Little Sisters Book and Art Emporium v.
Canada (Minister of Justice), [2000] 2 S.C.R. 1120
Little Sisters Book and Art Emporium,
B.C. Civil Liberties Association,
James
Eaton Deva and Guy Allen Bruce Smythe Appellants
v.
The Minister of Justice and Attorney
General of Canada,
the Minister of National Revenue and
the
Attorney General of British Columbia Respondents
and
The Attorney General for Ontario,
the Canadian AIDS Society,
the Canadian Civil Liberties
Association,
the Canadian Conference of the Arts,
EGALE Canada Inc.,
Equality Now, PEN Canada and
the
Women’s Legal Education and Action Fund (LEAF) Interveners
Indexed as: Little Sisters
Book and Art Emporium v. Canada (Minister of Justice)
Neutral citation: 2000 SCC
69.
File No.: 26858.
2000: March 16; 2000: December 15.
Present: McLachlin C.J. and L’Heureux‑Dubé, Gonthier, Iacobucci, Major, Bastarache, Binnie,
Arbour and LeBel JJ.
on appeal from the court of appeal for
british columbia
Constitutional law – Charter of Rights – Freedom of expression
– Customs and excise – Importation of
obscene goods – Customs legislation providing for interception and exclusion of
obscene goods and setting out administrative review process – Legislation placing onus on importer to establish that goods are
not obscene ‑‑ Gay and lesbian bookstore importing erotica from
United States – Customs officials wrongly delaying, confiscating or prohibiting
materials imported by bookstore on numerous occasions – Whether Customs legislation infringes freedom of expression ‑‑
If so, whether infringement justifiable –
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, ss. 1 , 2 (b) ‑‑
Customs Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. 1 (2nd Supp .), ss. 58 , 71 , 152(3) ‑‑
Customs Tariff, R.S.C., 1985, c. 41 (3rd Supp.), Schedule VII, Code
9956(a).
Constitutional law – Charter of Rights – Equality rights – Customs and excise – Importation of
obscene goods – Customs legislation providing for interception and exclusion of
obscene goods and setting out administrative review process – Gay and lesbian bookstore importing erotica from United
States – Customs officials wrongly delaying, confiscating or prohibiting
materials imported by bookstore on numerous occasions – Whether Customs legislation infringes equality rights – Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, s. 15 .
Customs and excise – Importation of obscene goods –
Customs legislation providing for interception and exclusion of obscene goods
and setting out administrative review process –
Gay and lesbian bookstore importing erotica from United States – Customs officials wrongly delaying, confiscating or prohibiting
materials imported by bookstore on numerous occasions – Whether Customs legislation infringes freedom of expression or
equality rights – Customs Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. 1 (2nd Supp .), ss. 58 , 71 ‑‑
Customs Tariff, R.S.C., 1985, c. 41 (3rd Supp.), Schedule VII, Code
9956(a).
The appellant bookstore,
of which the individual appellants are the directors and controlling
shareholders, carried a specialized inventory catering to the gay and lesbian
community which consisted largely of books that included gay and lesbian
literature, travel information, general interest periodicals, academic studies
related to homosexuality, AIDS/HIV safe‑sex advisory material and gay and
lesbian erotica. Since its establishment in 1983, the store has imported 80 to
90 percent of its erotica from the United States. Code 9956(a) of
Schedule VII of the Customs Tariff prohibits the importation of “[b]ooks, printed paper, drawings, paintings, prints, photographs or
representations of any kind that . . . are deemed to be obscene under
subsection 163(8) of the Criminal Code ”. At the
entry level, Customs inspectors determine the appropriate tariff
classification, pursuant to s. 58 of the Customs Act . The
classification exercise under Code 9956 largely consists of the Customs
inspector making a comparison of the imported materials with the illustrated
manual accompanying Memorandum D9‑1‑1, which describes the type of
materials deemed obscene by Customs. At the relevant time, an item considered “obscene” and thus prohibited was subject (under s. 60 of the Act) to a re‑determination
upon request, by a specialized Customs unit, and upon a further appeal subject
to a further re‑determination by the Deputy Minister or designate. Once
these administrative measures have been exhausted, an importer may appeal the
prohibition under s. 67 of the Act to a judge of the superior court of the
province where the material was seized, with a further appeal on a question of
law to the Federal Court of Canada, and then with leave to the Supreme Court of
Canada. Section 152(3) provides that in any proceeding under the Act the
burden of proof in any question in relation to the compliance with the Act or
the regulations in respect of any goods lies on the importer.
After a lengthy trial the
trial judge found not only that the Customs officials had wrongly delayed,
confiscated, destroyed, damaged, prohibited or misclassified materials imported
by the appellant bookstore on numerous occasions, but that these errors were
caused by the “systemic targeting” of the store’s importations. He concluded that the Customs legislation infringed
s. 2 (b) of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms , but
was justified under s. 1 . Although he denied a remedy under s. 52(1)
of the Constitution Act, 1982 , the trial judge issued a declaration
under s. 24(1) of the Charter that the Customs legislation had at
times been construed and applied in a manner contrary to ss. 2 (b)
and 15(1) of the Charter . The Court of Appeal, in a majority judgment,
dismissed the appellants’ appeal.
Held (Iacobucci, Arbour and LeBel JJ. dissenting in part): The
appeal should be allowed in part. The “reverse
onus” provision under s. 152(3) of the Customs Act cannot
constitutionally apply to put on the importer the onus of disproving
obscenity. An importer has a Charter right to receive expressive
material unless the state can justify its denial.
Per McLachlin C.J. and L’Heureux‑Dubé, Gonthier,
Major, Bastarache and Binnie JJ.: The interpretation given to
s. 163(8) of the Criminal Code in Butler does not
discriminate against the gay and lesbian community. The national community
standard of tolerance relates to harm, not taste, and is restricted to conduct
which society formally recognizes as incompatible with its proper functioning.
While it is true that under s. 163(8) the “community
standard” is identified by a jury or a judge sitting alone, a concern for
minority expression is one of the principal factors that led to adoption of the
national community test in Butler in the first place. The Canadian
community specifically recognized in the Charter that equality (and with
it, the protection of sexual minorities) is one of the fundamental values of
Canadian society. The standard of tolerance of this same Canadian community
for obscenity cannot reasonably be interpreted as seeking to suppress sexual
expression in the gay and lesbian community in a discriminatory way. Butler
validates a broad range of sexually explicit expression as non‑harmful.
The Constitution does not
prohibit border inspections. Any border inspection may involve detention and,
because Customs officials are only human, erroneous determinations. If
Parliament can prohibit obscenity, and Butler held that it had validly
done so, the prohibitions can be imposed at the border as well as within the
country. The only expressive material that Parliament has authorized Customs
to prohibit as obscene is material that is, by definition, the subject of
criminal penalties for those who are engaged in its production or trafficking
(or have possession of it for those purposes). The concern with prior
restraint operates in such circumstances, if at all, with much reduced
importance. It was open to Parliament in creating this type of government
machinery to lay out the broad outline in the legislation and to leave its
implementation to regulation by the Governor in Council or departmental
procedures established under the authority of the Minister. A failure at the
implementation level, which clearly existed here, can be addressed at the
implementation level. There is no constitutional rule that requires Parliament
to deal with Customs treatment of constitutionally protected expressive
material by legislation rather than by way of regulation or even by ministerial
directive or departmental practice. Parliament is entitled to proceed on the
basis that its enactments will be applied constitutionally by the public
service.
If Customs does not make
a tariff classification within 30 days the importer’s
classification applies. The 30‑day decision period was an important
protection inserted in the Customs Act for the benefit of importers. The
evidence demonstrated that Customs, because of scarce resources or otherwise,
failed to carry out the classification exercise sometimes for many months.
These deficiencies could clearly have been addressed by regulatory provisions
made under s. 164(1) (j) of the Customs Act or ministerial
directions to Customs officials.
The requirement in
s. 60(3) of the Act that a re‑determination of a tariff
classification be made with “all due dispatch” must be given content. The original determination must be made
within 30 days and there is no evidence that the re‑determination should
take longer. The trial judge found that some requests for re‑determination
under s. 63 took more than a year for decision. Such a delay is not in
accordance with the Act.
A court is the proper
forum for resolution of an allegation of obscenity. The department at that
stage has had the opportunity to determine whether it can establish on a
balance of probabilities that the expressive material is obscene. The court is
equipped to hear evidence, including evidence of artistic merit, and to apply
the law. The absence of procedures for taking evidence at the departmental
level requires the appeal to the court in obscenity matters to be interpreted
as an appeal by way of a trial de novo.
It was clearly open to
the trial judge to find, as he did, that the appellants suffered differential
treatment when compared to importers of heterosexually explicit material, let
alone more general bookstores that carried at least some of the same titles as
the appellant bookstore. Moreover, while sexual orientation is not mentioned
explicitly in s. 15 of the Charter , it is clearly an analogous
ground to the listed personal characteristics. The appellants were entitled to
the equal benefit of a fair and open customs procedure, and because they
imported gay and lesbian erotica, which was and is perfectly lawful, they were
adversely affected in comparison to other individuals importing comparable
publications of a heterosexual nature. On a more general level, there was no
evidence that homosexual erotica is proportionately more likely to be obscene
than heterosexual erotica. It therefore cannot be said that there was any
legitimate correspondence between the ground of alleged discrimination (sexual
orientation) and the reality of the appellants’
circumstances (importers of books and other publications including, but by no
means limited to, gay and lesbian erotica). There was ample evidence to
support the trial judge's conclusion that the adverse treatment meted out by
Canada Customs to the appellants violated their legitimate sense of self‑worth
and human dignity. The Customs treatment was high‑handed and dismissive
of the appellants' right to receive lawful expressive material which they had
every right to import.
While here it is the
interests of the gay and lesbian community that were targeted, other vulnerable
groups may similarly be at risk from overzealous censorship. The appellant bookstore
was targeted because it was considered “different”. On a more general level, it is fundamentally unacceptable that
expression which is free within the country can become stigmatized and harassed
by government officials simply because it crosses an international boundary,
and is thereby brought within the bailiwick of the Customs department. The
appellants’ constitutional right to receive perfectly lawful gay and lesbian
erotica should not be diminished by the fact their suppliers are, for the most
part, located in the United States. Their freedom of expression does not stop
at the border.
The source of the s.
15(1) Charter violation is not the Customs legislation itself. There is
nothing on the face of the Customs legislation, or in its necessary effects,
which contemplates or encourages differential treatment based on sexual
orientation. The definition of obscenity operates without distinction between
homosexual and heterosexual erotica. The differentiation was made here at the
administrative level in the implementation of the legislation. A large measure
of discretion is granted in the administration of the Act, from the level of
the Customs official up to the Minister, but it is well established that such
discretion must be exercised in accordance with the Charter . Many of
the systemic problems identified by the trial judge in the department’s treatment of potentially obscene imports might have been dealt
with by institutional arrangements implemented by regulation, but this was not
done. However, the fact that a regulatory power lies unexercised provides no
basis in attacking the validity of the statute that conferred it.
As conceded by the Crown,
the Customs legislation infringes s. 2 (b) of the Charter .
With the exception of the reverse onus provision in s. 152(3) of the Customs
Act , however, the legislation constitutes a reasonable limit prescribed by
law which the Crown has justified under s. 1 of the Charter . The Customs
Tariff prohibition is not void for vagueness or uncertainty, and is
therefore validly “prescribed by law”. Parliament’s legislative objective, which is to prevent Canada from being
inundated with obscene material from abroad, is pressing and substantial, and
Customs procedures are rationally connected to that objective. Moreover, the
basic statutory scheme set forth in the Customs legislation, properly
implemented by the government within the powers granted by Parliament, was
capable of being administered with minimal impairment of the s. 2 (b)
rights of importers, apart from the reverse onus provision. Customs officials
have no authority to deny entry to sexually explicit material unless it comes
within the narrow category of pornography that Parliament has validly criminalized
as obscene. With respect to lawful publications, the interference sanctioned
by Parliament was limited to the delay, cost and aggravation inherent in
inspection, classification and release procedures.
Per Iacobucci, Arbour and LeBel JJ. (dissenting in part): The
majority’s conclusion that the Butler test does not distinguish
between materials based on the sexual orientation of the individuals involved or
characters depicted is agreed with. The Butler test applies equally to
heterosexual, homosexual and bisexual materials. The use of national
community standards as the arbiter of what materials are harmful, and therefore
obscene, remains the proper approach. There is also agreement with the majority’s conclusions that the harm‑based
approach is not merely morality in disguise and that the Butler test
does apply to written materials, although it will be very difficult to make the
case of obscenity against a book.
The application of the
Customs legislation has discriminated against gays and lesbians in a manner
that violated s. 15 of the Charter . The Customs legislation does
not itself violate s. 15(1) , however, for the reasons given by the
majority. While it is arguable that pornographic materials play a more
important role in the gay and lesbian communities, gays and lesbians remain
able to access pornographic materials that do not create a substantial risk of
harm. Therefore legislation banning obscenity alone has no adverse effects,
and it is unnecessary to proceed with the rest of the analysis prescribed under
Law.
As properly conceded by
the respondents, the Customs legislation, as applied to books,
magazines, and other expressive materials, violates the appellants’ rights under s. 2 (b)
of the Charter . The legislation has been administered
in an unconstitutional manner, but it is the legislation itself, and not only
its application, that is responsible for the constitutional violations. Given
the extensive record of Charter violations, there must be sufficient
safeguards in the legislative
scheme itself to ensure that government action will not infringe
constitutional rights. The
issue is not solely whether the Customs legislation is capable of being applied
constitutionally. Instead, the crucial consideration
is that the legislation makes no reasonable effort to ensure that it will be
applied constitutionally to expressive materials. The government has provided
little reason to believe that reforms at the implementation level will
adequately protect the expressive rights involved or that any such reforms will
not be dependent on exemplary conduct by Customs officials to avoid future
violations of constitutional rights. Furthermore, it is not just the rough and ready border
screening procedure that has been responsible for these
constitutional infirmities, but the entire system by which these screening
decisions are reviewed.
The government’s burden under s. 1 of the Charter
is to justify the actual infringement on rights occasioned by the impugned
legislation, not simply that occasioned by some hypothetical ideal of the
legislation. Examining such a hypothetical ideal runs the risk of allowing
even egregious violations of Charter rights to go unaddressed.
Obviously any substantive standard for obscenity will have difficulties in
application, regardless of the
institutional setting in which it is applied. This will not necessarily
be cause for concern. Where, however, the challenge is to the
procedures by which the law is enforced, the fact that far more materials are
prohibited than intended is extremely relevant. Many of the items
seized in this case were eventually determined not to be obscene. These
wrongfully detained items clearly engaged the values underlying the guarantee
of free expression in s. 2 (b). While a more
deferential approach is appropriate where, as here, the government is mediating
between competing groups as a social policy maker, the Court cannot abdicate
its duty to demand that the government justify legislation limiting Charter
rights.
The substantive
standard for obscenity set out in s. 163(8) of the Criminal Code ,
as applied by Customs, is an intelligible standard, and the limit on Charter
rights is thus prescribed by law. The objective of the
Customs legislation, which is to limit the importation of obscene materials
into the country, is pressing and substantial. Preventing obscene materials
from ever entering the country is a rational means of protecting society from
harm. In light of the Customs legislation’s
failure to acknowledge effectively the unique Charter concerns raised
by expressive materials, however, it is not minimally intrusive. The only
accommodation made for expressive materials is that their review under
s. 67 is done by a superior court rather than by the Canadian
International Trade Tribunal. This is insufficient to safeguard the fundamental Charter rights
at stake. The sheer number of contested prohibitions, and the cost of
challenging them through the various levels of administrative review, makes it
completely impracticable for the appellants to contest each one of them up to
the s. 67 level.
The protection of
expressive freedom is central to the social and political discourse in our
country. If such a fundamental right is to be restricted, it must be done with
care. This is particularly the case when the nature of the interference is one
of prior restraint, not subsequent silencing through criminal sanction. The
flaws in the Customs regime are not the product of simple bad faith or
maladministration, but rather flow from the very nature of prior restraint
itself. Given the inherent dangers in a scheme of prior restraint at the
border it is obviously important to have procedural protections in the legislation itself that
can minimize these dangers. The
Customs legislation fails the s. 1 analysis primarily because it
lacks any such protections.
A minimally intrusive
scheme would ensure that those enforcing the law actually obey its dictates.
To determine whether something is obscene, it must be seen in its entirety, with
close attention to context, tone, and purpose. Customs officers have
consistently failed to apply Butler’s command
to consider the context and artistic merit of items under consideration. While
procedural safeguards might alleviate many of these problems, their complete
absence from the Customs legislation simply confirms the inadequacy of the
current scheme. Absolute discretion rests in a bureaucratic decision‑maker,
who is charged with making a decision without any evidence or submissions,
without any requirement to render reasons for decision, and without any
guarantee that the decision‑maker is aware of or understands the legal
test he or she is applying. Such a system cannot be minimally intrusive.
Moreover, the deleterious
effects of the existing Customs regime outweigh its benefits. The first
obvious deleterious effect of the current system is the extraordinarily high
rate of error. The detentions have had a dramatic, tangible effect on the
lives of countless Canadians. Alternative bookstores have had their viability
threatened by the constant delays and outright prohibitions. Authors and
artists have suffered the indignity of having their works condemned as obscene,
and not fit to enter the country. Perhaps most important of all, ordinary
Canadians have been denied important pieces of literature. Weighed against
these costs are the benefits of a Customs regime that makes almost no special
accommodations for the free expression rights at stake. The benefits of the
present legislation are primarily monetary, as the reforms sought by the
appellants will require public expenditures. However, it is important not to
overestimate those costs. In the absence of any evidence that a scheme
with more procedural safeguards would be impossible, it should
not be assumed that Parliament is completely incapable of devising a cost‑effective legislative
scheme that better protects the constitutional rights in question.
The appropriate remedy
for this violation of the appellants’ constitutional rights is to
strike down Code 9956(a) of the Customs Tariff. Given the fact
that there were grave systemic problems in the administration of the law, the primarily declaratory
remedy relied on by the majority is simply inadequate.
Systemic problems call for systemic solutions. Customs’ history
of improper censorship, coupled with its inadequate
response to the declarations of the courts below, confirms that only striking
down the legislation will guarantee vindication of the appellants’ constitutional rights. There are a number of options available to
Parliament to remedy the current flaws in the Customs legislation. First, it could enact new legislation
which properly safeguards the expressive rights at stake. Second, it could establish a
specialized administrative tribunal to expeditiously review obscenity determinations made by front-line Customs officers.
Finally, it could rely on the criminal law to deal with the importation of
obscene materials into the country in lieu of a prior restraint regime.
Cases Cited
By Binnie J.
Applied: R. v. Butler, [1992] 1 S.C.R. 452; disapproved
in part: Glad Day Bookshop Inc. v. Canada (Deputy Minister of National
Revenue, Customs and Excise), [1992] O.J. No. 1466 (QL); distinguished:
R. v. Morgentaler, [1988] 1 S.C.R. 30; Hunter v. Southam Inc., [1984] 2 S.C.R. 145; R. v. Bain, [1992] 1 S.C.R. 91; referred to: Luscher v. Deputy
Minister, Revenue Canada, Customs and Excise, [1985] 1 F.C. 85; Miron v. Trudel, [1995] 2 S.C.R. 418; Edmonton Journal
v. Alberta (Attorney General), [1989] 2 S.C.R. 1326; Ford v. Quebec
(Attorney General), [1988] 2 S.C.R. 712; R. v. Hicklin (1868), L.R.
3 Q.B. 360; Towne Cinema Theatres Ltd. v. The Queen, [1985] 1 S.C.R.
494; R. v. Hawkins (1993), 15 O.R. (3d) 549; R. v. Jacob (1996),
112 C.C.C. (3d) 1; R. v. Erotica Video Exchange Ltd. (1994), 163 A.R. 181;
Brodie v. The Queen, [1962] S.C.R. 681; R. v.
Simmons, [1988] 2 S.C.R. 495; United States v. Thirty‑Seven
Photographs, 402 U.S. 363 (1971); R. v. Oakes,
[1986] 1 S.C.R. 103; Law v. Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration),
[1999] 1 S.C.R. 497; Corbiere v. Canada (Minister of Indian and Northern
Affairs), [1999] 2 S.C.R. 203; Granovsky v. Canada (Minister of
Employment and Immigration), [2000] 1 S.C.R. 703, 2000 SCC 28; Lovelace
v. Ontario, [2000] 1 S.C.R. 950, 2000 SCC 37; R. v. Doug Rankine Co.
(1983), 36 C.R. (3d) 154; Egan v. Canada, [1995] 2 S.C.R. 513; Vriend
v. Alberta, [1998] 1 S.C.R. 493; M. v. H., [1999] 2 S.C.R. 3; Slaight
Communications Inc. v. Davidson, [1989] 1 S.C.R. 1038; Dagenais v.
Canadian Broadcasting Corp., [1994] 3 S.C.R. 835; R. v. Beare,
[1988] 2 S.C.R. 387; RJR‑MacDonald Inc. v. Canada
(Attorney General), [1995] 3 S.C.R. 199.
By
Iacobucci J. (dissenting in part)
R. v. Butler, [1992] 1 S.C.R. 452; Brodie v.
The Queen, [1962]
S.C.R. 681; R. v. C. Coles Co., [1965] 1 O.R. 557; A Book Named “John Cleland’s Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure” v. Attorney General of Massachusetts, 383 U.S. 413 (1966); Irwin
Toy Ltd. v. Quebec (Attorney General), [1989] 1 S.C.R. 927;
R. v. Keegstra, [1990] 3 S.C.R. 697; Reference
re ss. 193 and 195.1(1)(c) of the Criminal Code (Man.), [1990] 1
S.C.R. 1123; Law v. Canada (Minister of Employment
and Immigration), [1999] 1 S.C.R. 497; Hunter
v. Southam Inc., [1984]
2 S.C.R. 145; R. v.
Morgentaler, [1988] 1
S.C.R. 30; R. v. Bain, [1992] 1 S.C.R. 91; Corbiere
v. Canada (Minister of Indian and Northern Affairs), [1999] 2 S.C.R. 203; Egan v. Canada, [1995] 2 S.C.R. 513;
Dagenais v. Canadian Broadcasting Corp., [1994] 3 S.C.R. 835; R. v. Oakes, [1986] 1 S.C.R. 103; Thomson
Newspapers Co. v. Canada (Attorney General), [1998] 1 S.C.R. 877; Canadian
Broadcasting Corp. v. New Brunswick (Attorney General), [1996] 3 S.C.R.
480; RJR‑MacDonald Inc. v. Canada (Attorney General), [1995] 3
S.C.R. 199; R. v. Edwards Books and Art Ltd., [1986] 2 S.C.R. 713; R.
v. Nova Scotia Pharmaceutical Society, [1992] 2 S.C.R. 606; Osborne v.
Canada (Treasury Board), [1991] 2 S.C.R. 69; Entick v. Carrington
(1765), 2 Wils. K.B. 275, 95 E.R. 807; Near v. Minnesota, 283 U.S. 697
(1931); Canada (Human Rights Commission) v. Taylor, [1990] 3 S.C.R. 892;
Times Film Corp. v. City of Chicago, 365 U.S. 43 (1961); R. v. Lucas,
[1998] 1 S.C.R. 439; Freedman v. Maryland, 380 U.S. 51 (1965); United
States v. Thirty‑Seven Photographs, 402 U.S. 363 (1971); M. v. H.,
[1999] 2 S.C.R. 3; Vriend v. Alberta, [1998] 1 S.C.R. 493; Eldridge
v. British Columbia (Attorney General), [1997] 3 S.C.R. 624; Schachter
v. Canada, [1992] 2 S.C.R. 679; Tétreault‑Gadoury v. Canada
(Employment and Immigration Commission), [1991] 2 S.C.R. 22; Mahe v.
Alberta, [1990] 1 S.C.R. 342; R. v. Mills, [1999] 3 S.C.R. 668; Luscher
v. Deputy Minister, Revenue Canada, Customs and Excise, [1985] 1 F.C. 85; West
Virginia State Board of Education v. Barnette, 319 U.S. 624 (1943); R.
v. Lippé, [1991] 2 S.C.R. 114; Edmonton Journal v. Alberta (Attorney
General), [1989] 2 S.C.R. 1326; Dell Publishing Co. v. Deputy Minister
of National Revenue for Customs and Excise (1958), 2 T.B.R. 154.
Statutes and
Regulations Cited
Canada
Post Corporation Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. C‑10,
s. 42 [rep. & sub. c. 1 (2nd Supp.), s. 171 ].
Canadian Charter of
Rights and Freedoms, ss. 1 , 2 (b), 15(1) , 24(1) .
Constitution Act,
1982, s. 52(1) .
Criminal Code,
R.S.C., 1985, c. C‑46, s. 163(8) .
Customs Act,
R.S.C., 1985, c. 1 (2nd Supp .), ss. 2 , 58 , 60 , 63 , 64 [am.
c. 47 (4th Supp.), s. 52 (Sch., item 2(1)); am. 1992, c. 28,
s. 15], 67 [rep. & sub. c. 47 (4th Supp.), s. 52 (Sch., item
2(2))], 68, 71 [am. c. 41 (3rd Supp.), s. 120], 99, 152(3), 164.
Customs Tariff,
R.S.C., 1985, c. 41 (3rd Supp.), s. 114.
Customs Tariff,
S.C. 1987, c. 49, Sch. VII, Code 9956(a).
Customs
Tariff, S.C. 1997, c. 36, s. 166, Sch.,
Tariff item 9899.00.00.
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Cambridge Lectures 1989. Montreal: Yvon Blais, 1990, 1.
McElroy,
Wendy. XXX: A Woman’s Right to Pornography. New York: St.
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Milton,
John. Areopagitica; A Speech of Mr. John Milton for the Liberty
of Unlicenc’d
Printing, to the Parliament of England. London: 1644.
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Richard. “R. v. Butler: The Limits of the
Supreme Court’s Feminist Re‑Interpretation of Section 163" (1993),
25 Ottawa L. Rev. 361.
Nead, Lynda. “From the Female Nude: Art,
Obscenity and Sexuality”.
In Nicholas Mirzoeff, ed., The Visual Culture Reader.
London: Routledge, 1998, 485.
Paglia,
Camille. Vamps & Tramps: New Essays. New York: Vintage Books,
1994.
Renzetti,
Claire M. Violent Betrayal: Partner Abuse in Lesbian Relationships.
Newbury Park, Calif.: SAGE Publications, 1992.
Roach,
Kent. Constitutional Remedies in Canada. Aurora, Ont.: Canada Law
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Ryder,
Bruce. “Undercover
Censorship: Exploring the History of Regulation of Publications in Canada”. In Klaus Petersen and
Allan C. Hutchinson, eds., Interpreting Censorship in Canada. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1999.
Strossen,
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Doubleday, 1994.
APPEAL from a judgment of
the British Columbia Court of Appeal (1998), 54 B.C.L.R. (3d) 306, 160 D.L.R.
(4th) 385, [1999] 12 W.W.R. 445, 109 B.C.A.C. 49, 177 W.A.C. 49, 125 C.C.C.
(3d) 484, 54 C.R.R. (2d) 1, [1998] B.C.J. No. 1507 (QL), dismissing the appellants’ appeal from a decision of the British Columbia Supreme Court
(1996), 18 B.C.L.R. (3d) 241, 131 D.L.R. (4th) 486, [1996] B.C.J. No. 71 (QL),
dismissing the appellants’ application for a declaration pursuant to s. 52(1) of the Constitution
Act, 1982 . Appeal allowed in part, Iacobucci, Arbour and LeBel JJ.
dissenting in part.
Joseph J. Arvay, Q.C., and Irene C. Faulkner, for the
appellants.
Judith Bowers, Q.C., Brian J. Saunders and Daniel Kiselbach,
for the respondents the Minister of Justice and Attorney General of Canada and
the Minister of National Revenue.
George H. Copley, Q.C., and Jeffrey M. Loenen, for the respondent
the Attorney General of British Columbia.
Christine Bartlett‑Hughes and Robert E. Houston, Q.C., for the intervener
the Attorney General for Ontario.
R. Douglas
Elliott and Patricia A. LeFebour, for
the intervener the Canadian AIDS Society.
Patricia D. S.
Jackson and Tycho M. J. Manson,
for the intervener the Canadian Civil Liberties Association.
Frank Addario and Ethan Poskanzer, for the intervener the Canadian
Conference of the Arts.
Cynthia Petersen, for the intervener EGALE Canada Inc.
Janine Benedet, for the intervener Equality Now.
Jill Copeland, for the intervener PEN Canada.
Karen Busby and Claire Klassen, for the intervener the Women’s Legal Education and Action Fund (LEAF).
The judgment of McLachlin
C.J. and L’Heureux-Dubé, Gonthier, Major, Bastarache and Binnie JJ. was
delivered by
1
Binnie J. –
After a trial of considerable complexity lasting two months, the trial judge in
this case concluded not only that Customs officials had wrongly delayed,
confiscated, destroyed, damaged, prohibited or misclassified materials imported
by the appellant on numerous occasions, but that these errors were caused “by the systemic targeting
of Little Sisters' importations in the [Vancouver] Customs Mail Center”. Little Sisters is a
lesbian and gay bookshop owned by the appellants James Eaton Deva and Guy Bruce
Smythe, who say their equality rights as gay men have been violated by the
government’s action.
The store carried a specialized inventory catering to the gay and lesbian
community which consisted largely of books that included, but was not limited
to, gay and lesbian literature, travel information, general interest
periodicals, academic studies related to homosexuality, AIDS/HIV safe sex
advisory material and gay and lesbian erotica. It was not in the nature of a “XXX Adult” store. It was and is a
boutique carrying a fairly broad range of inventory of interest to a special
clientele. It was considered something of a “community
centre” for Vancouver’s gay and lesbian
population.
2
The appellants concede that much of the material imported by Little
Sisters consisted of erotica but have denied throughout that anything it has
imported is obscene. If the erotica had been manufactured in Canada, the
government would have had no legal basis to suppress it short of a successful
prosecution under s. 163 of the Criminal Code, R.S.C., 1985, c. C-46 , in
which the state would have the onus of establishing obscenity.
3
We are told that Canada produces very little gay and lesbian erotica,
obscene or otherwise, and Little Sisters therefore depends on foreign
suppliers, mainly in the United States. The appeal therefore requires us to
consider what limitations may constitutionally be placed on freedom of
expression when “expression” crosses international
boundaries, and to what extent the rights of importers must be balanced against
the state’s interest
in preventing the importation of materials that the state considers to be
harmful to society.
I. Facts
4
The appellant, Little Sisters Book and Art Emporium, is a corporation
incorporated under the laws of British Columbia. The individual appellants are
the directors and controlling shareholders of Little Sisters. The corporate
appellant has a business interest and the individuals combine both business and
personal interests. As all of the interests necessary to constitute this
appeal are represented, there is no need to disentangle their specific
corporate and individual interests, and I will generally refer to them
collectively as “the
appellants”.
5
Since its establishment in 1983, Little Sisters has imported 80 to 90
percent of its erotica from the United States. For the last 15 years it has
been a reluctant participant in a running battle with Canada Customs. Its
foreign suppliers typically insisted on payment within 30 days, yet
administrative delays at Customs frequently held up shipments until months
after they were paid for, and then, not infrequently, materials were seized or
ordered returned to sender. In the usual course the appellants were given no
reason for the seizure or return. Some of the suppliers refused to make
further shipments.
6
In very detailed and comprehensive reasons, the trial judge made a
number of key findings of fact in the appellants' favour. He identified very
high error rates in determinations respecting Little Sisters’ imports at all levels of
the Customs review procedure. He held that “[s]uch
high rates of error indicate more than mere differences of opinion and suggest
systemic causes”
((1996), 18 B.C.L.R. (3d) 241, at para. 100). He identified several reasons
for these high error rates, including the minimal resources given to Customs
officials combined with inadequate training in obscenity law ranging from a few
hours in the case of inspectors to a few days for higher ranks. Specifically,
he found (at para. 116) that:
Many publications,
particularly books, are ruled obscene without adequate
evidence. This highlights perhaps the most serious defect in the
present administration of code 9956(a), that is, that classifying
officers are neither adequately trained to make decisions on obscenity nor are
they routinely provided with the time and the evidence necessary to make such
decisions. There is no formal procedure for placing evidence of
artistic or literary merit before the classifying
officers. Consequently, many publications are prohibited entry into
Canada that would likely not be found to be obscene if full evidence were
considered by officers properly trained to weigh and evaluate that evidence.
7
The lack of available resources was of particular concern to the trial
judge, who found that: “The
inference to be drawn is that Tariff Administrators in the Prohibited
Importations Directorate do not have sufficient time available to consistently
do a proper job. The problem is even more significant at the regional levels
where customs officers encounter much higher volumes of goods and have far more
expansive duties”
(para. 81).
8
The trial judge found that the administration of the Customs scheme has
a significantly differential impact on small or specialty publishers, importers
and bookstores. He specifically found (at para. 105) that:
Customs' administration of
code 9956(a) results in arbitrary consequences. Traditional
bookstores do not have similar encounters with Canada Customs. Helen
Hager, who operated a general‑interest bookstore in Vancouver for many
years, did not know that Customs inspected books for obscenity until she left
that business and opened a store catering to women, in which she stocked some
material for lesbians. She had two shipments from Inland [a book
distributor] interrupted at the border and has never received two of the books
in the shipment, nor any documents from Customs in relation to them.
9
The trial judge noted that the task of reviewing allegedly obscene
materials was generally unpopular with Customs officers, who opted to rotate
out of Code 9956 obscenity duties after three to six months. I should note,
parenthetically, that there was no evidence that they suffered harmful
attitudinal changes as a result of their prolonged exposure to the sexually
explicit material sought to be imported by the appellants, albeit the exposure
was job-related.
10
Seizure included not only magazines, videos and photographic essays, but
books consisting entirely of text, including works by internationally
acclaimed authors such as The Man Sitting in the Corridor by Marguerite
Duras and Querelle by Jean Genet. Also seized were the award-winning
novels Trash by Dorothy Allison and The Young in One Another’s Arms by Jane Rule.
Frequently AIDS/HIV safe-sex education literature was classified as
prohibited. The Court record includes testimony from mainstream booksellers to
the effect that no such problems were encountered in their importation of the
same books. In fact, the President of Duthie’s,
a general bookstore chain in Vancouver, testified that an order she placed on
behalf of the British Columbia Civil Liberties Association consisting of titles
prohibited when sought to be imported by Little Sisters was inspected by
Customs but released to Duthie’s
without difficulty. Duthie’s
Customs broker testified that its book shipments are examined solely for the
purpose of determining GST payments. He thought that in the case of Duthie’s there was generally no
examination of titles for obscenity.
11
On the other hand the evidence showed that other small bookstores with
specialized inventory or clientele comparable to Little Sisters' had encountered
similar targeting. These included a scholarly bookstore “Pages” in Toronto carrying gay
studies and HIV/AIDS literature as well as “The
Toronto Women’s
Bookstore”, a feminist
bookstore. “Crosstown
Traffic”, a bookstore
in Ottawa, was similarly affected. It appears that there was no such blanket
surveillance of heterosexual erotica even in the case of so-called “adult” bookstores that sold
nothing else.
12
Little Sisters complains that the frequent delay of shipments destined
for its store, and the subsequent prohibition of some of the delayed items,
have negatively impacted its business by, inter alia, disrupting planned
book launches, causing loss of business to competitors stocking the same
delayed or prohibited items, and items such as magazines, which depend for
their shelf value on their timeliness. The case, however, is not about
business losses. It is about the loss by a minority of the freedom to read and
experience a broad range of writings and depictions, some of it claimed to be
of high artistic value, by reason, they say, of bureaucratic refusal to release
perfectly lawful material into the country.
13
Little Sisters identified 261 items that have been detained
between 1984 and 1994, 77 of them on more than one occasion. Items sought to
be imported by Little Sisters and subsequently delayed or prohibited included
items that were previously ruled admissible when imported by Little Sisters.
The trial judge noted (at para. 75) that a “striking
example of this” is
the collection of short stories entitled Macho Sluts, written by Pat
Califia, a well-established author. It has been prohibited pursuant
to s. 58 of the Customs Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. 1 (2nd Supp .) on four
separate occasions since October 23, 1989, when it was re‑determined
under s. 63 to be admissible. The satire Hothead Paisan
was prohibited when ordered by Little Sisters and, on one occasion, by The
Women’s Bookstore in Toronto, but was released to the latter bookstore
without difficulties on subsequent orders. The trial judge noted another 35
publications that were prohibited after they had earlier been ruled admissible
by Customs. Many items that have been prohibited when Little Sisters attempted
to import them are found in the Vancouver Public Library including Gay Ideas,
Tom of Finland, The Men With the Pink Triangle, Dzeleron: Myths
of the Northwest Coast, Gay Spirit and The Sexual Politics of
Meat. Customs officials were intrigued by the titles, apparently.
II. Scope of the Customs Mandate
14
Customs officials testified that there are approximately 10.5 million
entry transactions each year and that each day between 20,000 and 40,000 items
of mail enter the Customs Mail Center in Vancouver. Much of this mail is of
commercial value, and must be sorted and classified for tariff purposes. As
part of this classification procedure, Parliament has charged the Customs
authorities to intercept and exclude from this country obscene, hateful,
treasonable or seditious goods.
15
Prior to the 1959 amendments, appeals even in matters of alleged
obscenity were taken not to the courts but to the Tariff Board. Speaking in
the House of Commons on August 27, 1958, the Minister of National Revenue, Mr.
George Nowlan, described the difficulties experienced by Customs officials in
discharging their mandate in respect of “obscene” goods:
Last year I had submitted to me six
lithographs for inclusion in this year’s
calendars. They were six nudes. They had been passed on by all these
officers. Three of the nudes were absolutely nude and three had some sort of
diaphanous wrapping around their bodies. One of the senior officers said the
three which had the diaphanous clothing could be admitted because they were
semi-clothed. Another officer said their posture was indecent and they should
not be admitted, but the nudes could be admitted because their posture was not
indecent.
That
is an example of the judgment that has to be exercised and the kind of artistic
skill that has to be passed upon by customs officers. I really think that
we are much better qualified to deal with increasing the seasonal tariff on
cabbages and cucumbers than to pass moral judgment on literature coming into
the country. [Emphasis added.]
(House of Commons
Debates, vol. IV, 1st Sess., 24th Parl., August 27, 1958, at p. 4177)
16
The 1959 amendments redirected appeals in such matters to the courts.
In the wake of the decision in Luscher v. Deputy Minister, Revenue Canada,
Customs and Excise, [1985] 1 F.C. 85 (C.A.), obscenity was defined by
reference to s. 163 of the Criminal Code . As Parliament has prohibited
only material that it has criminalized, Parliament apparently intended there to
be a free flow of other materials across the border including sexually
expressive material that appeals to minority tastes. The Criminal Code
does not characterize “obscenity” based on sexual
orientation and neither, it must be inferred, did Parliament intend Customs
officials to do so.
17
The administrative burden of identifying prohibited goods in such a vast
inflow of material is enormous. In an era of increased volumes of cross-border
material, and reduced government resources, the difficulty of performing the
Parliamentary mandate cannot be underestimated. The task of properly reviewing
a single CD-Rom, featuring the usual array of photographs, film and text, would
require far more time than Customs officials are realistically able to devote
to the task. Moreover, with the exponential growth of pornographic sites on
the Internet, the barrier to the passage across the border of hard copy
material may some day be seen as of marginal importance to the enforcement of
anti-obscenity laws. Nevertheless, if the Parliamentary mandate is to be
carried out with regard not only to the larger public interest served by the Criminal
Code but also to the rights of individuals who claim to be engaged in
entirely lawful activities, adequate procedures and resources must be put in
place to operate the border scheme in a manner that respects Charter
rights.
18
Nobody has a Charter right to import materials that are obscene
within the meaning of s. 163 of the Criminal Code . The concern
expressed by the trial judge was that much of the delayed or prohibited
material did not qualify as obscene. The courts in British Columbia
found that the appellants had established Charter violations. The real
arguments are about the sources of the violations -- whether they are located
in the statutes themselves or only in their implementation -- and what to do
about them. This involves a consideration of how certain materials come to be
classified as “obscene”, and thus prohibited, and
whether the appellants when contesting such a classification were fairly dealt
with.
III. The Statutory Framework
19
Section 99 of the Customs Act authorizes Customs officers to
examine imported goods and mail and to open packages that they reasonably
suspect may contain goods referred to in the Customs Tariff, R.S.C.,
1985, c. 41 (3rd Supp.). Mail is referred to Customs on a similar basis (Canada
Post Corporation Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. C-10, s. 42 ) except that mail
weighing 30 grams or less may not be opened without the consent of the person
to whom it is addressed (Customs Act, s. 99(2) ).
20
At the entry level, Customs inspectors determine the appropriate tariff
classification (s. 58 ). At the relevant time, an item considered “obscene” and thus prohibited was
subject to a re-determination upon request, by a specialized Customs unit and
upon a further appeal subject to a further re-determination by the Deputy
Minister or designate. The appellants contend that the double step internal
review procedure was bureaucratic overkill, particularly because few front line
decisions were changed on further internal review. (The trial judge agreed
with this objection, and the government apparently heeded the trial judge’s concern because the Customs
Act was amended after the trial to eliminate the intermediate determination
(S.C. 1997, c. 36, s. 166 ).)
21
The Act contemplates that once these administrative measures have been
exhausted, an importer may appeal the prohibition pursuant to s. 67 of the Act
to a judge of the superior court of the province where the material was seized,
with a further appeal on a question of law to the Federal Court of Canada, and
then with leave to the Supreme Court of Canada. The appellants complain about
the high cost of this lengthy procedure, and about the inevitable delay. They
argue that a remedy which a small-scale importer cannot reasonably be expected
to exercise because of cost and delay disproportionate to the value of the
thing seized is really no remedy at all. Yet such incidents, of relatively
small importance on a case-by-case basis, cumulatively came to constitute a
significant barrier to freedom of expression for the gay and lesbian community
in Vancouver. The dimension of that problem led the appellants to challenge
the constitutionality of the administrative review process in the Customs
Act , and in the Customs Tariff, as violating their rights under ss.
2 (b) and 15(1) of the Charter .
IV. Relevant Enactments
22
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms
1. The Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms guarantees the rights and freedoms set out
in it subject only to such reasonable limits prescribed by law as can be
demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society.
2. Everyone has
the following fundamental freedoms:
.
. .
(b) freedom of thought, belief,
opinion and expression, including freedom of the press and other media of
communication;
15. (1) Every
individual is equal before and under the law and has the right to the equal
protection and equal benefit of the law without discrimination and, in
particular, without discrimination based on race, national or ethnic origin,
colour, religion, sex, age or mental or physical disability.
24. (1) Anyone
whose rights or freedoms, as guaranteed by this Charter , have been infringed or
denied may apply to a court of competent jurisdiction to obtain such remedy as
the court considers appropriate and just in the circumstances.
Constitution Act, 1982
52. (1) The
Constitution of Canada is the supreme law of Canada, and any law that is
inconsistent with the provisions of the Constitution is, to the extent of the
inconsistency, of no force or effect.
Customs Tariff, R.S.C., 1985, c. 41 (3rd Supp.)
114. The
importation into Canada of any goods enumerated or referred to in Schedule VII
is prohibited.
Customs Tariff, S.C. 1987, c. 49, Schedule VII
9956 Books, printed
paper, drawings, paintings, prints, photographs or representations of any kind
that
(a) are deemed to be obscene under
subsection 163(8) of the Criminal Code ;
Customs Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. 1 (2nd Supp .)
58. (1) An officer
may determine the tariff classification . . . of imported goods at any time
before or within thirty days after they are accounted for . . . .
.
. .
(5) Where an officer does
not make a determination . . . under subsection (1) in respect of goods, a
determination of the tariff classification . . . of the goods shall, for the
purposes of sections 60, 61 and 63, be deemed to have been made thirty days
after the time the goods were accounted for . . . in accordance with any
representations made at that time in respect of the tariff classification . . .
by the person accounting for the goods.
(6) A determination of
tariff classification . . . is not subject to review or to be restrained,
prohibited, removed, set aside or otherwise dealt with except to the extent and
in the manner provided by sections 60 to 65.
60. (1) The
importer or any person who is liable to pay duties owing on imported goods may,
after any duties thereon have been paid or security satisfactory to the
Minister has been given in respect of the duties owing,
(a) within ninety days, or
(b) where the
Minister deems it advisable, within two years
after the time the determination or
appraisal was made in respect of the goods under section 58 , request a
re-determination of the tariff classification or a re-appraisal of the value
for duty.
(2) A request under this
section shall be made to a designated officer in the prescribed manner and in
the prescribed form containing the prescribed information.
(3) On receipt of a
request under this section, a designated officer shall, with all due dispatch,
re-determine the tariff classification or re-appraise the value for duty, as
the case may be, and give notice of his decision to the person who made the
request.
63. (1) Any person
may,
(a) within ninety days after the
time he was given notice of a decision under section 60 or 61, or
(b) where the Minister deems it
advisable, within two years after the time a determination or appraisal was
made under section 58 ,
request a further re-determination of the
tariff classification or a further re-appraisal of the value for duty
re-determined or re-appraised under section 60 or 61.
(2) A request under this
section shall be made to the Deputy Minister in the prescribed manner and in
the prescribed form containing the prescribed information.
(3) On receipt of a
request under this section, the Deputy Minister shall, with all due dispatch,
re-determine the tariff classification or re-appraise the value for duty, as
the case may be, and give notice of his decision to the person who made the
request.
67. (1) A person
who deems himself aggrieved by a decision of the Deputy Minister made pursuant
to section 63 or 64 may appeal from the decision to [the court] ... within
ninety days after the time notice of the decision was given.
71. (1) Where the
release of goods has been refused on the ground that the goods have been
determined to be prohibited goods as described in code 9956 or 9957 of Schedule
VII to the Customs Tariff, re-determination may be requested under
sections 60 and 63 or made under section 64 and appeals may be taken under
sections 67 and 68 in respect of the determination....
152. . . .
(3) Subject to subsection
(4), in any proceeding under this Act, the burden of proof in any question
relating to
.
. .
(d) the compliance with any of the
provisions of this Act or the regulations in respect of any goods
lies on the person, other than Her Majesty,
who is a party to the proceeding or the person who is accused of an offence,
and not on Her Majesty.
164. (1) The
Governor in Council may make regulations
.
. .
(j) generally, to carry out the
purposes and provisions of this Act.
Criminal Code, R.S.C., 1985, c. C‑46
163. . . .
(8) For the purposes of
this Act, any publication a dominant characteristic of which is the undue
exploitation of sex, or of sex and any one or more of the following subjects,
namely, crime, horror, cruelty and violence, shall be deemed to be obscene.
V. Judicial History
A. Supreme Court of British Columbia (1996), 18
B.C.L.R. (3d) 241
23
At trial, the appellants sought a declaration under s. 52(1) of the Constitution
Act, 1982 , that the relevant Customs provisions are of no force and effect
because they violate ss. 2 (b) and 15(1) of the Charter . In
addition, or in the alternative, the appellants sought a declaration under s.
24(1) of the Charter that these provisions “have at all material times been construed and
applied in a manner that is contrary to s. 2 (b) and/or s. 15(1) of the Charter
and that is not justified pursuant to s. 1 ”.
24
Smith J. concluded that the Customs legislation infringed s. 2 (b)
of the Charter , but was justified under s. 1 . He found that the Customs
legislation did not infringe s. 15(1) of the Charter . In this respect,
he concluded that the law, although facially neutral, did have a
disproportionately negative effect on homosexuals, because materials related to
sexuality are much more central to homosexual culture and identity than to
heterosexuals. The prohibition of those materials thus imposes a
disproportionate burden on homosexuals. However, at para. 135 of his reasons,
Smith J. explained that in his view there was no violation of the
appellants’ equality
rights “because
obscenity is defined in terms of sexual practices”
as is homosexuality, and that differential treatment is therefore “relevan[t] . . . to the
functional values underlying the legislation”
(Miron v. Trudel, [1995] 2 S.C.R. 418, at para. 15, per
Gonthier J.). “The
point is”, he
concluded at para. 136, “that
homosexual obscenity is proscribed because it is obscene, not because it is
homosexual”.
25
In finding that the s. 2 (b) infringement was justified under s.
1 , Smith J. relied heavily on this Court’s
reasons in R. v. Butler, [1992] 1 S.C.R. 452. As it was held in Butler
that the standard provided by the word “obscene” in s. 163(8) of the Criminal
Code was intelligible and “prescribed
by law”, and as that
provision is incorporated into the Customs legislation by Code 9956(a),
he held that the Customs legislation’s
imposition of a limitation on s. 2 (b) was also “prescribed by law”. The Customs officers’ ability to apply the obscenity standard was
further assisted by an internal Customs manual identified as Memorandum D9-1-1,
together with a companion illustrative guide.
26
Turning to the objective of the impugned Customs legislation, the trial
judge found it was directed to the same purpose as s. 163 of the Criminal
Code , being the protection of society from the harm caused by the dissemination
of obscene materials. He found that the objective was sufficiently pressing
and substantial to justify an interference with freedom of expression.
27
Smith J. concluded that in the absence of an obviously superior
alternative, the courts should defer to Parliament’s chosen means of border control. He
dismissed as impractical the possibility of conducting a trial as a
precondition to barring the entry of any publication as obscene.
28
Having denied a remedy under s. 52(1) of the Constitution Act, 1982
Smith J. did conclude that a s. 24(1) declaration was appropriate due to
serious systemic problems in the administration of the Customs regime. In his
view these problems had resulted in the inconsistent and unwarranted
prohibition of many items of homosexual art and literature. In the result he
issued a declaration that provided in its operative entirety that:
THIS COURT DECLARES that
Tariff Code 9956(a) of Schedule VII and s. 114 of the Customs Tariff,
S.C. 1987, c. 41 (3rd Supplement) and ss. 58 and 71 of the Customs Act,
S.C. 1986, c. 1 (2nd Supplement) have at times been construed and applied
in a manner contrary to s. 2 (b) and s. 15(1) of the Canadian Charter of
Rights and Freedoms .
B. Court of Appeal for British Columbia (1998), 54
B.C.L.R. (3d) 306
29
In the Court of Appeal for British Columbia, Macfarlane J.A., for the
majority, held that Memorandum D9-1-1, the internal manual used by Customs
officers, was not “law” for the purposes of s. 1 ,
and was therefore not of assistance in determining whether the Customs
legislation evidences an intelligible standard that can be applied without
arbitrariness. Nevertheless, applying Butler, supra, he
concluded that the Customs legislation was not impermissibly vague, and was “prescribed by law”.
30
Macfarlane J.A. substantially agreed with the trial judge’s reasons on s. 1 ,
emphasizing that the scope and content of “obscene” is to be determined not by
the homosexual community, but by the application of a general community
standard. He rejected the appellants’
demand for an exemption, or differential treatment as to what materials the
homosexual community should be permitted access. Relying on Butler, he
rejected the appellants’
submissions that it was incumbent on Parliament to demonstrate a specific and
conclusive causal link between homosexual obscenity and harm to the community.
31
Macfarlane J.A. also denied relief under s. 15(1) . In his view, the
Customs legislation is discriminatory neither on its face, nor in its effect
because, if applied correctly, it only prohibits material because it is obscene
not because it is homosexual. Hall J.A., concurring, expressed his substantial
agreement with Macfarlane J.A.’s
reasons for dismissing the appeal.
32
Finch J.A., dissenting, distinguished the case before him from Butler,
stressing that in Butler the Court was not dealing with books, nor was it
dealing with materials “directed
at a homosexual market”
(para. 191). In Butler, the context was a criminal trial, and s. 163(8)
of the Criminal Code was directed to “subsequent
punishment” for
dissemination of obscene materials, as opposed to the “prior restraint”
imposed by the Customs legislation. Finally, in Butler there were no s.
15(1) discrimination considerations.
33
On the threshold question as to whether the Customs legislation imposes
a limitation that is “prescribed
by law”, Finch J.A.
found the trial judge to be in error. He held that Memorandum D9-1-1 was not “law”, and he noted the trial judge’s conclusion that the
prohibition on obscenity was difficult to administer, requiring “appropriate and consistent
training” and the aid
of the interpretive memo. With these facts established, he held that such a
legislative scheme could not be said to “meet
the constitutionally-mandated standard of precision” (para. 217). In the context of a criminal
trial, matters are only deemed to be obscene after acceptance by the trier of
fact of proof beyond a reasonable doubt. In the context of the Customs regime,
the same standard is not sufficiently intelligible.
34
Finch J.A. would have allowed the appeal and declared the Customs
legislation to be of no force and effect to the extent that it applies to “the importation of
homosexual books, printed paper, drawings, paintings, prints, photographs or
representations of any kind that are alleged to be obscene” (para. 257).
VI. Constitutional Questions
35
The following constitutional questions were stated by the Chief Justice:
1. Do ss. 58 and
71 of the Customs Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. 1 (2nd Supp .), and s. 114
and Code 9956(a) of Schedule VII of the Customs Tariff, R.S.C.,
1985, c. 41 (3rd Supp.) (now s. 136(1) and tariff item 9899.00.00 of the List
of Tariff Provisions set out in the schedule to the Customs Tariff, S.C.
1997, c. 36 ) [the “Customs
legislation”] in whole
or in part, insofar as they authorize customs officials to detain and prohibit
material deemed to be obscene, or in their application to either textual or gay
and lesbian material or to both, infringe s. 2 (b) of the Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms ?
2. If the answer
to question 1 is yes, is the infringement demonstrably justified in a free and
democratic society pursuant to s. 1 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and
Freedoms ?
3. Do ss. 58 and
71 of the Customs Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. 1 (2nd Supp .), and s. 114
and Code 9956(a) of Schedule VII of the Customs Tariff, R.S.C.,
1985, c. 41 (3rd Supp.) (now s. 136(1) and tariff item 9899.00.00 of the List
of Tariff Provisions set out in the schedule to the Customs Tariff, S.C.
1997, c. 36 ), in whole or in part, in their application to gay and lesbian
material, infringe s. 15(1) of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms ?
4. If the answer
to question 3 is yes, is the infringement demonstrably justified in a free and
democratic society pursuant to s. 1 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and
Freedoms ?
VII. Analysis
36
Government interference with freedom of expression in any form calls for
vigilance. Where, as here, a trial judge finds that such interference is
accompanied “by the
systemic targeting” of
a particular group in society (in this case individuals who were seen as
standard bearers for the gay and lesbian community), the issue takes on a
further and even more serious dimension. Sexuality is a source of profound
vulnerability, and the appellants reasonably concluded that they were in many
ways being treated by Customs officials as sexual outcasts.
37
The appellants were put in the position of supplicants to the government
in a 15-year crusade to obtain the entry into Canada of expressive material.
Whereas Customs aims to examine approximately eight per cent of goods coming
across the border, the trial judge found that “virtually
all imported mail addressed to Little Sisters is examined” (para. 52) and that “the federal Crown led no
evidence of any principled basis upon which such [look-out] procedures are
instituted” (para.
271). His conclusion, supported by numerous examples, was that untrained
Customs officials were too quick to equate homosexuality with obscenity.
38
In this Court the Crown acknowledged that errors were made in the
classification of the appellants' imported materials, but says that such errors
were only to be expected given the huge volume of cross-border mail handled at
the Vancouver Customs Mail Centre each day. The Crown went on to say that the
problems encountered by the appellants and dealt with in the trial evidence
have been addressed by amendments to the Customs Act and changes in
procedure. This is partly true, but I do not myself think it is open to the
Crown to contest the two-month trial that resulted in the judgment of January
19, 1996, which was very critical of the Customs department and then to turn
around and explain that “that
was then, and this is now”.
The appellants are entitled to a determination of their rights on the basis of
the evidence called before the trial judge, and to relief that goes beyond
registering an act of faith in the continuance of the department’s expressed good
intentions.
39
I propose first to deal with the relationship between the Customs
legislation and the obscenity provisions of the Criminal Code as
interpreted in Butler. My conclusion is that the Customs legislation
violates the appellants’
freedom of expression, as the Crown is prepared to concede, but with the
exception of the reverse onus provision in s. 152(3) of the Customs Act ,
it constitutes a reasonable limit prescribed by law which the Crown has
justified under s. 1 of the Charter .
40
The administration of the Act, however, was characterized by conduct of
Customs officials that was oppressive and dismissive of the appellants’ freedom of expression.
Its effect – whether
intended or not – was
to isolate and disparage the appellants on the basis of their sexual
orientation. The declaratory relief granted by the courts in British Columbia
fell short of giving specific guidance to Customs in respect of future action.
The appellants, however, did not pursue more structured relief under
s. 24(1) of the Charter in their appeal to the British Columbia
Court of Appeal or to this Court. Their primary objective was and is to have
the Customs legislation declared unconstitutional under s. 52(1) of the Constitution
Act, 1982 , either generally or in relation to importations by the gay and
lesbian community. In my view, the appellants' attack on the legislation is
correct only in part, that is to say in relation to the application of the
reverse onus provision, but as to that part the appeal must be allowed.
A. The Appellants’
Attack on the Customs Tariff Act and the Customs Act
41
The appellants allege, and the Crown agrees, that the Customs
legislation constitutes a prima facie limitation on their s. 2 (b)
freedom of expression which must be justified under s. 1 of the Charter .
The Constitution protects the right to receive expressive material as much as
it does the right to create it: Edmonton Journal v. Alberta (Attorney
General), [1989] 2 S.C.R. 1326, at pp. 1339-40. Section 2 (b) “protects listeners as well
as speakers”: Ford
v. Quebec (Attorney General), [1988] 2 S.C.R. 712, at p. 767.
42
Beyond this common ground, however, the appellants attack the
constitutionality of the Customs legislation on two more specific grounds.
First the appellants argue that the “harm-based” interpretation given to s.
163 of the Criminal Code in Butler, supra, does not apply
to gay and lesbian erotica in the same way as it does to heterosexual erotica, or
perhaps at all. Because the prohibition against importation of obscene goods
contained in the Customs legislation is rooted explicitly in s. 163 of the Criminal
Code , acceptance of this argument would mean that gay and lesbian
publications would not be subject to the ordinary border regime applicable to
other forms of expression.
43
Secondly, the appellants say that the procedure laid down in the Customs
legislation is so cumbersome and procedurally defective that it is incapable of
being administered consistently with the protection of their Charter
rights. They analogize the multi-tier internal review process and its attendant
complexities and delays to the procedural requirements struck down in R. v.
Morgentaler, [1988] 1 S.C.R. 30, where Dickson C.J. held that the source of
the unconstitutional delay in access to therapeutic abortions was the impugned Criminal
Code provision itself. He said, at p. 60:
One must conclude, and perhaps underline,
that the delay experienced by many women seeking a therapeutic abortion, be it
of one, two, four, or six weeks' duration, is caused in large measure by
the requirements of s. 251 itself. [Emphasis added.]
44
My conclusion on the first branch of the appellants’ attack is that the Butler
analysis does not discriminate against the gay and lesbian community. Butler
is directed to the prevention of harm, and is indifferent to whether such harm
arises in the context of heterosexuality or homosexuality. Nor in my view is
the gay and lesbian community discriminated against in the Customs legislation,
which is quite capable of being administered in a manner that respects Charter
rights. The government is entitled to impose border inspections of
expressive material. The obstacles experienced by the appellants and detailed
at length by the trial judge were not inherent in the statutory scheme.
The obstacles were, however, very real and in the end quite unjustified.
B. The Tariff Definition of Obscenity
45
The classification of imported “expressive
material” is referred
to in Code 9956(a) of Schedule VII of the Customs Tariff, which
prohibits the importation of goods described as:
Books, printed paper, drawings, paintings,
prints, photographs or representations of any kind that
(a) are deemed to be obscene under
subsection 163(8) of the Criminal Code . [Emphasis added.]
46
The incorporation by reference of s. 163(8) in the Customs Tariff
requires Customs officials to apply that definition of obscenity, which
provides as follows:
163. . . .
(8) For the purposes of
this Act, any publication a dominant characteristic of which is the undue
exploitation of sex, or of sex and any one or more of the following subjects,
namely, crime, horror, cruelty and violence, shall be deemed to be obscene. [Emphasis
added.]
C. The Butler Definition
47
Section 163(8) of the Criminal Code was authoritatively
interpreted by this Court in Butler, supra. Parliament, it was
held, had distanced itself from the old common law Hicklin test which defined
obscenity in terms of whether the material in question would result in the “corruption of morals”. See R. v. Hicklin
(1868), L.R. 3 Q.B. 360. “The
prevention of ‘dirt
for dirt’s sake’”, Sopinka J. for the majority, said at pp.
492-93, “is not a
legitimate objective which would justify the violation of one of the most
fundamental freedoms enshrined in the Charter ”. For ease of analysis, Sopinka J.
divided potentially obscene material into three categories at p. 484:
(1) explicit sex
with violence,
(2) explicit sex
without violence, but which subjects participants to treatment that is
degrading or dehumanizing if the material creates a substantial risk of harm,
(3) explicit sex
without violence among adults that is neither degrading nor dehumanizing.
48
In applying the community standard of tolerance to each of these
categories, Butler concluded (at p. 485) that the first category – the depiction of explicit
sex coupled with violence –
will “almost always” constitute the undue
exploitation of sex. The second category –
explicit sex that is “degrading
or dehumanizing” – may be undue “if the risk of harm is
substantial”. The
third category –
explicit sex that is not violent and is neither degrading nor dehumanizing – is “generally tolerated in our
society and will not qualify as the undue exploitation of sex unless it employs
children in its production”.
49
The key word in the statutory definition –
“undue” – was interpreted to incorporate an assessment
of the broader community’s
tolerance of harm. As Sopinka J. states at p. 479:
This type of material
would, apparently, fail the community standards test not because it offends
against morals but because it is perceived by public opinion to be harmful to
society, particularly to women.
50
Again, at p. 481, after citing Wilson J. in Towne Cinema Theatres
Ltd. v. The Queen, [1985] 1 S.C.R. 494, Sopinka J. emphasizes that “[t]he community is the
arbiter as to what is harmful to it”.
And, at p. 485, he says:
The courts must determine
as best they can what the community would tolerate others being exposed to on
the basis of the degree of harm that may flow from such exposure.
[Emphasis added.]
51
This approach was accepted by Gonthier J., concurring, who said at p.
520:
In this context, tolerance must be related
to the harm. It must mean not only tolerance of the materials, but also
tolerance of the harm which they may bring about. [Emphasis added.]
52
In the result, Butler affirmed constitutional protection for
sexually explicit expression and drew the boundary only where harm exceeded the
community’s level of
tolerance. Section 163(8) of the Criminal Code was upheld on the basis
that (i) the definition, as interpreted, was sufficiently certain to be “prescribed by law” and (ii) being defined as
a harm-based obscenity provision, it addressed a substantial and pressing
social objective in a rational and proportionate way.
D. Analysis of the Appellants’ Criticism of the Butler
Test
53
The appellants question the correctness of Butler and say, in any
event, that its approach cannot be freely transferred from heterosexual erotica
to gay and lesbian erotica. No constitutional question was stated regarding
the validity or constitutional limits of s. 163 of the Criminal Code .
The absence of notice of such a constitutional question precludes the
wide-ranging reconsideration of Butler sought by the appellants and some
of the interveners (even if the Court were to conclude that such a reconsideration
is either necessary or desirable). On the more specific issues, the
appellants, and the interveners in their support, argue that in the context of
the Customs legislation a “harm-based” approach which utilizes a
single community standard across all regions and groups within society is
insufficiently “contextual” or sensitive to specific
circumstances to give effect to the equality rights of gays and lesbians. The
appellants, supported by the interveners LEAF and EGALE, contend that
homosexual erotica plays an important role in providing a positive self-image
to gays and lesbians, who may feel isolated and rejected in the heterosexual
mainstream. Erotica provides a positive celebration of what it means to be gay
or lesbian. As such, it is argued that sexual speech in the context of gay
and lesbian culture is a core value and Butler cannot legitimately be
applied to locate it at the fringes of s. 2 (b) expression. Erotica,
they contend, plays a different role in a gay and lesbian community than it
does in a heterosexual community, and the Butler approach based, they
say, on heterosexual norms, is oblivious to this fact. Gays and lesbians are
defined by their sexuality and are therefore disproportionately vulnerable to
sexual censorship.
54
The appellants’
criticisms of Butler can, for present purposes, be grouped under the
following headings.
(a) The
Community Standard of Tolerance Is Majoritarian and Suppresses Minority Speech,
Including Homosexual Expression
55
The appellants contend that importing a majoritarian analysis into the
definition of obscenity (e.g. what the broader Canadian community will
tolerate), inevitably creates prejudice against non-mainstream, minority
representations of sex and sexuality. They argue that the "national"
community is by definition majoritarian and is more likely than the homosexual
community itself to view gay and lesbian imagery as degrading and
dehumanizing. The whole idea of a community standards test, they say, is
incompatible with Charter values that were enacted to protect minority
rights. The fact that no particular evidence to define the community standard
is required to support a successful prosecution heightens the vulnerability of
minorities (B. Cossman et al., Bad Attitude/s on Trial: Pornography,
Feminism, and the Butler Decision (1997), at pp. 107-8). What makes this
standard even more problematic in the context of gay and lesbian erotica is
that where expression is suppressed on the basis of sexual orientation, so goes
the argument, it silences voices that are already suppressed and subject to
discrimination. Professor Richard Moon says that in Butler “[j]udicial subjectivity
(value judgment) is simply dressed up in the objective garb of community
standards” (“R. v. Butler:
The Limits of the Supreme Court’s
Feminist Re-Interpretation of Section 163 ”
(1993), 25 Ottawa L. Rev. 361, at p. 370).
56
This line of criticism underestimates Butler. While it is of
course true that under s. 163 of the Criminal Code the “community standard” is identified by a jury or
a judge sitting alone, and to that extent involves an attribution rather than
an opinion poll, the test was adopted to underscore the unacceptability of the
trier of fact indulging personal biases, as was held to have happened in Towne
Cinema, supra. A concern for minority expression is one of the
principal factors that led to adoption of the national community test in Butler
in the first place, per Sopinka J., at p. 484:
Some segments of society
would consider that all three categories of pornography cause harm to society
because they tend to undermine its moral fibre. Others would contend that none
of the categories cause harm. Furthermore there is a range of opinion as to
what is degrading or dehumanizing. See Pornography and Prostitution in
Canada: Report of the Special Committee on Pornography and Prostitution
(1985) (the Fraser Report), vol. 1, at p. 51. Because this is not a matter that
is susceptible of proof in the traditional way and because we do not wish to
leave it to the individual tastes of judges, we must have a norm that will
serve as an arbiter in determining what amounts to an undue exploitation of
sex. That arbiter is the community as a whole.
57
The protective character of the national standard requirement is readily
apparent from the summation of the test in Butler (at p. 485):
If material is not obscene under this framework, it does not
become so by reason of the person to whom it is or may be shown or exposed nor
by reason of the place or manner in which it is shown.
In other words, a person's constitutionally protected space
does not shrink by virtue of his or her geographical location or participation
in a certain context or community, or indeed by the taste of a particular judge
or jury. It is not necessarily in the interest of the minority to disaggregate
community standards. The appellants have in mind a special standard related to
their lesbian and gay target audience. The fact is, however, that they
operate a bookstore in a very public place open to anyone who happens by,
including potentially outraged individuals of the local community who might
wish to have the bookstore closed down altogether. If “special standards” are to apply, whose “special standard”
is it to be? There is some safety in numbers, and a national constituency that
is made up of many different minorities is a guarantee of tolerance for
minority expression.
58
Butler affirmed that Parliament had successfully criminalized
harmful sexual expression, that is to say sexual expression that is shown to be
incompatible with society’s
proper functioning, but Canadian society also recognizes as fundamental to its
proper functioning the Charter rights to freedom of expression and
equality. The standard of tolerance of this same Canadian society cannot
reasonably be interpreted as seeking to suppress sexual expression in the gay
and lesbian community in a discriminatory way.
59
It may serve repeating that the national community standard relates to
harm not taste, and is restricted, per Sopinka J., at p. 485, to “conduct which society
formally recognizes as incompatible with its proper functioning”. The test is therefore
not only concerned with harm, but harm that rises to the level of being incompatible
with the proper functioning of Canadian society. The Canadian Civil Liberties
Association (CCLA) argues that “for
gays and lesbians erotica and other material with sexual content is not harmful
and is in fact a key element of the quest for self-fulfilment” (factum, at
para. 14). So described, the CCLA has defined the material safely outside
the Butler paradigm. Butler placed harmful expression – not sexual expression – at the margin of s. 2 (b).
(b) The
Degrading or Dehumanizing Test Is Open to Homophobic Prejudice
60
The appellants argue that the “degrading
or dehumanizing”
language in Butler is highly subjective and encouraged Customs, for
example, to prohibit depictions of anal intercourse long after the Department
of Justice advised Customs to the contrary. This argument seems to ignore that
the phrase “degrading
or dehumanizing” in Butler
is qualified immediately by the words “if
the risk of harm is substantial”
(p. 485 (emphasis added)). This makes it clear that not all sexually
explicit erotica depicting adults engaged in conduct which is considered to be
degrading or dehumanizing is obscene. The material must also create a
substantial risk of harm which exceeds the community’s tolerance. The potential of harm and a
same-sex depiction are not necessarily mutually exclusive. Portrayal of a
dominatrix engaged in the non-violent degradation of an ostensibly willing sex
slave is no less dehumanizing if the victim happens to be of the same sex, and
no less (and no more) harmful in its reassurance to the viewer that the victim
finds such conduct both normal and pleasurable. Parliament’s concern was with
behavioural changes in the voyeur that are potentially harmful in ways
or to an extent that the community is not prepared to tolerate. There is no
reason to restrict that concern to the heterosexual community.
(c) The
Harm-Based Approach Is Merely Morality in Disguise
61
The appellants argue that while the Court in Butler purported to
move away from the morality-based approach, a harm-based test effectively rests
on the same discredited moral foundation.
62
This line of argument simply rejects the idea that Butler means
what it says, i.e., that the community standard of tolerance is based on the
reasonable apprehension of harm, not on morality. The arguments assume that
any appeal to a national community standard cannot be targeted on harm and will
inevitably be overwhelmed by majoritarian taste. This approach presupposes
that the arbiter (the broader community) is incapable of being focussed on the
task that it is required to address (harm). We have no evidence that the
courts are not able to apply the Butler test, and the reported decisions
seem to confirm that the identification of harm is a well understood
requirement: R. v. Hawkins (1993), 15 O.R. (3d) 549 (C.A.), at p. 566; R.
v. Jacob (1996), 112 C.C.C. (3d) 1 (Ont. C.A.), a case of alleged indecent
exposure; and R. v. Erotica Video Exchange Ltd. (1994), 163 A.R. 181
(Prov. Ct.).
63
The intervener LEAF took the position that sado-masochism performs an
emancipatory role in gay and lesbian culture and should therefore be judged by
a different standard from that applicable to heterosexual culture. In support
of this position LEAF points out that, by definition, gender discrimination is
not an issue in “same-sex
erotica”. On the
other hand, the intervener Equality Now took the view that gay and lesbian
individuals have as much right as their heterosexual counterparts to be
protected from depictions of sex with violence or sexual conduct that is
dehumanizing or degrading in a way that can cause harm that exceeds community
standards of tolerance.
64
LEAF’s argument
seems to presuppose that the Butler test is exclusively gender-based.
Violence against women was only one of several concerns, albeit an important
one, that led to the formulation of the Butler harm-based test, which
itself is gender neutral. While it would be quite open to the appellants to
argue that a particular publication does not exceed the general community’s tolerance of harm for
various reasons, gay and lesbian culture as such does not constitute a general
exemption from the Butler test.
(d) The Butler
Test Is Oriented to Sexually Explicit Videos and Is Inappropriate for a Written
Text
65
A judicial decision is always to be read in the context of its
particular facts. The Butler case largely involved videos.
Nevertheless, there is nothing in the judgments of Sopinka and Gonthier JJ. to
suggest that the Butler test was not intended to apply to written
texts. I do not underestimate the importance of the medium, but ultimately Butler's
concern was not with the medium but with the message. It may be very difficult
to make the case of obscenity against a book, which is a medium perhaps less likely
to be conducive to harm and more likely to be protected by the artistic merit
or “inherent
necessities” defence.
The history of unsuccessful prosecutions of literary works in this country
since Brodie v. The Queen, [1962] S.C.R. 681 (Lady Chatterley's Lover)
seems to bear out this difficulty. In the Customs context, the time involved
to review properly a written text of considerable length for obscenity may be
out of all proportion to the supposed benefits. At some point Customs
authorities may decide that book banning should in most cases be left to those
responsible for enforcing the Criminal Code . However, the sheer
difficulty of making a successful obscenity case against a book should be seen
by the appellants, I would have thought, as one of the merits of the Butler
test.
(e) The Butler
Record Did Not Include Erotica Targeted at a Gay and Lesbian Clientele
66
The appellants argue that the lesbian depictions in the Butler
record were aimed at a heterosexual male audience, and that the Court did not
have occasion to address the differences between heterosexual and homosexual
erotica. The trial judge certainly noted such differences, albeit recognizing
that the “target
audience” concept had
been rejected in Towne Cinema, supra. He also accepted as a
sufficient basis for parliamentary intervention a “reasoned apprehension of harm” (Butler, at p.
504), and in this respect he relied on the conclusion of Professor Neil M.
Malamuth that “homosexual
pornography may have harmful effects even if it is distinct in certain ways
from heterosexual pornography”.
Professor Malamuth further observed that:
In recent years, [there] has been
increasing scientific research indicating that some of the behaviors that might
be related to exposure to some types of pornography are a serious problem
within the gay community as well as within the heterosexual one. . . . [T]here
are studies suggesting that within homosexual interactions the frequency of
sexually coercive acts as well as non-sexual aggression between intimates
occurs at a frequency quite comparable to heterosexual interactions.
67
The trial judge concluded that while erotica plays a more central role
in gay and lesbian culture than in heterosexual culture, the “harm-based” Butler approach is
applicable to both. In the application of the test, a court is able to sift
out erotica that in fact falls within the community’s tolerance of harm. While the social science
evidence is thin, it must be remembered that in Butler itself the Court
accepted that the Crown could not be required to adduce a higher level of proof
than the subject matter admits of. As Sopinka J. stated at p. 502:
While a direct link
between obscenity and harm to society may be difficult, if not impossible, to
establish, it is reasonable to presume that exposure to images bears a causal
relationship to changes in attitudes and beliefs.
and at p. 504:
I am in agreement with
Twaddle J.A. who expressed the view that Parliament was entitled to have a “reasoned apprehension of
harm” resulting from
the desensitization of individuals exposed to materials which depict violence,
cruelty, and dehumanization in sexual relations.
68
I agree with the trial judge and with the majority of the British
Columbia Court of Appeal that the attempt to carve out of Butler a
special exception for gay and lesbian erotica should be rejected.
E. Conclusion on Butler Issues
69
Accordingly, the legislative core of the Customs Tariff
prohibition, i.e., imported material that meets the obscenity provisions of s.
163 of the Criminal Code as interpreted in Butler, survives Charter
scrutiny in the context of gay and lesbian culture. The appellants argue that Butler
applied by a Customs officer raises a different free speech issue than Butler
applied by a court. In my view, however, Customs review should be seen in the
context of proceedings leading to court (if Customs pursues the prohibitions)
as discussed below.
F.
Attack on the Constitutionality of the Decision-Making Structure
Created by the Customs Act
70
On this branch of the argument the appellants claim that the statutory
Customs border review procedures achieve a level of unworkability comparable to
the abortion provisions of the Criminal Code which the Court held to be
unconstitutional in Morgentaler, supra. Similar arguments were
considered in Hunter v. Southam Inc., [1984] 2 S.C.R. 145, and R. v.
Bain, [1992] 1 S.C.R. 91. In those cases, the Court found that the source
of unconstitutionality resided in the legislation itself. I therefore turn in
the first instance to an examination of the Customs Tariff and the Customs
Act in light of the appellants' complaints. I will then take a more
detailed look at the relevant authorities.
71
The appellants say a regulatory structure that is open to the level of
maladministration described in the trial judgment is unconstitutionally
underprotective of their constitutional rights and should be struck down in its
entirety. In effect they argue that Parliament was required to proceed by way
of legislation rather than the creation of a delegated power of regulation in
s. 164(1) (j), which authorizes the Governor in Council to “make regulations . . .
generally, to carry out the purposes and provisions of this Act”, or by ministerial
directive. My colleague Iacobucci J. accepts the propositions that “[t]his Court's precedents
demand sufficient safeguards in the legislative scheme itself to ensure that
government action will not infringe constitutional rights” (para. 204) and because “the legislation makes no
reasonable effort to ensure that it will be applied constitutionally to
expressive materials”
(para. 211), Code 9956 should be struck from the Customs Tariff. I
do not think there is any constitutional rule that requires Parliament to deal
with Customs' treatment of constitutionally protected expressive material by
legislation (as the appellants contend) rather than by way of regulation (as
Parliament contemplated in s. 164(1) (j)) or even by ministerial
directive or departmental practice. Parliament is entitled to proceed on the
basis that its enactments “will
be applied constitutionally”
by the public service.
72
The authorities relied on by my colleague all deal with legislation that
itself contained problematic provisions. In this case, the complaint is about
the absence of affirmative provisions, per Iacobucci J., at para.
166: “The Customs
legislation lacks the most basic procedures necessary for a fair and accurate
determination of whether something is obscene.”
To put it another way, the appellants' complaint is about what Parliament did not
enact rather than what it did enact. The imposition on Parliament of a
constitutional obligation to deal itself with Charter -sensitive matters
rather than by permitting Parliament the option of enacting a delegated
regulation-making power has serious ramifications for the machinery of
government. I do not agree that Parliament’s
options are so limited.
73
The initial question, however, is whether the Customs legislation itself
contains procedures that infringe Charter rights, as in Morgentaler,
or whether the problem here is implementation, aggravated by administrative
constraints such as limited budgets and lack of qualified personnel, as found
by the trial judge.
74
The appellants’
argument can be organized under the following headings.
(a) The Crudity
of the Decision-making Process
75
The trial judge described the process thus (at para. 256):
. . . while memorandum D9-1-1 requires
classifying officers to read books from cover to cover, some officers simply
thumb through them or read pages at random. Many officers review videotapes
with the assistance of a fast-forward device, stopping only to examine scenes
of explicit sex; they do not listen to the soundtrack. Some who testified
acknowledged that they are not capable of determining artistic merit and that
they do not attempt to do so. Others claim to consider each item carefully and
completely and to determine whether the work has a valid purpose.
76
The appellants complain that there is no provision in the Customs
legislation for a hearing (written or oral) and no opportunity for the importer
to adduce evidence to inform the Customs officer. No reasons are typically
given by Customs for a prohibition beyond a tick in one of eight boxes entitled
“Sex With Violence”, “Child Sex”,
“Incest”, “Bestiality”,
“Necrophilia”, “Hate Propaganda”,
“Anal Penetration”, and “Other”. The box “Other” is followed by a short
line on which the inspector could write one or two words to describe the ground
for prohibition, but rarely did so in sufficient detail to be informative.
77
While these complaints have some substance, they address the statutory
scheme as operated by officials rather than the statutory scheme
itself. The Constitution does not prohibit border inspections: R. v.
Simmons, [1988] 2 S.C.R. 495. Any border inspection may involve detention
and, because Customs officials are only human, erroneous determinations. Thus
the trial judge found at para. 234 that:
The deleterious effects of
the legislation as opposed to the effects of its administration and
application, are that admissible material is sometimes detained to be
examined for compliance and that wrong decisions are sometimes made in
the classification of materials. [Emphasis added.]
I regard such potential as inherent in any border
surveillance scheme. Of themselves, they afford no reason to declare the
legislation unconstitutional.
78
If Parliament can validly prohibit obscenity, and Butler held
that it had validly done so, the prohibition can be imposed at the border as
well as within the country. The only expressive material that
Parliament has authorized Customs to prohibit as obscene is material that is,
by definition, the subject of criminal penalties for those who are engaged in
its production or trafficking (or have possession of it for those purposes).
The concern with prior restraint, discussed by my colleague Iacobucci J.
at paras. 232 to 236, operates in such circumstances, if at all, with much
reduced importance.
79
In the Customs context, procedures are inevitably different than in a
prosecution for a criminal offence, but I do not read Butler's linkage
between constitutionality and a reasoned apprehension of harm as being
contingent on the availability of a full trial in a criminal court. Criminal offences
require criminal procedures. The role and function of border inspections are
quite different.
80
The classification exercise under Code 9956 largely consists of the
Customs inspector making a comparison of the imported materials with the
illustrated manual that accompanied Customs Memorandum D9-1-1. If a picture in
an imported magazine, for example, looks to the Customs inspector like a “sample” of obscenity described in
D9-1-1, or depicted in its companion document of illustrations, it is deemed by
Customs to be obscene. There is not much scope in the process to evaluate
artistic merit or indeed for any of the subtleties of the jurisprudence under
s. 163 . The trial judge found that “importers
have no guarantee that they may see, and in fact are discouraged from seeing,
the prohibited material for purposes of preparing a submission on a request for
re-determination”
(para. 65). The process is no more than it purports to be, a rough and ready
border screening procedure that may lead Customs (with or without a
re-determination at a more senior departmental level) to refuse entry to the
goods. Parliament was entitled to assume that refusal would not be given
without reasonable cause. Such a refusal, it is important to emphasize, is
subject to appeal to the courts.
81
The evidence is that at the second stage re-determination, the material
is reviewed by a small number of Customs officials who work for approximately
three to six months in the Prohibited Importations Directorate. The assignment
is unpopular. The officials are given little training except “on-the-job” experience. The
legislation mandates neither the level of resources nor the requisite
training. The department sets its own priorities within the resources put at
its disposal.
82
Iacobucci J. argues that Parliament was constitutionally required to
spell out a more rights-protective regime in the Act itself, but in my view,
for the reasons given below, it was open to Parliament in creating this type of
government machinery to lay out the broad outline in the legislation and leave
its implementation to regulation by the Governor in Council or departmental
procedures established under the authority of the Minister. A failure at the
implementation level, which clearly existed here, can be addressed at the
implementation level.
(b) The
Inadequacies of Memorandum D9-1-1
83
Memorandum D9-1-1 is acknowledged by Customs as their key working tool
but it is of uncertain origins and level of approval. The Memorandum was
divided into various sections, and was accompanied by an illustrated manual
showing depictions of various sexual activities thought by Customs to be “degrading or dehumanizing”. There was no recognition
in the version of Memorandum D9-1-1 in use at the time of the events described
at trial that the community standard related to tolerance of harm rather than
taste.
84
The evidence established that for all practical purposes Memorandum
D9-1-1, and especially the companion illustrated manual, governed Customs’ view of obscenity. The
Customs' view was occasionally intransigent. Reference has already been made
to the opinion from the Department of Justice that depiction of anal
intercourse was not as such obscene. That opinion was ignored for at least two
years while imported materials depicting anal intercourse continued to be
prohibited on the basis of the outdated Memorandum D9-1-1.
85
The trial judge concluded that Customs’
failure to make Memorandum D9-1-1 conform to the Justice Department opinion on
the definition of obscenity violated the appellants’ Charter rights. However, I agree with
the British Columbia Court of Appeal that the trial judge put too much weight
on the Memorandum, which was nothing more than an internal administrative aid
to Customs inspectors. It was not law. It could never have been relied upon
by Customs in court to defend a challenged prohibition. The failure of Customs
to keep the document updated is deplorable public administration, because use
of the defective guide led to erroneous decisions that imposed an unnecessary
administrative burden and cost on importers and Customs officers alike. Where
an importer could not have afforded to carry the fight to the courts a
defective Memorandum D9-1-1 may have directly contributed to a denial of
constitutional rights. It is the statutory decision, however, not the manual,
that constituted the denial. It is simply not feasible for the courts to
review for Charter compliance the vast array of manuals and guides
prepared by the public service for the internal guidance of officials. The
courts are concerned with the legality of the decisions, not the quality of the
guidebooks, although of course the fate of the two are not unrelated.
(c) Non-Observance
of Time Limits
86
The initial inspection is carried out under s. 58 of the Customs Act ,
which authorizes Customs officers to determine the tariff classification of
imported goods. In the case of goods that are not “prohibited”,
the Customs Act requires the Customs officer to determine the
classification of imported goods within 30 days after being “accounted for” by the importer. Unless
the Customs officer makes a contrary classification within the 30-day period,
the classification proposed by the importer is accepted.
87
In this Court the appellants stated, and the Crown agreed, that the
30-day time limit did not apply in the case of “prohibited
goods”. The
appellants' motive, I infer, was to show how unworkable the statute is, but
there is nothing in the Act to support such an interpretation. It makes no
administrative sense because goods only become “prohibited” as a result of the
classification process. If no classification is made the goods cannot have “prohibited” status, and the trigger
for the supposed exception does not exist.
88
Accordingly, if Customs does not make a classification within 30 days
the importer’s
classification applies. If the department, while failing to act in a timely
way, nevertheless regards the materials as obscene, the matter may be referred
to the provincial authorities who may decide to commence a prosecution under
the Criminal Code . The 30-day decision period was an important
protection inserted in the Customs Act for the benefit of importers.
89
The evidence demonstrated that Customs, because of scarce resources or
otherwise, failed to carry out the classification exercise sometimes for many
months. As the trial judge found at para. 112 of his judgment:
Often, decisions are not
made within the statutorily‑prescribed time limits. The plaintiffs
identified many instances where the thirty‑day time limit between
detention and determination under s. 58 was exceeded. As well, they identified
many instances where the date of detention was incorrectly recorded on the Form
K27, making it impossible to determine whether the thirty‑day time limit
was observed.
90
These deficiencies could clearly have been addressed by regulatory
provisions made under s. 164(1) (j) or ministerial directions to Customs
officials. In the absence of such public service initiatives, an action
against the Crown in respect of an unlawfully detained shipment of material
accompanied by a substantial award of costs would likely have a salutary effect
in keeping Customs focussed on the deadlines imposed by Parliament.
(d) Delays
in the Internal Review and Reconsideration Process
91
Once a classification has been made, an importer who disagrees with the
classification has 90 days to appeal the “determination” to a designated officer “in the prescribed manner
and in the prescribed form”.
Section 60(3) requires the designated official to “re-determine”
the tariff classification “with
all due dispatch”.
The evidence is that “all
due dispatch” was
loosely interpreted in the case of the appellants' shipments. On this point
the trial judge found (at para. 113):
Re‑determinations
requested by Little Sisters under s. 60 were completed in times ranging from
ten days to three and one‑half months. It was conceded by Customs'
witnesses at trial that the reviewing officer could not have read the books in
question in some instances within the time it took to give the decision.
92
Parliament’s
direction that the re-determination be made with “all
due dispatch” must be
given content. The original determination must be made within 30 days and
there is no evidence that the re-determination should take longer. (Under the
terms of the subsequent Customs Act amendments, the determination must
be made by or at the time of accounting, which equally contemplates a speedy
procedure.) If Customs fails to make a re-determination within the allotted
time, an importer may apply for an order of mandamus, with costs, to
require that Customs reach a decision one way or the other.
93
Following the re-determination, a disappointed importer can make a
further appeal to the Deputy Minister or his designate under s. 63 of the Act.
This level of review allows the department at a senior level the opportunity to
reverse the earlier determination of the imported material as obscene unless
the Deputy Minister or his designate is prepared to go to court to defend the
prohibition. Once again, the decision is to be made “with all due dispatch”. Parliament’s
intention seems clearly to be to hurry the process along, and there is no reason
to expect “all due
dispatch” at this
second stage of re-determination will exceed 30 days either. The fact
Parliament eliminated the middle stage of the process after the trial seems to
confirm its desire for a streamlined decision-making process within the
department.
94
The trial judge found (at para. 113) that some requests for
re-determination under s. 63 took more than a year for decision. Such a
delay is not in accordance with the Act. It must be remembered that these
stages of administrative re-determination are internal procedures with no
opportunity given to the importer to be heard or to adduce evidence. They
were put in place, as Minister George Nowlan told the House of Commons, to deal
with “cabbages and
cucumbers” (see para.
15, supra). They are not in any sense “hearings” on the merits. Their
purpose is to afford the departmental hierarchy the opportunity to reverse a
first stage determination if it is not prepared to defend it. “[A]ll due dispatch” means that now, after the
recent amendment, an importer should have a final departmental decision within
30 days after it seeks a review of the initial determination that Customs “deems” the imported publication
to be obscene. This compares favourably with the 60-day limit stipulated in United
States v. Thirty-Seven Photographs, 402 U.S. 363 (1971), referred to by
Iacobucci J. at para. 241.
(e) The
Desirability of a Specialized Tribunal
95
The appellants argue that controversies involving freedom of expression
and equality rights ought not to be left in the hands of the usual bureaucratic
decision-making machinery. They point to the establishment in South Africa of
the Indecent Publications Tribunal, now replaced by the Office of Film and
Literature Classification and the Publications Appeal Board, and the Office of
Film and Literature Classification in Australia. The creation of such bodies
reflects the importance properly attached to expressive material and seems to
allow for a speedier and more specialized process to deal with subject matter
which our Customs department has found it very difficult to deal with.
However, while such a body may find favour with Parliament at some stage, the
present policy is to utilize the ordinary public service and the courts and
there is nothing unconstitutional about the absence of a specialized tribunal
from the statutory scheme.
(f) The Attack on Book Banning
96
The evidence is that Customs officials failed in general to deal
properly with books. Few, if any, were read in their entirety. The usual
procedure was for a Customs official to thumb through the pages of a book and
as soon as three passages replicating material considered to be obscene under
Memorandum D9-1-1 were identified in the text the book was deemed obscene and
prohibited. The procedure would be clearly inadequate in all but the most
egregious cases. No attempt was made to gain an impression of the book as a
whole on which “artistic
merit” could be
assessed.
(g) Onus of Proof of Obscenity
97
The constitutional question challenges the validity of s. 71 of the
Customs Act , on which the redetermination and court proceedings are
based. In part, the challenge relies on the “reverse
onus” provision
applied in such proceedings by virtue of s. 152(3) of the Customs Act ,
as explained in oral argument by counsel for the appellants:
We challenge the entire
scheme, not just the power of the Customs officer at the front line to do that
detention and prohibition, but the scheme insofar as it puts the onus on the
importer, whether the importer is a bookstore or a regular individual to
seek a redetermination, or review, or appeal, would have you through a
byzantine bureaucratic process and ultimately to the Courts in order to prove
that the material is not obscene. [Emphasis added.]
98
Section 152(3) is not specific to obscenity or even to prohibited goods
generally, but applies to “any
proceeding under this Act”,
including the appeals process authorized by s. 71 . Section 152(3) directs the
decision-maker to assume that Customs officials are right unless and until the
importer proves them to be wrong. It provides:
152.
. . .
(3) Subject to subsection
(4), in any proceeding under this Act, the burden of proof in any question
relating to
.
. .
(d) the compliance with any of the
provisions of this Act or the regulations in respect of any goods
lies on the person, other than Her Majesty,
who is a party to the proceeding or the person who is accused of an offence,
and not on Her Majesty.
99
The appellants did not directly impugn the constitutionality of the
reverse onus provision in their application to state the constitutional
questions, presumably because they intended to rely on its continued validity
as a lever to overturn the rest of the Customs legislation in relation to
expressive materials. In my view, however, the appellants' attack on s. 71 and
the procedures it authorizes is inextricably bound up with the reverse onus
provision, and the Court is not bound to accept the application of the latter
as valid when considering the constitutionality of the former. The
constitutional question in relation to s. 71 encompasses both aspects of the
appellants' argument.
100
The first step is to identify which of the various remedies afforded by
s. 71 attract the s. 152(3) onus. Where applicable, it would put on the
importer the burden of establishing a negative, i.e., that the expressive
material is more likely than not to be non-obscene.
101
The word “proceeding” is of course apt to apply
to any court action that may follow an in-house Customs determination. In my
view, however, the provision cannot constitutionally apply to put on the
importer the onus of disproving obscenity. Otherwise entry of expressive
materials could be denied by reason of the onus even where the standard of
obscenity is not met, as for example, where an importer lacks the resources or
the stamina to contest an initial determination. An importer has a Charter
right to receive expressive material unless the state can justify its denial.
It is not open to the state to put the onus on an individual to show why he or
she should be allowed to exercise a Charter right. It is for the state
to establish that a limitation on the Charter right is justified: R.
v. Oakes, [1986] 1 S.C.R. 103, per Dickson C.J., at pp. 136-37: “The onus of proving that a
limit on a right or freedom guaranteed by the Charter is reasonable and
demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society rests upon the party
seeking to uphold the limitation.”
102
As to the obscenity determination at the departmental level, I do not
think s. 152(3) applies at all. The Crown does not contend that all expressive
material entering Canada is presumptively obscene until shown to be otherwise.
The earliest the reverse onus could apply with any logic is in the
re-determination, but at that stage the importer is given neither sufficient
notice nor a sufficient opportunity to be heard to discharge the onus. The
reality is that once the front-line officer has made the initial determination
that he or she considers the publication to be obscene, the question for the
Deputy Minister or designate on the re-determination is whether the Department
is ready, willing and able, if required, to establish in court that the
detained material is obscene.
103
The Crown received notice in Glad Day Bookshop Inc. v.
Canada (Deputy Minister of National Revenue, Customs and Excise), [1992]
O.J. No. 1466 (QL) (Gen. Div.) (“Glad
Day (No. 2)”) that
s. 152(3) could not reverse the onus of proof on the obscenity issue onto the
importer, and in this Court the Crown tried neither to defend the application
of s. 152(3) to obscenity nor to advance any s. 1 justification. These
concessions were, I believe, quite correct.
104
In Glad Day (No. 2), Hayes J. went on to rule that not only did
the Crown carry the burden of proof but it must establish obscenity to the
criminal standard. This goes too far. Although the Customs Tariff
incorporates by reference the Criminal Code definition of obscenity, it
does so into a civil proceeding which generally requires proof only on a
balance of probabilities. The incorporation was made in response to Luscher
v. Deputy Minister, Revenue Canada, Customs and Excise, supra, which
held that the prohibition of "immoral" and "indecent"
materials in earlier Customs legislation was so vague as to be an unreasonable
limit on s. 2 (b) and to that extent was of no force or effect. We are
dealing with the imposition in civil proceedings of a limitation on freedom of
expression, and the imposition on the Crown of a civil standard of proof is
consistent with the usual Charter requirement that the Crown need only
justify an infringement to the civil standard.
105
As mentioned, s. 152(3) is not restricted to obscenity but has a broad
application across the whole Customs process. It may be appropriate when
dealing with imports of materials that ordinarily would not have much
constitutional sensitivity (such as Minister Nowlan's “cabbages and cucumbers”) to put the onus on the importer at the court
level to show that the Customs official has made an erroneous tariff
classification. What may work as a general rule in circumstances where Customs
procedures are not limited by constitutional rights does not, however, work in
relation to constitutionally protected expressive materials. In these
circumstances, however, the proper order should be limited to the matters
pertinent to the disposition of this appeal. I would therefore declare that s.
152(3) is not to be construed and applied so as to place on an importer the
onus to establish that goods are not obscene within the meaning of s.
163(8) of the Criminal Code . The burden of proving obscenity rests on
the Crown or other person who alleges it.
(h) Appeal to the Courts
106
The initial appeal is to the superior court of the province in which the
seizure occurred (ss. 67 , 71 ) together with an appeal on a question of law to
the Federal Court of Canada (s. 68).
107
In my view a court is the proper forum for resolution of an allegation
of obscenity. The department at that stage has had the opportunity to
determine whether it can establish on a balance of probabilities that the
expressive material is obscene. The court is equipped to hear evidence,
including evidence of artistic merit, and to apply the law. The absence of
procedures for taking evidence at the departmental level requires the appeal to
the court in obscenity matters to be interpreted as an appeal by way of a trial
de novo. It is true that the importer is put to the trouble and expense of
a defence to the obscenity issue, and that the Minister need only meet the
civil burden of proof. These disadvantages are inherent in any civil
litigation to vindicate rights. If the Crown loses the obscenity issue a civil
court will normally –
whereas the criminal court will normally not –
award costs. If the court is of the view that in a particular case Customs
officials have acted oppressively, costs can be awarded on a more generous
scale.
G.
The Appellants’
Claim that the Legislation Is Unconstitutionally Discriminatory Against the
Gay and Lesbian Community
108
In addition to their free speech attack on the machinery of the Customs
legislation, the individual appellants invoked their equality rights under s.
15(1) of the Charter . Their position is that the Customs legislation
itself is the source of violations of s. 15(1) as well as s. 2 (b)
of the Charter , and they claim that they are entitled to a s. 52
nullification remedy based as much on infringement of their equality rights as
on a denial of their right of free expression. It is therefore convenient,
before addressing the Morgentaler issue, to determine whether their
equality rights have been infringed and if so whether the source of the problem
is the Customs legislation itself, as the appellants contend, or whether the
problem described by the trial judge resulted from the unconstitutional conduct
of Customs officials exercising powers under constitutional legislation.
109
The appellants argue that the legislative scheme operates with
disproportionate and discriminatory effects on the gay and lesbian community
and therefore contravenes s. 15(1) and is to that extent null and void.
110
A number of recent decisions in this Court have emphasized a “purposive” interpretation of s. 15(1)
equality rights: Law v. Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration),
[1999] 1 S.C.R. 497; Corbiere v. Canada (Minister of Indian and Northern
Affairs), [1999] 2 S.C.R. 203; Granovsky v. Canada (Minister of
Employment and Immigration), [2000] 1 S.C.R. 703, 2000 SCC 28; and Lovelace
v. Ontario, [2000] 1 S.C.R. 950, 2000 SCC 37. These decisions were not
available at the time this case was dealt with by the courts of British
Columbia. It is now clearly established that the analysis proceeds in three
stages with close regard to context. At the first stage the claimant must show
that the law, program or activity imposes differential treatment between the
claimant and others with whom the claimant may fairly claim equality. The
second stage requires the claimant to demonstrate that this differentiation is
based on one or more of the enumerated or analogous grounds. The third stage
requires the claimant to establish that the differentiation amounts to a form
of discrimination that has the effect of demeaning the claimant’s human dignity. The “dignity” aspect of the test is
designed to weed out trivial or other complaints that do not engage the purpose
of the equality provision. In Law, supra, the Court stated, at
para. 51:
It may be said that the purpose of s. 15(1)
is to prevent the violation of essential human dignity and freedom through the
imposition of disadvantage, stereotyping, or political or social prejudice, and
to promote a society in which all persons enjoy equal recognition at law as
human beings or as members of Canadian society, equally capable and equally
deserving of concern, respect and consideration.
111
The trial judge made strong findings of fact in support of the
appellants’ position,
even though in the end he refused substantial relief on this ground.
(a) Stage
One: Differential Treatment
112
The trial judge found that shipments to gay and lesbian bookstores were
subjected to delays and seizures that were not only unjustified but were
disproportional to their share of imported material (paras. 105 and 251); that
the appellants had imported publications seized notwithstanding the identical
publications were freely available at other bookstores and in the Vancouver
Public Library; and that these problems of differential treatment were
systemic (para. 250). The trial judge found that “much homosexual erotica that has been
prohibited as obscene is not, in fact, obscene”
(para. 223 (emphasis added)). I will not repeat the findings in these respects
set out earlier in these reasons. Contrary to the conclusion of the trial
judge, however, the appellants contend that the source of this adverse
treatment lies in the Customs legislation itself.
113
The appellants were seen as key players in the lesbian and gay community
in Vancouver, and were targeted because homosexuality was too often equated
with obscenity. While homosexuals are said to form less than 10 per cent of
the Canadian population, up to 75 per cent of the material from time to time
detained and examined for obscenity was directed to homosexual audiences. (The
percentage varied of course.) The proportion of erotica produced for
homosexual audiences detained and examined by Customs was, the trial judge
found, “a proportion
far in excess of the relative size of the group”
(para. 251). There was evidence on which these findings could be made.
114
The trial judge identified Customs’
relentless pursuit of depictions of anal sex in gay erotica as symptomatic of
the Department's misplaced zeal. It appears that the Department of Justice
accepted as correct the view of Borins J. (as he then was) in R. v. Doug
Rankine Co. (1983), 36 C.R. (3d) 154 (Ont. Co. Ct.), quoted in 1985 by
Wilson J. in Towne Cinema, supra, at p. 523, that the
courts have taken the view that “[c]ontemporary
community standards would also tolerate the distribution of films which consist
of scenes of group sex, lesbianism, fellatio, cunnilingus, and anal sex” (p. 173 (emphasis
added)). Despite this opinion of the Department of Justice, Customs officials
continued to prohibit depictions of anal sex until Memorandum D9-1-1 was revised
in September 1994 just prior to trial. The trial judge found (at
para. 272) that Customs' refusal to abide by the Justice opinion deprived
the gay community
of representations of practices central to
the values and culture of the minority group to which they belong. As well, as
Professor Waugh pointed out, it constituted an embargo of “safe sex” guidelines within Canadian
homosexual communities at a time, in the context of the AIDS epidemic, when
such guidelines have been particularly important.
115
Significantly, the trial judge found that the failure of Customs to
amend their manuals in this regard was no accident. He states (at para. 268):
The decision not to amend was one
deliberately taken, and no satisfactory explanation was offered by the federal
Crown for the fact that Customs continued to prohibit depictions of anal
penetration in the face of the jurisprudence I have referred to and the
opinions received from the Department of Justice.
116
Taking the evidence as a whole, it was clearly open to the trial judge
to find, as he did, that the appellants suffered differential treatment when
compared to importers of heterosexually explicit material, let alone more
general bookstores that carried at least some of the same titles as Little
Sisters.
(b) Stage Two: Enumerated and
Analogous Grounds
117
The trial judge rejected the second stage of the appellants’ analysis despite his view
that the appellants had suffered adverse treatment because they were part of, and
suppliers to, the lesbian and gay community. He concluded the differentiation
was based on “real” characteristics and not
the “stereotypical
application of presumed group or personal characteristics”. He thought it
significant that both homosexuality and obscenity are defined in terms of
sexual practices. He agreed that the differentiation was based on sexual
orientation (second stage). He nevertheless found (at para. 135) no
infringement because:
Since homosexuals are defined by their
homosexuality and their art and literature is permeated with representations of
their sexual practices, it is inevitable that they will be disproportionately
affected by a law proscribing the proliferation of obscene sexual
representations.
There was no evidence to support the linkage thus made
between the frequency and scale of sexual representations and the quite
different issue of obscenity. A flourishing of sexual expression may have no
connection whatsoever with harm-based obscenity. The trial judge himself
protested against the detention of a “disturbing
amount of homosexual art and literature that is arguably not obscene” (para. 252). Nevertheless
he concluded that much of the imported material could be seen as degrading and
dehumanizing and therefore prohibited “because
it is obscene, not because it is homosexual”
(para. 136).
118
In my view, the issue of discrimination arises with regard to material
that was not obscene but was nevertheless detained, damaged,
misclassified or without justification turned back at the border because
it was destined for the gay and lesbian community. While sexual orientation is
not mentioned explicitly in s. 15 of the Charter , it is clearly an
analogous ground to the listed personal characteristics, as was held in Egan
v. Canada, [1995] 2 S.C.R. 513; Vriend v. Alberta, [1998] 1 S.C.R.
493, and M. v. H., [1999] 2 S.C.R. 3.
(c) Stage Three:
Discrimination
119
There is no need here to review at length the “[contextual] factors which may be referred to
by a s. 15(1) claimant in order to demonstrate that legislation has the effect
of demeaning his or her dignity, as dignity is understood for the purpose of
the Charter equality guarantee”
(Law, supra, at para. 62). The Court held in Vriend, supra,
that the gay and lesbian community has historically been the victim of
disadvantage, stereotyping, prejudice and vulnerability. As discussed earlier,
the community standard of tolerance of harm is a broad church that embraces
respect for minority expression. It is antithetical to the remedial reasons
underlying adoption of the community standard to single out a particular
minority as being less worthy than others of protection and respect.
120
The appellants claim that only 14 charges of obscenity were laid in four
years in British Columbia while approximately 35,000 prohibitions were imposed
by Customs in the same period. We do not know how many of these charges relate
to material imported by, amongst others, the appellants, or how many of the 14
charges (if any) resulted in convictions. Targeting is not necessarily
unconstitutional. The Customs Department is obliged to use its limited
resources in the most cost-effective way. This might include targeting
shipments that, on the basis of experience or other information, are more
likely than others to contain prohibited goods. The evidence here, however,
did not justify the targeting of Little Sisters and the three other lesbian and
gay bookstores. The Crown did not suggest that so-called XXX sex shops that
specialize in hard core heterosexual material were subject to such blanket
surveillance, even though, unlike in the case of Little Sisters, little if any
of their stock is found routinely on display in the Vancouver Public Library.
The appellants were entitled to the equal benefit of a fair and open Customs
procedure, and because they imported gay and lesbian erotica, which was and is
perfectly lawful, they were adversely affected in comparison to other
individuals importing comparable publications of a heterosexual nature.
121
On a more general level, there was no evidence that homosexual erotica
is proportionately more likely to be obscene than heterosexual erotica. It
therefore cannot be said that there was any legitimate correspondence between
the ground of alleged discrimination (sexual orientation) and the reality of
the appellants’
circumstances (importers of books and other publications including, but by no
means limited to, gay and lesbian erotica).
122
As to the nature and importance of the interest affected, the trial
judge himself concluded that access to homosexual erotica was central to gay
and lesbian culture at para. 128:
Because sexual practices are so integral to
homosexual culture, any law proscribing representations of sexual practices
will necessarily affect homosexuals to a greater extent than it will other
groups in society, to whom representations of sexual practices are much less
significant and for whom such representations play a relatively marginal role
in art and literature.
123
There was ample evidence to support the trial judge's conclusion that
the adverse treatment meted out by Canada Customs to the appellants and through
them to Vancouver’s
gay and lesbian community violated the appellants’
legitimate sense of self-worth and human dignity. The Customs treatment was
high-handed and dismissive of the appellants' right to receive lawful
expressive material which they had every right to import. When Customs
officials prohibit and thereby censor lawful gay and lesbian erotica, they are
making a statement about gay and lesbian culture, and the statement was
reasonably interpreted by the appellants as demeaning gay and lesbian values.
The message was that their concerns were less worthy of attention and respect
than those of their heterosexual counterparts.
124
While here it is the interests of the gay and lesbian community that
were targeted, other vulnerable groups may similarly be at risk from
overzealous censorship. Little Sisters was targeted because it was considered “different”. On a more general level,
it seems to me fundamentally unacceptable that expression which is free within
the country can become stigmatized and harassed by government officials simply
because it crosses an international boundary, and is thereby brought within the
bailiwick of the Customs department. The appellants’ constitutional right to receive perfectly lawful
gay and lesbian erotica should not be diminished by the fact their suppliers
are, for the most part, located in the United States. Their freedom of
expression does not stop at the border.
125
That having been said, there is nothing on the face of the Customs
legislation, or in its necessary effects, which contemplates or encourages
differential treatment based on sexual orientation. The definition of
obscenity, as already discussed, operates without distinction between
homosexual and heterosexual erotica. The differentiation was made here at the
administrative level in the implementation of the Customs legislation.
H. The Morgentaler Issue
126
My colleague Iacobucci J. concludes that even if the existence of some
type of border inspection or surveillance could be justified under s. 1 of the Charter ,
this particular scheme fails the minimal impairment test because what
Parliament has enacted is inherently and inevitably violative of rights of free
expression.
127
In reaching this conclusion, Iacobucci J. relies on some of the things
that Parliament could have said but does not say, and on this
basis cites certain pronouncements in Morgentaler, Hunter v. Southam
and Bain to find the Customs legislation unconstitutional. I do not
disagree with what is said in those cases but, with respect, I do not find the
legislation in this case to be comparable to the legislation at issue in those
cases.
128
In Morgentaler, the unconstitutionally cumbersome procedures
governing therapeutic abortion committees were spelled out in s. 251 of the Criminal
Code . The legislative scheme itself was held to be unworkable. The
problem resided in what was laid down by Parliament itself in the Criminal
Code , not with what was not laid down. The procedures enacted by
Parliament itself were the root cause of the Charter violations, per
Dickson C.J., at p. 62:
It is not possible to say that delay
results only from administrative constraints, such as limited budgets or a lack
of qualified persons to sit on therapeutic abortion committees. Delay results
from the cumbersome operating requirements of s. 251 itself.
.
. .
Even if the purpose of legislation is
unobjectionable, the administrative procedures created by law to bring
that purpose into operation may produce unconstitutional effects, and the
legislation should then be struck down. [Emphasis in original.]
The problem was located in s. 251 of the Code.
It therefore had to be addressed at the legislative level. There is no
equivalent in this case to the cumbersome statutory procedures imposed on
therapeutic abortion committees by s. 251 . It is true that at p. 68
Dickson C.J. also referred to the “further
flaw” that Parliament
had failed to provide in s. 251 “an
adequate standard for therapeutic abortion committees which must determine when
a therapeutic abortion should, as a matter of law, be granted”. In this case, the
appropriate legal standard is supplied by the incorporation by reference of
s. 163(8) of the Criminal Code , as Iacobucci J. concedes in para.
225.
129
In Hunter v. Southam, s. 10(3) of the Combines Investigation
Act purported to permit a member of the Restrictive Trade Practices
Commission to authorize a search and seizure. The Court held (at p. 164) that
a condition precedent to a valid search was the requirement of an authorization
– in advance where
feasible – by an impartial
arbiter. Parliament had vested members of the Restrictive Trade Practices
Commission with investigatory functions. They were therefore not impartial in
the matter of searches. The Act thus purported to confer on the members a
power that could not constitutionally be granted to them, and nothing that they
could do under the Act was capable of curing the statute’s wrongful attribution.
130
Dickson J. went on to consider the government's alternative argument, at
p. 168:
. . . that even if subss. 10(1) and 10(3)
do not specify a standard consistent with s. 8 for authorizing entry,
search and seizure, they should not be struck down as inconsistent with the Charter ,
but rather that the appropriate standard should be read into these
provisions. [Emphasis added.]
It was in this context that Dickson J. observed at p. 169:
It should not fall to the courts to fill in
the details that will render legislative lacunae constitutional.
In the case of Customs prohibitions, as stated, the “standard” or legal threshold to
lawful state intervention is found in the definition of obscenity in s. 163(8)
of the Criminal Code . Section 163(8) is clearly specified in Customs
Tariff Code 9956 (which my colleague would declare unconstitutional).
Dickson J. did not go on to suggest, as does my colleague, that not only the
standard but also the procedures attending its exercise must be spelled out in
the legislation. If this is correct, there is a great deal of legislation
governing Charter -sensitive conduct –
by the police, for example –
that is constitutionally deficient.
131
In Bain, supra, the accused challenged the lack of
even-handedness in the selection process for a criminal jury. Parliament gave
the Crown the ability to stand aside 48 prospective jurors and to challenge 4
jurors peremptorily. The accused in such case had but 12 peremptory
challenges, a legislated advantage to the Crown of over 4 to 1. The Crown
assured the court that its power would be exercised responsibly but the court
considered that the discriminatory law could not be thus salvaged. Bain
is the opposite of this case. There it was unsuccessfully argued that a
discriminatory law was capable of implementation in a neutral fashion. Here
the neutral law was found to have been implemented in a discriminatory
fashion. The issues are different and the remedy is therefore not the same.
132
The Customs Act , as is the case with most departmental
legislation, is rather short on the detail of how the department is actually to
be run. This is for good reason. Departmental priorities change and resources
rise and fall in response to a moving government agenda. The Minister requires
flexibility to determine how the departmental mandate is to be met.
133
A large measure of discretion is granted in the administration of the
Act, from the level of the Customs official up to the Minister, but it is well
established that such discretion must be exercised in accordance with the Charter
for the reasons articulated by Professor Peter Hogg in Constitutional Law of
Canada (loose-leaf ed.), vol. 2, at p. 34-11:
Action taken under
statutory authority is valid only if it is within the scope of that authority.
Since neither Parliament nor a Legislature can itself pass a law in breach of
the Charter , neither body can authorize action which would be in breach of the
Charter . Thus, the limitations on statutory authority which are imposed by the
Charter will flow down the chain of statutory authority and apply to
regulations, by-laws, orders, decisions and all other action (whether
legislative, administrative or judicial) which depends for its validity on
statutory authority.
Where legislation cannot be so construed, as in Hunter
v. Southam, Morgentaler and Bain, the infringing statutory
measure of course must be justified. In this case, however, I think the
Customs legislation is quite capable of being applied in a manner consistent
with respect for Charter rights. I do not agree with my colleague's
conclusion (at para. 204) that:
This Court's precedents demand sufficient
safeguards in the legislative scheme itself to ensure that government action
will not infringe constitutional rights. In the face of an extensive record of
unconstitutional application, it is not enough merely to provide a structure
that could be applied in a constitutional manner. This is particularly
the case where fundamental Charter rights, such as the right to free
expression, are at stake. [Emphasis in original.]
134
Free expression was at stake in Slaight Communications Inc. v.
Davidson, [1989] 1 S.C.R. 1038, yet the Court did not require Parliament to
amend the Canada Labour Code . The Court ruled only that an adjudicator
appointed under the Code must exercise his or her discretion in
accordance with the Charter . As Lamer J. (as he then was) stated
at p. 1078: “Legislation
conferring an imprecise discretion must therefore be interpreted as not
allowing Charter rights to be infringed”.
See also Dagenais v. Canadian Broadcasting Corp., [1994] 3 S.C.R. 835.
Cases dealing with Charter rights other than freedom of expression have
been similarly disposed of. In R. v. Beare, [1988] 2 S.C.R. 387, the
Court reversed the Saskatchewan Court of Appeal and upheld as valid the broad
discretion given to police officers under a power to fingerprint suspects,
despite objections about potential abuse. The Criminal Code provides
enormous discretion to government officials and the police in matters that
directly affect Charter rights, yet as La Forest J. pointed out at p.
411:
The Criminal Code
provides no guidelines for the exercise of discretion in any of these areas.
The day to day operation of law enforcement and the criminal justice system
nonetheless depends upon the exercise of that discretion.
This Court has already
recognized that the existence of prosecutorial discretion does not offend the
principles of fundamental justice; see R. v. Lyons, [[1987] 2 S.C.R.
309], at p. 348; see also R. v. Jones, [1986] 2 S.C.R. 284, at pp.
303-4. The Court did add that if, in a particular case, it was established
that a discretion was exercised for improper or arbitrary motives, a remedy
under s. 24 of the Charter would lie, but no allegation of this kind has
been made in the present case.
If Parliament is constitutionally able to confer broad
powers on the police and Justice Department officials under the Criminal
Code without establishing a specific institutional framework to deal with
out-of-court Charter -sensitive activities, I fail to see how Parliament
is nevertheless required to legislate special procedures to govern Customs
officials.
135
In the case of the Customs legislation, Parliament contemplated that
more detailed regulations may be necessary for the guidance of officials and
others. It provided in s. 164(1) (j) of the Customs Act , to
repeat, that the Governor in Council “may
make regulations . . . generally to carry out the purposes and provisions of
this Act”. Many of
the systemic problems identified by the trial judge in the department’s treatment of potentially
obscene imports might have been dealt with by institutional arrangements
implemented by regulation, but this was not done. However, the fact that a
regulatory power lies unexercised provides no basis for attacking the validity
of the statute that conferred it.
136
The specific provisions of the Customs Act relevant to the
appellants are the tariff classification provision (s. 58 ) and the various
rights to a redetermination (ss. 60 , 63 and 71 ) and appeals to the courts (ss.
67 and 152 ). Parliament was entitled, I think, to expect that the Minister,
with or without regulations under s. 164 , would put in place the necessary
detailed procedures, including procedures appropriate for processing
constitutionally sensitive material.
137
The fact this issue arises in connection with the administration of a
government department prompts two further comments. The first is that it is in
the nature of government work that the power of the state is exercised and the Charter
rights of the citizen may therefore be engaged. While there is evidence of
actual abuse here, there is the potential for abuse in many areas, and a
rule requiring Parliament to enact in each case special procedures for the
protection of Charter rights would be unnecessarily rigid.
138
Secondly, the government needs neither a special statute nor special
regulations to deal with its own employees. Customs officials are responsible
to the Minister by virtue of their jobs. I have already held that Customs
Tariff Code 9956 creates a constitutionally valid standard. In the
administration of the department the Minister may supplement by directive the
provisions of the Customs Act for its implementation. The public
service responds to ministerial direction with no less alacrity than it
responds to statute or regulation. In short, an importer's rights may be
protected in fact by statute, regulation, ministerial direction or even
departmental practice. What is crucial, at the end of the day, is that Charter
rights are in fact respected. The modalities for achieving that objective will
vary with the context. There is nothing unconstitutional about the option
selected by Parliament in this case.
139
All of this is to say that there are various methods to ensure respect by
the public service for the Charter rights of importers. Each method has
its advantages and
disadvantages. The fact Parliament opted for the more
flexible routes of delegated regulation and ministerial directive is not, I
think, a reason to invalidate the legislation itself.
I. Section 1 Justification
140
As stated, the Crown fairly acknowledged from the outset that the Customs
Act and Customs Tariff infringe the freedom of expression of
individuals by imposing a barrier to the communication of expressive material.
No matter how many (or how few) safeguards are built into the Customs
legislation, this barrier will remain. It is inherent in any Customs scheme
and the government must demonstrate that such a barrier is a reasonable limit.
141
It should be noted at the outset that the s. 15(1) infringements
identified by the trial judge are incapable of s. 1 justification. Violative
conduct by government officials that is not authorized by statute is not “prescribed by law” and cannot therefore be
justified under s. 1 . The equality rights issues therefore proceed directly to
the remedy phase of the analysis. Limitations on free expression were,
however, authorized by Parliament in the Customs legislation, and on that
branch of the appeal consideration must be given to whether a border inspection
regime in which the government assumes the burden of proving obscenity on a
balance of probabilities is a reasonable limit prescribed by law that can be
demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society.
142
As already noted, the Crown did not attempt to justify the application
of the s. 152(3) reverse onus provision to require an importer to establish non-obscenity.
143
In general terms, s. 1 of the Charter requires the government to
establish that the limitation imposed on the exercise by the appellants of
their Charter rights was undertaken pursuant to objectives that were
pressing and substantial. Moreover, the measures sought to be justified must
be shown to be proportionate to this objective, which is to say that they are
rationally connected to the objective, minimally impair the Charter
rights in question, and that a proper balance has been struck between the
effects of the limiting measure and the legislative measure. Finally it must
be shown that the deleterious effects of the limitations are outweighed by its
salutary benefits: Oakes, supra; RJR-MacDonald Inc. v. Canada
(Attorney General), [1995] 3 S.C.R. 199; Dagenais v. Canadian
Broadcasting Corp., supra, at p. 878.
144
Freedom of expression is central to our identity as individuals and to
our collective well-being as a society. Doubt about justification should be
resolved in its favour.
(a) Prescribed by Law
145
I have already rejected, for the reasons given, the appellants’ position that the Butler
standard is so vague as not to be a limitation “prescribed
by law” within the
meaning of s. 1 of the Charter when applied to gay and lesbian erotica.
146
Section 163 having been upheld in Butler, and the Customs
Tariff having incorporated s. 163 and the related jurisprudence, it follows
that the Customs Tariff prohibition is not void for vagueness or
uncertainty, and is therefore validly “prescribed
by law”. The
appellants argued that a legal standard which may be intelligible to a judge in
a criminal trial surrounded with all the appropriate procedural protections is
not necessarily intelligible to a Customs official left to his or her own
devices supplemented by Memorandum D9-1-1. I do not think “intelligibility” varies with the level of
procedural sophistication. The standard set out in s. 163(8) of the Criminal
Code either affords a reasonable guide to well-intentioned individuals
seeking to keep themselves within the law or it does not. Butler held
that it did. The standard is related to the community’s tolerance of harm. It is the severity of
the potential consequences that requires a judge to preside over a criminal
trial, not the intelligibility of the “community
tolerance” standard.
(b) Pressing and Substantial Objective
147
Parliament’s
legislative objective is to prevent Canada from being inundated with obscene
material from abroad. As in Butler, the ultimate objective was the
avoidance of harm that Parliament had a reasonable apprehension would be caused
by exposure to obscene material (Butler, supra, at p. 491). This
is a valid objective.
(c) Proportionality
(i) Rational
Connection
148
Canadian sovereignty includes the right to inspect and if considered
appropriate to prohibit the entry of goods which Parliament, in the valid
exercise of its criminal law power, has prohibited (Simmons, supra).
Customs procedures are rationally connected to that objective.
(ii) Minimal Impairment
149
Customs officials have no authority to deny entry to sexually explicit
material unless it comes within the narrow category of pornography that
Parliament has validly criminalized as obscene. With respect to lawful
publications, the interference sanctioned by Parliament was limited to the
delay, cost and aggravation inherent in inspection, classification and release
procedures. Unlike Butler, we are not dealing here with the denial of
the expressive right but with a temporary delay in obtaining possession of lawful
materials while the importation is being processed.
150
As stated, the Customs legislation outlines a skeletal scheme consisting
of a border inspection, a classification procedure for tariff purposes, and a
system of both internal and judicial appeals from a prohibition based on a
finding of obscenity. The inspection and classification provisions are
inherent in any border control, and are valid unless the appellants can
establish a constitutional right to open borders, which they have not done.
The re-determination and appeal provisions are inserted for the importer’s benefit. It is difficult
to envisage how the Crown could achieve its legitimate objective at the border,
or be fair to the public interest expressed through the obscenity provisions of
the Criminal Code as well as the interests of the importers of
expressive material, without such a system. It is clear that the statutory
scheme required supplementary measures by regulation or ministerial direction
beyond the skeletal provisions that were made. The operation of the statutory
scheme, as found by the trial judge, created a barrier to free expression that
exceeded the government’s
legitimate objectives, but that is a matter for regulatory or administrative
not necessarily legislative action. In my view the basic statutory
scheme set forth in the Customs legislation, properly implemented by the government
within the powers granted by Parliament, was capable of being administered with
minimal impairment of the s. 2 (b) rights of importers, apart from the
reverse onus provision which should be declared inapplicable to the obscenity
issue for the reasons previously mentioned.
151
Parliament created a broad regulation-making power in s. 164(1) (j)
of the Customs Act for the better implementation of the Act. Parliament
has given the executive the authority to put in place by regulation an
administrative or institutional structure that would protect the expressive
rights of the appellants and others. The problem here is not with the
legislators but with the failure of those responsible to exercise the powers
that they possess, including, according to the trial judge, the failure of
Customs to make available adequate resources to do the job effectively.
(d) Overall Proportionality
152
In my view Parliament has struck an appropriate balance between the
limiting effects of the Customs legislation and the legislative objective of
prohibiting the entry of socially harmful material. As held in Butler,
at p. 509, the benefits sought by the criminalization of obscenity are the
avoidance of harm and the enhancement of respect for all members of society,
and the promotion of non-violence and equality in their relations with each
other. If I am correct that the source of the appellants' problem lies at the
administrative level rather than the legislative level, the restriction imposed
by Parliament to catch expressive materials that violate s. 163 of the Criminal
Code at the international border does not outweigh the importance of the
legislative objective.
(e) Deleterious Effects Versus
Salutary Benefits
153
The deleterious effects on the appellants found by the trial judge went
way beyond any salutary benefits for Canadian society in this case, but that is
not the test. The test is whether the deleterious effects of the Customs
legislation, properly administered, exceed the salutary effect of the Customs
legislation. The Customs legislation, properly administered, is designed to
prevent entry into Canada of material that in all probability is obscene, i.e.,
likely to cause harm in excess of the community’s
standard of tolerance. That is a salutary benefit, although there is little
evidence in the record on this point, apart from identification of some adult
heterosexual pornographic magazines which are regularly and apparently
effectively monitored. Against this, the deleterious effect on importers of
lawful material is expected by Parliament to be no more than temporary
detention and the various costs in time and money reasonably occasioned by the
processing of the goods. If the Customs legislation operated as intended, as
it apparently does across a broad range of commercial and other goods, the
deleterious effects would be outweighed by its salutary benefit. The problem,
to repeat, is in the implementation and it is to the remedy for the deficient
administration of the Customs legislation that I now turn.
J. Remedy
154
In my view, the appellants have established that:
1. Section 152(3) of the Customs Act should
not be construed and applied so as to place the onus on an importer to
establish that goods are not obscene within the meaning of s. 163(8) of the Criminal
Code . The burden of proving obscenity rests on the Crown or other person
who alleges it.
2. The rights of the appellants under s. 2 (b)
and s. 15(1) of the Charter have been infringed in the following
respects:
(a) They have been targeted as importers
of obscene materials despite the absence of any evidence to suggest that gay
and lesbian erotica is more likely to be obscene than heterosexual erotica, or
that the appellants are likely offenders in this regard;
(b) In consequence of the targeting, the
appellants have suffered excessive and unnecessary prejudice in terms of
delays, cost and other losses in having their goods cleared (if at all) through
Canada Customs;
(c) The reasons for this excessive and
unnecessary prejudice include:
(i) failure by
Customs to devote a sufficient number of officials to carry out the review of
the appellants’
publications in a timely way;
(ii) the
inadequate training of the officials assigned to the task;
(iii) the failure
to place at the disposal of these officials proper guides and manuals, failure
to update Memorandum D9-1-1 and its accompanying illustrative manual in a
timely way, and the failure to develop workable procedures to deal with books
consisting mostly or wholly of written text;
(iv) failure to
establish internal deadlines and related criteria for the expeditious review of
expressive materials;
(v) failure to
incorporate into departmental guides and manuals relevant advice received from
time to time from the Department of Justice;
(vi) failure to
provide the appellants in a timely way with notice of the basis for detention
of publications, the opportunity to make meaningful submissions on a
re-determination, and reasonable access to the disputed materials for that
purpose; and
(vii) failure to
extend to the appellants the equal benefit of fair and expeditious treatment of
their imported goods without discrimination based on sexual orientation.
155
It is apparent that this catalogue particularizes in greater detail the
declaration issued by the trial judge, namely:
THIS COURT DECLARES that
Tariff Code 9956(a) of Schedule VII and s. 114 of the Customs Tariff,
S.C. 1987, c. 41 (3rd Supplement) and ss. 58 and 71 of the Customs Act,
S.C. 1986, c. 1 (2nd Supplement) have at times been construed and applied in a
manner contrary to s. 2 (b) and s. 15(1) of the Canadian Charter of Rights
and Freedoms .
156
The Crown did not cross-appeal the grant of the declaration and neither
in this Court nor in the British Columbia Court of Appeal did the appellants
make submissions on whether or how a declaration under s. 24(1) of the Charter
could be better framed to grant substantial relief. Their objective there as
here was to get rid of the legislation altogether.
157
Having rejected that s. 52 argument, except as to the reverse onus
provision, the remaining question is whether the Court should attempt to
fashion a more structured s. 24(1) remedy. I conclude, with some
hesitation, that it is not practicable to do so. The trial concluded on
December 20, 1994. We are told that in the past six years, Customs has
addressed the institutional and administrative problems encountered by the
appellants. In the absence of more detailed information as to what precisely
has been done, and the extent to which (if at all) it has remedied the
situation, I am not prepared to endorse my colleague's conclusion that these
measures are “not
sufficient” (para.
262) and have offered “little
comfort” (para. 265).
Equally, however, we have not been informed by the appellants of the specific
measures (short of declaring the legislation invalid or inoperative) that in
the appellants' view would remedy any continuing problems.
158
The most detailed suggestion the appellants have made in the way of a
s. 24(1) remedy is the following request:
. . . in the final alternative an
injunction restraining Customs from applying and administering the Customs
Tariff, S.C. 1987, c. 41 (3rd Supplement) s. 114, Schedule VII, Code
9956(a) and the Customs Act , S.C. 1986 (2nd Supp.), s. 58 and s. 71 , as
amended, permanently or until such time as there is no risk that the
unconstitutional administration will continue.
The first branch of the proposed injunction (“permanently”) amounts to a s. 52
declaration of inoperability, which I do not consider justified. The second
branch (“until such
time”) sets an
unrealistic standard (“no
risk”). If diluted to
a call for constitutional behaviour, the result would add little to the general
duty that falls on any government official to act in accordance with the
Constitution, injunction or no injunction, and would scarcely advance the
objectives of either clarity or enforceability. A more structured
s. 24(1) remedy might well be helpful but it would serve the interests of
none of the parties for this Court to issue a formal declaratory order based on
six-year-old evidence supplemented by conflicting oral submissions and
speculation on the current state of affairs. The views of the Court on the
merits of the appellants' complaints as the situation stood at the end of 1994
are recorded in these reasons and those of my colleague Iacobucci J. These
findings should provide the appellants with a solid platform from which to
launch any further action in the Supreme Court of British Columbia should they
consider that further action is necessary.
VIII. Disposition
159
The appeal is therefore allowed in part, and a declaration will issue
under s. 52 of the Constitution Act, 1982 that s. 152(3) of the Customs
Act is not to be construed and applied so as to place on an importer the
onus to establish that goods are not obscene within the meaning of s.
163(8) of the Criminal Code . The burden of proving obscenity rests on
the Crown or other person who alleges it.
160
The constitutional questions stated by the Chief Justice on July 8, 1999
should be answered as follows:
1. Do ss. 58 and
71 of the Customs Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. 1 (2nd Supp .), and s. 114
and Code 9956(a) of Schedule VII of the Customs Tariff, R.S.C.,
1985, c. 41 (3rd Supp.) (now s. 136(1) and tariff item 9899.00.00 of the List
of Tariff Provisions set out in the schedule to the Customs Tariff, S.C.
1997, c. 36) in whole or in part, insofar as they authorize customs
officials to detain and prohibit material deemed to be obscene, or in their
application to either textual or gay and lesbian material or to both, infringe
s. 2 (b) of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms ?
The answer is yes.
2. If the answer
to question 1 is yes, is the infringement demonstrably justified in a free and
democratic society pursuant to s. 1 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and
Freedoms ?
The answer is yes, except with respect to
the reverse onus provision as presently construed and applied by Canada
Customs.
3. Do ss. 58 and
71 of the Customs Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. 1 (2nd Supp .), and s. 114 and
Code 9956(a) of Schedule VII of the Customs Tariff, R.S.C., 1985,
c. 41 (3rd Supp.) (now s. 136(1) and tariff item 9899.00.00 of the List of
Tariff Provisions set out in the schedule to the Customs Tariff, S.C.
1997, c. 36 ), in whole or in part, in their application to gay and lesbian
material, infringe s. 15(1) of the Canadian Charter of Rights and
Freedoms ?
The answer is no. The appellants' equality
rights are not infringed by the Customs legislation itself.
4. If the answer
to question 3 is yes, is the infringement demonstrably justified in a free and
democratic society pursuant to s. 1 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and
Freedoms ?
The question need not be answered.
161
The appellants have been compelled to come to this Court to achieve even
the limited relief they have obtained, and they are therefore entitled to their
costs in this Court and in the British Columbia Court of Appeal on a party and
party basis. The award of costs at trial in favour of the appellants dated
March 29, 1996 is affirmed.
The reasons of Iacobucci, Arbour and LeBel
JJ. were delivered by
IACOBUCCI
J. (dissenting in part) --
I. Introduction and Summary
162
The individual appellants in this appeal operate a bookstore in Vancouver, the
Little Sisters Book and Art Emporium (“Little
Sisters”). The store
is also an appellant. As described in their amended statement of claim:
6. The principal business of Little
Sisters is the sale of books and magazines most of which are written by and for
homosexual men and women. Little Sisters also operates a mail order business
selling books to customers all across Canada.
7. Most of the books and magazines
sold by Little Sisters are published in the United States and imported into
Canada by Little Sisters.
163
All commercial goods imported into Canada, including books, magazines,
and other expressive materials, are subject to the Customs Tariff,
R.S.C., 1985, c. 41 (3rd Supp.), and the Customs Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. 1
(2nd Supp .) (together, the “Customs
legislation”). The
appellants argue that applying these procedures to the books and magazines
imported by Little Sisters violates their rights to freedom of speech, and to
equality, which are guaranteed under ss. 2 (b) and 15 , respectively, of
the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms .
164
I have had the benefit of reading the reasons of my colleague
Binnie J. in this case. While I agree with his conclusion that the Customs
legislation, as applied to books, magazines, and other expressive materials,
violates the appellants’
rights under s. 2 (b) of the Charter , it is my opinion that the legislation itself violates s. 2 (b)
and is not demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society. In
particular, the Customs legislation does not minimally impair the appellants’ rights, nor do the
benefits of the legislation outweigh its detrimental effects on the right of
free expression.
165
With regard to the appellants’
claim that the Customs legislation also violates the equality guarantee
contained in s. 15(1) of the Charter , I agree with my colleague Binnie
J. that it is only the application of the legislation, not the legislation
itself, that has resulted in violations of the appellants’ equality rights. The
harm-based obscenity test set out by this Court in R. v. Butler, [1992]
1 S.C.R. 452, is not in need of modification and applies equally to all
materials regardless of the sexual orientation of the individuals involved or
the characters depicted. The Customs legislation, which imports the obscenity
provision in s. 163(8) of the Criminal Code, R.S.C., 1985, c. C-46 , and
thus the test outlined in Butler, therefore does not in and of itself
infringe s. 15(1) of the Charter .
166
However, the current
procedures by which Customs enforces s. 163(8) at the border are grossly
inadequate. With a few minor exceptions, expressive materials are classified when entering Canada in the same
manner as mundane commercial goods. The Customs legislation lacks the most
basic procedures necessary for a fair and accurate determination of whether
something is obscene. Compounding these legislative deficiencies is the fact
that Customs officers, while no doubt well-intentioned and conscientious civil
servants, lack the training, time or resources to accomplish the task set for
them. In my respectful opinion, the Customs legislation makes no meaningful
accommodation for the expressive freedoms raised by this appeal. Such a regime
cannot be demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society.
167
The appropriate remedy for this violation of the appellants’ constitutional rights is
to strike down Tariff Code 9956(a) (now Tariff Item 9899.00.00) of the Customs
Tariff. Particularly in a case like the one before us, where there is an
extensive record of the improper detention of non-obscene works, the only
choice to ensure full protection
of the constitutional rights at stake is to invalidate the legislation and invite Parliament to
remedy the constitutional infirmities.
II. Factual and Legal Background
168
While both the courts below and my colleague Binnie J. have done an
excellent job of summarizing the voluminous record in this appeal, I wish to
provide my own synopsis in order to emphasize several points that are
particularly relevant to my reasoning. I will first outline the Customs
legislation challenged in this appeal and then describe the history of Customs’ enforcement of this
legislation. This examination will demonstrate that the problems with the
Customs regime are not simply the
product of isolated mistakes by individual Customs officers; instead, they
reflect systemic problems that can only be adequately addressed by rewriting
the applicable legislation.
A. The Relevant Constitutional and Statutory Provisions
169
The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms provides the
following:
1. The Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms guarantees the rights and freedoms set out
in it subject only to such reasonable limits prescribed by law as can be
demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society.
2. Everyone has the following
fundamental freedoms:
. . .
(b) freedom of thought, belief,
opinion and expression, including freedom of the press and other media of
communication;
15. (1) Every
individual is equal before and under the law and has the right to the equal protection
and equal benefit of the law without discrimination and, in particular, without
discrimination based on race, national or ethnic origin, colour, religion, sex,
age or mental or physical disability.
170
Section 163 of the Criminal Code prohibits the production or
dissemination of obscene materials. The definition of obscenity is found in s.
163(8) :
163. . . .
(8) For the purposes of
this Act, any publication a dominant characteristic of which is the undue
exploitation of sex, or of sex and any one or more of the following subjects,
namely, crime, horror, cruelty and violence, shall be deemed to be obscene.
171
The Customs Act, ss. 58 , 60 , 63 , 64 and 71 (as in force at the time of the trial),
sets out the procedures whereby Customs determines the tariff classification of
imported goods:
58. (1) An officer
may determine the tariff classification . . . of imported goods at any time
before or within thirty days after they are accounted for . . . .
.
. .
(5) Where an officer does
not make a determination . . . under subsection (1) in respect of goods, a
determination of the tariff classification . . . of the goods shall, for the
purposes of sections 60 , 61 and 63 , be deemed to have been made thirty days
after the time the goods were accounted for . . . in accordance with
any representations made at that time in respect of the tariff classification
. . . by the person accounting for the goods.
(6) A determination of
tariff classification . . . is not subject to review or to be restrained,
prohibited, removed, set aside or otherwise dealt with except to the extent and
in the manner provided by sections 60 to 65 .
60. (1) The importer . . . may . .
.
(a) within ninety days, or
(b) where the Minister deems it
advisable, within two years
after the time the determination
. . . was made in respect of the goods under section 58 , request a re‑determination
of the tariff classification . . . .
(2) A request under this
section shall be made to a designated officer in the prescribed manner and in
the prescribed form containing the prescribed information.
(3) On receipt of a
request under this section, a designated officer shall, with all due dispatch,
re‑determine the tariff classification . . . and give notice of his
decision to the person who made the request.
63. (1) Any person may,
(a) within ninety days after the
time he was given notice of a decision under section 60 . . . or
(b) where the Minister deems it
advisable, within two years after the time a determination . . . was made under
section 58 ,
request a further re‑determination of
the tariff classification . . . re‑determined . . . under
section 60 . . . .
(2) A request under this
section shall be made to the Deputy Minister in the prescribed manner and in
the prescribed form containing the prescribed information.
(3) On receipt of a
request under this section, the Deputy Minister shall, with all due dispatch,
re‑determine the tariff classification . . . and give notice of his
decision to the person who made the request.
64. The Deputy
Minister may re‑determine the tariff classification . . . of
imported goods
(a) within two years after the time
a determination . . . was made under section 58 , where the Minister deems it
advisable,
.
. .
(c) at any time, where the person
who accounted for the goods . . . has failed to comply with any of the
provisions of this Act or the regulations or has committed an offence under this
Act in respect of the goods,
(d) at any time, where the re‑determination
. . . would give effect to a decision of the Canadian International Trade
Tribunal, the Federal Court or the Supreme Court of Canada made in respect of
the goods, and
(e) at any time, where the re‑determination
. . . would give effect in respect of the goods, in this paragraph referred to
as the "subsequent goods", to a decision of the Canadian
International Trade Tribunal, the Federal Court or the Supreme Court of Canada
. . . made in respect of
(i) other like goods of the same importer
or owner imported on or prior to the date of importation of the subsequent
goods, where the decision relates to the tariff classification of those other
goods,
.
. .
and, where the Deputy Minister makes a re‑determination
. . . under this section, the Deputy Minister shall forthwith give
notice of that decision to the person who accounted for the goods
. . . the importer of the goods or the person who was the owner of
the goods at the time of release.
71. (1) Where the
release of goods has been refused on the ground that the goods have been
determined to be prohibited goods as described in code 9956 or 9957 of Schedule
VII to the Customs Tariff, re-determination may be requested under
sections 60 and 63 or made under section 64 and appeals may be taken under
sections 67 and 68 in respect of the determination . . . .
172
The Customs Tariff, s. 114, states that “[t]he importation into Canada of any goods
enumerated or referred to in Schedule VII is prohibited”. Schedule VII, Code 9956(a),
prohibits importation of:
Books, printed paper, drawings, paintings,
prints, photographs or representations of any kind that
(a) are deemed to be obscene under
subsection 163(8) of the Criminal Code ;
173
Several aspects of this regulatory scheme warrant
comment. The first is that the initial classification decision, according to
s. 58 of the Customs Act , is to be made by “[a]n officer”.
Section 2 of the Act states that a Customs officer includes any “person employed in the
administration or enforcement”
of the Customs Act , and any member of the Royal Canadian Mounted
Police. In practice, these decisions are made by Customs Inspectors and
Commodity Specialists, the front-line Customs officers. The statute does not
designate any specialized officers to make obscenity determinations. Instead,
any one of the approximately 4,000 Customs officers working at the border can
prohibit a book from entering the country.
The officers receive minimal training with regard to obscenity
determinations and are not required to have any specialized knowledge of art
or literature.
174
At high-volume border crossings, such as the Toronto region, certain
Commodity Specialists are given special responsibilities over obscenity
determinations. Goods suspected of being obscene are detained and forwarded to
a Commodity Specialist for
classification. However, John Shearer, the Director General of the Tariff
Programs Division, testified that working on obscenity classifications is
perceived to be more stressful and limiting career-wise. As a result, as Smith
J. recognized, “Customs
employees generally consider this work to be undesirable, not all officers
participate in it and those assigned to it are regularly moved from these
duties into other areas, generally after three to six months” ((1996), 18 B.C.L.R. (3d)
241, at para. 44).
175
Section 58 is also notable for its failure to offer any guidance as to
how the tariff classification is to be made. It does not provide for even the simplest of hearings.
It does not allow the importer to present evidence, call witnesses, or submit written arguments. It does not
require the officer to provide reasons for the decision to prohibit. It does
not even require the officer to read or view the material in question. In
fact, the only guidance offered by s. 58 is that the tariff classification of
imported goods “may” be determined within 30
days of its arrival.
176
At the time this case was heard by the Supreme Court of British
Columbia, s. 60 established
the first level of review for a s. 58 determination (the Customs Act has
since been amended to remove this level of review: S.C. 1997, c. 36, s. 166 ). Section 60 sets out little more
than the right to appeal “to
a designated officer in the prescribed manner and in the prescribed form”; there is no right to even
the most rudimentary hearing. In practice, s. 60 re-determinations are made by
a Tariff and Values Administrator (TVA). TVAs also serve as advisors to lower
level Customs officers. While TVAs have more training than Customs Inspectors
or Commodity Specialists, they can hardly be called experts. As Frank Lorito,
a former TVA, testified, his obscenity training consisted of five to ten hours
with his predecessor going over materials, and one day spent at the Prohibited
Importations Directorate (PID). Moreover, reviewing
allegedly obscene material accounts for only a small percentage of a TVA’s workload.
177
The final level of administrative review is established by s. 63 ,
which provides for an appeal to the Deputy Minister of National Revenue for
Customs and Excise. Under s. 2(3), the Deputy Minister is authorized to
delegate his powers under the Act to any person. In practice, these powers are
delegated to a handful of TVAs working at the PID. The TVAs at the PID are
generally people with advanced degrees (though not necessarily in literature),
and they receive several days of informal training from more senior officers
upon being appointed. While the importer is allowed to put forward any
information for consideration, s. 63 does not require that the Deputy Minister
(or his or her delegate) consider that information, nor is there a right to a
hearing of any kind.
178
Having exhausted three levels of administrative review, an importer is entitled under s. 67 to
appeal the Deputy Minister’s
determination. While reviews of the determinations for all other goods are
made by the Canadian International Trade Tribunal, materials prohibited under
Tariff Code 9956(a) are reviewed by the superior court of a province or territory. This is
the scheme’s only
special accommodation for the expressive rights at stake in the appeal.
Section 68 grants the right to seek leave to appeal from the superior court to
the Federal Court.
B. Enforcement of the Customs Legislation
179
The central documents
for enforcing Tariff Code 9956(a) are:
(1) Memorandum D9-1-1, “Interpretative Policy and Procedures for
the Administration of Tariff Code 9956” -- an internal directive for Customs
staff not generally available to the public; and (2) a large binder
entitled “Prohibited
Importations Directorate Material to Assist in the Interpretation of Tariff
Code 9956, Memorandum D9-1-1 With Respect to Obscenity” -- which
is also an internal Customs document not available to the public. Both documents describe what
types of materials are deemed obscene by Customs (examples include depictions
of bondage, pregnant or lactating women, postures of submission or humiliation,
child abuse and necrophilia), while
the latter binder contains reproductions of previously seized
materials.
180
Until September 29, 1994 –
mere days before the commencement of the
trial in this case –
Memorandum D9-1-1 prohibited depictions of anal penetration. This prohibition
persisted to that date in spite of the fact that on March 18, 1992 – a full 30 months earlier – the Department of Justice
had sent an analysis of the Butler decision to senior counsel at
Customs, reaching the following conclusion:
. . . as we have advised in previous
opinions, there is no jurisprudence supporting the proposition that all
depictions or descriptions of anal penetration are obscene in and of themselves
on the basis that anal penetration is inherently degrading or dehumanizing.
[Emphasis in original.]
As this episode makes clear, Memorandum D9-1-1 is only
Customs’ interpretation
of s. 163(8) ; there is no guarantee that it conforms with what this Court said
in Butler. In fact, for over two years Memorandum D9-1-1 was directly
at odds with our jurisprudence.
181
Initial determinations by
Customs officers are often
not completed within the 30-day
period prescribed by s. 58 . Section 60 re-determinations took up to three and
one-half months, and s. 63 re-determinations have taken over a year. Smith J.
concluded that these problems were a result of “the
inability of customs officers to deal with such a large volume of materials in
the short time they have available”
(para. 114).
182
Customs officers’
review of imported materials is frequently superficial and
context-insensitive. A typical example is provided by the testimony of Scenery
Slater, a Customs Inspector at the Vancouver Mail Center, describing how she
would review a videotape:
[W]e would view it on fast forward. And if
there was -- there was a scene or scenes we deemed might be potentially
prohibited, we rewind and slow it down to verify, and do this through the
entirety of the tape.
When asked whether she would typically read a book in its
entirety, she responded as follows:
That was rarely necessary. It’s -- what you -- what you
would initially do is you would try to determine the gist of the book . . . .
If you started reading it and the general nature was sort of sensationalistic
in a sexual manner, and you might flip through to make sure the entirety is
like that, go to various sections throughout. . . . You would find -- try to
find at least two to three instances of having something prohibited and then
once you hit three in the -- it was deemed that the rest of the book was of the
same nature you would prohibit it there without reading the rest of it.
183
Several Customs officers testified that they did not even attempt to
judge the political, artistic, or literary merit of a particular work. Mr.
Shearer freely admitted that Customs officers do not hold themselves out to be
experts on artistic or literary merit. Moreover, Customs officers often do not understand the
context in which a book was written. For example, Linda Murphy, the Director
of the PID, admitted her lack of
understanding of “the
S and M practices engaged in by some people in our society”. Another Customs officer
admitted that she had not recognized Marguerite Duras as a major French novelist of the twentieth
century, and that she generally did not have enough time to investigate
the literary credentials of the authors whose books appear before her for
review. As Smith J. noted (at para. 116), “[t]here
is no formal procedure for placing evidence of artistic or literary merit
before the classifying officers”.
184
Incorrect determinations
are the inevitable result of
these factors. If Customs officers have no literary training; if they
receive no arguments or submissions from importers; if they do not take
artistic merit into account; if they do not attempt to investigate the literary
reputation of the author; if they know nothing about the culture for which
various books are written; one perhaps should not be surprised that mistakes
will often be made. And indeed, the record is full of mistaken determinations
by Customs. Smith J. provided the following statistical summary (at para.
100):
The plaintiffs identified
261 titles detained from imported shipments destined for Little Sisters since
1984, seventy-seven of them on more than one occasion. Of those, sixty-two
were released for delivery after examination pursuant to s. 58 . Little Sisters
sought re-determinations pursuant to s. 60 on 210 prohibitions and were successful
on twenty-eight. Of 150 re-determinations sought pursuant to s. 63 , they were
successful on forty-six. As mentioned, they were successful on their one
appeal pursuant to s. 67. Thus, roughly 20% of prohibitions at the s. 58 level
were considered to be incorrect by Tariff and Values Administrators acting
pursuant to s. 60, and roughly 30% of the decisions of lower-ranking officers
were considered to be incorrect by Tariff Administrators reviewing the
materials pursuant to s. 63 . Such high rates of error indicate more than mere
differences of opinion and suggest systemic causes.
185
Behind the statistics are countless anecdotes of incorrect seizures.
Customs have prohibited entry of photographs taken by three Vancouver artists,
which had been taken abroad as part of an internationally recognized work on
lesbian sexuality. Jane Rule, the winner of a prize for best Canadian novel of
1978, had her award-winning book Contract With the World detained for
inspection by Customs. The book was released only because the supervisor of
the officer reviewing the book happened to recognize Jane Rule’s name. In the 1980s,
Customs seized a film on male masturbation destined for the University of
Manitoba’s Medical
School: see A. A. Borovoy, When Freedoms Collide: The Case for Our Civil
Liberties (1988), at p. 62.
186
An importer or exporter with a history of dealing in pornography is also
susceptible to increased scrutiny. During
the time period relevant to this appeal, Customs officers in British
Columbia inspected
virtually every shipment of books
and magazines headed to Little Sisters. The frequent detention and
prohibition of imported goods caused substantial hardship to Little Sisters and
its suppliers. Janine Fuller, an employee of Little Sisters, testified as
follows:
I think there’s
many different ramifications for the store. One is accountability to the
customers who come into the store having to explain over and over and over
again why specific titles might not be available. We do a tremendous amount of
special orders for people, having to indicate to them when we make those
special orders that we can’t
in good conscience assure them that this book is going to arrive undetained by
Canada Customs.
I don’t know of many book stores
that have to go through that tedious and expensive process. I think there’s also a sense of
self-censorship that occurs around ordering books in that you start to try and
read into what you think a customs agent would be assessing a book at and you
order accordingly. . . . So it certainly cuts down on what your book orders
are.
187
Little Sisters’
suppliers were also affected by Customs’
policies. One of Little Sisters’
main suppliers, Inland Distributors Ltd., routinely had its shipments inspected. Golden-Lee Book
Distributors, Inc. actually ceased shipping to Little Sisters as of September
1, 1994, for the following reason:
As I am sure you are aware
every shipment we send to you, whether containing questionable material or not,
is detained for months at a time. When shipments are returned to us they are
always missing books. Further, the books returned to us are so damaged that we
have to write them off as unsalable.
188
While Little Sisters and its suppliers are routinely targeted,
mainstream bookstores receive more favourable treatment. For example, the
operator of Duthie Books, a general interest bookstore in British Columbia,
testified that at the request of Little Sisters they ordered a number of books
that had been prohibited when destined for Little Sisters. The shipping
instructions were intentionally made identical to those given by Little Sisters.
In spite of the fact that Customs inspected the books, they arrived without incident. Similarly, books that were
prohibited when destined for Little Sisters were widely available at other
general interest bookstores in Vancouver, and even at the Vancouver Public
Library. Moreover, Little Sisters was not the only victim. As Nadine Strossen
has noted in Defending Pornography: Free Speech, Sex, and the Fight for
Women’s Rights (1995),
at p. 231, within two and one-half years after Butler was decided, over
half of all Canadian feminist bookstores had had materials confiscated or
detained by Customs.
189
There is also evidence that high-profile books receive favourable
treatment. The appellants noted two instances where such books --
specifically, Madonna’s
Sex, and Bret Easton Ellis’s
American Psycho -- were permitted entry in spite of containing depictions
that are indistinguishable from items routinely prohibited by Customs. Sex contains an account of a sexual encounter with a pubescent
boy. American Psycho contains explicit accounts of sex and
violence. The protagonist describes in detail how he seduces, tortures, rapes,
and kills his victims.
190
After an earlier public relations problem caused by the detention of
Salman Rushdie’s book Satanic
Verses, Customs approached American Psycho’s publisher, Random House, about pre-screening
the book. The review was conducted by senior officials rather than front-line
Customs Inspectors, who
ultimately concluded that the book did not depict the undue exploitation of sex.
I do not question the merits of that decision.
However, I would note that had such attention been paid to items
destined for Little Sisters, many of the mistakes detailed above might have
been avoided.
191
In spite of all these problems, John Shearer, the Director General of
Tariff Programs Division, saw no problems with the targeting of Little Sisters:
[T]here was no evidence that there was any
harassment. Our understanding of the way the system works is that, indeed,
this was a normal enforcement practice that met the practices and procedures we
follow in the Department.
That Mr. Shearer could say this in light of the compelling
evidence to the contrary presented in the course of this appeal emphasizes the
depth of the problem.
192
The net effect of Customs’
enforcement of Code 9956(a) against Little Sisters is well-summarized by
Smith J. as follows (at para. 99):
The delays and disruptions
caused by detained and prohibited shipments have affected Little Sisters
financially and in other ways. Often, material is dated by the time it is
received and has lost its sales value. Publications denied entry to Little Sisters
are often successfully imported and sold by other stores. Planned events, like
book launches, are sometimes jeopardized when Customs interrupts shipment of
the publications involved. The proprietors often refer customers to local
general-interest stores to obtain publications that Little Sisters is unable to
import. More subtly, Mr. Deva and Ms. Fuller must be very circumspect in their
ordering. They are uncomfortable with this self-censorship.
193
A discussion of the facts as brief as this cannot capture adequately the
complexities of the record compiled in this appeal. Nevertheless, I hope to
have conveyed a basic portrayal
of the Customs legislation and its enforcement.
III. Analysis
A. Applicability of Butler
194
I agree with my colleague Binnie J.’s
defence of the harm-based approach to obscenity set out by this Court in Butler, supra. In particular, I
agree with his conclusions that the Butler test does not distinguish
between materials based on the sexual orientation of the individuals involved or
characters depicted. It seems to me that the Butler test applies
equally to heterosexual, homosexual and bisexual materials. The use of
national community standards as the arbiter of what materials are harmful, and
therefore obscene, remains the proper approach. I
agree with Binnie J.’s conclusions that the harm-based
approach is not merely morality in disguise and that the Butler test
does apply to written materials.
195
On this latter point, however, I wish to emphasize Binnie J.’s holding that it will be “very difficult to make the
case of obscenity against a book, which is a medium perhaps less likely to be
conducive to harm and more likely to be protected by the artistic merit or ‘inherent necessities’ defence” (para. 65). This is borne
out by the fact that relatively few books have been held to be obscene in
Canada: see, e.g., Brodie v. The Queen, [1962] S.C.R. 681 (Lady
Chatterley’s
Lover by D. H. Lawrence not obscene), and R. v. C. Coles Co., [1965]
1 O.R. 557 (C.A.) (Fanny Hill -- Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure by John
Cleland not obscene –
a similar result was reached by the U.S. Supreme Court in A Book Named “John Cleland’s Memoirs of a Woman of
Pleasure” v.
Attorney General of Massachusetts, 383 U.S. 413 (1966)). As Porter C.J.O. stated for the
majority in C. Coles Co., at p. 563:
The freedom to write books, and thus to disseminate ideas, opinions, and
concepts of the imagination ‑‑ the freedom to treat with complete
candour of an aspect of human life and the activities, aspirations and failings
of human beings ‑‑ these are fundamental to progress in a free
society. In my view of the law, such freedom should not, except in extreme
circumstances, be curtailed.
196
I also wish to make it absolutely clear that a book must be read in its
entirety when determining whether or not it is obscene. As Judson J. stated in
the majority opinion in Brodie, at p. 702:
[A determination of obscenity] necessarily
involves a reading of the whole book with the passages and words to which
objection is taken read in the context of the whole book. Of that now there can
be no doubt. No reader can find a dominant characteristic on a consideration of
isolated passages and isolated words. Under this definition the book now must
be taken as a whole. It is not the particular passages and words in a certain
context that are before the Court for judgment but the book as a complete
work. The question is whether the book as a whole is obscene not whether certain passages and certain words,
part of a larger work, are obscene.
See also the
concurring opinion of Ritchie J. at p. 709. Customs must keep these points in
mind when dealing with written works in the future.
197
I further agree with
Binnie J. that the Butler test does not mean that concerns for
minority expression cannot be taken into account. This is because, as my colleague points out, the
national community standard relates only to harm not to taste. While Butler
must be applied in a contextual manner, I am not convinced that homosexual
pornography is so distinct from heterosexual pornography that a different
standard must apply. As this Court recognized in Butler, at p. 502, “a direct link between
obscenity and harm to society may be difficult, if not impossible, to establish”. Nonetheless, we concluded
that “it is reasonable
to presume that exposure to images bears a causal relationship to changes in
attitudes and beliefs”.
See also Irwin Toy Ltd. v. Quebec (Attorney General), [1989] 1 S.C.R.
927, at p. 994; R. v. Keegstra, [1990] 3 S.C.R. 697, at p. 776.
198
Given the near impossibility of demonstrating conclusive proof in these
kinds of cases, this Court has wisely held on many occasions that the legislature
is owed a certain amount of deference in fashioning solutions. The respondent
Canada relied primarily on the evidence of Dr. Neil Malamuth. In his report,
he concluded that “homosexual
pornography may have harmful effects even if it is distinct in certain ways
from heterosexual pornography”.
In his opinion, even allowing for differences in content, the messages conveyed
in homosexual pornography were sufficiently similar to those in heterosexual
pornography to raise an apprehension of harm.
199
The types of harms that Butler concluded might be exacerbated by
obscenity are capable of being present
in all human relationships,
regardless of the sexual
orientation of the individuals involved. There is no evidence that the
homosexual community is immune from the kinds of problems that s. 163 ’s obscenity provisions are
designed to address. On the contrary, the evidence is, sadly, that gay and lesbian relationships
suffer from physical, sexual, and mental abuse in much the same way that
heterosexual relationships do: see F. C. I. Hickson et al., “Gay Men as Victims of
Nonconsensual Sex”
(1994), 23 Archives of Sexual Behavior 281, at p. 281; D. Island and P.
Letellier, Men Who Beat the Men Who Love Them: Battered Gay Men and Domestic
Violence (1991), at p. 1; C. M. Renzetti, Violent Betrayal: Partner
Abuse in Lesbian Relationships (1992), at p. 115; and S. Jeffreys, The
Lesbian Heresy: A Feminist Perspective on the Lesbian Sexual Revolution
(1993), at pp. 187-88. As a result, I conclude that there is a reasoned
apprehension of harm from homosexual obscenity, and that Butler should
apply to all obscenity, regardless of the sexual orientation of its audience.
B. Does the Customs Legislation Violate Section 2(b) of
the Charter ?
200
The respondents
properly conceded that the Customs legislation violates s. 2(b). As
this Court made clear in Butler, supra, at p. 489, depictions of
purely physical sexual activity can be expression. This Court has ruled many
times that even speech without any “redeeming” qualities deserves the
protection of s. 2(b): see, e.g., Keegstra, supra, at p.
732; Reference re. ss. 193 and 195.1(1)(c) of the Criminal Code (Man.),
[1990] 1 S.C.R. 1123, at p. 1206 (the “Prostitution
Reference”) (per
Wilson J., in dissent but not on this point). Especially
given the high value of the non-obscene
materials affected by the Customs legislation, the violation of s. 2(b)
is clear.
C. Does the Customs Legislation Violate Section 15(1)
of the Charter ?
201
For the reasons given by my colleague Binnie J., I agree that the
Customs legislation does not itself violate s. 15(1) of the Charter .
The Customs legislation incorporates the obscenity definition in s. 163(8) of
the Criminal Code . As I have already made clear, the harm-based test
for obscenity set out in Butler is the same for all materials,
regardless of the sexual orientation of the individuals
involved or characters depicted. While it is arguable that pornographic
materials play a more important role in the gay and lesbian communities (because these communities are
defined by their sexuality and
because they are minority communities), gays and lesbians remain able to
access pornographic materials that do not create a substantial risk of harm.
Any heightened need for pornography in these communities, if such a need indeed
exists, must be met through the use of non-harmful pornography. Therefore
legislation banning obscenity alone has no adverse effects, and it is
unnecessary to proceed with the rest of the analysis prescribed under Law v.
Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration), [1999] 1 S.C.R. 497.
202
This said, it is crucial to keep in mind that, as Smith J. found at
para. 282 of his reasons for judgment and as my colleague Binnie J. concludes
at para. 123, the application
of the Customs legislation has discriminated against gays and lesbians in a
manner that violated s. 15 . This is an important factor in determining the appropriate
remedy in this appeal.
D.
Legislation Versus Application
203
To this point, I have largely agreed with the conclusions of my
colleague Binnie J. We differ,
however, over the crucial issue of whether the Customs legislation itself is
responsible for the constitutional violations documented in this case, or
whether it is only the legislation’s
application that was at
fault. We also differ over whether the infringements of the appellants’ free expression rights
have been justified by the government. Before turning to the s. 1 analysis, I
wish to establish why I have reached the conclusion that it is the Customs
legislation itself that is also responsible for the s. 2(b)
violations in this case.
204
As noted, both my
colleague Binnie J. and the courts below agreed that the legislation had been
administered in an unconstitutional manner.
In their opinion, the Customs legislation is capable of constitutional
application and therefore a
declaratory remedy is sufficient to safeguard the Charter rights
involved. With the greatest respect, I cannot agree that this is the proper approach.
This Court’s
precedents demand sufficient safeguards in
the legislative scheme itself to ensure that government action will not
infringe constitutional rights. In
the face of an extensive record of unconstitutional application, it is
not enough merely to
provide a structure that could be applied in a constitutional manner. This is particularly the case where
fundamental Charter rights, such as the right to free expression, are at
stake. The legislation itself must provide an adequate process to ensure that Charter
rights are respected when the legislation is applied at the administrative
level.
205
Consequently, I
disagree with my colleague Binnie J.’s interpretation of this Court’s decisions in Hunter v. Southam Inc., [1984] 2
S.C.R. 145, R. v. Morgentaler, [1988] 1 S.C.R. 30, and R. v. Bain, [1992] 1 S.C.R.
91. In my opinion, these cases illustrate the vigilance of this Court in
protecting Charter rights when the legislative scheme in question is
being applied in an unconstitutional fashion. Regardless of whether the
legislation is under- or over-inclusive, if it lends itself to the repeated
violations of Charter rights, as does the legislative scheme here, the
legislation itself is partially responsible and must be remedied.
206
In Hunter v. Southam, this Court considered a law that was, like
the one at bar, capable of being applied in a constitutional manner. The law
in question set out the procedures by which the Restrictive Trade Practices
Commission (RTPC) authorized searches by the Combines Investigation Branch
(CIB) to gather evidence of violations of the Combines Investigation Act,
R.S.C. 1970, c. C-23, s. 10. The law allowed the CIB to enter any premises “on which the Director [of
the CIB] believes there may be evidence relevant to the matters being inquired
into”, so long as a
member of the RTPC granted an authorizing certificate available on ex parte
application by the CIB: Combines Investigation Act. The government
submitted that “the
constitutionality of s. 10 ought to be considered on the basis of whether its
provisions could be applied consistently with the Charter ” (p. 153 (emphasis in
original)). If such an approach had been adopted, the law probably would have
been upheld. Nothing stopped RTPC members from issuing certificates only if
there were reasonable and probable grounds that a search would uncover
evidence.
207
However, Dickson J. (as he then was), writing for a unanimous Court,
roundly rejected that argument. He stated, at p. 166, that to read the
legislation “as simply
allowing the authorizing party to satisfy himself on [the legality of
the search], without requiring him to do so, would in my view be clearly
inadequate” (emphasis
in original). Permissive legislation was not enough. The statute had to require
prior authorization of the search by a “neutral
and impartial” arbiter
(at pp. 160-62). In that case, it was not thought sufficient to leave it to
those applying the statute to deal with the matter; similarly here, it hardly
seems appropriate to entrust the Customs bureaucracy, in its administration of
the Customs legislation, to deal with the matter through proper recognition of
the constitutional values in play.
208
Other decisions by this Court have confirmed Hunter v. Southam’s early promise not to
entrust the vindication of constitutional rights to the executive branch. The
most important case upholding this principle is Morgentaler, supra. In that case a
majority of this Court (with Dickson C.J. and Beetz J. writing separately)
struck down Canada’s abortion
law for unduly restricting access to abortions. While in Morgentaler
the problem was a surfeit of “procedure” rather than an absence,
the basic problem was the same as in this appeal: the legislation created
unacceptable delays and limitations on the right to an abortion, just as the
Customs legislation creates unacceptable delays and limitations on the right to
import non-obscene expressive
materials. As Dickson C.J. wrote in Morgentaler, at p. 75, “many women whom Parliament
professes not to wish to subject to criminal liability will nevertheless be
forced by the practical unavailability of the supposed defence to risk
liability or to suffer other harm such as a traumatic late abortion caused by
the delay inherent in the s. 251 system”.
Similarly in this appeal, a great number of non-obscene works that Parliament
did not intend to prohibit have been barred
from entering the country as a result of the flaws inherent in the
current regime.
209
Morgentaler also rejected the argument that any problems were a
product of maladministration, not the legislation itself. As Beetz J. noted at
pp. 92-93, three main factors contributed to the impugned delays in the system:
“(1) the absence of hospitals with therapeutic abortion committees in
many parts of Canada; (2) the quotas which some hospitals with committees
impose on the number of therapeutic abortions which they perform and (3) the
committee requirement itself”. Only the third of these was directly imposed by the legislation.
Under the legislation it was entirely open to the Canadian Council on Hospital
Accreditation and the provincial Ministers of Health to approve more hospitals
to perform abortions. The legislation did not prevent hospitals from
appointing more therapeutic abortion committees. The legislation did not
force hospitals to set insufficient abortion quotas. Nonetheless, the majority
of the Court recognized that these problems were attributable to the
legislation’s own
shortcomings: see ibid., at p. 62, per Dickson C.J.; at p. 98, per
Beetz J.
210
A final example is Bain, supra, where this Court
struck down Crown Attorneys’
power to “stand aside” up to 48 prospective
jurors without cause. Writing for a plurality, Cory J. decided at pp. 103-4,
that this was unacceptable:
Unfortunately
it would seem that whenever the Crown is granted statutory power that can be
used abusively then, on occasion, it will indeed be used abusively. The
protection of basic rights should not be dependent upon a reliance on the
continuous exemplary conduct of the Crown, something that is impossible to
monitor or control. Rather the offending statutory provision should be
removed. [Emphasis added.]
In concurring reasons, Stevenson J. similarly held, at p.
155, that while “the
stand by may be used beneficially, I do not think we can rely on professed good
intentions to uphold such a disparity”.
211
The issue is therefore not solely whether the Customs legislation is
capable of being applied constitutionally, as Binnie J. suggests. Instead, the
crucial consideration is that the legislation makes no reasonable effort to
ensure that it will be applied constitutionally to expressive materials. It
lacks an adequate process to ensure that s. 2(b) rights are fully
considered and respected. The Customs legislation’s failure in this regard practically invites
violations of the right to free expression, which is exactly what has happened. It is the inevitable
result of leaving the protection of fundamental Charter rights solely to
the good faith discretion of delegated power.
212
In this case, Binnie
J. argues that a failure at the implementation level can be addressed at that
level. As will be discussed below, however, the government has provided little
reason to believe that reforms at the implementation level will adequately
protect the expressive rights involved or that any such reforms will not be
dependent on exemplary conduct by Customs officials to avoid future violations
of constitutional rights. Furthermore, it is not just the “rough and ready border screening procedure”, as referred to by Binnie J. (at para. 80), that has been responsible for these
constitutional infirmities, but the entire system by which these screening
decisions are reviewed. Violations of expressive rights stemming from the
review procedures are caused by the legislation itself and cannot be remedied
at the implementation level. They require Parliament to turn its attention to
the entire scheme under which expressive materials are prevented from entering
Canada and to craft a response which at least makes a significant effort to
take the expressive rights which are interfered with by such a regime into
account.
213
In fact, the trial judge himself found that some of the violations of
expressive rights in this case stemmed from the Customs legislation itself. He
stated (at para. 234):
The deleterious effects of
the legislation, as opposed to the effects of its administration and
application, are that admissible material is sometimes detained to be examined
for compliance and that wrong decisions are sometimes made in the classification
of materials.
When the
problems at the review stages are also taken into consideration, it is clear
that the legislative scheme must take significant responsibility for the
violations of expressive rights that have been documented in this case. This
is not surprising when one considers that the Customs legislation was designed
to deal with mechanical, objective determinations under a taxing regime and not
nuanced judgments on literary and expressive values that are inherently subjective.
I therefore conclude that it is the Customs legislation itself which is
largely responsible for the infringement of s. 2 (b) Charter
rights in this case.
E. Is the Violation of Section 2 (b) Justified Under
Section 1?
(i) Introduction
214
Having reached this conclusion, I will now turn my attention to whether
the government has successfully justified the violations of expressive rights
in this case. As the analysis below will establish, I do not agree with the view that the Customs legislation
minimally impairs the appellants’
s. 2 (b) rights or that the benefits of the legislation outweigh its
detrimental effects. While Binnie J. concludes that it is only s. 152 of the Customs
Act which cannot be justified under s. 1 , and therefore must be read down,
I believe the whole regime must fall.
215
The appropriate test under s. 1 is well-known. There are three
essential requirements: (1) the limit on Charter freedoms must be “prescribed by law”; (2) the law in question
must be directed at a “pressing
and substantial objective”;
and (3) the means chosen must be a rational, proportionate response to the
legislative objective. There are three elements of the third requirement: the
law must show a rational connection to the government’s objective, it must minimally impair the
rights in question, and the legislation’s
benefits must outweigh its deleterious effects on Charter rights. See,
e.g., Corbiere v. Canada (Minister of Indian and Northern Affairs),
[1999] 2 S.C.R. 203, at paras. 21 and 97; Egan v. Canada, [1995] 2
S.C.R. 513, at para. 182; Dagenais v. Canadian Broadcasting Corp.,
[1994] 3 S.C.R. 835, at p. 887; R. v. Oakes, [1986] 1 S.C.R. 103.
216
Both Smith J. and Macfarlane J.A. suggested that Butler
controlled the s. 1 analysis in this appeal: see Smith J.’s reasons for judgment, at
para. 206; Macfarlane J.A.’s
reasons for judgment ((1998), 54 B.C.L.R. (3d) 306), at para. 75. With respect, I cannot agree.
The appellants put the point well at para. 87 of their factum:
Butler concerned Parliament’s constitutional competence
to proscribe the distribution of obscene material. Butler had nothing
to do with the process by which material is judged to be obscene except
to the extent that it is judged to be obscene after a criminal trial process.
[Emphasis in original.]
While the reasoning of Butler is obviously
instructive for many aspects of this appeal, I cannot accept that it is
dispositive of the s. 1 analysis.
(ii) The
Importance of Context
217
As this Court has frequently pointed out, context is indispensable to
the s. 1 analysis of freedom of expression cases:
In essence, context is the indispensable
handmaiden to the proper characterization of the objective of the impugned
provision, to determining whether that objective is justified, and to weighing
whether the means used are sufficiently closely related to the valid objective
so as to justify an infringement of a Charter right.
(Thomson Newspapers Co. v. Canada
(Attorney General), [1998] 1 S.C.R. 877, at para. 87)
See also Canadian Broadcasting Corp. v. New Brunswick
(Attorney General), [1996] 3 S.C.R. 480, at para. 63; RJR-MacDonald
Inc. v. Canada (Attorney General), [1995] 3 S.C.R. 199. at paras.
129-34; Butler, supra, at p. 500. A vitally important contextual
factor is the nature of the expressive activity the state is seeking to
restrict: see Keegstra, supra, at p. 760. In Thomson
Newspapers, at para. 91, Bastarache J. explained that the nature of the
expression in question matters “not
because a lower standard is applied, but because the low value of the
expression may be more easily outweighed by the government objective”. Similarly, in RJR-MacDonald,
supra, McLachlin J. (as she then was) noted at para. 134 that “nothing in the
jurisprudence suggests that the contextual approach reduces the obligation on
the state to meet the burden of demonstrating that the limitation on rights
imposed by the law is reasonable and justified”.
In short, neither the value of the expressive material, nor any other
contextual factor, will ever be determinative.
218
As Sopinka J. stated in Butler, supra, at p. 499, the core
values of freedom of expression include “the
search for truth, participation in the political process, and individual
self-fulfilment”.
Obscenity “does not
stand on an equal footing with other kinds of expression which directly engage
the ‘core’ of the freedom of
expression values”: Butler,
supra, at p. 500; cf. Keegstra, supra, at pp. 762-63.
However, the very nature of a contextual approach demands attention to how the
Customs legislation is actually applied. As Smith J. found, at para. 223, “much homosexual erotica
that has been prohibited as obscene is not, in fact, obscene”. Moreover, these were not
isolated errors like those dismissed as constitutionally insignificant by
Dickson C.J. in Keegstra, supra, at p. 783. To the contrary,
Smith J. found “grave
systemic problems in the Customs administration”
(para. 250), not isolated instances of “illegal
police harassment”.
Smith J.’s conclusion
is confirmed by a record that is replete with detentions and seizures of
award-winning novels, safe-sex manuals, celebrations of gay and lesbian identity, and other extremely
meritorious items.
219
The government’s
burden under s. 1 is to justify the actual infringement on rights
occasioned by the impugned legislation, not simply that occasioned by some
hypothetical ideal of the legislation. In my view, my colleague Binnie J.
incorrectly analyzes the s. 1 justification with regard only to the Customs
legislation when properly
administered. Examining such a hypothetical ideal runs the risk of
allowing even egregious violations of Charter rights to go unaddressed.
Obviously any substantive standard for obscenity will have difficulties in
application, regardless of the
institutional setting in which it is applied. As we recognized in Butler
and Keegstra, this will not necessarily be cause for concern. Where,
however, the challenge is to the procedures by which the law is enforced, the
fact that far more materials are prohibited than intended is extremely
relevant.
220
Many of the seized items were eventually determined not to be obscene.
These wrongfully detained items clearly engaged the values underlying the
guarantee of free expression in s. 2 (b). A number of commentators have stated that it is
important that all Canadians have the freedom to criticize and challenge the dominant
culture: As Wendy McElroy has noted in XXX: A Woman’s Right to Pornography
(1995), at p. 141: “Freedom
of speech is the ally of those who seek change; it is the enemy of those who
seek to maintain control. Pornography is nothing more or less than freedom of
speech applied to the sexual realm”.
Similarly, C. Paglia has described pornographic images as “shock devices to break down
bourgeois norms of decorum, reserve, and tidiness”:
Vamps & Tramps (1994), at p. 66; see also L. Duggan, N. Hunter and
C. S. Vance, “False
Promises: Feminist Antipornography Legislation in the U.S.”, in V. Burstyn, ed., Women
Against Censorship (1985), 130, at p. 145; M. D. Lepofsky, “Towards a Purposive
Approach to Freedom of Expression and its Limitation”, in F. E. McArdle, ed., The Cambridge
Lectures 1989 (1990), 1, at p. 11; S. Tisdale, Talk Dirty to Me: An
Intimate Philosophy of Sex (1994), at p. 157; and L. Nead, “From
the Female Nude: Art, Obscenity and Sexuality”,
in N. Mirzoeff, ed., The Visual Culture Reader (1998), 485, at p. 489.
221
Another contextual factor, identified in Irwin Toy, supra,
at pp. 993-94, is whether the government is mediating between competing groups
as a social policy maker. In such cases, a more deferential approach is
appropriate than when the government acts as a “singular
antagonist of the individual whose right has been infringed”; see also R. v. Edwards
Books and Art Ltd., [1986] 2 S.C.R. 713, at p. 772. In this appeal, the
Customs legislation attempts
to balance the right to free
expression and the government
interest in protecting society from obscene materials. Clearly some
latitude to Parliament is appropriate. That said, I agree with McLachlin J.’s warning at para. 136 of RJR-MacDonald,
supra:
Deference must not be carried to the point
of relieving the government of the burden which the Charter places upon
it of demonstrating that the limits it has imposed on guaranteed rights are
reasonable and justifiable. . . . To carry judicial deference to the point of
accepting Parliament’s
view simply on the basis that the problem is serious and the solution
difficult, would be to diminish the role of the courts in the constitutional
process and to weaken the structure of rights upon which our constitution and
our nation is founded.
While deference is appropriate, our Court cannot abdicate
its duty to demand that the government justify legislation limiting Charter
rights.
(iii) A Limit
Prescribed by Law
222
Section 1 of the Charter allows only those limits on rights that are “prescribed by law”. Citing R. v. Nova
Scotia Pharmaceutical Society, [1992] 2 S.C.R. 606, at pp. 635 and 639,
Smith J. described the test as follows (at para. 153):
What is required is that
the law in question be sufficiently intelligible to provide fair notice to
citizens, that is, “an understanding that certain conduct is the subject of legal
restrictions” (p. 635). In addition, the law must be precise enough that it
sufficiently describes the boundaries of unlawful conduct and delineates “an area of risk to allow for substantive notice to citizens” (p. 639).
See also Butler, supra, at p. 490; P. W.
Hogg, Constitutional Law of Canada (loose-leaf ed.), vol. 2, at pp.
35-11 and 35-12.
223
There can be no doubt that the Customs legislation itself is relatively
clear; the challenges made by the appellants and Finch J.A. focused on whether
the substantive standard for obscenity set out in s. 163(8) of the Criminal
Code , as applied by Customs, is an intelligible standard.
224
In his dissent Finch J.A. found, at para. 218, that Memorandum D9-1-1
was not “law”; that Customs officers
could not apply the legislation without the memo; and that therefore the
standard being applied was not one prescribed by law. I agree with Finch J.A.
that Memorandum D9-1-1 is not “law”; indeed, this was conceded
on appeal. However, and with great respect, I cannot agree that Customs
officers are entirely without an intelligible standard. First of all, the fact
that a law requires administrative interpretation is not necessarily fatal. For
example, in Osborne v. Canada (Treasury Board), [1991] 2 S.C.R.
69, the Court considered a law restricting political participation by public
servants. The plaintiffs in that appeal claimed that the limit on their rights
was not prescribed by law because it “require[d]
extensive guidelines in the form of non-authoritative views” (p. 94), just as
Memorandum D9-1-1 does in the present appeal. The Court rejected that claim.
Even though the legislation presented “considerable
difficulty in application to a specific situation”,
“difficulty of
interpretation cannot be equated with the absence of any intelligible standard” (pp. 96-97).
225
Second, and more importantly, I believe the Customs legislation
(through s. 163(8) ) provides an
intelligible standard for the simple reason that the Butler test is an
intelligible standard. In Nova Scotia Pharmaceutical Society, supra,
at p. 639, we held that legislation must define “an area of risk to allow for substantive notice to citizens”. Subsection
163(8) provides “substantive notice to
citizens” in the criminal context. It
is equally capable of providing such notice in the Customs context. Whether the procedures in place for applying that standard are
sufficient to protect the expressive rights at stake – the
question to which I will soon turn – is an entirely different
matter.
(iv) Pressing
and Substantial Objective
226
In Butler, supra, at p. 496, this Court recognized that “the harm caused by the
proliferation of materials which seriously offend the values fundamental to our
society is a substantial concern which justifies restricting the otherwise full
exercise of the freedom of expression”.
The Customs legislation is similarly intended to limit the importation of obscene materials into the country, and I conclude
that this objective is pressing and substantial.
227
That said, I would note that in Butler, supra, at p. 498,
Sopinka J. also warned that “the
objective of the impugned section is valid only in so far as it relates to the
harm to society associated with obscene materials”.
What is challenged primarily in this appeal is not the exclusion of obscenity
from this country; instead, it is the legislation which establishes the
procedural mechanism for doing so, by which a great number of non-obscene works
are detained or prohibited. The narrow ambit of the government’s legitimate purpose will
be important to remember when determining whether the Customs legislation is a
proportional response to the danger posed by the entry of obscene materials to
Canada.
(v) Proportionality
(a) Rational
Connection
228
This test is not particularly onerous. As McLachlin J. stated in RJR-MacDonald,
supra, at para. 154, a rational connection may be found “on the basis of reason or
logic, without insisting on direct proof of a relationship between the
infringing measure and the legislative objective”:
see also ibid., at para. 184, per Iacobucci J., concurring; Keegstra,
supra, at p. 776. Applying this standard in Butler, supra,
at p. 504, Sopinka J. held that scientific proof of obscenity laws’ efficacy was unnecessary:
. . . I am of the view that there is a
sufficiently rational link between the criminal sanction, which demonstrates
our community’s
disapproval of the dissemination of materials which potentially victimize women
and which restricts the negative influence which such materials have on changes
in attitudes and behaviour, and the objective.
229
In my opinion, preventing obscene materials from ever entering the
country is also a rational
a means of protecting society from harm.
While, as noted above, the Customs legislation in practice prohibits many works
that are not obscene, I believe this argument is better addressed to minimal
impairment than rational connection.
(b) Minimal
Impairment
(1) Introduction
230
In light of the Customs legislation’s
failure to acknowledge effectively
the unique Charter concerns raised by expressive materials, I conclude
that it is not minimally intrusive. As noted above, the only accommodation
made for expressive materials is that their review under s. 67 is done by a
superior court rather than by the Canadian International Trade Tribunal. In my
view, this is insufficient to safeguard the fundamental
Charter rights at stake. The sheer number of contested
prohibitions, and the cost of challenging them through the various levels of
administrative review, make it completely impracticable for the appellants to
contest each one of them up to the s. 67 level.
Thus the one accommodation
provided is not even triggered for the vast majority of prohibitions.
231
Context must be kept in
mind at this stage of the analysis. While the Customs legislation does not
engage the appellants’ personal liberty interests, as is the
case with an obscenity-related charge under s. 163 of the Criminal Code ,
it does engage one of the rights most central to the well-being of a free and
democratic society -- that of free expression. The protection of expressive
freedom is central to the social and political discourse in our country. If
such a fundamental right is to be restricted, it must be done with care. This
is particularly the case when the nature of the interference is one of prior
restraint, not subsequent silencing through criminal sanction.
(2) The Nature
of Prior Restraint
232
The Customs legislation enacts a prior restraint on speech. A prior
restraint is “a
requirement that the censor, acting to enforce standards announced by statute,
must approve before one may publish or exhibit”:
A. M. Bickel, The Least Dangerous Branch (2nd ed. 1986), at p. 135. By
contrast, subsequent prohibitions depend “not
on prior censorship, but on subsequent criminal prosecutions and on their in
terrorem effect”: ibid.,
at p. 136. Prior restraints are particularly severe restrictions on speech.
233
The common law has a long tradition disfavouring prior restraint. For
example, in the famous English case of Entick v. Carrington (1765), 2
Wils. K.B. 275, 95 E.R. 807, the plaintiff sued several of the King’s messengers in trespass
for entering into his home, searching through his private papers, and seizing certain
items. The defence relied on a King’s
warrant authorizing them to search for seditious writings. The court rejected
their defence, holding that the State could not invade a person’s privacy without any
evidence that he was guilty of libel (at p. 817):
The warrant in our case was an execution in
the first instance, without any previous summons, examination, hearing the
plaintiff, or proof that he was the author of the supposed libels; . . . it was
left to the discretion of these defendants to execute the warrant in the
absence or presence of the plaintiff, when he might have no witness present to
see what they did . . . .
234
Similarly, in his Commentaries on the Laws of England (4th ed.
1770), Book IV, at pp. 151-52, Blackstone equates prior restraints with the
death of free speech:
The liberty of the press
is indeed essential to the nature of a free state: but this consists in laying
no previous restraints upon publications, and not in freedom from
censure for criminal matter when published. Every freeman has an undoubted
right to lay what sentiments he pleases before the public; to forbid this, is
to destroy the freedom of the press; but if he publishes what is improper, mischievous,
or illegal, he must take the consequence of his own temerity. [Italics in
original; underlining added.]
Interpreting this common law history as incorporated into
the First Amendment to the United States Constitution, former United States Chief
Justice Hughes wrote in Near v. Minnesota, 283 U.S. 697 (1931), at p.
713, that the “chief
purpose” of the right
to free speech is “to
prevent previous restraints upon publication”.
235
I would stop short of asserting, like Blackstone, that any prior
restraint is necessarily destructive of freedom of the press. As the
respondent Attorney General of British Columbia points out, this Court has not
universally adhered to a rule against prior restraints: see, e.g., Canada
(Human Rights Commission) v. Taylor, [1990] 3 S.C.R. 892. (The same is
true of the United States Supreme Court: see Times Film Corp. v. City of
Chicago, 365 U.S. 43 (1961).) However, we have demanded that prior
restraint only be used where necessary to vindicate the societal interests at
stake. For example, in Dagenais, supra, the Court put
constitutional limits on the use of publication bans. The Court placed the
burden of proof on the party seeking the ban; required the trial judge to
consider all reasonable
alternatives to a ban; directed the trial judge to limit the scope of the ban
as much as possible; and permitted a ban only where the privacy rights at stake
outweighed the right to free speech (at pp. 881 and 890-91). In short, a
prior restraint was permitted only when it was necessary, and when it was as
narrowly tailored as possible. Similarly, in Taylor, supra, the
prior restraint was only imposed after the appellants had been held in contempt
of a prior order to cease and desist disseminating hate speech. Moreover,
neither of these cases involved
a pure prior restraint on speech. In both cases,
the bans were enforced by subsequent punishment, not by a requirement, like the
one in the Customs legislation, to submit materials for approval.
236
There are very good reasons for the traditional reticence of English,
American, and Canadian courts to impose prior restraints on speech. As Thomas
Emerson argued in “The
Doctrine of Prior Restraint”
(1955), 20 L. & Contemp. Probs. 648, at pp. 656-59, all systems of
prior restraint have certain inherent flaws. These include the breadth of
potential censorship, delays in publication of time-sensitive material, a lack
of transparency, and a propensity to favour censorship over speech. This last
flaw is perhaps the most important, as Emerson’s
prediction is a chillingly accurate prediction of how the Customs legislation
at issue has been applied (at p. 659):
The function of the censor is to censor.
He has a professional interest in finding things to suppress. His career
depends upon the record he makes. He is often acutely responsive to interests
which demand suppression -- interests which he himself represents -- and not so
well attuned to the more scattered and less aggressive forces which support
free expression . . . . The long history of prior restraint
reveals over and over again that the personal and institutional forces inherent
in the system nearly always end in a stupid, unnecessary, and extreme
suppression.
See also Bickel, supra, at p. 141. Moreover,
Emerson argued, at p. 670, that the “worst
evils of the system are likely to accumulate”
where the system “entrusts
the prevention of communication to an executive official”. This is not to criticize the character of
those charged with enforcing the Customs legislation. I have no doubt that
they are generally honest, well-intentioned, hard-working civil servants.
Emerson’s point, to
the contrary, is that the institutional dynamics of prior restraint commonly
produce the kinds of “grave
systemic problems”
found in this case by Smith J. A constitutional scheme of prior restraint at
the border must, at the very least, recognize and make accommodations for the
inherent dangers in such a system.
(3) The Customs
Regime Is Not Minimally Intrusive
237
The facts of this appeal are consistent with Emerson’s critique. The flaws in
the Customs regime are not the product of simple bad faith or
maladministration, but rather flow from the very nature of prior restraint
itself. Given these inherent dangers it is obviously important to have
procedural protections in the
legislation itself that can minimize the dangers posed by prior
restraint. The Customs
legislation fails the s. 1 analysis primarily because it lacks any such
protections.
238
In my respectful opinion, a minimally intrusive scheme would ensure that
those enforcing the law actually obey its dictates. To determine whether
something is obscene, it must be seen in its entirety, with close attention to
context, tone, and purpose. A work that may appear to be obscene may in fact
be a biting political satire or critique. Customs officers have consistently
failed to apply Butler’s
command to consider the context and artistic merit of items under
consideration.
239
In short, the Customs legislation displays all the hallmarks of prior
restraint criticized by Entick v. Carrington, Blackstone, and Emerson.
While procedural safeguards might alleviate many of these problems, their
complete absence from the Customs legislation simply confirms the inadequacy of
the current scheme. Absolute discretion rests in a bureaucratic
decision-maker, who is charged with making a decision without any evidence or
submissions, without any requirement to render reasons for decision, and
without any guarantee that the decision-maker is aware of or understands the
legal test he or she is applying. Such a system cannot be minimally intrusive.
240
And indeed, the Customs legislation is readily distinguishable from all
previous cases in which this Court has upheld a restriction on freedom of
speech. In Keegstra, supra, R. v. Lucas, [1998] 1 S.C.R.
439, and Butler, supra, the person whose speech was restricted
had the benefit of a criminal trial and all its concomitant procedural
safeguards. Irwin Toy, supra, involved a similar scheme of
subsequent punishment. In Dagenais, supra, a prior restraint was
only justified after a careful judicial balancing process that took into
account the free speech interests at stake. In Taylor, supra,
the restriction on free speech was imposed by an independent, specialized
tribunal that had many of the trappings of a judicial body. A prior restraint
was imposed only after a determination, in an adversarial setting, that Mr.
Taylor had violated Canada’s
provisions regarding hate speech. The Customs legislation, by contrast, offers
none of the protections of a criminal trial; it is enforced by relatively
untrained bureaucrats rather than a judge or specialized adjudicator; and it
targets expressive material,
often of high literary value, aimed at adults.
241
I disagree with the
suggestion that a less intrusive system is difficult to envision. A
less intrusive scheme is clearly possible. One
obvious option is that of expeditious judicial determination, which is
favoured in the United States. The United States Supreme Court held, in Freedman
v. Maryland, 380 U.S. 51 (1965), at p. 58, that: “[B]ecause only a judicial determination in an
adversary proceeding ensures the necessary sensitivity to freedom of
expression, only a procedure requiring a judicial determination suffices to
impose a valid final restraint”.
The court went even further in United States v. Thirty-Seven Photographs,
402 U.S. 363 (1971), where it considered a Customs regime that provided for immediate
referral to a federal district court of any material suspected of being
obscene. The court held that such proceedings must be instituted within 14 days, and completed within 60
days of commencement. Such expeditious review was essential to ensure that “administrative delay does
not in itself become a form of censorship”
(p. 367).
242
While I do not believe that
expeditious judicial determination is necessary for the Customs regime to be
minimally impairing, I would like to point out several means of
accommodating the expressive rights at stake that are not currently
required by the Customs legislation:
● Allowing importers to examine the
prohibited goods.
● Establishing a time limit within
which importers are entitled to a final determination.
● Placing the burden of proof on the
government to prove that something is obscene.
● Requiring Customs officers to
consider evidence or arguments submitted in support of detained goods.
● Requiring Customs officers making
determinations under ss. 58 , 60 , and 63 to compile a record and give reasons
for their decisions.
● Entitling importers to at least a
rudimentary hearing, which could
be done by written submissions.
● Ensuring that Customs officers enjoy
a large degree of independence, so that the role of “prosecutor”
and “judge” is not merged into a
single Customs officer position.
●
Setting up a specialized tribunal at high-volume entry points,
such as Vancouver and Fort Erie, to review front-line decisions regarding
obscenity determinations.
●
Compiling a database
of items that have been reviewed and determined to be non-obscene.
Some of these
suggestions are outlined by Professors
B. Cossman and B. Ryder, “Customs
Censorship and the Charter : The Little Sisters Case” (1996), 7 Constitutional
Forum 103, at p. 109.
243
I do not believe that all
of these safeguards are
constitutionally necessary. However, the absence of all of them is, in my opinion, strong evidence that Parliament
has not made any significant attempt to accommodate the free speech rights at stake
in this appeal. Such a law cannot be minimally intrusive.
244
In short, the legislation does almost nothing to accommodate the free
speech rights at stake in this appeal:
Apart from the right to appeal the deputy
minister’s
redetermination to court (sections 67 and 71 ), no special procedures are
established by the act for determining whether publications should be classed
as prohibited. The legislative policy of the Canadian government appears to be
that such determinations are to be treated as raising legal issues no different
in difficulty or importance than those raised by the determination of the
correct tariff on other goods. The elementary point that other tariff
classifications have nothing to do with freedom of expression appears to have
been overlooked in the drafting of the legislation.
(B. Ryder, “Undercover
Censorship: Exploring the History of the Regulation of Publications in Canada”, in K. Petersen and A. C.
Hutchinson, eds., Interpreting Censorship in Canada (1999), 129, at p. 133)
245
The respondent Canada replies that “since
Canada imports much of its pornography, the appellants’ suggested alternative to the impugned
legislation would bring the legitimate work of Customs to a standstill” (factum, at para. 68). In
essence, the respondent asserts that the costs of a minimally intrusive scheme
would outweigh its benefits. Since this issue is more appropriately addressed
under the third prong of the proportionality test, I will now turn to that question.
(c) Proportionality of Effects
246
I have concluded that the deleterious effects of the existing Customs
regime outweigh its benefits. The
first obvious deleterious effect of the current system is the extraordinarily
high rate of error. As discussed,
75 of 210 prohibitions challenged by Little Sisters were overturned. Added to
the 62 out of 261 detained items that were eventually released, this is a disturbing rate of error. This
rate would likely have been higher had the appellants possessed the resources
to challenge all prohibitions to the level of s. 71 review by the superior
court. As it is, they only challenged one prohibition to that level, where
they were successful. Such a high
rate of error results in a substantial number of non-obscene materials being
wrongfully detained or prohibited. This is a significant deleterious effect.
Every book
wrongfully prohibited from entering
Canada inflicts a
wound on our literary and cultural freedoms;
every unjustified
interference with intellectual freedom to
some extent embarrasses our country on the world stage.
247
Aside from such abstract harms, these detentions have had a dramatic,
tangible effect on the lives of countless Canadians. Alternative bookstores
like Little Sisters have had their viability threatened by the constant delays
and outright prohibitions. Authors and artists have suffered the indignity of
having their works condemned as obscene, and not fit to enter the country.
Perhaps most important of all, ordinary Canadians have been denied important
pieces of literature. This effect is particularly significant for
homosexuals. That homosexuals are a disadvantaged group in Canadian society
cannot be disputed: see M. v. H., [1999] 2 S.C.R. 3; Vriend v.
Alberta, [1998] 1 S.C.R. 493, Egan, supra. Homosexual literature is an
important means of self-discovery and affirmation for gay, lesbian and bisexual individuals. In a
society which marginalizes sexual difference, literature has the potential to
show individuals that they are not alone and that others share their experience. To ban books
carrying these messages can only reinforce the existing perceptions gay,
lesbian and bisexual
individuals have of their marginalization by society.
248
Weighed against these costs are the benefits of a Customs regime that
makes almost no special accommodations for the free expression rights at
stake. We are not concerned in this appeal with the benefits of keeping
obscenity out of Canada, as the appellants do not challenge the government’s right to exclude genuinely obscene materials.
What the appellants challenge, and what the respondents must justify, are the
lack of safeguards in the Customs legislation for expressive rights protected
by s. 2 (b) of the Charter .
249
The benefits of the present
legislation are primarily monetary, as the reforms sought by the appellants
will require public expenditures. However, it is important not to overestimate
those costs. Our jurisprudence has never said that the Constitution mandates
luxurious responses. But having no adequate response is not constitutionally
acceptable. In my opinion, the benefits of the current system cannot outweigh
the costs imposed by the Customs legislation.
250
All this said, it is unlikely that complying with the Constitution’s mandates will be
costless. However, this Court has rarely allowed that fact alone to be
determinative. Going back to Hunter v. Southam, supra, this Court has not
hesitated to impose potentially costly requirements on government in the
interest of vindicating Charter freedoms: see also Eldridge v.
British Columbia (Attorney General), [1997] 3 S.C.R. 624; Schachter v.
Canada, [1992] 2 S.C.R. 679; Tétreault-Gadoury v. Canada (Employment and
Immigration Commission), [1991] 2 S.C.R. 22; see also A. Lajoie, “De l’interventionnisme judiciaire comme apport à l’émergence des droits
sociaux” (1991), 36 McGill
L.J. 1338. Moreover, the government has not presented any evidence that a
scheme with more procedural safeguards would be impossible: see RJR-MacDonald,
supra, at para. 163, per McLachlin J.; ibid., at para.
188, per Iacobucci
J. In the absence of any such evidence I am loathe to assume that Parliament
is completely incapable of devising a cost-effective
legislative scheme that better protects the constitutional rights in
question.
251
On the other hand, I
recognize the context in which any new legislative scheme must operate. As
Smith J. pointed out at trial (at para. 48):
There
are approximately 240 ports of entry in Canada, and in the fiscal year
1993-1994, for example, almost 230,000 shipments, made up of about 330,000,000
goods, were imported through them. Customs officials estimate that there are
approximately 10.5 million entry transactions each year and that between 20,000
and 40,000 items of mail enter the Customs Mail Center daily in Vancouver
alone.
Canada is a
huge importer of expressive materials. A large reason why this case arose is
that Little Sisters, and other bookstores catering to the gay and lesbian
community, need to import many of the books and magazines they stock from the
United States. Given the tremendous volume of materials that must be processed
at our borders, leeway must be accorded to Parliament in striking an
appropriate balance between administrative efficiency and the protection of
expressive rights. I realize that a front-line screening process is a
necessity under a prior restraint approach, that government resources are
limited, that the border cannot be policed perfectly, and that mistakes in
obscenity determinations will occur. For these reasons, I agree with my colleague
Binnie J. that Parliament must be accorded some flexibility in establishing an
appropriate Customs regime. However, I cannot agree that the Customs
legislation presently in force, which makes almost no effort to accommodate
constitutionally protected expressive rights, has struck the appropriate
balance.
(vi) Conclusions
252
My colleague Binnie J.
concludes that part of the Customs legislation violates s. 2 (b) and that
this violation was not justified under s. 1 . As a result, he holds that the
reverse onus requirement in s. 152 of the Customs Act is
unconstitutional and must be read down (para. 105).
I am not convinced that it is only part of the Customs legislation that is unconstitutional. As the
Customs legislation makes only the most meagre
of efforts to accommodate expressive rights and as it has created deleterious effects that far outweigh the
primarily monetary benefits which result from the chosen legislative approach,
I believe the Customs legislation as a whole cannot survive s. 1 scrutiny. The
fact is that this legislation has resulted in an appalling level of
over-censorship. The government has simply not established that the serious
violation of the appellants’
s. 2 (b) rights caused by this legislation is demonstrably justified in
our free and democratic society. The remaining question is the appropriate
remedy.
F. What Is the Appropriate Remedy?
253
Given Smith J.’s
finding that there were “grave systemic problems” in the administration of
the law -- a conclusion with which I whole-heartedly agree -- the primarily declaratory remedy relied
on by Binnie J. is simply inadequate. Systemic problems call for
systemic solutions. I believe that Customs’
history of improper censorship, coupled with its
inadequate response to the declarations of the courts below, confirms that only striking down the
legislation in question will guarantee vindication of the appellants’ constitutional rights.
Having concluded that the law must fall, I will offer some broad guidelines for
future reform.
(i) Legislation
Must Ensure Constitutional Application
254
As was already illustrated
in reviewing this Court’s decisions in Morgentaler, Hunter
v. Southam, and Bain, it is legislation itself, not merely its
application, that must make an effort to ensure that constitutionally protected
rights are not infringed. In this case, it is true that nothing in the
Customs legislation itself forces Customs to
ignore evidence of literary and artistic merit; to make decisions
without even allowing written
submissions from the parties affected; and to discriminate against gay and
lesbian materials. However, the legislation does call for prior
restraint by an investigatory rather than adjudicatory body, and does not
provide for any meaningful safeguards aimed
at preventing the inevitable flaws that result from such a system.
255
Effectively, the respondents call on this Court to trust them. Indeed,
when questioned at oral arguments about what guarantee we have that the mistakes
of the past will not continue, counsel for the respondent Canada replied “what may
have occurred then, I trust will not occur now”. Our jurisprudence, most explicitly in Bain
has consistently rejected such flimsy constitutional protections. In Morgentaler,
Hunter v. Southam and Bain, this Court rejected the government’s invitation to trust
them. Instead, we demanded that the legislature enact laws that affirmatively
safeguarded constitutional rights, rather than leaving them to the mercy of
administrators.
256
In fact, the respondents’
approach would mean that every
unconstitutional law requires no more than a declaratory remedy; after all,
Parliament is fully capable of amending a law to bring it into compliance with
the Constitution at any time. I therefore disagree with Binnie J.’s conclusion that, with the
exception of s. 152(3) of the Customs Act , a declaratory remedy is
sufficient in this case. While the government is free to delegate powers, it
must do so in a way that
ensures -- or at the very least attempts to ensure -- that Charter
rights will be respected.
257
The respondents’
request for trust is particularly inappropriate in this appeal, where there is
a voluminous record of discriminatory enforcement. Counsel for the intervener
the Canadian AIDS Society summed up the point well in his oral submissions:
What the
Customs is saying to us in effect is, having [been] in your henhouse for almost
twenty years, this fox has now become vegetarian, and should remain in charge
with no further restrictions. Well, speaking for the chickens, we are not very
reassured. . . .
As a matter of logic, reason, and
constitutional precedent, the appellants are entitled to more. Even leaving aside the precedents of Hunter v. Southam, Morgentaler, and
Bain, Customs have proven themselves unworthy of
trust. In such a situation, in my respectful opinion, the only proper solution
is to give Parliament the opportunity to re-write the legislation.
(ii) Declaratory
Relief Is Insufficient
258
The need to strike down the Customs legislation as it applies to
expressive materials is reinforced by comparison with the alternate remedy
adopted by both the courts below, and by
Binnie J. in this Court. Declarations are, in many cases, an
appropriate constitutional remedy. As Kent Roach has summarized in his Constitutional
Remedies in Canada (loose-leaf ed.), at para. 12.30, declarations are often
preferable to injunctive relief because they are more flexible, require less
supervision, and are more deferential to the other branches of government.
However, declarations can suffer from vagueness, insufficient remedial
specificity, an inability to monitor compliance, and an ensuing need for
subsequent litigation to ensure compliance: see ibid., at para. 12.320.
259
Mahe v. Alberta, [1990] 1 S.C.R. 342, illustrates the appropriate
role of declaratory relief. In that case the Court held that Edmonton’s school system violated s.
23 of the Charter because it did not grant sufficient “management and control” over French-language education to the
linguistic minority. In determining the appropriate remedy, Dickson C.J.
recognized, at pp. 391-92, that the impugned provisions of the School Act
were “‘permissive’ provisions, that is, they
do not prevent authorities from acting in accordance with the Charter ,
but neither do they guarantee that such compliance will occur”. The Chief Justice
declined to strike down the legislation, instead choosing to issue a
declaration. He feared that “the
result of a declaration of invalidity would be to create a legislative vacuum” (p. 392), which would
potentially leave the appellants worse off. The Court therefore simply issued “a declaration in respect of
the concrete rights which are due to the minority language parents in Edmonton
under s. 23 ” (p.
392). Similarly in Eldridge, supra, the Court simply declared
that services must be provided to the deaf instead of striking down the entire
legislative scheme.
260
The rationale behind the remedial choice in those cases does not apply
to the present appeal. Striking down the applicability of the Customs
legislation to expressive materials will not make the appellants worse off; it
will fully vindicate their rights. While the appellants are admittedly not
entitled to any particular legislative scheme, they are entitled to a remedy
that will prevent further systematic and consistent violations of their
constitutional rights. Only invalidating
the impugned Customs
legislation will achieve that goal.
261
A final reason that declaratory relief is inappropriate in this case is
the difficulties the appellants face in enforcing it. This case has been a
massive undertaking for the appellants. Proving the constitutional violations
recognized by Smith J. required the
production of an enormous record. Unfortunately, if the appellants are
unsatisfied with the government’s
compliance with the declaration affirmed
by this Court, they have little choice but to try to assemble a similar record
documenting the enforcement of the Customs regime since the declaration was
made. This is obviously a heavy
burden, and indeed unfair. A stronger remedy is necessary to vindicate
the appellants’ rights.
(iii) Reforms
Undertaken Since Smith J.’s
Declaration Are Insufficient
262
In my respectful opinion, declaratory relief has already proven
ineffective. As Roach, supra, at para. 13.884 has noted, “declaratory relief does not
facilitate continued judicial supervision and may not be effective where
governments do not take prompt and good faith steps to comply with the
declaration”. While
obviously we lack evidence
of the enforcement of the Customs regime since Smith J.’s declaration, I believe that the reforms thus
far are not sufficient.
263
The first remedial measure, effected almost immediately, was to put in
place “interim
procedures . . . designed to prevent the detention of books with literary,
artistic, scholarly or instructional merit which would override Schedule VII,
Tariff Code 9956(a) consideration”
(respondent Canada’s
factum, at p. 8). Specifically, before detaining any book Customs Inspectors
were instructed to consult designated officers, who in turn would consult the
Prohibited Importations Directorate. Any detained book would be read by one of
the designated officers, and the determination would be reviewed by another
officer. Any prohibition would be reviewed by a Tariff and Values
Administrator.
264
Subsequently, over two years after Smith J.’s reasons for judgment were released, Customs
effected seven specific reforms which are described in the respondent Canada’s factum (at pp. 8-9):
(a) Memorandum
D9-1-1 was re-written with particular attention being given to s. 2 (b) Charter
rights, artistic merit and importers [sic] rights.
(b) A series of
Information Bulletins were issued by the Prohibited Importations Unit of
Customs, with the purpose of clarifying issues relating to the administration
of Tariff Item 9899.00.00. These Bulletins are available to the public through
the Prohibited Importations Unit.
(c) The somewhat
complicated B2 form by which an importer appealed a determination was replaced
by a simple written request for re-determination or review.
(d) Importers may
submit with their re-determination request any evidence which they view as
relevant.
(e) When goods are
detained and suspected of being obscene, the importer receives a written notice
containing the following information: a brief description of the goods; port of
entry; date of detention; statement of reasons for the detention, and a contact
name and telephone number. The importer is also invited to view the materials
and submit evidence in writing attesting to their admissibility.
(f) If the goods
are determined to be obscene according to the legislation, the importer
receives a written notice of determination containing the following
information: a brief description of the goods; the reasons for prohibition; a
contact name and telephone number; a list of options available, including
instructions for appeal. If the goods are not obscene, they are forwarded
immediately to the importer after any duties and taxes, if applicable, are
paid.
(g) Customs
officers are instructed to resolve all doubts in favour of freedom of
expression.
265
With respect, I am not satisfied that these measures will remedy the “grave systemic problems” found by Smith J. They
are largely hortatory or permissive.
The new provisions also seem to rely heavily on the expertise of the
Prohibited Importations Directorate. This is not reassuring. Linda Murphy,
the Director of that group, testified that she was completely unaware of the cultural practices
of various sexual minorities, and that she did not consider it her job to
consider a book’s
purpose and effect. Given the absence
of any legislative provisions to ensure that importers’ arguments and evidence
will be considered and that
decisions will be rendered in a timely fashion, these reforms offer
little comfort.
266
By the foregoing, I
do not mean to suggest that the reforms effected thus far are without merit.
Many of them may prove extremely valuable. However, both constitutional
precedent and common sense suggest that when a government agency has
systematically violated constitutional rights, structural reforms are
necessary. In Morgentaler, supra, the Court could also have
simply issued a declaration. The various federal and provincial ministries
could have approved more hospitals, eliminated quotas, and otherwise solved the
problems identified by this Court. However, the Court recognized that such a
solution was inappropriate. Where the problems are a direct result of flaws in
the legislation itself, as I believe is the case here, patchwork measures aimed
at various symptoms will not cure the underlying ailment. As Smith J. found,
and as I have endeavoured to demonstrate in these reasons, the flaws in the
Customs regime are systemic. They flow from the very nature of prior
restraint, and require careful consideration by Parliament. Declaratory
relief, in my opinion, is not appropriate.
267
The need for structural reform is reinforced by Customs’ long history of excessive,
inappropriate censorship. Before the appellants launched this case, Customs
illegally prohibited depictions of anal penetration; it systematically targeted Little Sisters and other
alternative bookstores; it
favoured books by mainstream authors like Bret Easton Ellis and Madonna, in
comparison to gay and lesbian authors; and it
failed to consider artistic merit in spite of Butler’s clear instruction to
always err on the side of protecting expressive freedom. Customs has entirely fulfilled Emerson’s dire predictions of how a
system of prior restraint will work in practice.
268
These are not the kinds of problems that can be solved by simply
directing Customs to behave themselves. In
all the circumstances, further indulgence misses the mark; what is needed is the
firm guidance that only new legislation from Parliament can provide. Striking
down the applicability of the Customs legislation to expressive materials is
consistent with the “Charter
Dialogue Between Courts and Legislatures”,
as it was described by Peter Hogg and Allison Bushell: (1997), 35 Osgoode
Hall L.J. 75. This Court has frequently recognized the importance of
fostering a dialogue between courts and legislatures: see R. v. Mills,
[1999] 3 S.C.R. 668, at para. 57; Vriend, supra, at para. 139.
Particularly where, as here, it appears that Parliament has not turned its mind
to the issue at hand, striking down the legislation may encourage much needed
changes.
269
This would not be the first time a court has struck down the
Customs provisions for obscenity. In 1985, the Federal Court held that the
existing Customs legislation was an unjustifiable infringement of the right to
free expression: see Luscher v. Deputy Minister, Revenue Canada, Customs and
Excise, [1985] 1 F.C. 85 (C.A.). The law had prohibited “immoral and indecent” works, a standard the
Federal Court correctly held to be unduly vague. The government almost
immediately introduced new legislation tying the standard to the Criminal
Code definition of obscenity, and in the House of Commons debates various
Members applauded the Court’s
ruling: see House of Commons Debates, vol. III, 1st Sess., 33rd Parl.,
April 2, 1985, at pp. 3605-6, 3608 and 3611.
270
It required a court ruling to force Parliament to rethink the
substantive standard Customs is to apply at the border. It seems to me that the same should be
done for the procedural mechanisms used to apply that standard. Broad,
structural reforms are necessary to remedy the manifold problems identified
through the course of this appeal, and I fear those remedies will only come if
this Court acts decisively, as the Federal Court did in 1985, to invalidate the existing
legislation.
(iv) Remedial
Options
271
Given the remedy adopted by Binnie
J., Parliament will not,
strictly speaking, have to amend the current legislation. However, Parliament is not
restricted to acting only when this Court tells it to. Even accepting my colleague’s conclusion in this appeal, I would quote the wise
words of Frankfurter J., dissenting, in West Virginia State Board of
Education v. Barnette, 319 U.S. 624 (1943), at p. 670:
Our constant preoccupation with the constitutionality
of legislation rather than with its wisdom tends to preoccupation of the
. . . mind with a false value. The tendency of focussing
attention on constitutionality is to make constitutionality synonymous with
wisdom, to regard a law as all right if it is constitutional. Such an attitude
is a great enemy of liberalism.
The constitutional is not always
synonymous with the optimal: R.
v. Lippé, [1991]
2 S.C.R. 114, at p. 142, per Lamer C.J. Sometimes “constitutionality” means only that an unimpressive, minimal threshold has
been met. I hope that
Parliament, recognizing this truth, will address the problems identified in
this appeal even without an order from this Court.
272
Books are different from other goods crossing the border. As Voltaire
noted, “Liberty of
thought is the life of the soul”:
Essay on Epic Poetry (1727).
While he was writing in the context of political speech, I believe the words
of Cory J. in Edmonton Journal v. Alberta (Attorney General), [1989] 2
S.C.R. 1326, at p. 1336, are apt here:
It is difficult to imagine
a guaranteed right more important to a democratic society than freedom of
expression. . . . The vital importance of the concept cannot be
over‑emphasized. No doubt that was the reason why the framers of the Charter set forth s. 2 (b)
in absolute terms which distinguishes it, for example, from s. 8 of the Charter which guarantees the
qualified right to be secure from unreasonable search. It seems that the rights
enshrined in s. 2 (b) should therefore only be restricted in the clearest
of circumstances.
Cory J. went on to cite (at p. 1337) the following passage
from John Stuart Mill, "On Liberty" in On Liberty and
Considerations on Representative Government (1946), at p. 14:
If all mankind minus one were of one
opinion, and only one person were of the contrary opinion, mankind would be no
more justified in silencing that one person, than he, if he had the power,
would be justified in silencing mankind.
273
Books with no
political context must not
be undervalued. John Milton recognized the universal value of literature in
his Areopagitica; A Speech for the Liberty of Unlicenc’d Printing, to the
Parliament of England (1644):
[A]s good almost kill a Man as kill a good
Book; who kills a Man kills a reasonable creature, God’s Image; but he who destroys a good Book,
kills reason itself, kills the Image of God, as it were in the eye. Many a man
lives a burden to the Earth; but a good Book is the precious life-blood of a
master spirit, embalmed and treasured upon purpose to a life beyond life.
Obviously this Court has previously recognized that some expressive materials merit
suppression. But we must do so only with sombre
recognition that we are choosing the lesser of two very great evils.
274
Freedom of speech means not just the right to question the
dominant political structure, but to question the dominant society and culture.
Unfortunately, the Customs legislation has systematically stifled that right.
I sincerely hope that Parliament will recognize this grave injustice. In that
hope, I will offer several suggestions as to how the current legislative scheme
could be constitutionally improved. I
have already set out a list, at para. 242, of several means of accommodating
the expressive rights at stake that are not currently mandated by the Customs
legislation. While not all of these protections are constitutionally required,
some are worthy of special emphasis. I should also emphasize the point made
above that, because of the volume and complexity of materials imported into
Canada, Parliament must be accorded flexibility in fashioning its response.
275
First, I believe
that new legislation must provide for a number of basic standards to properly
safeguard the fundamental expressive rights at stake. At a minimum, there
should be a procedure to allow citizens to be promptly informed of the fact
that expressive materials which they are attempting to import have been
detained, along with the preliminary reasons for this detention. The importer
should then have a right to examine the detained materials and to make effective
representations as to why the detained materials are not obscene. A right to
make “effective representations” would include, among other things, the right to make at
least written submissions, to present evidence, and a statutory guarantee that
these submissions and evidence will be considered by the decision-maker. As
pointed out by Binnie J., the onus must be on the state to establish, on a
balance of probabilities, that the detained materials are in fact obscene under
s. 163(8) of the Criminal Code . Determinations should be made in a
prompt fashion, and brief reasons must be given when materials are determined
to be obscene. A time limit to exhaust the administrative decision and
internal appeal mechanisms should be provided, with any materials not released
or prohibited within the prescribed time being automatically released. Of
course, a further right of appeal must continue to exist to the superior court
of a province. The goal would be to create an open, expeditious process that
allows for greater interaction between the individuals affected and the state.
276
Second, I believe
that Parliament should give consideration to the establishment of a specialized administrative tribunal to expeditiously review obscenity
determinations made by front-line
Customs officers. The
animating principles in establishing such a tribunal should be independence and
effectiveness. A model could be the boards that currently review and
classify all films that are publicly displayed in each province. While
front-line Customs Inspectors would
still make the initial determination as to whether something should be
detained, the questionable
materials should then immediately be passed on to the tribunal for a prompt
decision. The procedures of such
a tribunal should provide for similar rights to those just discussed in
relation to the drafting of new Customs legislation.
277
As the great majority of commercial shipments of books enter Canada at a handful of high-volume
ports of entry, it would be efficient for a tribunal of this nature to operate
in these places. In my opinion, such a system would not necessarily be
much more onerous on the government than
the existing one. It would
free ordinary Customs officers to fulfil the many other functions that they are far better equipped
to perform. Moreover, by separating the function of screening the material
from actually determining its status, it would avoid the problem identified in Hunter
v. Southam, supra, of merging the investigatory and adjudicatory
functions. As Dickson J. noted in that case at p. 164: “A member of the R.T.P.C. passing on the
appropriateness of a proposed search under the Combines Investigation Act
is caught by the maxim nemo judex in sua causa. He simply cannot be the
impartial arbiter necessary to grant an effective authorization.”
278
Implicit in such a
regime is that the tribunal will be properly staffed and have access to
adequate resources. For any administrative agency to be independent and
efficacious, its members must be at arm’s length from government, its procedures
must be sufficiently developed, its resources must be proportionate to its
workload (perhaps with some sort of case management system), it must be
properly managed, and its staff and members must receive adequate training and
legal advice.
279
Finally, and as a further alternative, I believe that Parliament may
wish to consider relying on the criminal law to deal with the importation of
obscene materials into the country in lieu of a prior restraint regime. In 1958, the Tariff Board was
asked to re-determine the admissibility of the novel Peyton Place, which
had been banned in 1956. The majority of the Board, by a 2-1 margin, found it
to be non-obscene: see Dell Publishing Co. v. Deputy Minister of National
Revenue for Customs and Excise (1958), 2 T.B.R. 154. The decision itself
is unremarkable; what is remarkable is what the majority said in a postscript
not found in the reported version cited above:
The Board, with great
respect, wishes to draw to the attention of the Government an opinion which it
has formed as a consequence of performing this rather distasteful
responsibility. We cannot bring ourselves to believe that either the
officers of the Department of National Revenue, Customs and Excise, or
ourselves are qualified to make the kind of decision involved in classifying
books under tariff item 1201. Essentially, this is a decision that a book
would constitute an offence under the Criminal Code if publicly sold or
publicly offered for sale in Canada. Such decisions, we believe, should be
made by courts with appropriate jurisdiction in criminal matters.
Therefore, unless there
are compelling reasons to the contrary, we suggest that tariff item 1201 be
amended so as to apply only to books which have been adjudged to constitute an
offence under the Criminal Code . [Emphasis added.]
(National Archives of Canada, RG 79, vol.
276, file 471)
280
As a matter of public policy, I agree with the Tariff Board majority’s suggestion. However, as a
matter of law, I am quite rightly restricted to determining what is
constitutional; and, as already noted, that does not necessarily overlap
perfectly with what is optimally
right or just. A system of prior restraint which sufficiently respects the
expressive rights of Canadians may well be constitutional. But in the digital
and information age in which we now find ourselves, I question whether such an
approach continues to be either fair or effective. In my respectful opinion, a
better approach would be to have Customs officers alert the proper authorities
when questionable materials come to their attention, and leave the obscenity
determination to prosecutorial discretion and the courts. This accords with
Blackstone’s view,
outlined above (at para. 234), that every individual should have the right to
put their views forward, but if these views happen to be illegal they must “take the consequence of
[their] own temerity”.
Under this approach, every Canadian would be able to import any expressive
material they desire into the country, but if those materials are obscene they
must be ready to accept the consequences of their action, which may include seizure of the materials and,
possibly, the laying of criminal charges.
281
No doubt there are many other steps that could be taken to
improve the current system. I put
these suggestions forward to show that there is a variety of approaches
available to Parliament to underscore the importance of ensuring Canadians have
access to as many expressive materials as possible while realizing the
practical constraints that are involved. Because the present regime
essentially treats books like any other commodity, I hope that Parliament will
review and revise the current Customs legislation to reflect the seminal
importance of freedom of expression in our Canadian democracy.
IV. Conclusion
282
In conclusion, I respectfully cannot agree with my colleague Binnie J. that the only amendment
needed to the existing legislation is to shift the onus from the importer to
the government. Without the opportunity for
importers to make effective representations and a statutory guarantee that
decisions will be made in a timely fashion, I question the significance
of a shift in onus. In my opinion, the record in this appeal amply bears out
Smith J.’s conclusion
that there are “grave
systemic” flaws in the
enforcement of the Customs legislation. But
I cannot agree that the remedy is simply to issue a declaration and
take it on faith that Canada Customs –
an agency which, it bears repeating, has a long and ignominious record of
excessive censorship throughout this century –
will reform its ways.
283
I would therefore allow the appeal, set
aside the judgment of the British Columbia Court of Appeal and declare, pursuant to s. 52 of the Constitution
Act, 1982 , that Schedule VII, Tariff Code 9956(a) (now Tariff
Item 9989.00.00) is of no force and effect. I
would suspend this declaration of invalidity for a period of 18 months to allow
the government time to choose the preferred remedial option described in these
reasons, and to take the related steps necessary to make the implementation of
the chosen option effective.
Appeal allowed in part with costs, Iacobucci, Arbour and LeBel JJ.
dissenting in part.
Solicitors for the
appellants: Arvay Finlay, Victoria.
Solicitor for the respondents the
Minister of Justice and Attorney General of Canada and the Minister of National
Revenue: The Department of Justice, Vancouver.
Solicitor for the respondent the
Attorney General of British Columbia: The Ministry of the Attorney
General, Victoria.
Solicitor for the intervener the
Attorney General for Ontario: The Ministry of the Attorney General,
Toronto.
Solicitors for the intervener the
Canadian AIDS Society: Elliott & Kim, Toronto.
Solicitors for the intervener the
Canadian Civil Liberties Association: Tory Tory DesLauriers &
Binnington, Toronto.
Solicitors for the intervener the
Canadian Conference of the Arts: Sack Goldblatt Mitchell, Toronto.
Solicitors for the intervener EGALE
Canada Inc.: Sack Goldblatt Mitchell, Toronto.
Solicitor for the intervener Equality
Now: Janine Benedet, Toronto.
Solicitors for the intervener PEN
Canada: Ruby & Edwardh, Toronto.
Solicitor for the intervener the Women’s Legal Education and
Action Fund (LEAF): Karen Busby and Claire Klassen, Winnipeg.