SUPREME
COURT OF CANADA
Between:
Her
Majesty The Queen
Appellant
and
Jamie
Kenneth Taylor
Respondent
- and -
Director
of Public Prosecutions of Canada,
Attorney
General of Ontario and Canadian Civil Liberties Association
Interveners
Coram: Abella, Rothstein, Moldaver, Karakatsanis and Wagner JJ.
Reasons
for Judgment:
(paras. 1 to 43)
|
Abella J. (Rothstein, Moldaver,
Karakatsanis and Wagner JJ. concurring)
|
r. v.
taylor, 2014 SCC 50, [2014] 2
S.C.R. 495
Her Majesty The Queen Appellant
v.
Jamie Kenneth Taylor Respondent
and
Director of Public Prosecutions of
Canada,
Attorney General of Ontario and
Canadian Civil Liberties
Association Interveners
Indexed as: R. v. Taylor
2014 SCC 50
File No.: 35609.
2014: April 23; 2014: July 18.
Present: Abella, Rothstein, Moldaver, Karakatsanis and
Wagner JJ.
on appeal from the court of appeal for alberta
Constitutional law — Charter of Rights — Right to
counsel — Accused informed by police of his right to counsel — Accused
informing police that he wished to speak to counsel — Police failing to
facilitate contact with counsel at scene of accident and hospital — Blood drawn from accused at hospital without accused being able
to consult counsel and used as basis for conviction — Whether police’s failure
to implement or facilitate access to counsel was in breach of accused’s right
to retain and instruct counsel without delay — If so, whether evidence should
be excluded — Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, ss. 10 (b), 24(2) .
The
accused was arrested for impaired driving causing bodily harm when he lost
control of his vehicle injuring three of his passengers. At the time of his
arrest, he was informed of his Charter rights, including his right to
counsel, and was asked whether he wanted to call a lawyer. The accused
responded that he wanted to speak both to his father and to his lawyer. At no
time was the accused given access to a phone while at the scene of the
accident. As a precaution and in accordance with normal practice, the accused
was taken by ambulance to the hospital for examination. At the hospital, a
nurse took five vials of blood from the accused. The police later demanded and
obtained a second set of samples of the accused’s blood for investigative
purposes. At no point during the accused’s time in hospital did the police
attempt to provide him with an opportunity to speak to his lawyer or determine
whether such an opportunity was even logistically or medically feasible. The
police successfully applied for a warrant to seize the first vials of blood the
hospital took from the accused. The trial judge agreed with the Crown that the
second set of blood samples were taken in violation of the accused’s s. 10 (b)
rights, but found that there was no breach of the accused’s s. 10 (b)
rights prior to the first samples being taken. This was based on the trial
judge’s assumption that where an accused is awaiting or receiving medical
treatment, there is no reasonable opportunity to provide private access to the
accused to a telephone to implement his right to instruct counsel. The first
set of blood samples were admitted at trial. On the basis of this evidence, the
accused was convicted of three counts of impaired driving causing bodily harm. A
majority in the Court of Appeal allowed the appeal, finding that the trial
judge erred when he concluded that there was no reasonable opportunity to
facilitate access to a lawyer prior to the taking of these blood samples. The
evidence was excluded, the conviction set aside, and an acquittal entered.
Held: The appeal should be dismissed.
Section 10 (b) of the Charter
provides that everyone has the right on arrest or detention to retain and
instruct counsel without delay and to be informed of that right. The purpose of the s. 10 (b) Charter right is
to allow an arrested or detained individual not only to be informed of his
other rights and obligations under the law but also to obtain advice as to how
to exercise those rights. Access to legal advice ensures that an individual who
is under control of the state and in a situation of legal jeopardy is able to
make a free and informed choice whether to cooperate with the police. The duty
to inform a detained person of his or her right to counsel arises immediately
upon arrest or detention and the duty to facilitate access to a lawyer, in
turn, arises immediately upon the detainee’s request to speak to counsel. The
arresting officer is therefore under a constitutional obligation to facilitate
the requested access to a lawyer at the first reasonably available opportunity.
Until the requested access to counsel is provided, it is uncontroversial that
there is an obligation on the police to refrain from taking further
investigative steps to elicit evidence.
While the police are under no
legal duty to provide their own cell phone to an arrested or detained
individual, they nonetheless have a duty both to provide phone access at the first reasonable opportunity to avoid self‑incrimination
and to refrain from eliciting evidence from the individual before access to
counsel has been facilitated. While s. 10(b) of the Charter
does not create a right to use a specific phone, it does guarantee that the
individual will have access to a phone to exercise his right to counsel. The burden is on the Crown to show that a
given delay was reasonable in the circumstances.
An individual who enters a
hospital to receive medical treatment is not in a Charter -free zone. Where
the individual has requested access to
counsel and is in custody at the hospital, the police have an obligation under
s. 10 (b) to take steps to ascertain whether private access to a
phone is in fact available. In this case, one of the police officers admitted
that at the hospital, he made a mistake and that he would have and could have
given the accused the requested access if he had remembered to do so. Once at
the hospital, it was 20 to 30 minutes before the hospital took any blood
from the accused, more than enough time for the police to make inquiries as to
whether a phone was available or a phone call medically feasible. At no point
did the police even turn their minds to the obligation to provide access.
This is a case not so much about
delay in facilitating access, but about its complete denial. This ongoing
failure cannot be characterized as reasonable. Constitutional rights cannot be displaced by
assumptions of impracticality. Barriers to access must be proven, not assumed,
and proactive steps are required to turn the right to counsel into access
to counsel. The accused’s s. 10(b)
rights were clearly violated. The seriousness of the Charter breach and
the impact of the police conduct on the accused’s interests warrant the
exclusion of the evidence.
Cases Cited
Referred
to: R. v. Manninen, [1987] 1 S.C.R. 1233; R. v. Suberu,
2009 SCC 33, [2009] 2 S.C.R. 460; R. v. Sinclair, 2010 SCC 35, [2010] 2
S.C.R. 310; R. v. Bartle, [1994] 3 S.C.R. 173; R. v. Evans,
[1991] 1 S.C.R. 869; R. v. Brydges, [1990] 1 S.C.R. 190; R. v. Luong,
2000 ABCA 301, 271 A.R. 368; Brownridge v. The Queen, [1972] S.C.R. 926;
R. v. Ross, [1989] 1 S.C.R. 3; R. v. Prosper, [1994] 3 S.C.R. 236;
R. v. Grant, 2009 SCC 32, [2009] 2 S.C.R. 353; R. v. Spencer,
2014 SCC 43, [2014] 2 S.C.R. 212.
Statutes and Regulations Cited
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms,
ss. 8 , 10 , 24(2) .
APPEAL
from a judgment of the Alberta Court of Appeal (Berger, O’Brien and Slatter JJ.A.),
2013 ABCA 342, 87 Alta. L.R. (5th) 114, 561 A.R. 103, 594 W.A.C. 103, [2014] 1
W.W.R. 352, 302 C.C.C. (3d) 181, 7 C.R. (7th) 165, 293 C.R.R. (2d) 69, 54
M.V.R. (6th) 190, [2013] A.J. No. 1079 (QL), 2013 CarswellAlta 1933, setting
aside the accused’s convictions for impaired driving causing bodily harm. Appeal
dismissed.
Jason R. Russell, for the appellant.
Patrick C. Fagan, Q.C., and Kaysi Fagan, for the respondent.
Nick Devlin and Jennifer
Conroy, for the intervener the Director of Public Prosecutions of Canada.
Frank Au, for the
intervener the Attorney General of Ontario.
David S. Rose, for
the intervener the Canadian Civil Liberties Association.
The
judgment of the Court was delivered by
[1]
Abella J. — This is a case about the police informing
an individual about his right to counsel as soon as he was arrested, then
promptly forgetting to implement it throughout his detention, including during
his stay in a hospital. While he was at the hospital, blood samples were taken
which were used as evidence at trial to convict him of impaired driving causing
bodily harm.
[2]
Section 10 (b) of the Canadian Charter
of Rights and Freedoms guarantees that detained or arrested individuals
have the right to retain and instruct counsel without delay. In R. v.
Manninen, [1987] 1 S.C.R. 1233, this Court recognized that this
imposes a corresponding duty on the police to ensure that individuals are given
a reasonable opportunity to exercise the right. This appeal is about the scope
of that duty when a detained individual is receiving medical treatment. The
question before us is whether the police’s failure to take any steps to
implement or facilitate access to counsel is a breach of s. 10 (b) in the
circumstances. In my view, it is and the evidence should be excluded.
Background
[3]
On April 13, 2008, Jamie Kenneth Taylor was
driving a four-door pickup truck in the early hours of the morning with four
passengers after attending a social event in Cochrane, Alberta. He was driving
at high speed. Shortly before 1:25 a.m., he lost control while attempting a
right turn. The truck hit a street lamp and rolled over several times. Three
of his passengers were injured.
[4]
Cst. Douglas MacGillivray arrived at the scene
of the accident at 1:31 a.m. Emergency medical personnel were there when he
arrived, along with several bystanders. One bystander identified Mr. Taylor as
the driver of the vehicle. While speaking to Mr. Taylor, Cst. MacGillivray
noted that he showed some signs of impairment. Because he had been told that
one of the passengers had not survived the accident, Cst. MacGillivray arrested
Mr. Taylor at 1:41 a.m. for impaired driving causing death. Soon afterwards,
he learned that there were in fact no fatalities so the charge was modified to
impaired driving causing bodily harm.
[5]
After arresting Mr. Taylor, Cst. MacGillivray
put him in the back of his police cruiser. At 1:43 a.m., he informed him of
his Charter rights, including his right to counsel, and asked whether he
wanted to call a lawyer. Mr. Taylor said he wanted to speak to both his father
and to his lawyer, Patrick Fagan.
[6]
Mr. Taylor was then assessed by a paramedic in
the back of the police car. He was taken into an ambulance for further
examination at 2:13 a.m. At first, he was unwilling to cooperate with the
paramedic, but when the paramedic explained that the interview and physical
examination were for the purpose of patient care, Mr. Taylor became cooperative
and forthcoming, telling the paramedic that he had been drinking that night.
[7]
The paramedic concluded that there was nothing
wrong with Mr. Taylor’s physical condition, but as a precaution and in
accordance with normal practice, he persuaded Mr. Taylor to be taken by
ambulance to the hospital for examination by a physician. The ambulance left
the accident scene at 2:19 a.m. and arrived at the hospital at 2:43 a.m.
[8]
At no time was Mr. Taylor given access to a
phone while at the scene of the accident. Cst. MacGillivray testified that he
did not think about giving Mr. Taylor access to a phone there, and that “it was
a fault that I made in that it didn’t happen” at the scene of the accident. He
also said that providing access to a telephone in the back of a police car was
“not a practice we normally do. . . . [T]he practice that we normally
do, we transport to the detachment. They sit in a room where they have the
room to themselves and a list of phone numbers . . . . And so, with the
practice of not allowing an accused to use a phone in a police car, that’s what
I was going with.” Constable Elizabeth-Anne MacNamara, who was at the scene of
the accident, gave similar evidence about police practices at roadside.
[9]
After the ambulance left, Cst. MacGillivray made
a note to remind himself to give Mr. Taylor the opportunity to speak to his
lawyer at the hospital.
[10]
After being admitted, Mr. Taylor waited on a
stretcher in a hallway of the hospital until shortly after 3 a.m., when he was
moved to a bed in a curtained area and examined by a nurse and doctor. Cst.
MacGillivray was present during his medical examination. Cst. MacNamara was
also present and taking notes. She was there to observe and maintain
continuity of any blood samples that were taken.
[11]
A nurse took five vials of blood from Mr. Taylor
between 3:05 a.m. and 3:12 a.m. Mr. Taylor’s name and a patient number were
recorded on each of the vials. Both Cst. MacGillivray and Cst. MacNamara
observed the procedure, and Cst. MacNamara tracked the blood until it was
delivered to the hospital lab for analysis.
[12]
Immediately after the blood was taken, Cst.
MacGillivray asked the nurse whether Mr. Taylor would be able to leave the
hospital in order to give a breath sample at the police station. When he
learned from the nurse at 3:13 a.m. that she did not know when Mr. Taylor would
be released, Cst. MacGillivray decided to issue a blood demand to Mr. Taylor.
The blood samples were taken by a doctor at 4:53 a.m. Cst. MacGillivray left
the hospital at 5:36 a.m. with this second set of blood samples.
[13]
At no point during Mr. Taylor’s time in the
hospital did Cst. MacGillivray or Cst. MacNamara attempt to provide Mr. Taylor
with an opportunity to speak to his lawyer or determine whether such an
opportunity was even logistically or medically feasible. Cst. MacNamara
testified that since her only purpose at the hospital was to assist in the
tracking of the blood, she took no steps to inquire whether Mr. Taylor’s s. 10 (b)
rights had been complied with.
[14]
Cst. MacGillivray gave the following explanation
for why Mr. Taylor was not provided access to a lawyer at the hospital:
A . . . I didn’t think of it.
At the time we were in a hospital hallway. I was just watching
him. And I didn’t think to put a phone to his ear. That’s all I can say.
It was a -- it was a rookie mistake I guess . . . .
. . .
Q And, just so we are clear,
at no time did you undertake any effort to bring a phone to him?
A No, I did not.
. . .
Q Why didn’t you let him use
your cell phone when he was laying there on the stretcher at the
hospital to call a lawyer?
A I have no explanation. I
just didn’t.
. . .
Q I take it if you had to do
it all over again, you would have done it differently?
A Oh, yes.
Q You would have given Mr.
Taylor an opportunity to consult with a lawyer before those five
vials of blood were taken from him, at approximately 3:10 a.m., right?
A I obviously would have, yes.
He said he did not
realize his mistake until days later.
[15]
The next day, April 14, Cst. MacGillivray
applied for a warrant to seize the first five vials of blood the hospital took
from Mr. Taylor. A warrant issued on April 17. On April 18, Cst. MacGillivray
took this blood from the hospital. The analysis of both sets of blood samples
indicated that at the time of the accident, Mr. Taylor had more alcohol in his
blood than was lawfully permitted.
[16]
The Crown conceded at trial that there was a
breach of s. 10 (b) with respect to the second set of blood samples taken
at 4:53 a.m. because the police had failed to give Mr. Taylor an opportunity to
speak with his lawyer prior to making the demand. The Crown relied instead on
the analysis of the first set of blood samples which were taken by the hospital
20 to 30 minutes after Mr. Taylor had arrived at the hospital.
[17]
The trial judge made a number of unequivocal
findings confirming that the police did not at any time provide access to a
phone at the hospital despite Mr. Taylor’s stable condition:
•
“The Accused ‘was well ambulatory with no neural
deficits’. [His] speech was fine, he was alert, there was no slurring or
impediments to his speech and he answered questions appropriately.”
•
“. . . at no time during the detainment was the
request of the detainee [for counsel] honoured by the [police].”
•
“[Taylor] was not provided an opportunity to
exercise his right to counsel at any point during the course of his detention .
. . .”
•
“. . . no telephone was provided to the Accused
at the scene of the accident.”
•
“At no time while the Accused was at the
hospital did either of the police officers take any steps towards affording the
Accused the opportunity to speak to counsel.”
•
Cst. MacGillivray acknowledged that he “made a
mistake”, that “there was a lot going on at the hospital”, and that he “did not
think to put his cell phone to the Accused’s ear, or obtain a phone number for
him”.
•
Since Mr. Taylor “was not [Cst. MacNamara’s]
responsibility . . . she did not direct her mind” towards his right to
counsel. She did not take “any steps to facilitate a telephone call for the
accused”.
[18]
The trial judge agreed with the Crown that there
was a s. 10 (b) breach when Cst. MacGillivray made a demand for the
second set of blood samples without “implement[ing] [Mr. Taylor’s] right to
counsel”, but concluded that there was no breach of Mr. Taylor’s
s. 10 (b) rights prior to the first set of blood samples being
taken. He also found that no phone needed to be provided at the accident
scene. As for the hospital, he assumed that where an accused “is awaiting or
receiving emergency medical treatment, there is no reasonable opportunity to
provide private access to the accused to a telephone to implement his right to
instruct counsel”. The first set of blood samples were accordingly admitted
into evidence. On the basis of this evidence, Mr. Taylor was convicted of
three counts of impaired driving causing bodily harm.
[19]
A majority in the Court of Appeal allowed the
appeal, finding that the trial judge erred when he concluded that there was no
reasonable opportunity to facilitate access to a lawyer prior to the taking of
the first set of blood samples. In its view, Mr. Taylor’s s. 10 (b)
rights were violated, and this resulted in Mr. Taylor’s “inability to
exercise a meaningful and informed choice as to whether he should or should not
consent” to the taking of blood samples by the hospital. The evidence was
excluded, the conviction set aside, and an acquittal entered. I agree with the
majority of the Court of Appeal’s conclusion.
Analysis
[20]
Section 10 of the Charter states:
10.
Everyone has the right on arrest or detention
(a) to be informed promptly of the
reasons therefor;
(b) to retain and instruct counsel
without delay and to be informed of that right; and
(c) to have the validity of the detention
determined by way of habeas corpus and to be released if the detention
is not lawful.
This appeal engages s.
10 (b). The issue is whether the police complied with the duty to
facilitate Mr. Taylor’s request to speak to counsel “without delay”.
[21]
The purpose of the s.
10 (b) right is “to allow the detainee not only to be informed of his
rights and obligations under the law but, equally if not more important, to
obtain advice as to how to exercise those rights”: Manninen, at pp.
1242-43. The right to retain and
instruct counsel is also “meant to assist detainees regain their liberty, and
guard against the risk of involuntary self-incrimination”: R. v. Suberu,
[2009] 2 S.C.R. 460, at para. 40. Access to legal advice ensures that an
individual who is under control of the state and in a situation of legal
jeopardy “is able to make a choice
to speak to the police investigators that is both free and informed”: R. v.
Sinclair, [2010] 2 S.C.R. 310, at para. 25.
[22]
In R. v. Bartle, [1994] 3 S.C.R.
173, Lamer C.J. explained why the right to counsel must be facilitated “without
delay”:
This opportunity is made available
because, when an individual is detained by state authorities, he or she is put
in a position of disadvantage relative to the state. Not only has this
person suffered a deprivation of liberty, but also this person may be at risk
of incriminating him- or herself. Accordingly, a person who is “detained”
within the meaning of s. 10 of the Charter is in immediate need of
legal advice in order to protect his or her right against
self-incrimination and to assist him or her in regaining his or her liberty
. . . . Under s. 10(b), a detainee is entitled as of right to
seek such legal advice “without delay” and upon request. . . . [T]he
right to counsel protected by s. 10 (b) is designed to ensure that
persons who are arrested or detained are treated fairly in the criminal
process. [Emphasis added; p. 191.]
[23]
He also confirmed the three corresponding duties
set out in Manninen which are imposed on police who arrest or detain an
individual:
(1) to inform the detainee of his or her
right to retain and instruct counsel without delay and of the existence and
availability of legal aid and duty counsel;
(2) if a detainee has indicated a desire
to exercise this right, to provide the detainee with a reasonable opportunity
to exercise the right (except in urgent and dangerous circumstances); and
(3) to refrain from eliciting evidence
from the detainee until he or she has had that reasonable opportunity (again,
except in cases of urgency or danger).
(Bartle, at p.
192, citing Manninen, at pp. 1241-42; R. v. Evans, [1991] 1
S.C.R. 869, at p. 890; and R. v. Brydges, [1990] 1 S.C.R. 190, at pp.
203-4.)
[24]
The duty to inform a detained person of his or
her right to counsel arises “immediately” upon arrest or detention (Suberu,
at paras. 41-42), and the duty to facilitate access to a lawyer, in turn,
arises immediately upon the detainee’s request to speak to counsel. The
arresting officer is therefore under a constitutional obligation to facilitate
the requested access to a lawyer at the first reasonably available
opportunity. The burden is on the Crown to show that a given delay was
reasonable in the circumstances (R. v. Luong (2000), 271 A.R. 368, at
para. 12 (C.A.)). Whether a delay in facilitating access to counsel is
reasonable is a factual inquiry.
[25]
This means that to give
effect to the right to counsel, the police must inform detainees of their s.
10(b) rights and facilitate access to those rights where
requested, both without delay. This includes “allowing
[the detainee] upon his request to use the telephone for that purpose if one is
available” (Manninen, at p. 1242). And all this because
the detainee is in the control of the police and cannot exercise his right to
counsel unless the police give him a reasonable opportunity to do so (see Brownridge v. The Queen, [1972] S.C.R. 926, at pp.
952-53).
[26]
Until the requested access to counsel is
provided, it is uncontroversial that there is an obligation on the police to
refrain from taking further investigative steps to elicit evidence (R. v.
Ross, [1989] 1 S.C.R. 3, at p. 12; R. v. Prosper, [1994] 3 S.C.R. 236, at p. 269).
[27]
The majority in the
Court of Appeal was of the view that in light of Cst. MacGillivray’s
acknowledgement that he could have provided his own cell phone, the “‘mistake’ in failing to provide it” gave rise to a
breach of s. 10(b). The Crown takes issue with this finding, and I
agree that in light of privacy and safety issues, the police are under no legal
duty to provide their own cell phone to a detained individual.
[28]
But the police nonetheless have both a duty to
provide phone access as soon as practicable to reduce the possibility of
accidental self-incrimination and to refrain from eliciting evidence from the
individual before access to counsel has been facilitated. While s. 10(b) does
not create a “right” to use a specific phone, it does guarantee that the
individual will have access to a phone to exercise his right to counsel at the first
reasonable opportunity.
[29]
As the trial judge found, Cst. MacGillivray
admitted that at the hospital, he made a “mistake” and that he would have — and
could have — given Mr. Taylor the requested access if he had
remembered to do so. In other words, Mr. Taylor could have been given the
opportunity to speak to counsel at the hospital if Cst. MacGillivray had
remembered to do so. He made no mention of any practical obstacles to access,
such as a medical emergency, the absence of a phone, or even problems in
providing sufficient privacy to Mr. Taylor.
[30]
There is, in fact, virtually no evidence about
what logistical or medical barriers stood between Mr. Taylor and a phone call
to his lawyer. It is true that Cst. MacNamara testified that at the hospital
“[t]here was absolutely no way [Mr. Taylor] could have contacted counsel
and had any privacy in the setting that we were in”, but this retrospective
imputation of impracticability is of limited relevance given her
acknowledgement that she was only there to track the blood samples and whether
such access was possible was not part of her duties there. As a result, she
too made no inquiries of the hospital staff.
[31]
There may well be circumstances when it will not
be possible to facilitate private access to a lawyer for a detained person
receiving emergency medical treatment. As this Court noted in Bartle, a
police officer’s implementational duties under s. 10(b) are necessarily
limited in urgent or dangerous circumstances. But those attenuating
circumstances are not engaged in this case. As the trial judge found, the
paramedic “did not feel there was anything wrong with the Accused”, but took
Mr. Taylor to the hospital only “out of an abundance of caution, and in
accordance with normal practice”. And once at the hospital, it was 20 to 30
minutes before the hospital took any blood from Mr. Taylor, more than enough
time for the police to make inquiries as to whether a phone was available or a
phone call medically feasible.
[32]
The duty of the police is to provide access to
counsel at the earliest practical opportunity. To suggest, as the trial judge
did, that it is presumptively reasonable to delay the implementation of the
right to counsel for the entire duration of an accused’s time waiting for and
receiving medical treatment in a hospital emergency ward, without any evidence
of the particular circumstances, undermines the constitutional requirement of
access to counsel “without delay”.
[33]
Not everything that happens in an emergency ward
is necessarily a medical emergency of such proportions that communication
between a lawyer and an accused is not reasonably possible. Constitutional
rights cannot be displaced by assumptions of impracticality. Barriers
to access must be proven, not assumed, and proactive steps are required to turn
the right to counsel into access to counsel.
[34]
An individual who enters a hospital to receive
medical treatment is not in a Charter -free zone. Where the individual has
requested access to counsel and is in custody at the hospital, the police have
an obligation under s. 10 (b) to take steps to ascertain whether private
access to a phone is in fact available, given the circumstances. Since most
hospitals have phones, it is not a question simply of whether the individual is
in the emergency room, it is whether the Crown has demonstrated that the
circumstances are such that a private phone conversation is not reasonably
feasible.
[35]
The result of the officers’ failure to even turn
their minds that night to the obligation to provide this access, meant that
there was virtually no evidence about whether a private phone call would have
been possible, and therefore no basis for assessing the reasonableness of the
failure to facilitate access. In fact, this is a case not so much about delay
in facilitating access, but about its complete denial. It is difficult to see
how this ongoing failure can be characterized as reasonable. Mr. Taylor’s s.
10(b) rights were clearly violated. With respect, the trial judge erred
in concluding otherwise.
[36]
In light of the conclusion that Mr. Taylor’s s.
10(b) rights were violated by the failure on the part of the police to
take any steps to facilitate Mr. Taylor’s requested access to counsel
before the first set of blood samples were taken, it is unnecessary to decide
whether his s. 8 Charter right against unreasonable search and seizure
was breached. I would note only that the police should not be able to
circumvent the duty to implement an arrested individual’s s. 10 (b)
rights by attempting to cure any tainted evidence with a warrant authorizing
its seizure.
[37]
Having concluded that there was a breach of Mr.
Taylor’s right to counsel under s. 10(b) prior to the taking of the
first set of blood samples, the remaining issue is whether to exclude the
evidence under s. 24(2) of the Charter . When faced with an application
for exclusion under s. 24(2) , a court must assess and balance the effect of
admitting the evidence on the public’s confidence in the justice system, having
regard to “the seriousness of the Charter -infringing state conduct, the
impact of the breach on the Charter -protected interests of the accused,
and the societal interest in an adjudication on the merits”: R. v. Grant,
[2009] 2 S.C.R. 353, at para. 85.
[38]
It goes without saying that the public has an
interest in an adjudication of the merits of a case where, as here, the
evidence sought to be excluded is reliable and key to the case. But as this
Court has consistently said, most recently in R. v. Spencer, [2014]
2 S.C.R. 212, at para. 80, the public also has an interest “in ensuring that
the justice system remains above reproach in its treatment of those charged
with these serious offences”.
[39]
This brings us to the seriousness of the Charter -infringing
state conduct. The record indicates that the s. 10 (b) breach was not
the result of a wilful disregard for Mr. Taylor’s rights. Nevertheless, Cst.
MacGillivray’s failure to facilitate Mr. Taylor’s s. 10 (b) rights
constituted a significant departure from the standard of conduct expected of
police officers and cannot be condoned. In short, at no point did the police
do anything to facilitate Mr. Taylor’s access to counsel at the hospital,
either before the initial hospital samples were taken or when they demanded a
blood sample. This branch of the Grant test therefore leans in favour
of exclusion.
[40]
Moreover, the impact of the breach on Mr.
Taylor’s Charter -protected interests was serious. Arrested individuals
in need of medical care who have requested access to counsel should not be
confronted with a Hobson’s choice between a frank and open discussion with
medical professionals about their medical circumstances and treatment, and
exercising their constitutional right to silence. The police placed
Mr. Taylor’s medical interests in direct tension with his constitutional
rights. His legal vulnerability was significant, and, correspondingly, so was
his need for his requested assistance from counsel.
[41]
There is no need to speculate about the advice
Mr. Taylor might have received had he been given access to counsel as he
requested, such as whether he would have refused to consent to the taking of
any blood samples for medical purposes. It is clear that the denial of
the requested access had the effect of depriving him of the opportunity to make
an informed decision about whether to consent to the routine medical treatment
that had the potential to create — and in fact ultimately did create —
incriminating evidence that would be used against him at trial. The impact of
the breach on Mr. Taylor’s s. 10(b) rights was exacerbated when Mr.
Taylor was placed in the unnecessarily vulnerable position of having to choose
between his medical interests and his constitutional ones, without the benefit
of the requested advice from counsel. Mr. Taylor’s blood samples, taken
in direct violation of his right to counsel under s. 10(b),
significantly compromised his autonomy, dignity, and bodily integrity. This
supports the exclusion of this evidence. As this Court said in Grant,
“it may be ventured in general that where an intrusion on bodily integrity is
deliberately inflicted and the impact on the accused’s . . . bodily integrity
and dignity is high, bodily evidence will be excluded, notwithstanding its
relevance and reliability” (para. 111).
[42]
After weighing all the relevant considerations,
in my view the seriousness of the Charter breach and the impact of the
police conduct on Mr. Taylor’s interests are such that the admission of the
evidence would so impair public confidence in the administration of justice as
to warrant the exclusion of the evidence.
[43]
I would dismiss the appeal.
Appeal
dismissed.
Solicitor
for the appellant: Attorney General of Alberta, Edmonton.
Solicitors
for the respondent: Fagan & McKay, Calgary.
Solicitor
for the intervener the Director of Public Prosecutions of Canada: Public
Prosecution Service of Canada, Toronto.
Solicitor
for the intervener the Attorney General of Ontario: Attorney General
of Ontario, Toronto.
Solicitors for the
intervener the Canadian Civil Liberties Association: David Rose Law,
Toronto.