Siemens v. Manitoba (Attorney General), [2003] 1
S.C.R. 6, 2003 SCC 3
David Albert Siemens, Eloisa Ester Siemens and
Sie‑Cor Properties Inc. o/a The Winkler Inn Appellants
v.
The Attorney General of Manitoba and
the Government of Manitoba Respondents
and
Attorney General of Canada, Attorney General of Ontario,
Attorney General of New Brunswick, Attorney General
of Alberta, 292129 Alberta Ltd., operating as The Empress Hotel,
484906 Alberta Ltd., operating as Lacombe Motor Inn,
Leto Steak & Seafood House Ltd., Neubro Holdings Inc.,
operating as Lacombe Hotel, Wayne Neufeld, 324195 Alberta Ltd.,
operating as K.C.’s Steak & Pizza, and Katerina Kadoglou Interveners
Indexed as: Siemens v.
Manitoba (Attorney General)
Neutral citation: 2003 SCC 3.
File No.: 28416.
Hearing and judgment: October 31, 2002.
Reasons delivered: January 30, 2003.
Present: McLachlin C.J. and Gonthier, Iacobucci, Major,
Bastarache, Binnie, Arbour, LeBel and Deschamps JJ.
on appeal from the court of appeal for manitoba
Constitutional law — Distribution of
legislative powers — Criminal law — Property and civil rights — Matters of
local or private nature — Gaming — Province enacting local option legislation
enabling municipalities to hold binding plebiscites on prohibition of video
lottery terminals in their communities — Whether legislation and section
deeming non‑binding plebiscite to be binding plebiscite held in
accordance with legislation intra vires province — Constitution Act, 1867,
ss. 91(27) , 92(13) , (16) — The Gaming Control Local Option (VLT)
Act, S.M. 1999, c. 44, s. 16.
Constitutional law — Charter of Rights — Freedom of
expression — Life, liberty and security of person — Equality — Local option
legislation enabling municipalities to hold binding plebiscites on prohibition
of video lottery terminals in their communities — Whether legislation infringes
freedom of expression, right to life, liberty and security of person or right
to equality guaranteed in Charter — Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms,
ss. 2 (b), 7 , 15(1) — The Gaming Control Local Option (VLT) Act, S.M.
1999, c. 44, s. 16.
The Manitoba Lotteries Corporation (“MLC”) manages the
operation of video lottery terminals (“VLTs”) in the province, by entering into
agreements with “siteholders” and placing VLTs, which remain the property of
the MLC, on the siteholders’ premises. The appellants were siteholders with
several VLTs generating revenue at their place of business. In 1998, the Town
of Winkler held a non‑binding plebiscite supporting the prohibition of
VLTs in their town. The following year, the Government of Manitoba enacted
local option legislation (The Gaming Control Local Option (VLT) Act (“VLT
Act”)), enabling municipalities to hold binding plebiscites on the
prohibition of VLTs. Section 16 of the VLT Act referred
specifically to the Winkler plebiscite, deeming it to be binding and resulting
in the termination of the appellants’ siteholder agreement and the removal of
the VLTs from their premises. The appellants challenged the legislation on the
grounds that s. 16 violated ss. 2 (b), 7 and 15(1) of the Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms and that the legislation was ultra vires
the provincial government because it encroached on the exclusive federal
criminal law jurisdiction. The motions judge rejected these claims, and the
Court of Appeal upheld that decision.
Held: The
appeal should be dismissed.
The VLT Act in its entirety and s. 16 in
particular are intra vires the provincial legislature. To determine
whether there was legislative authority to enact the VLT Act, the
purpose and effects of the legislation must be analysed to ascertain its pith
and substance. The Act’s purposes are to regulate gaming in the province and
to allow for local input on the issue of VLTs, both of which fall under
s. 92 of the Constitution Act, 1867 . Section 16(1) deals
specifically with siteholder agreements which are contractual in nature and
thereby fall under property and civil rights. On a broader level, the
municipal plebiscites empower each community to determine whether VLTs will be
permitted, thereby invoking matters of a local nature. The VLT Act is
not a colourable attempt to legislate criminal law as it does not create penal
consequences, and was not enacted for a criminal law purpose. Local morality
may affect which municipalities choose to ban VLTs through binding plebiscites,
but this moral aspect is incidental to the overall regulatory scheme. The Criminal
Code specifically creates an exception to the gaming offences where
provincial lottery schemes are established, affirming the double aspect of
gaming, promoting federal‑provincial cooperation and removing operational
conflict and any question of paramountcy. Lastly, local option legislation is
a valid exercise of legislative power and not an improper abdication of the
legislature’s law‑making powers. The application of a statutory VLT
prohibition is conditional upon there being a certain plebiscite result,
allowing municipalities to decide on the applicability of the Act to their
communities.
The appellants’ Charter rights were not
violated by the Act. Section 16 does not violate s. 2 (b) of
the Charter by denying the appellants the right to vote. While voting
is a protected form of expression, there is no constitutional right to vote in
a referendum, as a referendum is a creation of legislation. Moreover, the VLT
Act does not prevent the residents of Winkler from voting in future
plebiscites on the issue of VLTs. Section 16 also does not violate the
appellants’ s. 7 Charter rights. The right to life, liberty and
security of the person encompasses fundamental life choices, not pure economic
interests. Finally, the appellants’ rights under s. 15(1) were not
violated. Residence in Winkler is not an analogous ground, as there is nothing
to suggest that residents there are historically disadvantaged or that they
suffer from any sort of prejudice. Moreover, the legislation does not
discriminate against the appellants in any substantive sense. Winkler
residents were singled out in s. 16 because theirs was the only
municipality to have already held a plebiscite. There was no harm to dignity.
The purpose of s. 16 was to respect the will of the Winkler residents as
expressed in that plebiscite. The section does not affect the right of Winkler
residents to vote in a VLT plebiscite under the Act and they may initiate a
plebiscite to reinstate VLTs in their community.
Cases Cited
Applied: R.
v. Furtney, [1991] 3 S.C.R. 89; Law v. Canada
(Minister of Employment and Immigration), [1999] 1 S.C.R. 497; Russell
v. The Queen (1882), 7 App. Cas. 829; Attorney‑General for
Ontario v. Canada Temperance Federation, [1946] A.C. 193; Haig v. Canada,
[1993] 2 S.C.R. 995; distinguished: Johnson v. Attorney General of
Alberta, [1954] S.C.R. 127; Re The Initiative and Referendum Act
(1916), 27 Man. R. 1; referred to: R. v. Big M Drug Mart Ltd.,
[1985] 1 S.C.R. 295; Edmonton Journal v. Alberta (Attorney General),
[1989] 2 S.C.R. 1326; R. v. Wholesale Travel Group Inc., [1991] 3 S.C.R.
154; Thomson Newspapers Co. v. Canada (Attorney General), [1998] 1
S.C.R. 877; Kitkatla Band v. British Columbia (Minister of Small Business,
Tourism and Culture), [2002] 2 S.C.R. 146, 2002 SCC 31; O’Grady v.
Sparling, [1960] S.C.R. 804; Ross v. Registrar of Motor Vehicles,
[1975] 1 S.C.R. 5; Global Securities Corp. v. British Columbia (Securities
Commission), [2000] 1 S.C.R. 494, 2000 SCC 21; Rio Hotel Ltd. v. New
Brunswick (Liquor Licensing Board), [1987] 2 S.C.R. 59; Reference re
Validity of Section 5(a) of the Dairy Industry Act, [1949] S.C.R. 1, aff’d
[1951] A.C. 179 (sub nom. Canadian Federation of Agriculture v.
Attorney‑General for Quebec); Reference re Firearms Act (Can.),
[2000] 1 S.C.R. 783, 2000 SCC 31; Reference re The Farm Products
Marketing Act, [1957] S.C.R. 198; Nova Scotia Board of Censors v.
McNeil, [1978] 2 S.C.R. 662; OPSEU v. Ontario (Attorney General),
[1987] 2 S.C.R. 2; Godbout v. Longueuil (City), [1997] 3 S.C.R. 844; Blencoe
v. British Columbia (Human Rights Commission), [2000] 2 S.C.R. 307, 2000
SCC 44; R. v. Turpin, [1989] 1 S.C.R. 1296; Corbiere v. Canada
(Minister of Indian and Northern Affairs), [1999] 2 S.C.R. 203.
Statutes and Regulations Cited
Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms, ss. 1 , 2 (b), 6 ,
7 , 15(1) .
Constitution Act, 1867, ss. 91(27) , 92(13) , (15) , (16) .
Criminal Code, R.S.C. 1985, c. C‑46, s. 207 [rep. & sub. c. 52
(1st Supp.), s. 3 ].
Gaming Control Act, S.M. 1996, c. 74, s. 1 “video lottery terminal”.
Gaming Control Local Option
(VLT) Act, S.M. 1999, c. 44, ss. 1
“plebiscite”, “video lottery gaming”, 3, 16.
Human Rights Code, S.M. 1987‑88, c. 45.
Authors Cited
Manitoba. Gaming Control
Commission. Municipal VLT Plebiscite Review. Winnipeg: The
Commission, 1998.
Manitoba. Legislative Assembly. Debates
and Proceedings, 5th Sess., 36th Leg., vol. XLIX, No. 57A,
July 8, 1999, p. 4092.
Manitoba Lottery Policy Review. Working
Group Report. Winnipeg: The Manitoba Lottery Policy Review Working
Group, 1995.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Manitoba Court of
Appeal, [2001] 2 W.W.R. 515, 153 Man. R. (2d) 106, 85 C.R.R. (2d) 59, [2000]
M.J. No. 588 (QL), 2000 MBCA 152, affirming a decision of the Court of Queen’s
Bench, [2001] 2 W.W.R. 491, 151 Man. R. (2d) 49, 78 C.R.R. (2d) 268, [2000]
M.J. No. 417 (QL), 2000 MBQB 140. Appeal dismissed.
David G. Hill and Curtis
A. Knudson, for the appellants.
Shawn Greenberg and Jayne
Kapac, for the respondents.
Robert W. Hubbard, for
the intervener the Attorney General of Canada.
Hart Schwartz, for the
intervener the Attorney General of Ontario.
Gabriel Bourgeois, Q.C.,
for the intervener the Attorney General of New Brunswick.
Roderick Wiltshire, for
the intervener the Attorney General of Alberta.
Ronald J. Dumonceaux and
Graham K. Neill, for the interveners 292129 Alberta Ltd. et al.
The judgment of the Court was delivered by
Major J.
—
I. Introduction
1
In 1999, the Government of Manitoba enacted local option legislation
enabling municipalities to hold binding plebiscites on the prohibition of video
lottery terminals (“VLTs”) in their communities. The legislation set out the
procedure by which the plebiscites were to be initiated, held, and given
effect. In addition, the legislation contained a specific section dealing with
the Town of Winkler, which had held a non-binding plebiscite supporting a
prohibition of VLTs the previous year. As a result of the legislation, VLTs
were prohibited in Winkler until such time as a future binding plebiscite, held
in accordance with the legislation, would permit their return to the
municipality.
2
Both the Manitoba Court of Queen’s Bench and the Court of Appeal
concluded that The Gaming Control Local Option (VLT) Act, S.M. 1999, c.
44 (“VLT Act”), either as a whole or s. 16 in particular, was neither ultra
vires the provincial legislature nor did it violate the Canadian Charter
of Rights and Freedoms . The appellants subsequently challenged the
legislation before this Court on the grounds that s. 16 , dealing specifically
with Winkler, violates ss. 2 (b), 7 , and 15(1) of the Charter .
They also argued that the legislation is ultra vires the provincial
government because it is an affront to Parliament’s exclusive jurisdiction over
criminal law. On October 31, 2002, the Court unanimously dismissed their
appeal. These are the reasons for that decision.
II. Facts
3
The Manitoba Lotteries Corporation (“MLC”) is responsible for operating
lottery schemes, including VLTs, in the province. The MLC enters into
agreements with “siteholders” to place VLTs on the siteholders’ property. The
siteholders then receive a percentage of the VLTs’ revenue. However, the VLTs
remain the property of the MLC and, according to the terms of the siteholder
agreement, can be removed at any time, with or without cause.
4
The appellants, David and Eloisa Siemens, are the sole shareholders of
Sie-Cor Properties Inc., which purchased The Winkler Inn in 1993. They
invested a considerable amount of money in the renovation and expansion of the
Inn, and submitted that VLTs were an important consideration when making their
investment. The appellants increased the number of VLTs from 8 to 10 when they
first purchased The Winkler Inn, and then from 10 to 12 in the fall of 1994.
Their mortgage payments roughly coincided with the monthly VLT revenue.
5
In August 1998, the Town of Winkler passed a resolution to hold a
plebiscite regarding VLTs in the municipality. The plebiscite was held in
conjunction with the October municipal elections. The question was:
Should the Town of Winkler request that the Provincial Government ban
video lottery terminals in Winkler, which would result in the Town of Winkler
losing its annual municipal VLT grant?
Approximately
50 percent of eligible voters participated in the plebiscite, including Mr. and
Mrs. Siemens. A sizeable majority (77.8 percent) of the votes cast were in
favour of requesting a ban on VLTs. In response to the plebiscite, the Town of
Winkler passed a resolution in December 1998 to forward the results to the
Government of Manitoba. Sie-Cor Properties Inc., in turn, filed an application
in the Court of Queen’s Bench seeking a declaration that the resolution was
invalid and an order of certiorari quashing it.
6
In July 1999, while Sie-Cor’s application was proceeding to a hearing,
the Manitoba Government passed the VLT Act. The Act permits
municipalities to hold binding plebiscites regarding the prohibition of VLTs
within their jurisdictions. In addition, the government used the new
legislation as an opportunity to give effect to the plebiscite that had already
been held in Winkler. Specifically, s. 16 of the Act seeks to terminate the
siteholder agreements in Winkler and deems that a resolution prohibiting VLTs
was passed in accordance with the Act. Pursuant to this legislation, the
siteholder agreement with The Winkler Inn was terminated effective December 1,
1999.
III. Relevant
Statutory Provisions
7
The Gaming Control Local Option (VLT) Act, S.M. 1999, c. 44
1 In this Act,
.
. .
“plebiscite” means a vote by the electors of a municipality on a
resolution approved by the council or stated on a petition
(a) to prohibit video lottery gaming within the municipality, or
(b) where video lottery gaming within the municipality is prohibited
because of a plebiscite, to permit video lottery gaming within the
municipality;
.
. .
“video lottery gaming” means the operation of a lottery scheme,
as defined in the Criminal Code (Canada), that involves the use of a
video lottery terminal.
3(1) Notwithstanding section 3 of The Manitoba Lotteries
Corporation Act, no person shall carry on any video lottery gaming, under a
siteholder agreement or otherwise, within a municipality while a resolution
prohibiting video lottery gaming within the municipality is in effect.
3(2) A resolution prohibiting video lottery gaming within a
municipality comes into effect on the first day of the fifth month following
the month in which it is approved by a majority of the votes cast in a
plebiscite and continues in effect until a resolution permitting video lottery
gaming within the municipality is approved by a majority of the votes cast in a
plebiscite.
16(1) Each siteholder agreement existing before the coming into
force of this section respecting the operation of video lottery terminals at a
site located in the Town of Winkler is terminated on the first day of the fifth
month following the month in which this Act comes into force, and the
corporation shall remove all video lottery terminals from sites located in the
Town of Winkler as soon as practicable after that day.
16(2) A resolution to prohibit video lottery gaming within the
Town of Winkler is deemed for the purposes of this Act to have been approved by
a plebiscite and is deemed to come into effect on the first day of the fifth
month following the month in which this Act comes into force.
Criminal
Code, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-46
207. (1) Notwithstanding any of the
provisions of this Part relating to gaming and betting, it is lawful
(a) for the government of a province, either alone or in
conjunction with the government of another province, to conduct and manage a
lottery scheme in that province, or in that and the other province, in
accordance with any law enacted by the legislature of that province.
Constitution
Act, 1867
92. In each Province the Legislature may
exclusively make Laws in relation to Matters coming within the Classes of
Subjects next herein-after enumerated; that is to say, —
.
. .
13. Property and Civil Rights in the Province.
.
. .
16. Generally all Matters of a merely local or private Nature in the
Province.
Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms
2. Everyone has the following fundamental freedoms:
.
. .
(b) freedom of thought, belief, opinion and expression,
including freedom of the press and other media of communication
.
. .
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.
IV. Judgments
Below
A. Manitoba
Court of Queen’s Bench, [2001] 2 W.W.R. 491, 2000 MBQB 140
8
In March 2000, Hamilton J. heard arguments on a motion to have certain
questions of law determined before trial on Sie-Cor’s certiorari
application. At issue was whether the VLT Act, either as a whole or s.
16 in particular, was ultra vires the provincial legislature as an
invasion into the federal government’s criminal law power, and whether s. 16
violated ss. 2 (b), 6 , 7 , and 15(1) of the Charter . It was also
argued that the legislation constituted prohibited discrimination under the
Manitoba Human Rights Code, S.M. 1987-88, c. 45. Hamilton J. rejected
all the appellants’ claims.
9
In dismissing the division of powers argument, Hamilton J. relied on R.
v. Furtney, [1991] 3 S.C.R. 89. That case held that gaming was a matter
within the “double aspect” doctrine, such that both Parliament and the
provincial legislatures had jurisdiction to legislate in that area. She found
that the VLT Act was, therefore, prima facie within the
legislative authority of the Manitoba Government. She also found that the VLT
Act was not an attempt to enact criminal law, as the legislation lacked
both penal consequences and a criminal law purpose.
B. Manitoba
Court of Appeal, [2001] 2 W.W.R. 515, 2000 MBCA 152
10
In a short oral judgment delivered by Twaddle J.A. (Kroft and Steel
JJ.A. concurring), the Manitoba Court of Appeal dismissed the appeal on all
grounds, expressing that it was in “substantial agreement” with Hamilton J.,
“both with respect to the declarations made and her reasons for them”.
V. Issues
11
By order of the Chief Justice dated December 19, 2001, the following
constitutional questions were stated for the Court’s consideration:
(1) Is The Gaming Control Local Option (VLT)
Act, S.M. 1999, c. 44, in its entirety ultra vires the Legislature
of the Province of Manitoba as it relates to a subject matter which is within
the exclusive jurisdiction of the Parliament of Canada under s. 91(27) of the Constitution
Act, 1867 ?
(2) Is s. 16(1) of The Gaming Control Local
Option (VLT) Act ultra vires the Legislature of the Province of
Manitoba as it relates to a subject matter which is within the exclusive
jurisdiction of the Parliament of Canada under s. 91(27) of the Constitution
Act, 1867 ?
(3) Is s. 16 of The Gaming Control Local
Option (VLT) Act inconsistent with s. 2 (b) of the Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms ?
(4) If the answer to question 3 is in the
affirmative, is s. 16 of The Gaming Control Local Option (VLT) Act
nevertheless justified by s. 1 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and
Freedoms ?
(5) Is s. 16 of The Gaming Control Local
Option (VLT) Act inconsistent with s. 7 of the Canadian Charter of
Rights and Freedoms ?
(6) If the answer to question 5 is in the
affirmative, is s. 16 of The Gaming Control Local Option (VLT) Act
nevertheless justified by s. 1 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and
Freedoms ?
(7) Is s. 16 of The Gaming Control Local
Option (VLT) Act inconsistent with s. 15(1) of the Canadian Charter of
Rights and Freedoms ?
(8) If the answer to question 7 is in the
affirmative, is s. 16 of The Gaming Control Local Option (VLT) Act
nevertheless justified by s. 1 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and
Freedoms ?
VI. Analysis
A. Interpreting
the VLT Act
12
A significant portion of the appellants’ submissions focussed on the
proper characterization and interpretation of the VLT Act, and
particularly s. 16 of that Act. The main thrust of their argument was that s.
16 of the VLT Act did not “give effect” to the plebiscite that occurred
in Winkler in 1998 and that, therefore, the constitutionality of the
legislation must be assessed without reference to that plebiscite. They noted
that s. 16 does not explicitly refer to the 1998 plebiscite, and that s. 16(2)
refers to the indefinite “a plebiscite” rather than the definite “the
plebiscite”. As well, they submitted that the subsection deems a resolution
prohibiting gaming to have been passed by a municipal plebiscite in Winkler,
when no such resolution was ever approved by the town council. These
characteristics allegedly demonstrate that s. 16 of the VLT Act did not
give effect to the plebiscite that actually occurred in Winkler in the fall of
1998, and that it unfairly attributes a binding plebiscite to the residents of
Winkler, who never voted in such a plebiscite.
13
The appellants expressed puzzlement at being affected by the 1998
plebiscite, as that plebiscite was not held pursuant to a resolution
prohibiting VLTs, as required by the Act. The answer to that puzzlement is
that the VLT Act has a more general application, and, in accordance with
the principles of purposive interpretation, that s. 16 was intended to
incorporate the wishes already expressed by Winkler voters into the broader
provincial scheme.
14
No doubt the legislation could have been drafted in a way that more
explicitly expressed the purpose of s. 16. Nevertheless, given the entire
context of the legislation, the legislative purpose is clear. The Town of
Winkler held a non-binding plebiscite in the fall of 1998, in which a majority
of votes cast supported a request to remove VLTs from the community. The town
council forwarded the results of the plebiscite to the provincial government.
In response, the provincial government enacted legislation prohibiting the
operation of VLTs in Winkler and terminating all siteholder agreements in that
community.
15
The appellants acknowledged at the appeal that, if the government had
wished to enact legislation dealing solely with the prohibition of VLTs in the
Town of Winkler, it could legitimately have done so. However, instead of
giving effect to the Winkler plebiscite in an act designed solely for that
purpose, the government incorporated a section prohibiting VLTs in Winkler into
a larger statute that established a scheme for all municipalities to prohibit
or reinstate VLTs through binding plebiscites. I cannot see how the
legislative structure chosen by the government affects the Act’s
constitutionality. Through the VLT Act, the province attempted to bring
Winkler within the larger scheme of VLT plebiscites in the province. In order
to do so, it deemed that Winkler voters had approved a VLT prohibition in
accordance with the Act. All the parties agree that the Winkler plebiscite did
not, in fact, approve such a prohibition. Indeed, since the Winkler plebiscite
preceded the introduction of the VLT Act, it was impossible for voters
to do so. Regardless, the legislature had the latitude to give effect to the
Winkler plebiscite by various means, including the deeming provision it used.
Unless the legislation is otherwise unconstitutional, the particular means
chosen by the legislature cannot be used as a basis to declare it invalid.
16
It should be noted that the less-than-ideal legislative drafting is not
an independent ground upon which legislation can be found unconstitutional.
The wording of the statute is only relevant to the analysis in so far as it
informs the determination of the pith and substance of the legislation. As
long as the pith and substance of s. 16 falls within the provincial sphere of
legislative authority, it is immaterial whether it could have been drafted in
clearer terms.
17
Similarly, it cannot be concluded that the wording of s. 16 dictates
that the appellants’ Charter claims must be assessed without considering
the Winkler plebiscite of 1998. This Court has stated on numerous occasions
that the evaluation of Charter claims should be contextual: R. v.
Big M Drug Mart Ltd., [1985] 1 S.C.R. 295, at p. 344 (per Dickson J.
(as he then was)); Edmonton Journal v. Alberta (Attorney General),
[1989] 2 S.C.R. 1326, at pp. 1355-56 (per Wilson J.); R. v. Wholesale
Travel Group Inc., [1991] 3 S.C.R. 154, at pp. 224-26 (per Cory J.);
Thomson Newspapers Co. v. Canada (Attorney General), [1998] 1 S.C.R.
877, at para. 87 (per Bastarache J.); Law v. Canada (Minister of
Employment and Immigration), [1999] 1 S.C.R. 497, at para. 62 (per
Iacobucci J.). The purpose and effects of the legislation cannot be examined
in a vacuum, but must be considered in light of the facts as they are known to
both the claimant and the legislator.
18
The rationale for contextual analysis is particularly strong in this
case. But for the 1998 Winkler plebiscite, the provincial government would
never have enacted s. 16 of the VLT Act. The legislature did not single
out the Town of Winkler on an arbitrary basis; rather, it enacted s. 16 to
respond to the wishes of Winkler voters. If the Court were to ignore the 1998
plebiscite in assessing the Charter claims, it would be ignoring the
very circumstances that gave rise to the impugned section. This is both
logically and legally flawed. Nevertheless, the analysis of the Charter
claims is not dependent on the existence of the 1998 plebiscite, and the legislation
would have been upheld in any event. The contextual analysis merely
strengthens that conclusion.
B. The
Division of Powers Claim
19
To determine whether the Manitoba Government had legislative authority
to enact the VLT Act, it is necessary to identify the pith and substance
of that legislation. In Kitkatla Band v. British Columbia (Minister of
Small Business, Tourism and Culture), [2002] 2 S.C.R. 146, 2002 SCC 31, at
para. 53, it was held that the pith and substance analysis involves an inquiry
into both the purpose of the legislation and its effects. LeBel J. also wrote
that, where a specific section of the legislation is being challenged, its pith
and substance should be identified before that of the Act as a whole. If the
impugned section is ultra vires, it may still be upheld if it is
sufficiently integrated into a valid provincial legislative scheme (para. 58).
However, since the appellants in the present case have challenged both s. 16
and the VLT Act as a whole, it is necessary to identify the pith and
substance of both in any event.
20
The purpose of s. 16 of the VLT Act is to prohibit VLTs in
Winkler and to cancel all existing siteholder agreements with respect to VLTs.
The legislative debates on the VLT Act indicate that s. 16 was enacted
to give effect to the plebiscite that had already been held in Winkler, albeit
before the Act came into force. The responsible Minister said:
As you may be aware, Madam Speaker, last fall the
citizens of Winkler conducted a plebiscite requesting the removal of VLTs from
that community. This legislation supports that community’s will. This
legislation will recognize the legitimacy of the 1998 VLT plebiscite in
Winkler.
(Manitoba, Legislative Assembly, Debates and Proceedings, 5th
Sess., 36th Leg., vol. XLIX, No. 57A, July 8, 1999, at p. 4092 (Mrs. Render))
The effect of
s. 16(1) of the VLT Act was to cancel the siteholder agreement with The
Winkler Inn. Further, as indicated, s. 16(2) attempted to bring the non-binding
Winkler plebiscite within the local option scheme outlined in the other
sections of the Act. The Act allows plebiscites to be held on whether to
prohibit VLTs within the municipality or, where a VLT prohibition is already in
effect, on whether to reinstate VLTs within the municipality. Thus, by deeming
a resolution prohibiting VLTs to have been approved in Winkler in accordance
with the Act, the effect of s. 16(2) is to put the Town of Winkler into the
“starting position” of prohibiting VLTs. If a subsequent VLT plebiscite is to
be held in Winkler, the question will ask whether to reinstate VLTs in that
community.
21
More broadly, the purpose of the VLT Act as a whole seems to be,
quite simply, to allow municipalities to express, by binding plebiscite,
whether they wish VLTs to be permitted or prohibited within their communities.
This purpose is evident from the title of the Act, The Gaming Control Local
Option (VLT) Act, which clearly expresses the government’s desire to obtain
local input on the issue of VLTs. The VLT Act was the government’s
response to two reports: the Manitoba Lottery Policy Review’s Working Group
Report (1995) (the “Desjardins Report”), and the Manitoba Gaming Control
Commission’s Municipal VLT Plebiscite Review (1998). Both reports
recommended that municipal plebiscites be held to determine local opinion on
the issue of VLTs.
22
The pith and substance of the VLT Act falls within a provincial
head of legislative authority. As Stevenson J. wrote for this Court in Furtney,
supra, at p. 103, gaming is a matter that falls within the
“double aspect” doctrine. Accordingly, gaming can be subject to legislation by
both the federal and provincial governments:
In my view, the regulation of gaming activities has
a clear provincial aspect under s. 92 of the Constitution Act, 1867
subject to Parliamentary paramountcy in the case of a clash between federal and
provincial legislation. . . . Altogether apart from features of gaming which
attract criminal prohibition, lottery activities are subject to the legislative
authority of the province under various heads of s. 92 , including, I suggest,
property and civil rights (13), licensing (9), and maintenance of charitable
institutions (7) (specifically recognized by the Code provisions).
Provincial licensing and regulation of gaming activities is not per se
legislation in relation to criminal law.
Without
foreclosing discussion on other potential heads of jurisdiction, it is
sufficient for this appeal to find that the VLT Act was, prima facie,
validly enacted under ss. 92(13) and 92(16) . Section 16(1) deals specifically
with the siteholder agreements, which are contractual in nature and thereby
fall under property and civil rights. On a broader level, the municipal
plebiscites empower each community to determine whether VLTs will be permitted,
thereby invoking matters of a local nature.
23
The VLT Act is not, as the appellants have submitted, a
colourable attempt to legislate criminal law. The Act does not possess the
relevant characteristics outlined by Rand J. in Reference re Validity of
Section 5(a) of the Dairy Industry Act, [1949] S.C.R. 1, at p. 50, and
affirmed by the Privy Council in Canadian Federation of Agriculture v.
Attorney-General for Quebec, [1951] A.C. 179, at p. 196, and, more
recently, in Reference re Firearms Act (Can.), [2000] 1 S.C.R.
783, 2000 SCC 31, at para. 27. These are (1) a prohibition, (2) coupled with a
penalty, and (3) a criminal law purpose. The respondents conceded that the VLT
Act contains a prohibition, namely, s. 3(1) prohibits the operation of VLTs
in municipalities that have banned them as the result of a binding plebiscite.
Nevertheless, this alone is insufficient to establish that the VLT Act
is, in pith and substance, criminal law. The Act does not create penal
consequences, and was not enacted for a criminal law purpose.
24
Although s. 3(1) prohibits the operation of VLTs in relevant
municipalities, it does not create a provincial offence. Nor does it impose a
penalty for operating VLTs in those municipalities. If VLT operators were to
be charged with any offence, it would be under the gaming provisions in the Criminal
Code , which prohibit gambling except in accordance with lottery
schemes conducted and managed by the provinces. The effect of s. 3(1) of the VLT
Act is simply to remove the exception and give full effect to the existing
federal offences.
25
However, even if the VLT Act did create a provincial offence or
impose a fine, that would not necessarily make it an attempt to legislate
criminal law. Section 92(15) of the Constitution Act, 1867 allows the
provincial legislatures to impose fines or other punishments as a means of
enforcing valid provincial law, and the provinces have enacted countless
punishable offences within their legislative spheres. Motor vehicle offences
are the classic example, and they have been declared constitutionally valid in,
inter alia, O’Grady v. Sparling, [1960] S.C.R. 804 (careless
driving); and Ross v. Registrar of Motor Vehicles, [1975] 1 S.C.R. 5
(provincial licence suspension upon conviction for Criminal Code
impaired driving offence). The mere presence of a prohibition and a penalty
does not invalidate an otherwise acceptable use of provincial legislative power.
26
The appellants submitted that the VLT Act contains penal
consequences because it terminates all siteholder agreements in municipalities
that have voted to prohibit VLTs in accordance with the Act. Relying on this
Court’s decision in Johnson v. Attorney General of Alberta, [1954]
S.C.R. 127, they argued that the provisions of the VLT Act result in the
forfeiture of VLTs, which can be characterized as a penalty. However, the
termination of siteholder agreements cannot be characterized as a forfeiture within
the meaning of the criminal law. At all times during a siteholder agreement,
the MLC maintains ownership of the VLTs. The siteholder (in this case, the
appellants) has no property interest in the machines. Therefore, when the
agreement is terminated and the VLTs are removed from the siteholder’s
establishment, the siteholder is not required to forfeit any property. The
siteholder has merely lost the opportunity to earn a percentage of the revenue
that the VLTs generate.
27
That is sufficient to distinguish the present appeal from Johnson,
supra, which properly identified the alleged penalty as a forfeiture.
In that case, the impugned legislation specifically denied property rights in
slot machines. Where the machines were being operated contrary to the
legislation, the Act allowed police to confiscate those machines even if,
except for the legislation, they would have been considered the property of the
offender. In short, a violation of the legislation struck down in Johnson resulted
in a loss of property. In the present case, however, the VLT Act merely
allows the MLC to reclaim its own VLTs. This cannot be considered a
forfeiture.
28
The conclusion that the VLT Act does not impose penal
consequences makes it unnecessary to determine whether it was enacted for a
criminal law purpose. Nevertheless, certain submissions made during the course
of proceedings warrant a brief response. The appellants argued that the VLT
Act was enacted for purposes of public morality, and that it was,
therefore, an attempt to legislate criminal law. This submission is flawed on
several bases. First, the trial judge found no evidence indicating that this
law was enacted to regulate public morality. The province has authority to
regulate gaming, and this includes provisions regulating where gaming may be
conducted. Just as the province can regulate when and where alcohol may be
legally consumed, so can it regulate when and where individuals can legally
operate VLTs. It does not follow that, in doing so, the province is somehow
regulating public morality.
29
Second, the province and individual municipalities may have any number
of reasons for restricting gaming to certain locations. Some may concern the
local economy, and others may be purely aesthetic or cultural. There is no
basis on which to assume that the dominant purpose for prohibiting VLTs in
certain locations is to regulate public morality. Indeed, the fact that the
VLT Act does not affect VLTs located at racetracks or other “premises
dedicated to gaming activity” suggests that the government was not attempting
to condemn VLTs on any moral basis. See Gaming Control Act, S.M. 1996,
c. 74, s. 1. Rather, it supports the interpretation that the VLT Act
was designed merely to limit more “incidental” contact with VLTs — in taverns,
for example — in municipalities that wish to do so.
30
Third, the presence of moral considerations does not per se
render a law ultra vires the provincial legislature. In giving
Parliament exclusive jurisdiction over criminal law, the Constitution Act,
1867 did not intend to remove all morality from provincial legislation. In
many instances, it will be impossible for the provincial legislature to
disentangle moral considerations from other issues. For example, in the
present case, it is difficult to ignore the various social costs associated
with gambling and VLTs. As the Desjardins Report, supra, examined in
detail, government-run gambling can have adverse social consequences, including
addiction, crime, bankruptcy, and reductions in charitable gaming. The
provincial government can legitimately consider these social costs when
deciding how to regulate gaming in the province. The fact that some of these
considerations have a moral aspect does not invalidate an otherwise legitimate
provincial law.
31
The dominant purpose of the VLT Act is to regulate gaming in the
province. Any moral aspects of the VLT Act fall within the doctrine of
“incidental effects”, recently affirmed by this Court in Kitkatla Band,
supra, at para. 54; and Global Securities Corp. v. British Columbia
(Securities Commission), [2000] 1 S.C.R. 494, 2000 SCC 21, at para. 23.
Where a law is in pith and substance related to the provincial legislative
sphere, it will not be struck down merely because it has incidental effects on
a federal head of power. For instance, in Rio Hotel Ltd. v. New Brunswick
(Liquor Licensing Board), [1987] 2 S.C.R. 59, it was held that a provincial
law restricting nude entertainment at licensed taverns was valid. It is
reasonable to assume that such a law would have had some incidental effects on
public morality. Yet, the Court found that the law was validly enacted because
in pith and substance it dealt with licensing, local matters, and property and
civil rights.
32
In the present appeal, the provincial government passed a law that was
within a provincial head of legislative authority. Although there is a
possibility that local morality may affect which municipalities choose to ban
VLTs through binding plebiscites, the dominant purpose of the VLT Act is
not to express moral disapproval of VLTs. In as much as there is a moral
aspect to the VLT Act, this effect is incidental to the overall
regulatory scheme, and does not infringe on Parliament’s exclusive authority to
legislate criminal law.
33
In making this determination, I am mindful of the presumption of
constitutionality recognized in Reference re The Farm Products Marketing Act,
[1957] S.C.R. 198, at p. 255; Nova Scotia Board of Censors v. McNeil,
[1978] 2 S.C.R. 662, at pp. 687-88; Re Firearms Act, supra,
at para. 25. When faced with two plausible characterizations of a law, we
should normally choose that which supports the law’s constitutional validity.
34
The Attorney General of Canada’s intervention in support of the
provincial government creates a situation of attempted federal-provincial
cooperation. The governments, in the absence of jurisdiction, cannot by simple
agreement lend legitimacy to a claim that the VLT Act is intra vires.
However, given that both federal and provincial governments guard their
legislative powers carefully, when they do agree to shared jurisdiction, that
fact should be given careful consideration by the courts: OPSEU v. Ontario
(Attorney General), [1987] 2 S.C.R. 2, at pp. 19-20; Kitkatla Band,
supra, at paras. 72-73.
35
This principle is further bolstered in the present case by the explicit
interaction of the Criminal Code and provincial gaming legislation.
Section 207(1) (a) of the Criminal Code specifically creates an
exception to the gaming and betting offences where a lottery scheme has been
established by a province. It was first enacted in 1969 for the purpose of
decriminalizing lotteries and allowing each province to determine whether it
wished to establish a lottery scheme. Where no such scheme exists, the Criminal
Code offences still apply. Parliament has intentionally designed a
structure for gaming offences that affirms the double aspect of gaming and
promotes federal-provincial cooperation in this area. Section 207(1) (a)
removes the possibility of operational conflict, and with it, any question of
paramountcy.
36
I conclude that the VLT Act in its entirety, and s. 16 in particular,
are intra vires the provincial legislature. The Act’s purposes are to
regulate gaming in the province and to allow for local input on the issue of
VLTs, both of which fall under the powers enumerated in s. 92 of the Constitution
Act, 1867 . It is not an attempt to legislate criminal law, as it has
neither penal consequences nor a criminal law purpose. Finally, the issues of
interjurisdictional immunity and paramountcy do not arise in this case, and
they need not be discussed beyond what has already been stated.
C. The
Claim of Improper Delegation
37
Before turning to the various Charter claims, a brief comment is
warranted on the argument raised by the intervening group of Alberta
merchants. They challenged the entire VLT Act on the ground that it
constitutes an improper abdication of the legislature’s law-making powers and
usurps the authority of the Lieutenant Governor. These interveners submit
that, by allowing municipalities to hold binding plebiscites, the provincial
government has given them the power to make and repeal law. This, they argue,
violates the provincial legislature’s exclusive authority to make laws for the
province.
38
This submission fails, as the interveners’ argument rests on an
incorrect characterization of the impugned legislation. The VLT Act
does not, in any way, empower municipal voters to enact legislation. The Act
has been wholly drafted, debated and enacted by the provincial legislature, and
has been given Royal Assent by the Lieutenant Governor. It sets out how the
municipal plebiscites will take place and what their effects will be in the
relevant municipalities. The only role played by municipal electors is in
initiating and voting in a plebiscite. The results of the plebiscite determine
whether the prohibition in s. 3 of the VLT Act will apply in the
municipality. In other words, the application of the statutory VLT prohibition
is conditional upon there being a certain plebiscite result. Consequently, the
VLT Act falls within the category of “conditional legislation” which was
upheld by the Privy Council in Russell v. The Queen (1882), 7 App. Cas.
829, at p. 835:
. . . the Act does not delegate any legislative powers whatever. It
contains within itself the whole legislation on the matters with which it
deals. The provision that certain parts of the Act shall come into operation
only on the petition of a majority of electors does not confer on these persons
power to legislate. Parliament itself enacts the condition and everything
which is to follow upon the condition being fulfilled. Conditional legislation
of this kind is in many cases convenient, and is certainly not unusual, and the
power so to legislate cannot be denied to the Parliament of Canada, when the
subject of legislation is within its competency.
39
Through the VLT Act, the Manitoba Government has employed a
statutory instrument to bind itself to respect local opinion. Nowhere does the
Act, in purpose or effect, give municipal voters the power to legislate. This
case is distinguishable from Re The Initiative and Referendum Act
(1916), 27 Man. R. 1 (C.A.), upon which the interveners based their argument.
There, the impugned legislation allowed voters to submit laws for approval by
ballot and, if approved, the proposed law would be deemed an Act of the
provincial legislature. Here, there has been no attempt to bypass the
Legislative Assembly or to usurp its law-making function. The Act merely
allows municipalities to decide on the applicability of the Act to their
communities.
40
Finally, I would add that the interveners’ argument would severely
restrict Parliament and the provincial legislatures from enacting “local
option” legislation, which was upheld over a century ago by the Privy Council
in Russell, supra, with respect to the Canada Temperance Act.
That decision was affirmed by the Privy Council in Attorney-General for
Ontario v. Canada Temperance Federation, [1946] A.C. 193, and there is no
need to question its continued validity as authority on this issue.
D. The
Claim under Section 2 (b) of the Charter
41
According to the appellants, the effect of the “deemed vote” in s. 16 of
the VLT Act was to deny them the right to vote in a plebiscite under the
Act and, therefore, to violate their freedom of expression in s. 2 (b) of
the Charter . There is no question since this Court’s decision in Haig
v. Canada, [1993] 2 S.C.R. 995, that casting a vote is a form of expression
that is protected under s. 2 (b). The question in this case is whether
s. 16 of the VLT Act actually violates this freedom. I conclude that it
does not.
42
While Haig held that voting is a protected form of expression, it
also concluded that there is no constitutional right to vote in a referendum.
See L’Heureux-Dubé J., at pp. 1040-41:
A referendum is a creation of legislation.
Independent of the legislation giving genesis to a referendum, there is no
right of participation. The right to vote in a referendum is a right accorded
by statute, and the statute governs the terms and conditions of participation.
. . . In my view, though a referendum is undoubtedly a platform for
expression, s. 2 (b) of the Charter does not impose upon a
government, whether provincial or federal, any positive obligation to consult
its citizens through the particular mechanism of a referendum. Nor does it
confer upon all citizens the right to express their opinions in a referendum.
A government is under no constitutional obligation to extend this platform of
expression to anyone, let alone to everyone. A referendum as a
platform of expression is, in my view, a matter of legislative policy and not
of constitutional law. [Emphasis in original.]
A municipal
plebiscite, like a referendum, is a creation of legislation. In the present
case, any right to vote in a plebiscite must be found within the language of
the VLT Act. It alone defines the terms and qualifications for voting.
Accordingly, the appellants cannot complain that the VLT Act, itself,
denied them the right to vote in a VLT plebiscite.
43
A caveat was added in Haig that, once the government
decides to extend referendum voting rights, it must do so in a fashion that is
consistent with other sections of the Charter . However, as the
appellants submitted that they had been denied referendum voting rights on a
discriminatory basis, their claim should be assessed under s. 15(1) , of which
more will be said below.
44
Finally, it is worth noting that the VLT Act does not prevent the
residents of Winkler from voting in future plebiscites on the issue of VLTs.
They have not been disenfranchised from VLT plebiscites. Like all other
residents of Manitoba, they are free to initiate a plebiscite under the Act to
either reinstate or remove VLTs from their municipality.
E. The
Claim under Section 7 of the Charter
45
The appellants also submitted that s. 16 of the VLT Act violates
their right under s. 7 of the Charter to pursue a lawful occupation.
Additionally, they submitted that it restricts their freedom of movement by
preventing them from pursuing their chosen profession in a certain location,
namely, the Town of Winkler. However, as a brief review of this Court’s Charter
jurisprudence makes clear, the rights asserted by the appellants do not fall
within the meaning of s. 7 . The right to life, liberty and security of the
person encompasses fundamental life choices, not pure economic interests. As
La Forest J. explained in Godbout v. Longueuil (City), [1997] 3 S.C.R.
844, at para. 66:
. . . the autonomy protected by the s. 7 right to liberty encompasses
only those 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.
More recently,
Blencoe v. British Columbia (Human Rights Commission), [2000] 2 S.C.R.
307, 2000 SCC 44, concluded that the stigma suffered by Mr. Blencoe while
awaiting trial of a human rights complaint against him, which hindered him from
pursuing his chosen profession as a politician, did not implicate the rights
under s. 7 . See Bastarache J., at para. 86:
The prejudice to the respondent in this case . . . is essentially
confined to his personal hardship. He is not “employable” as a politician, he
and his family have moved residences twice, his financial resources are depleted,
and he has suffered physically and psychologically. However, the state has not
interfered with the respondent and his family’s ability to make essential life
choices. To accept that the prejudice suffered by the respondent in this case
amounts to state interference with his security of the person would be to
stretch the meaning of this right.
46
In the present case, the appellants’ alleged right to operate VLTs at
their place of business cannot be characterized as a fundamental life choice.
It is purely an economic interest. The ability to generate business revenue by
one’s chosen means is not a right that is protected under s. 7 of the Charter .
F. The
Claim under Section 15(1) of the Charter
47
The appellants argued that their rights under s. 15(1) of the Charter
were violated by s. 16 of the VLT Act. This claim should be analyzed in
accordance with the three-pronged test summarized by Iacobucci J. in Law,
supra, at para. 88:
(A) whether a law imposes differential treatment
between the claimant and others, in purpose or effect;
(B) whether one or more enumerated or analogous
grounds of discrimination are the basis for the differential treatment; and
(C) whether the law in question has a purpose or
effect that is discriminatory within the meaning of the equality guarantee.
The appellants
submitted that part (A) of the test was met because s. 16 of the VLT Act
distinguished between residents of Winkler and all other residents of
Manitoba. They further argued that this distinction was based on the analogous
ground of residence, and was discriminatory because it denied them the
opportunity to vote in a binding plebiscite on the issue of VLTs.
48
There is no merit in this ground of appeal. First, although s. 16 of
the VLT Act clearly makes a distinction between Winkler and other
municipalities, it is implausible that residence in Winkler constitutes an
analogous ground of discrimination. Residence was rejected as an analogous
ground in both Haig, supra, and R. v. Turpin, [1989] 1
S.C.R. 1296. Further, the majority in Corbiere v. Canada (Minister of
Indian and Northern Affairs), [1999] 2 S.C.R. 203, clearly stated that the
analogous ground recognized in that case was “Aboriginality-residence”, and
that “no new water is charted, in the sense of finding residence, in the
generalized abstract, to be an analogous ground” (para. 15). In rejecting the claimant’s
s. 15 argument in Haig, the majority explained, at p. 1044, why
residence is an unlikely analogous ground:
It would require a serious stretch of the imagination to find that persons
moving to Quebec less than six months before a referendum date are
analogous to persons suffering discrimination on the basis of race, religion or
gender. People moving to Quebec less than six months before a referendum date
do not suffer from stereotyping, or social prejudice. Though its members were
unable to cast a ballot in the Quebec referendum, the group is not one which
has suffered historical disadvantage, or political prejudice. Nor does the
group appear to be “discrete and insular”. Membership in the group is highly
fluid, with people constantly flowing in or out once they meet Quebec’s
residency requirements. [Emphasis in original.]
Although the
Court in Haig left it open for residence to be established as an
analogous ground in the appropriate case, I share the trial judge’s view here
that this is not such a case. Nothing suggests that Winkler residents are
historically disadvantaged or that they suffer from any sort of prejudice.
49
However, putting the appellants’ case at its best and assuming that they
could establish a distinction based on an analogous ground, the legislation
does not discriminate against them in any substantive sense. It is not
necessary to proceed through all the contextual factors listed by Iacobucci J.
in Law, supra, because it is clear that the VLT Act
directly corresponds to the circumstances of Winkler residents. The Town of
Winkler was singled out in s. 16 of the VLT Act because it was the only
municipality to have held a plebiscite on the issue of VLTs. The very
purpose of that section was to respect the will of Winkler residents, as
expressed in their 1998 plebiscite. Viewed in the context of that plebiscite,
I am not convinced that any reasonable resident of Winkler would feel that he
or she has been marginalized, devalued or ignored as a member of Canadian
society (see Law, supra, at para. 53). There is no harm to
dignity, and no violation of s. 15(1) .
50
It was noted above in the s. 2 (b) claim that s. 15(1) might be
implicated where the opportunity to vote in a plebiscite is extended to some
and withheld from others based on a prohibited ground of discrimination. This
would be the case if a law prohibited members of a certain race or religion
from voting in a plebiscite. However, that is not the case in this appeal.
First, as previously noted, the distinction in s. 16 of the VLT Act is
not based on an analogous ground. Second, the distinction does not affect the
qualification and ability of Winkler residents to vote in a VLT plebiscite
under the Act. They are free to initiate a plebiscite should they wish to
reinstate VLTs in their community. Consequently, although s. 16 makes a
distinction for Winkler residents, that distinction has nothing to do with the
alleged right to vote.
VII. Conclusion
and Disposition
51
These reasons support the October 31, 2002 dismissal of this appeal.
The respondents are entitled to costs, and the stated constitutional questions
are answered as follows:
(1) Is The Gaming Control Local Option (VLT)
Act, S.M. 1999, c. 44, in its entirety ultra vires the Legislature
of the Province of Manitoba as it relates to a subject matter which is within
the exclusive jurisdiction of the Parliament of Canada under s. 91(27) of the Constitution
Act, 1867 ?
Answer: No.
(2) Is s. 16(1) of The Gaming Control Local
Option (VLT) Act ultra vires the Legislature of the Province of
Manitoba as it relates to a subject matter which is within the exclusive
jurisdiction of the Parliament of Canada under s. 91(27) of the Constitution
Act, 1867 ?
Answer: No.
(3) Is s. 16 of The Gaming Control Local
Option (VLT) Act inconsistent with s. 2 (b) of the Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms ?
Answer: No.
(4) If the answer to question 3 is in the
affirmative, is s. 16 of The Gaming Control Local Option (VLT) Act
nevertheless justified by s. 1 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and
Freedoms ?
Answer: It is unnecessary to answer this question.
(5) Is s. 16 of The Gaming Control Local
Option (VLT) Act inconsistent with s. 7 of the Canadian Charter of
Rights and Freedoms ?
Answer: No.
(6) If the answer to question 5 is in the
affirmative, is s. 16 of The Gaming Control Local Option (VLT) Act
nevertheless justified by s. 1 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and
Freedoms ?
Answer: It is unnecessary to answer this question.
(7) Is s. 16 of The Gaming Control Local
Option (VLT) Act inconsistent with s. 15(1) of the Canadian Charter of
Rights and Freedoms ?
Answer: No.
(8) If the answer to question 7 is in the
affirmative, is s. 16 of The Gaming Control Local Option (VLT) Act
nevertheless justified by s. 1 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and
Freedoms ?
Answer: It is unnecessary to answer this question.
Appeal dismissed with costs.
Solicitors for the appellants: Hill Abra Dewar, Winnipeg.
Solicitor for the respondents: Department of Justice,
Winnipeg.
Solicitor for the intervener the Attorney General of
Canada: Attorney General of Canada, Toronto.
Solicitor for the intervener the Attorney General of
Ontario: Ministry of the Attorney General, Toronto.
Solicitor for the intervener the Attorney General of New Brunswick:
Attorney General of New Brunswick, Fredericton.
Solicitor for the intervener the Attorney General of
Alberta: Alberta Justice, Edmonton.
Solicitors for the interveners 292129 Alberta Ltd. et al.: Merchant
Law Group, Edmonton.