R. v. Asante‑Mensah, [2003] 2 S.C.R. 3, 2003 SCC 38
Daniel Asante‑Mensah Appellant
v.
Her Majesty The Queen Respondent
Indexed as: R. v. Asante‑Mensah
Neutral citation: 2003 SCC 38.
File No.: 28867.
2002: November 7; 2003: July 11.
Present: McLachlin C.J. and Gonthier, Iacobucci, Major,
Bastarache, Binnie, Arbour, LeBel and Deschamps JJ.
on appeal from the court of appeal for ontario
Trespass — Arrest — Arrest without warrant on
premises by person authorized by occupier — Reasonable force — Whether a
citizen can use reasonable force in making a lawful arrest under Ontario’s
Trespass to Property Act — Concept of arrest — Trespass to Property Act, R.S.O.
1990, c. T.21, s. 9.
The appellant, a taxi driver, repeatedly “scooped”
fares at the arrivals level of Pearson International Airport (Toronto) without
a permit, contrary to regulations. He continued to do so, notwithstanding
having received notice under s. 3 of the provincial Trespass to
Property Act (“TPA”) prohibiting entry for any purpose onto airport
property. He shrugged off the fines resulting from charges of trespass.
In an effort to control the problem of taxi drivers, including the appellant,
soliciting fares without proper licences on airport premises, the airport
authorities decided to exercise their power of “citizen’s” arrest under
s. 9 of the TPA. This appeal arose from an incident where an
airport inspector approached the appellant, touched his shoulder, and informed
him that he was under arrest for trespassing and that he would be detained for
police arrival. The appellant attempted to enter his vehicle to flee the
scene but the inspector blocked his way. During the confrontation, the
appellant shoved his car door into the person of the inspector to cause him to
back off and fled. The trial judge concluded that the appellant could not be
convicted of resisting a lawful arrest because the inspector used “reasonable
force” to make the arrest but was not authorized to do so. The Court of Appeal
set aside the acquittal and substituted a conviction.
Held: The appeal
should be dismissed.
The word “arrest” has a well‑understood meaning
at common law. It is a term of art. Unless the context otherwise
dictates, the court should interpret the word as it appears in s. 9 of the
TPA in accordance with the common law of arrest. Otherwise, there is no
guidance at all to occupiers about how to “arrest” somebody, let alone what
conduct the occupier is permitted and what is not permitted, and conversely,
what are the rights of the alleged trespasser.
“Arrest” in the context of the TPA should
therefore be seen as a continuing status initiated by words accompanied by
physical touching or submission and ending with delivery to the police,
maintained as necessary with a force that is no more than reasonable in all the
circumstances. The occupier is permitted the means (reasonable force) to
fulfill the duty (delivery of the person arrested) to achieve the purpose of
the arrest (to terminate the trespass and bring the trespasser to the police to
be dealt with according to law).
The TPA relates to a highly specific and
limited offence. The effect of denying the occupier the right to use any
degree of force would be to subject him or her to tort claims because of the
attempt to deliver the arrested person to the police in compliance with
s. 9(2) of the TPA. Where a lawful arrest under the TPA
occasions some intentional pushing and shoving, the question is, who should be
treated as the wrongdoer, the person performing the arrest or the arrested
person? The legislature should not be taken as intending to lay on the
occupier a duty to deliver the person arrested to the police and at the same
time impose civil or criminal liability for the use of reasonable force
necessary for its fulfilment.
An occupier is therefore entitled to use reasonable
force both to initiate the status of arrest and to maintain it. Once the
trespasser is delivered to the police, s. 9(3) of the TPA deems
that the officer has made the arrest. At that point, it will be out of the
hands of the occupier to determine if the arrest should be maintained or
whether lesser measures suffice.
The ability to use force is necessary to the efficacy
of the arrest power because it often provides a necessary precondition to
securing the submission of the person arrested. The use of reasonable force is
therefore supported not only by the incidents of arrest at common law but also
by s. 28(b) of the Ontario Interpretation Act.
The courts below rejected the appellant’s Charter
challenge to s. 9 of the TPA based on s. 7 (“fundamental
justice”) and s. 9 (“arbitrary detention or imprisonment”). The challenge
was not renewed here.
“Reasonable force” in the context of the TPA
will have regard not only to what force is necessary to accomplish the arrest,
but also to whether a forcible arrest was in all the circumstances a reasonable
course of action in the first place.
Since many trespasses are of trivial importance, they
are best handled by means short of an arrest. The latitude shown to police
officers, who are under a duty to act and must often react in difficult and
exigent circumstances, will not necessarily be shown to an occupier who is
under no duty to act and who instigates a confrontation with a trespasser.
The arrest was a reasonable course
of action on the facts of this case. All other attempts to secure the
appellant’s compliance had failed. The amount of force applied by the inspector
was, on the facts of this case, no more than was reasonable.
Cases Cited
Referred to: R. v.
Lerke (1986), 24 C.C.C. (3d) 129; Eccles v. Bourque, [1975]
2 S.C.R. 739; R. v. Page, [1964] O.J. No. 383 (QL); Holgate‑Mohammed
v. Duke, [1984] A.C. 437; Murray v. Ministry of Defence, [1988] 1
W.L.R. 692; King v. Poe (1866), 15 L.T.R. (N.S.) 37; Frey v. Fedoruk,
[1950] S.C.R. 517; Christie v. Leachinsky, [1947] A.C. 573; Colet v.
The Queen, [1981] 1 S.C.R. 2; R. v. Whitfield, [1970]
S.C.R. 46; R. v. Latimer, [1997] 1 S.C.R. 217; Hussien v.
Chong Fook Kam, [1970] A.C. 942; Sandon v. Jervis (1859), El. Bl.
& El. 942, 120 E.R. 760; Nicholl v. Darley (1828), 2 Y. & J.
399, 148 E.R. 974; Genner v. Sparks (1704), 6 Mod. Rep. 173, 87
E.R. 928; Spicer v. Holt, [1977] A.C. 987; Grainger v. Hill
(1838), 4 Bing. (N.C.) 212, 132 E.R. 769; Alderich v. Humphrey (1898),
29 O.R. 427; Higgins v. MacDonald (1928), 50 C.C.C. 353; R. v.
Platten (2000), 258 A.R. 153; R. v. Morris (2001), 283 A.R. 272; Dedman
v. The Queen, [1985] 2 S.C.R. 2; R. v. Godoy, [1999] 1 S.C.R. 311; R.
v. Cunningham (1979), 49 C.C.C. (2d) 390; R. v. Tricker (1995), 96
C.C.C. (3d) 198; R. v. Ambrose, [1999] O.J. No. 3607 (QL); Spencer v.
Pollard (1989), 68 O.R. (2d) 730; Pozniak v. Sault Ste. Marie Police
Services Board (2000), 139 O.A.C. 186; Mobarakizadeh v. Viking Rideau
Corp., [2001] O.J. No. 5045 (QL); Diggs v. Century Investigation
and Security Services Inc., [2002] O.J. No. 4251 (QL); MacDonald v.
Hees (1974), 46 D.L.R. (3d) 720; Mullins v. Levenick, [1998] N.B.J.
No. 60 (QL); Chopra v. Eaton (T.) Co. (1999),
240 A.R. 201; Briggs v. Laviolette (1994), 21 C.C.L.T. (2d)
105; R. v. Freake (1990), 85 Nfld. & P.E.I.R. 25; Cluett v. The
Queen, [1985] 2 S.C.R. 216; R. v. Biron, [1976] 2 S.C.R.
56; Besse v. Thom (1979), 96 D.L.R. (3d) 657, rev’d (1979), 107 D.L.R.
(3d) 694; R. v. Bottrell (1981), 60 C.C.C. (2d) 211; R. v. Simpson
(1993), 79 C.C.C. (3d) 482.
Statutes and Regulations Cited
Act to provide for the Summary
Punishment of Petty Trespasses and other offences,
S.U.C. 1834, 4 Wm. 4, c. 4, s. 5.
Canadian Charter of Rights and
Freedoms, ss. 7 , 9 .
Coastal Fisheries Protection
Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. C‑33, s. 8
[am. 1999, c. 19, s. 5].
Criminal Code, R.S.C. 1985, c. C‑46, ss. 25 , 41(1) , 145(1)
[rep. & sub. 1985, c. 27 (1st Supp.), s. 20 ], 270(1), (2), 494.
Fish and Wildlife Conservation
Act, 1997, S.O. 1997, c. 41, s. 93(2).
Fish Inspection Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. F.18, s. 7(3) [am. 1999, c. 12, Sch. N,
s. 2(2)].
Government Airport Concession
Operations Regulations, SOR/79‑373.
Immigration and Refugee
Protection Act, S.C. 2001, c. 27, ss. 55 , 138 .
Interpretation Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. I.11, s. 28.
National Defence Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. N‑5, s. 154 [am. 1985, c. 31 (1st
Supp.), s. 48 ; am. 1998, c. 35, s. 92(d)].
Occupiers’ Liability Act, S.O. 1980, c. 14.
Petty Trespass Act, R.S.N.L. 1990, c. P‑11, s. 4.
Petty Trespass Act, R.S.O. 1970, c. 347.
Petty Trespasses Act, R.S.M. 1987, c. P50, s. 2.
Protection of Property Act, R.S.N.S. 1989, c. 363, s. 6.
Provincial Offences Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. P.33, ss. 146, 147.
Statute of Winchester, 13 Edw. 1, Stat. 2, c. 1, 2, 4, 6.
Trespass Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 462, ss. 8, 9, 10.
Trespass Act, S.N.B. 1983, c. T‑11.2, s. 7.
Trespass to Premises Act, R.S.A. 2000, c. T‑7, s. 5.
Trespass to Property Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. T.21, ss. 2, 3, 4, 9.
Trespass to Property Act, R.S.P.E.I. 1988, c. T‑6, s. 5.
Trespass to Property Act, 1980, S.O. 1980, c. 15.
Authors Cited
Anand, Raj. Task Force on
the Law Concerning Trespass to Publicly‑Used Property as it Affects Youth
and Minorities. Toronto: Ontario Ministry of the Attorney General,
1987.
Blackstone, William. Commentaries
on the Laws of England, Book IV. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1769.
Canada. Law Reform Commission.
Working Paper 41. Arrest. Ottawa: The Commission, 1985.
Fridman, Gerald
Henry Louis. The Law of Torts in Canada, vol. 1.
Toronto: Carswell, 1989.
Halsbury’s Laws of England, vol. II(I), 4th ed. (reissue). By Lord Hailsham of
St. Marylebone. London: Butterworths, 1990.
Hawkins, William. A Treatise
of the Pleas of the Crown; or, A system of the principal matters relating to
that subject, digested under proper heads, 8th ed., vol. II. London:
S. Sweet, 1824.
Holdsworth, Sir William. A
History of English Law, vol. III, 2nd imp. London: Methuen
& Co., 1973.
McLeod, Ross. Parapolice:
A Revolution in the Business of Law Enforcement. Toronto: Boheme Press,
2002.
Ontario. Pearson International
Airport Taxi and Limousine Task Force. Report to the Ontario Minister of
Municipal Affairs. Toronto: The Task Force, 1990.
Ontario. Ministry of the Attorney
General. Discussion Paper on Occupiers’ Liability and Trespass to
Property. Toronto: Ministry of the Attorney General, 1979.
Ontario. Ministry of the Attorney
General. This land is whose land? A legal guide to property
protection rights. Toronto: Ministry of the Attorney General, 1987.
Rigakos, George S. The
New Parapolice: Risk Markets and Commodified Social Control. Toronto:
University of Toronto Press, 2002.
Salhany, Roger E. Canadian
Criminal Procedure, 6th ed. Aurora, Ont.: Canada Law Book, 1994 (loose‑leaf
updated May 2003, release 18).
Stenning, Philip C., and Clifford
D. Shearing. Search and Seizure: Powers of Private Security Personnel.
Study paper prepared for the Law Reform Commission of Canada. Ottawa: The
Commission, 1979.
Stephen, James
Fitzjames. A History of the Criminal Law of England, vol. I.
London: MacMillan and Co., 1883.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Ontario Court of Appeal
(2001), 204 D.L.R. (4th) 51, 150 O.A.C. 325, 157 C.C.C. (3d) 481, [2001] O.J.
No. 3819 (QL), dismissing the accused’s appeal against the convictions for
escaping lawful custody and allowing the Crown’s appeal against the acquittal
of assault with intent to resist arrest by the Ontario Court of Justice
(General Division), [1996] O.J. No. 1821 (QL). Appeal dismissed.
Jennifer D. Thompson
and Michael W. Lacy, for the appellant.
Scott C. Hutchison, for the respondent.
The judgment of the Court was delivered by
1
Binnie J. — This appeal
requires us to consider whether a citizen, in making an arrest that is
otherwise lawful under s. 9 of the Ontario Trespass to Property Act,
R.S.O. 1990, c. T.21 (“TPA”), can use reasonable force.
2
The question is important because the TPA (like equivalent
trespass statutes in other provinces) is the workhorse of private security
services in their patrol of the shopping malls, airports, sports stadiums and
other private spaces where the public tends to congregate.
3
The question divided the courts below. The trial judge found that a
private individual has no right to use force in effecting a citizen’s arrest
for a minor offence such as trespass. He also highlighted the policy
implications of such a rule, expressing particular concern about the risk of an
escalation of violence and the prospect of injury. In his view, the public
interest would not be served by authorizing persons “other than peace officers
who are trained in the limits and safe avenues of use of force” ([1996] O.J.
No. 1821 (QL), at para. 182) to use physical force against other persons.
4
The Court of Appeal disagreed. In its view, where the power of arrest
exists, stand-offs between the parties are to some extent inevitable, and
“[t]he issue is who becomes the wrongdoer if force is used” ((2001), 204 D.L.R.
(4th) 51, at para. 63). Physical restraint, or submission to the prospect
of physical restraint, is inherent in the concept of arrest. The proper and
effective limitation on the occupier’s use of force is not to deny the right
altogether but to focus on what is reasonable in all the circumstances. With
respect, I believe the decision of the Court of Appeal properly reflects the
legislative intent behind s. 9 of the TPA. I would therefore
dismiss the appeal.
I. The Facts
5
The appellant, a self-professed “scooper” at Toronto’s Pearson Airport,
has shown what the trial judge described as “an unrelenting pattern of
contempt” (para. 121) for the efforts of the authorities to regulate the
taxi and limousine business on their premises.
6
“Scoopers” pick up fares at the arrivals level without a permit,
contrary to the Government Airport Concession Operations Regulations,
SOR/79-373. The airport authorities believe that they are accountable to the
public for the quality of taxi and limousine services. The trial judge
described the pre-GACO system as something of a free-for-all “characterized by
poor service, some substandard vehicles, allegations of chicanery and a lack of
control which was occasionally reflected in violence” (para. 19). The
1990 Bartlett Report (prepared for the Ontario Minister of Municipal Affairs)
agreed with the conclusion of the federal airport authorities that a dedicated
fleet of vehicles is the best option for providing the public with an
acceptable level of service at a reasonable cost.
7
Permits are now issued only to a dedicated, licensed fleet of vehicles.
The appellant and about 65 other “scoopers” actively challenged this system by
regularly soliciting travellers at the airport.
8
The inspectors employed by the airport authority, now a privatized
entity, laid charges of trespass from time to time but these apparently had
little deterrent effect. The charges were difficult to prove, because
out-of-province airport users were generally not available to testify in
court. Where a conviction was obtained, the fines were modest. The 1990
Bartlett Report observed that “small fines could be regarded simply as a cost
of doing business . . .” (p. 12).
9
On June 4, 1990, the airport authorities issued notices under s. 3
of the TPA to scoopers, including the appellant, prohibiting entry for any
purpose onto airport property. Disobedience to the notices led to charges of
trespass.
10
In the year ending July 1991, the appellant had shrugged off 22 such
charges. In the trial judge’s view, “[t]he accused’s testimony was
demonstrably motivated by a hatred for the government witnesses and the
regulatory system he has devoted himself to defeating” (para. 96).
11
The RCMP decided that they did not have the resources to deal further
with the scooper problem. Accordingly, in consultation with the RCMP, the
airport authorities decided to exercise their power of “citizen’s” arrest under
s. 9 of the TPA.
The Subject
Matter of the Charges
(i) Incident One
12
On July 22, 1991, two airport ground transportation inspectors observed
the appellant’s taxi parked unattended at the curb of the arrivals level. One
of them approached the appellant, touched him on the shoulder, and informed him
that he was under arrest for trespassing. The appellant drove away. As a
result, he was charged with escaping lawful custody. A conviction was
eventually entered and is no longer under appeal.
(ii) Incident Two
13
On July 25, 1991, two inspectors again saw the appellant’s unattended
taxi parked at the curb along with another scooper’s car. On seeing the
appellant emerge from the terminal, one inspector approached the appellant,
touched his shoulder, and informed him that he was under arrest for trespassing
and that he would be detained for police arrival. The appellant attempted to
enter his vehicle to flee the scene but the inspector blocked his way. (The
appellant claims the inspector’s actions amounted to an assault. The trial
judge found that no more than reasonable force was used.) The appellant then
shoved his car door into the person of the inspector to cause him to back off
and, ignoring the inspector’s protests, drove away. The door-shoving incident
led to a charge of assault with intent to resist arrest. The appellant was
also charged with escaping lawful custody. It is the former charge that is the
basis of the present appeal.
14
The trial judge concluded that, by using force however modest and
reasonable to block the appellant’s escape, the inspector’s otherwise lawful
conduct became unlawful. “The accused was entitled to resist an unlawful
use of force designed to continue and preserve the [lawful] arrest and custody”
(para. 197 (emphasis in original)). Accordingly, he convicted the
appellant for escape from lawful custody but dismissed the charge of assault
with intent to resist an arrest.
(iii) Incident Three
15
Later in the afternoon of July 25, 1991, another incident at the airport
led to charges against the appellant of dangerous driving, use of a weapon in
committing an assault, and escaping lawful custody. The charges arose in this
way. A different inspector, aware of the appellant’s previous arrest the same
day, saw the appellant’s taxi “trolling” past the arrivals level at Terminal
3. He stepped out in front of the appellant’s taxi with his hand raised,
holding his badge, and ordered the appellant to stop. The appellant kept on
coming and, to avoid personal injury, the inspector jumped onto the hood of the
appellant’s car, from where he was dislodged as the appellant accelerated to
get clear of the terminal. The inspector had made no physical contact to arrest
the appellant. There was clearly no submission by the appellant to the
inspector’s authority. The trial judge held that no arrest had occurred and,
having a reasonable doubt on other aspects of the evidence, dismissed all
charges in connection with this incident.
16
The only issue that survives into this Court therefore is whether
reasonable force may be used in making or continuing an arrest under s. 9
of the TPA.
II. Judicial
History
A. Ontario
Court (General Division), [1996] O.J. No. 1821 (QL)
17
A challenge to the constitutionality of s. 9 of the TPA
based on ss. 7 and 9 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms
was rejected.
18
With respect to statutory interpretation, the trial judge held that the
appellant could not be convicted of resisting a lawful arrest because the
inspector was not authorized by s. 9 of the TPA to use “reasonable
force” to make the arrest. Firstly, no such authority is spelled out in the TPA;
secondly, such authority as may be inferred from the common law should not
apply to arrests for provincial misdemeanours; and, thirdly, it would be bad
public policy to read such authority into the TPA because of the
inherent risk of escalation of violence and the prospect of injury to the
citizen making the arrest, the person arrested, or both. The appellant was
convicted of the two counts of escaping lawful custody.
B. Ontario
Court of Appeal (2001), 204 D.L.R. (4th) 51
19
The Court of Appeal dismissed the appellant’s appeal both on the
constitutional issues and against the convictions for escaping lawful custody.
20
The Crown’s appeal of the acquittal on the assault with intent to resist
arrest was allowed. In the court’s view, the TPA does include the
authority to use reasonable force to arrest and detain the person arrested.
The authority is incidental to the statutory power of arrest and does not
require separate explicit statutory authority. On this point, R. v. Lerke
(1986), 24 C.C.C. (3d) 129 (Alta. C.A.), was agreed with.
21
In its reasons, the court referred to the history of the power of arrest
at common law. According to W. Holdsworth, A History of English Law
(1973), vol. III, at pp. 598-600, “common law powers of arrest are derived
from the rights and duties of ordinary citizens in relation to the maintenance
of ‘the King’s peace’. In early times, before the advent of professional
police forces, the ordinary citizen not only enjoyed the right to make
arrests, but was duty-bound in certain cases to do so” (para. 39
(emphasis in original)). The notion of reasonable force and physical restraint
was, the court concluded, inherent in a power to arrest.
22
The court rejected the appellant’s argument that the right to use
reasonable force is excluded by s. 146 of the Provincial Offences Act,
R.S.O. 1990, c. P.33, which protects police officers and others from
prosecution when only necessary force is used. The issue here is the scope of
the authority, not the scope of the protection. While it is true that both the
Fish Inspection Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. F.18, and the Fish and
Wildlife Conservation Act, 1997, S.O. 1997, c. 41, provide
specifically for the use of force in certain circumstances, the court wrote: “We do not regard the fact that the legislature went out of its way
to specify the power to use force in aid of the powers conferred by these
statutes as sufficient to displace the interpretation we have indicated as
being appropriate for the TPA” (para. 53).
III. Relevant Legislative
Provisions
23
Trespass to Property Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. T.21
9. — (1) A police officer, or the occupier
of premises, or a person authorized by the occupier may arrest without warrant
any person he or she believes on reasonable and probable grounds to be on the
premises in contravention of section 2.
(2) Where the person who makes an arrest under
subsection (1) is not a police officer, he or she shall promptly call for
the assistance of a police officer and give the person arrested into the
custody of the police officer.
(3) A police officer to whom the custody of a
person is given under subsection (2) shall be deemed to have arrested the
person for the purposes of the provisions of the Provincial Offences Act
applying to his or her release or continued detention and bail.
Interpretation
Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. I.11
28. In every Act, unless the contrary
intention appears,
. . .
(b) where power is given to a person, officer
or functionary to do or to enforce the doing of an act or thing, all such
powers shall be understood to be also given as are necessary to enable the
person, officer or functionary to do or enforce the doing of the act or thing;
Provincial
Offences Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. P.33
146. — (1) Every police officer is,
if he or she acts on reasonable and probable grounds, justified in using as
much force as is necessary to do what the officer is required or authorized by
law to do.
(2) Every person upon whom a police officer calls
for assistance is justified in using as much force as he or she believes on
reasonable and probable grounds is necessary to render such assistance.
Criminal
Code, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-46
25. (1) Every one who is required or
authorized by law to do anything in the administration or enforcement of the
law
(a) as a private person,
(b) as a peace officer or public officer,
(c) in aid of a peace officer or public officer, or
(d) by virtue of his office,
is, if he acts on reasonable grounds, justified in doing what he is
required or authorized to do and in using as much force as is necessary for
that purpose.
145. (1) Every one who
(a) escapes from lawful custody, or
. . .
is guilty of an indictable offence and liable to imprisonment for a
term not exceeding two years or is guilty of an offence punishable on summary
conviction.
270. (1) Every one commits an offence who
. . .
(b) assaults a person with intent to resist or prevent the
lawful arrest or detention of himself or another person; or
. . .
(2) Every one who commits an offence under
subsection (1) is guilty of
(a) an indictable offence and is liable to imprisonment for a
term not exceeding five years; or
(b) an offence punishable on summary conviction.
494. (1) Any one may arrest without warrant
(a) a person whom he finds committing an indictable offence; or
(b) a person who, on reasonable grounds, he believes
(i) has committed a criminal offence, and
(ii) is escaping from and freshly pursued by persons who have lawful
authority to arrest that person.
(2) Any one who is
(a) the owner or a person in lawful possession of property, or
(b) a person authorized by the owner or by a person in lawful
possession of property,
may arrest without warrant a person whom he finds committing a criminal
offence on or in relation to that property.
(3) Any one other than a peace officer who arrests
a person without warrant shall forthwith deliver the person to a peace officer.
IV. Analysis
24
This appeal arises in the context of a justifiably frustrated airport
authority seeking to control “scooping” activities on its premises which even
the appellant concedes are unlawful. Yet the implications of recognizing a
power to use force in effecting an arrest under the TPA go far beyond
the present context. Countryside ramblers come face to face with farmers.
Teenagers occasionally upset mall owners who think adolescents “hanging out”
deter business. Drifters seek shelter in railway stations. Protesters march
their placards onto the private property of a target business. The list of
potential confrontations goes on.
25
In recent years, provincial legislation such as Ontario’s TPA has
become the primary legal basis upon which private security firms and the like
monitor and control activities on private properties. Intelligarde, one of
Ontario’s largest private security firms, estimates that its guards have
arrested over 30,000 people in the last 20 years on the basis of the TPA
(R. McLeod, Parapolice: A Revolution in the Business of Law Enforcement
(2002), at p. 67). G. S. Rigakos writes that “the most
well-worn piece of legislation for Intelligarde staff is the Trespass to
Property Act. It provides them with broad powers of arrest on private property
and is the statute of choice among a litany of provisions making it very easy
for private security guards to arrest citizens in Ontario” (The New
Parapolice: Risk Markets and Commodified Social Control (2002), at
pp. 52-53).
26
The power of arrest is a potent weapon to put in the hands of landowners
and occupiers to be wielded in protection of their private property. Whether
or not force is used, the liberty of the person arrested is compromised. The TPA
states expressly that there is no requirement for a judicial warrant. The
right to arrest arises when the occupier has “reasonable and probable grounds”
to believe the person arrested is a trespasser (s. 9(1)). The arrested
person is then handed over to the police. When so much of the space where the
modern community gathers, including airports and shopping malls, is in private
hands, there is legitimate controversy about the nature and scope of the
occupier’s arrest power (see R. Anand, Task Force on the Law Concerning
Trespass to Publicly-Used Property as it Affects Youth and Minorities
(1987), at pp. 81 et seq.; P. C. Stenning and
C. D. Shearing, Search and Seizure: Powers of Private Security
Personnel (1979), at p. 75 (study paper prepared for the Law Reform
Commission of Canada)).
27
The decision to grant or withhold the power of arrest is a legislative
decision. Absent a Charter challenge, our task is limited to statutory
interpretation. The power of arrest is clearly granted to occupiers. We are
simply required to determine the content of the legislative grant. Section 9
of the TPA provides, without elaboration, that “a person authorized by
the occupier may arrest without warrant any person he or she believes on
reasonable and probable grounds to be on the premises” as a trespasser
(emphasis added).
28
The word “arrest” has a well-understood meaning at common law. Unless
the context otherwise dictates, I think we are bound to interpret the word as
it appears in s. 9 of the TPA in accordance with the common law of
arrest. Eccles v. Bourque, [1975] 2 S.C.R. 739, raised a similar
issue. Police committed a trespass in attempting to make an arrest. They were
sued for civil damages. The Court held that, while the Criminal Code
power to arrest without a warrant did not include any express authority to
trespass, such authority was an incident of arrest at common law
(pp. 742-43). So too here, the legislature has used the word “arrest” as
a term of art. Otherwise, there is no guidance at all to occupiers about how
to “arrest” somebody, let alone what conduct the occupier is permitted and what
is not permitted, and conversely, what are the rights of the alleged
trespasser.
(a) Trespass
to Property Act
29
First enacted in 1834 as the Act to provide for the Summary
Punishment of Petty Trespasses and other offences, S.U.C. 1834, 4
Wm. 4, c. 4, the statute authorized a land owner or his or her
agent to apprehend individuals for trespass and deliver them to a
Justice of the Peace. The arrest provision (which remained virtually unchanged
until 1980) provided that “any person found committing any such trespass as
aforesaid may be apprehended without a Warrant, by any Peace Officer, or the
owner of the property injured, or the servant or any person authorised
by him, and forthwith taken to the nearest Justice of the Peace to be dealt
with according to Law” (s. 5 (emphasis added)).
30
In a discussion paper produced in 1979, the Ontario Ministry of the
Attorney General argued that the purpose of the TPA was to provide a
relatively quick, cheap and intelligible remedy for trespass: Discussion
Paper on Occupiers’ Liability and Trespass to Property (1979), at p. 13
(“1979 Discussion Paper”). The TPA, it was noted, did not replace the
common law remedies, but gave occupiers additional rights: 1979 Discussion
Paper, at p. 13; R. v. Page, [1964] O.J. No. 383 (QL) (H.C.), at
para. 6 (“[t]he Petty Trespass Act . . . is a very old
statute which gives the occupiers of premises certain additional rights to
those enjoyed at common law”).
31
In 1980, the Petty Trespass Act, R.S.O. 1970, c. 347, was
reformed and the Occupiers’ Liability Act, S.O. 1980, c. 14, was enacted
in order to facilitate prosecutions and increase the protection of interests of
rural landowners. In the Ministry of the Attorney General’s 1979 Discussion
Paper, at p. 13, the inadequacy of the existing Act from the landowners’
perspective was seen to be threefold:
First, the wording of the existing offence is unclear and, along with
other factors, leads to difficulties in prosecution. Second, the law does not
deter trespass onto land under cultivation even though significant farm losses
are caused by trespassers. Third, the Act does not ensure the privacy of
occupiers of land or permit the control of recreational activities.
32
Accordingly, the Trespass to Property Act, 1980, S.O. 1980,
c. 15, provides owners or agents of the owners with a number of options.
Under the current law, s. 2 makes trespass a provincial offence subject to
a fine of up to $2,000. Occupiers may direct persons to leave a property (s.
2(1)(b)), and give notice that further activity or entry onto the
property is prohibited either absolutely (s. 3) or within limits
(s. 4). More intrusively, as already discussed, occupiers or their agents
(and police officers) are empowered to arrest without warrant if on reasonable
grounds they believe the individual is trespassing (s. 9). The
inconvenience and indignity of being arrested may sometimes be seen as more of
a punishment than the amount of the fine ultimately levied. It is equally, on
that account, more of a deterrent.
(b) Arrest at Common Law
33
A good starting point is the description of an arrest at common law
provided by Lord Diplock in Holgate-Mohammed v. Duke, [1984] A.C. 437
(H.L.), at p. 441:
The word “arrest” . . . is a term of
art. First, it should be noted that arrest is a continuing act; it
starts with the arrester taking a person into his custody, (sc. by action or
words restraining him from moving anywhere beyond the arrester’s control), and
it continues until the person so restrained is either released from custody
or, having been brought before a magistrate, is remanded in custody by the
magistrate’s judicial act. [Emphasis added.]
See also Murray
v. Ministry of Defence, [1988] 1 W.L.R. 692 (H.L.), at p. 699.
34
As will be seen, this common law definition dovetails with the 1834 Act
(“taken to the nearest Justice of the Peace”). Section 9(2) now requires
the occupier to “give the person arrested into the custody of the police
officer”. Both versions presuppose detention and a measure of continuing
restraint on liberty between the initiation of the arrest and the delivery of
the person arrested to the police. Thus, adapting the incidents of an “arrest”
at common law to the legislative grant of a power of arrest in s. 9 of the
TPA, the occupier is permitted the means (reasonable force) to fulfill
the duty (delivery of the person arrested) to achieve the purpose of the arrest
(to terminate the trespass and bring the trespasser to the police to be dealt
with according to law).
35
The appellant argues that it is anomalous to allow his liberty to be
restrained by arrest and detention when, if he were charged with trespass under
s. 2(1) of the TPA and convicted, the only consequence would be a fine
of no more than $2,000. There would be no imprisonment. In other words, he
says, the processes of the TPA permit a greater interference with his
liberty than any possible outcome of a successful prosecution. It cannot be
disputed, however, that the legislature has conferred a power of arrest
on occupiers, and imposed a duty to deliver the person arrested to the
police. A serious interference with personal liberty of a trespasser is thus
clearly authorized by the TPA even if he submits, i.e., whether
“reasonable force” is used or not. The appellant has abandoned the Charter
challenge he advanced in the courts below. We must therefore interpret and
apply the TPA as we find it.
(c) The
Concept of a Citizen’s Arrest
36
The concept of “arrest” by private citizens is as old as the common
law. It predates the rise of the modern police force. Laycraft C.J.A.
observed in Lerke, supra, at p. 135:
The power exercised by a citizen who arrests another is in direct
descent over nearly a thousand years of the powers and duties of citizens in
the age of Henry II in relation to the “King’s Peace”.
37
The “King’s Peace” itself was a concept introduced by the Norman Kings.
It required the inhabitants of each community to apprehend all felons, and held
them collectively responsible for failing to do so: Statute of Winchester,
13 Edw. 1, Stat. 2 (1285), cc. 1, 2, 4 and 6;
J. F. Stephen, A History of the Criminal Law of England
(1883), vol. I, at p. 189. At common law, a private citizen had both
a right and a positive obligation to perform an arrest when a felony was being
committed or had “in fact” been committed: Stephen, supra, at
p. 193; W. Hawkins, A Treatise of the Pleas of the Crown (8th
ed. 1824), vol. II, c. 9 “Of the Court of the Coroner”, Sect. 6,
at p. 74. Things could get quite bloody, as Blackstone recounts:
Any private person (and a fortiori a peace
officer) that is present when any felony is committed, is bound by the law to
arrest the felon; on pain of fine and imprisonment, if he escapes through the
negligence of the standers by. And they may justify breaking open doors
upon following such felon: and if they kill him, provided he cannot be
otherwise taken, it is justifiable; though if they are killed in
endeavoring to make such arrest, it is murder. [Emphasis in original.]
(W. Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England, Book
IV, 1769, at pp. 289-90)
38
Felonies were serious crimes, of course, and the authority and duty of
private citizens to arrest for misdemeanours were significantly more limited.
In King v. Poe (1866), 15 L.T.R. (N.S.) 37 (Ex.), it is reported at
p. 40 that there is no “right to arrest a person . . . of a
misdemeanor, where there is no breach of the peace, and where it is not
necessary to arrest the offender to prevent the renewal of the act”. Simple
trespass did not ordinarily give rise to a breach of the peace, and therefore,
at common law, did not ordinarily give rise to a right of arrest: see Frey
v. Fedoruk, [1950] S.C.R. 517, at p. 520 (where this Court held that
clandestine entry onto private property by a “peeping tom” did not constitute a
breach of the peace).
39
The airport inspectors, as stated, derive their power to arrest from
statute. Powers of arrest have been conferred on ordinary citizens by statute
from early times, for example, to arrest for the misdemeanours of “night
walking” and “riding armed” (see, e.g., Hawkins, supra, c. 12 “Of
Arrests by Private Persons”, Sect. 20, at p. 120, and Sect. 22, at p.
121). The citizen’s power of arrest survives under s. 494 of the Criminal
Code (“Cr. C.”). As will be seen, many federal and provincial
statutes authorize a citizen’s arrest but few give any explicit guidance about
its procedures and consequences. The explanation is that legislators
presuppose that the term has a well-known legal significance (i.e., is a term
of art) derived from the common law.
40
The development of modern police forces brought about a transfer of law
enforcement activities from private citizens to peace officers. But it is the
peace officer’s powers which are in a sense derivative from that of the
citizen, not the other way around. As the House of Lords commented in Christie
v. Leachinsky, [1947] A.C. 573, at p. 591, per Lord Simonds, at
common law, “[i]t is to be remembered that the right of the constable in or out
of uniform is, except for a circumstance irrelevant to the present discussion,
the same as that of every other citizen”. See also R. E. Salhany, Canadian
Criminal Procedure (6th ed. (loose-leaf)), at p. 3-8.1.
(d) The Arrest Procedure
41
The TPA does not set out the procedure for arrest. I accept, of
course, that statutes which encroach on the liberty of the subject should be
construed, where ambiguous, in favour of upholding such liberty: Colet v.
The Queen, [1981] 1 S.C.R. 2, at p. 10, per Ritchie J.
Here, however, the word “arrest” is not ambiguous. It is a term of art. It
describes a well-understood legal procedure. The TPA incorporates by
reference the incidents of arrest at common law except as modified expressly or
by necessary implication.
42
In R. v. Whitfield, [1970] S.C.R. 46, this Court adopted, for the
purposes of the Criminal Code , the following common law definition of
the act of arrest, per Judson J., at p. 48:
Arrest consists of the actual seizure or touching of a person’s body
with a view to his detention. The mere pronouncing of words of arrest is not
an arrest, unless the person sought to be arrested submits to the process and
goes with the arresting officer.
This
definition was accepted as correct by a unanimous Court in R. v. Latimer,
[1997] 1 S.C.R. 217, at para. 24, and is not contested by the appellant.
What the appellant says, however, is that he was not required by law to
acquiesce in the further efforts of the inspector (which the trial judge
characterized as reasonable) to hand him over to the police. This argument
amounts to an attempted revival of the concept of “symbolic arrest”, i.e., an
arrest without constraint or substance, that was made and rejected in Whitfield.
There the accused argued that he had never been “custodially arrested”
(p. 47) or “taken or captured” (p. 48) by a police officer who knew
of an outstanding warrant for the arrest of the accused and spotted him in his
car. Grabbing him by the shirt through the car window, the police officer shouted
“you are under arrest”. The accused accelerated, broke the officer’s hold on
the shirt, and left the scene. Hall J., for the dissenting judges, said
that “Parliament must be presumed to have known that the words ‘arrest’ and
‘custody’ are not synonymous” (p. 54), and concluded that the accused
should have been charged with avoiding arrest, not escaping lawful custody.
The majority disagreed. Judson J., speaking for the majority, explained
at p. 48 that:
There is no room for what seems to be a new
subdivision of “arrest” into “custodial” arrest and “symbolical” or “technical”
arrest. An accused is either arrested or he is not arrested. If this accused
was arrested, he escaped from lawful custody and is
guilty . . . .
43
Distinctions between the concepts of “arrest” and “custody” are made for
some purposes in the Criminal Code : see, e.g., Law Reform Commission of
Canada, Working Paper 41, Arrest (1985), at p. 30. The appellant
now concedes that he was properly convicted of escaping lawful custody, but his
idea seems to be that once he is “touched”, as in a children’s game, he is free
either to submit or to go his own way. If he leaves, he may be charged with
escaping lawful custody, but he says the inspector has no authority to
use any degree of force to preserve that lawful custody. This cannot be
so. Arrest implies confrontation and confrontation creates a potential for the
use of force by one party or the other. In Hussien v. Chong Fook Kam,
[1970] A.C. 942 (P.C.), Lord Devlin commented, at p. 947:
An arrest occurs when a police officer states in
terms that he is arresting or when he uses force to restrain the individual
concerned. It occurs also when by words or conduct he makes it clear that he
will, if necessary, use force to prevent the individual from going where he
may want to go. [Emphasis added.]
44
The touching of the appellant and the door-shoving incident were, from
the perspective of the participants, a single continuing event. To say the
arrest is initiated by a touch is not to say that the power incidental to
arrest is thereby exhausted. The purpose of the arrest (delivery of the
accused) remained to be fulfilled. The legislature should not be taken as
intending to lay on the occupier a duty of delivery and at the same time impose
civil and criminal liability for the use of reasonable force necessary for its
fulfilment.
45
In the present case, the two arrests were initiated by words of
explanation and a mere “touching”. If touching is sufficient in a particular
case to bring about compliance, then touching is all “the force” that is
authorized. In Sandon v. Jervis (1859), El. Bl. & El. 942, 120 E.R.
760 (Ex.) (a case considered by Judson J. in Whitfield, supra,
at pp. 48-49), it was said, at p. 762, per Pollock C.B.,
“the law is that, if the officer is near enough to the debtor to touch him, and
does touch him, and gives him notice of the writ, it is an arrest”. See also Nicholl
v. Darley (1828), 2 Y. & J. 399, 148 E.R. 974 (Ex.), at p. 976:
“the slightest touch is an arrest in point of law”. Where a bailiff did not
lay hands on the defendant however, there was no arrest. See Genner v.
Sparks (1704), 6 Mod. Rep. 173, 87 E.R. 928 (Q.B.), at p. 929: “if
here he had but touched the defendant even with the end of his finger, it had
been an arrest” (emphasis in original). There is no doubt the appellant
understood the significance of the inspector’s touch because, according to the
trial judge, he made every effort to avoid being touched.
46
Arrest may also be effected by words and a restraint on liberty which is
accompanied by submission. This is how Whitfield was interpreted in Latimer,
supra, where the accused, a Saskatchewan farmer, was detained by police
on suspicion of terminating the life of his handicapped daughter. The police,
for their own reasons, intended to stop short of arresting him and no “words of
arrest” were spoken. No force was used. However, the issue, for purposes of
s. 9 of the Charter (“arbitrary detention”), was defined by the
Court as what the person arrested understood. It was concluded that he
submitted to go with the police because he understood that he was under
compulsion to do so. There was, in the words of Lamer C.J., a de facto
arrest (para. 25). Latimer considered himself deprived of “his liberty to
go where he pleases”: Spicer v. Holt, [1977] A.C. 987 (H.L.), at
p. 1000.
47
In the present case, however, the appellant certainly did not, in the
time-honoured phrase, “resig[n] his personal liberty”: Grainger v. Hill
(1838), 4 Bing. (N.C.) 212, 132 E.R. 769, at p. 774, per
Bosanquet J. See also Alderich v. Humphrey (1898), 29 O.R. 427
(Div. Ct.), at p. 432, and Higgins v. MacDonald (1928), 50 C.C.C. 353
(B.C.C.A.), at p. 355. Something more than words or a touch was required
to secure his compliance. Therefore, in my view, something more was
authorized.
48
In summary, the trial judge was correct in holding that in the first two
incidents, the appellant was lawfully arrested. In the third incident (during
the afternoon of July 25, 1991), when the inspector wound up on the hood of the
appellant’s car without touching him, and there was not even the potential
for immediate physical restraint, and certainly no submission, there was no
arrest.
(e) The Status of the Appellant Between the
Act of Arrest and His Expected Delivery to the Police
49
The appellant seeks to compartmentalize the apprehension of an arrested
person into distinct and separate stages including detention, arrest, custody
and delivery to the police, with different rights and obligations attaching to
the inspector and the appellant at the different stages. At para. 197,
the trial judge concluded on this point that, once the inspector had “touched”
the appellant to make the arrest, he
was not authorized to use force to continue the lawful arrest
and custody of the accused. To the extent that he was engaged in doing so, as
I have earlier found, the ground transportation inspector was not lawfully
executing the arrest of the accused. [Emphasis added.]
The trial
judge thus treated the arrest as a “continuing” status and I agree with him.
However if, as I conclude below, an occupier is entitled to use reasonable
force to initiate the status, then, in my view, it follows from the
nature of an arrest that the occupier is entitled to use reasonable force to
maintain the status. Once the trespasser is delivered to the police,
s. 9(3) of the TPA deems that the officer has made the arrest. At
that point, it will be out of the hands of the occupier to determine if the
arrest should be maintained or whether lesser measures suffice.
50
In the course of the hearing of this appeal, a conceptual concern was
raised as to whether the appellant could be charged both with assault
with intent to resist arrest (s. 270(1)(b) Cr. C.) and
escaping lawful custody (s. 145(1) (a) Cr. C.). In my
view, these charges are not mutually exclusive. The appellant was aware of his
arrest and, in shoving the door into the inspector, the appellant was resisting
by intentionally assaultive behaviour the continuing state of arrest initiated
by the touch: see, e.g., R. v. Platten (2000), 258 A.R. 153 (Prov. Ct.),
at p. 158 (after lawful arrest, the arrestee pushed and flailed against
the officer constituting assault under s. 270(1)(b) Cr. C.));
and R. v. Morris (2001), 283 A.R. 272 (Q.B.), at p. 278 (the
accused’s acts constituted an attempted assault under s. 270(1)(b)
where, after the arrest, he cocked his fist in preparation for hitting the
officer). If the appellant had “resigned his liberty” after shoving the door,
there would have been no escape from lawful custody. The escape charge was
laid under s. 145(1) (a) Cr. C. because the appellant
followed up the door-shoving incident with a self-help escape. Equally, in the
earlier incident on July 22, there was a self-help escape from custody. But
there was no assault on the inspector and thus no charge under s. 270(1)(b).
(f) The
Use of Reasonable Force
51
At common law, an interference with the arrested person’s liberty,
including the use of force, must be no more than is “reasonably necessary”: Dedman
v. The Queen, [1985] 2 S.C.R. 2, at p. 35; R. v. Godoy, [1999]
1 S.C.R. 311, at para. 22. This limitation was expressed by the Ontario
Ministry of the Attorney General in its advice to occupiers in a 1987
publication, This land is whose land? A legal guide to property protection
rights, at p. 14:
An occupier will be arresting a trespasser if any
actual restraint is imposed on a person’s liberty against that individual’s
will.
The restraint may be imposed by the application of
reasonable force, or by circumstances that imply the threat of force. In
every case, the trespasser should be informed of being under arrest and the
reason for the arrest.
This position
is consistent with Lerke, supra, at p. 134, and is
illustrated by R. v. Cunningham (1979), 49 C.C.C. (2d) 390 (Man. Co.
Ct.), at p. 396.
52
In Whitfield, supra, Judson J. stated at p. 50:
“A police officer has the right to use such force as may be necessary
to make an arrest.” (And, it should be added, to continue the state of being
under arrest.) The proposition of Judson J. was formulated in terms of
the police because that was the situation in Whitfield itself. See also
R. v. Tricker (1995), 96 C.C.C. (3d) 198 (Ont. C.A.), at p. 207,
where it was accepted that a police officer is entitled to use reasonable force
in making an arrest for a provincial offence under the Highway Traffic Act,
R.S.O. 1990, c. H.8. As mentioned, however, the right to use reasonable
force attaches at common law to the institution of an arrest, not to the status
of the individual making the arrest: see also Lerke, supra, at
p. 134, and Halsbury’s Laws of England (4th ed. 1990),
vol. II(I), at pp. 524-25.
53
The trial judge acknowledged that a policeman could use reasonable force
but concluded that the occupier could not, yet the s. 9 arrest power confers
a single power of arrest exercisable by “[a] police officer, or the occupier of
premises, or a person authorized by the occupier”. At common law too, as we
have seen, the powers of the police grew out of the powers of arrest of the
citizen. It would therefore be anomalous if, in the exercise of exactly the
same statutory power, reasonable force could be used by the police to maintain
the state of arrest, but if the arrest is made by an occupier under precisely
the same s. 9(2) power of arrest, there is no such authority. The TPA,
like the common law, does not differentiate the power of arrest according to
the status of the person exercising it. In fact, the use of force under the TPA
has been upheld both when police officers make the arrest (R. v. Ambrose,
[1999] O.J. No. 3607 (QL) (C.J.); Spencer v. Pollard (1989), 68
O.R. (2d) 730 (Dist. Ct.); and Pozniak v. Sault Ste. Marie Police Services
Board (2000), 139 O.A.C. 186 (Div. Ct.)), and in the case of arrest by an
occupier (Mobarakizadeh v. Viking Rideau Corp., [2001] O.J.
No. 5045 (QL) (S.C.J.)).
54
If the law were otherwise, s. 9 of the TPA would have
conferred on the occupier a completely symbolic power of arrest. The concept,
rejected in Whitfield, would be resuscitated for arrests for provincial
offences other than by peace officers. I do not think we should encourage a
patchwork of different types of arrest unless the wording of a statute either
expressly or by necessary implication requires us to do so.
55
There is no such compelling circumstance here. On the contrary, the
result of the appellant’s argument would give trespassers like the appellant
the upper hand simply by refusing to submit. They would render wrongful even
the most reasonable efforts by the occupier to fulfill the TPA
obligation to deliver him or her to the police.
56
The appellant’s strongest argument is the public interest in avoiding
physical confrontations between private citizens. However, even on the
appellant’s theory, if the trespasser once arrested attempts to flee, the
inspector would have a right to use reasonable force to prevent the commission
of an indictable offence, namely evading lawful custody. Thus, denying the
occupier the right to use reasonable force in making and continuing the arrest
does not mean that in the arrest situation no force will be used. So too we
must consider the common law powers of physical ejection of a trespasser
discussed below. Anomalies as to when reasonable force can and cannot be used
are avoided not only by recognition of the incidents of arrest at common law,
but also by virtue of s. 28 of the Interpretation Act which
provides:
28. In every Act, unless the contrary
intention appears,
. . .
(b) where power is given to a person,
officer or functionary to do or to enforce the doing of an act or thing, all
such powers shall be understood to be also given as are necessary to enable the
person, officer or functionary to do or enforce the doing of the act or
thing; [Emphasis added.]
57
The appellant says that force is not a necessary element of
arrest. In Latimer, he says, no force was used yet a de facto
arrest resulted. Therefore, he says, s. 28(b) does not apply. The better
view, however, is that the ability to use force often provides the necessary
precondition to securing the submission of the person arrested. It is
therefore necessary to the efficacy of the arrest power, as the facts of this
case demonstrate.
58
The anomalies inherent in the appellant’s position can be looked at in
another way. It is not contested that an alternative to arrest would have been
the forcible ejection of the appellant from the airport property: see Diggs
v. Century Investigation and Security Services Inc., [2002] O.J.
No. 4251 (QL) (S.C.J.), at para. 62: “In ejecting the trespasser,
the occupier or other person with authority may use a reasonable degree of
force, so long as he uses no more force than is reasonably necessary”; MacDonald
v. Hees (1974), 46 D.L.R. (3d) 720 (N.S.S.C.); Mullins v. Levenick,
[1998] N.B.J. No. 60 (QL) (Q.B.). Ejection by necessary force is a
defence now enshrined in s. 41(1) Cr. C. The situation would thus
be, on the appellant’s view, that the inspector could have used the force
reasonably necessary to escort the appellant off the airport property, but if
on their way down the arrivals ramp they met a policeman coming the other way,
and the inspector delivered the appellant to the police instead of continuing
their walk to the airport perimeter, the forced march, otherwise lawful, would
have become assaultive. All would depend on the inspector’s original intent,
arrest or ejection. Such distinctions would serve no useful purpose, and
should not be presumed to have been intended by the legislature.
59
Where a lawful arrest under the TPA occasions some intentional
pushing and shoving, the question is, as the Court of Appeal noted, who should
be treated as the wrongdoer, the inspector or the scooper? In my view, the
respondent is correct. Providing the force used is no more than is reasonable
and necessary, the person undertaking the arrest is acting within the scope of
his or her s. 9 authority.
(g) The “Negative Inference” From Other
Provincial Legislation
60
Against this general approach to the interpretation of s. 9 of the TPA,
the appellant argues that a negative inference should be taken from other
Ontario legislation. In particular, the appellant relies on s. 146 of
the Provincial Offences Act, which I reproduce for ease of reference:
146. — (1) Every police officer is, if
he or she acts on reasonable and probable grounds, justified in using as much
force as is necessary to do what the officer is required or authorized by law
to do.
(2) Every person upon whom a police officer calls
for assistance is justified in using as much force as he or she believes on
reasonable and probable grounds is necessary to render such assistance.
61
On the appellant’s reading, the fact that the Provincial Offences Act
shields police officers but not private individuals (unless acting at the
request of the police for assistance) is “a clear indication” that s. 9
does not authorize citizens to use reasonable force when making an arrest.
62
I agree with the Court of Appeal that such a “negative inference” is not
warranted. Sections 146 and 147 of the Provincial Offences Act do
not in and of themselves grant authority to the police or to anyone else to use
force in making an arrest. Their sole function, as with the parallel provision
in s. 25 Cr. C., is to confer a limited immunity: Eccles, supra.
An occupier making an arrest under the TPA without meeting the
conditions of s. 146 simply proceeds without the benefit of s. 146
protection, and must look to the common law for a “shield”.
63
The appellant also relies on a negative inference from the fact that the
use of necessary force is explicitly authorized in the context of arrest
in Ontario’s Fish and Wildlife Conservation Act, 1997, s. 93(2) (“A
conservation officer may use as much force as is necessary to make an arrest
under this section”), and the Fish Inspection Act, s. 7(3) (“An
inspector may use as much force as is necessary to make an arrest under
subsection (2)”). Both of these provisions were enacted after the date
of the trial judgment herein (May 8, 1996) but before the decision of
the Ontario Court of Appeal (October 1, 2001). I agree with the Court of
Appeal here as well that a negative inference is not justified. The fishing
statutes require the arresting official to release the person arrested as soon
as practicable, unless a series of conditions are met. The focus is on
terminating the activity rather than delivering the arrested individual to the
police. For various reasons, therefore, it was apparently thought necessary to
spell out the authority to use “necessary” force. Be that as it may, I agree
with the Court of Appeal that the fact the legislature chose to put additional
detail into fishing laws does not alter the common law content of the word
“arrest” incorporated by reference into s. 9 of the TPA.
(h) Other Comparable Provincial Legislation
64
No trespass statute enacted by a Canadian province explicitly
authorizes the use of force in making an arrest. Nonetheless, most provincial
trespass statutes empower owners (or their agents) and police officers to
arrest trespassers. See, e.g., Trespass to Premises Act, R.S.A. 2000,
c. T-7, s. 5
(Alberta); Petty Trespasses Act, R.S.M. 1987, c. P50, s. 2
(Manitoba); Petty Trespass Act, R.S.N.L. 1990, c. P-11, s. 4
(Newfoundland and Labrador); Trespass Act, S.N.B. 1983, c. T-11.2, s. 7 (New
Brunswick). In none of these provisions is the use of
reasonable force mentioned, yet in each case the occupier is under a duty to
hand over the person arrested to the police, provincial court judge or justice
of the peace. It is that duty, which is itself foreshadowed in the common law,
that implies that a reasonable force may be applied to achieve the statutory
purpose.
65
Other provinces have rejected the notion of occupier’s arrest,
preferring to keep arrest (and the potential use of force) in the hands of the
police. Thus, British Columbia’s Trespass Act allows owners to question
the trespasser for their identity, but not to arrest them. Only
police officers may undertake an arrest: Trespass Act, R.S.B.C. 1996,
c. 462, ss. 8-10. Similarly, Nova Scotia and P.E.I.’s trespass statutes
only authorize police officers to arrest trespassers: Trespass to Property
Act, R.S.P.E.I. 1988, c. T-6, s. 5; Protection of Property Act,
R.S.N.S. 1989, c. 363, s. 6. These statutes simply reflect a
different legislative approach to the one adopted in Ontario, and may reflect
policy concerns similar to those expressed by the trial judge in this case.
(i) Relevant Federal Legislation
66
Over 20 federal statutes authorize some form of “citizen’s”
arrest, but only three explicitly authorize the use of force in arresting an
individual without a warrant: the Immigration and Refugee Protection
Act, S.C. 2001, c. 27, ss. 55 and 138 ; the National Defence
Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. N-5, s. 154 (as amended
by R.S.C. 1985, c. 31 (1st Supp.), s. 48), and the Coastal Fisheries
Protection Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. C‑33, s. 8 (as
amended by S.C. 1999, c. 19, s. 5). The remainder of the federal
statutes authorize arrest without reference to the use of force, but require
the person arrested to be delivered forthwith to a peace officer in terms
similar to s. 9(2) of the TPA.
67
It can thus be seen that it is common practice for both Parliament and
the provincial legislatures to use the word “arrest” without further
explanation or further qualification in a wide variety of contexts, leaving the
incidents (including the use of reasonable force) to be supplied by
interpretation acts or the common law.
(j) Policy Arguments
68
The concern expressed by the trial judge about the potential escalation
of violence if private occupiers have the right to use force in furtherance of
their private interest is a real one, although the emphasis on “private”
interest must be qualified by the acknowledgment that the prosecution, if it
proceeds, is subject to the control of a Crown Attorney and a fine, if any, is
payable to the public purse.
69
The TPA relates to a highly specific and limited offence. The
effect of denying the occupier the right to use any degree of force
would be to subject him or her to tort claims because of the attempt to deliver
the arrested person to the police in compliance with s. 9(2) of the TPA.
In the present case, for example, the appellant followed up the door-shoving
incident on July 25 with a private assault charge against the inspector. It
seems to me that if the legislature considers a matter of sufficient importance
to warrant the grant of a special power of arrest, it would not wish, as a
matter of policy, to “chill” its exercise by denying any protection to those
who exercise it in a reasonable way.
70
The appellant also contends that the legislature could not have intended
to escalate a minor provincial offence such as trespass into a major “escape
arrest” offence under the Criminal Code . This escalation is not
surprising. Firstly, even the appellant now admits that he was properly
convicted of escaping lawful custody, which is equally an offence prosecutable
by summary conviction or indictment under the Criminal Code . Secondly,
the law regards a defiance of lawful authority more seriously than the original
offending act in many circumstances, e.g., the sanctions meted out for leaving
the scene of an accident. The triggering offence may be quite minor, e.g.,
careless driving, but if there is an attempt to evade civil or criminal
liability, it is the evasion to which the law attaches greater importance.
Similarly, the act of resisting lawful arrest or escaping lawful custody can
reasonably be seen as more serious than a simple trespass against private
property, and the Criminal Code so regards it.
(k) What Level of Force is Reasonable and
Justified?
71
Many trespasses are of trivial importance. They are best handled by
means short of an arrest. This was recognized in the 1987 Ontario Ministry of
the Attorney General’s paper This land is whose land?, supra, at
pp. 14-15:
An arrest is a grave imposition on another person’s liberty and should
only be attempted if other options prove ineffective. Further, an arrest
attempt may lead to a confrontation more serious than the initial offence of
trespass, and should be exercised with caution. Excessive force or improper
use of the arrest power, may leave the occupier, or a designated agent, open to
both criminal charges and civil liability.
72
Individuals who were wrongly arrested, or against whom unreasonable
force was used, have successfully pursued prosecutions for assault as well as
claims for civil damages against the arresting party. See, e.g., Chopra v.
Eaton (T.) Co. (1999), 240 A.R. 201 (Q.B.), at para. 147 (private
security guard liable in damages for unnecessarily putting store customer in
headlock and handcuffing him); Briggs v. Laviolette (1994), 21 C.C.L.T.
(2d) 105 (B.C.S.C.) (private citizen liable in damages for bodily injury caused
by slapping in face and poking with stick an individual he thought had broken
his car window); and R. v. Freake (1990), 85 Nfld. & P.E.I.R. 25
(Nfld. Prov. Ct.) (building owner convicted of assault for using excessive
force against 11-year-old suspected trespasser).
73
A certain amount of latitude is permitted to police officers who are
under a duty to act and must often react in difficult and exigent
circumstances: Cluett v. The Queen, [1985] 2 S.C.R. 216, at
p. 222; R. v. Biron, [1976] 2 S.C.R. 56, at p. 64
(Laskin C.J., dissenting); Besse v. Thom (1979), 96 D.L.R. (3d) 657
(B.C. Co. Ct.), at p. 667, reversed on other grounds at (1979), 107
D.L.R. (3d) 694 (B.C.C.A.); R. v. Bottrell (1981), 60 C.C.C. (2d) 211
(B.C.C.A.), at p. 218. The same latitude will not necessarily be shown to
an occupier who is under no duty to act and who instigates a confrontation with
a trespasser.
74
Further, “reasonable force” in the context of the TPA may have to
have regard not only to what force is necessary to accomplish the arrest, but
also to whether a forcible arrest was in all the circumstances a reasonable
course of action in the first place. I say this because determining whether “a
defendant who claims to have been enforcing the criminal law is liable in tort
necessarily involves taking into account what the criminal law states is or is
not justifiable conduct” (emphasis added):
G. H. L. Fridman, The Law of Torts in Canada (1989), vol. 1,
at p. 70.
75
Justification in the criminal law looks at a broader range of factors
than simply the physical force required to restrain a person arrested: see,
e.g., R. v. Simpson (1993), 79 C.C.C. (3d) 482 (Ont. C.A.), in which it
was explained per Doherty J.A., at p. 499, that justifiability
under s. 25 Cr. C. (and, by extension, s. 146 of the Provincial
Offences Act)
depends on a number of factors including the duty being performed, the
extent to which some interference with individual liberty is necessitated in
order to perform that duty, the importance of the performance of that duty to
the public good, the liberty interfered with, and the nature and extent of the
interference.
76
This dictum was approved and applied by this Court in Godoy, supra,
at para. 18, and is quite consistent, it seems to me, with the advice
mentioned earlier in the 1987 Ministry of the Attorney General’s paper This
land is whose land?, supra, that an arrest “should only be attempted
if other options prove ineffective” (p. 14). It is also consistent with
s. 495(2) Cr. C. which provides that a police officer shall not
make an arrest (unless a warrant is obtained) with respect to summary
conviction (and some other lesser) offences unless it is necessary to do so to
establish the identity of the person arrested, to secure or preserve evidence
of or relating to the offence, to prevent the continuation or repetition of the
offence or the commission of another offence, or to secure the attendance in
court of the person arrested. I mention this argument because, in a proper
case, it might provide a further constraint in tort on any potential abuse of
s. 9. The scope of justification in the context of a TPA arrest
will have to await a proper case where an occupier who is sued in tort as a
result of a TPA arrest is called upon to demonstrate that the arrest, as
well as the force used to effect it, was reasonable in all the circumstances.
(l) Charter Implications
77
As mentioned, the courts below rejected the appellant’s Charter
challenge to s. 9 of the TPA based on s. 7 (“fundamental
justice”) and s. 9 (“arbitrary detention or imprisonment”). The challenge
was not renewed here. On the facts, we are not called on in this case to
address the question whether a citizen’s arrest could be construed as state
action for purposes of the Charter , as held by the Alberta Court of
Appeal in Lerke, supra, at p. 134 and, if so, what
consequences might flow from that ruling.
(m) Application to the Facts of this Case
78
The trial judge was under no doubt that arrest was a reasonable course
of action on the facts of this case. All other attempts to secure the
appellant’s compliance had failed, as the trial judge explained, at
para. 154:
While an inspector could swear an information causing the court to
summons the alleged offender, such an approach would not satisfactorily address
the blatant, ongoing commission of the offence. Likewise, a direction to Mr.
Asante-Mensah to leave the property had historically proven to be a meaningless
communication. The act of private arrest stops the commission of the offence
and prevents its continuation.
79
The appellant now concedes that if the inspector was entitled to use
force, then the amount of force applied by the inspector was reasonable.
V. Conclusion
80
In my view, “arrest” in the context of the TPA should be seen as
a continuing status initiated by words accompanied by physical touching or
submission and ending with delivery to the police, maintained as necessary with
a force that is no more than reasonable in all the circumstances. I would
therefore dismiss the appeal.
Appeal dismissed.
Solicitors for the appellant: Kelly, Jennings & Lacy,
Toronto.
Solicitor for the respondent: Ministry of the Attorney General for
Ontario, Toronto.