occurred and that evidence of that offence
is likely to be found, the justice of the peace or the judge of the Provincial
Court of Saskatchewan may issue a warrant to do all or any of the
following:
(a) enter and
search any place or premises named in the warrant;
(b) search
any vehicle described in the warrant;
(c) seize
anything that may be evidence of an offence against this Act.
(2) With a
warrant issued pursuant to subsection (1), the peace officer or person
appointed by the minister may:
(a) enter and
search any place or premises named in the warrant;
(b) search
any vehicle described in the warrant;
(c) open and
examine any trunk, box, bag, parcel, closet, cupboard or other receptacle that
the peace officer or person appointed by the minister finds in the place,
premises or vehicle;
(d) require
the production of and examine any records or property that the peace
officer or person appointed by the minister believes, on reasonable grounds,
may contain information related to an offence against this Act;
(e) remove,
for the purpose of making copies, any records examined pursuant to this
section; and
(f) seize and
remove from any place, premises or vehicle searched anything that may be
evidence of an offence against this Act.
(3) Subject
to subsection (4), the peace officer or person appointed by the minister may
exercise all or any of the powers mentioned in subsection (2) without a
warrant issued pursuant to this section if:
(a) the
conditions for obtaining a warrant exist; and
(b) the peace
officer or person appointed by the minister has reasonable grounds to believe
that the delay necessary to obtain a warrant would result:
(i) in danger
to human life or safety; or
(ii) in the loss,
removal or destruction of evidence.
66(1) A peace officer, without a warrant, may seize any
vehicle that the peace officer has reasonable grounds to believe is being
driven in contravention of . . . regulations made pursuant to clauses 69(1)(v)
to (oo) and may retain it in his or her possession or store it in a suitable
place.
The Motor
Carrier Act, S.S. 1986, c. M-21.2
32(1)
A peace officer or a person appointed by the board may order the driver or
owner of a vehicle to submit the vehicle or any combination of vehicles
or the cargo being carried on such a vehicle to any examination and tests
that the peace officer considers necessary.
(2) If, in
the opinion of the peace officer or a person appointed by the board, the
vehicle or combination of vehicles or the cargo being carried on such a vehicle
is found to be unfit for transportation or dangerous to passengers or the
public or for any other reason results in a contravention of this Act or
the regulations, he may:
(a) order the
driver or the owner of the vehicle to take any steps that are necessary to
eliminate the contravention; and
(b) order
that the vehicle be removed from the highway until compliance with this Act
and the regulations is established.
(3) Every occupant of a vehicle which is being examined or tested
or the cargo of which is being examined or tested pursuant to this Act shall,
when requested, provide reasonable assistance to the person who is
conducting the examination.
III. Judgments
A. Court of Queen’s Bench of Saskatchewan (Pritchard
J.), 2006 SKQB 393, 283 Sask. R. 159
[15] The
trial judge held that the police inspection powers under legislation governing
commercial vehicles on the highway did not extend to permit a warrantless
search of the small duffle bag located in the sleeping compartment of a tractor
unit in circumstances where the officer had no reasonable or probable grounds
to believe that criminal offences had been committed. While the expectation of
privacy in a commercial vehicle is generally less than in a private vehicle,
which itself is generally less than in a private home or office, even this
lesser privacy interest was entitled to Charter protection. She stated:
Is it reasonable to conclude that the officer had
bona fide regulatory concerns that prompted him to further investigate this
commercial vehicle? On the one hand, he had found sufficient irregularities in
a very short span of time to be concerned that there could be more. He had
already found breaches of provincial legislation that justified at least one if
not more tickets. And, given that the unit was not registered for commercial
use in Saskatchewan, the officer was entitled to immediately prohibit the
vehicle from any further travel within the province until the proper permit was
obtained. Given these considerations and nothing more, it might be reasonable
to conclude that the officer continued his investigation to check for further
regulatory infractions. Nevertheless, given the totality of the circumstances,
it does appear that the officer was more interested in looking for evidence
of criminal activity than for contraventions of commercial trucking regulations.
I come to this conclusion based on the “irregularities” that were concerning
the officer and in particular, his suspicion that there may have been some
alterations done to the trailer. Such a concern does not relate primarily
to commercial trucking regulations. It relates to suspected criminal activity.
[Emphasis added; para. 19.]
[16] In the
trial judge’s view, the warrantless searches were unreasonable and the evidence
of the money and the marijuana was excluded. The appellants were acquitted.
B. Court of
Appeal for Saskatchewan, 2009 SKCA 8, 320 Sask. R. 179
(1) Wilkinson J.A. (Smith J.A. Concurring)
[17] In the
majority view, a mere hunch or speculation that a trailer had been altered or
refabricated, even if hidden contraband was the suspected reason for the
alteration, did not taint an otherwise lawful regulatory search. The
appellants had not established that the police were exploiting the highway
regulatory inspection as a convenient pretext in the rapidly unfolding
circumstances that confronted the officers at the roadside.
[18] The
detention was not arbitrary. The search for documents was authorized by law.
The police had not violated the appellants’ reasonable expectation of privacy.
There was no infringement of s. 8 . The money found in the duffle bag should
not have been excluded from evidence. The marijuana was located in a search
incidental to a lawful arrest. This is an exception to the principle that
warrantless searches are prima facie unreasonable. In the majority
view, the two items of evidence, namely the marijuana and the cash, ought both
to have been admitted into evidence. A new trial was ordered.
(2) Jackson J.A. (Dissenting in Part)
[19] Jackson
J.A. concluded that the trial judge did not err in holding that the police
officer could not rely on a regulatory search power once his “focus” became
criminal activity. A police officer could not search for contraband with that
as the purpose or one of the defined purposes of the search, because the search
authority extended to regulatory matters only. However, Jackson J.A. agreed
with the majority that if the arrest had been lawful, the searches undertaken
as incident to that arrest would have been lawful as well.
[20] Applying
s. 24(2) of the Charter , Jackson J.A. drew a distinction between the
money and the marijuana. In her view, the cash was rightly excluded, but the
marijuana ought to have been admitted. Thus, in the result, she would have sustained
the acquittal on the “proceeds of crime” charge, but set aside the acquittals
in relation to the possession and trafficking of drugs charges, and ordered a
new trial in relation to the drug charges only.
IV. Analysis
[21] At the
heart of this appeal lies the thorny issue of warrantless searches conducted in
conjunction with random roadside stops. A warrantless search is presumptively
unreasonable and contrary to s. 8 of the Charter , which guarantees to
everyone “the right to be secure against unreasonable search or seizure”. In
the absence of a warrant, the Crown must establish on a balance of
probabilities that the search was authorized by law, that the law itself is
reasonable, and that the manner in which the search was carried out was
reasonable: R. v. Collins, [1987] 1 S.C.R. 265, at p. 278, and R. v.
Caslake, [1998] 1 S.C.R. 51, at para. 10.
[22] The
appeal also engages s. 9 of the Charter (“the right not to be
arbitrarily detained or imprisoned”). A random vehicle stop on the highway is,
by definition, an arbitrary detention: Dedman v. The Queen, [1985] 2
S.C.R. 2; R. v. Hufsky, [1988] 1 S.C.R. 621; R. v. Ladouceur,
[1990] 1 S.C.R. 1257 (hereinafter “Ladouceur (Ont.)”); Mellenthin;
and R. v. Harris, 2007 ONCA 574, 87 O.R. (3d) 214. The detention will
only be justified under s. 1 of the Charter (Hufsky, at p. 637)
if the police act within the limited highway-related purposes for which the
powers were conferred (Ladouceur (Ont.), per Cory J., at p.
1287).
A. The
Initial Stop
[23] Random
roadside stops must be limited to their intended purposes. “A check stop does
not and cannot constitute a general search warrant for searching every vehicle,
driver and passenger that is pulled over”, per Cory J., in Mellenthin,
at p. 629. It thus becomes necessary to examine the authority claimed by the
police at each step from the original demand to the appellants to pull their
truck over on the Trans-Canada Highway to the discovery of the cash and
subsequently the marijuana a couple of hours later as well as the follow-up
“inventory search” the next morning, to determine at what point, if at all, the
police infringed the rights of the appellants under s. 8 or s. 9 of the Charter .
A roadside stop is not a static event. Information as it emerges may entitle
the police to proceed further, or, as the case may be, end their enquiries and
allow the vehicle to resume its journey.
[24] Much
of the debate on the appeal focussed on whether the search of the duffle bag
was or was not covered by s. 63(5) of the H&TA. This inquiry is
important but not sufficient. A distinction must be drawn between the
existence of a police power and the further issue of whether that power,
otherwise legal, is exercised in violation of s. 8 of the Charter ,
having regard to a trucker’s reasonable expectation of some privacy in the
sleeping area of the cab. An exclusive focus on police powers under the H&TA
may not give adequate weight to Charter concerns. Equally,
restricting the Court’s focus to the Charter may distract attention from
the important preliminary question of whether the police possessed the power to
conduct a search in the first place.
[25] The
Court has ruled on a number of occasions that pursuant to statutory authority,
the police officers can randomly stop persons for “reasons related to driving a
car such as checking the driver’s licence and insurance, the sobriety of the
driver and the mechanical fitness of the vehicle”: Ladouceur (Ont.),
at p. 1287. See also R. v. Orbanski, 2005 SCC 37, [2005] 2 S.C.R. 3, at
para. 41; Mellenthin, at p. 624. The courts below held that the
appellants’ truck was stopped for the valid purpose of carrying out an H&TA
document check, and this issue is no longer seriously in dispute. The stop was
valid. On this basis, the case is readily distinguishable from our Court’s
recent ruling in R. v. Harrison, 2009 SCC 34, [2009] 2 S.C.R. 494, where
the accused had been pulled over for no valid purpose. The police equally
exceed their powers in the Saskatchewan case of R. v. Ladouceur, 2002
SKCA 73, 165 C.C.C. (3d) 321 (hereinafter “Ladouceur (Sask.)”), where
the officers set up a random stop program called “Operation Recovery”
specifically to detect not only highway infractions but to “locate contraband being
transported on our highways” (para. 69). For that purpose the Saskatchewan
checkpoint was staffed not only with police, but on occasion customs and
immigration officials, “tobacco people”, wildlife officials and sniffer dogs
(para. 44). The random stop program in Ladouceur (Sask.) was designed
as a “comprehensive check for criminal activity” (para. 43) and was therefore
fatally flawed from the outset.
[26] In the
present case, by contrast, the random stop program was directly related to legitimate
highway purposes. Commercial trucking is regulated in every aspect from loads
and load safety under The Motor Carrier Act to potentially
dangerous cargo under The Dangerous Goods Transportation Act, S.S.
1984-85-86, c. D-1.2. As such, the initial stop, in this case under s. 40 of The
Highway Traffic Act, did not violate the s. 9 rights of the appellants: Ladouceur
(Ont.), at p. 1287; Orbanski, at para. 41.
B. The
Regulatory Search
[27] Section
32(1) of The Motor Carrier Act authorizes a peace officer to “order the
driver or owner of a vehicle to submit the vehicle . . . or the cargo being
carried on such a vehicle to any examination and tests that the peace officer
considers necessary”. In the same vein, s. 63(5) of the H&TA
provides that if a police officer “has reasonable grounds to believe that a
vehicle is being operated in contravention” of regulatory requirements, he may
conduct a warrantless search of “the vehicle for evidence of an offence” and
“seize anything that may be evidence of an offence”. In such cases, of course,
“an offence” refers to H&TA provisions that include regulation of
the manner in which any part of a vehicle or its load is to be marked or
labelled; the contents of a driver’s log and the manner in which a driver’s log
is to be kept and maintained; the number of hours a driver can be on duty or
drive; and, the classes or types of vehicles for which a trip inspection report
is to be completed (s. 69(1)).
C. The Highways and Transportation Act Power of
Search and Seizure Was Properly Invoked
[28] There
is no doubt that, after the initial stop, the officer quickly obtained
reasonable grounds to believe that the appellants were operating the truck in
violation of the H&TA, having regard to the lack of a truck licence
valid in Saskatchewan, the display of an expired fuel sticker and inconsistent
entries in the driver’s logbook. At the time the officer began to investigate
the cab of the tractor unit, it was quite within his statutory authority to
search for further evidence related to H&TA offences.
[29] In
these circumstances, the continued detention of the appellants was not
arbitrary and the search of the tractor-trailer rig for relevant papers was
authorized by s. 63(5)(b). At least initially, they were not unreasonable.
D. The Appellants’ Limited Expectation of Privacy
in the Sleeping Area of the Cab
[30] I
agree with the trial judge that drivers ordinarily have some expectation of
privacy in the sleeping area of a cab of the tractor-trailer, including the
space behind the front seats where the duffle bag with the money was found.
Whether or not an individual has a subjective expectation of privacy, and
whether or not that expectation is objectively reasonable, is an assessment to
be made having regard to the totality of the circumstances: R. v. Edwards,
[1996] 1 S.C.R. 128, at para. 45; R. v. Tessling, 2004 SCC 67, [2004] 3
S.C.R. 432; R. v. Kang-Brown, 2008 SCC 18, [2008] 1 S.C.R. 456, at
paras. 8-10 and 48. The onus of proof of such reasonable expectation, to a
probability standard, lies on the Charter claimant.
[31] While
the appellants did not testify about their subjective belief, the court may
presume that individuals would expect a measure of privacy in what, for a
long-distance trucker, suffices as a temporary mobile home. The expectation is
objectively reasonable because living quarters, however rudimentary, should not
be classified as a Charter -free zone: Johnson v. Ontario (Minister
of Revenue) (1990), 75 O.R. (2d) 558 (C.A.), and R. v. Belnavis,
[1997] 3 S.C.R. 341. Nevertheless, the level of expectation is necessarily low
because the cab of a tractor-trailer rig is not only a place of rest but a
place of work, and the whole of the cab is therefore vulnerable to frequent
random checks in relation to highway transport matters. As Wilkinson J.A.
pointed out, “[k]nowledge of the transportation legislation is a requirement to
be licensed as a driver. The [appellants] would be well aware of the
possibility of mandatory inspections and searches, whether for documents or for
potential violation of any one of the countless obligations imposed by the
regulatory scheme” (para. 70). Accordingly, there can be little expectation of
privacy, even in the sleeping area of a truck (particularly one which is
travelling in violation of relevant highway regulations). A stop may quickly
precipitate a search, and the occupants either know or ought to know of that
reality and govern themselves accordingly.
E. Did the Regulatory Search Authority Cease
Because of Taint by an Impermissible Criminal Law Purpose?
[32] As
stated, this is not a case where the random stop was constitutionally flawed
from the outset. The argument of the appellants is that an investigation
lawful at the outset became unlawful when the police officer, based on
information lawfully obtained from the appellants and the appearance of their
vehicle, began to suspect criminal activity. The trial judge found, and the
appellants contend, that the policeman’s search of the duffle bag should be
attributed predominantly to his interest in illegal criminal activity, and as
such, they say it fell outside any valid regulatory purpose.
[33] The
officer made no secret at trial of his interest in finding contraband. It was
part of his job to take an interest in contraband. In the nature of things,
contraband is a bigger issue for police than trucking documents. However, he
testified that it was only “at that point” of finding the money that he
believed “there was a good possibility there was a secret compartment in the
trailer” (A.R., vol. 2, at p. 204).
[34] The first
question is whether the police officer, in continuing the search, exceeded his
s. 63(5) authority when he reached the point of suspicion. The second question
is whether what he did, despite the authority of s. 63(5) to pursue regulatory
offences, was unreasonable in relation to the protected Charter privacy
interests of the accused in the sleeping area of the cab. The statutory
authority for the search and the reasonableness of its exercise are two
distinct issues.
[35] As to
the police powers issue, the trial judge agreed that notwithstanding that the
officer had found “sufficient irregularities in a very short span of time to be
concerned that there could be more” and that “it might be reasonable to
conclude that the officer continued his investigation to check for further
regulatory infractions”, nevertheless, “given the totality of the
circumstances, it does appear that the officer was more interested in
looking for evidence of criminal activity than for contraventions of commercial
trucking regulations” (para. 19 (emphasis added)). This led to a discussion
about “dual purpose” searches, and whether a “dominant” criminal law purpose
would invalidate an otherwise valid regulatory search or, on the contrary, a
legitimate regulatory purpose could “sanitize” or “cleanse” an unlawful
criminal law purpose.
[36] Wilkinson
J.A., for the majority in the court below, found the dual purpose debate
unhelpful and succinctly expressed the view that
the lawful aim cannot be used as a pretext, ruse, or subterfuge to
perpetuate the unlawful aim. That, ultimately, is the focal point of the
inquiry. It is not a question of degree, or determining which purpose is
predominate or subordinate. Rather, it is a question whether a lawful purpose
is being exploited to achieve an impermissible aim. [para. 85]
What happened
here, in her view, is not within the mischief contemplated by the late Chief
Justice Bayda in Ladouceur (Sask.) that “it is important not to
encourage the establishment of checkstops where a nominally lawful aim is but a
plausible facade for an unlawful aim” (para. 66).
[37] It is
to be expected that RCMP officers patrolling the Trans-Canada Highway are
interested in any number of potential infractions including criminal offences
as well as provincial matters. It could hardly be otherwise. However, as
pointed out by Martin J.A., “[t]he lawful search was not converted into an
unlawful or an unreasonable search because the officers, in addition, had the
expectation that the search might also uncover drugs”: R. v. Annett (1984),
17 C.C.C. (3d) 332 (Ont. C.A.), at p. 335, leave to appeal refused, [1985] 1
S.C.R. v.
[38] In Brown
v. Durham Regional Police Force (1998), 43 O.R. (3d) 223 (C.A.), the police
used the Ontario equivalent H&TA powers to stop and question bikers
attending a gathering of the Paradise Riders Motorcycle Club, suspected to be a
criminal organization. The police took advantage of the stop to gather
information about the individuals and the gathering. Doherty J.A., for the
court, while upholding as valid the police conduct in that particular case,
stated:
While I can find no sound reason for invalidating an
otherwise proper stop because the police used the opportunity afforded by that
stop to further some other legitimate interest, I do see strong policy reasons
for invalidating a stop where the police have an additional improper purpose.
Highway safety concerns are important, but they should not provide the police with
a means to pursue objects which are themselves an abuse of the police power or
are otherwise improper. [p. 238]
[39] Police
power, whether conferred by statute or at common law, is abused when it is
exercised in a manner that violates the Charter rights of an accused.
This is a better framework of analysis, in my opinion, than the “predominant
purpose” test applied here by the trial judge. If the Charter is
violated, it makes little difference, I think, that the police had in mind
multiple purposes. A valid regulatory purpose, whether predominant or not,
would not sanitize or excuse a Charter violation.
[40] This
position is consistent with what the Court said about Annett in R. v.
Law, 2002 SCC 10, [2002] 1 S.C.R. 227:
The distinguishing feature of Annett, however, is that the full
scope of the officers’ search was authorized by statute; thus, the only
issue was whether their hidden intentions rendered the search unreasonable.
[Emphasis added; para. 24.]
Law
involved a theft investigation. The police recovered a stolen security safe,
and decided to look at the contents for the totally unrelated purpose of
investigating potential tax evasion by the complainant in the theft case. We
held that the evidence obtained from the safe was properly excluded in the
resulting tax prosecution. Of interest for present purposes, however, is the
distinction noted by the Court between police powers and Charter
compliance.
[41] I
agree with Wilkinson J.A. that the question is not “determining which purpose is
predominate or subordinate” (para. 85). As long as there is a continuing
regulatory purpose on which to ground the exercise of the regulatory power, the
issue is whether the officer’s search of the duffle bag infringed the
reasonable expectations of privacy of the appellants. I do not think that it
did, having regard to the totality of the circumstances as they had progressed
to the time of that search.
F. Did
Discovery of the Cash in the Duffle Bag Violate Section 8?
[42] The
trial judge, with respect, set the barrier to the ongoing police investigation
too high when she wrote:
In this case, I have no difficulty in concluding that
the initial stop and detention were lawful and did not infringe s. 9 .
Likewise, the initial search did not violate s. 8. However, once the officer
became suspicious that alterations had been made to the trailer, the focus of
his inquiry shifted from a regulatory inspection to a criminal investigation.
Given this change in focus, he required either informed consent or reasonable
and probable grounds to continue searching for evidence to support his
suspicions, neither of which existed. [para. 28]
[43] I do
not agree that the officer’s concurrent interest in contraband (even if it was
“predominant”) rendered the H&TA search unlawful or unreasonable
within the scope of s. 8 of the Charter . As already stated, knowledge
of transportation legislation is a requirement to be licensed as a driver.
Commercial drivers are well aware of the police authority to conduct random
stops and to search a vehicle for evidence of infractions. Commercial trucking
is a highly regulated industry. Breaching a law will not in itself reduce an
individual’s legitimate privacy expectations (otherwise, it would be argued
that offenders would always forfeit s. 8 protection relevant to evidence of the
offence), but here, as events progressed from the police stop to the initial
regulatory search of the cab, there was no police invasion of the minimal
privacy interest that existed. As was the case in Annett, “the
expectation that the search might also uncover drugs” (p. 335) did not convert
a Charter -compliant regulatory search into a Charter violation: R.
v. Sewell, 2003 SKCA 52, 175 C.C.C. (3d) 242.
[44] The
trial judge did not express any doubt about the officer’s evidence that
relevant papers were frequently dispersed around a cab, often collected in a
bag similar to the one at issue here, and that when he “pushed down on the
duffel bag, [he] felt and heard paper products inside” (A.R., vol. 2, at p.
181). In other words, the officer did not proceed immediately to open the bag
without some preliminary evaluation of its likely relevance to the regulatory
search. The paper contents felt more like items connected to the H&TA
inquiry than if the contents had felt solid in a way that might have indicated
personal clothing (or drugs). In the circumstances, it was not unreasonable,
given the appellants’ very limited privacy interest, for the officer to open
the bag. At that point, the cash was in plain view.
G. The
Appellants’ Reliance on the Jarvis Case Is Misplaced
[45] The
decision in R. v. Jarvis, 2002 SCC 73, [2002] 3 S.C.R. 757, does not
support the trial judge’s “predominant purpose” test in this situation. In
that case, a taxpayer defending a prosecution for tax evasion objected to the
admission of self-incriminating information and documents obtained by Revenue
Canada in the course of a civil audit that, he was led to believe, might (or
might not) lead to a reassessment. The taxpayer’s cooperation at the
reassessment stage was of course compulsory. In the course of the inquiry, the
subject matter did not change at any time. It remained the documents and
information relevant to Mr. Jarvis’ tax matters. The question arose at the
point where material came to be viewed by Revenue Canada from a different
perspective. The Court agreed with the taxpayer that “there must be some
measure of separation between the audit and [penal] investigative functions”
(para. 84) and held that officials “cross the Rubicon” when the “predominant
purpose of a particular inquiry is the determination of penal liability” (para.
88). In other words, “when the inquiry in question engages the adversarial
relationship between the taxpayer and the state” (para. 88), the taxpayer is
entitled to Charter protection appropriate to the penal context. The
present case is wholly different. We are not “crossing the Rubicon” from a
civil dispute into penal remedies. Here the context was always penal. The Charter
applies to provincial offences as well as to criminal offences. The shifting
focus argument was appropriate in Jarvis, but I do not think it helps in
the solution of this appeal. The issue here is whether the police search of
the duffle bag did “in the totality of the circumstances” invade the reasonable
privacy interest of the appellants. I would hold that it did not.
[46] In
summary, the Crown established on a balance of probabilities that the
warrantless search was authorized by s. 63(5) of the H&TA, the
reasonableness of the law itself is not challenged, and the manner in which the
search was carried out was reasonable. The Collins test is therefore
satisfied.
H. The
Arrest of the Appellants for Possession of the Proceeds of Crime Was Valid
[47] The
trial judge concluded that the arrest was invalid. The existence of reasonable
and probable grounds is a legal standard and is subject to appellate review: R.
v. Feeney, [1997] 2 S.C.R. 13.
[48] The
discovery of a large sum of cash may not on its own constitute objective,
reasonable and probable grounds to arrest for possession of proceeds of crime
but the existence of the cash may contribute to such reasonable grounds when
“‘circumstances or evidence’ . . . exist that create a reasonable inference
that the money is proceeds of crime” (trial judgment, at para. 35): see R.
v. Perello, 2005 SKCA 8, 193 C.C.C. (3d) 151; R. v. Franks, 2003
SKCA 70, 176 C.C.C. (3d) 488. Here, the context was sufficient to supply the
officer with the “something more”: three men in an empty, improperly licensed
truck making a run across the prairies at midnight on a highway where the truck
was not entitled to be. The explanation for where the cargo had gone, and why
the truck was apparently empty as it headed east, did not correspond to the
documents, which were riddled with multiple discrepancies. The unexplained
$115,000 was in bills of small denominations wrapped in bundles which the
police officer believed to be typical of drug dealings:
Q. So in your mind was there any question that these were proceeds
of crime?
A. Given my observations of the money and the amount of money, the
circumstances surrounding its transportation and the subjects and the vehicle,
there was no doubt in my mind that this was proceeds of crime.
Q. Have you had an opportunity to observe how money is packaged in
your experience?
A. Based on my experience as well as research I
have done and the sessions I have had with experts and people who have been
involved in this type of activity, the type of bundling that was observed there
with the elastic bands and the small denominations is indicative of it being
involved in proceeds of crime and in particular of the drug trade in my mind.
[A.R., vol. 2, at pp. 210-11]
While the Crown
did not attempt to qualify the officer as an expert on drug monies, the
officer’s experience and training supported the probative value of his evidence
on this point. The cumulative effect of the factual elements previously
described provides objective support for the officer’s subjective belief that
he had reasonable and probable grounds to make the arrests. As stated in R.
v. Marin, [1994] O.J. No. 1280 (QL) (Gen. Div.), at para. 16, and approved
in R. v. Jacques, [1996] 3 S.C.R. 312, at para. 25, “Looked at
individually no single one is likely sufficient to warrant the grounds for the
detention and seizure. The whole is greater than the sum of the individual
parts viewed individually.”
I. The
Search of the Trailer After the Arrest
[49] A
search is properly incidental where the police attempt to “achieve some valid
purpose connected to the arrest” including “ensuring the safety of the police
and public, the protection of evidence from destruction at the hands of the
arrestee or others, and the discovery of evidence which can be used at the
arrestee’s trial”: Caslake, at para. 19 (emphasis added); R. v.
Golden, 2001 SCC 83, [2001] 3 S.C.R. 679, at paras. 74-75. The appellants
were under arrest for possession of the proceeds of crime. It was clearly
“incidental” to this arrest to search the vehicle in which the cash was found
for evidence of the criminal activity to which the money related: R. v. Rao
(1984), 12 C.C.C. (3d) 97 (Ont. C.A.), and Cloutier v. Langlois, [1990]
1 S.C.R. 158. The officers’ belief that this purpose would be served by a search
of the trailer (given their previous roadside observation of the discrepancy in
the dimensions) was itself reasonable. The important consideration is the link
between the location and purpose of the search and the grounds for the arrest.
[50] The
lapse of about two hours between the roadside arrest and the search of the
trailer’s secret compartment is not significant and did not, in my view,
undermine the close causal and spatial connection between the arrest and the
search. In Caslake, the search of the vehicle did not occur until six
hours after the arrest, but the Court concluded that such a delay “is not, in
and of itself, problematic in the case at bar” (para. 28). Nor is the temporal
gap of two hours problematic in this case. The lack of quick action by the
police may be explained by the fact that the truck was impounded in the RCMP
yard in the middle of the night. It could not, at the time, be legally driven
in Saskatchewan. No particular purpose would have been served by shortening
the delay from two hours to, say, fifteen minutes. In neither case would such
a delay have worked to the prejudice of the appellants.
[51] In
these circumstances, no distinct and separate demonstration of reasonable and
probable grounds was required: Caslake, at para. 25; R. v. Caprara (2006),
144 C.R.R. (2d) 287 (Ont. C.A.); and R. v. Chubak, 2009 ABCA 8, 243
C.C.C. (3d) 202.
[52] The
trial judge held the arrest to be invalid, but added, “If I am wrong about the
arrest, I would nevertheless find that once the arrest was made, there were no
exigent circumstances that required the officers to further search the trailer
without first obtaining a search warrant” (para. 32). However, the basis of
the warrantless search was not “exigent circumstances” but connection or
relatedness, i.e. to trigger the common law authority to search for evidence of
the crime to which the arrest related: Cloutier v. Langlois, at p.
186. In my view, the seizure of the 392 pounds of marijuana was Charter
compliant as it was discovered during a valid search for evidence incidental to
a valid arrest.
J. The
Subsequent “Inventory” Search of the Cab by Corporal Houston Was Invalid
[53] The
following day an RCMP officer from the Integrated Proceeds of Crime Unit
searched the tractor-trailer rig for the purpose of creating an inventory. Caslake
ruled that “an inventory search per se does not serve a ‘valid objective
in pursuit of the ends of criminal justice’” because its purposes “relate to
concerns extraneous to the criminal law. If the police feel the need to
inventory a car in their possession for their own purposes, that is one thing.
However, if they wish to tender the fruits of that inventory search into
evidence at a criminal trial, the search must be conducted under some lawful
authority” (para. 30). Corporal Houston’s work was incidental to RCMP
administrative procedures rather than to the arrest of the appellants. As a
result, it did not meet the requirements of a warrantless search, and the
fruits of the “inventory” search were thus harvested in breach of s. 8 .
K. The Evidence Gathered in the Inventory Search
Should Nevertheless Be Admitted Under Section 24(2)
[54] In R.
v. Grant, 2009 SCC 32, [2009] 2 S.C.R. 353, this Court revised the approach
to s. 24(2) and held that the analysis should be reoriented towards:
(i) the seriousness of the Charter -infringing state conduct;
(ii) the impact upon the Charter -protected interests of the
accused; and
(iii) society’s interest in having criminal matters adjudicated on their
merits.
The task for
courts remains one of achieving a balance between individual and societal
interests with a view to determining whether the administration of justice
would be brought into disrepute by admission of the evidence. In my view, the
evidence found in the “inventory search” which consists largely of additional
trucking documents plus the potentially misleading “decals” ought not to be
excluded. Had the RCMP officers continued their post-midnight search incident
to arrest they would have been within their rights to do so, and the subject
evidence would have been readily discoverable at that time. The subsequent
inventory search for administrative purposes of an impounded truck that has
already been searched (though less meticulously) should be classified as a
technical breach with a minimal impact on the Charter -protected
interests of the appellants. The evidence ought to be available for whatever
relevance it may have to assist in the resolution of the outstanding charges on
their merits.
V. Conclusion
[55] I
would dismiss the appeal.
Appeal dismissed.
Solicitors for the appellants: Brayford Shapiro Law Office,
Saskatoon.
Solicitor for the respondent: Public Prosecution Service of
Canada, Saskatoon.