SUPREME
COURT OF CANADA
Between:
A.C.,
A.C. and A.C.
Appellants
and
Director
of Child and Family Services
Respondent
‑
and ‑
Attorney
General of Manitoba, Attorney General of
British
Columbia, Attorney General of Alberta
and
Justice for Children and Youth
Interveners
Coram: McLachlin C.J.
and Binnie, LeBel, Deschamps, Abella, Charron and Rothstein JJ.
Reasons
for Judgment:
(paras. 1 to 122)
Concurring
Reasons:
(paras. 123 to 161)
Dissenting
Reasons:
(paras. 162 to 239)
|
Abella J. (LeBel, Deschamps and Charron
JJ. concurring)
McLachlin C.J. (Rothstein J. concurring)
Binnie J.
|
______________________________
A.C. v. Manitoba (Director of Child and Family Services),
2009 SCC 30, [2009] 2 S.C.R. 181
A.C. et al. Appellants
v.
Director of Child and Family Services Respondent
and
Attorney
General of Manitoba, Attorney General of
British
Columbia, Attorney General of Alberta
and Justice
for Children and Youth Interveners
Indexed as: A.C. v. Manitoba (Director of Child
and Family Services)
Neutral citation: 2009 SCC 30.
File No.: 31955.
2008: May 20; 2009: June 26.
Present: McLachlin C.J. and Binnie, LeBel, Deschamps,
Abella, Charron and Rothstein JJ.
on appeal from the court of appeal
for manitoba
Constitutional law — Charter of Rights — Liberty and
security of person — Fundamental justice — Medical treatment — Child under 16
years of age refusing blood transfusions because her religion requires that she
abstain from receiving blood — Transfusion necessary to avoid severe
consequences to child’s health — For child under 16, provincial child and
family services legislation authorizing court to order treatment that it
considers in best interests of child — For child 16 and over, no medical
treatment can be ordered by court without child’s consent unless court
satisfied that child lacks ability to understand relevant information or
consequences of treatment decision — Whether legislation arbitrary because it
deprives children under 16 of opportunity to demonstrate capacity — Whether
legislation infringes child’s liberty and security interests in manner contrary
to principles of fundamental justice — Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms,
s. 7 — Child and Family Services Act, C.C.S.M. c. C80, s. 25(8), (9).
Constitutional law — Charter of Rights — Equality
rights — Discrimination on basis of age — Child under 16 years of age refusing
blood transfusions because her religion requires that she abstain from
receiving blood — Transfusion necessary to avoid severe consequences to child’s
health — For child under 16, provincial child and family services legislation
authorizing court to order treatment that it considers in best interests of
child — For child 16 and over, no medical treatment can be ordered by court
without child’s consent unless court satisfied that child lacks ability to
understand relevant information or consequences of treatment decision — Whether
legislation infringes child’s equality rights — Canadian Charter of Rights and
Freedoms, s. 15 — Child and Family Services Act, C.C.S.M. c. C80, s. 25(8),
(9).
Constitutional law — Charter of Rights — Freedom of
religion — Child under 16 years of age refusing blood transfusions because her
religion requires that she abstain from receiving blood — Transfusion necessary
to avoid severe consequences to child’s health — For child under 16, provincial
child and family services legislation authorizing court to order treatment that
it considers in best interests of child — For child 16 and over, no medical
treatment can be ordered by court without child’s consent unless court
satisfied that child lacks ability to understand relevant information or
consequences of treatment decision — Whether legislation infringes child’s
freedom of religion — If so, whether infringement justifiable — Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms, ss. 1 , 2 (a) — Child and Family Services Act,
C.C.S.M. c. C80, s. 25(8), (9).
Status of persons — Child protection — Care while
under apprehension — Maturity — Court order authorizing treatment — For child
under 16, provincial child and family services legislation authorizing court to
order treatment that it considers in “best interests” of child — For child 16
and over, no medical treatment can be ordered by court without child’s consent
unless court satisfied that child lacks ability to understand relevant
information or consequences of treatment decision — Whether young person under
16 entitled to demonstrate sufficiency of maturity in medical treatment
decisions — Interpretation of “best interests” standard — Child and Family
Services Act, C.C.S.M. c. C80, s. 25(8), (9).
C was admitted to hospital when she was 14 years, 10
months old, suffering from lower gastrointestinal bleeding caused by Crohn’s
disease. She is a devout Jehovah’s Witness and, some months before, had signed
an advance medical directive containing her written instructions not to be
given blood under any circumstances. Her doctor believed that internal
bleeding created an imminent, serious risk to her health and perhaps her life.
She refused to consent to the receipt of blood. A brief psychiatric assessment
took place at the hospital on the night after her admission. The Director of
Child and Family Services apprehended her as a child in need of protection, and
sought a treatment order from the court under s. 25(8) of the Manitoba Child
and Family Services Act, by which the court may authorize treatment that it
considers to be in the child’s best interests. Section 25(9) of the Act
presumes that the best interests of a child 16 or over will be most effectively
promoted by allowing the child’s views to be determinative, unless it can be
shown that the child does not understand the decision or appreciate its
consequences. Where the child is under 16, however, no such presumption
exists. The applications judge ordered that C receive blood transfusions,
concluding that when a child is under 16, there are no legislated restrictions
of authority on the court’s ability to order medical treatment in the child’s
“best interests”. C and her parents appealed the order arguing that the
legislative scheme was unconstitutional because it unjustifiably infringed C’s
rights under ss. 2 (a), 7 and 15 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and
Freedoms . The Court of Appeal upheld the constitutional validity of the
impugned provisions and the treatment order.
Held (Binnie J.
dissenting): The appeal should be dismissed. Sections 25(8) and 25(9) of the Child
and Family Services Act are constitutional.
Per LeBel, Deschamps,
Abella and Charron JJ.: When the young person’s best interests are interpreted
in a way that sufficiently respects his or her capacity for mature, independent
judgment in a particular medical decision‑making context, the
constitutionality of the legislation is preserved. Properly construed to take
an adolescent’s maturity into account, the statutory scheme strikes a constitutional
balance between what the law has consistently seen as an individual’s
fundamental right to autonomous decision making in connection with his or her
body, and the law’s equally persistent attempts to protect vulnerable children
from harm. The “best interests” standard in s. 25(8) operates as a sliding
scale of scrutiny, with the child’s views becoming increasingly determinative
depending on his or her maturity. The more serious the nature of the decision
and the more severe its potential impact on life or health, the greater the
degree of scrutiny required. The result of this interpretation of s. 25(8) is
that young people under 16 will have the right to demonstrate mature medical
decisional capacity. This protects both the integrity of the statute and of
the adolescent. [3] [22] [30] [115]
Mature adolescents have strong claims to autonomy, but
these claims exist in tension with a protective duty on the part of the state
that is justified by the difficulty of defining and identifying “maturity”.
Any solution to this tension must be responsive to its complexity. Where a
child under 16 comes before the court under s. 25 of the Child and Family
Services Act, it is the ineffability inherent in the concept of “maturity”
that justifies the state’s retaining an overarching power to determine whether
allowing the child to exercise his or her autonomy in a given situation
actually accords with his or her best interests. But “best interests” must in
turn be interpreted so as to reflect and respect the adolescent’s developing
autonomy interest. The more a court is satisfied that a child is capable of
making a truly mature and independent decision on his or her own behalf, the
greater the weight that must be given to his or her views when a court is
exercising its discretion under s. 25(8). If, after a careful analysis of the
young person’s ability to exercise mature and independent judgment, the court
is persuaded that the necessary level of maturity exists, the young person’s
views ought to be respected. [82] [84] [86-88]
In assessing an adolescent’s maturity in a s. 25(8)
“best interests” analysis, a judge should take into account the nature, purpose
and utility of the recommended medical treatment and its risks and benefits;
the adolescent’s intellectual capacity and the degree of sophistication to
understand the information relevant to making the decision and to appreciate
the potential consequences; the stability of the adolescent’s views and whether
they are a true reflection of his or her core values and beliefs; the potential
impact of the adolescent’s lifestyle, family relationships and broader social
affiliations on his or her ability to exercise independent judgment; the
existence of any emotional or psychiatric vulnerabilities and the impact of the
adolescent’s illness on his or her decision‑making ability. Any relevant
information from adults who know the adolescent may also factor into the
assessment. [96]
When the “best interests” standard is properly
interpreted, the legislative scheme created by ss. 25(8) and 25(9) of the Child
and Family Services Act does not infringe ss. 7 , 15 or 2 (a) of the Charter
because it is neither arbitrary, discriminatory, nor violative of religious
freedom. Under s. 7 of the Charter , while it may be arbitrary to assume
that no one under the age of 16 has capacity to make medical treatment
decisions, it is not arbitrary to give them the opportunity to prove that they
have sufficient maturity to do so. [98] [107]
With respect to s. 15 , in permitting adolescents under
16 to lead evidence of sufficient maturity to determine their medical choices,
their ability to make treatment decisions is ultimately calibrated in
accordance with maturity, not age, and no disadvantaging prejudice or stereotype
based on age can be said to be engaged. [111]
Similarly, since a young person is entitled to lead
evidence of sufficient maturity, the impugned provisions do not violate a
child’s religious convictions under s. 2 (a). Consideration of a child’s
“religious heritage” is one of the statutory factors which a judge must
consider in determining the “best interests” of a child under s. 25(8), and
expanding the deference to a young person’s religious wishes as his or her
maturity increases is a proportionate response both to the young person’s
religious rights and the protective goals of s. 25(8). [28] [112] [113]
Interpreting the best interests standard so that a young
person is afforded a degree of bodily autonomy and integrity commensurate with
his or her ability to exercise mature, independent judgment navigates the
tension between an adolescent’s increasing entitlement to autonomy as he or she
matures and society’s interest in ensuring that young people who are vulnerable
are protected from harm. This brings the “best interests” standard in s. 25(8)
in line with the evolution of the common law and with international principles,
and strikes an appropriate balance between achieving the protective legislative
goal while at the same time respecting the right of mature adolescents to
participate meaningfully in decisions relating to their medical treatment.
[108]
Per McLachlin C.J. and
Rothstein J.: The Child and Family Services Act is a complete code for
medical decision making for or by apprehended minors. It requires the judge to
be satisfied that a treatment order is in the child’s best interests by
undertaking an independent analysis of all relevant circumstances and the
factors in s. 2(1) of the Act, including the child’s needs, mental and
emotional maturity and preferences. This multi‑factored “best interests
of the child” approach required by s. 25(8) does not operate unconstitutionally
in the case of a child under 16 who possesses capacity to make a treatment
decision and understands the nature and consequences of the treatment. [123]
[126] [132-135]
Section 25(8) of the Child and Family Services Act does
not violate s. 7 of the Charter . This provision, although it deprives a
child under 16 of the “liberty” to decide her medical treatment and may impinge
on her “security of the person”, does not function in a manner that is contrary
to the principles of fundamental justice. The s. 7 liberty or autonomy right is
not absolute, even for adults, nor does it trump all other values. Limits on
personal autonomy that advance a genuine state interest do not violate s. 7 if
they are shown to be based on rational, rather than arbitrary grounds. Here,
when the relationship between s. 25(8) and the state interest at stake are
considered, the statutory provision is not arbitrary in the substantive sense.
The statutory scheme successfully balances society’s interest in ensuring that
children receive necessary medical care on the one hand, with the protection of
their autonomy interest, to the extent this can be done, on the other. The
legislative decision to vest treatment authority regarding under‑16
minors in the courts is a legitimate response to heightened concerns about
younger adolescents’ maturity and vulnerability to subtle and overt coercion
and influence. This concern with free and informed decision making animates the
legislative scheme and expresses the state’s interest in ensuring that the
momentous decision to refuse medical treatment by persons under 16 are truly
free, informed and voluntary. Age, in this context, is a reasonable proxy for
independence. The Act requires the judge to take account of the treatment
preference of a minor under 16 as a factor in assessing the child’s “best
interests”, while refusing to give it the presumptive weight it would carry
with a child over 16. This distinction reflects the societal reality of how
children mature, and the dependence of children under 16 on their parents, as
well as the difficulty of carrying out a robust and comprehensive analysis of
maturity and voluntariness in the exigent circumstances of crucial treatment
decisions in cases such as C’s. Further, the s. 7 requirement that the
limitation be carried out in a procedurally fair manner is satisfied by the
notice and participation requirements in the Child and Family Services Act.
[136-138] [141] [143-149] [160]
Section 25(8) does not violate s. 15 of the Charter .
The distinction drawn by the Act between children under 16 and those 16 and
over is ameliorative and not invidious. First, it aims at protecting the
interests of minors as a vulnerable group. Second, it protects the targeted
group — children under 16 — in a way that gives the individual child a degree
of input into the ultimate decision on treatment. This is sufficient to
demonstrate that the distinction drawn by the Act, while based on an enumerated
ground, is not discriminatory within the meaning of s. 15 . [152]
Finally, while the legislative authorization of
treatment over C’s sincere religious objections constitutes an infringement of
her right to religious freedom guaranteed by s. 2 (a) of the Charter ,
the infringement is justifiable under s. 1 . The fact that C’s aversion to
receiving a blood transfusion springs from religious conviction does nothing to
alter the essential nature of the claim as one for absolute personal autonomy
in medical decision making. If s. 25(8) is viewed through the lens of s. 2 (a),
the limit on religious practice imposed by the legislation emerges as justified
under s. 1 , because the objective of ensuring the health and safety and of
preserving the lives of vulnerable young people children is pressing and
substantial, and the means chosen — giving discretion to the court to order
treatment after a consideration of all relevant circumstances — is a
proportionate limit on the right. [153-156]
The applications judge assumed that C had “capacity” to
make the treatment decision but, after considering the relevant factors set out
in s. 2(1) of the Child and Family Services Act including her maturity
and including her wish not to have the treatment, concluded that treatment was
in the child’s best interests. This decision conformed to the provisions of the
Act. While, if time and circumstances permit, it is optimal for a judge to
fully consider and give reasoned judgment on all the factors he or she takes
into account, proceeding on the assumption of “capacity” — an assumption that
favoured C’s autonomy interest — was reasonable in these circumstances where a
child’s life hung in the balance and the need for a decision was urgent.
[158-159]
Per Binnie J.
(dissenting): Forced medical procedures must be one of the most egregious
violations of a person’s physical and psychological integrity. The state’s
interest in ensuring judicial control over the medical treatment of “immature”
minors ceases to exist where a “mature” minor under 16 demonstrates the lack of
need for any such overriding state control. In such cases, the legitimate
object and basis of state intervention in the life of the young person has, by
reason of the judge’s finding of maturity, disappeared. Whether judges,
doctors and hospital authorities agree or disagree with C’s objection, the
decision belongs to her, as the Charter is not just about the freedom to
make the wise and correct choice; it also gives her the individual autonomy and
the religious freedom to refuse forced medical treatment, even where her life
or death hangs in the balance, regardless of what the judge thinks is in her
best interest. The state would be justified in taking the decision away from C
if there was any doubt about her capacity, as in a situation of urgency, or
whether she was acting under the influence of her parents (who are Jehovah’s
Witnesses). However, these matters were looked into by three psychiatrists at
the Winnipeg hospital where the blood transfusion was to be administered, and
the psychiatrists concluded, and the applications judge accepted, that C —
though 14 months short of reaching 16 years of age — was nevertheless at the
material time an individual “with capacity to give or refuse consent to her own
medical care”. [163-167] [176] [237]
Children may generally be assumed to lack the requisite
degree of capacity and maturity to make potentially life‑defining
decisions. This lack of capacity and maturity provides the state with a
legitimate interest in taking the decision‑making power away from the
young person and vesting it in a judge under the Child and Family Services
Act. At common law, proof of capacity entitles the “mature minor” to
exercise personal autonomy in making medical treatment decisions free of
parental or judicial control. While it may be very difficult to persuade a
judge that a young person who refuses potentially life‑saving medical
treatment is a person of full capacity, nonetheless, the Charter
requires such an opportunity to be given in the case of an adolescent of C’s
age and maturity. The Act mandates an individualized assessment on a patient‑by‑patient
basis, and courts routinely handle capacity as a live issue under the Child
and Family Services Act in the case of minors between the ages of 16 and
18. Section 25(8) is unconstitutional because it prevents a person under 16
from establishing that she or he understands the medical condition and the
consequences of refusing treatment, and should therefore have the right to
refuse treatment whether or not the applications judge considers such refusal
to be in the young person’s best interests. [175-178]
While it is understandable that judges would
instinctively give priority to the sanctity of life, the rejection of the
potentially lifesaving effects of blood transfusions by Jehovah’s Witnesses is
fundamental to their religious convictions. The rights under ss. 2 (a)
and 7 of the Charter are given to everyone, including individuals under
16 years old. If a mature minor does in fact understand the nature and
seriousness of her medical condition and is mature enough to appreciate the
consequences of refusing consent to treatment, then the state’s only
justification for taking away the autonomy of that young person in such
important matters disappears. The young person with capacity is entitled to
make the treatment decision, not just to have “input” into a judge’s
consideration of what the judge believes to be the young person’s best
interests. [191-192] [202] [207] [214]
The irrebuttable presumption of incapacity to consent to
or refuse medical treatment therefore violates C’s freedom of religion and her
right not to be deprived of her liberty or security of the person except in
accordance with the principles of fundamental justice. It was rightly conceded
that s. 25 violated s. 2 (a), subject to the s. 1 defence advanced by the
government. [211] [215]
With respect to s. 7 , C’s liberty interest is directly
engaged because it is obvious that anyone who refuses a potentially life‑saving
blood transfusion on religious grounds does so out of a deeply personal and
fundamental belief about how they wish to live, or cease to live, in obedience
to what they interpret to be God’s commandment. Her security interest is also
engaged because an unwanted blood transfusion violates the fundamental value of
protecting bodily integrity from state interference. The principles of
fundamental justice that are breached in this case are both procedural and
substantive. In terms of substantive justice, the irrebuttable presumption
takes away the personal autonomy of C and other “mature minors” for no valid
state purpose. The purpose of the Child and Family Services Act is to
defend the “best interest” of children who are “in need of protection” — this means,
in this context, children who do not have the capacity to make their own
decisions about medical treatment. When applied to young persons who possess
the requisite capacity, the irrebuttable presumption has “no real relation” to
the legislative goal of protecting children who do not possess such capacity.
The deprivation in the case of mature minors is thus arbitrary and violates s.
7 . In terms of procedural justice, the procedures in the Act are also
deficient because they do not afford a young person the opportunity to rebut
the very presumption upon which the court’s authority to act in the best
interests of the young person rests, namely lack of capacity. Where (as in this
case) a young person’s capacity can fairly be determined in a timely way, s.
25(8)’s failure to leave room for the young person to rebut the presumption of
incapacity violates fundamental procedural fairness. [219-225]
The limit imposed by the irrebuttable presumption on C’s
ss. 2 (a) and 7 rights is not justifiable under s. 1 of the Charter .
The care and protection of children is a pressing and substantial legislative
objective that is of sufficient importance to justify limiting a Charter right.
However, the impugned procedure under s. 25 of the Act is not rationally
connected to that objective. Since the Act itself acknowledges in s. 25(9)
that mature minors 16 and over are presumed to be of sufficient capacity to
make their own treatment decisions, it is “arbitrarily unfair or based on
irrational considerations” to deny mature minors under 16 the opportunity of
demonstrating what in the case of the older mature minors is presumed in their
favour. Furthermore, the irrebuttable presumption of incapacity does not
impair “as little as possible” the right or freedom in question as shown by the
fact that the Manitoba legislature has enacted a rebuttable presumption in
other health care statutes. Such a rebuttable presumption provides an
available legislative solution that both protects the state interest in looking
out for those who lack the capacity to look out for themselves and the need to
impair minimally the rights of mature minors under 16 years of age who do not
lack that capacity. Finally, the irrebuttable presumption has a
disproportionately severe effect on the rights of mature minors under 16
because they do not suffer from the lack of capacity or maturity that justifies
the state intervention in relation to immature minors. Moreover, the
government has not shown that the irrebuttable presumption in the Act produces
“proportionality between the deleterious and the salutary effects” because
while the mature minor’s Charter rights are harmed, the state’s interest
in protecting the health of immature minors is not advanced. [233-237]
Cases Cited
By Abella J.
Applied: Rodriguez
v. British Columbia (Attorney General), [1993] 3 S.C.R. 519; Malette v.
Shulman (1990), 72 O.R. (2d) 417; Fleming v. Reid (1991), 4 O.R.
(3d) 74; Gillick v. West Norfolk and Wisbech Area Health Authority,
[1985] 3 All E.R. 402; Re W (a minor) (medical treatment), [1992] 4 All
E.R. 627; Re R (a minor) (wardship: medical treatment), [1991] 4 All
E.R. 177; J.S.C. v. Wren (1986), 76 A.R. 115; Alberta (Director of
Child Welfare) v. H. (B.), 2002 ABPC 39, [2002] 11 W.W.R. 752, aff’d 2002
ABQB 371, [2002] 7 W.W.R. 616, aff’d 2002 ABCA 109, [2002] 7 W.W.R. 644, leave
to appeal refused, [2002] 3 S.C.R. vi; Chaoulli v. Quebec (Attorney General),
2005 SCC 35, [2005] 1 S.C.R. 791; B. (R.) v. Children’s Aid Society of
Metropolitan Toronto, [1995] 1 S.C.R. 315; considered: Young v.
Young, [1993] 4 S.C.R. 3; King v. Low, [1985] 1 S.C.R. 87; Ciarlariello
v. Schacter, [1993] 2 S.C.R. 119; referred to: R. v. Oakes,
[1986] 1 S.C.R. 103; Re T (adult: refusal of medical treatment), [1992]
4 All E.R. 649; R. v. Morgentaler, [1988] 1 S.C.R. 30; Re E (a minor)
(wardship: medical treatment), [1993] 1 F.L.R. 386; Re S (a minor)
(consent to medical treatment), [1994] 2 F.L.R. 1065; Re L (medical
treatment: Gillick competency), [1998] 2 F.L.R. 810; Re M (medical
treatment: consent), [1999] 2 F.L.R. 1097; Van Mol (Guardian ad Litem
of) v. Ashmore, 1999 BCCA 6, 168 D.L.R. (4th) 637; H. (T.) v. Children’s
Aid Society of Metropolitan Toronto (1996), 138 D.L.R. (4th) 144; Dueck
(Re) (1999), 171 D.L.R. (4th) 761; Hôpital Ste-Justine v. Giron,
2002 CanLII 34269; U. (C.) (Next friend of) v. Alberta (Director of Child
Welfare), 2003 ABCA 66, 13 Alta. L.R. (4th) 1; Re L.D.K. (1985), 48
R.F.L. (2d) 164; Re A.Y. (1993), 111 Nfld. & P.E.I.R. 91; Region
2 Hospital Corp. v. Walker (1994), 150 N.B.R. (2d) 366; Planned
Parenthood of Central Missouri v. Danforth, Attorney General of Missouri,
428 U.S. 52 (1976); Bellotti, Attorney General of Massachusetts v. Baird,
443 U.S. 622 (1979); Parham, Commissioner, Department of Human Resources of
Georgia v. J. R., 442 U.S. 584 (1979); Cardwell v. Bechtol, 724
S.W.2d 739 (1987); Belcher v. Charleston Area Medical Center, 422 S.E.2d
827 (1992); In re E.G., 549 N.E.2d 322 (1989); In the Matter of Long
Island Jewish Medical Center, 557 N.Y.S.2d 239 (1990); Novak v. Cobb
County-Kennestone Hospital Authority, 849 F. Supp. 1559 (1994), aff’d 74
F.3d 1173 (1996); In the Matter of Rena, 705 N.E.2d 1155 (1999); Commonwealth
v. Nixon, 761 A.2d 1151 (2000); Secretary, Department of Health and
Community Services v. J.W.B. (Marion’s Case) (1992), 175 C.L.R. 218; Director
General, New South Wales Department of Community Services v. Y., [1999]
NSWSC 644 (AustLII); Minister for Health v. A.S., [2004] WASC 286, 33
Fam. L.R. 223; Blencoe v. British Columbia (Human Rights Commission),
2000 SCC 44, [2000] 2 S.C.R. 307; Godbout v. Longueuil (City), [1997] 3
S.C.R. 844; Reference re ss. 193 and 195.1(1)(c) of the Criminal Code (Man.),
[1990] 1 S.C.R. 1123; R. v. Malmo-Levine, 2003 SCC 74, [2003] 3
S.C.R. 571; Winnipeg Child and Family Services v. K.L.W., 2000 SCC 48,
[2000] 2 S.C.R. 519; Syl Apps Secure Treatment Centre v. B.D., 2007 SCC
38, [2007] 3 S.C.R. 83; R. v. Sharpe, 2001 SCC 2, [2001] 1 S.C.R. 45; Canadian
Foundation for Children, Youth and the Law v. Canada (Attorney General),
2004 SCC 4, [2004] 1 S.C.R. 76; R. v. D.B., 2008 SCC 25, [2008] 2 S.C.R.
3; R. v. Kapp, 2008 SCC 41, [2008] 2 S.C.R. 483; Law v. Canada
(Minister of Employment and Immigration), [1999] 1 S.C.R. 497; Gosselin
v. Quebec (Attorney General), 2002 SCC 84, [2002] 4 S.C.R. 429; McKinney
v. University of Guelph, [1990] 3 S.C.R. 229; Harrison v. University of
British Columbia, [1990] 3 S.C.R. 451; Stoffman v. Vancouver General Hospital,
[1990] 3 S.C.R. 483; Douglas/Kwantlen Faculty Assn. v. Douglas College,
[1990] 3 S.C.R. 570; Tétreault-Gadoury v. Canada (Employment and
Immigration Commission), [1991] 2 S.C.R. 22.
By McLachlin C.J.
Referred to: B.
(R.) v. Children’s Aid Society of Metropolitan Toronto, [1995] 1 S.C.R.
315; Re A.Y. (1993), 111 Nfld. & P.E.I.R. 91; R. v. Morgentaler,
[1988] 1 S.C.R. 30; Rodriguez v. British Columbia (Attorney General),
[1993] 3 S.C.R. 519; New Brunswick (Minister of Health and Community Services)
v. G. (J.), [1999] 3 S.C.R. 46; Chaoulli v. Quebec (Attorney General),
2005 SCC 35, [2005] 1 S.C.R. 791; R. v. D.B., 2008 SCC 25, [2008] 2
S.C.R. 3; R. v. Kapp, 2008 SCC 41, [2008] 2 S.C.R. 483; Canadian
Foundation for Children, Youth and the Law v. Canada (Attorney General),
2004 SCC 4, [2004] 1 S.C.R. 76; Syndicat Northcrest v. Amselem, 2004 SCC
47, [2004] 2 S.C.R. 551; R. v. Big M Drug Mart Ltd., [1985] 1 S.C.R.
295; R. v. Oakes, [1986] 1 S.C.R. 103; Dagenais v. Canadian
Broadcasting Corp., [1994] 3 S.C.R. 835.
By Binnie J. (dissenting)
Starson v. Swayze, 2003
SCC 32, [2003] 1 S.C.R. 722; B. (R.) v. Children’s Aid Society of
Metropolitan Toronto, [1995] 1 S.C.R. 315; Hopp v. Lepp, [1980] 2
S.C.R. 192; Reibl v. Hughes, [1980] 2 S.C.R. 880; Malette v. Shulman
(1990), 72 O.R. (2d) 417; Fleming v. Reid (1991), 4 O.R. (3d) 74; Ciarlariello
v. Schacter, [1993] 2 S.C.R. 119; Airedale NHS Trust v. Bland,
[1993] 1 All E.R. 821; Re C (adult: refusal of medical treatment), [1994]
1 All E.R. 819; Re T (adult: refusal of medical treatment), [1992] 4
All E.R. 649; Re B (adult: refusal of medical treatment), [2002] EWHC
429, [2002] 2 All E.R. 449; Cruzan v. Director, Missouri Department of
Health, 497 U.S. 261 (1990); Auckland Area Health Board v. Attorney‑General,
[1993] 1 N.Z.L.R. 235; Rodriguez v. British Columbia (Attorney General),
[1993] 3 S.C.R. 519; Nancy B. v. Hôtel‑Dieu de Québec (1992), 69
C.C.C. (3d) 450; Van Mol (Guardian ad Litem of) v. Ashmore, 1999 BCCA 6,
168 D.L.R. (4th) 637; R. v. Big M Drug Mart Ltd., [1985] 1 S.C.R. 295; Syndicat
Northcrest v. Amselem, 2004 SCC 47, [2004] 2 S.C.R. 551; Multani v.
Commission scolaire Marguerite-Bourgeoys, 2006 SCC 6, [2006] 1 S.C.R. 256; R.
v. Morgentaler, [1988] 1 S.C.R. 30; Godbout v. Longueuil (City),
[1997] 3 S.C.R. 844; R. v. Malmo-Levine, 2003 SCC 74, [2003] 3 S.C.R.
571; Blencoe v. British Columbia (Human Rights Commission), 2000 SCC 44,
[2000] 2 S.C.R. 307; Chaoulli v. Quebec (Attorney General), 2005 SCC 35,
[2005] 1 S.C.R. 791; New Brunswick (Minister of Health and Community
Services) v. G. (J.), [1999] 3 S.C.R. 46; R. v. Kapp, 2008 SCC 41,
[2008] 2 S.C.R. 483; Gosselin v. Quebec (Attorney General), 2002 SCC 84,
[2002] 4 S.C.R. 429; R. v. Oakes, [1986] 1 S.C.R. 103; Dagenais v.
Canadian Broadcasting Corp., [1994] 3 S.C.R. 835.
Statutes and Regulations Cited
Age of Majority Act,
C.C.S.M. c. A7, s. 1.
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, ss. 1 , 2 (a), 7 , 15 .
Child and Family Services Act, C.C.S.M. c. C80, ss. 1(1) “child”, 2, 17, 21(1), 25, 25(8), 25(9),
27(1).
Health Care Directives Act, C.C.S.M. c. H27, s. 4(2).
Mental Health Act, C.C.S.M. c. M110, s. 2.
Treaties and Other International Instruments
Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and
Dignity of the Human Being with Regard to the Application of Biology and
Medicine: Convention on Human Rights and Biomedicine, Eur. T.S. No. 164, c. II, art. 6.
Convention on the Rights of the
Child, Can. T.S. 1992 No. 3, arts. 3, 5, 12, 14.
Authors Cited
Alderson, Priscilla. “Everyday and medical life
choices: decision-making among 8- to 15-year-old school students”, in Michael
Freeman, ed., Children, Medicine and the Law. Aldershot: Ashgate,
2005, 445.
Alderson, Priscilla. “In the genes or in the stars?
Children’s competence to consent”, in Michael Freeman, ed., Children,
Medicine and the Law. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2005, 549.
Ambuel, Bruce, and Julian Rappaport. “Developmental
Trends in Adolescents’ Psychological and Legal Competence to Consent to
Abortion” (1992), 16 Law & Hum. Behav. 129.
Berg, Jessica W., et al. Informed Consent: Legal
Theory and Clinical Practice, 2nd ed. New York: Oxford University Press,
2001.
“Blood Transfusion And Outcomes”, in Medical News
Today, April 23, 2009 (online:
www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/147167.php).
Brazier, Margaret, and Caroline Bridge. “Coercion or
caring: analysing adolescent autonomy”, in Michael Freeman, ed., Children,
Medicine and the Law. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2005, 461.
Bridge, Caroline. “Religious Beliefs and Teenage
Refusal of Medical Treatment” (1999), 62 Mod. L. Rev. 585.
Buchanan, Allen E., and Dan W. Brock. Deciding
for Others: The Ethics of Surrogate Decision Making. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1990.
Dickens, Bernard M. “Medically Assisted Death: Nancy
B. v. Hôtel-Dieu de Québec” (1993), 38 McGill L.J. 1053.
Douglas, Gillian. “The Retreat from Gillick”
(1992), 55 Mod. L. Rev. 569.
Dworkin, Gerald. “Consent, Representation, and Proxy
Consent”, in Willard Gaylin and Ruth Macklin, eds., Who Speaks For The
Child: The Problems of Proxy Consent. New York: Plenum Press, 1982, 191.
Eekelaar, John. “The Emergence of Children’s Rights”
(1986), 6 Oxford J. Legal Stud. 161.
Eekelaar, John. “The Importance of Thinking that
Children Have Rights” (1992), 6 Int’l J.L. & Fam. 221.
Eekelaar, John. “The Interests of the Child and the
Child’s Wishes: The Role of Dynamic Self‑Determinism” (1994), 8 Int’l
J.L. & Fam. 42.
Eekelaar, John. “White Coats or Flak Jackets?
Doctors, Children and the Courts — Again” (1993), 109 L.Q. Rev. 182.
Ferguson, Lucinda. “The End of an Age: Beyond Age
Restrictions for Minors’ Medical Treatment Decisions”. Paper prepared for the
Law Commission of Canada. Ottawa: The Commission, October 29, 2004.
Ferguson, Lucinda. “Trial by Proxy: How Section 15
of the Charter Removes Age from Adolescence” (2005), 4 J.L. &
Equality 84.
Fortin, Jane. Children’s Rights and the
Developing Law, 2nd ed. London: LexisNexis UK, 2003.
Freeman, Michael. “Removing rights from adolescents”
(1993), 17 Adoption & Fostering 14.
Freeman, Michael D. A. The Rights and Wrongs of
Children. London: Pinter, 1983.
Gilmour, Joan M. “Death and Dying”, in Mary Jane
Dykeman et al., eds., Canadian Health Law Practice Manual. Toronto:
Butterworths, 2000 (loose-leaf updated November 2008, issue 29), 8.01.
Gilmour, Joan M. “Death, Dying and Decision-making
about End of Life Care”, in Jocelyn Downie, Timothy Caulfield and Colleen M.
Flood, eds., Canadian Health Law and Policy, 3rd ed. Markham, Ont.:
LexisNexis, 2007, 437.
Hartman, Rhonda Gay. “Coming of Age: Devising
Legislation for Adolescent Medical Decision-Making” (2002), 28 Am. J. L.
& Med. 409.
Hogg, Peter W. Constitutional Law of Canada,
vol. 2, 5th ed. Scarborough, Ont.: Thomson/Carswell, 2007.
Levine, Saul. “Informed Consent of Minors in Crucial
and Critical Health Care Decisions”, in Aaron H. Esman, ed., Adolescent
Psychiatry: The Annals of the American Society for Adolescent Psychiatry,
vol. 25. Hillsdale, N.J.: Analytic Press, 2000, 203.
Lewis, Catherine C. “A Comparison of Minors’ and
Adults’ Pregnancy Decisions” (1980), 50 Amer. J. Orthopsychiat. 446.
Manitoba. Law Reform Commission. Minors’ Consent
to Health Care, Report #91. Winnipeg: The Commission, 1995.
Mason, John Kenyon. Medico‑Legal Aspects of
Reproduction and Parenthood, 2nd ed. Aldershot: Dartmouth, 1998.
Masson, Judith. “Re W: appealing from the golden
cage” (1993), 5 J. Child L. 37.
Meisel, Alan. “The Legal Consensus About Forgoing
Life-Sustaining Treatment: Its Status and Its Prospects” (1992), 2 Kennedy
Inst. of Ethics J. 309.
Munby, Sir James. “Consent to Treatment: Children
and the Incompetent Patient”, in Andrew Grubb, ed., assisted by Judith Laing, Principles
of Medical Law, 2nd ed. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004, 205.
Rosato, Jennifer L. “Let’s Get Real: Quilting a
Principled Approach to Adolescent Empowerment in Health Care Decision-Making”
(2001-2002), 51 DePaul L. Rev. 769.
Ross, Lainie Friedman. “Health Care Decisionmaking
by Children: Is It in Their Best Interest?”, in Michael Freeman, ed., Children,
Medicine and the Law. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2005, 487.
Rozovsky, Lorne Elkin. The Canadian Law of
Consent to Treatment, 3rd ed. Markham, Ont.: LexisNexis Butterworths,
2003.
Scofield, Giles R. “Is the Medical Ethicist an
‘Expert’?” (1994), 3(1) Bioethics Bulletin 1.
Scott, Elizabeth S. “The Legal Construction of
Adolescence” (2000-2001), 29 Hofstra L. Rev. 547.
Sneiderman, Barney, John C. Irvine and Philip H.
Osborne. Canadian Medical Law, 3rd ed., c. 20, “The Mature Minor
Patient and the Refusal of Treatment”. Scarborough, Ont.: Thomson/Carswell,
2003.
Weithorn, Lois A., and Susan B. Campbell. “The
Competency of Children and Adolescents to Make Informed Treatment Decisions”
(1982), 53 Child Dev. 1589.
Will, Jonathan F., “My God My
Choice: The Mature Minor Doctrine and Adolescent Refusal of Life-Saving or
Sustaining Medical Treatment Based Upon Religious Beliefs” (2005-2006), 22 J.
Contemp. Health L. & Pol’y 233.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Manitoba Court of Appeal
(Huband, Steel and Hamilton JJ.A.), 2007 MBCA 9, 212 Man. R. (2d) 163, 389
W.A.C. 163, 276 D.L.R. (4th) 41, [2007] 4 W.W.R. 62, 151 C.R.R. (2d) 191,
[2007] M.J. No. 26 (QL), 2007 CarswellMan 28, affirming an order of Kaufman J.
Appeal dismissed, Binnie J. dissenting.
David C. Day, Q.C.,
and Allan Ludkiewicz, for the appellant A.C. (child).
Shane H. Brady,
for the appellants A.C. and A.C. (parents).
Norm Cuddy,
Alfred Thiessen and Kristian J. Janovcik, for the respondent.
Deborah L. Carlson
and Nathaniel Carnegie, for the intervener the Attorney General of
Manitoba.
Neena Sharma and Karrie
Wolfe, for the intervener the Attorney General of British Columbia.
Margaret Unsworth,
Q.C., and Lillian Riczu, for the intervener the Attorney General
of Alberta.
Cheryl Milne and
Mary Birdsell, for the intervener Justice for Children and Youth.
The judgment of LeBel, Deschamps, Abella and Charron JJ.
was delivered by
[1]
Abella J. — One of
the most sensitive decisions a judge can make in family law is in connection
with the authorization of medical treatment for children. It engages the most
intensely complicated constellation of considerations and its consequences are
inevitably profound.
[2]
When a child under 16 is apprehended in Manitoba pursuant to the Child
and Family Services Act, C.C.S.M. c. C80, and where the child or his or her
parents refuse essential medical treatment, the court may authorize treatment
that it considers to be “in the best interests” of the child. If the
apprehended child is 16 or over, no medical treatment can be ordered by the
court without the child’s consent unless the court is satisfied that the child
lacks the ability to understand either the relevant information or the
consequences of the treatment decision.
[3]
The main issue in this appeal is whether those provisions of the Child
and Family Services Act are constitutional. In my view, if the young
person’s best interests are interpreted in a way that sufficiently respects his
or her maturity in a particular medical decision-making context, the
constitutionality of the legislation is preserved.
[4]
I acknowledge that because we are dealing with the inherent
imprecision of childhood and adolescent development, maturity is necessarily an
imprecise standard. There is no judicial divining rod that leads to a “eureka”
moment for its discovery; it depends on the court’s assessment of the
adolescent, his or her circumstances and ability to exercise independent
judgment, and the nature and consequences of the decision at issue. But I am
nonetheless strongly of the view that in order to respect an adolescent’s
evolving right to autonomous medical decision making, a thorough assessment of
maturity, however difficult, is required in determining his or her best
interests.
BACKGROUND
[5]
A.C. was 14 years and 10 months old when she was admitted to the
hospital on April 12, 2006. She suffered an episode of lower gastrointestinal
bleeding as a result of Crohn’s disease. A.C. is a Jehovah’s Witness who
believes that her religion requires that she abstain from receiving blood.
[6]
A few months before her admission to the hospital, A.C. had
completed an “advance medical directive” with written instructions that she not
receive blood transfusions under any circumstances. On April 13, the day after
A.C.’s admission, Dr. Stanley Lipnowski, the doctor treating her at the
hospital, requested that the hospital’s
Department of
Psychiatry undertake an assessment of A.C. “to determine capability to
understanding death”. The report, completed by three psychiatrists that night
between 10:00 p.m. and 11:45 p.m. after an interview with the girl and her
parents, did not use the word “capacity”. Instead, the report indicated that
A.C. was “alert and cooperative . . . very well spoken. Mood ‘fairly good’. .
. . [B]right, [slightly] teary at times, full range and appropriate”. Her
parents fully supported A.C.’s decision and told the psychiatrists that A.C.
“treasures her relationship with God and does not want to jeopardize it, that
she understands her disease and what is happening”. The report concluded that
A.C. had “no psychiatric illness at present” and that:
The patient understands the reason why a transfusion may be recommended,
and the consequences of refusing to have a transfusion.
[7]
At the time of her assessment, A.C.’s condition was stable and
continued to stabilize for a few days, but on the morning of April 16, she
experienced more internal bleeding. Her doctors wanted to give her a blood
transfusion. She refused.
[8]
As a result, the Director of Child and Family Services
(“Director”) apprehended her as a child in need of protection under the Child
and Family Services Act.
[9]
A court order was requested under ss. 25(8) and 25(9) of that
Act, authorizing qualified medical personnel to administer blood transfusions
to A.C. as deemed necessary by the attending physician. Those provisions state:
25(8) Subject
to subsection (9), upon completion of a hearing, the court may authorize a
medical examination or any medical or dental treatment that the court considers
to be in the best interests of the child.
25(9) The
court shall not make an order under subsection (8) with respect to a child who
is 16 years of age or older without the child’s consent unless the court is
satisfied that the child is unable
(a) to
understand the information that is relevant to making a decision to consent or
not consent to the medical examination or the medical or dental treatment; or
(b) to appreciate the reasonably foreseeable consequences of making
a decision to consent or not consent to the medical examination or the medical
or dental treatment.
[10]
The emergency application was heard by Kaufman J. Counsel for
the Director was in the courtroom. Others, including Dr. Lipnowski, counsel
for the Winnipeg Regional Health Authority, counsel for A.C.’s parents, a
social worker, and A.C.’s father, were together in a hospital boardroom and
participated in the hearing by conference call. A.C. did not participate.
[11]
Dr. Lipnowski’s evidence was that the transfusions were necessary
because the risk to A.C. if she did not receive blood was “significant”:
[T]he longer she goes without, the more the risk is of her having serious
oxygen deprivation to the point where [if] for argument sake she’s not getting
enough oxygen to her kidneys, they will shut down and cause essential poisoning
of her system. If she does not get enough oxygen to her brain she can
conceivably have seizures and other manifestations of the brain that will
contribute to a faster demise or death. [A.R., at p. 171]
[12]
Kaufman J. granted the treatment order. At the urging of her
counsel, he agreed to proceed on the assumption that A.C. had “capacity” to
make medical decisions because, in his view, her capacity was irrelevant to his
task. Even though she did not wish to receive blood, he concluded that when a
child is under 16 years old, “there are no legislated restrictions of the
authority” on the court’s ability to order medical treatment in the child’s
“best interests” under s. 25(8) of the Child and Family Services Act.
He was satisfied, based on the testimony of Dr. Lipnowski, that A.C. was “in
immediate danger as the minutes go by, if not [of] death, then certainly
serious damage”.
[13]
About six hours later, A.C. was given three units of blood. The
treatments were successful and A.C. recovered. On May 1, the Director’s
application was withdrawn.
[14]
A.C. and her parents appealed the order of Kaufman J. on
alternative grounds. First, they argued that s. 25(8) of the Act, and the
“best interests” test contained in it, applies only to minors under 16 without
capacity, and so should not have been applied to A.C. Alternatively, they
argued that ss. 25(8) and 25(9) of the Child and Family Services Act were
unconstitutional because they unjustifiably infringed A.C.’s rights under ss.
2 (a), 7 and 15(1) of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms ,
which state:
2. Everyone
has the following fundamental freedoms:
(a) freedom
of conscience and religion;
7. Everyone has the right to life, liberty and security of
the person and the right not to be deprived thereof except in accordance with
the principles of fundamental justice.
15. (1) Every individual is equal before and
under the law and has the right to the equal protection and equal benefit of
the law without discrimination and, in particular, without discrimination based
on race, national or ethnic origin, colour, religion, sex, age or mental or
physical disability.
[15]
On appeal, Steel J.A., for a unanimous court, confirmed at the
outset that the issue was not A.C.’s capacity, stating:
The court confirmed with counsel that this court would deal with the
interpretation of the legislation on the same basis as the motions judge; that
is, that s. 25(8) was based on the best interests test even if the minor had
capacity. Therefore, this would not be a decision as to whether the minor in
question, A.C., had capacity in this particular case. [para. 21]
She rejected
A.C.’s argument that s. 25(8) applies only to children under 16 without capacity:
2007 MBCA 9, 212 Man. R. (2d) 163. The Court of Appeal concluded that the
legislation ousts the common law principles relating to “mature minors”, and
instead empowers the court to make treatment decisions for those under 16, with
or without capacity, based on a “best interests” test. A child’s wishes and
capacity are relevant to the analysis, but not determinative. She concluded
that the Child and Family Services Act formed “a complete and exclusive
code for dealing with refusal of medical treatment in circumstances where an
application is made under s. 25 of the CFSA” (para. 61).
[16]
In evaluating the strength of A.C.’s claim under s. 7 of the Charter ,
Steel J.A. identified the competing interests at stake as being the interest an
adolescent has in his or her personal autonomy and, on the other hand, the
state’s interest in the protection of children and the sanctity of life. In
her view, s. 25 of the Child and Family Services Act successfully
balanced these interests. It was not “arbitrary” to adopt the age of 16 as the
“presumptive line”, because it cannot be said that the law “bears no relation
to, or is inconsistent with, the objective that lies behind [it]” (para. 79,
citing Rodriguez v. British Columbia (Attorney General), [1993] 3
S.C.R. 519, at pp. 594-95).
[17]
Four foundations grounded Steel J.A.’s conclusion that the
threshold age of 16 was not arbitrary:
First, a fixed
age has been chosen as the dividing line for other purposes regarding children
and fundamental life choices. We do not allow children, whether they are
mature minors or not, to determine whether to attend school, to determine where
to live when their parents divorce (although their wishes may be considered) or
to decide to marry. Second, the requirement for an individual assessment in
the case of a child under 16 may not adequately protect children in an
emergency situation where a court must consider a wide variety of variables,
including the different physical, emotional and intellectual maturity of each
child in a time‑limited situation. Third, the level for intervention is
life threatening. In this type of situation, the state has chosen a measured
policy which allows for less discretion on the part of younger teenagers and
more discretion on the part of older teenagers.
Finally, the determination is made within the context
of a best interests test, taking into account the child’s wishes and capacity.
The best interests test has been used historically and is internationally
recognized. [paras. 79-80]
[18]
The Court of Appeal also concluded that any breach of A.C.’s s.
2 (a) right to freedom of religion was justified under s. 1 of the Charter .
The objective of the legislation, “protecting the life and health of children”,
was clearly pressing and substantial. The rational connection and minimal
impairment branches of the Oakes test (R. v. Oakes, [1986] 1
S.C.R. 103) were also met for substantially the same reasons that led the court
to conclude that the scheme did not violate s. 7 .
[19]
Finally, Steel J.A. found that there was no breach of s. 15,
A.C.’s equality rights, because there was no “arbitrary marginalization” of
children since the legislation “attempts to respond to the dependency and
reduced maturity of children as a group” (para. 105).
[20]
Steel J.A. offered some concluding guidance for the judicial
conduct of these difficult proceedings. The procedure “must be adapted to the
nature of the medical emergency that exists” and “should be conducted with
appropriate procedural safeguards” (para. 110), but the opinions of medical
personnel are not determinative. The court should, as directed by the Child
and Family Services Act, and, “where possible”, give the child “a
meaningful, age-appropriate opportunity to participate in the proceedings”
(para. 113) and take those views into account.
[21]
I agree with Steel J.A. that the provisions are constitutional
and I agree with much of her thoughtful analysis. With respect, however, I
disagree with her interpretive conclusion that s. 25(8) of the Act “treats all
minors under 16 the same way” (para. 49). In my view, to be
constitutionally compliant, the interpretation of “best interests” in s. 25(8)
of the Act requires that sufficient account be taken of a particular
adolescent’s maturity in any given medical treatment context.
[22]
It is a sliding scale of scrutiny, with the adolescent’s views
becoming increasingly determinative depending on his or her ability to exercise
mature, independent judgment. The more serious the nature of the decision, and
the more severe its potential impact on the life or health of the child, the
greater the degree of scrutiny that will be required.
[23]
This interpretation of the “best interests” standard in s. 25(8)
of the Act is not only more consistent with the actual developmental reality of
young people; it is also conceptually consistent with the evolutionary
development of the common law “mature minor” doctrine in both the Canadian and
international jurisprudence. Under this doctrine, courts have readily accepted
that an adolescent’s treatment wishes should be granted a degree of deference
that is reflective of his or her evolving maturity. Notably, however, they
have rarely viewed this mandate as being inconsistent with their overarching
responsibility to protect children from harm.
ANALYSIS
[24]
Under the Child and Family Services Act, where either the
child or the child’s parents refuse to consent to recommended medical
treatment, the court has the power under s. 25(8) to consider whether
authorizing treatment against the wishes of the parents and/or child is in the
child’s best interests. Section 25(9) presumes that the best interests of a
child 16 or over will be most effectively promoted by allowing the child’s
views to be determinative, unless it can be shown that the child lacks the
maturity to understand the decision or appreciate its consequences. Where the
child is under 16, no such presumption exists.
[25]
The heart of A.C.’s constitutional argument is that there is, in
essence, an irrebuttable presumption of incapacity in the Act for those under
16, and that this renders ss. 25(8) and 25(9) of the Child and Family
Services Act contrary to ss. 2 (a), 7 and 15 of the Charter .
She does not challenge the constitutionality of a cut-off age of 16; she
challenges the constitutionality of depriving those under 16 of an opportunity
to prove that they too have sufficient maturity to direct the course of their
medical treatment. Her submission is that at common law, mature minors,
similar to adults, have the capacity to decide their own medical care. In
failing to recognize this “deeply rooted” right, the statutory scheme, she
argues, infringes the Charter .
[26]
Her s. 7 argument is that the provisions infringe her liberty and
security interests and are contrary to the principles of fundamental justice
because the inability of those under 16 to prove capacity is an arbitrary
restriction. She argued that if the provisions were interpreted to include a
rebuttable presumption that would allow her to lead evidence demonstrating that
she had sufficient maturity to make treatment decisions, they would not be
arbitrary and would be in accordance with the principles of fundamental
justice.
[27]
A.C. further argued that the provisions violate s. 15 because
they discriminate against her based on age. Again, however, she concludes that
if the legislation permitted her to demonstrate that she had sufficient
decisional maturity, there is no discrimination.
[28]
Lastly, A.C.’s argument under s. 2 (a) is that the
provisions violate her religious convictions as a Jehovah’s Witness. Once
again, it is her view that the ability to lead evidence of maturity would cure
any constitutional infirmity.
[29]
I accept the general validity of A.C.’s assertion that there is
no constitutional justification for ignoring the decision-making capacity of
children under the age of 16 when they are apprehended by the state. However,
I do not think that the impugned provisions, properly interpreted, call for
such an approach.
[30]
The question is whether the statutory scheme strikes a
constitutional balance between what the law has consistently seen as an
individual’s fundamental right to autonomous decision making in connection with
his or her body and the law’s equally persistent attempts to protect vulnerable
children from harm. This requires examining the legislative scheme, the common
law of medical decision making both for adults and minors, a comparative review
of international jurisprudence, and relevant social scientific and legal
literature. The observations that emerge from this review will inform the
constitutional analysis.
The
Legislative Scheme
[31]
The Child and Family Services Act, which defines when and
how children can be brought under the care of the state, is focused on
protecting the best interests of the child in accordance with defined
criteria. Children are defined in s. 1(1) as those under the age of majority,
which, in Manitoba, is 18 (Age of Majority Act, C.C.S.M. c. A7, s. 1).
In any proceeding under the Act, “a child 12 years of age or more is entitled
to be advised of the proceedings and of their possible implications for the
child and shall be given an opportunity to make his or her views and
preferences known” to the decision maker (s. 2(2)). Children under 12 can also
have their views taken into account if a judge is satisfied that they are “able
to understand the nature of the proceedings” and the judge “is of the opinion
that it would not be harmful to the child” (s. 2(3)).
[32]
The “best interests of the child” standard, found in s. 2(1),
is the conceptual cornerstone of the Act, whose preambular Declaration of
Principles proclaims that “[t]he best interests of children are a fundamental
responsibility of society.” Section 2(1) is set out in full, with the relevant
provisions underlined:
2(1) The
best interests of the child shall be the paramount consideration of the
director, an authority, the children’s advocate, an agency and a court in all
proceedings under this Act affecting a child, other than proceedings to
determine whether a child is in need of protection, and in determining the
best interests of the child all relevant matters shall be considered, including
(a) the
child’s opportunity to have a parent‑child relationship as a wanted and
needed member within a family structure;
(b) the
mental, emotional, physical and educational needs of the child and the
appropriate care or treatment, or both, to meet such needs;
(c) the
child’s mental, emotional and physical stage of development;
(d) the
child’s sense of continuity and need for permanency with the least possible
disruption;
(e) the
merits and the risks of any plan proposed by the agency that would be caring
for the child compared with the merits and the risks of the child returning to
or remaining within the family;
(f) the
views and preferences of the child where they can reasonably be ascertained;
(g) the
effect upon the child of any delay in the final disposition of the proceedings;
and
(h) the child’s cultural, linguistic, racial and religious
heritage.
[33]
A child in need of protection is defined in s. 17(1), which
states that “a child is in need of protection where the life, health or
emotional well‑being of the child is endangered by the act or omission of
a person”. Section 17(2) develops this general proposition by including a
child who
(b) is
in the care, custody, control or charge of a person
.
. .
(iii) who neglects or refuses to provide or obtain proper medical or
other remedial care or treatment necessary for the health or well‑being
of the child or who refuses to permit such care or treatment to be provided to
the child when the care or treatment is recommended by a duly qualified medical
practitioner;
[34]
Section 25 of the Act deals with the authorization of the medical
treatment of an apprehended child, including when consent is required and what
procedures should be followed. Authority is given to child protection
authorities to authorize medical treatment for apprehended children in s.
25(1)(b) and (c). Under s. 25(1)(b), a medical examination can be authorized
by the agency where the consent of a parent or guardian would otherwise be required.
Medical or dental treatment can be authorized under s. 25(1)(c) if
(i) the
treatment is recommended by a duly qualified medical practitioner or dentist,
(ii) the
consent of a parent or guardian of the child would otherwise be required, and
(iii) no parent or guardian of the child is available to consent to
the treatment.
[35]
According to s. 25(2), where a child is 16 or over, a medical
examination or treatment cannot be authorized without the consent of the
child. Where the child is 16 or over and refuses to consent, or where the
parents of a child under 16 refuse to consent, the agency may apply to a court
for an order authorizing the treatment in accordance with s. 25(3), which
states:
25(3) An
agency may apply to court for an order
(a) authorizing
a medical examination of an apprehended child where the child is 16 years of
age or older and refuses to consent to the examination; or
(b)
authorizing medical or dental treatment for an apprehended child where
(i) the
parents or guardians of the child refuse to consent to the treatment, or
(ii) the child is 16 years of age or older and refuses to consent to
the treatment.
[36]
Where the judge is satisfied that the life or health of the child
is seriously and imminently endangered, the application can proceed without
filing the necessary documents (s. 25(6)) and testimony can be given over the
telephone (s. 25(7)).
[37]
Sections 25(8) and 25(9) govern when a court can impose medical
treatment at the request of the agency. They are the two provisions being
challenged in this case and are repeated here for ease of reference:
25(8) Subject
to subsection (9), upon completion of a hearing, the court may authorize a
medical examination or any medical or dental treatment that the court considers
to be in the best interests of the child.
25(9) The
court shall not make an order under subsection (8) with respect to a child who
is 16 years of age or older without the child’s consent unless the court is
satisfied that the child is unable
(a) to
understand the information that is relevant to making a decision to consent or
not consent to the medical examination or the medical or dental treatment; or
(b) to appreciate the reasonably foreseeable consequences of making a
decision to consent or not consent to the medical examination or the medical or
dental treatment.
[38]
This is the relevant statutory context. Its language and objectives
frame the constitutional analysis but cannot, by themselves, provide the whole
picture. As stated earlier, A.C.’s argument that ss. 25(8) and 25(9) infringe
the Charter is grounded in the contention that they fail to respect the
mature minors’ “deeply rooted” right to decide their own medical care. Unlike
the Chief Justice, therefore, it is my respectful view that the next step in
the interpretive exercise requires examining the common law of medical decision
making generally, and then how it has been applied in the case of minors.
Common Law
for Adults
[39]
The legal environment for adults making medical treatment
decisions is important because it demonstrates the tenacious relevance in our
legal system of the principle that competent individuals are — and should be —
free to make decisions about their bodily integrity.
[40]
At common law, adults are presumptively entitled to direct the
course of their own medical treatment and generally must give their “informed
consent” before treatment occurs, although this presumption of capacity can be
rebutted by evidence to the contrary. (See Lucinda Ferguson, “The End of an
Age: Beyond Age Restrictions for Minors’ Medical Treatment Decisions”, paper
prepared for the Law Commission of Canada (October 29, 2004), at p. 5.) When
competency is not in question, this right “to decide one’s own fate” (Re T
(adult: refusal of medical treatment), [1992] 4 All E.R. 649 (C.A.), at p.
661) includes the unqualified right to refuse life-saving medical treatment.
[41]
In the leading case of Malette v. Shulman (1990), 72 O.R.
(2d) 417 (C.A.), a doctor was held liable for battery because he gave an
unconscious adult Jehovah’s Witness a blood transfusion despite the fact that
she had a signed card stating clearly that she would not consent to a
transfusion. Even though the treatment almost certainly saved her life, Robins
J.A. cogently explained the basis for the doctor’s liability as follows:
A competent
adult is generally entitled to reject a specific treatment or all treatment, or
to select an alternate form of treatment, even if the decision may entail risks
as serious as death and may appear mistaken in the eyes of the medical
profession or of the community. Regardless of the doctor’s opinion, it is
the patient who has the final say on whether to undergo the treatment. . . .
The doctrine of informed consent is plainly intended to ensure the freedom of
individuals to make choices concerning their medical care.
.
. .
. . . To transfuse a Jehovah’s Witness in the face
of her explicit instructions to the contrary would, in my opinion, violate her
right to control her own body and show disrespect for the religious values by
which she has chosen to live her life . . . .
.
. .
The state’s interest in preserving the life or health of a
competent patient must generally give way to the patient’s stronger interest in
directing the course of her own life. . . .
.
. .
In sum, it is my view that the principal interest
asserted by Mrs. Malette in this case — the interest in the freedom to
reject, or refuse to consent to, intrusions of her bodily integrity — outweighs
the interest of the state in the preservation of life and health and the
protection of the integrity of the medical profession. While the right to
decline medical treatment is not absolute or unqualified, those state interests
are not in themselves sufficiently compelling to justify forcing a patient to
submit to nonconsensual invasions of her person. [Emphasis added; pp. 424,
426, 429 and 430.]
[42]
There is a significant exception to this principle in the case of
emergencies. Robins J.A. explained why no consent is required in such
circumstances as follows:
The emergency situation is an exception to the
general rule requiring a patient’s prior consent. When immediate medical
treatment is necessary to save the life or preserve the health of a person who,
by reason of unconsciousness or extreme illness, is incapable of either giving
or withholding consent, the doctor may proceed without the patient’s consent.
The delivery of medical services is rendered lawful in such circumstances
either on the rationale that the doctor has implied consent from the patient to
give emergency aid or, more accurately in my view, on the rationale that the
doctor is privileged by reason of necessity in giving the aid and is not to be
held liable for so doing. On either basis, in an emergency the law sets aside
the requirement of consent on the assumption that the patient, as a reasonable
person, would want emergency aid to be rendered if she were capable of giving
instructions. [pp. 424-25]
[43]
The principles set out in Malette were applied by the
Ontario Court of Appeal in a non-religious context in Fleming v. Reid
(1991), 4 O.R. (3d) 74, where two men with schizophrenia were declared to be
incompetent to consent to psychiatric treatment. Their physician proposed to
treat them with neuroleptic drugs which, for many, control or minimize
psychotic episodes or symptoms associated with schizophrenia, but which can
have significant and unpredictable harmful side effects. When they were
competent, the two patients had expressed a desire not to take the drugs.
[44]
Concluding that these preferences ought to be respected, Robins
J.A. summarized the applicable law as follows:
The right to determine what shall, or shall not,
be done with one’s own body, and to be free from non-consensual medical
treatment, is a right deeply rooted in our common law. This right
underlies the doctrine of informed consent. With very limited exceptions,
every person’s body is considered inviolate, and, accordingly, every competent
adult has the right to be free from unwanted medical treatment. The fact
that serious risks or consequences may result from a refusal of medical
treatment does not vitiate the right of medical self-determination.
.
. .
. . . in my view, the common law right to
determine what shall be done with one’s own body and the constitutional right
to security of the person, both of which are founded on the belief in the
dignity and autonomy of each individual, can be treated as co-extensive.
[Emphasis added; pp. 85 and 88.]
(See also R.
v. Morgentaler, [1988] 1 S.C.R. 30.)
[45]
In Rodriguez, notwithstanding its conclusion on assisted
suicide, this Court nonetheless confirmed that adults have the right to refuse
or discontinue treatment, regardless of the results. As noted by Justice
Sopinka for the majority:
Canadian courts have recognized a common law right of
patients to refuse consent to medical treatment, or to demand that treatment,
once commenced, be withdrawn or discontinued (Ciarlariello v. Schacter,
[1993] 2 S.C.R. 119). This right has been specifically recognized to exist
even if the withdrawal from or refusal of treatment may result in death (Nancy
B. v. Hotel Dieu de Québec (1992), 86 D.L.R. (4th) 385 (Que. S.C.); and Malette
v. Shulman . . .). [p. 598]
Common Law
for Minors
[46]
The latitude accorded to adults at common law to decide their own
medical treatment had historically narrowed dramatically when applied to
children. However the common law has more recently abandoned the assumption
that all minors lack decisional capacity and replaced it with a general
recognition that children are entitled to a degree of decision-making autonomy
that is reflective of their evolving intelligence and understanding. This is
known as the common law “mature minor” doctrine. As the Manitoba Law Reform
Commission noted, this doctrine is “a well-known, well-accepted and workable
principle which . . . raise[s] few difficulties on a day-to-day basis” (Minors’
Consent to Health Care (1995), Report #91, at p. 33). The doctrine
addresses the concern that young people should not automatically be deprived of
the right to make decisions affecting their medical treatment. It provides
instead that the right to make those decisions varies in accordance with the
young person’s level of maturity, with the degree to which maturity is
scrutinized intensifying in accordance with the severity of the potential
consequences of the treatment or of its refusal.
[47]
A.C. argued that the mature minor doctrine means that mature
children are, at common law, entitled to make all decisions related to
their medical care, including the decision to refuse life-saving medical
treatment. This literal interpretation of the “mature minor” doctrine, with
respect, miscasts its actual development and application, both in Canada and abroad.
It also seriously underrepresents the limits on the ability to accurately assess
maturity in any given child.
[48]
The “mature minor” principle was first articulated by the House
of Lords in Gillick v. West Norfolk and Wisbech Area Health Authority,
[1985] 3 All E.R. 402. The issue was whether a doctor could prescribe
contraception for a girl under the age of 16 without attracting liability in
tort for proceeding without the consent of her parents.
[49]
The majority accepted that adolescents under the age of 16 could,
theoretically, consent to medical treatment. Lord Fraser explained:
It seems to me verging on the absurd to suggest that a girl or a boy aged
15 could not effectively consent, for example, to have a medical examination of
some trivial injury to his body or even to have a broken arm set. Of course
the consent of the parents should normally be asked, but they may not be
immediately available. Provided the patient, whether a boy or a girl, is
capable of understanding what is proposed, and of expressing his or her own
wishes, I see no good reason for holding that he or she lacks the capacity to
express them validly and effectively and to authorise the medical man to make
the examination or give the treatment which he advises. After all, a minor
under the age of 16 can, within certain limits, enter into a contract. He or
she can also sue and be sued, and can give evidence on oath. Moreover, a girl
under 16 can give sufficiently effective consent to sexual intercourse to lead to
the legal result that the man involved does not commit the crime of rape . . .
. Accordingly, I am not disposed to hold now, for the first time, that a girl
aged less than 16 lacks the power to give valid consent to contraceptive advice
or treatment, merely on account of her age. [p. 409]
[50]
While accepting that the parental right and duty of custody and
control does not entirely disappear until a child reaches the age of majority,
Lord Fraser observed that the imposition of a rigid legal line would fail to
reflect the reality that a child’s transition from childhood to adulthood is a
continuous one:
It is, in my view, contrary to the ordinary experience of mankind, at
least in Western Europe in the present century, to say that a child or a young
person remains in fact under the complete control of his parents until he
attains the definite age of majority, now 18 in the United Kingdom, and that on
attaining that age he suddenly acquires independence. In practice most wise
parents relax their control gradually as the child develops and encourage him
or her to become increasingly independent. Moreover, the degree of parental
control actually exercised over a particular child does in practice vary
considerably according to his understanding and intelligence and it would, in
my opinion, be unrealistic for the courts not to recognise these facts. [pp.
410-11]
[51]
In a separate but concurring opinion, Lord Scarman also conceived
of parental authority as declining gradually in accordance with the young
person’s evolution into adulthood:
. . . I would
hold that as a matter of law the parental right to determine whether or not
their minor child below the age of 16 will have medical treatment terminates if
and when the child achieves a sufficient understanding and intelligence to
enable him or her to understand fully what is proposed.
. . .
. . . The law relating to parent and child is concerned with
the problems of the growth and maturity of the human personality. If the law
should impose on the process of “growing up” fixed limits where nature knows
only a continuous process, the price would be artificiality and a lack of
realism in an area where the law must be sensitive to human development and
social change. . . .
. . . parental right yields to the child’s right to make his own
decisions when he reaches a sufficient understanding and intelligence to be
capable of making up his own mind on the matter requiring decision. [pp. 423
and 421-422]
While accepting
that assessing the sufficiency of a child’s maturity created an uncertain
standard, Lord Scarman, like Lord Fraser, was of the view that a level of
uncertainty was worth the cost of keeping “the law in line with social
experience” (p. 425).
[52]
Gillick was hailed as ushering in an era of judicial
respect for children’s rights to self-determination, and it clearly made great
strides in that direction. Yet it is important to remember that the issue was
a child’s ability to authorize treatment that a medical professional
considered to be in that child’s best interests. Lord Fraser’s conclusion that
physicians could rely on the instructions of “mature” children rested at least
partly on the assumption that “there may be circumstances in which a doctor is
a better judge of the medical advice and treatment which will conduce to a
[child’s] welfare than her parents” (p. 412 (emphasis added)). The
ultimate question was always “what is best in the interests of the . . .
[minor] patient” (p. 413).
[53]
Even for Lord Scarman, who seemed to adopt a somewhat more
enhanced view of a young person’s decisional rights, the issues of autonomy and
“best interests” were conflated to some degree: the question was whether the
minor was capable of “exercis[ing] a wise choice in his or her own interests”
(p. 423).
[54]
Several years later, in Re W (a minor) (medical treatment),
[1992] 4 All E.R. 627, the English Court of Appeal dealt with the more
complicated question of whether a court could override an adolescent’s refusal
of treatment in the face of great injury or even death. Re W, and
the prior decision in Re R (a minor) (wardship: medical treatment),
[1991] 4 All E.R. 177 (C.A.), definitively established that even “mature
minors” were subject to the court’s inherent parens patriae jurisdiction.
This inherent jurisdiction was found by the court to be broader than the powers
of a natural parent, and justified overriding the treatment wishes of even a “Gillick-competent”
minor.
[55]
All three judges in Re W stressed, however, that while the
court was theoretically empowered to authorize treatment of “Gillick-competent”
minors under its parens patriae jurisdiction, the wishes and objections
of a minor would necessarily factor significantly into any assessment of his or
her “best interests”, with the weight given to such views varying in accordance
with the minor’s maturity. As Balcombe L.J. stated:
[T]here is no
overriding limitation to preclude the exercise by the court of its inherent
jurisdiction and the matter becomes one for the exercise by the court of its
discretion. Nevertheless the discretion is not to be exercised in a moral
vacuum. . . . [A]s children approach the age of majority, they are increasingly
able to take their own decisions concerning their medical treatment. . . .
Accordingly the older the child concerned the greater the weight the court
should give to its wishes, certainly in the field of medical
treatment. In
a sense this is merely one aspect of the application of the test that the
welfare of the child is the paramount consideration. It will normally be in
the best interests of a child of sufficient age and understanding to make an
informed decision that the court should respect its integrity as a human being
and not lightly override its decision on such a personal matter as medical
treatment, all the more so if that treatment is invasive. . . .
. . . What I do stress is that the judge
should approach the exercise of the discretion with a predilection to give
effect to the child’s wishes on the basis that prima facie that will be in
his or her best interests. [Emphasis added; pp. 643-44.]
Nolan L.J.
agreed that “[i]n considering the welfare of a child, the court must not only
recognise but if necessary defend the right of the child, having sufficient
understanding to take an informed decision, to make his or her own choice” (p.
648).
[56]
Gillick, Re R and Re W currently represent
the law for adolescents’ medical decision-making capacity in the United Kingdom.
What is important to note is that none of these cases asserted that a “mature
minor” should be treated as an adult for all decisional treatment purposes.
The Court of Appeal confirmed in Re R and Re W that a child’s “Gillick
competence” or “mature minor” status at common law will not necessarily
prevent the court from overriding that child’s wishes in situations where the
child’s life is threatened. In such cases, the court may exercise its parens
patriae jurisdiction to authorize treatment based on an assessment of what
would be most conducive to the child’s welfare, with the child’s views carrying
increasing weight in the analysis as his or her maturity increases.
[57]
To date, no court in the United Kingdom has allowed a child under
16 to refuse medical treatment that was likely to preserve the child’s
prospects of a normal and healthy future, either on the ground that the
competence threshold had not been met (see, e.g., Re E (a minor) (wardship:
medical treatment), [1993] 1 F.L.R. 386 (Fam. Div.); Re S (a minor)
(consent to medical treatment), [1994] 2 F.L.R. 1065 (Fam. Div.); Re L
(medical treatment: Gillick competency), [1998] 2 F.L.R. 810 (Fam. Div.)),
or because the court concluded that it had the power to override the wishes of
even a “Gillick-competent” child (see Re M (medical treatment:
consent), [1999] 2 F.L.R. 1097 (Fam. Div.)).
[58]
Shortly after the House of Lords’ decision in Gillick, the
“mature minor” doctrine was applied in Canada. In J.S.C. v. Wren (1986),
76 A.R. 115 (C.A.), a 16-year-old girl had received medical approval for a
therapeutic abortion, but her parents sought an injunction to prevent it
because the age of majority was 18. Based on Gillick, Kerans J.A.
concluded that the girl was capable of consenting to the abortion on her own
behalf. As in Gillick, however, the proposition advanced in Wren
was not that a “mature minor” was essentially an adult for medical
treatment purposes, but rather that courts must give adolescents room to
exercise their autonomy to the extent that their maturity allows:
What is the application of the principle in this case? We infer from
the circumstances detailed in argument here that this expectant mother and her
parents had fully discussed the ethical issues involved and, most regrettably,
disagreed. We cannot infer from that disagreement that this expectant mother
did not have sufficient intelligence and understanding to make up her own mind.
Meanwhile, it is conceded that she is a “normal intelligent 16 year old”. We
infer that she did have sufficient intelligence and understanding to make up
her own mind and did so. At her age and level of understanding, the law is that
she is to be permitted to do so.
.
. .
. . . Parental rights (and obligations)
clearly do exist and they do not wholly disappear until the age of majority.
The modern law, however, is that the courts will exercise increasing
restraint in that regard as a child grows to and through adolescence.
[Emphasis added; paras. 16 and 13.]
(See also Van
Mol (Guardian ad Litem of) v. Ashmore, 1999 BCCA 6, 168 D.L.R. (4th) 637.)
[59]
As in the United Kingdom, where deferring to the wishes of a
child under 16 was likely to jeopardize his or her potential for a healthy
future, treatment has always been ordered by courts in Canada over the refusal
of the adolescent and his or her parents. In H. (T.) v. Children’s Aid
Society of Metropolitan Toronto (1996), 138 D.L.R. (4th) 144 (Ont. Ct.
(Gen. Div.)), the 13-year-old patient suffered from aplastic anaemia. She and
her mother, both Jehovah’s Witnesses, refused to consent to any treatment involving
blood products. The two treating physicians, as well as a child psychiatrist,
testified that the girl lacked the maturity to judge the foreseeable
consequences of her decision. She was found not “capable of expression of
refusal of consent” and therefore made a temporary ward of the state so that
she could be treated.
[60]
In Dueck (Re) (1999), 171 D.L.R. (4th) 761 (Sask. Q.B.), a
13-year-old boy refused to consent to further chemotherapy and surgery of his
leg. Rothery J. found that he was not capable of refusing consent because he
was deeply influenced by his father, whom he always obeyed without question.
The father controlled the information the boy was getting about treatment, and
misled him with respect to the nature of his condition, the treatment proposed,
and the likelihood that the non‑medical alternative therapies the father
preferred would be successful. The boy’s decision to refuse treatment was
therefore found not to be voluntary, and the court ordered that he receive the
treatments.
[61]
In Alberta (Director of Child Welfare) v. H. (B.), 2002
ABPC 39, [2002] 11 W.W.R. 752, a 16-year-old girl was diagnosed with acute
myeloid leukemia. The recommended course of treatment was intense chemotherapy,
which would require the use of blood products. Such treatment had a success
rate of 40-50 percent, which increased to 50-65 percent if accompanied by a
bone marrow transplant. The girl and her parents, Jehovah’s Witnesses, refused
to consent to the use of blood products. The father later changed his mind and
consented, but the hospital and physicians would not treat the girl over her
own refusal, since they were of the view that she was a mature adolescent and
therefore entitled to refuse treatment. The Director of Child Welfare sought
an apprehension and medical treatment order. Jordan Prov. Ct. J. found that
the girl was not mature enough to make the decision to die, concluding that she
had
not had the life or developmental experience which would allow her to
question her faith and/or its teachings and that such experience is an
essential step in arriving at a personal level of development such that she can
be considered to be a mature minor who has the capacity to refuse medical
treatment which is necessary to save her life. Intelligence, thoughtfulness,
exemplary behaviour and notable academic achievement are not sufficient when
the magnitude of the decision faced by a 16 year-old involves a certain risk of
death. [p. 761]
The decision was
upheld at the Court of Queen’s Bench, 2002 ABQB 371, [2002] 7 W.W.R. 616, aff’d
2002 ABCA 109, [2002] 7 W.W.R. 644, leave to appeal refused, [2002] 3 S.C.R.
vi, on the ground that the relevant provincial legislation ousted the common
law rule of mature minor and justified the court’s authorizing treatment in the
child’s best interests. See also Hôpital Ste-Justine v. Giron, 2002
CanLII 34269 (Que. Sup. Ct.); U. (C.) (Next friend of) v. Alberta (Director
of Child Welfare), 2003 ABCA 66, 13 Alta. L.R. (4th) 1.
[62]
Where a child’s decisional capacity to refuse treatment has been
upheld, on the other hand, it has been because the court has accepted that the
mature child’s wishes have been consistent with his or her best interests. In Re
L.D.K. (1985), 48 R.F.L. (2d) 164 (Ont. Prov. Ct. (Fam. Div.)), for
example, the patient was a 12-year-old girl suffering from acute myeloid
leukaemia. She and her parents were Jehovah’s Witnesses, and refused to consent
to chemotherapy that would necessitate blood transfusions. The Children’s Aid
Society apprehended the girl in order to compel the treatment. Two doctors
testified that the odds of a favourable outcome after treatment were relatively
low (around 30 percent) and that the side effects were severe. The trial
judge, Main Prov. Ct. J., accepted the girl’s commitment to her religious
beliefs and to fighting against any transfusion, and found that “the emotional
trauma [the child] would experience” in forced treatment would outweigh the
anticipated benefits (p. 169). He refused to make her a ward of the state,
concluding: “[T]his child’s life is equally in danger whichever path is taken,
whether she is left here [in hospital] and subjected to this treatment or she
is allowed to leave and be treated according to the wishes and beliefs of herself
and her parents” (p. 170).
[63]
In Re A.Y. (1993), 111 Nfld. & P.E.I.R. 91 (Nfld.
S.C.), the court was faced with an application from the Director of Child
Welfare to impose treatment on a 15-year-old Jehovah’s Witness who had cancer.
The treating doctor was of the view that the young person required blood
transfusions as well as chemotherapy. The court found both that the child was
mature and that it was not in his best interests to impose treatment. Wells J.
noted that the treatment was less than 40 percent likely to be effective, was
not “essential”, and was contrary to the mature adolescent’s wishes. He was
not, therefore, found to be a child in need of protection and subject to the
state’s care. (See also Region 2 Hospital Corp. v. Walker (1994), 150 N.B.R.
(2d) 366 (C.A.).)
Other
Jurisdictions
[64]
Not surprisingly, the relationship between an adolescent’s
maturity and his or her right to “medical self‑determination” has been
canvassed in other jurisdictions.
[65]
The Supreme Court of the United States has never commented
directly on the legal rights of mature adolescents to direct their own medical
care, although it has recognized that some minors possess the maturity to make
certain specific constitutionally protected decisions, including the decision
to have an abortion (see, e.g., Planned Parenthood of Central Missouri v.
Danforth, Attorney General of Missouri, 428 U.S. 52 (1976)). In Bellotti,
Attorney General of Massachusetts v. Baird, 443 U.S. 622 (1979), however,
the court indicated that adolescents’ constitutional rights could not “be
equated with those of adults” due to “the particular vulnerability of children;
their inability to make critical decisions in an informed, mature manner; and
the importance of the parental role in child rearing” (p. 634). Neglecting to
draw a clear distinction between incompetent younger children and older
adolescents, the Supreme Court in Parham, Commissioner, Department of Human
Resources of Georgia v. J. R., 442 U.S. 584 (1979), held that
“[m]ost children, even in adolescence, simply are not able to make sound
judgments concerning many decisions, including their need for medical care or
treatment” (p. 603).
[66]
Individual states have approached the issue of adolescent
decision making in various ways, some enacting statutory exceptions to the
default presumption of incapacity, and some embracing the common law “mature
minor” doctrine to varying degrees. As in the U.K. and Canada, no state court
has gone so far as to suggest that the “mature minor” doctrine effectively
“reclassifies” mature adolescents as adults for medical treatment purposes.
The variance in the jurisprudence from the different states is captured in some
of the following cases and academic writing: Cardwell v. Bechtol, 724
S.W.2d 739 (Tenn. 1987); Belcher v. Charleston Area Medical Center, 422
S.E.2d 827 (W. Va. 1992); In re E.G., 549 N.E.2d 322 (Ill. 1989);
In the Matter of Long Island Jewish Medical Center, 557 N.Y.S.2d 239
(Sup. Ct. 1990); Novak v. Cobb County-Kennestone Hospital Authority, 849
F. Supp. 1559 (N.D. Ga. 1994), aff’d 74 F.3d 1173 (11th Cir. 1996); In the
Matter of Rena, 705 N.E.2d 1155 (Mass. App. Ct. 1999); Commonwealth v.
Nixon, 761 A.2d 1151 (Pa. 2000). See also Rhonda Gay Hartman, “Coming of
Age: Devising Legislation for Adolescent Medical Decision-Making” (2002), 28 Am.
J. L. & Med. 409; Jonathan F. Will, “My God My Choice: The Mature Minor
Doctrine and Adolescent Refusal of Life-Saving or Sustaining Medical Treatment
Based Upon Religious Beliefs” (2005-2006), 22 J. Contemp. Health L. &
Pol’y 233; Elizabeth S. Scott, “The Legal Construction of Adolescence”
(2000-2001), 29 Hofstra L. Rev. 547; Jennifer L. Rosato, “Let’s Get
Real: Quilting a Principled Approach to Adolescent Empowerment in Health Care
Decision-Making” (2001-2002), 51 DePaul L. Rev. 769.
[67]
Australian courts too have recognized the “mature minor” rule.
In Secretary, Department of Health and Community Services v. J.W.B.
(Marion’s Case) (1992), 175 C.L.R. 218, the High Court of Australia stated:
The common law
in Australia has been uncertain as to whether minors under sixteen can consent
to medical treatment in any circumstances. However, the recent House of Lords
decision in Gillick v. West Norfolk A.H.A. is of persuasive authority.
The proposition endorsed by the majority in that case was that parental power
to consent to medical treatment on behalf of a child diminishes gradually as
the child’s capacities and maturity grow and that this rate of development
depends on the individual child. . . . A minor is, according to this
principle, capable of giving informed consent when he or she “achieves a
sufficient understanding and intelligence to enable him or her to understand
fully what is proposed”.
This approach, though lacking the certainty of a
fixed age rule, accords with experience and with psychology. It should be
followed in this country as part of the common law. [pp. 237-38]
[68]
And, as elsewhere, Australian courts have determined that their
authority to make orders in respect of children’s welfare, including medical
treatment, is not limited by the decisions of a “Gillick-competent”
minor (see Director General, New South Wales Department of Community
Services v. Y., [1999] NSWSC 644 (AustLII), at paras. 99-103). The
treatment decisions of even mature children can therefore be overridden by a
court exercising its parens patriae jurisdiction or the Family Court’s
almost identical statutory jurisdiction. In Minister for Health v. A.S.,
[2004] WASC 286, 33 Fam. L.R. 223, for example, the Supreme Court of Western
Australia stated that the court will almost always override a child’s decision
to refuse life-saving or life-prolonging treatment, in accordance with the
child’s best interests. While the views of the child are relevant to the “best
interests” analysis, and while a court will exercise great caution in
overturning them, these wishes alone will not be determinative, regardless of
maturity (para. 23; Marion’s Case, at p. 280).
[69]
What is clear from the above survey of Canadian and international
jurisprudence is that while courts have readily embraced the concept of
granting adolescents a degree of autonomy that is reflective of their evolving
maturity, they have generally not seen the “mature minor” doctrine as dictating
guaranteed outcomes, particularly where the consequences for the young person
are catastrophic.
Academic
Literature
[70]
This reluctance to interpret the “mature minor” doctrine as
demanding automatic judicial deference to the young person’s medical treatment
decisions where doing so will put the adolescent’s life or health in grave
danger seems to stem from the difficulty of determining with any certainty
whether a given adolescent is, in fact, sufficiently mature to make a
particular decision. As academic legal and social scientific literature in
this area reveals, there is no simple and straightforward means of definitively
evaluating — or discounting — the myriad of subtle factors that may affect an
adolescent’s ability to make mature, stable and independent choices in the
medical treatment context.
[71]
There is considerable support for the notion that while many
adolescents may have the technical ability to make complex decisions, this does
not always mean they will have the necessary maturity and independence of
judgment to make truly autonomous choices. As Jane Fortin significantly
observes: “. . . cognitive capacity to reach decisions does not necessarily
correlate with ‘mature’ judgment” (Children’s Rights and the Developing Law
(2nd ed. 2003), at p. 73). (See also Lucinda Ferguson, “Trial by Proxy: How
Section 15 of the Charter Removes Age from Adolescence” (2005), 4 J.L.
& Equality 84, at pp. 84 and 92; Lois A. Weithorn and Susan B.
Campbell, “The Competency of Children and Adolescents to Make Informed
Treatment Decisions” (1982), 53 Child Dev. 1589; Catherine C. Lewis, “A
Comparison of Minors’ and Adults’ Pregnancy Decisions” (1980), 50 Amer. J.
Orthopsychiat. 446; Bruce Ambuel and Julian Rappaport, “Developmental
Trends in Adolescents’ Psychological and Legal Competence to Consent to
Abortion” (1992), 16 Law & Hum. Behav. 129; Lainie Friedman Ross,
“Health Care Decisionmaking by Children: Is It in Their Best Interest?”, in
Michael Freeman, ed., Children, Medicine and the Law (2005), 487, at pp.
488-89; Allen E. Buchanan and Dan W. Brock, Deciding for Others: The Ethics
of Surrogate Decision Making (1990), at p. 221: “[C]hildren may give
inadequate weight to the effects of decisions on their future interests, and
also fail to anticipate future changes in their values that may be predictable
by others.”)
[72]
Margaret Brazier and Caroline Bridge explore the limits of
assessing autonomy in “Coercion or caring: analysing adolescent autonomy”, in Children,
Medicine and the Law, 461, in the context of whether “a teenager brought up
in a Jehovah’s Witness family [can] make a free choice on a matter central to
his family’s faith” (p. 468). They propose the following as a model for
autonomous choices:
. . . fully autonomous choice is largely an ideal. . . . The best we can
manage is a maximally autonomous choice. In determining whether a particular
individual choice demands respect we should look to see whether that choice is
undermined by any irremediable defect in the autonomy of the choice in
question. [p. 468]
[73]
Many experts suggest that due to the very nature of adolescence,
adolescent choices may be particularly prone to defects in decisional
autonomy. Saul Levine, in his discussion of adolescent decision making in the
health care context, concludes that the influences on a minor’s capacity to independently
address and answer crucial health care decisions may be subtle but
“profound”:
The minors may be competent according to the . . . developmental and
cognitive criteria, and yet their relationship with their parents or with
surrogates may be complicated and convoluted. Many children do not wish to
counter their parents’ wishes for fear of hurting them, of losing favor with
them, or of engendering feelings of guilt in themselves. Other children and
adolescents have a propensity to counter their parents’ motivation, because
they are in a rebellious phase or mode, or because of deep-seated conflict in
the family. This does not do justice to the wide range of possible
psychodynamic configurations . . . .
(“Informed Consent of Minors in Crucial and Critical Health Care
Decisions”, in Aaron H. Esman, ed., Adolescent Psychiatry: The Annals of the
American Society for Adolescent Psychiatry (2000), vol. 25, 203, at p. 211)
According to
Levine, an adolescent’s decisions may also be particularly affected by social
opinion:
The issue of what “they” will think, feel, or say varies with the
attitudes and biases prevalent at the time and cannot be underestimated in its
power on a child’s rationale. “They” could refer to the society as a whole, but,
much more so, it is related for the child to his or her local subgroup (nuclear
and extended family, church congregation, close family, friends, etc.). [p.
212]
[74]
Brazier and Bridge express similar concerns about the potential
influence of such external factors on a child’s ability to make truly
independent choices:
A child of 14 living in a deeply religious home is constrained not just
by love and affection for his family but by a continuing relationship of
dependency and the limited opportunity he has enjoyed to widen his horizons.
[p. 486]
[75]
Priscilla Alderson studied decision making in 8- to 15-year-old
London students in order to assess their degree of independence from their
parents in light of the Gillick decision (“Everyday and medical life
choices: decision-making among 8- to 15-year-old school students”, in Children,
Medicine and the Law, p. 445). She found that children were more likely to
agree with their parents over having surgery or visiting a doctor than over
other decisions, such as what films to watch or friends to spend time with.
Alderson also conducted interviews with young people in hospitals. When asked
when they thought they would be entitled to consent to surgery, most simply
cited the relevant law:
Replies on consent to surgery are probably influenced
by beliefs about the law, rather than by personal preferences. A frequent
reply in the hospital study is, “I’m not allowed to consent to surgery until
I’m 16, or 18 or [occasionally] 21”. Another response is to equate freedom to
make medical decisions with being somehow “grown-up”, such as old enough to go
out to work or to leave home. “Sixteen” or “18” are therefore common answers,
and reveal more about public beliefs than particular youngsters’ need or
ability. [p. 457]
[76]
In a separate paper, Alderson argued that social context has a
strong influence on children’s competency to consent to medical treatment:
Many factors surround children’s consent, and powerfully, often
invisibly, influence the child’s understanding and decisions. Some of the
young patients we met wanted to “be the main decider”, others wanted to share
in decisions, and others wanted their parents and/or doctors to make decisions
for them. Competence is more than a skill, it is a way of relating, and can be
understood more clearly when each child’s inner qualities are seen within a
network of relationships and cultural influences.
(“In the genes or in the stars? Children’s competence to consent”, in Children,
Medicine and the Law, 549, at p. 553)
[77]
Moreover, the health or medical status of the adolescent may in
itself affect his or her maturity and ability to make maximally autonomous
choices, since the ability of an adolescent to provide informed consent may be
affected by the chronicity of the illness and by any “discomfort, pain, and
malaise” experienced by the young person as a result of his or her condition
(Levine, at p. 209).
[78]
Clearly the factors that may affect an adolescent’s ability to
exercise independent, mature judgment in making maximally autonomous
choices are numerous, complex, and difficult to enumerate with any precision.
They include “the individual physical, intellectual and psychological maturity
of the minor, the minor’s lifestyle [and] the nature of the parent-child
relationship” (Manitoba Law Reform Commission, Minors’ Consent to Health
Care, p. 32). While it may be relatively easy to test cognitive competence
alone, as the social scientific literature shows, it will inevitably be a far
more challenging exercise to evaluate the impact of these other types of
factors.
[79]
The difficulty and uncertainty involved in assessing maturity has
prompted some experts to suggest that children should be entitled to exercise
their autonomy only insofar as it does not threaten their life or health. As
John Eekelaar remarks:
We cannot know
for certain whether, retrospectively, a person may not regret that some control
was not exercised over his immature judgment by persons with greater
experience. But could we not say that it is on balance better to subject all
persons to this potential inhibition up to a defined age, in case the failure
to exercise the restraint unduly prejudices a person’s basic or developmental
interests?
(“The Emergence of Children’s Rights” (1986), 6 Oxford J. Legal Stud.
161, at pp. 181-82)
(See also
Michael D. A. Freeman, The Rights and Wrongs of Children (1983), c. 2;
and Fortin, at p. 76.)
Interpreting
Best Interests
[80]
These observations take us back to ss. 25(8) and 25(9) of the Child
and Family Services Act, and to an interpretive approach to “best
interests” that is consistent with international standards, developments in the
common law, and the reality of childhood and child protection.
[81]
The general purpose of the “best interests” standard is to
provide courts with a focus and perspective through which to act on behalf of
those who are vulnerable. In contrast, competent adults are assumed to be “the
best arbiter[s] of [their] own moral destiny” (Giles R. Scofield, “Is the
Medical Ethicist an ‘Expert’?” (1994), 3(1) Bioethics Bulletin 1, at p.
9), and so are entitled to independently assess and determine their own best
interests, regardless of whether others would agree when evaluating the choice
from an objective standpoint.
[82]
The application of an objective “best interests” standard to
infants and very young children is uncontroversial. Mature adolescents, on the
other hand, have strong claims to autonomy, but these claims exist in tension
with a protective duty on the part of the state that is also justified.
[83]
The tension between autonomy and child protection is real, often
dramatic, and always painful. It is described by Joan M. Gilmour as follows:
While a mature minor can consent to medically recommended treatment,
the extent to which he or she has the power to consent to a treatment that is
not beneficial or therapeutic remains unclear. The argument that a minor can
only consent to care that would be of benefit (or refuse that which is of
little or no benefit) is sometimes referred to as “the welfare principle”. It
suggests that a mature minor can only make those decisions about medical care
that others would consider to be in his or her interests; as such, it
challenges the extent of the commitment in law to mature minors’ interests in
self-determination and autonomy. . . .
. . . [The welfare principle] reflects an uneasiness with autonomy as
the overriding value that the law advances in this context, rather than
protection of the minor’s life and health as one who is still vulnerable.
(“Death and Dying”, in Mary Jane Dykeman et al., eds., Canadian Health
Law Practice Manual (loose-leaf), 8.01, at§8.52 and §8.54)
[84]
In my view, any solution to this tension must be responsive to
its complexity. As Gilmour points out, and as the English Court of Appeal in Re
W confirmed, the distinction between principles of welfare and autonomy
narrows considerably — and often collapses altogether — when one appreciates
the extent to which respecting a demonstrably mature adolescent’s capacity for
autonomous judgment is “by definition in his or her best interests” (§8.54).
(See also Joan M. Gilmour, “Death, Dying and Decision‑making about End of
Life Care”, in Jocelyn Downie, Timothy Caulfield and Colleen M. Flood, eds., Canadian
Health Law and Policy (3rd ed. 2007), 437, at p. 443.)
[85]
In the vast majority of situations where the medical treatment of
a minor is at issue, his or her life or health will not be gravely endangered
by the outcome of any particular treatment decision. That is why courts have
determined that medical practitioners should generally be free to rely on the
instructions of a young person who seems to demonstrate sufficient maturity to
direct the course of his or her medical care.
[86]
Where a young person comes before the court under s. 25 of the Child
and Family Services Act, on the other hand, it means that child protective
services have concluded that medical treatment is necessary to protect his or
her life or health, and either the child or the child’s parents have refused to
consent. In this very limited class of cases, it is the ineffability
inherent in the concept of “maturity” that justifies the state’s retaining an
overarching power to determine whether allowing the child to exercise his or
her autonomy in a given situation actually accords with his or her best
interests. The degree of scrutiny will inevitably be most intense in cases
where a treatment decision is likely to seriously endanger a child’s life or
health.
[87]
The more a court is satisfied that a child is capable of making a
mature, independent decision on his or her own behalf, the greater the weight
that will be given to his or her views when a court is exercising its discretion
under s. 25(8). In some cases, courts will inevitably be so convinced of a
child’s maturity that the principles of welfare and autonomy will collapse
altogether and the child’s wishes will become the controlling factor. If,
after a careful and sophisticated analysis of the young person’s ability to
exercise mature, independent judgment, the court is persuaded that the
necessary level of maturity exists, it seems to me necessarily to follow that
the adolescent’s views ought to be respected. Such an approach clarifies that
in the context of medical treatment, young people under 16 should be permitted
to attempt to demonstrate that their views about a particular medical treatment
decision reflect a sufficient degree of independence of thought and maturity.
[88]
As L’Heureux-Dubé J. said in Young v. Young, [1993] 4
S.C.R. 3, “courts must be directed to create or support the conditions which
are most conducive to the flourishing of the child” (p. 65 (emphasis
added)). And in King v. Low, [1985] 1 S.C.R. 87, McIntyre J. observed:
“It must be the aim of the Court . . . to choose the course which will best
provide for the healthy growth, development and education of the child so
that he will be equipped to face the problems of life as a mature adult”
(p. 101 (emphasis added)). When applied to adolescents, therefore, the “best
interests” standard must be interpreted in a way that reflects and addresses an
adolescent’s evolving capacities for autonomous decision making. It is not
only an option for the court to treat the child’s views as an increasingly
determinative factor as his or her maturity increases, it is, by definition,
in a child’s best interests to respect and promote his or her autonomy to the
extent that his or her maturity dictates. (See John Eekelaar, “The Importance
of Thinking that Children Have Rights” (1992), 6 Int’l J.L. & Fam.
221, at pp. 228-29, and “The Interests of the Child and the Child’s Wishes: The
Role of Dynamic Self-Determinism” (1994), 8 Int’l J.L. & Fam. 42.)
[89]
This approach to “best interests” finds support in the relevant
provisions of the Child and Family Services Act. The standard a judge
is obliged to follow before deciding whether to authorize treatment for a child
under 16 in accordance with s. 25(8) is found in s. 2(1) of the Act. That
section sets out the primacy of the child’s best interests and delineates a
number of considerations to be included in making such a determination. These
considerations include the mental, emotional and physical needs of the child;
his or her mental, emotional and physical stage of development; the child’s
views and preferences; and the child’s religious heritage. No priority is
given to one factor over the other.
[90]
What the blending of these factors will actually yield in any
particular case will obviously depend on the particular child and the
particular circumstances of that child. That is because the best interests
standard is necessarily individualistic. As Lorne Rozovsky points out,
it is quite possible
for a particular child to be able to consent to one treatment but not another
because of the child’s ability to understand one and not the other. Similarly,
one child may be able to consent to a particular treatment, whereas another
child of the same age may not because of the difference in the mental
capabilities of the two children, or because of their individual circumstances.
(The Canadian Law of Consent to Treatment (3rd ed. 2003), at p.
83)
[91]
Yet this does not mean, as Kaufman J. in this case seemed to
suggest, that the standard is a licence for the indiscriminate application of
judicial discretion. To divorce the application of the best interests standard
from an assessment of the mature child’s interest in advancing his or her own
autonomous claims would be to endorse a narrow, static and profoundly
unrealistic image of the child and of adolescence.
[92]
The statutory factors reflect decades of careful study into
children’s needs and how the law can best meet them. We have come, with time,
to understand the significance of so many relevant considerations which had
been previously hidden behind formulaic solutions like “the tender years
doctrine”. With our evolving understanding has come the recognition that the
quality of decision making about a child is enhanced by input from that child.
The extent to which that input affects the “best interests” assessment is as
variable as the child’s circumstances, but one thing that can be said with
certainty is that the input becomes increasingly determinative as the child
matures. This is true not only when considering the child’s best interests in
the placement context, but also when deciding whether to accede to a child’s
wishes in medical treatment situations.
[93]
Such a robust conception of the “best interests of the child”
standard is also consistent with international instruments to which Canada is a
signatory. The Convention on the Rights of the Child, Can. T.S. 1992
No. 3, which Canada signed on May 28, 1990 and ratified on December 13, 1991,
describes “the best interests of the child” as a primary consideration in all
actions concerning children (Article 3). It then sets out a framework under
which the child’s own input will inform the content of the “best interests”
standard, with the weight accorded to these views increasing in relation to the
child’s developing maturity. Articles 5 and 14 of the Convention, for example,
require State Parties to respect the responsibilities, rights and duties of
parents to provide direction to the child in exercising his or her rights under
the Convention, “in a manner consistent with the evolving capacities of the
child”. Similarly, Article 12 requires State Parties to “assure to the child
who is capable of forming his or her own views the right to express those views
freely in all matters affecting the child, the views of the child being
given due weight in accordance with the age and maturity of the child” (see
also the Council of Europe’s Convention for the Protection of Human Rights
and Dignity of the Human Being with Regard to the Application of Biology and
Medicine: Convention on Human Rights and Biomedicine, Eur. T.S. No. 164, c.
II, art. 6: “The opinion of the minor shall be taken into consideration as an
increasingly determining factor in proportion to his or her age and degree of
maturity.”)
[94]
Scrutiny of a child’s maturity in a s. 25(8) best interests
analysis will require, by definition, an individualized assessment, having
regard to the unique situation of the particular child, including the nature of
the treatment decision and the severity of its potential consequences. In Medico‑Legal
Aspects of Reproduction and Parenthood (2nd ed. 1998), J. K. Mason
explains:
. . . I suggest that the degree of understanding required for valid
consent to a doctor’s advice is different from that needed to refuse to accept
an opinion based on years of study and experience. In so saying, I do not deny
that a child may, at times, be fully capable of a reasonable refusal of
treatment — a refusal which may well be based on considerations other than
medical; what I am proposing is that the level of required understanding may be
higher in the latter than in the former circumstance. In any event, this is a
stance the courts are not afraid to adopt when necessary. [Emphasis deleted; p.
321.]
(See Caroline
Bridge, “Religious Beliefs and Teenage Refusal of Medical Treatment” (1999), 62
Mod. L. Rev. 585, at p. 590; Gilmour, “Death, Dying and Decision‑making
about End of Life Care”, at p. 443; Barney Sneiderman, John C. Irvine and
Philip H. Osborne, Canadian Medical Law (2003), c. 20, “The Mature Minor
Patient and the Refusal of Treatment”, at p. 465.)
[95]
In those most serious of cases, where a refusal of treatment
carries a significant risk of death or permanent physical or mental impairment,
a careful and comprehensive evaluation of the maturity of the adolescent will
necessarily have to be undertaken to determine whether his or her decision is a
genuinely independent one, reflecting a real understanding and appreciation of
the decision and its potential consequences.
[96]
As all of this demonstrates, the evolutionary and contextual
character of maturity makes it difficult to define, let alone definitively
identify. Yet the right of mature adolescents not to be unfairly deprived of
their medical decision-making autonomy means that the assessment must be
undertaken with respect and rigour. The following factors may be of
assistance:
·
What is the nature, purpose and utility of the recommended medical
treatment? What are the risks and benefits?
·
Does the adolescent demonstrate the intellectual capacity and
sophistication to understand the information relevant to making the decision
and to appreciate the potential consequences?
·
Is there reason to believe that the adolescent’s views are stable and a
true reflection of his or her core values and beliefs?
·
What is the potential impact of the adolescent’s lifestyle, family
relationships and broader social affiliations on his or her ability to exercise
independent judgment?
·
Are there any existing emotional or psychiatric vulnerabilities?
·
Does the adolescent’s illness or condition have an impact on his or her
decision-making ability?
·
Is there any relevant information from adults who know the adolescent,
like teachers or doctors?
This list is not
intended to represent a formulaic approach. Its objective is to assist courts
in assessing the extent to which a child’s wishes reflect true, stable and
independent choices.
Constitutional
Diagnosis
[97]
Constitutional compliance in the context of the medical treatment
decisions anticipated by ss. 25(8) and 25(9) means that the best interests
standard must be interpreted in a way that is not arbitrary (to avoid violating
s. 7 of the Charter ); not discriminatory on the basis of age (to avoid a
s. 15 violation); and not contrary to a child’s right to freedom of religion
protected by s. 2 (a). A.C. argued that all such constitutional
violations can be avoided by allowing someone in her position to attempt to
demonstrate sufficient maturity to have her treatment wishes respected.
[98]
In my view, this is exactly what the best interests standard
requires in medical treatment decision cases for adolescents. When the “best
interests” standard is applied in a way that takes into increasingly serious
account the young person’s views in accordance with his or her maturity in a
given treatment case, the legislative scheme created by ss. 25(8) and 25(9) of
the Child and Family Services Act is neither arbitrary, discriminatory,
nor violative of religious freedom.
[99]
We turn first to whether ss. 25(8) and 25(9) of the Child and
Family Services Act, as interpreted in these reasons, violate A.C.’s rights
under s. 7 of the Charter .
[100]
An order imposing medical treatment under s. 25 implicates a
child’s liberty and security of the person. Wilson J., in Morgentaler,
stated that “[liberty], properly construed, grants the individual a degree of
autonomy in making decisions of fundamental personal importance” (p. 166; see
also Blencoe v. British Columbia (Human Rights Commission), 2000 SCC 44,
[2000] 2 S.C.R. 307, at para. 49: “. . . ‘liberty’ is engaged where
state compulsions or prohibitions affect important and fundamental life
choices”; Godbout v. Longueuil (City), [1997] 3 S.C.R. 844, at para. 66:
“[T]he right to liberty . . . protects within its ambit the right to an
irreducible sphere of personal autonomy wherein individuals may make inherently
private choices free from state interference”). And in Rodriguez,
Sopinka J. for the majority confirmed that the concept of security of the
person encompasses “a notion of personal autonomy involving, at the very least,
control over one’s bodily integrity free from state interference and freedom
from state-imposed psychological and emotional stress” (pp. 587-88). As
McLachlin J. (as she then was) explained in dissent:
Security of the person has an element of personal autonomy, protecting
the dignity and privacy of individuals with respect to decisions concerning
their own body. It is part of the persona and dignity of the human being that
he or she have the autonomy to decide what is best for his or her body. This
is in accordance with the fact . . . that “s. 7 was enacted for the purpose of
ensuring human dignity and individual control, so long as it harms no one
else”. [p. 618]
(See also Reference
re ss. 193 and 195.1(1)(c) of the Criminal Code (Man.), [1990] 1 S.C.R.
1123, at p. 1177: “Section 7 is . . . implicated when the state restricts
individuals’ security of the person by interfering with, or removing from them,
control over their physical or mental integrity.”)
[101]
The notion that ss. 25(8) and 25(9) engage A.C.’s security of the
person and liberty interests also finds support in the common law, which, as
shown earlier in these reasons, has long recognized “[t]he right to determine
what shall, or shall not, be done with one’s own body, and to be free from
non-consensual medical treatment” (Fleming, at p. 85). The principle
was adopted by this Court in Ciarlariello v. Schacter, [1993] 2 S.C.R.
119, at p. 135, where Cory J. explained:
It should not be forgotten that every patient has a right to bodily
integrity. This encompasses the right to determine what medical procedures
will be accepted and the extent to which they will be accepted. Everyone has
the right to decide what is to be done to one’s own body. This includes the
right to be free from medical treatment to which the individual does not
consent. This concept of individual autonomy is fundamental to the common law
and is the basis for the requirement that disclosure be made to a patient. If,
during the course of a medical procedure a patient withdraws the consent to
that procedure, then the doctors must halt the process. This duty to stop does
no more than recognize every individual’s basic right to make decisions
concerning his or her own body.
[102]
The inability of an adolescent to determine her own medical
treatment, therefore, constitutes a deprivation of liberty and security of the
person, which must, to be constitutional, be in accordance with the principles
of fundamental justice (Gerald Dworkin, “Consent, Representation, and Proxy
Consent,” in Willard Gaylin and Ruth Macklin, eds., Who Speaks For The
Child: The Problems of Proxy Consent (1982), 191, at p. 203).
[103]
A.C. argued that if the provisions are interpreted narrowly so
that someone under 16 is deprived of the opportunity to demonstrate her
capacity, they are arbitrary, and a law that is arbitrary will not be in
accordance with the principles of fundamental justice (Chaoulli v. Quebec
(Attorney General), 2005 SCC 35, [2005] 1 S.C.R. 791, at paras. 129-31,
citing R. v. Malmo-Levine, 2003 SCC 74, [2003] 3 S.C.R. 571, at
para. 135, and Rodriguez, at p. 594). As the Chief Justice and Major J.
explained in Chaoulli: “The state is not entitled to arbitrarily limit
its citizens’ rights to life, liberty and security of the person” (para. 129).
A law will be arbitrary
where “it
bears no relation to, or is inconsistent with, the objective that lies behind
[it]”. To determine whether this is the case, it is necessary to consider the
state interest and societal concerns that the provision is meant to reflect: Rodriguez,
at pp. 594‑95.
In order not to be arbitrary, the limit on life,
liberty and security requires not only a theoretical connection between the
limit and the legislative goal, but a real connection on the facts. The
onus of showing lack of connection in this sense rests with the claimant. The
question in every case is whether the measure is arbitrary in the sense of
bearing no real relation to the goal and hence being manifestly unfair. The
more serious the impingement on the person’s liberty and security, the more
clear must be the connection. Where the individual’s very life may be at stake,
the reasonable person would expect a clear connection, in theory and in fact,
between the measure that puts life at risk and the legislative goals. [Emphasis
added; paras. 130-31.]
[104]
It is therefore necessary to put the analysis into the context of
the objectives of the provisions. The overarching goal of statutes such as the
Child and Family Services Act is to protect children from harm (Winnipeg
Child and Family Services v. K.L.W., 2000 SCC 48, [2000] 2 S.C.R. 519, at
para. 15; B. (R.) v. Children’s Aid Society of Metropolitan Toronto,
[1995] 1 S.C.R. 315, at p. 382; Syl Apps Secure Treatment Centre v. B.D.,
2007 SCC 38, [2007] 3 S.C.R. 83, at para. 2). In B. (R.), La Forest J.
discussed the importance of the state’s role in protecting children:
The state’s interest in legislating in matters affecting children has a
long‑standing history. In R. v. Jones, supra, for example,
I acknowledged the compelling interest of the province in maintaining the
quality of education. More particularly, the common law has long recognized the
power of the state to intervene to protect children whose lives are in jeopardy
and to promote their well‑being, basing such intervention on its parens
patriae jurisdiction; see, for example, Hepton v. Maat, supra;
E. (Mrs.) v. Eve, [1986] 2 S.C.R. 388. The protection of a child’s right
to life and to health, when it becomes necessary to do so, is a basic tenet of
our legal system, and legislation to that end accords with the principles of
fundamental justice, so long, of course, as it also meets the requirements of
fair procedure. [Emphasis added; para. 88.]
(See also R.
v. Sharpe, 2001 SCC 2, [2001] 1 S.C.R. 45, at para. 174.)
And this Court has long recognized that children are a “highly vulnerable”
group (Canadian Foundation for Children, Youth and the Law v. Canada
(Attorney General), 2004 SCC 4, [2004] 1 S.C.R. 76, at para. 56; R. v.
D.B., 2008 SCC 25, [2008] 2 S.C.R. 3, at para. 48).
[105]
On the other hand, adolescents clearly have an interest in
exercising their capacity for autonomous choice to the extent that their
maturity allows. And society has a corresponding interest in nurturing
children’s potential for autonomy by according weight to their choices in a
manner that is reflective of their evolving maturity. In order to promote this
objective, “paternalism should always be kept to a minimum and carefully
justified” (Fortin, at p. 26).
[106]
Given these competing values, a problem arises when a child’s
interest in exercising his or her autonomy conflicts with society’s legitimate
interest in protecting him or her from harm. As Fortin remarks (at pp. 26-27):
“The difficulty lies in establishing a formula which authorizes paternalistic
interventions to protect adolescents from making life-threatening mistakes, but
restrains autocratic and arbitrary adult restrictions on their potential for
autonomy.”
[107]
Given the significance we attach to bodily integrity, it would be
arbitrary to assume that no one under the age of 16 has capacity to make
medical treatment decisions. It is not, however, arbitrary to give them the
opportunity to prove that they have sufficient maturity to do so.
[108]
Interpreting the best interests standard so that a young person
is afforded a degree of bodily autonomy and integrity commensurate with his or
her maturity navigates the tension between an adolescent’s increasing
entitlement to autonomy as he or she matures and society’s interest in ensuring
that young people who are vulnerable are protected from harm. This brings the
“best interests” standard in s. 25(8) in line with the evolution of the common
law and with international principles, and therefore strikes what seems to me
to be an appropriate balance between achieving the legislative protective goal
while at the same time respecting the right of mature adolescents to
participate meaningfully in decisions relating to their medical treatment. The
balance is thus achieved between autonomy and protection, and the provisions
are, accordingly, not arbitrary.
[109]
A.C. also argued that s. 25(8) violated her s. 15 equality rights
on the basis of age. In R. v. Kapp, 2008 SCC 41, [2008] 2 S.C.R. 483,
the Court confirmed that the applicable two-part test under s. 15(1) is:
(1) Does the law create a distinction based on an enumerated or
analogous ground? (2) Does the distinction create a disadvantage by
perpetuating prejudice or stereotyping? [para. 17]
[110]
Age distinctions have frequently been upheld by this Court (see Law
v. Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration), [1999] 1 S.C.R. 497; Gosselin
v. Quebec (Attorney General), 2002 SCC 84, [2002] 4 S.C.R. 429; McKinney
v. University of Guelph, [1990] 3 S.C.R. 229; Harrison v. University of
British Columbia, [1990] 3 S.C.R. 451; Stoffman v. Vancouver General
Hospital, [1990] 3 S.C.R. 483; and Douglas/Kwantlen Faculty Assn. v.
Douglas College, [1990] 3 S.C.R. 570). (But see Tétreault-Gadoury v.
Canada (Employment and Immigration Commission), [1991] 2 S.C.R. 22.) They
are currently employed to determine when a person can marry, vote, drive,
consent to sexual intercourse and sell property. As noted by McLachlin C.J. in
Gosselin, it must be recognized that “age‑based distinctions are a
common and necessary way of ordering our society” (para. 31). In the context
of s. 15 of the Charter , McLachlin C.J. has commented that while “all
age‑based legislative distinctions have an element of this literal kind
of ‘arbitrariness’”, this alone does not invalidate them “[p]rovided that the
age chosen is reasonably related to the legislative goal” (Gosselin, at
para. 57).
[111]
Age demarcations for allocating presumptions were defended by
Jessica W. Berg et al., in Informed Consent: Legal Theory and Clinical
Practice (2nd ed. 2001):
Most authors in this area agree that age cut-offs
should not be used as automatic determinants of de facto capacity for any type
of decision but may function as an indicator to shift presumptions.
Thus, individuals below the age of consent are presumed to lack capacity unless
shown otherwise, and those above the age of consent are presumed to have
capacity until shown otherwise. [Emphasis added; p. 97.]
Under the Child
and Family Services Act, the distinction between promoting autonomy and
protecting welfare is presumed to collapse at age 16, subject to evidence to
the contrary. But whether a child is under or over 16, the weight that is
accorded to his or her views under s. 25 of the Act will ultimately correspond
to a court’s conclusions about the extent to which the child is capable of
making decisions in his or her own best interests. By permitting adolescents
under 16 to lead evidence of sufficient maturity to determine their medical
choices, their ability to make treatment decisions is ultimately calibrated in
accordance with maturity, not age, and no disadvantaging prejudice or
stereotype based on age can be said to be engaged. There is therefore no violation
of s. 15 .
[112]
A.C. also alleged that her freedom of religion was infringed
because the Act prevented her from refusing medical treatment that is contrary
to her religious beliefs. She contends that the legislative scheme in the Child
and Family Services Act avoids infringing her s. 2 (a) rights only if
she is entitled to lead evidence of sufficient maturity.
[113]
This is precisely the effect of interpreting the “best interests”
test in s. 25(8) as an evolutionary compendium of considerations that give
increased strength to increased maturity. Moreover, consideration of a child’s
“religious heritage” is one of the statutory factors in determining “best
interests”. Expanding the deference to a young person’s religious wishes as
her maturity increases is a proportionate response to her religious rights and
the protective goals of s. 25(8).
[114]
In conclusion, I agree with A.C. that it is inherently arbitrary
to deprive an adolescent under the age of 16 of the opportunity to demonstrate
sufficient maturity when he or she is under the care of the state. It is my
view, however, that the “best interests” test referred to in s. 25(8) of the
Act, properly interpreted, provides that a young person is entitled to a degree
of decisional autonomy commensurate with his or her maturity.
[115]
The result of this interpretation of s. 25(8) is that adolescents
under 16 will have the right to demonstrate mature medical decisional
capacity. This protects both the integrity of the statute and of the
adolescent. It is also an interpretation that precludes a dissonance between
the statutory provisions and the Charter , since it enables adolescents
to participate meaningfully in medical treatment decisions in accordance with
their maturity, creating a sliding scale of decision-making autonomy. This, in
my view, reflects a proportionate response to the goal of protecting vulnerable
young people from harm, while respecting the individuality and autonomy of
those who are sufficiently mature to make a particular treatment decision.
[116]
If ss. 25(8) and 25(9) did in fact grant courts an unfettered
discretion to make decisions on behalf of all children under 16, despite their
actual capacities, while at the same time presuming that children 16 and over
were competent to veto treatment they did not want, I would likely agree that
the legislative scheme was arbitrary and discriminatory. A rigid statutory
distinction that completely ignored the actual decision-making capabilities of
children under a certain age would fail to reflect the realities of childhood
and child development. However, this is not the effect of ss. 25(8) and
25(9). As the foregoing analysis demonstrates, a child’s maturity and
corresponding interest in self-determination will factor significantly into any
determination of his or her “best interests” under s. 25(8) of the Act, with
the child’s views becoming increasingly determinative as his or her maturity
increases.
[117]
I would therefore uphold the constitutionality of ss. 25(8) and
25(9) of the Child and Family Services Act.
[118]
Having determined that ss. 25(8) and 25(9) of the Act are
constitutional, the final question is what this means for the present case.
A.C. sought an order setting aside Kaufman J.’s treatment order on the basis
that she was a mature minor and that her treatment decisions therefore ought to
have been respected.
[119]
No one in any of the proceedings determined whether A.C. was in
fact able to make a mature, independent judgment about her medical treatment,
and the psychiatric report was never subjected to a review of any kind, let
alone a searching one. Kaufman J. proceeded based on his view that the
question of A.C.’s capacity was ultimately irrelevant under the Act, concluding
that when a child is under 16, there are no restrictions on the court’s ability
to authorize medical treatment on his or her behalf. At the Court of Appeal,
the question of A.C.’s capacity was not even considered by the court. In
response to the Attorney General of Manitoba’s argument that the appeal should
not be heard because there was no proper evidentiary record of capacity, Steel
J.A. stated:
I agree that the determination of capacity is a
delicate issue heavily dependent on the facts. However, it is not necessary
to decide the issue of capacity in order to address the legal issue raised in
this appeal. The issue is strictly one of statutory interpretation and,
depending on the meaning given to the legislation, whether the legislation
conforms with the requirements of the Charter . [Emphasis added; para.
37.]
[120]
Since neither court in the prior proceedings assessed A.C.’s
“best interests” in light of her maturity, there is no reviewable judicial
determination before us as to A.C.’s ability to make an independent, mature
decision to refuse the blood transfusions, in accordance with the intense
scrutiny contemplated in these reasons for such circumstances. Moreover, the
issue of the validity of Kaufman J.’s treatment order is clearly moot — the
medical emergency that gave rise to this litigation is long since over and A.C.
is no longer under the age of 16.
[121]
On the other hand, while A.C. has technically lost her
constitutional challenge, she successfully argued that the provisions should be
interpreted in a way that allows an adolescent under the age of 16 to
demonstrate sufficient maturity to have a particular medical treatment decision
respected. In these circumstances, it seems to me appropriate that since this
is the major impact of these reasons, she should be awarded her costs.
[122]
Accordingly, although the appeal from the Court of Appeal’s
finding of constitutionality is dismissed, A.C. is entitled to her costs
throughout.
The reasons of McLachlin C.J. and Rothstein J. were delivered by
[123]
The Chief Justice —
I agree with Abella J. that s. 25(8) of the Child and Family Services Act,
C.C.S.M. c. C80 (“CFSA”), does not violate the Canadian Charter of
Rights and Freedoms , and that the applications judge’s decision in this
case should be upheld. In my view, this conclusion follows from a consideration
of what the statute requires and the settled law on ss. 2 (a), 7 and 15
of the Charter . The CFSA provides a complete statutory scheme
with respect to medical decisions for children and adolescents deemed to be in
need of state protection. This comprehensive scheme displaces the existing
common law regarding medical decision making by “mature minors”. In my view,
the constitutional analysis must therefore center on the statute itself.
1. The CFSA Displaces the Common Law
“Mature Minor” Doctrine
[124]
The “mature minor” doctrine was developed as a means to govern
the relationship between a medical professional and a minor with capacity. As
Abella J. explains, the mature minor doctrine reflects a “recognition that
children are entitled to a degree of decision‑making autonomy that is
reflective of their evolving intelligence and understanding” (para. 46).
[125]
The mature minor doctrine remains the relevant common law with
respect to capable adolescents’ consent to medical treatment. In contrast,
however, the Manitoba legislature has addressed the specific child welfare
concerns that arise where necessary care is refused. Section 17(2)(b) of the CFSA
provides that a child in need of protection is one who
(b) is in the care, custody, control or charge of a person
.
. .
(iii) who neglects or refuses to provide or obtain proper medical
. . . care or treatment necessary for the health or well‑being
of the child or who refuses to permit such care or treatment to be
provided to the child when the care or treatment is recommended by a duly
qualified medical practitioner;
As Steel J.A.
noted for the Court of Appeal:
The mature
minor principle focusses on the right to autonomy and independent decision‑making.
In child protection legislation, that principle must be balanced against the
welfare principle. The state has an interest in the sanctity of life and, in
particular, in preserving the life and health of the child.
(2007 MBCA 9, 212 Man. R. (2d) 163, at para. 54)
It is these
competing interests, particularly as they apply to younger adolescents, that
the CFSA attempts to reconcile.
[126]
As Steel J.A. observed:
The language in s. 25(8) and (9) read together is sufficiently clear to oust
the common law rule for those under 16. The legislature intended to supersede
the common law and to implement a specific policy choice based upon the best
interests of a child under 16 in cases where there has been a determination
that a child’s life or health is being endangered. Continued application of
the mature minor rule in that situation would be inconsistent with the express
provisions of the CFSA. [para. 57]
In my view, the CFSA
provides a complete code with respect to medical decision making for or by
apprehended minors. It therefore ousts the common law regarding mature
minors.
2. What the CFSA Provides
[127]
The Manitoba CFSA deals with the difficult situation of providing
medical care to a child in circumstances where the child (defined as anyone
under 18 years of age) and his or her parents refuse to consent to treatment.
The state has an interest in ensuring that children receive necessary medical
care. This Court has held that “[t]he protection of a child’s right to life and
to health, when it becomes necessary to do so, is a basic tenet of our legal
system, and legislation to that end accords with the principles of fundamental
justice, so long, of course, as it also meets the requirements of fair
procedure”: B. (R.) v. Children’s Aid Society of Metropolitan Toronto,
[1995] 1 S.C.R. 315, at para. 88, per La Forest J.
[128]
The parents or the child may, for various reasons, refuse to
consent to care that is necessary to protect the child’s life or health.
Refusal, for whatever reason, may qualify the child as in need of protection:
s. 17(2)(b)(iii). Not all refusals will result in a finding that a child is in
need of protection. For instance, in Re A.Y. (1993), 111 Nfld. &
P.E.I.R. 91, the Newfoundland Supreme Court held that a 15-year-old boy
suffering from terminal cancer and refusing a transfusion on religious grounds
was not “a child in need of protection” because the blood transfusion was not considered
essential. Whether a child is in need of protection requires a case-by-case
analysis with a view to the relevant statutory criteria as discussed more fully
below.
[129]
Once a child is found to be in need of protection and is
apprehended pursuant to s. 21(1), ss. 25(8) and 25(9) set out the process for
the judicial authorization of treatment (see Appendix). The legislation allows
the court to authorize treatment that it considers to be in the best interests
of the child pursuant to the criteria in s. 2(1).
[130]
The CFSA distinguishes between “children” under 16 years
of age and “children” aged 16 to 18. Section 25(8) provides that in the case
of children under 16, the judge “may authorize . . . any medical . . .
treatment that the court considers to be in the best interests of the child”.
In the case of children 16 and over, s. 25(9) provides that treatment
cannot be ordered without the patient’s consent, unless the court is satisfied
that he or she is unable to understand the nature of the decision and its
likely consequences. As A.C. was under 16 at the time of the order for
treatment, s. 25(9) did not apply.
[131]
Under both ss. 25(8) and 25(9), the judge ordering treatment must
be satisfied that it is in the best interests of the child. The Act defines
the “best interests of the child” in s. 2(1). Section 2(1) directs the judge
to consider “all relevant matters”, and goes on to set out a list of
considerations that may be relevant, depending on the nature of the case. In
terms of this case, the most important of these are “the mental, emotional,
physical and educational needs of the child and the appropriate care or
treatment, or both, to meet such needs”; “the child’s mental, emotional and
physical stage of development”; and “the views and preferences of the child
where they can reasonably be ascertained”.
[132]
In summary, the statute requires the judge making an order for
treatment of a minor to be satisfied that the order is in the child’s best
interests. To determine whether it is in the child’s best interests, the judge
must consider all relevant circumstances, including the child’s needs, mental
and emotional maturity and preferences. The judge must weigh the various
relevant factors and on that basis arrive at a decision as to whether an order
for treatment is in the child’s best interests. In the case of a child aged
16 or older, he or she has the right to refuse treatment, unless the judge is
satisfied that the child is unable to understand the nature of the decision and
its likely consequences.
[133]
It will be apparent that the statutory scheme requires the judge
in each case to make an independent analysis of all relevant considerations,
including those listed in s. 2(1). For this reason, it is dangerous to speculate
on whether a judge would ever, under a legislative scheme such as this, decline
to order medical treatment for a child under the age of 16 where the result
would be probable death. Similarly, it may be unhelpful to hypothesize on
where the line between autonomy and treatment should be drawn in particular
cases. It is common sense to suggest, however, that the more dangerous the
situation from the perspective of the child’s security of person, the more
compelling must be the case that the child is fully mature, not only in matters
of intellect and understanding, but in comprehension of the potential life that
lies before her and the full future impact of her immediate choice.
3. Is
the Legislation Constitutional?
(a) The Section 7 Challenge
[134]
A.C. argues that s. 25(8) violates s. 7 of the Charter ,
which provides that the state must not deprive a person of “life, liberty and
security of the person”, except in accordance with the principles of
fundamental justice. A.C. contends that the treatment order by Kaufman J.
infringed her liberty and security of the person. More generally, A.C. argues
that the statutory scheme, s. 25(8) in particular, deprives her of “liberty”
and “security of the person” by allowing a court to order treatment against her
wishes. A.C. claims that it does so in a way that is arbitrary and thus
contrary to the principles of fundamental justice.
[135]
Specifically, A.C. argues that the multi‑factored “best
interests of the child” approach required by s. 25(8) operates unconstitutionally
in the case of a child under 16 who possesses the capacity to make a decision
on her treatment. A.C. asserts that a child under 16 who understands the
nature of the treatment and its consequences has the constitutional right to
refuse treatment under s. 7 of the Charter . The state has no right to
vest this authority in the court, in her view.
(i) Principles of Fundamental Justice
[136]
It is clear that s. 25(8) deprives a child under 16 of the
“liberty” to decide her medical treatment. An order for treatment of an
unwilling minor may also impinge on her “security of the person”, which
protects a person’s interest in “bodily integrity”: R. v. Morgentaler,
[1988] 1 S.C.R. 30, at p. 56 (per Dickson C.J.).
[137]
This leaves the question of whether the law infringes liberty
and security of the person in a manner that is contrary to the principles of
fundamental justice. This inquiry reflects the fact that the s. 7 liberty or
“autonomy” right is not absolute, even for adults. In Rodriguez v. British
Columbia (Attorney General), [1993] 3 S.C.R. 519, there was broad agreement
that the s. 7 right to make decisions about one’s body and life may be
constrained by law to reflect other competing societal interests. In that
case, the competing societal interest was the protection of vulnerable persons
who may be subject to coercion to end their life prematurely. The majority (per
Sopinka J.) held that this balancing of interests occurs under s. 7 through
the rubric of the principles of fundamental justice. I took the view (in
dissent) that the competing interests should be considered under the s. 1
justification analysis. Notwithstanding these different approaches, all
members of the Court who addressed the issue accepted that limits on personal
autonomy that advance a genuine state interest do not violate s. 7 if they are
shown to be based on rational, rather than arbitrary grounds.
[138]
As Steel J.A. noted at the Court of Appeal, the principles of
fundamental justice have both substantive and procedural elements (see Lamer
C.J. in New Brunswick (Minister of Health and Community Services) v. G. (J.),
[1999] 3 S.C.R. 46, at para. 70 (“the principles of fundamental justice in
child protection proceedings are both substantive and procedural”)). I will
consider each in turn.
(ii) Substantive Principles of Fundamental
Justice
[139]
A.C. argues that the distinction drawn between children under 16
and children 16 and above violates the substantive principle of fundamental
justice that decisions concerning liberty not be arbitrary. Children 16 and
over have the right to refuse treatment, provided they understand the treatment
and appreciate the consequences of the decision to consent or not consent to
treatment. Children under 16, even though they may possess the requisite
understanding, do not have that right. Given that age is an inexact proxy for
decision-making capacity, A.C. contends that differential treatment based on a
child’s having attained the age of 16 is arbitrary for the purposes of s. 7 .
[140]
A limit on a s. 7 interest is arbitrary if it “bears no relation
to, or is inconsistent with, the objective that lies behind the legislation”: Rodriguez,
at pp. 619-20, per McLachlin J., dissenting. As I stated with Major J.
in Chaoulli v. Quebec (Attorney General), 2005 SCC 35, [2005] 1 S.C.R.
791, “[t]he question in every case is whether the measure is arbitrary in the
sense of bearing no real relation to the goal and hence being manifestly
unfair” (para. 131).
[141]
In order to determine whether a statutory provision is arbitrary
and therefore contrary to fundamental justice, “the relationship between the
provision and the state interest must be considered”: Sopinka J. in Rodriguez,
at p. 594. In the present case, the relevant statutory provisions address the
circumstance where a parent or legal guardian refuses to obtain or allow
necessary medical care to be provided to a child in his or her care. Where the
affected adolescent also refuses care, a medical professional cannot legally
administer treatment. To resolve the dilemma between adolescent autonomy and
the state’s interest in ensuring child welfare, the CFSA allows courts
to authorize necessary treatment under certain conditions. The objective of
the statutory scheme is to balance society’s interest in ensuring that children
receive necessary medical care on the one hand, with the protection of minors’
autonomy interest to the extent this can be done, on the other. Sections 25(8)
and 25(9), informed by s. 2(1), set up a mechanism to achieve this goal.
[142]
The question is whether the impugned distinction between minors
who have reached the age of 16 and those who have not is related to the
legislative objective. In my view, it is.
[143]
The legislative decision to vest treatment authority regarding
under-16 minors in the courts is a legitimate response, in my view, to
heightened concerns about younger adolescents’ maturity and vulnerability to
subtle and overt coercion and influence. The legislature’s decision not to
accord a presumption of consent to children under 16 reflects the reality that
the judgment of children on momentous personal decisions increases with age.
Judgment is a function, not only of intellectual understanding of treatment and
the consequences of refusing it, but of experience and independence. To use
the term invoked by the Director of Child and Family Services (“Director”), it
requires “ethical, emotional maturity” (R.F., at para. 35). As Abella J.
explains with reference to the relevant social science literature (at paras.
70-79), younger adolescents are more susceptible to the influence of their
peers and parents than older adolescents. In my opinion, the legislative
scheme evidences a legitimate concern with these factors as they affect younger
adolescents, and the impracticability of reliably testing for them in the
crucial and often exigent context of authorizing necessary medical treatment.
[144]
As the Director puts it (factum, at para. 35):
[C]apacity,
however defined, is by no means the only factor governing one’s ability to make
an informed healthcare decision. As important is whether the choice is made voluntarily
and whether it is, in fact, an informed decision:
. . . competence
alone is not a sufficient condition for valid consent. . . . They
also need the third element of consent: voluntariness. It may be difficult
to accept a treatment option if that particular choice will lead to a loss of
important relationships. To give or refuse consent to medical treatment,
the law requires not just decision making competence but also accurate
information and lack of coercion. [Italics in original; underlining
added.]
(Juliet Guichon and Ian Mitchell, “Medical emergencies in children of
orthodox Jehovah’s Witness families: Three legal cases, ethical issues and
proposals for management”, Paediatric Child Health, vol. 11, No. 10
(December 2006), p. 657)
These concerns with
free and informed decision making animate the legislative scheme. They express
the state’s interest in ensuring that the momentous decision to refuse medical
treatment by persons under 16 are truly free, informed and voluntary.
[145]
Age, in this context, is a reasonable proxy for independence. The
CFSA is not alone in recognizing age 16 as an appropriate marker of
maturity for certain purposes. Below 16, many adolescents are physically
dependent on parents for mobility (e.g. driving) and cannot work full‑time.
Most are also required by law to attend school. In other words, a variety of
laws and social norms make them more dependent on their immediate families and
peers in their daily lives than older adolescents. The danger of excessive parental
and peer influence overwhelming free and voluntary choice is ever-present.
Similarly, in the youth criminal law context, it is recognized as a principle
of fundamental justice that young persons must generally be treated differently
from adults by virtue of their “reduced maturity and moral capacity”: R. v.
D.B., 2008 SCC 25, [2008] 2 S.C.R. 3, at para. 47 (per Abella J.).
The CFSA acknowledges these realities and therefore places the final
decision‑making power with the courts in accordance with the best
interests of the child.
[146]
Against this view, my colleague Binnie J. concludes that the
legislature’s failure to extend full medical autonomy to children under 16 with
“capacity” is arbitrary and therefore violative of s. 7 . However, Binnie J.
concedes that a more probing definition of “capacity” applies in the case of
minors under 16. Accepting the Director’s view that “capacity is about more
than intelligence”, he endorses (at para. 203) the Director’s description of
capacity as
“ethical, emotional maturity”; in short, wisdom and a sense of judgment.
Moreover, capacity, however defined, is by no means the only factor governing
one’s ability to make an informed healthcare decision. As important is whether
the choice is made voluntarily and whether it is, in fact, an informed
decision. [Emphasis deleted; R.F., at para. 35.]
The difficulty,
as I see it, is that Binnie J. goes on to equate this broader definition of
maturity with the more limited definition of capacity in s. 25(9) CFSA.
[147]
The Director’s broader definition of capacity (“ethical [and]
emotional maturity”) reflects the legislative concern that minors most
susceptible to outside influence have their interest in truly voluntary and
informed choice most carefully safeguarded. The test applicable to minors 16
and over — namely, the ability to understand the relevant information and to
appreciate the reasonably foreseeable consequences of consenting or not
consenting — does not capture this more robust conception of capacity. The Act
requires the judge to take account of the treatment preference of a minor under
16 as a factor in assessing the child’s “best interests”, while refusing to
give it the presumptive weight it would carry with a child aged 16 or older. This
distinction reflects the societal reality of how children mature, and the
dependence of children under 16 on their parents, as well as the difficulty of
carrying out a comprehensive analysis of maturity and voluntariness of the kind
described by the Director in the exigent circumstances of crucial treatment
decisions in cases such as A.C.’s. I conclude that the impugned distinction is
not arbitrary.
(iii) Procedural Element of Principles of
Fundamental Justice
[148]
The s. 7 principles of fundamental justice also include a
procedural dimension. Where a person’s liberty or security of the person is
engaged, as here, the limitation must be carried out in a procedurally fair
manner. In my view, the notice and participation requirements in the CFSA satisfy
this requirement. Section 25(4) mandates that formal notice of a treatment
hearing be given to the minor in question and his or her parents or guardians,
if the minor is 16 or older. But while s. 25(4) only applies to those 16 and
older, the more general language in s. 2(2) guarantees that in all proceedings
under the Act, “a child 12 years of age or more is entitled to be advised of
the proceedings and of their possible implications for the child and shall be
given an opportunity to make his or her views and preferences known to a judge
or master making a decision in the proceedings”. Further, s. 2(3) gives the
judge a discretion to consider the views of a child under the age of 12. I
agree with Steel J.A. that “[r]ead together, these provisions illustrate a
considered approach by the legislature to providing age‑appropriate
notice to the children who may be the subject of proceedings under the CFSA,
consistent with s. 7 of the Charter ” (para. 84).
[149]
I conclude that s. 25(8), while it impacts on the liberty and
autonomy of children under 16, does so in a way that is appropriately attuned
to a legitimate legislative goal. It is not arbitrary, and therefore it does
not violate s. 7 of the Charter .
(b) Section 15 of the Charter
[150]
A.C. argues that the age distinction discriminates against her on
the basis of age, contrary to s. 15. Under the test recently restated in R.
v. Kapp, 2008 SCC 41, [2008] 2 S.C.R. 483, a s. 15 claimant must show that
a distinction based on an enumerated or analogous ground creates a disadvantage
by perpetuating prejudice or stereotyping.
[151]
As this Court recognized in Canadian Foundation for Children,
Youth and the Law v. Canada (Attorney General), 2004 SCC 4, [2004] 1 S.C.R.
76, “[c]hildren are a highly vulnerable group” (para. 56). Deschamps J., in
dissent, further observed that “[c]hildren as a group face pre-existing
disadvantage in our society. . . . [T]heir vulnerability was
entrenched by the traditional legal treatment of children as the property or
chattel of their parents or guardians” (para. 225).
[152]
In the present case, however, A.C.’s claim must fail because the
distinction drawn by the Act between minors under 16 and those 16 and over is
ameliorative, not invidious. First, it aims at protecting the interests of
minors as a vulnerable group. Second, it protects the members of the targeted
group — children under 16 — in a way that gives the individual child a degree
of input into the ultimate decision on treatment. In my view, this is sufficient
to demonstrate that the distinction drawn by the Act, while based on an
enumerated ground, is not discriminatory within the meaning of s. 15.
(c) Section 2 (a) of the Charter
[153]
A.C. argues that the legislative authorization of treatment over
her sincere religious objections constitutes an unjustifiable infringement of
her right to religious freedom. It is not in dispute that A.C. possessed a
sincere religious belief as a Jehovah’s Witness against receiving blood
products and transfusions: Syndicat Northcrest v. Amselem, 2004 SCC 47,
[2004] 2 S.C.R. 551, at para. 46.
[154]
The impugned provisions of the CFSA operates to deprive
A.C. of full decision-making authority as to whether or not she will receive
blood products where medically necessary. This is clearly more than a trivial
interference with her “right to manifest beliefs and practices”: R. v. Big M
Drug Mart Ltd., [1985] 1 S.C.R. 295, at p. 337. Where a minor is
transfused against her will, she may often experience psychic harm, as
described in this case. In my view, the respondent rightly concedes that s. 25
CFSA violates s. 2 (a).
[155]
In this case, the s. 7 and s. 2 (a) claims merge, upon
close analysis. Either the Charter requires that an ostensibly “mature”
child under 16 have an unfettered right to make all medical treatment
decisions, or it does not, regardless of the individual child’s motivation for
refusing treatment. The fact that A.C.’s aversion to receiving a blood
transfusion springs from religious conviction does not change the essential
nature of the claim as one for absolute personal autonomy in medical decision
making.
[156]
If s. 25(8) is viewed through the lens of s. 2 (a), the
limit on religious practice imposed by the legislation emerges as justified
under s. 1 , for many of the same reasons that the law is not arbitrary for the
purposes of s. 7 . The objective of ensuring the health and safety of
vulnerable young people is pressing and substantial, and the means chosen —
giving discretion to the court to order treatment after a consideration of all
relevant circumstances — is a proportionate limit on the right, thus satisfying
the requirements under R. v. Oakes, [1986] 1 S.C.R. 103.
4. The Judge’s Decision
[157]
While factor-guided, the judge’s task of assessing the best
interests of the child and his or her ultimate decision to order treatment
remain discretionary. Section 25(8) provides that “upon completion of a
hearing, the court may authorize . . . medical . . .
treatment that the court considers to be in the best interests of the child”.
This statutory discretion “must be exercised within the boundaries set by the
principles of the Charter ”; Dagenais v. Canadian Broadcasting Corp.,
[1994] 3 S.C.R. 835, at p. 875. If the judge fails to do so, it is open to the
applicant to challenge the judge’s decision. Even if the legislation is
constitutional, a judge’s decision under it may be set aside if it is contrary
to the provisions of the Act or the Charter .
[158]
The applications judge in this case, Kaufman J., ordered
treatment of A.C., then under 16. The treatment was, on the evidence,
necessary to save her life. Kaufman J. assumed for the purposes of the
decision that A.C. had “capacity” to make the decision. Considering the
relevant factors set out in s. 2(1), including her wish not to have the
treatment, he concluded that treatment was in the child’s best interests and
ordered that it take place.
[159]
This decision conformed to the provisions of the Act. The only
possible criticism from this perspective is that the judge proceeded with the
analysis on the basis of presumed “capacity”. In the exigent circumstances, he
did not consult with A.C. herself, nor did he review the psychiatrists’ reports
or any other evidence regarding capacity. As discussed above, capacity in the
narrow intellectual sense of s. 25(9) CFSA does not capture the
constitutionally valid thrust of the provisions pertaining to children under
16. The decision to assume capacity in the narrow sense but conclude that
treatment should be ordered on the basis of other factors was therefore not in
error. If time and circumstances permit, it is optimal for a judge to fully
consider and give reasoned judgment on all the factors he or she takes into
account. However, proceeding on the assumption of “capacity” — an assumption
that favoured A.C.’s autonomy interest — was reasonable in these circumstances,
where a child’s life hung in the balance and the need for a decision was
urgent. I would not fault the applications judge on this count.
[160]
The remaining question is whether the decision conformed to the Charter .
It is argued that once the judge presumed capacity, he was bound under the Charter
to give effect to A.C.’s wishes. The order for treatment, it is argued,
therefore violates s. 7 . The flaw in this contention is the assumption
that autonomy under s. 7 is absolute and trumps all other values. As discussed
above, this Court has rejected this contention.
5. Conclusion
[161]
I would dismiss the appeal and affirm the constitutionality of
ss. 25(8) and 25(9) CFSA. Like Abella J., I would order costs to A.C.
throughout.
The following are the reasons delivered by
[162]
Binnie J. (dissenting)
— This is a disturbing case. The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms enshrines
in our highest law the liberty and independence of a mature individual to make
life’s most important choices free of government intervention, provided there
is no countervailing social interest of overriding importance. This
proposition is tested on this appeal by A.C., a Jehovah’s Witness, who is a
mature minor. She claims the right to make a choice that most of us would
think is a serious mistake, namely to refuse a potentially lifesaving blood
transfusion. Her objection, of course, is based on her religious beliefs.
[163]
The Charter is not just about the freedom to make what
most members of society would regard as the wise and correct choice. If that
were the case, the Charter would be superfluous. The Charter ,
A.C. argues, gives her the freedom — in this case religious freedom — to refuse
forced medical treatment, even where her life or death hangs in the balance.
[164]
Counsel for A.C. acknowledges that the state would be entirely
justified in taking the decision away from A.C. if there was any doubt about
her capacity, as in a situation of urgency, or whether she was acting under the
influence of her parents (who are Jehovah’s Witnesses). However, these matters
were looked into by three psychiatrists at the Winnipeg hospital where the
blood transfusion was to be administered, and the psychiatrists concluded, and
the applications judge accepted, that A.C. — though under 16 years of age — was
nevertheless at the material time an individual “with capacity to give or
refuse consent to her own medical care” (A.R., at p. 91). The formal order of
the applications judge dated April 16, 2006 so states.
[165]
Counsel for A.C. argues that whether judges, doctors and hospital
authorities agree with A.C.’s objection or not, the decision belongs to the
patient. The essential question is not what is to be decided about
medical treatment but who is to make the decision.
[166]
My colleague Abella J. acknowledges that judges should be
required to take the views of a mature minor into consideration when the
judge decides what is in the best interest of A.C. But this position
ignores the heart of A.C.’s argument, which is that the individual autonomy
vouchsafed by the Charter gives her the liberty to refuse the
forced pumping of someone else’s blood into her veins regardless of what the
judge thinks is in her best interest. In my respectful view, the Child and
Family Services Act, C.C.S.M. c. C80 (“CFSA”), is insufficiently
respectful of constitutional limits on the imposition of forced medical
treatment on a mature minor. I would therefore allow the appeal.
I. Overview
[167]
Forced medical procedures must be one of the most egregious
violations of a person’s physical and psychological integrity against the will
of an individual whose refusal is based on a strong religious faith. A.C. had
three months earlier signed an advance medical directive dated January 10, 2006
pursuant to the Health Care Directives Act, C.C.S.M. c. H27 (“HCDA”),
containing her written instructions not to be given blood under any
circumstances:
I am one of Jehovah’s Witnesses, and I make this directive out of
obedience to commands in the Bible, such as: “Keep abstaining . . . from
blood.” (Acts 15:28, 29) [A.R., at p. 222]
As will be seen,
the Manitoba HCDA, unlike the CFSA, permits a minor under
the age of 16 to rebut the presumption of incapacity.
[168]
The Manitoba legislature’s denial of rights to young persons
under the age of 16 is not in accordance with the views of its own Law Reform
Commission, which concluded, in a report prepared in consultation with the
province’s physicians, that a “fixed age” limit is neither “practical or
workable”:
We found that
the mature minor rule is a well-known, well-accepted and workable principle
which seems to raise few difficulties on a day-to-day basis. There was
quite strong opposition to the use of a fixed age limit; the development of
children was seen to be too variable to permit a fixed age to be a practical or
workable concept. The interviews revealed no reason for concern in respect
of the operation of the mature minor rule. [Emphasis added.]
(Minors’ Consent to Health Care (1995), Report #91, at p. 33)
[169]
At the relevant time, A.C. was being treated (with her consent)
with non-blood products and medication to stop the internal bleeding. She had
no desire to die, but she wished to live in accordance with her religious
beliefs.
[170]
On April 16, 2006, A.C. experienced renewed internal bleeding.
The hospital, faced with the refusal of A.C. to consent to a blood transfusion,
sought the intervention of the Manitoba Director of Child and Family Services
(the “Director”) who immediately had A.C. apprehended as a child in need of
protection (A.R., at p. 187) and sought the treatment order now under appeal.
[171]
Section 25(8) CFSA provides that “upon completion of a
hearing, the court may authorize a medical examination or any medical or dental
treatment that the court considers to be in the best interests of the child”
(defined as a person under 18 years of age).
[172]
Had A.C. been 14 months older on the date of the s. 25
application, she would have benefited from s. 25(9) CFSA which says that
no treatment order can be made without the consent of a young person 16 or
over unless the court is satisfied that he or she does not
understand the information relevant to consenting or not consenting to
treatment, or is not able to “appreciate the reasonably foreseeable
consequences of making a decision to consent or not consent”.
[173]
My colleague Abella J. notes, correctly, that “the psychiatric
report was never subjected to a [judicial] review of any kind, let alone a
searching one” (para. 119), but this is precisely the problem with the Charter -breaching
procedure adopted by the applications judge, who refused to allow A.C. to lead
evidence at the s. 25(8) hearing (which he held by conference call) of her
capacity. In the learned judge’s view, the CFSA made such evidence
irrelevant in the case of a young person under 16. Her capacity, in his
interpretation of s. 25, was not a “live issue”. He simply accepted that A.C.
“is a person with capacity to give or refuse consent to her own medical care”
(see formal order April 16, 2006, A.R., at p. 91), but concluded that from his
point of view, regardless of her capacity, it was in her best interests to
receive the blood transfusion and he therefore granted the treatment order. In
my view, A.C. is entitled to have her appeal disposed of on the basis that, as
the formal order states, she “is a person with capacity to give or refuse
consent to her own medical care”.
[174]
The order of the applications judge was upheld by a unanimous
Court of Appeal on February 5, 2007. The issue by that time was moot, as the
April 16, 2006 order had been executed, but the court heard the appeal on the
basis (correctly in my view) that the CFSA issue was not only likely to
recur but in the nature of things will generally be evasive of review. Few
treatment decisions of this nature can await the outcome of the appellate
process.
[175]
As is described in the reasons of my colleague Abella J., the
class of persons known as “mature minors” is well established at common law.
It consists of individuals who are treated as adults for the purposes of making
medical treatment decisions free of parental or judicial control. At common
law, proof of capacity entitles the “mature minor” to personal autonomy in
making such decisions. No doubt at common law, as under a statutory authority,
it is very difficult to persuade a judge that a young person who refuses
potentially lifesaving medical treatment is a person of full capacity. Yet,
for the reasons that follow, I believe the Charter required such an
opportunity to be given in the case of an adolescent of the age and maturity of
A.C. The fact that in the end a judge disagrees with the mature minor’s
decision is not itself a lawful reason to override it.
[176]
Children may generally (and correctly) be assumed to lack the
requisite degree of capacity and maturity to make potentially life-defining
decisions. It is this lack of capacity and maturity that provides the
state with a legitimate interest in taking the decision-making power away from
the young person and vesting it in a judge under the CFSA. Yet, this is
not a case about broad government programs where line drawing and generalized
age categories are sometimes essential and inevitable for administrative
reasons. The CFSA requires individualized treatment decisions,
and courts routinely handle capacity as a live issue under the CFSA in
the case of minors between the ages of 16 and 18. The question here is whether
in the course of those individualized CFSA treatment assessments the
presumption of incapacity to refuse medical treatment can constitutionally be
made irrebuttable in the case of young people under 16. I do not think
it can. In such cases, the legitimate object and basis of state intervention
in the life of the young person has, by reason of the judge’s finding of
maturity, ceased to exist.
[177]
In short, s. 25 CFSA is unconstitutional because it
prevents a person under 16 from establishing that she or he understands the
medical condition and the consequences of refusing treatment, and should
therefore have the right to refuse treatment whether or not the applications
judge considers such refusal to be in the young person’s best interests, just
as is now the case with a “mature minor” who is 16 or 17 years old.
[178]
The Director argues that no Charter rights are absolute,
which is true, but the onus is on the state to justify overriding an
individual’s fundamental choices about invasive medical treatment. We are not
dealing with categories of people classified by age for administrative
convenience as, for example, say, in the case of voting rights. The CFSA
mandates an individualized assessment on a patient-by-patient basis.
[179]
In my opinion the deprivation of liberty or security of the
person does not accord with the principles of fundamental justice where the
only justification advanced for the deprivation, namely the incapacity of the
young person, has been accepted by the applications judge not to exist.
II. Facts
[180]
A.C. was born on June 7, 1991. At the time of the s. 25 hearing,
she was 14 years and 10 months old. She had been admitted to hospital on
April 12, 2006, after suffering an episode of lower gastrointestinal bleeding.
The loss of blood had decreased her haemoglobin count, but thereafter her
condition stabilized for several days.
The
Psychiatric Assessment Report
[181]
The day following A.C.’s admission to hospital, her physician,
Dr. Lipnowski, requested an assessment by the hospital’s consultant psychiatrists:
Please see 14 [year old female] admitted as [C]rohn’s disease [with]
lower GI bleeding. [Patient] is Jehovah’s Witness refusing all blood product
transfusions. Please do assess the patient to determine capability to
understanding death. Thank you. [A.R., at p. 227]
The potential of
death was therefore central to the inquiry. Three hospital psychiatrists, Drs.
Kuzenko, Bristow and Altman, examined A.C. and reported as follows:
[Patient] is
aware of medical concern for blood loss, [decreased hemoglobin] and that if
blood loss is severe, a transfusion is the recommended [treatment]. She is
aware of alternatives to transfusion — [erythropoietin] and iron. States
that even if she will die, she will refuse blood based on scripture “to
maintain a clean standing with God.” She was voluntarily baptized 2 years
ago and believes that “this is the absolute truth.”
Sleep is “pretty good.” Concentration “good.” Energy “really good.”
Eating well (apart from this past week). [Emphasis added; A.R., at p. 227.]
[182]
The psychiatrists made enquiries to determine the extent of
parental influence and reported:
[A.C.]
[d]enies feeling pressured by parents and has a good relationship with them.
Has good support system.
.
. .
. . . [The parents] believe she treasures
her relationship with God and does not want to jeopardize it, that she
understands her disease and what is happening. [A.R., at p. 228]
The psychiatric
assessment report concluded:
The patient appears to understand the nature of her Crohn’s illness (and
GI bleeding) and reason for admission. She also appears to understand the
nature of her treatments, and that should her current medical status worsen,
the treating MD’s may suggest a blood transfusion. The patient understands
the reason why a transfusion may be recommended, and the consequences of
refusing to have a transfusion. At the time of our assessment, patient
demonstrated a normal [mental status examination with] intact cognition (30/30
[Mini-Mental State Examination]). [Emphasis added; A.R., at p. 229.]
[183]
In the early hours of Sunday April 16, A.C. suffered another
internal bleed. Her doctor believed this new episode created an imminent and
serious risk to her health and perhaps her life. He wanted to give her a blood
transfusion. She refused to consent to the receipt of any blood or blood
products on religious grounds.
III. Judicial History
A. Court of Queen’s Bench of Manitoba
(Kaufman J.)
[184]
At the s. 25 hearing, which proceeded in the absence of A.C., her
attending physician, Dr. Lipnowksi, testified that because of reduced
haemoglobin levels, A.C.’s vital organs were not receiving sufficient oxygen.
Until her low haemoglobin level improved, the medical staff could not
investigate by colonoscopy or other procedure whether A.C.’s intestinal
bleeding was continuing. While the non-blood medication presently being
administered might assist in stopping further bleeding, it would not remedy the
low haemoglobin count. The risk to A.C. was significant even if the internal
bleeding had stopped, because if the doctors waited for A.C.’s haemoglobin to
rebuild naturally (i.e. without a blood transfusion), there could be permanent
and serious damage to A.C.’s bone marrow and kidneys.
[185]
The CFSA hearing proceeded expeditiously. Counsel
representing A.C.’s family, Mr. Allan Ludkiewicz, heard the evidence on behalf
of the Director and Dr. Lipnowski over a cell phone on his way to the
hospital. He urged the applications judge to come to the hospital as well to
review the hospital’s recently completed psychiatric assessment report, but the
applications judge viewed such evidence as irrelevant in light of the language
of s. 25 CFSA:
MR. LUDKIEWICZ [by telephone]: Yeah. I was going to request of the
court that the, that the hearing be held at the hospital with -- if, if, if My
Lord would, would come down. I, I believe that the --
THE COURT [by telephone]: What’s the, what’s the purpose of that?
MR. LUDKIEWICZ: It’s -- what I understand is that this patient has
been assessed as being capable of making her own decisions.
THE COURT: She’s under 16.
MR. LUDKIEWICZ: She, she’s been assessed by, by the doctors. There,
there is an assessment report which I would want to put into evidence first and
the assessment report indicates that [A.C.] understands the nature, excuse me,
of her illness and the possible consequences.
THE COURT: Counsel, I -- where -- just help me out here. She’s under
16. Is her consent required?
MR. LUDKIEWICZ: Her -- if, if she’s capable, My Lord.
THE COURT: Where does it say --
MR. LUDKIEWICZ: She’s, she’s in the same position as, as an adult.
She makes her own medical decisions.
MR. THOMSON [Counsel for the Director]: Your Lordship, what the
agency is relying on are the provisions of Section 25 of the Child and Family
Services Act which clearly contemplate that that type of investigation
doesn’t occur under the legislation for a child who is less than 16 years of
age and the provision that I would rely on in particular is subsection 9 of
Section 25 of the Act.
MR. LUDKIEWICZ: Well, My, My Lord, first of all, the
-- this, this is a Charter matter, to begin with. I’d like to put that on the
record. It involves Section 2 (a) freedom of religion. It involves Section 7 ,
liberty and security of the person. A capable person of any age makes their
own decisions when it comes to, to health care. They have they [sic]
freedom of choice. So I believe that the first thing that My Lord should have
before you is the assessment report. [Emphasis added; A.R., at pp. 178-79.]
[186]
The s. 25 hearing proceeded as soon as counsel representing
A.C.’s family arrived at the hospital. The applications judge was conferenced
in by telephone. Counsel again sought to introduce evidence as to A.C.’s
capacity through the psychiatric report and through A.C.’s father, but was
stopped by the applications judge (A.R., at p. 201).
MR. LUDKIEWICZ: In my examination of the father. When, when I was
coming to this hearing, when I was driving it was indicated that we’re assuming
that [A.C.] has capacity; is that correct --
THE COURT: That’s --
MR. LUDKIEWICZ: -- or am I allowed to lead that?
THE COURT: I’m, I’m proceeding on the assumption
that she has capacity and doesn’t want this done. I’m taking that as a given.
[Emphasis added; A.R., at p. 199.]
When counsel for
the Director sought to ask A.C.’s doctor about A.C.’s capacity, the
applications judge, consistently with his earlier ruling, did not allow it:
THE COURT: I think, I think that if [A.C.’s capacity] becomes a
live issue then I would want to attend and speak to the child myself and see
the assessment report. But I am going to proceed, as I say. If we’re
going to proceed in this format then it seems to me only fair to proceed on the
assumption that the child has capacity and that the child objects.
If, if, if I thought that, that [A.C.’s capacity]
was going to be an issue, then I would deal with it by way of attending and
speaking to the child and reading the assessment report rather than hearing
Dr. Lipnowski’s summary or opinion based on that, counsel. So I’m going to
proceed without that. [Emphasis added; A.R., at p. 201.]
[187]
Based on the attending doctor’s evidence, the applications judge
was satisfied that there was “immediate danger as the minutes go by, if not
[of] death, then certainly serious damage”. He granted the treatment order
because, in his opinion, s. 25(8) CFSA requires the court to act in what
the court regards as the “best interests of the child” even for minors with
capacity if they are under 16 years of age. In his view, the blood
transfusion would be in A.C.’s best interests. He did not address the Charter
issues. He issued an order
4. That qualified medical personnel are hereby
authorized to administer blood transfusions and/or blood products to the Respondent
[A.C.] as they deem medically necessary without the consent of Respondent
[A.C.] or her parents. . . .
[188]
Pursuant to s. 27(1) CFSA, the Director then filed a
petition and notice of an application for an order declaring A.C. to be a child
in need of protection. On May 1, 2006, while still apprehended, A.C. filed an
application for relief under the Charter claiming that her apprehension
and the Director’s related actions violated her Charter rights.
Subsequently the Director withdrew the apprehension and his guardianship
petition. The psychiatric assessment report was filed as an exhibit on the
appeal.
B. Manitoba Court of Appeal (Huband, Steel and
Hamilton JJ.A.), 2007 MBCA 9, 212 Man. R. (2d) 163
[189]
Steel J.A., for a unanimous court, agreed that s. 25 CFSA
violates religious freedom but found the violation was saved under s. 1 of the Charter .
Medical treatment against an individual’s wishes also violated the s. 7
interests of liberty and security of the person, but did so here in accordance
with the principles of fundamental justice, and so did not result in a breach
of s. 7 . The age-based distinction also did not violate s. 15 , since
“[a]ge-based distinctions are a common and necessary way of ordering society”
(para. 4).
IV. Relevant Statutory Provisions
[190]
Child and Family Services Act, C.C.S.M. c. C80
25(1) Where
a child has been apprehended, an agency
.
. .
(c) may
authorize the provision of medical or dental treatment for the child if
(i) the
treatment is recommended by a duly qualified medical practitioner or dentist,
(ii) the
consent of a parent or guardian of the child would otherwise be required, and
(iii) no
parent or guardian of the child is available to consent to the treatment.
25(2) Notwithstanding
clause (1)(b) or (c), if the child is 16 years of age or older, an agency shall
not authorize a medical examination under clause (1)(b) or medical or dental
treatment under clause (1)(c) without the consent of the child.
25(3) An
agency may apply to court for an order
(a) authorizing
a medical examination of an apprehended child where the child is 16 years of
age or older and refuses to consent to the examination; or
(b) authorizing
medical or dental treatment for an apprehended child where
(i) the
parents or guardians of the child refuse to consent to the treatment, or
(ii) the
child is 16 years of age or older and refuses to consent to the treatment.
25(4) The
agency shall notify the parents or guardians of the child and the child, if the
child is 16 years of age or older, of the time and place at which an
application under subsection (3) is to be heard, and shall do so not less than
two days before the time fixed for the hearing.
.
. .
25(8) Subject
to subsection (9), upon completion of a hearing, the court may authorize a
medical examination or any medical or dental treatment that the court considers
to be in the best interests of the child.
29(9) The
court shall not make an order under subsection (8) with respect to a child who
is 16 years of age or older without the child’s consent unless the court is
satisfied that the child is unable
(a) to
understand the information that is relevant to making a decision to consent or
not consent to the medical examination or the medical or dental treatment; or
(b) to appreciate the reasonably foreseeable consequences of making a
decision to consent or not consent to the medical examination or the medical or
dental treatment.
V. Analysis
[191]
Individuals who do not subscribe to the beliefs of Jehovah’s
Witnesses find it difficult to understand their objection to the potentially
lifesaving effects of a blood transfusion. It is entirely understandable that
judges, as in this case, would instinctively give priority to the sanctity of
life. Religious convictions may change. Death is irreversible. Even where
death is avoided, damage to internal organs caused by loss of blood may have
serious and long lasting effects.
[192]
Yet strong as is society’s belief in the sanctity of life, it is
equally fundamental that every competent individual is entitled to autonomy to
choose or not to choose medical treatment except as that autonomy may be
limited or prescribed within the framework of the Constitution. The rights
under s. 2 (a) of the Charter (religious freedom) and s. 7
(liberty and security of the person) are given to everyone, including
individuals under 16 years old.
[193]
Under s. 25 of Manitoba’s CFSA, a court may authorize
medical treatment of a child under 16 who is declared to be in need of
protection if it considers the treatment to be “in the best interests of the
child”, having regard to “all relevant matters” including a series of factors
enumerated at s. 2(1) of the Act, “the child’s cultural, linguistic, racial and
religious heritage”. Section 2(1)(f) talks about “the views and preferences of
the child where they can reasonably be ascertained”. Yet all of these factors
are treated merely as inputs into the assessment by a third party — the judge —
of a child’s “best interests”.
[194]
In Starson v. Swayze, 2003 SCC 32, [2003] 1 S.C.R. 722,
faced with an individual suffering from a mental illness, this Court recognized
that a “best interests” assessment by a court is only appropriate in the
absence of an individual’s capacity to decide for himself or herself. The
province in that case sought to protect individuals who are vulnerable because
of mental illness in much the same way as the province in this case seeks to
protect those who are vulnerable because of youth. It was made clear in that
case that the assessment of an individual’s capacity and his or her ability to
appreciate the choice that must be taken is completely distinct from an
assessment of what is in that same individual’s best interests from an
objective point of view. McLachlin C.J. (in dissent, but not on this issue)
described the balance that must be struck between the value of autonomy and the
need to protect the vulnerable:
Like understanding, appreciation does not require
agreement with a particular conclusion, professional or otherwise. A patient
may look at the pros and cons of treatment and arrive at a different conclusion
than the medical experts. Nor does it amount to a “best interests” standard. A
patient who is capable has the right to refuse treatment, even if that treatment
is, from a medical perspective, in his or her best interest. It is crucial
to guard against interpreting disagreement with a particular diagnosis or
proposed treatment plan as itself evidence of incapacity. [Underlining and
italics added; para. 19.]
In this case,
the majority’s interpretation of the CFSA does not render rebuttable the
presumption that persons under 16 lack the capacity to refuse medical
treatment. Under their interpretation of the CFSA, even if a minor under
16 demonstrates his or her capacity, he or she is still not treated in the same
manner as a minor who is 16 and over. His or her demonstrated capacity remains
one consideration among others (however much its weight increases in correspondence
with the maturity level and the nature of the treatment decision to be made),
and is in no way determinative. A.C.’s position throughout this case has been
that once it is established that she is an individual with “capacity” the
applications judge ought to cede to her the power to decide to have or not to
have the blood transfusion. In seeking to set aside the April 16, 2006 order,
A.C. asks for either a constitutional exemption or the nullification of ss.
25(8) and 25(9) CFSA (A.F., at paras. 114 and 116). The sliding scale
of weight the majority is prepared to give to her views is not responsive to
her argument. Her point is: who decides?
[195]
In B. (R.) v. Children’s Aid Society of Metropolitan Toronto,
[1995] 1 S.C.R. 315, this Court upheld an Ontario child welfare statute that
allowed a court to order that a blood transfusion be given to a baby against
the parent’s religious convictions because “a parent’s freedom of religion does
not include the imposition upon the child of religious practices which threaten
the safety, health or life of the child” (para. 225). The present situation is
clearly distinguishable because here A.C.’s own physical integrity and
religious conviction are in issue, and there was no evidence, and no argument,
that A.C. was somehow acting under parental influence.
A. The Charter Right to Personal
Autonomy
[196]
A competent and informed adult may always refuse treatment. This
is a right that long predated the Charter . Health care providers must
obtain a legally valid consent before treating patients: Hopp v. Lepp,
[1980] 2 S.C.R. 192; Reibl v. Hughes, [1980] 2 S.C.R. 880; Malette v.
Shulman (1990), 72 O.R. (2d) 417 (C.A.); Fleming v. Reid (1991), 4
O.R. (3d) 74 (C.A.). In Ciarlariello v. Schacter, [1993] 2 S.C.R. 119,
this Court endorsed the proposition that “[t]he fact that serious risks or
consequences may result from a refusal of medical treatment does not vitiate
the right of medical self-determination” (p. 135).
[197]
This right to personal autonomy is, of course, independent
of any religious conviction, although religion may on occasion be a motivating
factor.
[198]
There is a strong consensus among common law countries regarding
the right to refuse medical treatment, even if this leads to death. (See A.
Meisel, “The Legal Consensus About Forgoing Life-Sustaining Treatment: Its
Status and Its Prospects” (1992), 2 Kennedy Inst. of Ethics J. 309; B.
M. Dickens, “Medically Assisted Death: Nancy B. v. Hôtel-Dieu de
Québec” (1993), 38 McGill L.J. 1053, at p. 1060; Airedale NHS
Trust v. Bland, [1993] 1 All E.R. 821 (H.L.), at p. 891; Re C (adult:
refusal of medical treatment), [1994] 1 All E.R. 819 (Fam. Div.); Re
T (adult: refusal of medical treatment), [1992] 4 All E.R. 649 (C.A.); Re
B (adult: refusal of medical treatment), [2002] EWHC 429 (Fam.), [2002] 2
All E.R. 449; Cruzan v. Director, Missouri Department of Health, 497
U.S. 261 (1990); and Auckland Area Health Board v. Attorney‑General,
[1993] 1 N.Z.L.R. 235 (H.C.).)
[199]
In Canada, this was recognized by the Ontario Court of Appeal in
the Malette case. Mrs. Malette was a Jehovah’s Witness who arrived at
the hospital unconscious but who carried with her a signed medical alert card
specifying that no blood be administered under any circumstances.
Nevertheless, the doctor (no doubt acting on a belief in the sanctity of life)
gave Mrs. Malette a blood transfusion. He was held liable for battery. The
court stated:
A competent
adult is generally entitled to reject a specific treatment or all treatment, or
to select an alternate form of treatment, even if the decision may entail risks
as serious as death and may appear mistaken in the eyes of the medical
profession or of the community. Regardless of the doctor’s opinion, it is
the patient who has the final say on whether to undergo the treatment. . .
. The doctrine of informed consent is plainly intended to ensure the freedom
of individuals to make choices concerning their medical care. For this
freedom to be meaningful, people must have the right to make choices that
accord with their own values regardless of how unwise or foolish those choices
may appear to others . . . .
.
. .
The state’s interest in preserving the life or health
of a competent patient must generally give way to the patient’s stronger
interest in directing the course of her own life. . . . Recognition of the
right to reject medical treatment cannot, in my opinion, be said to depreciate
the interest of the state in life or in the sanctity of life. Individual free
choice and self‑determination are themselves fundamental constituents of
life. To deny individuals freedom of choice with respect to their health care
can only lessen, and not enhance, the value of life. [Emphasis added; pp. 424
and 429-30.]
Malette
was endorsed by the majority opinion in Rodriguez v. British Columbia
(Attorney General), [1993] 3 S.C.R. 519, at p. 598.
[200]
In Nancy B. v. Hôtel‑Dieu de Québec (1992), 69
C.C.C. (3d) 450, the Superior Court of Quebec applied the Civil Code
of Lower Canada to hold that Mrs. B. had the right to discontinue her
respiratory support treatment, even though this would soon lead to her death.
The majority opinion in Rodriguez, at p. 598, confirmed that Nancy B.
correctly states the law in common law provinces as well.
[201]
Professor Bernard Dickens concludes, I think correctly, that in
these cases the courts “have accepted the legal option of mentally competent
free individuals to risk preventable death rather than be compelled to live
under conditions they find objectionable” (p. 1065 (emphasis added)).
B. The Personal Autonomy of “Mature Minors”
[202]
These principles were applied in the context of “mature minors”
by the British Columbia Court of Appeal in Van Mol (Guardian ad Litem of) v.
Ashmore, 1999 BCCA 6, 168 D.L.R. (4th) 637, at para. 75:
But once the required capacity to consent has been achieved by the young
person reaching sufficient maturity, intelligence and capability of understanding,
the discussions about the nature of the treatment, its gravity, the material
risks and any special or unusual risks, and the decisions about undergoing
treatment, and about the form of the treatment, must all take place with and
be made by the young person whose bodily integrity is to be invaded and
whose life and health will be affected by the outcome. [Underlining and
italics added.]
A.C. is not an
adult, but nor was she a toddler at the relevant time. The court in Van Mol
quite rightly viewed the young person with capacity as entitled to make
the treatment decision, not just to have “input” into a judge’s consideration
of what the judge believes to be the young person’s best interests. Under
Abella J.’s approach, the court may (or may not) decide to give effect to the
young person’s view, but it is still the court that makes the final decision as
to what is best for the young person. This mature young person,
however, insists on the right to make her own determination about what
treatment to receive or not to receive, based on a mature grasp of her perilous
situation.
C. What Is “Capacity”?
[203]
The respondent Director points out, correctly in my view, that
“capacity is about more than intelligence”. He goes on to describe “capacity”
as
“ethical, emotional maturity”; in short, wisdom and a sense of judgment.
Moreover, capacity, however defined, is by no means the only factor governing
one’s ability to make an informed healthcare decision. As important is whether
the choice is made voluntarily and whether it is, in fact, an informed
decision . . . . [Emphasis in original; R.F., at para.
35.]
The Chief
Justice objects that the Director’s “broader definition of maturity [cannot be
equated] with the more limited definition of capacity in s. 25(9) CFSA”
(para. 146), but of course the Director was specifically talking about capacity
in the context of s. 25(9), which is what the argument in this case is all
about. In any event, the greater includes the lesser.
[204]
I agree with the Director’s view of what constitutes “capacity”
in this context, as did the Van Mol court when it spoke of “capacity” as
being attained when the young person has achieved “sufficient maturity,
intelligence and capability of understanding” (para. 75). This approach to
capacity, in my view, is reflected in s. 25(9) CFSA which relates
capacity to the ability
(a) to
understand the information that is relevant to making a decision to consent or
not consent to the medical examination or the medical or dental treatment; or
(b) to appreciate the reasonably foreseeable consequences of making a
decision to consent or not consent to the medical examination or the medical or
dental treatment.
[205]
In this case, the formal order dated April 16, 2006 flatly
accepts A.C.’s capacity as a fact, and the hospital’s psychiatric unit reported
that A.C.’s decision was both informed and voluntary. No one contends
otherwise.
D. The Constitutional Objection
[206]
The Crown supports the validity of the CFSA on the basis
that decisions about medical treatment cannot be left in the hands of young
persons because they cannot be expected to fully grasp the nature or
seriousness of their medical condition or the consequences of refusing consent
to treatment. The court is therefore authorized to grant or withhold consent
based on the “best interests of the child”.
[207]
Of course, if a teenager (as in this case) does understand
the nature and seriousness of her medical condition and is mature enough to
appreciate the consequences of refusing consent to treatment, then the
justification for taking away the autonomy of that young person in such
important matters does not exist.
[208]
As mentioned, the reasons of my colleague Abella J. attempt to
soften the CFSA scheme by interpreting the scope of “the best interests
of the child” test to include the judicial notion of “mature minor” and
consideration of A.C.’s capacity, but the brunt of A.C.’s objection is directed
at a prior question, whether the state can impose a “best interests of the
child” test when the judge accepts that the factual basis for its imposition
does not exist.
E. The Irrebuttable Presumption of
Incapacity
[209]
Having accepted that A.C. was a “person with capacity to give or
refuse consent to her own medical care” (A.R., at p. 91), the applications
judge nevertheless concluded that s. 25(8) CFSA made that inquiry
irrelevant in the case of a young person under 16 years of age because, as the
Director puts it in his factum,
there is no “mature minor” exception in the CFSA. There is
nothing ambiguous about the delineation between a child over the age of 16 and
a child under the age of 16 in s. 25 of the CFSA. The former is deemed
capable of making treatment decisions (rebuttable on evidence to the contrary),
while the treatment decisions of [a person under 16], even if she is capable,
will not be dispositive. [Emphasis in original; R.F., at para. 46.]
Similarly, in
the Court of Appeal the parties agreed that the court “would proceed in the
same manner as did [the applications judge]; that is, by assuming that A.C. had
capacity” and on that basis, determine the “pure question of law with respect
to statutory interpretation [ss. 25(8) and 25(9) CFSA] and the impact of
that interpretation on A.C.’s Charter rights” (C.A. rehearing motion,
2007 MBCA 59, 214 Man. R. (2d) 177, at para. 14).
[210]
Steel J.A. for the Court of Appeal concluded, and I agree with
her succinct interpretation:
Reading s. 25(8) together with s. 25(9), in the
context of the whole CFSA, it seems clear that the legislature did
direct its mind to the question of a mature minor. The language is plain. It
decided to provide for a modified mature minor rule where the treatment
decisions of those 16 and over with capacity would be respected. For those
under 16, with or without capacity, the court would decide based on the
best interests tests. That does not mean that the child’s wishes and
capacity are not considered when ascertaining what is in the child’s best
interests, but they are not determinative factors. [Underlining and italics
added; para. 50.]
The question is
whether the “modified mature minor” rule can pass Charter muster.
F. Charter Objections to the Irrebuttable
Presumption of Incapacity of Young Persons Under 16 Years Old
[211]
The appellant A.C. contends that the irrebuttable presumption of
incapacity to consent to or refuse medical treatment violates her freedom of
religion (s. 2 (a)), her right not to be deprived of her liberty or
security of the person except in accordance with the principles of fundamental
justice (s. 7 ), and her right to be free of age discrimination (s. 15).
(1) Freedom of Religion
[212]
Section 2 (a) of the Charter provides that “[e]veryone
has the following fundamental freedoms [including] freedom of conscience and
religion”. “Everyone” includes A.C.
[213]
Jehovah’s Witnesses believe that blood represents life and that
respect for this gift from God requires the faithful to abstain from accepting
blood to sustain life. They say that the Bible’s prohibition applies equally
to eating, drinking and transfusing blood and is not lessened in times of
emergency. They believe that observance of this principle is an element of
their personal responsibility before God. In Malette, the Ontario Court
of Appeal recognized that “[i]f [Mrs. Malette’s] refusal involves a risk of
death, then, according to her belief, her death would be necessary to ensure
her spiritual life” (p. 429).
[214]
The protection afforded to freedom of conscience and religion by
s. 2 (a) of the Charter covers religious practices as well as
religious beliefs:
Freedom in a
broad sense embraces both the absence of coercion and constraint, and the right
to manifest beliefs and practices. Freedom means that, subject to such
limitations as are necessary to protect public safety, order, health, or morals
or the fundamental rights and freedoms of others, no one is to be forced to act
in a way contrary to his beliefs or his conscience.
(R. v. Big M Drug Mart Ltd., [1985] 1 S.C.R. 295, at p.
337)
There is no
doubt that A.C.’s belief was sincere, as must be established by a s. 2 (a)
claimant (Syndicat Northcrest v. Amselem, 2004 SCC 47, [2004] 2 S.C.R.
551, at para. 46; Multani v. Commission scolaire
Marguerite-Bourgeoys, 2006 SCC 6, [2006] 1 S.C.R. 256, at paras. 34-35).
It is not contested that the rejection of blood transfusions by Jehovah’s
Witnesses is fundamental to their religious convictions. Nor would A.C.’s
rejection of a blood transfusion harm anyone except (potentially) herself.
[215]
Section 25(8) CFSA authorizes an applications judge to
substitute his view of what is in “the best interests of the child” for the
young person’s religious conviction that required her to refuse the blood
transfusion. The interference with A.C.’s religious conscience far exceeded
the “non-trivial” threshold established in Amselem, and it was rightly
conceded by the respondent that s. 25 CFSA violated s. 2 (a),
subject, of course, to the s. 1 defence advanced by the government.
(2) Liberty and Security of the Person
[216]
Section 7 of the Charter provides:
7. Everyone has the right to life,
liberty and security of the person and the right not to be deprived thereof
except in accordance with the principles of fundamental justice.
“Everyone”
includes A.C.
(3) The Liberty Interest
[217]
The judgment under appeal concluded that A.C. was not at liberty
to refuse a blood transfusion. The s. 7 liberty interest is not limited to
freedom from physical restraint, but it can certainly be appreciated that
forced medical treatment is a direct physical intrusion into the body of the patient.
Moreover it is not without risks. In any
event, the s. 7 liberty interest is engaged when the state steps in to prohibit
(or compel) fundamental life choices that “[e]veryone” is otherwise free to
pursue (or to decline to pursue). In B. (R.), La Forest J. observed,
with respect to the liberty interest in s. 7 , that
[i]n a free and democratic society, the individual must be left room for
personal autonomy to live his or her own life and to make decisions that are of
fundamental personal importance. [para. 80]
To a Jehovah’s
Witness, nothing is of more “fundamental personal importance” than observance
of the teachings of the church.
[218]
Wilson J. in R. v. Morgentaler, [1988] 1 S.C.R. 30, had
earlier grounded the liberty interest in the fundamental concepts of human
dignity, personal autonomy, privacy and choice in decisions going to the
individual’s fundamental being (p. 166). In Godbout v. Longueuil (City),
[1997] 3 S.C.R. 844, La Forest J. observed that he did “not by any means regard
this sphere of autonomy as being so wide as to encompass any and all decisions
that individuals might make in conducting their affairs. Indeed, such a view
would run contrary to the basic idea . . . that individuals cannot, in any
organized society, be guaranteed an unbridled freedom to do whatever they
please” (para. 66). However, he went on to say, such liberty interests do
extend to matters that “can properly be characterized as fundamentally or
inherently personal such that, by their very nature, they implicate basic
choices going to the core of what it means to enjoy individual dignity and
independence” (para. 66). This approach to the liberty interest has since been
adopted and applied in other cases including R. v. Malmo-Levine, 2003
SCC 74, [2003] 3 S.C.R. 571, at para. 85; Blencoe v. British Columbia (Human
Rights Commission), 2000 SCC 44, [2000] 2 S.C.R. 307, at para. 54; Chaoulli
v. Quebec (Attorney General), 2005 SCC 35, [2005] 1 S.C.R. 791; B. (R.).
[219]
The Court has thus long preached the values of individual
autonomy. In this case, we are called on to live up to the s. 7 promise in
circumstances where we instinctively recoil from the choice made by A.C. because
of our belief (religious or otherwise) in the sanctity of life. But it is
obvious that anyone who refuses a potentially lifesaving blood transfusion on
religious grounds does so out of a deeply personal and fundamental belief about
how they wish to live, or cease to live, in obedience to what they interpret to
be God’s commandment. As such, A.C.’s s. 7 liberty interest is directly
engaged.
(4) Security of the Person
[220]
The s. 7 reference to “security of the person” affords
“[e]veryone” protection from serious assault on his or her physical,
psychological or emotional integrity: New Brunswick (Minister of Health and
Community Services) v. G. (J.), [1999] 3 S.C.R. 46; Rodriguez, at
pp. 587-88 (per Sopinka J.), and at p. 618 (per McLachlin J.); Chaoulli,
at paras. 116 and 122 (per McLachlin C.J. and Major J.), and Blencoe,
at para. 55. An unwanted blood transfusion violates what Chaoulli
describes as the fundamental value of “bodily integrity free from state
interference” (para. 122).
(5) Principles of Fundamental Justice
[221]
The more difficult step in the s. 7 analysis generally is to
identify the principle of fundamental justice that is said to be breached. In
the present case, the principles of fundamental justice at issue are both
procedural and substantive.
[222]
In terms of substantive justice, the irrebuttable presumption
takes away the personal autonomy of A.C. and other “mature minors” for no
valid state purpose. The purpose of the CFSA is to defend the “best
interests” of children who cannot look after themselves and who are, therefore
“in need of protection”. This means, in the present context, children who do
not have the capacity (broadly defined) to make their own decisions about
medical treatment. But the court order of April 16, 2006 accepted that A.C. does
have that capacity. At common law, as Abella J. shows, mature minors have the right
to make such decisions for themselves when their level of maturity warrants
it. If the legislative net is cast so widely as to impose a legal disability
on a class of people in respect of an assumed developmental deficiency that
demonstrably does not exist in their case, it falls afoul of the “no valid
purpose” principle referred to by Sopinka J. in Rodriguez, at p. 594:
Where the deprivation of the right in question does
little or nothing to enhance the state’s interest (whatever it may be), it
seems to me that a breach of fundamental justice will be made out, as the
individual’s rights will have been deprived for no valid purpose.
[223]
Arbitrariness is a breach of fundamental justice, and arises
where a law “bears no relation to, or is inconsistent with, the objective that
lies behind [it]”. The no valid state purpose principle requires the
identification of a public interest said to be advanced by the challenged law.
The no arbitrariness principle looks at what valid state interests are
said to be advanced and examines the relationship (if any) between the state
purpose(s) and the impugned measure. The “no arbitrariness” principle was
addressed by the Chief Justice and Major J. in Chaoulli, at para. 131:
The question
in every case is whether the measure is arbitrary in the sense of bearing no
real relation to the goal and hence being manifestly unfair. The more serious
the impingement on the person’s liberty and security, the more clear must be
the connection.
(See also Rodriguez, at pp. 594-95.)
Here, for the
reasons already mentioned, the limit (i.e. the irrebuttable presumption) when
applied to young persons of capacity has “no real relation” to the legislative
goal of protecting children who lack such capacity. The deprivation in
the case of mature minors (a class to which A.C. belongs) is arbitrary, and the
deprivation therefore violates s. 7 .
[224]
The principles of fundamental justice also include, of course,
procedural fairness whose content varies with the context of the case and the
interests at stake. In Morgentaler, the procedures set out by the
legislature to allow women access to legal abortions were held to be deficient
because they caused undue delay and were unavailable to many women. In the
present case, the procedures in the CFSA are deficient because they do
not afford a young person the opportunity to rebut the very presumption upon
which the court’s authority to act in the best interests of the young person
rests — the presumption that she is incapable of making that decision for
herself. Section 25’s failure to leave room (in what is conceded to be an
individualized process) for the young person to rebut this presumption violates
fundamental procedural fairness. The state can have no valid interest in
preventing a young person from challenging the legislative presumption that she
lacks the capacity to determine what medical procedures she should undergo.
The Director urges administrative concerns such as the lack of time and
facilities that a s. 25 hearing may encounter, but those same concerns exist in
the cases of young persons 16 and 17 years old, yet the CFSA
contemplates contested capacity hearings in those cases.
[225]
It is perfectly acceptable that the “default position” is to let
the judge decide. Indeed the judge should always make the final decision — if
there is any doubt, on a balance of probabilities — that the young person is
capable. It is perfectly acceptable in an emergency situation where the issue
of capacity cannot properly be explored for the judge to proceed to a decision
about treatment as quickly as circumstances require. What is unfair, in my
view, is for the presumption of incapacity to remain irrebuttable in
circumstances where the young person’s capacity can fairly be determined
in a timely way, as it was in this case by the three hospital psychiatrists,
whose opinion of A.C.’s capacity was accepted by the judge.
(6) Equality Rights
[226]
Steel J.A. concluded:
While the CFSA mandates differential treatment
based on age, the appellants did not establish that it does so in an arbitrary
manner or that it marginalizes or treats children as less worthy on the basis
of irrelevant characteristics. The distinction between children over and under
16 is not an affront to human dignity in the manner contemplated in Law.
[para. 106]
The “dignity”
analysis has subsequently been reorganized by R. v. Kapp, 2008 SCC 41,
[2008] 2 S.C.R. 483, where the majority explained at para. 23 that instead of
“dignity” the analysis in a particular case “more usefully focusses on the
factors that identify impact amounting to discrimination”.
[227]
The dispute here does not turn on the differential treatment of
children and adults generally, but on the irrebuttable presumption in the CFSA
that “mature minors” under 16 are to be treated differently than the comparator
group, namely, mature minors who are 16 and over. The latter are deemed by the
legislature to have the capacity to make decisions about their own medical
treatment unless the contrary is shown. The former are denied even the
opportunity to demonstrate their capacity in deciding matters that affect their
vital physical and psychological interests.
[228]
The Attorney General of Manitoba concedes that the CFSA imposes
differential treatment on the basis of age, but denies that the distinction is
discriminatory (factum, at para. 37).
[229]
In this respect, the Attorney General of Manitoba relies strongly
on the comments of the Chief Justice in Gosselin v. Quebec (Attorney
General), 2002 SCC 84, [2002] 4 S.C.R. 429:
[U]nlike race, religion, or gender, age is not strongly associated with
discrimination and arbitrary denial of privilege. This does not mean that
examples of age discrimination do not exist. But age-based distinctions are a
common and necessary way of ordering our society. [para. 31]
Gosselin,
of course, involved a Charter challenge to the age-related classification
of benefits under Quebec social welfare legislation. It is apparent that in
the administration of such benefit programs, certain generalizations must be
made about the characteristics of people included in the different
classifications, otherwise the program may become unworkable. The present
context is quite different. A.C. is not seeking a government benefit. She is
protesting a state-authorized imposition of a blood transfusion to which she
objects on religious grounds. On this point, Professor Hogg observes:
. . . our laws
are replete with provisions in which age is employed as the qualification for
pursuits that require skill or judgment. Consider the laws regulating voting,
driving, drinking, marrying, contracting, will-making, leaving school, being
employed, etc. In regulating these matters, all jurisdictions impose
disabilities on young people, employing age as a proxy for ability. Such
stereotyping is inevitably inaccurate, because individuals mature at different
rates. In principle, the use of age could be eliminated, because each
individual could be tested for performance of each function. Age is used as
a qualification for no other reason than to avoid or reduce the administrative
burden of individualized testing. [Emphasis added.]
(P. W. Hogg, Constitutional Law of Canada (5th ed. 2007), vol. 2,
at p. 668)
As emphasized
earlier, the CFSA requires individualized assessment.
[230]
A.C. compares her position to that of mature minors who are 16
and 17 years old and who are not confronted with an irrebuttable presumption of
incapacity. She underlines the significant intrusion in her life (however
well-intentioned and medically appropriate) posed by forced medical treatment.
Her objection would be the same whether or not the refusal of consent in a
particular case is based on religious grounds. Within the class of mature
minors, the line drawn at 16 does not correspond with the claimant group’s
reality as concluded by the Manitoba Law Reform Commission, in its rejection of
a “fixed age” cut-off in the report previously mentioned, Minors’ Consent
to Health Care, at pp. 33 and 38.
[231]
That having been said, I do not think the real gravamen of
A.C.’s complaint is age discrimination. Her fundamental concern is with the
forced treatment of her body in violation of her religious convictions. In the
circumstances, I think that rather than pursue a full s. 15(1) analysis, it is
preferable to treat the elements of her s. 15 argument as part of A.C.’s
response to the government’s s. 1 justification to the violations of s. 2 (a)
and s. 7 of the Charter .
G. Is the CFSA Irrebuttable Presumption
Justified as a Reasonable Limit in a Free and Democratic Society Under Section
1 of the Charter ?
[232]
At the September 7, 2006 hearing before the Manitoba Court of
Appeal, counsel for the Attorney General was asked whether she wished to adduce
s. 1 evidence. Counsel replied that she “was content to rely on the record as
it stood” (C.A. judgment, at para. 37). Accordingly, if there exists some
evidence of a state interest in subjecting the medical treatment of minors under
16 to judicial control irrespective of their capacity to make these
decisions for themselves, it was not put before the Court.
[233]
I accept that the care and protection of children is a pressing
and substantial legislative objective that is of sufficient importance to
justify limiting a Charter right. However, the impugned procedure under
s. 25 CFSA is not rationally connected to that objective. The problem
is that the CFSA itself acknowledges in s. 25(9) that mature minors who
are 16 and over are presumed to be of sufficient capacity to make their own
treatment decisions, and it seems to me “arbitrary, unfair or based on
irrational considerations” (as those words are used in R. v. Oakes,
[1986] 1 S.C.R. 103, at p. 139) to deny mature minors under 16 the opportunity
of demonstrating what in the case of the older mature minors is presumed
in their favour.
[234]
Certainly the irrebuttable presumption of incapacity does not
impair “‘as little as possible’ the right or freedom in question” (Oakes,
at p. 139). The Manitoba legislature itself has recognized in other statutes
that young persons under 16 may have the requisite capacity to make important
decisions about their health and medical treatment. In the HCDA,
mentioned previously, s. 4(2) provides that “[i]n the absence of evidence to
the contrary, it shall be presumed for the purpose of this Act (a) that a
person who is 16 years of age or more has the capacity to make health care
decisions [rebuttable by the state]; and (b) that a person who is under 16
years of age does not have the capacity to make health care decisions
[rebuttable by the person below age 16].” It was under the HCDA, of
course, that A.C. gave her directive dated January 10, 2006 that she was not to
receive a blood transfusion.
[235]
The Mental Health Act, C.C.S.M. c. M110, also creates a rebuttable
presumption of incapacity for minors under 16 (s. 2 ). Although each of these
statutes has its own particular focus, the contrasting treatment of mature
minors is striking. Its justification is neither self-evident nor supported by
s. 1 evidence. It seems obvious that the rebuttable presumption enacted in
relation to mature minors under the age of 16 by the HCDA and the Mental
Health Act offers an available legislative solution that both protects the
state interest in looking out for those who lack the capacity to look out for
themselves and the need to minimally impair the rights of mature minors under
16 years of age who do not lack that capacity.
[236]
As stated, both the Director and the Attorney General of Manitoba
rely on the fact that the CFSA is sometimes used in emergency situations
where there is neither the time nor the facilities to explore properly the
capacity of the mature minor. This is undoubtedly true, and in such cases the
young person under 16 may not have the time or the opportunity to rebut the
“default” position of incapacity, and will have a s. 25 order made in what the
judge considers to be their best interests. The point here is that s. 25
procedure is not limited to emergency situations, and reference to factors
peculiar to an emergency cannot save the section as it stands.
[237]
Finally, the irrebuttable presumption has a disproportionately
severe effect on the rights of mature minors under 16 because they do not
suffer from the lack of capacity or maturity that characterizes other minors.
The state’s interest in ensuring judicial control over the medical treatment of
“immature” minors is not advanced by overriding the Charter rights of
“mature” minors under 16 who are in no such need of judicial control. Nor has
the respondent shown that the irrebuttable presumption in the CFSA
produces “proportionality between the deleterious and the salutary effects” (Dagenais
v. Canadian Broadcasting Corp., [1994] 3 S.C.R. 835, at p. 889 (emphasis
deleted)). Indeed based on what I have already said, I believe A.C. has
demonstrated that the deleterious effects are dominant.
5. Do ss. 25(8) and 25(9) of The Child and Family Services Act,
S.M. 1985-86, c. 8, infringe s. 15 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and
Freedoms ?
Answer: Not necessary to answer.
6. If so, is the infringement a reasonable limit
prescribed by law as can be demonstrably justified in a free and democratic
society under s. 1 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms ?
Answer: Not necessary to answer.
[239]
The appellants should have their costs in this Court and in the
courts below.
APPENDIX
Child and
Family Services Act, C.C.S.M. c. C80
Sections 25(8)
and 25(9), the two provisions being challenged in this case:
25(8) Subject
to subsection (9), upon completion of a hearing, the court may authorize a
medical examination or any medical or dental treatment that the court considers
to be in the best interests of the child.
25(9) The
court shall not make an order under subsection (8) with respect to a child who
is 16 years of age or older without the child’s consent unless the court is
satisfied that the child is unable
(a) to
understand the information that is relevant to making a decision to consent or
not consent to the medical examination or the medical or dental treatment; or
(b) to appreciate the reasonably foreseeable consequences of making a
decision to consent or not consent to the medical examination or the medical or
dental treatment.
Section 2(1):
2(1) The
best interests of the child shall be the paramount consideration of the
director, an authority, the children’s advocate, an agency and a court in all
proceedings under this Act affecting a child, other than proceedings to
determine whether a child is in need of protection, and in determining the
best interests of the child all relevant matters shall be considered, including
(a) the
child’s opportunity to have a parent‑child relationship as a wanted and
needed member within a family structure;
(b) the
mental, emotional, physical and educational needs of the child and the
appropriate care or treatment, or both, to meet such needs;
(c) the child’s mental, emotional and physical stage of
development;
(d) the
child’s sense of continuity and need for permanency with the least possible
disruption;
(e) the
merits and the risks of any plan proposed by the agency that would be caring
for the child compared with the merits and the risks of the child returning to
or remaining within the family;
(f) the
views and preferences of the child where they can reasonably be ascertained;
(g) the
effect upon the child of any delay in the final disposition of the proceedings;
and
(h) the child’s cultural, linguistic, racial and religious heritage.
Appeal dismissed, Binnie J.
dissenting.
Solicitors for the appellant A.C. (child): Ludkiewicz, Bortoluzzi,
Winnipeg.
Solicitors for the appellants A.C. and A.C. (parents): W. Glen How
& Associates, Georgetown.
Solicitors for the respondent: Tapper Cuddy, Winnipeg.
Solicitor for the intervener the Attorney General of Manitoba:
Attorney General of Manitoba, Winnipeg.
Solicitor for the intervener the Attorney General of British
Columbia: Attorney General of British Columbia, Vancouver.
Solicitor for the intervener the Attorney General of Alberta:
Attorney General of Alberta, Edmonton.
Solicitor for the intervener Justice for Children and Youth: Canadian
Foundation for Children, Youth and the Law, Toronto.
The Act has been amended since the hearing before this Court.
Section 2(1) now states: “The best interests of the child shall be the
paramount consideration of the director, an authority, the children’s advocate,
an agency and a court in all proceedings under this Act affecting a child,
other than proceedings to determine whether a child is in need of protection,
and in determining best interests the child’s safety and security shall be the
primary considerations. After that, all other relevant matters shall be
considered, including . . . .”
Lord Donaldson, M.R., in both Re R and Re W also
suggested that the power of parents to authorize treatment co-existed with the
child’s until he or she reached the age of majority, entitling parents to
consent to treatment that the child did not want, even where the child was “Gillick-competent”.
In other words, while “mature minors” can consent to treatment, and while
parents cannot veto that consent, minors cannot refuse treatment
against the wishes of their parents because the parents can consent on the
mature child’s behalf. This theory of “concurrent consents” has provoked considerable
criticism in the academic literature on the ground that it is illogical and
fails to reflect the House of Lords’ reasoning in Gillick (see, e.g.,
Gillian Douglas, “The Retreat from Gillick” (1992), 55 Mod. L. Rev.
569; Judith Masson, “Re W: appealing from the golden cage” (1993), 5 J.
Child L. 37; John Eekelaar, “White Coats or Flak Jackets? Doctors, Children
and the Courts — Again” (1993), 109 L.Q. Rev. 182; Michael Freeman,
“Removing rights from adolescents” (1993), 17 Adoption & Fostering
14; Sir James Munby, “Consent to Treatment: Children and the Incompetent
Patient”, in Andrew Grubb, ed., Principles of Medical Law (2nd ed.
2004), 205, at pp. 234-35).
At a recent International Consensus Conference on Transfusion and
Outcomes, which included experts in the field of anesthesiology, intensive
care, hematology, oncology, surgery, and patient blood management, and was
monitored by the United States Food and Drug Administration and the American
and the Australian Red Cross, what was described as “[a]n exhaustive review and
analysis of the medical literature by a panel of experts” concluded that “[t]he
vast majority of studies show an association between red blood cell
transfusions and higher rates of complications such as heart attack, stroke,
lung injury, infection and kidney failure and death.” See
www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/147167.php, “Blood Transfusions And
Outcomes”, April 23, 2009.