SUPREME
COURT OF CANADA
Between:
Her
Majesty The Queen
Appellant
and
L.M.
Respondent
Official English Translation: Reasons of LeBel J.
Coram: McLachlin
C.J. and Bastarache, Binnie, LeBel, Deschamps, Fish, Abella, Charron and
Rothstein JJ.
Reasons
for Judgment:
(paras. 1 to 54)
Dissenting
Reasons :
(paras. 55 to 70)
|
LeBel J. (McLachlin C.J. and Bastarache,
Binnie, Deschamps, Abella, Charron and Rothstein JJ. concurring)
Fish J.
|
______________________________
R. v. L.M., [2008] 2 S.C.R. 163, 2008 SCC 31
Her Majesty The Queen Appellant
v.
L.M. Respondent
Indexed as: R. v. L.M.
Neutral citation: 2008 SCC 31.
File No.: 31577.
2007: November 14; 2008: May 29.
Present: McLachlin C.J. and Bastarache, Binnie,
LeBel, Deschamps, Fish, Abella, Charron and Rothstein JJ.
on appeal from the court of appeal for quebec
Criminal law — Sentencing — Maximum sentence —
Accused convicted of sexually assaulting his young daughter and of making,
distributing and possessing child pornography — Sentencing judge stating that
accused had committed worst crime in worst circumstances and imposing maximum
sentence on count of sexual assault — Principles applicable to imposition of
maximum sentence — Criminal Code, R.S.C. 1985, c. C‑46,
ss. 718 , 718.1 , 718.2 , 718.3 .
Criminal law — Appeal against sentence — Principles
applicable to intervention by appellate court in appeal against sentence.
Criminal law — Sentencing — Long‑term offender
— Accused convicted of sexually assaulting his young daughter and of making,
distributing and possessing child pornography — Crown applying for finding that
accused is long‑term offender — Whether long‑term offender’s period
of community supervision must be taken into account in determining appropriate
term of imprisonment — Criminal Code, R.S.C. 1985, c. C‑46,
s. 753.1 .
The accused was convicted of sexually assaulting his
four‑year‑old daughter and of making, distributing and possessing
child pornography. At the time of his arrest, his computer contained
approximately 5,300 pornographic photographs and 540 pornographic videos
involving children. Many of the photographs were either of his daughter or a
friend of his daughter, or of both of them. Furthermore, this was not the
first time the accused had been in trouble with the law for sexual assaults on
minors. Stressing that he had committed the “worst crime in the worst
circumstances”, the trial judge imposed the maximum sentence of 10 years
for the count of sexual assault and a consecutive sentence for the other counts,
resulting in a global sentence of 15 years. Because of the record of the
accused and the high risk that he would reoffend, the trial judge also found
him to be a long‑term offender and ordered that he be supervised in the
community for a period not exceeding 10 years. On the basis that certain
facts had not been proven and that the maximum sentence for sexual assault was
not warranted, the majority of the Court of Appeal reduced the global sentence
imposed on the accused from 15 to 9 years.
Held (Fish J. dissenting):
The appeal should be allowed.
Per McLachlin C.J.
and Bastarache, Binnie, LeBel, Deschamps, Abella, Charron and
Rothstein JJ.: The sentence imposed by the trial judge should be
restored. Appellate courts must show great deference in reviewing decisions of
trial judges where appeals against sentence are concerned and should intervene
to vary sentences imposed at trial only if the sentences are demonstrably
unfit. In the instant case, the majority of the Court of Appeal did not meet
this requirement of deference. Rather, it substituted its own assessment for
that of the trier of fact and reviewed the exercise of her discretion without a
valid reason. [14‑16]
In sentencing matters, the trial judge enjoys
considerable discretion because of the individualized nature of the process.
To arrive at an appropriate sentence, the judge must weigh the normative
principles set out by Parliament in ss. 718 , 718.1 and 718.2 of the Criminal
Code . Although exceptional in nature, the maximum sentence is not reserved
for the worst crime committed in the worst circumstances; it must be imposed if
warranted in light of the normative principles of the Code, applied in
an individualized context, and of the circumstances. The trial judge’s
decision will continue to be dictated by the fundamental principle that a
“sentence must be proportionate to the gravity of the offence and the degree of
responsibility of the offender”. [17] [20‑22]
In the instant case, the sentence imposed by the trial
judge was proportionate to the gravity of the acts of the accused, and the
mitigating and aggravating circumstances and the objectives of the Code
were accounted for. The acts of the accused were highly reprehensible, and the
evidence convinced the judge that they were sufficiently serious, and the
accused sufficiently blameworthy, to warrant the maximum sentence. Since the
sentence was not unreasonable, the Court of Appeal should not have intervened
to vary it. The Court of Appeal’s finding that penetration had not been proven
beyond a reasonable doubt constitutes an improper reassessment of the evidence
in the absence of a reviewable error in the trial judge’s assessment of the
facts. Finally, the Court of Appeal could not give the principle — provided
for in s. 718.2 of the Code — that sentences should be similar to
other sentences imposed in similar circumstances priority over the principle of
deference to the trial judge’s exercise of discretion, since the sentence was
not vitiated by an error in principle and the trial judge had not imposed a
sentence that was clearly unreasonable by failing to give adequate
consideration to certain factors or by improperly assessing the evidence. [30]
[33] [35] [53]
The sentencing judge must not take the period of
supervision of the accused in the community as a long‑term offender into
account when determining the acceptable length of his or her incarceration.
Even though a judge determining the length of a sentence of imprisonment will
also receive the application to find the offender to be a long‑term
offender before passing sentence, it is important to remain faithful to the
conceptual distinction between sentencing and the imposition of a supervision
period. A judge who confuses these two processes risks straying from the
normative principles and the objectives of sentencing. The principal objective
of a prison sentence is punishment, although a number of factors are considered
in determining its length, including the gravity of the offence, the degree of responsibility
of the offender, the parity principle and the possibility of imposing a less
restrictive sanction. In contrast, the objectives of the supervision of an
offender are to ensure that the offender does not reoffend and to protect the
public during a period of supervised reintegration into society; the length of
this period of supervision is based on an offender’s criminal past and on the
likelihood that he or she will reoffend. In the instant case, the trial judge
correctly applied the objectives and principles relating to the two types of
decisions. [46‑50] [53]
Per Fish J.
(dissenting): While trial judges are entitled to considerable deference in
sentencing matters, the majority of the Court of Appeal did not err in varying
the sentence imposed by the trial judge because of the excessive severity of
the impugned sentences in relation to the sentences imposed in reasonably
similar cases. On an appeal against sentence, a court of appeal is required by
s. 687 of the Criminal Code to “consider the fitness of the
sentence appealed against”, and the court is expressly empowered to vary the
sentence if it finds the sentence unfit. In determining a fit sentence,
Parliament has now recognized in s. 718.2(b) of the Code
that parity is a principle that trial judges must consider. Failure to do so
adequately thus amounts in itself to a reviewable error in principle:
appellate intervention does not depend on the existence of an additional error
in principle as well. However, the disparity of an impugned sentence will only
justify appellate intervention where, as the majority of the Court of Appeal
found was the case here, the sentence imposed by the trial judge represents a
substantial and marked departure from sentences customarily imposed on similar offenders
for committing similar crimes. [55-56] [63‑65]
Cases Cited
By LeBel J.
Applied: R. v.
Cheddesingh, [2004] 1 S.C.R. 433, 2004 SCC 16; distinguished:
R. v. M.P., [2005] Q.J. No. 78 (QL), 2005 QCCA 7; referred
to: R. v. Shropshire, [1995] 4 S.C.R. 227; R. v.
McDonnell, [1997] 1 S.C.R. 948; R. v. M. (C.A.), [1996] 1
S.C.R. 500; R. v. W. (G.), [1999] 3 S.C.R. 597; R. v. Johnson,
[2003] 2 S.C.R. 357, 2003 SCC 46; R. v. Proulx, [2000] 1 S.C.R. 61, 2000
SCC 5; R. v. Lyons, [1987] 2 S.C.R. 309; R. v. Jones, [1994] 2
S.C.R. 229; Beaulieu v. R., [2007] Q.J. No. 2116 (QL), 2007 QCCA
403; Corneau v. R., [2001] R.J.Q. 2509; R. v. Ménard, [2002] Q.J.
No. 5271 (QL); R. v. M. (J.S.) (2003), 173 C.C.C. (3d) 75, 2003
BCCA 66; R. v. Archer (2005), 193 C.C.C. (3d) 376; R. v. Blair
(2002), 167 B.C.A.C. 21, 2002 BCCA 205; R. v. J.G.E.S., [2006] B.C.J.
No. 3455 (QL), 2006 BCSC 2004.
By Fish J. (dissenting)
R. v. M. (C.A.), [1996] 1
S.C.R. 500; R. v. Shropshire, [1995] 4 S.C.R. 227; R. v. Larche,
[2006] 2 S.C.R. 762, 2006 SCC 56.
Statutes and Regulations Cited
Criminal Code, R.S.C. 1985, c. C‑46, ss. 151 , 152 , 153 , 161(2) (a),
163.1 , 172.1 , 173(2) , 271 , 272 , 273 , 687 , 718 , 718.1 , 718.2 , 718.3 , 752.1(1) ,
753 , 753.1 , 810.1 .
Authors Cited
Canada. Public Safety Canada. “Long term offender
designation”, updated October 2006 (online: http://www.
publicsafety.gc.ca/prg/cor/tls/lto‑eng.aspx).
Dadour, François. De la détermination de la
peine: principes et applications. Markham, Ont.:
LexisNexis, 2007.
Ferris, Thomas W. Sentencing: Practical
Approaches. Markham, Ont.: LexisNexis Butterworths, 2005.
Manson, Allan. The Law of Sentencing.
Toronto: Irwin Law, 2001.
Ruby, Clayton C. Sentencing,
6th ed. Markham, Ont.: LexisNexis Butterworths, 2004.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Quebec Court of Appeal
(Nuss, Morin and Côté JJ.A.), [2006] R.J.Q. 1354, 39 C.R. (6th) 133,
[2006] Q.J. No. 4966 (QL), 2006 CarswellQue 4631, 2006 QCCA 735, setting
aside the sentencing decision rendered by Wilhelmy J.C.Q., J.E. 2006‑525,
SOQUIJ AZ‑50340372, [2005] Q.J. No. 15934 (QL), 2005 CarswellQue
9973. Appeal allowed, Fish J. dissenting.
Benoît Lauzon, Michel
Pennou and Lori Renée Weitzman, for the appellant.
Yves Gratton, for
the respondent.
English version of the judgment of McLachlin C.J. and Bastarache, Binnie,
LeBel, Deschamps, Abella, Charron and Rothstein JJ. delivered by
LeBel J. —
I. Introduction
A. Nature
of the Case
[1]
In this appeal, the Court must reconsider certain sentencing principles,
and in particular those relating to maximum sentences. The case also raises
difficulties flowing from the relationship between the procedure of the
application for a finding that an offender is a long‑term offender under
s. 753.1 of the Criminal Code, R.S.C. 1985, c. C‑46 (“Cr. C.”),
and the process for determining the appropriate sentence.
[2]
The respondent, L.M., was convicted of sexually assaulting his daughter
and of making, distributing and possessing child pornography. The trial judge
imposed the maximum sentence on him for the count of sexual assault and a
consecutive sentence for the counts of making, distributing and possessing
child pornography. She also found him to be a long‑term offender and
ordered him to be supervised in the community for a period of 10 years.
L.M. appealed the sentence to the Court of Appeal. The majority of that court
allowed the appeal and reduced the global sentence imposed by the trial judge.
For the reasons that follow, I would restore that sentence.
B. Origin of the Case
[3]
In 2002, Switzerland’s federal police were investigating an
international ring of pedophiles that included groups suspected of distributing
child pornography on the Internet. In the course of this investigation, Swiss
police officers contacted the Sûreté du Québec (“S.Q.”) after identifying two
Quebeckers in Internet user groups whose names included the root “sampi” (for “sans
pilosité”, meaning “hairless”). The first of these men revealed L.M.’s
identity to the S.Q. Upon entering L.M.’s home, S.Q. officers noted that
several items found there confirmed the origin of photographs discovered on the
Internet, not to mention that the child who opened the door, R.M., the daughter
of the accused, L.M., appeared in some of those photographs.
[4]
The investigation and trial revealed that the childhood of R.M., one of
the respondent’s four children, had been nightmarish. R.M. was her father’s
principal victim, having been sexually assaulted between the ages of two and
four. The evening of L.M.’s arrest, R.M. was questioned by police. According
to her highly candid testimony, related in the words of a four‑year‑old
child, this little girl had been regularly photographed in the nude by her
father, who periodically touched her sexually, penetrated her and spent the
night with her in what they referred to as the [translation] “love room”.
[5]
During that time, L.M. made money distributing child pornography on the
Internet. At the time of his arrest, his computer contained approximately
5,300 pornographic photographs and 540 pornographic videos involving
children. Many of the photographs were either of R.M. or A., a four‑year‑old
child who regularly visited L.M.’s home, or of both of them. For example, one
of the hard drives seized by the S.Q. contained a series of 33 pictures of
R.M. in which she first appears dressed as a princess, after which the final
photographs are close‑up shots of her genitals.
[6]
L.M.’s arrest was not the first time he had been in trouble with the
law. At the age of 17, he had been convicted of sexually assaulting a six‑year‑old
girl. At 24, he was charged with sexually assaulting a minor, but the
proceedings were terminated when he entered into a recognizance under
s. 810.1 Cr. C. (sentencing decision, [2005] Q.J.
No. 15934 (QL), at para. 38; judgment on long‑term offender
designation, [2005] Q.J. No. 15933 (QL), at para. 30).
C. Judgments of the Courts Below
(1) Court of Québec
(a) Conviction
[7]
L.M. pleaded guilty on the counts of possessing and distributing child
pornography but contested the charges of making child pornography and sexual
assault. At the end of the trial, Judge Wilhelmy found that the Crown had
proven L.M.’s guilt on these counts. Regarding the sexual assault charge,
Judge Wilhelmy found R.M.’s testimony highly reliable and credible because
of what she said and the circumstances in which she said it ([2005] Q.J.
No. 1215 (QL), at paras. 151‑52). Furthermore, according to
Judge Wilhelmy, virtual conversations on an ICQ chat site traced back to
the computer of the accused confirmed the assault against R.M.
(paras. 104, 123‑24 and 155). The conviction is not contested in
this Court.
(b) Sentence
[8]
Eight months later, Judge Wilhelmy rendered her sentencing decision. In
her opinion, there were several aggravating factors in the circumstances of the
case. They included the repeated assaults on a very young child; the parental
relationship with and position of authority over her; the creation of
pornographic images and their distribution over the Internet or, in other
words, around the world; and the criminal record of the accused (sentencing
decision, at paras. 59 and 61). The trial judge then stated that the
accused had committed the [translation] “worst
crime . . . in the worst circumstances” (para. 65). For these
reasons, Judge Wilhelmy sentenced L.M. to the maximum penalty of 10 years’
imprisonment on the count of sexual assault and to 3, 5 and 5 years
respectively on those of possessing, making and distributing child
pornography. The global sentence was 15 years, as the sentences on the
pornography‑related counts were to be served concurrently with each
other, but consecutively to the sentence for sexual assault. Finally, Judge
Wilhelmy reduced the sentence for sexual assault by 16 months to give the
accused credit for time spent in remand custody.
[9]
That same day, in a separate judgment, the trial judge ruled on a motion
by the Crown for a finding that the accused is a long‑term offender and
an order that he be supervised in the community for a period of 10 years
under s. 753.1 Cr. C. In her opinion, the imposition of a
period of supervision such as this cannot affect the length of the period of
deprivation of liberty, as determined at the time of sentencing (judgment on
long‑term offender designation, at para. 18). According to Judge
Wilhelmy, in setting the length of the period of supervision that was to follow
the sentence, she had to consider in particular the risk that the offender
would reoffend, which she thought to be substantial, and the fact that his
sexual deviance was deeply rooted (paras. 27 and 30). She therefore
ordered a 10‑year supervision period, the maximum permitted by law.
(2) Court of Appeal, [2006] R.J.Q. 1354,
2006 QCCA 735
[10]
L.M. appealed the sentence to the Quebec Court of Appeal. The appeal
was allowed in part by the majority of that court. I will now summarize the
reasons of the majority and those of the dissent.
(a) Reasons of the Majority
[11]
For reasons written primarily by Côté J.A., the majority of the
Court of Appeal allowed L.M.’s appeal and reduced the sentence imposed by the
Court of Québec, which they found inappropriate. In Côté J.A.’s view,
certain facts, the acts of penetration in particular, had not been proven.
After weighing the factors she considered to have been proven and the holdings
in cases she considered to be comparable, Côté J.A. concluded that the maximum
sentence for sexual assault was unwarranted. In her opinion, this was not the
worst crime committed in the worst circumstances. She therefore reduced the
sentence for sexual assault to 6 years. Côté J.A. also reduced the
concurrent sentences for making and distributing child pornography to
3 years. The global sentence imposed on L.M. was thus reduced from 15 to
9 years, less 16 months for the time spent in remand custody.
However, Côté J.A. upheld the 10‑year supervision period.
Nuss J.A. concurred with his colleague’s proposed disposition, but
expressed reservations about adopting the concept of the [translation] “worst crime committed in
the worst circumstances”.
(b) Reasons of the Dissent
[12]
Morin J.A., dissenting, would have upheld the sentence imposed by the
Court of Québec. In his view, the majority’s intervention in the trial judge’s
assessment of the facts was unwarranted, as was their interference with the
exercise of her sentencing discretion. He added that following
Côté J.A.’s line of reasoning, it would never be possible to impose the
maximum sentences provided for in the Criminal Code (para. 83).
II. Analysis
A. Issues
[13]
This appeal raises three issues with regard to sentencing. The first
two have been addressed often by the courts, but in light of the position of
the majority of the Court of Appeal, it may be helpful to review the relevant
principles in this area of criminal law and procedure. The third issue is a
newer one. I will discuss the following issues in turn:
(1) What principles are applicable to
intervention in an appeal against sentence?
(2) What principles are applicable to
the imposition of a maximum sentence? Is it necessary to imagine the worst
crime committed in the worst circumstances?
(3) Must a long‑term offender’s
period of community supervision be taken into account in determining the
appropriate term of imprisonment?
B. Intervention by the Court of Appeal
(1) Principles
[14]
In its past decisions, this Court has established that appellate courts
must show great deference in reviewing decisions of trial judges where appeals
against sentence are concerned. An appellate court may not vary a sentence
simply because it would have ordered a different one. The court must be
“convinced it is not fit”, that is, “that . . . the sentence [is]
clearly unreasonable” (R. v. Shropshire, [1995] 4 S.C.R. 227, at
para. 46, quoted in R. v. McDonnell, [1997] 1 S.C.R. 948, at
para. 15). This Court also made the following comment in R. v. M.
(C.A.), [1996] 1 S.C.R. 500, at para. 90:
. . . absent an error in principle, failure to consider a
relevant factor, or an overemphasis of the appropriate factors, a court of
appeal should only intervene to vary a sentence imposed at trial if the
sentence is demonstrably unfit.
(See also R.
v. W. (G.), [1999] 3 S.C.R. 597, at para. 19;
A. Manson, The Law of Sentencing (2001), at p. 359; and
F. Dadour, De la détermination de la peine: principes et applications
(2007), at p. 298.)
[15]
Owing to the profoundly contextual nature of the sentencing process, in
which the trier of fact has broad discretion, the standard of review to be
applied by an appellate court is one based on deference. The sentencing judge
has “served on the front lines of our criminal justice system” and possesses
unique qualifications in terms of experience and the ability to assess the
submissions of the Crown and the offender (M. (C.A.), at
para. 91). In sum, in the case at bar, the Court of Appeal was required —
for practical reasons, since the trier of fact was in the best position to
determine the appropriate sentence for L.M. — to show deference to the sentence
imposed by the trial judge.
(2) Violation of the Principles
[16]
The majority of the Court of Appeal did not meet this requirement of
deference. In effect, they reassessed L.M.’s sentence without showing it to be
clearly unreasonable. They even varied certain findings of fact, in particular
with respect to the acts of penetration, despite Judge Wilhelmy’s conclusions
concerning the quality of the evidence, which she found to be clear. In
assessing the overall seriousness of the offences committed by L.M., the Court
of Appeal also disregarded the close connection between the sexual assault
charges and the charges of making child pornography and distributing it on the
Internet. In so doing, it substituted its own assessment for that of the trier
of fact and reviewed the exercise of her discretion without a valid reason.
Moreover, as we will now see, the majority of the Court of Appeal
misinterpreted the principles applicable to maximum sentences.
C. Maximum Sentences
(1) General Sentencing Principles
Determining
the Appropriate Sentence
[17]
Far from being an exact science or an inflexible predetermined
procedure, sentencing is primarily a matter for the trial judge’s competence
and expertise. The trial judge enjoys considerable discretion because of the
individualized nature of the process (s. 718.1 Cr. C.; R.
v. Johnson, [2003] 2 S.C.R. 357, 2003 SCC 46, at para. 22; R. v.
Proulx, [2000] 1 S.C.R. 61, 2000 SCC 5, at para. 82). To arrive at an
appropriate sentence in light of the complexity of the factors related to the
nature of the offence and the personal characteristics of the offender, the
judge must weigh the normative principles set out by Parliament in the Criminal
Code :
‑ the objectives of denunciation,
deterrence, separation of offenders from society, rehabilitation of offenders,
and acknowledgment of and reparations for the harm they have done (s. 718 Cr. C.)
(see Appendix);
‑ the fundamental principle that a
sentence must be proportionate to the gravity of the offence and the degree of
responsibility of the offender (s. 718.1 Cr. C.); and
‑ the principles that a sentence should
be increased or reduced to account for aggravating or mitigating circumstances,
that a sentence should be similar to other sentences imposed in similar
circumstances, that the least restrictive sanctions should be identified and
that available sanctions other than imprisonment should be considered
(s. 718.2 Cr. C.).
(2) Maximum Sentences
and Cheddesingh
[18]
This individualized sentencing process is part of a system in which
Parliament has established a very broad range of sentences that can in some
cases extend from a suspended sentence to life imprisonment. The Criminal
Code provides for a maximum sentence for each offence. However, it seems
that the maximum sentence is not always imposed where it could or should be, as
judges are influenced by an idea or viewpoint to the effect that maximum
sentences should be reserved for the worst cases involving the worst
circumstances and the worst criminals. As can be seen in the case at bar, the
influence of this notion is such that it sometimes leads judges to write horror
stories that are always worse than the cases before them. As a result, maximum
sentences become almost theoretical:
In the end the
difficulty with maximums is that they may be seen as almost theoretical rather
than as an indication of how seriously an offence is to be treated in the
“ordinary” case.
(T. W. Ferris, Sentencing: Practical Approaches (2005),
at p. 292)
[19]
As Morin J.A. noted in his dissenting reasons, human nature is such
that it will always be possible for a court to imagine a worse case than the
one before it. Morin J.A. rightly pointed out that it is important for a
judge, when deciding whether the maximum sentence can or should be imposed for
a given offence, to avoid contemplating fictitious situations in this way.
This approach is consistent with this Court’s recent case law.
[20]
In R. v. Cheddesingh, [2004] 1 S.C.R. 433, 2004 SCC 16, the Court
acknowledged the exceptional nature of the maximum sentence, but firmly
rejected the argument that it must be reserved for the worst crimes committed
in the worst circumstances. Instead, all the relevant factors provided for in
the Criminal Code must be considered on a case‑by‑case
basis, and if the circumstances warrant imposing the maximum sentence, the
judge must impose it and must, in so doing, avoid drawing comparisons with
hypothetical cases:
. . . terms such as “stark horror”, “worst offence” and
“worst offender” add nothing to the analysis and should be avoided. All
relevant factors under the Criminal Code . . . must be
considered. A maximum penalty of any kind will by its very nature be imposed
only rarely . . . and is only appropriate if the offence is of
sufficient gravity and the offender displays sufficient blameworthiness. As is
always the case with sentencing, the inquiry must proceed on a case‑by‑case
basis. [para. 1]
[21]
Even where a maximum sentence is imposed, therefore, regard must be had to
the trial judge’s discretion, the individualized nature of sentencing and the
normative principles set out by Parliament in ss. 718 , 718.1 and 718.2 Cr. C.
There is still a place in criminal law for maximum sentences in appropriate
circumstances.
[22]
Thus, the maximum sentence cannot be reserved for the abstract case of
the worst crime committed in the worst circumstances. The trial judge’s
decision will continue to be dictated by the fundamental principle that a
“sentence must be proportionate to the gravity of the offence and the degree of
responsibility of the offender” (s. 718.1 Cr. C.).
Proportionality will be achieved by means of a “complicated calculus” whose
elements the trier of fact understands better than anyone. The trial judge’s
position in the sentencing process justifies the respect owed to the reasoned
exercise of his or her discretion and the deferential approach that appellate
courts should take in such matters (see Manson, at p. 86). As is noted in
one commentary on sentencing principles:
[translation] [The] objectives of
denunciation, deterrence, separation from society, rehabilitation, reparations
and retribution are all quite general, and there is no precise standard that
can be applied to rank them. At first glance, this is desirable, since the
sentencing process is fundamentally an individualized one in that sentences
will necessarily vary from one offender to another in light of the particular
emphasis that will be placed on one or the other of the objectives in order to
arrive at the appropriate sentence, having regard to all the circumstances, in
each case.
(Dadour, at p. 17)
[23]
In the case at bar, the Court of Appeal should have asked whether, in
light of Judge Wilhelmy’s findings of fact, imposing the maximum sentence was
reasonable having regard to the circumstances and the objectives of sentencing
rather than digging deeper to find something horrible. A review of the Court
of Québec’s judgment in light of the principles stated above confirms that the
sentence imposed was lawful and reasonable. This is clear from the reasons
given by Judge Wilhelmy for her sentencing decision.
(3) Application of the
Sentencing Principles by the Trial Judge
Objective and
Subjective Seriousness
[24]
Judge Wilhelmy began her analysis by considering the objective
seriousness of the offences of which L.M. had been convicted. She noted the
lengths of the maximum sentences provided for by Parliament: 10 years for
sexual assault (s. 271(1)(a) Cr. C.), 10 years for
making child pornography (s. 163.1(2)(a) Cr. C.),
10 years for distributing child pornography (s. 163.1(3)(a) Cr. C.)
and 5 years for possessing child pornography (s. 163.1(4)(a) Cr. C.).
[25]
On the subjective seriousness of the offences, Judge Wilhelmy referred
to a number of aggravating factors that led her to conclude that a long period
of incarceration was necessary. She noted L.M.’s record of similar acts, the
repeated nature of the acts and their impact on the victims, his parental
relationship, position of authority and position of trust with respect to the
principal victim, the quantity of pornographic materials seized, the central
role played by the accused in supplying the distribution network and in
facilitating the production of the materials, the children’s ages, the nature
of the scenes shown in the photographs and videos, and the medium — the
Internet — used to distribute the pornographic photographs and videos (see in
particular para. 61 of the sentencing decision).
[26]
In addition to the violence inherent in repeated sexual assaults on such
a young child, the list of aggravating circumstances could include the fact
that R.M. was unquestionably subjected to psychological violence. According to
a report by the Centre jeunesse de Montréal dated April 19, 2005 that was
filed in the Court of Québec, the little girl had been scarred for life by her
father’s acts and was having difficulty fitting in with children her own age
(A.R., at pp. 108‑9; sentencing decision, at para. 28).
[27]
Moreover, the gravity of L.M.’s acts is clear from his modus operandi.
A portion of the collection of pornographic photographs and videos he posted on
the Internet were the product of sexual assaults on his own little girl. His
acts must be considered as a whole.
[28]
Finally, I note that L.M. disseminated his pornography around the world
over the Internet. The use of this medium can have serious consequences for a
victim. Once a photograph has been posted on the Web, it can be accessed
indefinitely, from anywhere in the world. R.M. will never know whether a
pornographic photograph or video in which she appears might not resurface
someday.
[29]
The only mitigating circumstance identified by Judge Wilhelmy was L.M.’s
recent acknowledgment of his sexual deviance. Whether his admission was
sincere is open to question. According to the pre‑sentence report
prepared for the Court of Québec by probation officer Isabelle Mailloux on
May 3, 2005, L.M. at no time used [translation]
“negative language in referring to child pornography or acknowledged the
unacceptable nature of that act” (A.R., at p. 125). In a psychiatric
assessment submitted to the Court of Québec on June 13, 2005,
Dr. Louis Morissette noted that L.M. had admitted [translation] “the inadequacy of his fantasies” in a second
interview only after having read the pre‑sentence report (A.R., at
p. 140). Judge Wilhelmy made the following comment: [translation] “However, [the] reversal
occurred after the accused had read the pre‑sentence and psychological
reports, which mentioned that he had acknowledged nothing and shown no regret
whatsoever” (judgment on long‑term offender designation, at
para. 22).
[30]
L.M.’s acts were highly reprehensible, and the evidence convinced Judge
Wilhelmy that they were sufficiently serious, and L.M. sufficiently
blameworthy, to warrant the maximum sentence. Judge Wilhelmy rightly wanted to
denounce L.M.’s conduct, deter sex offenders from committing such offences and
separate L.M. from society because of his lack of remorse, especially since his
acts included the abuse of a person under 18 in relation to whom he was in a
position of trust. Similarly, the offence had been committed in the context of
the abuse of a position of authority in relation to the victim.
[31]
The judge also correctly understood the close relationship between the
offences, the overall situation they gave rise to and the need to impose a
global sentence suited to that situation. Viewed as a whole, the crime was
complex. The offence of sexual assault was closely connected with three other
offences of making, possessing and distributing child pornography that are
subject to express sanctions under the Criminal Code . Each aspect of
the offender’s conduct could be considered only in light of all these charges,
viewed as a whole. As Judge Wilhelmy concluded, the global sentence was the
crucial factor in determining the sentence in the case at bar.
[32]
From this perspective, the sentence imposed by Judge Wilhelmy was not
unreasonable. The trial judge had a broad discretion, was in a privileged
position as the trier of fact and certainly had the expertise to assess L.M.’s
character, the heinous nature of his acts and the impact that a longer or
shorter sentence might have on the chances of his reoffending and on his
prospects for rehabilitation.
(4) Unwarranted
Intervention by the Court of Appeal
[33]
As I mentioned above, the majority of the Court of Appeal erred in
varying a sentence that was not unreasonable. Their finding that penetration
had not been proven beyond a reasonable doubt constitutes an improper
reassessment of the evidence in the absence of a reviewable error in the Court
of Québec’s assessment of the facts.
[34]
Moreover, the majority of the Court of Appeal attached great importance
to the principle that a sentence should be similar to sentences imposed on
similar offenders for similar offences committed in similar circumstances
(paras. 41 et seq.), which is one of the normative sentencing
principles provided for in the Criminal Code (s. 718.2 Cr. C.).
Although this principle permits an appellate court to temper the discretionary
aspect of the sentencing process, it was applied incorrectly by the majority of
the Court of Appeal.
[35]
This exercise of ensuring that sentences are similar could not be given
priority over the principle of deference to the trial judge’s exercise of
discretion, since the sentence was not vitiated by an error in principle and
the trial judge had not imposed a sentence that was clearly unreasonable by
failing to give adequate consideration to certain factors or by improperly
assessing the evidence (M. (C.A.), at para. 92, quoted in McDonnell,
at para. 16; W. (G.), at para. 19; see also Ferris, at
p. 149, and Manson, at p. 93). This Court has clearly confirmed the
“trial judge’s traditionally broad sentencing discretion” (M. (C.A.),
at para. 56). Furthermore, this principle has been codified in
s. 718.3 Cr. C.
[36]
Owing to the very nature of an individualized sentencing process,
sentences imposed for offences of the same type will not always be identical.
The principle of parity does not preclude disparity where warranted by the
circumstances, because of the principle of proportionality (see Dadour, at
p. 18). As this Court noted in M. (C.A.), at para. 92,
“there is no such thing as a uniform sentence for a particular crime”. From
this perspective, an appellate court is justified in intervening only if the
sentence imposed by the trial judge “is in substantial and marked departure
from the sentences customarily imposed for similar offenders committing similar
crimes” (M. (C.A.), at para. 92).
[37]
The case at bar can be distinguished from each of the cases cited by the
majority of the Court of Appeal. The case before this Court is markedly
different as regards the quantity of materials seized and the scope of the
network of Internet users having access to them, not to mention the connection
between the sexual assaults committed by L.M. and his making, possession and
distribution of child pornography. I will give one example of this. The
majority of the Court of Appeal stressed the similarity between R. v. M.P.,
[2005] Q.J. No. 78 (QL), 2005 QCCA 7, and the instant case (see
para. 73). Their aim in doing so was to bring L.M.’s sentence in line
with the one imposed in M.P. But in that case the pornographic
materials were not posted on the Internet; they were sent only to two friends
of the abused child’s father. Having disregarded L.M.’s wide distribution of
the materials, made possible by the Internet, the Court of Appeal failed to
demonstrate any real similarity between M.P. and the case at bar. Consequently,
this attempt at achieving parity in sentencing, based as it was on an incorrect
analogy, was itself inappropriate.
D. Finding That the Offender Is a Long‑Term Offender
[38]
This appeal also raises the issue of the relationship between sentencing
and the procedure for finding an offender to be a long‑term offender.
When the Crown applies to have an offender found to be a long‑term
offender, must the judge, in determining the length of the term of
imprisonment, take the subsequent period of community supervision into
account? I do not think so. In my view, a distinction must be made between
sentencing per se and the procedure for imposing a period of post‑sentence
supervision.
(1) Description of the
System of Supervision
[39]
As this Court did with respect to dangerous offenders (R. v.
Lyons, [1987] 2 S.C.R. 309, at p. 339; R. v. Jones, [1994] 2
S.C.R. 229, at p. 297), I note the exceptional nature of the finding that
an offender is a long‑term offender. As I will explain below, the
strictness and precision of the rules applicable to this supervisory mechanism
necessarily limit the number of people to whom it will apply. In 2005, or
eight years after the introduction of this new system of supervision, there
were 300 long‑term offenders in Canada: 187 of them were
incarcerated, and 113 were in the community under supervision. Most of them
had committed sexual offences (“Long term offender designation”, Public Safety
Canada (online: www.publicsafety.gc.ca/prg/cor/tls/lto‑eng.aspx)).
Procedure
[40]
The Criminal Code provides that the Crown must first of all apply
to have an accused found to be a long‑term offender after he or she has
been convicted, but before sentence is imposed (ss. 752.1(1) , 753.1(1) (a)
and 753.1(3.1) (a) Cr. C.). After this application is filed,
the court may have experts assess the offender. Their report will be used as
evidence in the application (ss. 752.1(1) and 753.1(1) Cr. C.).
This report will enable the judge to determine whether the offender poses a serious
risk to public safety. The Criminal Code sets out three conditions that
must be met before a judge may grant an application for supervision:
(i) First, a sentence of imprisonment
of two years or more must be warranted for the offence for which the
offender has been convicted (s. 753.1(1)(a) Cr. C.).
(ii) Next, the judge must be satisfied
beyond a reasonable doubt that there is a substantial risk that the offender
will reoffend (s. 753.1(1)(b) Cr. C.; see, for example, Beaulieu
v. R., [2007] Q.J. No. 2116 (QL), 2007 QCCA 403, at para. 25).
In assessing that risk, the judge must determine (s. 753.1(2) Cr. C.):
(a) that the offender has been convicted of a
sexual offence under ss. 151 , 152 , 153 , 163.1(2) , 163.1(3) , 163.1(4) ,
163.1(4.1) , 172.1 , 173(2) , 271 , 272 or 273 Cr. C., or has engaged
in “serious conduct of a sexual nature in the commission of another offence of
which the offender has been convicted” (s. 753.1(2)(a) Cr. C.);
and
(b) that the offender has shown a pattern of repetitive
behaviour that shows a likelihood of the offender’s causing injury to or
inflicting severe psychological damage on other persons, or has, by
conduct in any sexual matter, shown a likelihood of causing injury to other
persons in the future (s. 753.1(2)(b)(i) and (ii) Cr. C.;
see, for example, Corneau v. R., [2001] R.J.Q. 2509 (C.A.)). This
assessment of [translation]
“prospective dangerousness” concerns, in sum, past conduct and the facts
relating to the commission of the offences (R. v. Ménard, [2002] Q.J.
No. 5271 (QL) (C.A.), at para. 23).
(iii) Finally, the judge must find that
there is a “reasonable possibility” of eventual control of the risk in the
community (s. 753.1(1)(c) Cr. C.). It is interesting
to note that the expression used in the French version of this provision is “possibilité
réelle” (real possibility) (R. v. M. (J.S.) (2003), 173 C.C.C. (3d)
75, 2003 BCCA 66, at para. 27).
[41]
This Court has previously stated that a sentencing judge must, if
satisfied that a community supervision order will make it possible “to reduce
the threat to the life, safety or physical or mental well‑being of other
persons to an acceptable level”, consider the option of finding an offender to
be a long‑term offender before finding him or her to be a dangerous
offender (see Johnson, at para. 40; see also C. Ruby, Sentencing
(6th ed. 2004), at p. 541). This is the only situation in which the Criminal
Code requires a judge to consider the possibility of supervision before
determining the appropriate sentence. The decision is thus based on
controlling a serious risk: if this objective can be attained in the community,
an offender cannot be found to be dangerous and, as a result, be imprisoned for
an indeterminate period (see Ferris, at pp. 301‑3).
[42]
Although they both contribute to assuring public safety, the dangerous
offender and long‑term offender designations have different objectives.
Unlike a dangerous offender (s. 753 Cr. C.), who will
continue to be deprived of liberty, since such offenders are kept in prison to
separate them from society (s. 718.1 ), a long‑term offender
serves a sentence of imprisonment of two years or more and is then subject to
an order of supervision in the community for a period not exceeding
10 years for the purpose of assisting in his or her rehabilitation
(s. 753.1(3) Cr. C.). This measure, which is less restrictive
than the indeterminate period of incarceration that applies to dangerous
offenders, protects society and is at the same time consistent with [translation] “the principles of
proportionality and moderation in the recourse to sentences involving a
deprivation of liberty” (Dadour, at p. 228).
(2) Relationship to
Sentencing
[43]
The respondent relies on an Ontario Court of Appeal decision to argue
that the principle of proportionality should apply to the combined effect of
the period of community supervision and the sentence of imprisonment. While it
was careful to state that a community supervision order is “not a sentence”,
the Ontario Court of Appeal made the following comments, on that occasion,
regarding the combined effect of the prison sentence and the supervision
period:
Although it may be argued that a mandatory community supervision order
. . . is not a sentence, in my view, as a matter of principle, the
principles of sentencing in ss. 718 to 718.2 should apply when measuring
the combined effect of a mandatory custodial sentence and mandatory community
supervision order. This would include the fundamental principle of
proportionality in s. 718.1 . . . .
. . . Assuming that the principle of proportionality applies
. . ., I find nothing inappropriate about the eight‑year period
of community supervision in addition to this sentence. It is necessary to
recognize that the custodial sentence for the predicate offences and the
community supervision order each serve a discrete purpose. Therefore, in
considering the appropriateness of the length of the appellant’s community
supervision, it must be considered in the context of the purpose of the
dangerous and long‑term offender regime, which is to protect the public.
(R. v. Archer (2005), 193 C.C.C. (3d) 376, at paras. 21-22)
[44]
Of course, a period of community supervision cannot be any longer than
is necessary to obviate the risk that the offender will reoffend and thus to
protect the public. In my view, however, to adopt the general rule the
respondent wishes to draw from Archer would be to disregard the
distinction between the sentence of imprisonment and the period of supervision,
which have different objectives.
(3) Distinction Between
the Function of the Finding and That of Sentencing
[45]
This Court has held that the procedure for finding an offender to be a dangerous
offender forms part of the sentencing process (Lyons, at
pp. 350 and 374; Jones, at p. 294; Johnson, at
para. 23). Can it be said that the procedure for finding an offender to
be a long‑term offender also forms part of the sentencing
process? Obviously, since the sentencing judge is the same judge who would
make the order so finding. However, the similarities between that finding and
a sentencing proceeding end there.
[46]
These two types of decisions can be distinguished on the basis of the
objectives and methods, and certain technical aspects, of the sentencing
process. The principal objective of a prison sentence is punishment, although
the sentence must be determined in accordance with the principles set out in
the Criminal Code . On the other hand, the objectives of and rationale
for the supervision of an offender in the community are to ensure that the
offender does not reoffend and to protect the public during a period of
supervised reintegration into society. The British Columbia Court of Appeal
mentioned this distinction in a recent judgment:
The fixed
sentence and supervision orders focus on two different goals: the former on
punishment for the predicate offence, the latter on prevention of future
criminal conduct. In the latter the predicate offence plays a relevant role as
an indicator of risk.
(R. v. Blair (2002), 167 B.C.A.C. 21, 2002 BCCA 205, at
para. 37; see R. v. J.G.E.S., [2006] B.C.J. No. 3455 (QL),
2006 BCSC 2004, at paras. 134 and 137, for another example of this.)
[47]
Furthermore, the sentencing judge will not calculate the length of each
of these steps in the same way. A number of factors are considered in
determining the length of a prison sentence, including, to name but a few, the
gravity of the offence, the degree of responsibility of the offender, the
parity principle and the possibility of imposing a less restrictive sanction.
In contrast, the length of a period of community supervision is based on an
offender’s criminal past and on the likelihood that he or she will reoffend,
which are addressed in the assessment report.
[48]
Finally, in practice, the effect of a sentence is to deprive the
offender of his or her liberty, whereas community supervision is aimed at
reintegrating the offender into the community under the supervision of the
Correctional Service of Canada. Furthermore, the period of community
supervision does not begin until after the sentence (imprisonment) has been
served. From this perspective, the preferred approach for a judge considering
a period of community supervision is very different from the one that must be
taken in determining the length of a sentence of imprisonment.
(4) Relationship to the
Determination of the Appropriate Sentence
[49]
Nevertheless, the judge determining the length of an offender’s sentence
of imprisonment will also receive the application to find the offender to be a
long‑term offender before passing sentence. As a result, the judge will
quite likely tend to consider both decisions at the same time. He or she may
accordingly find it difficult to observe the conceptual distinction between the
two decisions. Despite these practical difficulties, it is important to remain
faithful to the distinction between sentencing and the imposition of a
supervision period. A judge who confuses these two processes risks straying
from the normative principles and the objectives of sentencing. A judge who
does so would also neglect the specific objective of the procedure for finding
an offender to be a long‑term offender, which requires the application of
different principles. Parliament intended that the judge determine the
appropriate sentence first. After doing so, the judge is to ask, in light of
Parliament’s objective of protecting the public, whether a period of supervision
is warranted. The period of community supervision cannot therefore be equated
with a new period of deprivation of liberty consecutive to the one resulting
from the sentence.
(a) Need to Maintain the
Conceptual and Practical Distinction Between the Two Steps
[50]
It is therefore my opinion that a long‑term offender’s period of
community supervision cannot be taken into account when determining the
acceptable length of the offender’s incarceration. I fear that the principle
that a sentence should be similar to other sentences imposed in similar
circumstances would be seriously undermined if Canadian courts were to compare
fixed sentences (for sex offenders who have not been found to be long‑term
offenders) with fixed sentences accompanied by supervision orders (for sex
offenders who have been found to be long‑term offenders).
(b) Application to the Case at Bar
[51]
Judge Wilhelmy pointed out that protecting society is the fundamental
objective being pursued in providing in the Criminal Code for the
supervision of offenders. She mentioned that the accused was 31 years old
and had never been treated for sexual deviance, although he claimed that he
wanted to enter a program for sex abusers. She added that L.M. continued to
insist that he had only fondled his daughter (without penetrating her) and to
play down the gravity of what he had done to her, whereas the evidence showed
that the situation was much more serious. Referring to L.M.’s history of
sexual assaults and the recognizance he had entered into under s. 810.1 Cr. C.,
Judge Wilhelmy concluded that L.M.’s deviance was of long standing. Finally,
the experts agreed unanimously that there was a substantial risk that he would
reoffend (judgment on long‑term offender designation, at para. 27).
[52]
For all these reasons, Judge Wilhelmy ruled in favour of a long
supervision period for L.M. as a long‑term offender. She did not take
L.M.’s period of incarceration into account when determining the length of his
period of community supervision. Instead, she focussed on the future, that is,
on the need to protect the public from the risk that L.M. would reoffend. In
my view, her analysis was flawless.
III. Conclusion
[53]
Judge Wilhelmy imposed an appropriate sentence on L.M. The
sentence is proportionate to the gravity of his acts, and the mitigating and
aggravating circumstances and the objectives of the Criminal Code have
been accounted for. As there was no reviewable error in Judge Wilhelmy’s
decision, the Court of Appeal was wrong to vary the sentence. In my opinion,
the trial judge correctly applied the law, placing the appropriate emphasis on
the specific objectives of the finding that an offender is a long‑term
offender.
IV. Disposition
[54] For
the foregoing reasons, I would allow the appeal, set aside the judgment of the
Court of Appeal and restore the sentence imposed by the Court of Québec.
The following are the reasons delivered by
Fish J.
(dissenting) —
I
[55]
It is well established that trial judges are entitled to considerable
deference in sentencing matters. I take no issue in this regard with the clear
and persuasive reasons of my colleague, Justice LeBel. With respect, however,
I have reached a different conclusion regarding the application of that rule in
this case. I would therefore dismiss the appeal.
II
[56]
On an appeal against sentence, the Court of Appeal is required by s. 687
of the Criminal Code, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-46 , to “consider the fitness of
the sentence appealed against”. And the Court is expressly empowered to vary
the sentence if it finds the sentence unfit.
[57]
Here, the trial judge convicted the respondent of sexual assault and
found him guilty as well of “making, distributing and possessing” child
pornography ([2005] Q.J. No. 1215 (QL)). The respondent was immediately
incarcerated pending sentence. Eight months later, the trial judge sentenced
him to the maximum punishment for sexual assault — 10 years’ imprisonment —
less 16 months on account of the respondent’s pre-sentence custody. On the
child pornography counts, the trial judge imposed a total of 5 years’
imprisonment, to be served consecutively to the term for sexual assault. The
trial judge also found the respondent to be a “long-term offender” within the
meaning of s. 753.1 of the Code and ordered that he be supervised
in the community for an additional 10 years, which is again the maximum period
provided by law ([2005] Q.J. No. 15933 (QL) and [2005] Q.J. No. 15934 (QL)).
[58]
At the time of sentence, the respondent was 31 years old. This was his
first prison sentence. He did, however, have a previous conviction for sexual
assault, committed when he was 17. The facts relevant to his convictions in
this case, and the details regarding the sentences imposed, are fully set out
in the reasons of Justice LeBel.
[59]
On an appeal by the respondent, the Court of Appeal reduced his sentence
for sexual assault from 10 years to 6 (again, less 16 months on account of
pre-sentence custody), and the sentence on the child pornography counts from 5 years
to 3 years ([2006] R.J.Q. 1354, 2006 QCCA 735). The long-term offender finding
and the 10-year supervision order were left undisturbed.
[60]
The only issue in this Court is whether the majority in the Court of
Appeal erred in finding that the custodial sentences were “unfit” within the
meaning of s. 687 of the Criminal Code . And, in this regard, there is
no dispute that a sentence will not be considered unfit if the trial judge,
bearing in mind the relevant facts, applied the governing principles correctly
and the sentence itself is neither manifestly inadequate nor manifestly
excessive.
[61]
A governing principle of particular relevance to this appeal is set out
in s. 718.2 (b) of the Criminal Code , which requires the
sentencing court to take into consideration the principle that “a sentence
should be similar to sentences imposed on similar offenders for similar
offences committed in similar circumstances”. Reading the separate reasons of
Nuss and Côté JJ.A. together, as one must, it may properly be said that the
majority in the Court of Appeal reduced the respondent’s cumulative sentence
from 15 years to 9 years on the ground that the trial judge failed to
adequately consider this principle, resulting in a manifestly excessive
sentence.
[62]
It is true that Côté J.A. disagreed in her reasons with the trial
judge’s finding that the maximum sentence for sexual assault was justified on
the “worst offender, worst offence” criterion, but her conclusion ultimately
rests on an extensive and detailed review of the sentences meted out in sexual
assault cases involving child victims, and related cases of child pornography.
She considered as well the range of sentences imposed for incest, which is
punishable by 14 years’ imprisonment as opposed to 10 for sexual assault. Côté
J.A. recognized that the respondent had not been charged with that offence but
nonetheless found sentences for incest relevant, bearing in mind the facts of
this case. Her conclusion that the sentences imposed by the trial judge were unfit
rests, ultimately, on its disparity in relation to the other sentences she
reviewed.
[63]
In his separate reasons, moreover, Nuss J.A. made it clear that he did
not adopt the observations of Côté J.A. regarding the “worst offender, worst
offence” branch of the trial judge’s decision. I therefore think it right to
conclude, as mentioned earlier, that the majority decision in the Court of
Appeal rests essentially on the excessive severity of the impugned sentences in
relation to the sentences imposed in reasonably similar cases. In my view, the
court did not err in varying the sentence imposed by the trial judge for this
reason. Nor did it err in finding that the respondent’s reprehensible conduct
warranted a lengthy term of imprisonment — 9 years — followed by 10 years
of supervision in the community.
[64]
Parliament has now recognized in s. 718.2 (b) of the Criminal
Code that parity is a principle that trial judges must consider in
determining a fit sentence. Failure to do so adequately thus amounts in
itself to a reviewable error in principle: appellate intervention does not
depend, in my respectful view, on the existence of an additional error
in principle as well.
[65]
I am aware, of course, that the disparity of an impugned sentence will
only justify appellate intervention where the sentence imposed by the trial
judge represents a substantial and marked departure from sentences customarily
imposed on similar offenders for committing similar crimes: R. v. M. (C.A.),
[1996] 1 S.C.R. 500, at para. 92. Moreover, appellate scrutiny on a claim of
disparity is subject to due regard for the need to individualize sentences.
But where a substantial and marked departure has been made out — as the Court
of Appeal found was the case here — the sentence may in my view be varied to
bring it within the acceptable range: see R. v. Shropshire, [1995] 4
S.C.R. 227, at para. 48.
[66]
I need hardly add that taking into consideration the principle of parity
“does not require the court to apply it without regard to the other principles
of sentencing set out in the Code or in binding decisions of the
courts”: R. v. Larche, [2006] 2 S.C.R. 762, 2006 SCC 56, at para. 35.
[67]
Finally, in fairness to the trial judge and to Justice Côté, I pause
here to mention that, in the recent past “[i]t has often been remarked that . .
. maximum sentences ought to be reserved for the worst offender committing the
worst type of offence” (per Lamer C.J., speaking for the Court in M.
(C.A.), at para. 36). For the reasons given by Justice LeBel in this case,
I agree that this criterion ought nonetheless to be abandoned.
III
[68]
A Court of Appeal cannot vary the sentence imposed at trial merely
because it might have instead rendered a different sentence: Shropshire,
at para. 46. On an appeal by the Crown, it will thus not suffice for the Court
of Appeal to conclude that the impugned sentence is lenient; nor, on an
appeal by the accused, to find that the sentence is severe. Rather, a
sentence may be varied only if it is found to be too lenient or too
severe — that is to say, “clearly excessive or inadequate”; and therefore
unfit (Shropshire, at para. 48).
[69]
In short, as mentioned at the outset, Courts of Appeal are indeed bound
to recognize that trial courts enjoy a broad discretion in sentencing matters.
But they are required to intervene where the sentence imposed at trial is shown
to be unfit, within the meaning of the decided cases. And in reviewing their
decisions on a recognized ground, we should remain mindful that provincial
Courts of Appeal are endowed in sentencing matters with a supervisory
jurisdiction that this Court is not meant to share. As Lamer C.J. put it in M.
(C.A.), at para. 92: “Appellate courts . . . serve an important function in
reviewing and minimizing the disparity of sentences imposed by sentencing
judges for similar offenders and similar offences committed throughout Canada.”
IV
[70]
For all of these reasons, with respect for those who see the matter
differently, I would dismiss the appeal.
APPENDIX
Criminal Code, R.S.C. 1985, c. C‑46
718. The fundamental purpose of sentencing is to contribute,
along with crime prevention initiatives, to respect for the law and the
maintenance of a just, peaceful and safe society by imposing just sanctions
that have one or more of the following objectives:
(a) to
denounce unlawful conduct;
(b) to
deter the offender and other persons from committing offences;
(c) to
separate offenders from society, where necessary;
(d) to
assist in rehabilitating offenders;
(e) to
provide reparations for harm done to victims or to the community; and
(f) to
promote a sense of responsibility in offenders, and acknowledgment of the harm
done to victims and to the community.
. . .
753.1 (1) [Application for finding that an offender is a long‑term
offender] The court may, on application made under this Part following the
filing of an assessment report under subsection 752.1(2), find an offender
to be a long‑term offender if it is satisfied that
(a) it
would be appropriate to impose a sentence of imprisonment of two years or more
for the offence for which the offender has been convicted;
(b)
there is a substantial risk that the offender will reoffend; and
(c) there is a reasonable possibility of eventual control of the
risk in the community.
Appeal allowed, Fish J.
dissenting.
Solicitors for the appellant: Poursuites
criminelles et pénales du Québec, Montréal.
Solicitors for the respondent: Des
Longchamps, Bourassa, Trudeau & LaFrance, Montréal.