R. v. Bunn, [2000] 1 S.C.R. 183
Her Majesty The Queen Appellant
v.
Thomas Andrew Bunn Respondent
and
The Attorney General of Canada and
the Attorney General for
Ontario Interveners
Indexed as: R. v. Bunn
Neutral citation: 2000 SCC 9.
File No.: 26339.
1999: May 25,
26; 2000: January 31.
Present: Lamer C.J. and L’Heureux‑Dubé, Gonthier,
Cory, McLachlin, Iacobucci, Major,
Bastarache and Binnie JJ.
on appeal from the court of appeal for manitoba
Criminal law -- Sentencing -- Legislative amendment
-- Accused sentenced to two years’ incarceration -- New legislation introducing
conditional sentencing regime after trial but before appeal -- Conditional
sentence available when sentence of less than two years imposed -- Whether
accused eligible to conditional sentence on appeal.
Criminal law -- Sentencing -- Conditional sentences
-- Lawyer convicted of breach of trust -- Whether Court of Appeal erred in
substituting conditional sentence for two-year penitentiary term imposed by
sentencing judge -- Criminal Code, R.S.C., 1985, c. C-46, s. 742.1 .
The accused, a lawyer, was retained by Soviet lawyers
to recover and remit inheritances of money from the estates of six deceased
Manitoba and Saskatchewan residents. In all cases, he converted part of the
trust money received for each of the beneficiaries from his trust account to
his general account. When the conversions were discovered by the Law Society,
his right to practice was suspended. He was later disbarred. The accused was
convicted of six counts of breach of trust and sentenced to two years’
incarceration. At the time of sentencing, the accused was married with one
teenage daughter. His wife was disabled and confined to a wheelchair. After
trial but prior to the appeal, Bill C-41 and the conditional sentencing regime
came into force. The Court of Appeal allowed the accused’s appeal from
sentence and imposed a conditional sentence of two years less a day.
Held (L’Heureux-Dubé, Bastarache and Binnie JJ. dissenting): The appeal
should be dismissed.
Per Lamer C.J. and
Gonthier, McLachlin, Iacobucci and Major JJ.: Bill C-41 introduced the
conditional sentencing regime and significant changes to the principles of
sentencing. These changes raise the distinct possibility that a judge who
sentenced an offender to a short penitentiary term prior to the introduction of
Bill C-41, particularly a term of exactly two years, would have found that a
sentence of less than two years was appropriate had the new provisions been in
force at the time of sentencing. The offender would therefore have been
eligible for a conditional sentence. Accordingly, the new amendments
constitute a potential mitigation of punishment for such an offender, and
should apply on appeal.
Where there has been an intervening change in the law
between sentencing and appeal, it is as though the sentencing judge has
committed an error in principle, because relevant principles have not been
considered. The Court of Appeal need not, therefore, defer to all of the trial
judge’s findings, and can proceed to re-sentence the accused in light of the
new principles. In reviewing the Court of Appeal’s sentence, this Court should
accord it some deference.
In this case, there is no reason to interfere with the
Court of Appeal’s sentence. None of the offences carried a minimum term of
imprisonment. The decision to reduce the sentence to less than two years was
justified in light of the changes in the law. The effect of ss. 718.2(e)
and 718(e) and (f) was sufficient to warrant a reduction of the
sentence in this case. The Court of Appeal reasonably concluded that the ruin
and humiliation that the accused had brought down upon himself and his family,
together with the loss of his professional status, could provide sufficient
denunciation and deterrence when coupled with a conditional sentence of two
years less a day with house arrest. The court also imposed a condition of 200
hours of community service which was capable of achieving the restorative
objective of reparation to the community. Moreover, the Court of Appeal noted
important mitigating circumstances in this case. The accused was the sole
provider and caregiver for both his disabled wife and their daughter. The Court
of Appeal’s sentence provided sufficient denunciation and deterrence, and was
not disproportionately lenient.
Per L’Heureux-Dubé,
Bastarache and Binnie JJ. (dissenting): The trial judge’s sentence should be
restored. An intervening change in the law does not necessarily give rise to
re-sentencing by the Court of Appeal. Rather, it gives rise to a right of
review to determine whether the sentence of the trial judge is inconsistent
with the new sentencing principles and therefore in error. Here, the Court of
Appeal did not have sufficient reason to interfere with the trial judge’s
decision to impose the penitentiary term. The two-year sentence of
incarceration was neither unfit, nor inconsistent with the new principles of
sentencing introduced by Bill C-41.
While the changes to the Criminal Code would in
a proper case permit a reduction of a sentence to two years less a day, thereby
triggering the consideration of a conditional sentence, this is not an
appropriate case for community sanctions. The focus of the sanction for
criminal breach of trust is denunciation and general deterrence. Lawyers
convicted of criminal breach of trust have generally been sentenced to jail.
This emphasis on denunciation and general deterrence is particularly important
when courts punish lawyers who have committed criminal breach of trust. First,
the criminal dishonesty of lawyers has profound effects on the public’s ability
to conduct business that affect people far beyond the victims of the particular
crime. Second, as officers of the court, lawyers are entrusted with heightened
duties, the breach of which brings the administration of justice into
disrepute. Thirdly, judges are drawn from the legal profession and there is a
duty to ensure public confidence in the pool from which members of the bench
are selected. Finally, judges must be particularly scrupulous in sentencing
lawyers in a manner that dispels any apprehension of bias. A lawyer should
receive, and be seen to receive, the same treatment as any other person
convicted of a similar crime. Any perception that a lawyer might receive more
lenient consideration by the courts must be guarded against.
Even if the Court of Appeal correctly relied on the
introduction of the conditional sentencing regime to revisit the sentence,
given that denunciation and deterrence are the primary principles of sentencing
engaged by a breach of trust by a lawyer, a conditional sentence would be
disproportionally lenient in this case. The facts display a significant level
of criminal culpability and the short penitentiary sentence imposed by the
trial judge was proportionate to the gravity of the offence. The severity of
this sentence is seriously undermined by the substitution of a conditional
sentence of two years less a day. This is more than a reduction of a single
day, it is also significantly less severe in terms of incarceration.
Cases Cited
By Lamer C.J.
Referred to: R. v.
Proulx, [2000] 1 S.C.R. 1, 2000 SCC 5; R. v. L.F.W., [2000] 1 S.C.R.
132, 2000 SCC 6; R. v. R.N.S., [2000] 1 S.C.R. 149, 2000 SCC 7; R. v.
R.A.R., [2000] 1 S.C.R. 163, 2000 SCC 8; R. v. Kineapple, [1975] 1
S.C.R. 729; R. v. Dunn, [1995] 1 S.C.R. 226; R. v. Gladue, [1999]
1 S.C.R. 688; R. v. M. (C.A.), [1996] 1 S.C.R. 500.
By Bastarache J. (dissenting)
R. v. Proulx, [2000] 1
S.C.R. 61, 2000 SCC 5; R. v. R.N.S., [2000] 1 S.C.R. 149, 2000 SCC 7;
R. v. R.A.R., [2000] 1 S.C.R. 163, 2000 SCC 8; R. v. M. (C.A.),
[1996] 1 S.C.R. 500; R. v. Dunn, [1995] 1 S.C.R. 226; R. v. Bergeron,
[1998] Q.J. No. 3539 (QL); R. v. Manolescu (1997), 202 A.R. 241; R.
v. Gladue, [1999] 1 S.C.R. 688; R. v. Barker (1995), 102 Man. R.
(2d) 305; R. v. Kelleher, [1995] M.J. No. 398 (QL); R. v. Ryan,
[1976] 6 W.W.R. 668; R. v. Salmon, Alta. Q.B., Calgary 9001‑2179-02,
October 21, 1991; R. v. Gingera, [1966] 1 C.C.C. 273; R. v. Oliver,
[1977] 5 W.W.R. 344; R. v. Shandro (1985), 65 A.R. 311; Marchessault
v. La Reine, C.A. Mtl., No. 500-10-000035-848, July 12, 1984; R. v.
Foran, [1970] 1 C.C.C. 336.
Statutes and Regulations Cited
An Act
to amend the Criminal Code (sentencing) and other Acts in consequence thereof, S.C. 1995, c. 22.
Criminal Code, R.S.C., 1985, c. C-46 , Part XXIII [repl. 1995, c. 22,
s. 6], ss. 718 , 718.1 , 718.2 [am. 1997, c. 23, s. 17], 742.1(a),
(b) [repl. 1997, c. 18, s. 107.1].
Interpretation Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. I-21, s. 44 (e).
APPEAL from a judgment of the Manitoba Court of Appeal
(1997), 125 C.C.C. (3d) 570, 118 Man. R. (2d) 300, 149 W.A.C. 300, [1997] M.J.
No. 543 (QL), allowing the accused’s appeal from a sentence of two years’
imprisonment imposed by Scollin J. Appeal dismissed, L’Heureux-Dubé, Bastarache
and Binnie JJ. dissenting.
Matthew Britton, for
the appellant.
Martin D. Glazer, for
the respondent.
S. Ronald Fainstein, Q.C.,
for the intervener the Attorney General of Canada.
Kenneth L. Campbell and
Gregory J. Tweney, for the intervener the Attorney General for Ontario.
The judgment of Lamer C.J. and Gonthier, McLachlin,
Iacobucci and Major was delivered by
1
The Chief Justice -- This
is a Crown appeal from a decision of the Manitoba Court of Appeal substituting
a conditional sentence for the penitentiary term imposed by the trial judge.
This case was heard together with the appeals in R. v. Proulx, [2000] 1
S.C.R. 61, 2000 SCC 5; R. v. L.F.W., [2000] 1 S.C.R. 132, 2000 SCC 6; R.
v. R.N.S., [2000] 1 S.C.R. 149, 2000 SCC 7, and R. v. R.A.R., [2000]
1 S.C.R.163, 2000 SCC 8. Like R.A.R. and R.N.S., this case
raises questions about the effects of changes in the law between the
pronouncement of the sentence by the trial judge and the hearing of the appeal.
I. Factual
Background
2
The respondent, a lawyer, began an agency relationship with an
association of lawyers in the former Soviet Union. The Soviet lawyers retained
the respondent to recover and remit inheritances of money from the estates of
six deceased Manitoba and Saskatchewan residents. The money involved was sent
to the respondent by the executors of the estates or their solicitors, and he acted
for the beneficiaries pursuant to a power of attorney signed by each of the
beneficiaries. The respondent was also the executor of one estate.
3
In all cases, the respondent converted part of the trust money received
for each of the beneficiaries from his trust account to his general account.
Approximately $86,000 was converted through 145 separate transfers between
February 1986 and September 1989, after he had already taken 10 percent as fees
for his services. The conversions were discovered by a spot audit conducted by
the Law Society of Manitoba in October 1989. The Law Society suspended the
respondent’s right to practice and later disbarred him.
4
The respondent was convicted of six counts of breach of trust and six
counts of theft, although the theft charges were stayed pursuant to the
principles set out in R. v. Kienapple, [1975] 1 S.C.R. 729. At the time
of sentencing, the respondent was 45 years old and employed with a local
corporation. He was married with one teenage daughter. His wife was disabled
and confined to a wheelchair. As a result of his wife’s disability, the
respondent had taken on a large share of family responsibilities, and he was
the sole income-earner for the family. His legal career had been beset by
financial woes for many years. According to the pre-sentence report, the
respondent was acutely aware of what he had already lost in personal terms,
namely a 20-year career as a lawyer, and the respect of the public and his
peers. He suffered “humiliation and torment . . . amplified with the
realization that his invalid wife and teenage daughter must share in the
embarrassment and debasement of his personal debacle” (p. 9 of the pre-sentence
report).
5
He was sentenced to two years’ incarceration (sentences of imprisonment
of two years or more are served in a penitentiary). The respondent appealed
his convictions and sentence, and the Crown cross-appealed the sentence. After
trial but prior to the appeal, An Act to amend the Criminal Code
(sentencing) and other Acts in consequence thereof, S.C. 1995, c. 22 (“Bill
C-41”), and the conditional sentencing regime came into force. The Manitoba
Court of Appeal dismissed the respondent’s convictions appeal and the Crown’s
cross-appeal, but allowed the respondent’s appeal from sentence and substituted
a conditional sentence of two years less a day.
II. Relevant
Statutory Provisions
6
Criminal Code, R.S.C., 1985, c. C-46
718. The fundamental purpose of sentencing
is to contribute, along with crime prevention initiatives, to respect for the
law and the maintenance of a just, peaceful and safe society by imposing just
sanctions that have one or more of the following objectives:
(a) to denounce unlawful conduct;
(b) to deter the offender and other persons from committing
offences;
(c) to separate offenders from society, where necessary;
(d) to assist in rehabilitating offenders;
(e) to provide reparations for harm done to victims or to the
community; and
(f) to promote a sense of responsibility in offenders, and
acknowledgment of the harm done to victims and to the community.
718.1 A sentence must be proportionate to
the gravity of the offence and the degree of responsibility of the offender.
718.2 A court that imposes a sentence shall
also take into consideration the following principles:
(a) a sentence should be increased or reduced to account for any
relevant aggravating or mitigating circumstances relating to the offence or the
offender, and, without limiting the generality of the foregoing,
(i) evidence that the offence was motivated by bias, prejudice or hate
based on race, national or ethnic origin, language, colour, religion, sex, age,
mental or physical disability, sexual orientation, or any other similar factor,
(ii) evidence that the offender, in committing the offence, abused the
offender’s spouse or child,
(iii) evidence that the offender, in committing the offence, abused a
position of trust or authority in relation to the victim, or
(iv) evidence that the offence was committed for the benefit of, at the
direction of or in association with a criminal organization
shall be deemed to be aggravating circumstances;
(b) a sentence should be similar to sentences imposed on similar
offenders for similar offences committed in similar circumstances;
(c) where consecutive sentences are imposed, the combined
sentence should not be unduly long or harsh;
(d) an offender should not be deprived of liberty, if less
restrictive sanctions may be appropriate in the circumstances; and
(e) all available sanctions other than imprisonment that are
reasonable in the circumstances should be considered for all offenders, with
particular attention to the circumstances of aboriginal offenders.
742.1 Where a person is convicted of an
offence, except an offence that is punishable by a minimum term of
imprisonment, and the court
(a) imposes a sentence of imprisonment of less than two years,
and
(b) is satisfied that serving the sentence in the community
would not endanger the safety of the community and would be consistent with the
fundamental purpose and principles of sentencing set out in sections 718 to
718.2,
the court may, for the purpose of supervising the offender’s behaviour
in the community, order that the offender serve the sentence in the community,
subject to the offender’s complying with the conditions of a conditional
sentence order made under section 742.3.
III. Judgments
Below
A. Manitoba
Court of Queen’s Bench, C.R. 94-01-14797, February 5, 1996
7
In brief reasons, Scollin J. stated that the
aggravating and mitigating factors in the case had been thoroughly explored by
both counsel. The Crown had listed as aggravating factors the breach of trust,
the repeated occurrence of illegal conversions (145 transactions), the amount
of money at issue, and the fact that the respondent had been unwilling to
acknowledge guilt and repay the sums. Defence counsel referred to the
embarrassment and loss of reputation already suffered by the respondent and the
letters of reference from other lawyers written in the respondent’s favour.
8
Scollin J. referred to the poor treatment of the distant Soviet
beneficiaries, and to the burden placed upon other members of the Law Society
by the respondent’s unlawful conduct. He stated that he gave weight to the
reference letter from a lawyer with whom the respondent had been associated
from time to time, and that he had paid attention to a letter from another
lawyer who had been told by the victims’ lawyer in the U.S.S.R. that the
victims would be satisfied with a one-year sentence of imprisonment. He also
stated that he “paid close attention” to the pre-sentence report, which
described the hardship that the respondent had already suffered as a result of
his actions. Commenting that it was difficult to reach a perfect sentence,
Scollin J. held that a sentence of two years’ imprisonment was merited. He
stated that a longer sentence would “cross the border into vengeance”, while a
shorter sentence would be an “excess of sympathy in the guise of mercy”.
B. Manitoba
Court of Appeal (1997), 118 Man. R. (2d) 300
9
Kroft J.A. began by noting that the court’s
primary concern was not with the duration of the detention ordered by the trial
judge, since a sentence of two years’ imprisonment on the facts of the
particular case was not one which, prior to the introduction of the conditional
sentencing regime, would have been likely to invite appellate intervention. He
stated that the introduction of the conditional sentence was part of a change
that involved replacing the existing Part XXIII of the Criminal Code
with a new set of principles. He held that the new conditional sentencing
provisions could be given retroactive effect in relation to this appeal
pursuant to s. 44 (e) of the Interpretation Act, R.S.C., 1985, c.
I-21 , and this Court’s decision in R. v. Dunn, [1995] 1 S.C.R. 226.
Accordingly, the Court of Appeal was in the position of considering the fitness
of the sentence according to different statutory criteria than those in effect
when the trial judge rendered his decision. Unlike the usual sentence appeal,
the court was entitled, if not bound, to exercise its own discretion.
10
Kroft J.A. was persuaded that if the option had been open to him, the
trial judge would have, and should have, addressed the possibility of imposing
a sentence of two years less a day instead of two years. He based this
observation on the wording of the sentencing judgment and on the mitigating factors
of the case, including the important role played by the respondent at home with
his disabled wife and as sole supporter of his family, as well as the
respondent’s financial difficulties. Kroft J.A. also considered the letter
referred to by the trial judge which indicated that the victims would be
satisfied with a one-year sentence of imprisonment.
11
In determining whether a conditional sentence would be appropriate,
Kroft J.A. began by noting that the respondent was not a danger to the
community. Turning to a consideration of the principles of sentencing, Kroft
J.A. stated that concerns of denunciation and deterrence had been addressed by
the ruin and humiliation that the respondent had brought upon himself and his
family, and by the loss of the respondent’s professional status. Kroft J.A.
therefore reduced the sentence originally imposed by one day, and ordered that
it be served in the community. In addition to the mandatory conditions, he
ordered the respondent to perform 200 hours of community service, remain
resident at his current address or another approved address, and be confined to
his property at all times, with limited exceptions.
IV. Issue
12
At issue in this appeal is whether the Court of Appeal improperly
interfered in substituting a conditional sentence for the two-year penitentiary
term imposed by the sentencing judge.
V. Analysis
13
The Crown argued that the Court of Appeal erred in two respects. First,
the Court of Appeal should not have reduced the two-year sentence imposed by
the trial judge by one day so as to make the respondent eligible for a
conditional sentence. Second, and in the alternative, the Court of Appeal
erred in concluding that a conditional sentence was warranted in this case,
particularly because a conditional sentence could not provide sufficient
denunciation and deterrence. I will consider each argument in turn.
A. Did the
Court of Appeal Err in Reducing the Sentence by One Day?
14
The Crown’s argument may be briefly put as follows. Pursuant to s.
742.1 (a) of the Criminal Code , conditional sentences are only
available in cases where a sentence of less than two years is imposed. Where a
sentence of two years is imposed by the sentencing judge, a conditional
sentence is unavailable, unless that sentence is demonstrably unfit and reduced
to less than two years on appeal. In this case Scollin J. imposed a two-year sentence.
The Court of Appeal stated that it was not primarily concerned with the
duration of the detention ordered, and that a sentence of two years for the
offences the respondent committed would not have been likely to invite
appellate intervention in the past. Therefore, according to the Crown, the
two-year sentence imposed by Scollin J. was not demonstrably unfit. It should
not have been disturbed, and a conditional sentence should not have been
imposed.
15
The Crown’s argument presupposes that the respondent was not entitled to
the benefit of the sentencing amendments introduced by Bill C-41 on appeal. As
I discussed in R.A.R., supra, at paras. 14-16, an offender
is entitled to the benefit of any amendments to sentencing provisions introduced
after sentencing but prior to appeal that provide for a reduction or mitigation
of punishment. The Crown’s argument is that Bill C-41 only constitutes a
reduction or mitigation of punishment for those offenders sentenced to less
than two years’ imprisonment because a conditional sentence is unavailable for
offenders who receive a penitentiary term. Since the respondent was sentenced
to a penitentiary term, the sentencing provisions in force at the time the
respondent was originally sentenced should continue to apply. If these
provisions were applied, the sentence of incarceration should not have been
reduced by one day, as the Court of Appeal conceded that a sentence of two
years would not have warranted appellate intervention in the past.
16
In my view, the Crown construes the mitigating effect of the new
sentencing amendments too narrowly. While Bill C-41 and the introduction of
the conditional sentencing regime constitute a mitigation of punishment for
offenders sentenced to less than two years’ imprisonment, I am of the opinion
that the new amendments may also constitute a mitigation of punishment for
offenders who were sentenced to short penitentiary terms, particularly those
sentenced to terms of exactly two years.
17
In addition to the introduction of the conditional sentence, Bill C-41
also introduced significant changes to the principles of sentencing. As this
Court found in R. v. Gladue, [1999] 1 S.C.R. 688, at para. 48, and Proulx,
supra, at paras. 14-19, two of Parliament’s principal objectives in
enacting Bill C-41 were to reduce the use of prison as a sanction and to expand
the use of restorative justice principles in sentencing. It was noted that
these two objectives were linked, as the objectives of restorative justice would
generally be achieved more efficiently by sanctions other than incarceration:
see Gladue, supra, at para. 43; Proulx, supra, at
para. 109.
18
These objectives are reflected in several provisions of the new Part
XXIII of the Criminal Code . Section 718.2 (e) provides that “all
available sanctions other than imprisonment that are reasonable in the
circumstances should be considered for all offenders, with particular attention
to the circumstances of the aboriginal offenders”. Commenting on the
significance of the enactment of s. 718.2 (e), the Court found in Gladue,
supra, at para. 39, that:
With respect for the contrary view, we do not
interpret s. 718.2(e) as expressing only a restatement of existing law,
either with respect to the general principle of restraint in the use of prison
or with respect to the specific direction regarding aboriginal offenders. . .
. The enactment of the new Part XXIII was a watershed, marking the first
codification and significant reform of sentencing principles in the history of
Canadian criminal law.
New emphasis
is also placed on the principles of restorative justice in s. 718(e) and
(f): see Gladue, supra, at para. 43.
19
These changes to the law raise the distinct possibility that a
judge who sentenced an offender to a short penitentiary term prior to the
introduction of Bill C-41, particularly a term of exactly two years, would have
found that a sentence of less than two years was appropriate had the new
provisions been in force at the time of the sentencing. The offender would
therefore have been eligible for a conditional sentence. Accordingly, the new
amendments constitute a potential mitigation of punishment for such an
offender, and should apply on appeal.
20
I note one further argument in support of this position. On occasion, a
sentencing judge will impose a short penitentiary term, especially one of
exactly two years, instead of a long jail term because in some areas of the
country, the conditions in federal penitentiaries are better than those in
provincial institutions. Where a penitentiary term was imposed for this reason
prior to the introduction of Bill C-41, it is even more likely that the
sentencing judge may have sentenced the offender to a term of imprisonment of
less than two years had the new provisions been in force at the time of
sentencing.
21
For the foregoing reasons, I am of the opinion that the respondent was
entitled to the benefit of the changes to the law on appeal. As a result, the
Court of Appeal was entitled to conduct a re-sentencing. In R. v. M. (C.A.),
[1996] 1 S.C.R. 500, at para. 90, I explained that "absent an error in
principle . . . a court of appeal should only intervene to vary a sentence
imposed at trial if the sentence is demonstrably unfit". Where there has
been an intervening change in the law between sentencing and appeal, it is as
though the sentencing judge has committed an error in principle, albeit for
reasons beyond his or her control, because relevant principles have not been
considered. The Court of Appeal need not, therefore, defer to all of the trial
judge's findings, and can proceed to re-sentence the respondent in light of the
new principles.
B. Did the
Court of Appeal Err in Imposing a Conditional Sentence?
22
In reviewing
the Court of Appeal’s sentence, this Court should accord it some deference; see
R.A.R., supra, at para. 21. I find no reason to interfere with
the Court of Appeal’s sentence. None of the offences of which the respondent
was convicted carried a minimum term of imprisonment. The Court of Appeal’s
decision to reduce the sentence to less than two years was justified in light
of the changes in the law. In my view, the effect of ss. 718.2(e) and
718(e) and (f) was sufficient to warrant a reduction of the
respondent’s sentence, thereby satisfying the requirement of s. 742.1 (a).
I also see no reason to interfere with the Court of Appeal’s finding that the
respondent did not pose any danger to the community.
23
Turning to a consideration of the principles of sentencing, the court
reasonably concluded that the ruin and humiliation that Mr. Bunn had brought
down upon himself and his family, together with the loss of his professional
status, could provide sufficient denunciation and deterrence when coupled with
a conditional sentence of two years less a day with house arrest. The Court of
Appeal also imposed a condition of 200 hours of community service which was
capable of achieving the restorative objective of reparation to the community.
Moreover, the Court of Appeal noted important mitigating circumstances in this
case. The respondent was the sole provider and caregiver for both his wife,
who suffered from multiple sclerosis and had been confined to a wheelchair for
years, and their teenage daughter.
VI. Disposition
24
The Court of Appeal’s sentence provided sufficient denunciation and
deterrence, and was not disproportionately lenient. I would dismiss the
appeal.
The reasons of L’Heureux-Dubé, Bastarache and Binnie
JJ. were delivered by
25
Bastarache J. (dissenting)
-- This Crown’s appeal raises the question of whether the Manitoba Court of
Appeal erred in substituting a conditional sentence for the penitentiary term
of two years imposed by the trial judge. As in the companion cases of R. v.
R.N.S., [2000] 1 S.C.R. 149, 2000 SCC 7, and R. v. R.A.R., [2000] 1
S.C.R. 163, 2000 SCC 8, An Act to amend the Criminal Code (sentencing) and
other Acts in consequence thereof, S.C. 1995, c. 22 (“Bill C‑41”),
was introduced after trial and before appeal. In contrast with those appeals,
the trial judge in this case did not impose a sentence within the range of
sentences that might benefit from the new conditional sentencing provisions.
Instead he found that the appropriate sentence was a short penitentiary term.
26
While I agree with the statement of principles set out in R. v.
Proulx, [2000] 1 S.C.R. 61, 2000 SCC 5, I cannot accept the conclusion reached
by the Chief Justice in this case. While on the face of it the Court of Appeal
made a minor adjustment of one day in the two-year sentence imposed by the
trial judge, the Court of Appeal in fact levered this minor adjustment into the
substitution of an altogether different sentencing approach from that
considered appropriate by the trial judge, who, as stated, concluded that the
appellant ought to be incarcerated in a penitentiary for two years. In my
view, the Court of Appeal did not have sufficient reason to interfere with this
determination by the trial judge: the sentence was neither unfit, nor
inconsistent with the new principles of sentencing introduced by Bill C-41.
Furthermore, while the changes to the Criminal Code, R.S.C., 1985, c.
C-46 , could in a proper case permit a reduction of a sentence to two years less
a day, thereby triggering the consideration of a conditional sentence, this is
not an appropriate case for community sanctions.
27
A Court of Appeal has jurisdiction to revisit and vary a sentence if the
sentence is demonstrably unfit or if the trial judge made an error in principle
(R. v. M. (C.A.), [1996] 1 S.C.R. 500, at para. 90). By virtue of
the Interpretation Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. I-21 , an accused found guilty
has the right to receive the benefit of an intervening change in the applicable
law that would serve to reduce or to mitigate a penalty when that change occurs
after sentencing but before appeal (R. v. Dunn, [1995] 1 S.C.R. 226).
Thus, the Court of Appeal could have varied the sentence of two years if it was
unfit, or if the provisions of Bill C-41 would have reduced or mitigated the
sentence, which would have amounted to finding that an error in principle was
made.
28
The Court of Appeal began by determining that a sentence of two years
was not demonstrably unfit, and would not have invited appellate intervention
prior to the legislative amendment. The decision of the trial judge to impose
a penitentiary term is a significant one. I agree with the Chief Justice that
this choice may sometimes be affected by outside factors, such as the
availability of treatment facilities, the location of prisons, the risks posed
to the prisoner at a specific institution, or the timing of predicted release.
However, I find no indication that the trial judge in this case considered any
factors other than those pertaining directly to the criminal culpability of the
respondent. I agree that this sentence was appropriate in light of all the
facts before the trial court and in consideration of sentences for similar
crimes before the change in the law.
29
The Court of Appeal went on to consider the effect of Bill C-41. Kroft
J.A. found that the introduction of the conditional sentencing option required
the Court of Appeal to reconsider the sentence, and concluded:
I am persuaded that if the option had been open to
him, Scollin, J., would have, and should have, addressed the possibility of
imposing a sentence of two years less a day instead of two years, and that
sanctions other than imprisonment would have been considered.
((1997), 118 Man. R. (2d) 300, at p. 302.)
30
While I agree that the trial judge, Scollin J., would undoubtedly have
considered the full range of sentencing options open to him, the more important
consideration is that Scollin J. rejected all options short of a term in the penitentiary.
After considering all of the submissions on sentence, he specifically
concluded:
[A] sentence of two years is merited by the conduct of the accused.
More than that, in this case, would cross the border into vengeance; less would
be an excess of sympathy in the guise of mercy.
(Man. Q.B., C.R. 94-01-14797, February 5, 1996, at p. 34 (transcript).)
The trial
judge came to this determination after hearing extensive submissions from the
Crown, who requested a sentence of four years, and the defence, who urged a
sentence of one year. The trial judge also had the benefit of a pre-sentence
report indicating that the accused was reluctant to acknowledge criminal
culpability and concluding that, “supervised probation would serve no practical
need or purpose. Mr. Bunn has all the tools in terms of requisite capacities,
skills, and supports to construct any reality he so chooses” (p. 9 of the
pre-sentence report).
31
In my view, the introduction of the conditional sentencing option alone
should have had no effect on the appeal in this case since the offender would
not have been eligible for the conditional sentence given the penitentiary term
imposed. In the two-stage approach set out in Proulx, supra, the
first step is to exclude the possibility of both probationary measures and a
penitentiary term: “[i]f either of these sentences is appropriate, then a
conditional sentence should not be imposed” (para. 58 (emphasis
added)). In this case the trial judge fashioned a fit and proper sentence that
was outside the range of sentences eligible for conditional sentencing. The
Court of Appeal should therefore not have considered the availability of a
conditional sentence unless Bill C‑41 introduced other changes relevant
to the punishment of the offender that would mitigate or reduce his sentence.
32
It is true that Bill C-41 made other significant changes in the
sentencing regime that would, in an appropriate case, require a Court of Appeal
to vary a sentence imposed by a trial judge that is outside the range of
sentences eligible for conditional sentences. As recognized in R. v. Gladue,
[1999] 1 S.C.R. 688, at para. 43, in addition to introducing the conditional
sentence and requiring sentencing judges to consider alternatives to
imprisonment, the new provisions both codify the existing sentencing principles
which are listed in s. 718(a) through (d) and introduce new
restorative justice principles in s. 718(e) and (f). It may be
that in an appropriate case the combination of the restorative principles with
the requirement to consider alternatives to imprisonment would serve to reduce
a penitentiary term to two years less a day so that a conditional sentence
might be imposed. But this can only occur where consideration of all
sentencing principles makes it clear that there has been an error in principle
producing an unfit sentence. I would therefore, with respect, disagree with
the Chief Justice where he says that an intervening change in the law
necessarily gives rise to re‑sentencing by the Court of Appeal. In my
view, the intervening change in the law gives rise to a right of review to
determine whether the sentence of the trial judge is inconsistent with the new
sentencing principles and therefore in error. This interpretation is in accord
with the decision of the majority in Dunn, supra, where this
Court rejected the notion that de novo sentencing was appropriate.
33
This is not a case where a variance in sentence is warranted based on
the changes introduced in s. 718. It is well established that the focus of the
sanction for criminal breach of trust is denunciation and general deterrence;
see, for example, R. v. Barker (1995), 102 Man. R. (2d) 305 (C.A.); R.
v. Kelleher, [1995] M.J. No. 398 (QL) (Prov. Ct.), at para. 7. In the past
this has required that, absent exceptional circumstances, lawyers convicted of
criminal breach of trust have been sentenced to jail; see R. v. Ryan,
[1976] 6 W.W.R. 668 (Alta. C.A.); Barker, supra; R. v.
Bergeron, [1998] Q.J. No. 3539 (QL) (C.Q.), at para. 19. This emphasis on
denunciation and general deterrence is, for a number of reasons, particularly
important when courts punish lawyers who have committed criminal breach of
trust. First, the criminal dishonesty of lawyers has profound effects on the
public’s ability to conduct business that affect people far beyond the victims
of the particular crime (R. v. Salmon, Alta. Q.B., Calgary 9001‑2179‑02,
October 21, 1991). Second, as officers of the court, lawyers are entrusted
with heightened duties, the breach of which brings the administration of
justice into disrepute (R. v. Gingera, [1966] 1 C.C.C. 273 (Man. C.A.); R.
v. Manolescu (1997), 202 A.R. 241 (Prov. Ct.)). Thirdly, judges are drawn
from the legal profession and there is a duty to ensure public confidence in
the pool from which members of the bench are selected (R. v. Oliver,
[1977] 5 W.W.R. 344 (B.C.C.A.)).
34
Finally, judges must be particularly scrupulous in sentencing lawyers in
a manner that dispels any apprehension of bias. A lawyer should receive, and
be seen to receive, the same treatment as any other person convicted of a
similar crime. While they are not to be singled out for harsher penalties than
others convicted in comparable circumstances, any perception that a lawyer
might receive more lenient consideration by the courts must be guarded against
(Ryan, supra; R. v. Shandro (1985), 65 A.R. 311 (C.A.)).
In this regard I would adopt the reasoning of my colleague Justice L’Heureux‑Dubé,
then a member of the Quebec Court of Appeal, in Marchessault v. La Reine,
C.A. Mtl., No. 500-10-000035-848, July 12, 1984, at p. 3:
[translation]
On a subjective level, it is clear that whenever a crime is committed by a
public figure, a person in authority, a star, etc., all the factors mentioned,
or almost all, are present: the crime and the punishment receive greater
publicity, the shame and opprobrium are that much greater, the financial loss
resulting from the loss of employment is commensurate with the high income.
. . .
Popular wisdom has it that the further one falls,
the more it hurts. . . .
[T]he higher the rank or position the figure occupies in society, the
more well known he or she is, the lighter the sentence should be and,
conversely, the more humble or obscure the figure is, the harsher it will be.
I do not accept this proposition: the scales could not accommodate these two
unequal measures. Justice must be the same for everyone, great or small, rich
or poor.
35
Even if I were to accept that the Court of Appeal correctly relied on
the introduction of the conditional sentencing regime to revisit the sentence
on the Dunn principle, I would still decline to impose a conditional
sentence in this case.
36
In the instant case, the serious nature of the statutory aggravating
factor of abuse of trust (s. 718.2) renders a conditional sentence
inappropriately lenient. In this regard I would also point to further
aggravating factors: the vulnerability and number of the foreign victims, many
of whom were elderly; the extended length of time over which the accused
perpetrated the breaches, three years and seven months; the pattern of conduct,
consisting of the repetition of 145 separate transactions; and the unlikeliness
that he would have been caught, especially by the victims. The mitigating
significance of the accused’s otherwise good reputation in the community and
lack of prior record should be given little weight in this type of case because
it is that same unsullied reputation that allowed the accused to gain the
position from which he could commit the crime (R. v. Foran, [1970] 1
C.C.C. 336 (Ont. C.A.); Kelleher, supra).
37
These facts display a significant level of criminal culpability and in
my view the short penitentiary sentence imposed by the trial judge was
proportionate to the gravity of the offence. The severity of this sentence is
seriously undermined by the substitution of a conditional sentence of two years
less a day. This is more than a reduction of a single day; it is, as explained
in Proulx, at para. 40, also significantly less severe in terms of
incarceration. As observed in Proulx, at para. 102:
Incarceration will usually provide more denunciation than a conditional
sentence, as a conditional sentence is generally a more lenient sentence
than a jail term of equivalent duration. That said, a conditional sentence
can still provide a significant amount of denunciation. This is particularly
so when onerous conditions are imposed and the duration of the conditional
sentence is extended beyond the duration of the jail sentence that would
ordinarily have been imposed in the circumstances. [Emphasis added.]
In this case,
because the jail term that would otherwise have been imposed was either two
years or two years less a day, it is impossible for the length of the
conditional sentence to be extended in order to compensate for the lessened
degree of denunciation. Since denunciation and deterrence are the primary
principles of sentencing engaged by a breach of trust by a lawyer, it would be
disproportionally lenient to give a conditional sentence in this case.
38
I would, therefore, allow the appeal and restore the two-year sentence
of incarceration imposed by the trial judge. The Crown requested only that the
respondent be incarcerated for the remainder of his conditional sentence.
Since the respondent has already served his conditional sentence in its
entirety, I would stay the service of this sentence.
Appeal dismissed,
L’Heureux-Dubé, Bastarache
and Binnie JJ. dissenting.
Solicitor for the appellant: Manitoba Justice, Winnipeg.
Solicitor for the respondent: Martin D. Glazer, Winnipeg.
Solicitor for the intervener the Attorney General of Canada: The
Deputy Attorney General of Canada, Ottawa.
Solicitor for the intervener the Attorney General for Ontario: The
Ministry of the Attorney General, Toronto.
Cory J. took no part in the judgment.