R. v. Williams, [2003] 2 S.C.R. 134, 2003 SCC 41
Her Majesty The Queen Appellant
v.
Harold Williams Respondent
and
Attorney General of Ontario Intervener
Indexed as: R. v.
Williams
Neutral citation: 2003 SCC
41.
File No.: 28873.
2002: December 3; 2003: September 18.
Present: McLachlin C.J. and Iacobucci, Major, Bastarache,
Binnie, Arbour and Deschamps JJ.
on appeal from the court of appeal for newfoundland and labrador
Criminal law — Aggravated assault — Non‑disclosure
of HIV status — Accused having unprotected sexual relations with complainant
during their 18-month relationship — Five months into relationship, accused
learning he was HIV-positive but failing to disclose his HIV status to
complainant — Complainant likely already infected before accused learned he was
HIV-positive — Whether Crown can prove endangerment of complainant’s life
beyond reasonable doubt — Whether accused guilty of aggravated assault —
Criminal Code, R.S.C. 1985, c. C‑46, s. 268(1) .
Criminal law — Attempted aggravated assault — Non‑disclosure
of HIV status — Accused having unprotected sexual relations with complainant
during their 18-month relationship — Five months into relationship, accused
learning he was HIV-positive but failing to disclose his HIV status to
complainant — Whether accused guilty of attempted aggravated assault — Criminal
Code, R.S.C. 1985, c. C‑46, ss. 24(1) , 265(1) (a), 268(1) , 660 .
The complainant and W had an 18-month relationship
beginning in June 1991. On November 15, 1991, W learned that he had recently
tested positive for HIV. The complainant tested negative shortly thereafter.
W kept the complainant in the dark about his HIV condition as well as the fact
that he had been tested. Although W was given counselling on at least three
different occasions by two doctors and a nurse about HIV, its transmission,
safer practices and his duty to disclose his HIV status to sexual partners, he
continued to practise unprotected sex with the complainant. It was accepted
that the complainant would never knowingly have had sex with an HIV‑positive
person. The relationship ended in November 1992 and she tested positive for
HIV in April 1994. W has conceded that he infected the complainant with HIV.
Similarly, the Crown has conceded that it is quite possible that W infected the
complainant before learning of his positive status. At trial, W was convicted
of aggravated assault and common nuisance. The Court of Appeal upheld the
conviction for common nuisance but allowed the appeal against the conviction
for aggravated assault, substituting therefor a conviction for attempted
aggravated assault.
Held: The appeal
should be dismissed.
Where, as here, the Crown alleges an offence
predicated on an aggravating consequence, it must prove the consequence beyond
a reasonable doubt. An accused who fails to disclose his HIV-positive status
cannot be convicted of an aggravated assault endangering life in circumstances
where the complainant could already have been HIV-positive. In such
circumstances, however, W was properly convicted of attempted aggravated
assault.
While W acted with a shocking level of recklessness
and selfishness, the Crown could not show that sexual activity after November
15, 1991 harmed the complainant, or even exposed her to a significant risk of
harm, because at that point she was possibly, and perhaps likely, already
HIV-positive. W’s acquittal on the charge of aggravated assault must therefore
be affirmed. The mens rea of the offence had been proven beyond a
reasonable doubt, but the Crown was unable to prove an essential element of the
actus reus, namely that W’s sexual conduct, after learning that he had
tested positive for HIV, risked endangering the complainant’s life. The
medical evidence indicates that a single act of unprotected vaginal intercourse
carries a significant risk of HIV transmission. It was therefore at least
doubtful that the complainant was free of HIV infection on November 15, 1991
when W first discovered, then decided to conceal, his HIV status. The
complainant tested negative for HIV shortly thereafter, although the expert
evidence was that at that date she may well have been infected with HIV but not
yet had time to develop the antibodies that would disclose her condition in the
test.
To constitute a crime, the actus reus and the mens
rea or intent must, at some point, coincide. Here, however, before
November 15, 1991, there was an endangerment but no intent; after November 15,
1991, there was an intent but at the very least a reasonable doubt about the
existence of any endangerment.
The focus of the crime of aggravated assault is on the
nature of the consequences rather than on the nature of the assault. The same
act of sexual assault by an HIV-positive accused would undoubtedly injure or
put at risk many potential partners but if, because of a complainant’s
particular circumstances, there is a reasonable doubt that the complainant was
put in harm’s way by the assault charged, there is no aggravated assault. In
this case, there was a reasonable doubt that the life of the complainant was
capable of being endangered after November 15, 1991 by re-exposure to a virus
that she had likely already acquired.
There is nothing in the evidence to suggest that the
complainant, believing rightly or wrongly that she was HIV-free, consented to
unprotected sexual intercourse with an HIV-positive partner. At all relevant
times, the complainant believed that both she and W were HIV-free.
W stands properly convicted of attempted aggravated
assault. The crime of attempt requires the Crown to establish the mens rea
to commit the crime in question. The intent to commit the crime of aggravated
assault is established for the period after November 15, 1991. As to the actus
reus, failure to prove endangerment of life was fatal to the prosecution in
this case of aggravated assault but it is not fatal to a conviction for
attempted aggravated assault. Clearly, W took more than preparatory steps. He
did everything he could to achieve the infection of the complainant by repeated
acts of unprotected intercourse for approximately one year between November 15,
1991 and November 1992, when the relationship ended. The reasonable doubt
about the timing of her actual infection was unknown to both partners. These
facts, established in the evidence, are sufficient to prove the attempt.
Cases Cited
Referred to: R. v.
Cuerrier, [1998] 2 S.C.R. 371; R. v. Godin, [1994] 2 S.C.R.
484; R. v. City of Sault Ste. Marie, [1978] 2 S.C.R. 1299; Sansregret
v. The Queen, [1985] 1 S.C.R. 570; R. v. Cooper, [1993] 1 S.C.R.
146; R. v. Droste (1979), 49 C.C.C. (2d) 52; R. v. Ewanchuk,
[1999] 1 S.C.R. 330; R. v. Leclerc (1991), 67 C.C.C. (3d) 563; R. v.
Brodie (1995), 60 B.C.A.C. 153; R. v. Dewey (1999), 132 C.C.C. (3d)
348; R. v. Ross, [1998] O.J. No. 3427 (QL); R. v. Vang (1999),
132 C.C.C. (3d) 32; R. v. DeSousa, [1992] 2 S.C.R. 944; R. v. Ancio,
[1984] 1 S.C.R. 225; United States of America v. Dynar, [1997] 2 S.C.R.
462.
Statutes and Regulations Cited
Criminal Code, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-46, ss. 24(1) , 220 , 221 , 249(3) , (4) , 255(2) ,
(3) , 265 , 267 (b), 268 , 271 , 272(1) (c), 273(1) , 430(2) , 433 (b),
463 (a), 660 .
Authors Cited
New Shorter Oxford English
Dictionary on Historical Principles, vol. 1.
Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1993, “endanger”.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Newfoundland and
Labrador Court of Appeal (2001), 205 Nfld. & P.E.I.R. 1, 158 C.C.C. (3d)
523, [2001] N.J. No. 274 (QL), 2001 NFCA 52, upholding the accused’s conviction
for common nuisance and setting aside his conviction for aggravated assault,
but substituting a conviction for attempted aggravated assault. Appeal
dismissed.
Rachel Huntsman, for
the appellant.
Derek J. Hogan, for the
respondent.
Susan Chapman and Dana
Peterson, for the intervener.
The judgment of the Court was delivered by
1
Binnie J. — The question
raised in this appeal is whether an accused who fails to disclose that he is
HIV-positive can be convicted of an aggravated assault endangering life by
engaging in unprotected sex with a complainant who, at the time of the alleged
assault, could herself have been infected with HIV.
2
The respondent acted with a shocking level of recklessness and
selfishness. There is no doubt that he committed a criminal assault on the
complainant, and further that he was guilty of an attempted aggravated
assault (as well as common nuisance). However, as was noted by the majority in
the Court of Appeal of Newfoundland and Labrador, aggravated assault, as
defined in s. 268(1) of the Criminal Code, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-46 , is
an offence based on proof of certain consequences. The courts below found, and
the Crown admits, that there exists a reasonable doubt that the assault in
question was capable of causing the life-threatening consequences
alleged in the indictment. The Crown is therefore unable to establish the actus
reus of that particular offence. Its appeal in that respect should
therefore be dismissed.
I. Facts
3
During their sexual affair that lasted for approximately 18 months,
which began when the complainant was 18 years old, the complainant and the
respondent engaged in numerous acts of vaginal intercourse and occasional
fellatio. Condoms were used on occasion; however, the complainant did not take
the usual precautions against pregnancy because the respondent had told her
that he had had a vasectomy.
4
The relationship began in June 1991. The Agreed Statement of Facts says
that “soon after”, the sexual activity began. Unfortunately, there is no
evidence about precisely when the first act of intercourse occurred, or the
approximate frequency of sexual intercourse over the ensuing 18-month period.
5
Unknown to the complainant, the respondent attended a medical clinic in
St. John’s for HIV testing on October 16, 1991. It seems his name was on a
list of former partners provided by an individual who had tested HIV-positive,
that is to say, was shown to be infected by the Human Immunodeficiency Virus.
He was told on November 15, 1991 that he too had tested HIV-positive. He was
given counselling on at least three different occasions by two doctors and a
nurse about HIV, its transmission, safer practices and his duty to disclose his
HIV status to sexual partners. The respondent says he was devastated by the
result of the test, but chose to follow none of the recommended safer practices
in his relationship with the complainant, whom he kept in the dark about his
HIV condition. He provided the names of two past sexual partners to the public
health authorities, but not the name of the complainant. In fact, as stated,
the complainant did not know the respondent had been tested.
6
The complainant took an HIV test on November 20, 1991. We do not know
who or what prompted this action. She tested negative for the virus and so
informed the respondent. Their sexual relationship continued for another year,
terminating for unrelated reasons in November 1992.
7
In the spring of 1994, the complainant attended a program called Skills
for Success. A guest speaker spoke on the subject of HIV and AIDS. The
complainant became concerned because she was displaying some of the symptoms of
HIV infection that were mentioned by the guest lecturer. This prompted her to
get a second test done. She was informed that she was HIV-positive on April
15, 1994.
8
When the complainant confronted the respondent with the result of her
test, he repeatedly and falsely denied that he had ever tested positive for
HIV.
9
When questioned as to whether she would have had sexual relations with
the respondent had she known that he was HIV-positive, the complainant’s
response as recorded in the Agreed Statement of Facts was: “At any point in my
life, no, I would not have had sex with somebody that’s HIV-positive.”
10
In the Agreed Statement of Facts, the respondent concedes that he “did
infect [the complainant] with HIV”. As to timing, the Crown conceded that “it
is possible that [the respondent] infected [the complainant] before
learning of his positive status” (emphasis added).
A. The Medical Evidence
11
The Agreed Statement of Facts sets out, inter alia, the following
attributes of HIV infection:
37. A single act of unprotected vaginal
intercourse carries a significant risk of HIV transmission.
38. To date, there is no cure for HIV infection.
The current approach to treatment is to use a combination of drugs to try and
control the virus. Even with treatment, HIV infection can still lead to
devastating illnesses with fatal consequences.
.
. .
40. Anti-body testing is still the primary way of
testing for HIV. . . .
41. . . . between seventy to ninety percent of
people develop the HIV antibodies within three months of infection.
Ninety-nine point nine percent of people will test positive for the HIV
antibodies within six months of infection. There have been some reports where
it has taken up to a year and even one report that [it took] eighteen months.
12
Accordingly, at the time the respondent found out that he was
HIV-positive, it is clear that he had already been a carrier of HIV for a
significant period of time.
13
Equally, although the complainant tested negative for HIV shortly
thereafter, she may well have been infected with HIV but not yet had time to
develop the antibodies that would disclose her condition in the test.
14
It was therefore at least doubtful that the complainant was free of HIV
infection at the time the respondent first discovered, and then concealed, his
HIV status on November 15, 1991.
B. Dr. Michael Bowmer’s Evidence
15
Dr. Bowmer, a physician with the Health Care Corporation, Infectious
Diseases and Internal Medicine, in St. John’s, was one of the specialist
doctors who counselled the respondent. In the course of his testimony at the
preliminary inquiry, Dr. Bowmer was asked whether one partner with HIV could
re-infect another partner who was already infected with HIV. He responded that
HIV “mutates very quickly” over a period of time and can produce in one partner
a drug-resistant strain. The mutant strain might then be transferred to the
other partner, thereby transmitting a drug-resistant strain of HIV to which an
HIV-positive complainant had not previously been exposed, with possibly lethal
consequences. Safer sex therefore continues to be important “because the
resistance of one virus in one person may occur at a different rate than the
resistance in another. And then the potential is that the person who is not
resistant [to drug therapy] receives the resistant strain.”
16
Dr. Bowmer was not called as a witness at trial, but a transcript of his
evidence at the preliminary inquiry was “adopted as a part of the facts of the
case”. The Crown did not pursue a “re-infection” theory either at trial or on
the appeal to the Newfoundland and Labrador Court of Appeal. The Crown did not
put forward the possibility suggested by Dr. Bowmer that a partner who was
already infected with HIV could nevertheless be re-infected with a “mutant” HIV
strain resistant to drugs, possibly because Dr. Bowmer himself conceded that
“we don’t know enough about the virus in an individual person to know how
rapidly one virus is mutating to a resistant strain”. No tests were done in
this respect on either the respondent or the complainant.
C. The Court Proceedings
17
The respondent was charged with aggravated assault, criminal negligence
causing bodily harm and common nuisance. The trial judge found the respondent
guilty of aggravated assault and common nuisance but not guilty of criminal
negligence causing bodily harm ((2000), 189 Nfld. & P.E.I.R. 156). On
appeal, the Court of Appeal unanimously dismissed the respondent’s appeal on
his conviction for common nuisance ((2001), 158 C.C.C. (3d) 523, 2001 NFCA
52). A majority of the Court of Appeal allowed the appeal against conviction
for aggravated assault, but substituted a conviction for attempted
aggravated assault.
18
Wells C.J.N. would have dismissed the appeal against conviction on the
charge of aggravated assault because in his view, the Crown should not be required
to “do the impossible” and prove, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the
complainant was not infected with HIV prior to November 15, 1991. In the
present state of medical science, this can never be proven. Recognition of
that uncertainty does not automatically constitute reasonable doubt as to
whether the respondent, on the basis of the standard set out in R. v.
Cuerrier, [1998] 2 S.C.R. 371, endangered the life of the
complainant. In the view of Wells C.J.N., the Crown had only to prove the
chance or possibility that the complainant was still HIV-free on November 15,
1991 for there to be a risk. While it can never be known whether the risk in
this case was low or medium or high, in his view the key is that there was a
risk. The Court, in Cuerrier, supra, specifically decided that
proof of actual harm was not required. It was sufficient to prove exposure to
risk.
II. Analysis
19
The exposure of an unwitting sexual partner to the risk of HIV
infection, through a deliberate deception, is the stuff of nightmares, yet
cases of such misconduct now regularly come before the courts.
20
There is no doubt that the respondent’s conduct was criminal. He stands
convicted of attempted aggravated assault (maximum penalty of seven years) and
common nuisance (maximum penalty of two years).
21
The Crown is not satisfied with the conviction on attempted
aggravated assault. The Crown’s view is that the respondent should be
convicted on the greater offence of aggravated assault itself.
22
The mens rea for aggravated assault is the mens rea for
assault (intent to apply force intentionally or recklessly or being wilfully
blind to the fact that the victim does not consent) plus objective foresight of
the risk of bodily harm: R. v. Godin, [1994] 2 S.C.R. 484, at p. 485,
and Cuerrier, supra, at para. 95. There is no dispute that,
in this case, this mental element of aggravated assault has been proven beyond
a reasonable doubt.
23
The central issue in this case, therefore, is whether, having charged
the respondent with aggravated assault, the Crown was able to prove all
of the requisite elements of the actus reus of that particular crime,
which is defined in s. 268(1) of the Criminal Code as follows:
268. (1) Every one commits an aggravated
assault who wounds, maims, disfigures or endangers the life of the complainant.
24
Prosecution of that particular offence, which has as its focus the consequences
of the assault, is complicated in this case by the “window” of uncertain
duration between an individual contracting HIV and the ability of the medical
authorities (at least in 1991) to test for it. The respondent seeks to exploit
this window of uncertainty in two respects. Firstly, he says the complainant
consented at all times during their relationship to unprotected sexual
intercourse. Based on his interpretation of Cuerrier, supra, he
says that her consent to unprotected sex after November 15, 1991 was not
vitiated by his deception. Therefore, he argues, not only was there no
aggravated assault, there was no assault at all.
25
Secondly, he says the Crown is unable to prove an essential element of
the offence of aggravated assault, namely that the respondent’s sexual conduct
after knowing he had tested HIV-positive endangered the complainant’s life.
The Crown, he says, is unable to prove the actus reus of one of the
particular offences it chose to prosecute.
26
I think the respondent’s first point is based on an erroneous
interpretation of Cuerrier, but that he is entitled to succeed, based on
the Agreed Statement of Facts, on his second point.
A. The Critical Date – November 15, 1991
27
The most important date in this case is November 15, 1991. On that
date, the respondent learned that he was HIV-positive. I do not overlook the
possibility that prior to November 15, 1991 he might have anticipated at least
the risk of an HIV-positive outcome, perhaps by October 16, 1991 when he was
called in for the test, but we have no satisfactory proof of that. The
critical date for the purpose of establishing fraud to vitiate consent (Criminal
Code, s. 265(3) (c)) is when the respondent had sufficient awareness
of his HIV-positive status that he can be said to have acted “intentionally or
recklessly, with knowledge of the facts constituting the offence, or with
wilful blindness toward them” (R. v. City of Sault Ste. Marie, [1978] 2
S.C.R. 1299, at p. 1309). In this context, the distinction between
recklessness and wilful blindness could be important:
Wilful blindness is distinct from recklessness
because, while recklessness involves knowledge of a danger or risk and
persistence in a course of conduct which creates a risk that the
prohibited result will occur, wilful blindness arises where a person who has
become aware of the need for some inquiry declines to make the inquiry because
he does not wish to know the truth. He would prefer to remain ignorant.
[Emphasis added.]
(Sansregret v. The Queen, [1985] 1 S.C.R. 570, at p. 584, per
McIntyre J.)
28
Once an individual becomes aware of a risk that he or she has contracted
HIV, and hence that his or her partner’s consent has become an issue, but
nevertheless persists in unprotected sex that creates a risk of further HIV
transmission without disclosure to his or her partner, recklessness is
established.
29
In the present case, however, the Agreed Statement of Facts does not
permit us to draw any firm conclusions about the state of the respondent’s
awareness of the danger, or even the risk of the danger of HIV infection
prior to November 15, beyond the bare fact that he was asked to take a test.
We have almost no knowledge of the circumstances.
30
Giving the respondent the benefit of the doubt, I therefore propose to
use November 15, 1991 as the date when, clearly, he knew that he was
HIV-positive and, moreover, had been warned by the doctors that sexual
intercourse with an unprotected partner could have potentially lethal
consequences for her, but nevertheless persisted.
31
For purposes of this case, it makes no difference whether the critical
date is October 16 or November 15, 1991. In the Agreed Statement of Facts, at
para. 46, the Crown acknowledged that the complainant might have become
infected with HIV as early as August 1991:
. . . it is possible that [the respondent] infected [the complainant]
before learning of his positive status. [The complainant]’s negative test
result may have been within [the complainant]’s “window period” in that when
[the complainant] was tested on November 20, 1991 her body had not yet produced
the HIV antibodies which the test is designed to detect. It is possible that
on November 20, 1991, [the complainant] was incubating the virus and her body
had not yet made the antibody, and thereby if present, it was undetectable. It
is possible that she may have been infected in August, 1991, but not tested
HIV-positive on November 20, 1991.
32
The trial judge said the complainant’s negative test of November 20,
1991 is “the best evidence we have of her status at that time” (para. 26), but,
with respect, this statement flew in the face of all the medical evidence about
the duration of “the window” of incubation between the infection and
testability contained in the Agreed Statement of Facts. At the very least,
there is a reasonable doubt about when she was first infected with HIV.
33
The Court of Appeal thought the evidence showed it likely that
the complainant was infected with HIV prior to November 15, 1991. I agree.
34
Although the respondent was deceitful after November 15, 1991, the Crown
concedes that it cannot show that sexual activity after that date harmed the
complainant, or even exposed her to a significant risk of harm, because at that
point she was possibly, and perhaps likely, already infected with HIV.
B. The Necessary Concurrence of Intent and
Endangerment
35
To constitute a crime “at some point the actus reus and the mens
rea or intent must coincide”: R. v. Cooper, [1993] 1 S.C.R. 146, at
p. 157. See also R. v. Droste (1979), 49 C.C.C. (2d) 52 (Ont. C.A.), at
pp. 53-54. Here, however, before November 15, 1991, there was an endangerment
but no intent; after November 15, 1991, there was an intent but at the very
least a reasonable doubt about the existence of any endangerment. Therein lies
the essence of the Crown’s problem in this case.
C. The Consent Issue
36
The absence of consent is an essential element of any assault. I
reproduce for convenience the relevant Criminal Code provisions:
265. (1) A person commits an assault when
(a) without the consent of another person, he applies
force intentionally to that other person, directly or indirectly;
.
. .
(3) For the purposes of this section, no consent
is obtained where the complainant submits or does not resist by reason of
.
. .
(c) fraud; or [Emphasis added.]
37
The meaning of consent in the assault context was recently considered by
the Court in R. v. Ewanchuk, [1999] 1 S.C.R. 330, at paras. 26-27, per
Major J.:
The absence of consent, however, is subjective and
determined by reference to the complainant’s subjective internal state of
mind towards the touching, at the time it occurred . . . .
Confusion has arisen from time to time on the meaning
of consent as an element of the actus reus of sexual assault. Some of
this confusion has been caused by the word “consent” itself. A number of
commentators have observed that the notion of consent connotes active behaviour
. . . . While this may be true in the general use of the word, for the
purposes of determining the absence of consent as an element of the actus
reus, the actual state of mind of the complainant is determinative. At
this point, the trier of fact is only concerned with the complainant’s
perspective. The approach is purely subjective. [Emphasis added.]
38
There is no doubt that the complainant did not subjectively consent to
unprotected sex with an HIV-positive partner. She so testified and there is no
reason to doubt her. Following November 15, 1991, the respondent knew, but the
complainant did not, that he was HIV-positive. Each act of unprotected sex
exposed her to the lethal virus. There is nothing whatsoever in the evidence
to suggest that the complainant, believing rightly or wrongly that she was
HIV-free, consented to run such a risk.
39
In Cuerrier, supra, an HIV-positive accused had, as had
the respondent in this case, engaged in unprotected sex with two complainants
without disclosing his infection. However, unlike here, the complainants in Cuerrier
did not become infected with HIV. Cory J. held, at para. 127:
Without disclosure of HIV status there cannot be a
true consent. The consent cannot simply be to have sexual intercourse. Rather
it must be consent to have intercourse with a partner who is HIV-positive.
True consent cannot be given if there has not been a disclosure by the accused
of his HIV-positive status. A consent that is not based upon knowledge of the
significant relevant factors is not a valid consent.
In that case,
sex with the accused had put the complainants at significant risk to their
health. This was sufficient to vitiate their consent to sexual intercourse.
40
The Cuerrier principle, reproduced above, applies here. The
complainant never consented to have sexual intercourse with a partner who was
HIV-positive. As of November 15, 1991, at the latest, he knew he was
HIV-positive and she did not. The unexpected revelation to the complainant in
1994 that she might already have been infected by the respondent prior to
November 15, 1991, could have had no possible retroactive effect on her mental
state at the time of the relationship more than two years earlier. At all relevant
times, she believed that both she and the respondent were HIV-free.
That is enough to reject the respondent’s argument on consent.
D. Proof of the Consequences of an Assault
Is an Essential Element of Aggravated Assault
41
The requirements of an aggravated assault include those of the assault
itself plus, as mentioned, certain listed consequences:
268. (1) Every one commits an aggravated
assault who wounds, maims, disfigures or endangers the life of the complainant.
The
prosecution must establish all of the elements of an assault plus the
aggravating circumstance.
42
In R. v. Leclerc (1991), 67 C.C.C. (3d) 563 (Ont. C.A.),
Lacourcière J.A. wrote for the court, at pp. 567-68:
The case-law interpreting the sections quoted [ss.
265 and 268 ] makes it clear that the essential intent required for an assault,
as defined, remains the same for all forms of assault, including aggravated
assault. Parliament intended that the severity of the punishment should
increase to reflect the more serious consequences of the assault.
[Emphasis added.]
43
In Godin, supra, Cory J. stated, at p. 485, “[t]he section
pertains to an assault that has the consequences of wounding, maiming or
disfiguring” (emphasis added) or (to complete the list) endangering life.
“Endanger” means to “[p]ut in danger . . . put in peril . . . [i]ncur the
risk”: New Shorter Oxford English Dictionary on Historical
Principles (1993), vol. 1, at p. 816. As to the focus on consequences, see
generally R. v. Brodie (1995), 60 B.C.A.C. 153, at para. 4; R. v.
Dewey (1999), 132 C.C.C. (3d) 348 (Alta. C.A.), at para. 9; and R. v.
Ross, [1998] O.J. No. 3427 (QL) (Gen. Div.), at para. 23. See also R.
v. Vang (1999), 132 C.C.C. (3d) 32 (Ont. C.A.), at para. 12.
44
Section 268(1) is only one of a number of Criminal Code
provisions that “call for a more serious charge if certain consequences
follow”: R. v. DeSousa, [1992] 2 S.C.R. 944, at p. 966. These include
criminal negligence causing bodily harm (s. 221 ), criminal negligence causing
death (s. 220 ), dangerous operation causing bodily harm (s. 249(3) ), dangerous
operation causing death (s. 249(4) ), impaired driving causing bodily harm (s.
255(2) ), impaired driving causing death (s. 255(3) ), assault causing bodily
harm (s. 267 (b)), aggravated assault (s. 268 ), sexual assault causing
bodily harm (s. 272(1) (c)), aggravated sexual assault (s. 273(1) ),
mischief causing danger to life (s. 430(2) ) and arson causing bodily harm (s.
433 (b)).
45
The “aggravation” in aggravated assault thus comes from the
consequences. In DeSousa itself, the Court held, at pp. 966-67, per
Sopinka J.:
No principle of fundamental justice prevents Parliament from treating
crimes with certain consequences as more serious than crimes which lack those
consequences.
.
. .
The same act of assault may injure one person but not another.
The implicit rationale of the law in this area is that it is acceptable to
distinguish between criminal responsibility for equally reprehensible acts on
the basis of the harm that is actually caused. . . . [Emphasis added.]
46
The same act of sexual assault by an HIV-positive accused would
undoubtedly injure or put at risk many potential partners but if, because of a
complainant’s particular circumstances, she was not put in harm’s way by the
assault charged, there is no aggravated assault. By way of further
illustration, the gunman who fires a shot into a sleeping figure intending to
kill him is not guilty of murder if, in fact, the intended victim had already
died of natural causes.
47
I therefore agree with the majority of the Court of Appeal of
Newfoundland and Labrador that proof of endangerment of the complainant’s life
was an essential element of the prosecution’s case for aggravated assault.
E. The Contrary View of the Trial Judge
48
In the present case, the trial judge reviewed in some detail the
judgment in Cuerrier and acknowledged, at para. 12:
The essence of what Cory J. wrote was that having
unprotected sex with someone who is HIV-positive is inherently risky, that by
its nature it endangers. The unique situation where it is not risky, where
it does not endanger, is where infection has already occurred. [Emphasis
added.]
Having said
that, however, he found the respondent guilty of aggravated assault because
having unprotected sex with someone who is HIV-positive is inherently
risky . . . by its nature it endangers. [Emphasis added.]
49
The trial judge erred, with respect, in switching the focus from the consequences
of the assault to the nature of the assault (“by its nature it endangers”).
There are several provisions of the Criminal Code that differentiate
charges on the basis of the nature of the assault, e.g., s. 271 (sexual
assault), but s. 268 (aggravated assault) is not one of them. Under that
section, the court is directed by Parliament to focus on the consequences.
F. The Dissenting View of Wells C.J.N.
50
Wells C.J.N., in his dissent, took a position intermediate between his
colleagues and the trial judge. Unlike the trial judge, he agreed, at para.
109, that the gist of the charge lay in the consequences:
Clearly, if the evidence established, with
certainty, that the complainant was infected by the [respondent] (or anyone
else) prior to November 15, 1991, the [respondent] could not be found guilty on
the charge because, being already infected, the complainant was no longer in a
condition where she could be exposed to risk of such infection,
subsequent to the [respondent] discovering he was HIV positive. She could not
become more infected. [Emphasis in original.]
51
He also agreed that the evidence raised a reasonable doubt as to whether
the complainant was already infected as a result of unprotected sexual
intercourse with the respondent prior to November 15, 1991, but “[b]eyond
question”, he said, “it is possible that the complainant was not
infected at the time that the [respondent] learned he was HIV-positive” (para.
116 (emphasis in original)).
52
Thus, unlike Welsh J.A., he concluded that if there was a possibility
that the complainant was not infected on November 15, 1991, then she
should be considered at risk or endangerment.
53
With respect, this amounts to saying that a reasonable doubt about the
existence of the consequences required by s. 268(1) enures to the benefit of
the Crown. An accused would be entitled to an acquittal only if it were
established that the complainant was “with certainty” (Wells C.J.N.’s words)
infected with HIV on November 15, 1991. This amounts to a reversal of the onus
of proof on a central element of the actus reus of the offence, namely
that the complainant was in fact put in harm’s way by the assault in question rather
than by antecedent sexual activities which, while lethal, were committed
without the requisite mens rea.
G. The Refutation of “The Paradox”
54
Both the trial judge and the members of the Court of Appeal expressed
concern about the seeming paradox that in Cuerrier the accused, who did not
infect the complainants, was held guilty of aggravated assault whereas here,
the respondent, who did infect the complainant, was acquitted of
aggravated assault. The paradox is resolved, however, when it is recognized
that in Cuerrier, the accused was deceitful about his HIV status from
the beginning of the sexual relationship whereas here, at the likely time of
the complainant’s HIV infection, she was freely engaging in unprotected sex
with a partner who was unaware of his own HIV condition and certainly unaware
that he was placing the complainant at risk. As noted in DeSousa, supra,
at pp. 966-67:
Conduct may fortuitously result in more or less
serious consequences depending on the circumstances in which the consequences
arise.
55
If the Crown wishes to allege an offence predicated on an aggravating
consequence, the Crown must prove the consequence beyond a reasonable doubt.
56
There is no doubt that the complex pathology of HIV creates difficulties
in a prosecution for aggravated assault. Other charges could have been laid:
sexual assault, for example.
57
The differing results in Cuerrier and this case simply reflect
the different factual circumstances. The conduct of this respondent after
November 15, 1991 is no less reprehensible. The abuse of the complainant’s
trust, the obtaining of her consent by deceit, and the sexual activity itself
are all common to both cases. The difference here is that, unknown to the
respondent at the time, there was a reasonable doubt on the evidence that the
life of the complainant was capable of being endangered after November
15, 1991 by re-exposure to a virus she had likely already acquired.
58
Section 268(1) applies to a wide variety of human activity, and its
interpretation should not be skewed to accommodate the hard facts of this
case. Its focus should continue to be, as in the past, on the nature of the
consequences rather than on the nature of the assault.
59
I would therefore affirm the acquittal of the respondent on the charge
of aggravated assault.
H. The Conviction for Attempted
Aggravated Assault
60
The Crown was able to prove every element of the offence of aggravated
assault except for one element of the actus reus: the endangerment of
life.
61
The following provisions of the Criminal Code are relevant:
24. (1) Every one who, having an intent to
commit an offence, does or omits to do anything for the purpose of carrying out
the intention is guilty of an attempt to commit the offence whether or not
it was possible under the circumstances to commit the offence. [Emphasis
added.]
265. (1) A person commits an assault when
(a) without the consent of another person, he applies force
intentionally to that other person, directly or indirectly;
660. Where the complete commission of an
offence charged is not proved but the evidence establishes an attempt to commit
the offence, the accused may be convicted of the attempt.
62
The crime of attempt, as with any offence, requires the Crown to
establish that the accused intended to commit the crime in question: R.
v. Ancio, [1984] 1 S.C.R. 225, at pp. 247-48. The requisite intent is
established here for the period after November 15, 1991. The respondent,
knowing at that time that he was HIV-positive, engaged in unprotected sex with
the complainant intending her thereby to be exposed to the lethal consequences
of HIV. The evidence showed that he had been fully counselled by two doctors
and a nurse on all relevant aspects of the potential result of unprotected sex.
63
With regard to the actus reus, the Crown established beyond a
reasonable doubt every element of a sexual assault. There was (i) physical
contact inflicted by the respondent on the complainant (ii) of a sexual nature
(iii) without valid consent: Ewanchuk, supra, at para. 25. In
this case, the Crown alleged “simple” aggravated assault (s. 268(1) ) rather
than aggravated sexual assault (s. 273(1) ). While the former is
included in the latter, the maximum penalty on a conviction for attempted
aggravated sexual assault is 14 years (s. 463 (a)), i.e., the same
as for a conviction of aggravated assault simpliciter.
64
Failure to prove endangerment of life was fatal to the prosecution in
this case of aggravated assault but it is not fatal to a conviction for attempted
aggravated assault. Clearly, the respondent took more than preparatory steps.
He did everything he could to achieve the infection of the complainant by
repeated acts of intercourse for approximately one year between November 15,
1991 and November 1992 when the relationship ended. The reasonable doubt about
the timing of her actual infection was the product of circumstances quite
extraneous to the respondent’s post-November 15, 1991 conduct.
65
These facts, established in the evidence, are sufficient to prove the
attempt. As the Court explained in the United States of America v. Dynar,
[1997] 2 S.C.R. 462, at paras. 73-74, per Cory and Iacobucci JJ.:
An accused is guilty of an attempt if he intends to commit a crime and
takes legally sufficient steps towards its commission. Because an attempt is
in its very nature an incomplete substantive offence, it will always be the
case that the actus reus of the completed offence will be deficient, and
sometimes this will be because an attendant circumstance is lacking. . . .
. . . The law of attempt is engaged only when, as in this case, the mens
rea of the completed offence is present entirely and the actus reus
of it is present in an incomplete but more-than-merely-preparatory way.
66
Here the actus reus of aggravated assault “is present in an
incomplete but more-than-merely-preparatory way” (Dynar, supra,
at para. 74). The respondent therefore stands properly convicted of attempted
aggravated assault.
I. The Medical Evidence in Future Cases
67
This case was argued on the basis of an Agreed Statement of Facts
supplemented by the transcript of Dr. Bowmer, who raised but was not really
asked to explore the potential medical consequences of unprotected sex between
HIV-infected partners.
68
The Court of Appeal acknowledged the possibility of proof that
“regardless of the infection, there was a significant risk to the complainant’s
life” (para. 45).
This could be accomplished by, for example, evidence
that the risk is increased by multiple exposures to the virus. In the absence
of evidence to the contrary, the reasonable inference would be that, once an
individual was infected with the virus, further exposure would not increase the
risk to life. [para. 46]
69
On the facts of this case, however, Welsh J.A. concluded, at
para. 36, that:
There is no evidence to establish that unprotected intercourse at that
stage could expose her to a significant risk of serious bodily harm.
70
Nothing in these reasons is intended to foreclose the possibility that
in a future case the hypothesis raised by Dr. Bowmer could be properly explored
in the evidence, and, depending on the findings of fact, lead to a different
outcome with respect to a finding of endangerment.
III. Conclusion
71
I would therefore affirm the respondent’s convictions for attempted
aggravated assault and common nuisance. I would dismiss the Crown’s appeal
with respect to the charge of aggravated assault.
Appeal dismissed.
Solicitor for the appellant: Department of Justice, St. John’s,
Newfoundland and Labrador.
Solicitor for the respondent: Newfoundland Legal Aid Commission,
St. John’s, Newfoundland and Labrador.
Solicitor for the intervener: Ministry of the Attorney General of Ontario,
Toronto.