Date: 20110203
Docket: A-425-09
Citation: 2011 FCA 39
CORAM: NADON J.A.
TRUDEL
J.A.
MAINVILLE J.A.
BETWEEN:
PIERINO
DIVITO
Appellant
and
MINISTER OF PUBLIC SAFETY
AND EMERGENCY
PREPAREDNESS
Respondent
and
CANADIAN CIVIL LIBERTIES ASSOCIATION
Intervener
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
MAINVILLE J.A. (CONCURRING)
[1]
This
appeal raises for the first time in this Court the relationship between the
right to enter and remain in Canada guaranteed to every citizen under
subsection 6(1) of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, Part 1
of the Constitution Act, 1982, being Schedule B to the Canada Act
1982 (U.K.), 1982, c.11(the “Charter”) and the authority of the
Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness (the “Minister”) under the
International Transfer of Offenders Act, S.C. 2004, c. 21 to refuse a
transfer to Canada of an offender who is a Canadian citizen incarcerated
abroad.
[2]
The
appellant in this case, supported by the intervener the Canadian Civil
Liberties Association, seeks to have declared unconstitutional subsection 8(1)
and paragraphs 10(1)(a) and 10(2)(a) of the International Transfer of
Offenders Act which empower the Minister to refuse the transfer of a
Canadian offender incarcerated abroad where the offender’s return to Canada
would constitute a threat to the security of Canada or where, in the Minister’s
opinion, the offender will commit, after the transfer, a terrorism offence or a
criminal organization offence.
[3]
For
the reasons further set out below, I find that subsection 8(1) and paragraphs
10(1)(a) and 10(2)(a) of the International Transfer of Offenders Act do
constitute prima facie infringements of the right of a Canadian citizen
to enter and remain in Canada guaranteed under subsection 6(1) of the Charter,
but that these legislative provisions are nevertheless reasonable limits to
that right as can be demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society
pursuant to section 1 of the Charter.
Background to the appeal
[4]
The
appellant, born in 1937, immigrated to Canada when he was
16, and subsequently became a Canadian citizen in 1980. The record shows that
he has had a difficult relationship with the law, going back many years,
including prior convictions in 1962 for attempted false pretences, in 1963 for
possession of a restricted weapon outside a dwelling house, in 1963 for living
on the avails of prostitution, in 1966 for the possession of a still, in 1976
for possession of stolen property, and in 1987 for assault.
[5]
In
March of 1995, the appellant was found guilty by a Canadian court of serious
drug related offences involving the importation of 5400 kilograms of cocaine
having a street value of over $500 million, and was sentenced to a long
imprisonment term.
[6]
While
he was serving his sentence in Canada, authorities in the United States sought
his extradition from Canada in order to answer serious charges related
to the possession and distribution of drugs in the state of Florida involving
300 kilograms of cocaine. After serving his incarceration time in Canada, the
appellant was extradited to the United States in June of 2005. He
pleaded guilty to cocaine distribution charges and was sentenced by an American
court to 90 months of imprisonment. In determining this sentence, the American
court took into account and credited 145 months for time served in Canada.
[7]
It
is noteworthy that various Canadian courts involved in adjudicating criminal
charges or extradition proceedings concerning the appellant’s associates have
concluded that the appellant was the leader of a criminal organization heavily
involved in drug trafficking: Divito c. Le Ministre de la justice du
Canada, J.E. 2004-2034 (C.A.) at paras. 34, 50; Divito c.
Canada (Ministre de la Justice), J.E. 2005-96; 194 C.C.C. (3d) 148 (C.A) at
para. 5; R. c. Gauvin, 187 N.B.R. (2d) 262 (C.A.); R. v. Rumbaut,
1998 CanLII 9816 (ND Q.B.).
[8]
In December of
2006, the appellant submitted a first transfer request under the International
Transfer of Offenders Act, which was approved by the authorities of the
United States Department of Justice but refused by the Minister in October of
2007. This refusal was not challenged by the appellant.
[9]
However,
shortly after this first refusal, the appellant submitted a second transfer
request under the act. The Minister denied the second request for a transfer to
Canada for the
following reasons:
The offender has been
identified as an organized crime member, convicted for an offence involving a
significant quantity of drugs. The nature of his offence and his affiliations
suggest that the offender’s return to Canada
would constitute a potential threat to the safety of Canadians and the security
of Canada.
Federal Court judgment
[10]
The
appellant challenged this second refusal through a judicial review application
before the Federal Court. The application was heard and decided by Harrington
J. at the same time as a challenge brought by the appellant’s son to a similar
refusal by the Minister. Indeed, the appellant’s son was also incarcerated in
the United States and had also sought a transfer to Canada under the
International Transfer of Offenders Act. Harrington J. rejected the
appellant’s application for judicial review and the constitutional challenge to
the impugned provisions of the legislation in short reasons which refer to the
lengthier reasons stated in the case of the appellant’s son and reported at
2009 FC 983. The reasons for the decision in the appellant’s case are thus to
be found in the decision concerning his son, and can be briefly summarized as
follows.
[11]
Harrington
J. relied on his reasons in Kozarov v. Canada (Minister of
Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2007 FC 866, [2008] 2
F.C.R. 377 (Kozarov) to find that the International Transfer of
Offenders Act did not engage subsection 6(1) of the Charter. Under
his reasoning in Kozarov, Harrington J. found that the restrictions on the
mobility of offenders seeking a transfer to Canada arise from
the actions and criminal activities of the offenders themselves. Consequently
what is at issue in a transfer request under the International Transfer of
Offenders Act is not a mobility right, but rather “the transfer of
supervision of a prison sentence” (Kozarov at para. 32).
[12]
In
the event he was found to be wrong on this issue, Harrington J. further found,
for the reasons set out by Kelen J. in Getkate v. Canada (Minister of Public
Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2008 FC 965, [2009] 3 F.C.R. 26 (Getkate),
that the impugned provisions of the International Transfer of Offenders Act
were reasonable limits as can be demonstrably justified in a free and
democratic society pursuant to section 1 of the Charter, “given that the
applicant has already had his mobility restricted due to his own illegal
activity” (Getkate at para. 27).
[13]
Having
upheld the constitutional validity of the legislation, Harrington J. then
reviewed the decision of the Minister on administrative law grounds. Applying a
reasonableness standard of review, he found that in light of the appellant’s
criminal record, it was not unreasonable for the Minister to opine that the
appellant would renew his contacts with elements of organized crime once
transferred to Canada in order to serve his sentence. Consequently,
the refusal of the transfer on the basis of that opinion was reasonable.
Positions of the parties
on appeal
[14]
The
appellant’s position in this Court is strictly limited to constitutional
grounds, and consequently the appellant does not raise any administrative law
arguments to challenge the Minister’s decision to refuse his transfer.
[15]
The
appellant and the intervener argue that the right to enter and to remain in Canada guaranteed
to every Canadian citizen by subsection 6(1) of the Charter is a
particularly fundamental right in light, notably, of the fact that Parliament
may not derogate from that right pursuant to section 33 of the Charter.
They add that the right to return to one’s country of citizenship is set out in
numerous international instruments to which Canada is a party, thus emphasising
the importance and fundamental value of this right. They bolster their argument
relying by analogy on United States of America v. Cotroni; United States of
America v. El Zein, [1989] 1 S.C.R. 1469 (United States v. Cotroni)
and on United States v. Burns, 2001 SCC 7, [2001] 1 S.C.R. 283, in which
the Supreme Court of Canada found that the extradition of a citizen from Canada
infringes the right to remain in Canada guaranteed by subsection 6(1) of the Charter.
[16]
The
appellant and the intervener further argue that the infringements to the right
to enter and to remain in Canada resulting from the International Transfer
of Offenders Act are not justifiable under section 1 of the Charter since
there is no rational link between, on the one hand, the protection of the
safety of Canadians and the security of Canada and, on the other hand, the
objectives of rehabilitation and reintegration underlying the offender transfer
scheme as explicitly stated in section 3 of the legislation. The appellant and
the intervener assert that the safety of Canadians and the security of Canada would be
better served by allowing all Canadian offenders imprisoned abroad to benefit
from a transfer to Canada, thus allowing them to be directly supervised by
Canadian authorities pursuant to Canada’s correctional system,
which notably provides for supervised conditional releases.
[17]
The
Minister, for his part, relies on the reasoning found in Kozarov to
conclude that subsection 6(1) of the Charter is not engaged in this
case. The International Transfer of Offenders Act simply provides
special modalities for the execution of a foreign sentence imposed upon a
Canadian citizen by allowing, in appropriate circumstances, the citizen to
serve his sentence in Canada. No mobility right is engaged since the
offender incarcerated abroad would not be physically able to avail himself of
the right to enter Canada were it not for the transfer legislation
itself. The mobility rights of the offender are already limited by the
incarceration sentence, and the offender’s mobility rights will continue to be
restricted whether or not a transfer is agreed to by the Minister.
[18]
The
Minister adds that should this Court find that subsection 6(1) of the Charter
is nevertheless engaged, then the impugned provisions of the International
Transfer of Offenders Act are justified under section 1 of the Charter.
The objectives of these provisions are the protection of the security of Canada
and of the safety of Canadian citizens, and such objectives are incontestably
pressing and substantial, and the means provided in the legislation to meet
these objectives satisfy the test of R. v. Oakes, [1986] 1 S.C.R. 103.
Issues
[19]
This
appeal raises the two following issues:
a. Do subsection
8(1) and paragraphs 10(1)(a) and 10(2)(a) of the International Transfer of
Offenders Act infringe subsection 6(1) of the Charter?
b. If so, are
these legislative provisions justified under section 1 of the Charter?
Analysis
a) The standard of review
[20]
This
appeal raises the constitutional validity of subsection 8(1) and of paragraphs
10(1)(a) and 10(2)(a) of the International Transfer of Offenders Act in
light of subsection 6(1) and section 1 of the Charter. In these
circumstances the standard of review is that of correctness. The role of an
appellate court, when deciding an appeal from an application for judicial
review, is to determine whether the reviewing court identified the applicable
standard of review and applied it correctly.
b) The
statutory scheme
[21]
In
1977, Canada and the United States of America signed a Treaty between Canada
and the United States of America on the Execution of Penal Sentences, March
2, 1977, [1978] Can. T.S. No. 12. Under the treaty, offenders sentenced to
imprisonment in one of the signing countries may be transferred to the other
country if the sending state, the receiving state and the concerned offender
concur to the transfer, and if the offender is a citizen of the receiving
country. Both parties to the treaty are committed to establish by legislation
or regulation the procedures necessary and appropriate to give legal effect
within their respective territories to sentences pronounced by courts of the
other party, and to mutually collaborate in these procedures. Moreover, under
the terms of the treaty, save exception, the completion of a transferred
offender’s sentence is to be carried out according to the laws and procedures
of the receiving country, including the application of any provisions for
reduction of the term of confinement by parole, conditional release or
otherwise.
[22]
Parliament
adopted the Transfer of Offenders Act, S.C. 1977-78, c. 9 in large part
to ensure the implementation of this treaty and a similar treaty with Mexico, as well as
eventual future treaties with other countries. Under subsection 6(1) of that
act, the responsible Minister was provided with an unfettered discretion to
approve or disapprove the transfer under the act of a Canadian citizen found
guilty of an offence in a foreign state with which Canada has entered
into a treaty for the transfer of offenders:
6. (1) Where the Minister is informed on
behalf of a foreign state that a Canadian offender has requested transfer to
Canada and that the responsible authority in that state agrees to such
transfer, the Minister shall cause the foreign state to be advised whether he
approves or disapproves the transfer of such offender and, where he approves
the transfer, he shall make the necessary arrangements therefor.
|
6. (1) Lorsque le Ministre est avisé par
un État étranger qu’un délinquant canadien demande son transfèrement au
Canada et que l’autorité compétente de cet État l’a approuvé, il informe
l’État étranger de son acceptation ou de son refus de ce transfèrement et, en
cas d’acceptation, il prend les mesures nécessaires à ce transfèrement.
|
[23]
Canada has since
concluded numerous bilateral and multilateral treaties concerning the transfer
of offenders. Though more recent statistical information has not been placed
before us, the record nevertheless shows that between 1978 and 2003, a total of
118 offenders were transferred from Canada to a foreign country, for the most
part the United States (106 transfers) while, during the same period, 1,066 offenders
were transferred to Canada from various foreign countries, mainly the United
States (836 offenders): Legislative Summary: Bill C-33 International
Transfer of Offenders Act, (Parliamentary Information And Research Service,
29 July 2003) at 4 (page 95 of the Appeal Record).
[24]
Major
modifications to the offender transfer system were however adopted in 2004
through the International Transfer of Offenders Act, S.C. 2004, c. 21,
which modernized and replaced the prior Transfer of Offenders Act. For
the purposes of this appeal, the most notable changes introduced in 2004
concern new provisions setting out the purposes of the legislation, and also
providing for specific criteria which the Minister must consider in determining
whether to consent to the transfer of Canadian and foreign offenders. A
requirement that reasons be provided when the Minister’s consent is refused was
also added. For our purposes, the pertinent provisions of the International
Transfer of Offenders Act introduced in 2004 read as follows:
3. The purpose of this Act is to
contribute to the administration of justice and the rehabilitation of
offenders and their reintegration into the community by enabling offenders to
serve their sentences in the country of which they are citizens or nationals.
7. A person may not be transferred under a
treaty, or an administrative arrangement entered into under section 31 or 32,
unless a request is made, in writing, to the Minister.
8. (1) The consent of the three parties to
a transfer — the offender, the foreign entity and Canada — is required.
10. (1) In determining whether to consent
to the transfer of a Canadian offender, the Minister shall consider the
following factors:
(a) whether the offender's
return to Canada would constitute a threat
to the security of Canada;
(b) whether the offender left or
remained outside Canada with the intention of abandoning Canada as their place of permanent
residence;
(c) whether the offender has
social or family ties in Canada; and
(d) whether the foreign entity
or its prison system presents a serious threat to the offender's security or
human rights.
(2) In determining whether to consent
to the transfer of a Canadian or foreign offender, the Minister shall
consider the following factors:
(a) whether, in the Minister's
opinion, the offender will, after the transfer, commit a terrorism offence or
criminal organization offence within the meaning of section 2 of the Criminal
Code; and
(b) whether the offender was
previously transferred under this Act or the Transfer of Offenders Act,
chapter T-15 of the Revised Statutes of Canada, 1985.
11. (1) A consent, a refusal of consent or
a withdrawal of consent is to be given in writing.
(2) If the Minister does not consent to
a transfer, the Minister shall give reasons.
13. The enforcement of a Canadian
offender's sentence is to be continued in accordance with the laws of Canada as if the offender had been
convicted and their sentence imposed by a court in Canada.
|
3. La présente loi a pour objet de
faciliter l'administration de la justice et la réadaptation et la réinsertion
sociale des délinquants en permettant à ceux-ci de purger leur peine dans le
pays dont ils sont citoyens ou nationaux.
7. Le transfèrement d'une personne en
vertu d'un traité ou d'une entente administrative conclue en vertu des
articles 31 ou 32 est subordonné à la présentation d'une demande écrite au
ministre.
8. (1) Le transfèrement nécessite le
consentement des trois parties en cause, soit le délinquant, l'entité
étrangère et le Canada.
10. (1) Le ministre tient compte des
facteurs ci-après pour décider s'il consent au transfèrement du délinquant
canadien :
a) le retour au Canada du délinquant
peut constituer une menace pour la sécurité du Canada;
b) le délinquant a quitté le Canada ou
est demeuré à l'étranger avec l'intention de ne plus considérer le Canada
comme le lieu de sa résidence permanente;
c) le délinquant a des liens
sociaux ou familiaux au Canada;
d) l'entité étrangère ou son système
carcéral constitue une menace sérieuse pour la sécurité du délinquant ou ses
droits de la personne.
(2) Il tient compte des facteurs
ci-après pour décider s'il consent au transfèrement du délinquant canadien ou
étranger :
a) à son avis, le délinquant commettra,
après son transfèrement, une infraction de terrorisme ou une infraction
d'organisation criminelle, au sens de l'article 2 du Code criminel;
b) le délinquant a déjà été transféré en
vertu de la présente loi ou de la Loi sur le transfèrement des délinquants,
chapitre T-15 des Lois révisées du Canada (1985).
11. (1) Le consentement au transfèrement,
le refus de consentement et le retrait de consentement se font par écrit.
(2) Le ministre est tenu de motiver
tout refus de consentement.
13. La peine imposée au délinquant canadien
transféré continue de s'appliquer en conformité avec le droit canadien, comme
si la condamnation et la peine avaient été prononcées au Canada.
|
c) Do subsection 8(1) and
paragraphs 10(1)(a) and 10(2)(a) of the International Transfer of Offenders Act
infringe subsection 6(1) of the Charter?
[25]
As
noted above, in order to be transferred from incarceration in a foreign country
to incarceration in Canada, the International Transfer of Offenders Act
requires that an offender who is a Canadian citizen submit a request in writing
to the Minister, and such request is subject to refusal by the Minister for
certain specified reasons, including reasons related to the security of Canada,
to the threat of terrorism, or to the threat of organized criminal activity.
[26]
The
first issue before this Court is whether these provisions of the legislation
infringe on subsection 6(1) of the Charter, which enshrines every
Canadian citizen’s “right to enter, remain in and leave Canada”.
[27]
To
interpret the right to enter and to remain in Canada guaranteed
by subsection 6(1) of the Charter, it is useful to adopt a purposive
approach. The often quoted words of Dickson J. (as he then was) in R. v. Big
M Drug Mart Ltd., [1985] 1 S.C.R. 295 at 344 set out the appropriate
analysis to be carried out:
This
Court has already, in some measure, set out the basic approach to be taken in
interpreting the Charter. In Hunter v. Southam Inc., [1984] 2
S.C.R. 145, this Court expressed the view that the proper approach to the
definition of the rights and freedoms guaranteed by the Charter was a
purposive one. The meaning of a right or freedom guaranteed by the Charter
was to be ascertained by an analysis of the purpose of such a guarantee;
it was to be understood, in other words, in the light of the interests it was
meant to protect.
In
my view this analysis is to be undertaken, and the purpose of the right or
freedom in question is to be sought by reference to the character and the
larger objects of the Charter itself, to the language chosen to
articulate the specific right or freedom, to the historical origins of the
concepts enshrined, and where applicable, to the meaning and purpose of the
other specific rights and freedoms with which it is associated within the text
of the Charter. The interpretation should be, as the judgment in Southam
emphasizes, a generous rather than a legalistic one, aimed at fulfilling the
purpose of the guarantee and securing for individuals the full benefit of the Charter's
protection. At the same time it is important not to overshoot the actual
purpose of the right or freedom in question, but to recall that the Charter
was not enacted in a vacuum, and must therefore, as this Court's decision in Law
Society of Upper Canada v. Skapinker, [1984] 1 S.C.R. 357, illustrates, be
placed in its proper linguistic, philosophic and historical contexts.
[28]
The
right of a Canadian citizen to enter and to remain in Canada is one of
the most fundamental rights associated with citizenship. The fundamental nature
of this right is clearly reflected both in domestic legislation and in
international instruments, and has been reiterated on many occasions by the
Canadian judiciary, most notably by the Supreme Court of Canada.
[29]
The
Citizenship Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-29 sets out a detailed and stringent
framework for the acquisition of citizenship. Subsection 19(1) of the Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act, S.C. 2001, c. 27 specifically provides that
every Canadian citizen within the meaning of the Citizenship Act has the
unqualified and unrestricted right to enter and remain in Canada, and that an
officer must allow a person to enter Canada if satisfied that the
person is a citizen. The legislative history related to this provision
establishes that this is a right which predates the coming into force of the Charter.
Section 3 of the Immigration Act, S.C. 1952, c. 325 and R.S.C. 1970, c.
I-2, for example, provided for a citizen’s right to “come in to Canada”.
[30]
The
right of British citizens to enter and remain in the royal realm has been a
fundamental right since at least the time of the Magna Carta, which
forbade the exile of a freeman without lawful judgment. A similar prohibition
against arbitrary exile is found in paragraph 2(a) of the Canadian Bill of
Rights S.C. 1960, c. 44. However, prior to its incorporation in the Charter,
the right was subject to legislative override: Co-operative Committee on
Japanese Canadians v. Attorney-General of Canada, [1947] A.C. 87. The
origin of the right can probably be traced back to feudal principles of allegiance
to, and protection by, a lord and, ultimately, the reigning monarch.
[31]
The
right to enter and to remain in one’s country of citizenship has also been
reiterated in numerous international instruments to which Canada is a
signatory, including notably the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights,
GA Res. 217 (III), UN Doc. A/810 (1948), in which paragraph 13(2) provides that
“[e]veryone has the right to leave any country, including his own, and to
return to his country”, and the 1966 International Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights, 999 U.N.T.S. 172, in which paragraph 12(4) similarly provides that
“[n]o one shall be arbitrarily deprived of the right to enter his own country”.
[32]
Moreover,
the Supreme Court of Canada has repeatedly found that the right under
subsection 6(1) of the Charter is engaged in the context of extradition
proceedings against a Canadian citizen, most notably in United States v.
Cotroni, supra at pp. 1480-81, United States v. Burns, supra
at para. 41; and Lake v. Canada (Minister of
Justice),
2008 SCC 23, [2008] 1 S.C.R. 761 at paras. 28 and 42. This Court has also held
in Kamel
v. Canada,
2009 FCA 21, [2009] 4 F.C.R. 449 at para. 15 (leave to appeal to the
Supreme Court of Canada refused), that subsection 6(1) of the Charter is
also engaged when a request for a passport is denied.
[33]
If
a Canadian citizen’s Charter right to remain in Canada under subsection
6(1) is engaged when Canadian authorities seek his extradition in order to face
charges and eventual imprisonment in a foreign jurisdiction, it seems logical that
the citizen’s right to enter and remain in Canada would also be engaged when
that same foreign jurisdiction agrees to transfer that Canadian citizen to
Canada in order to serve his sentence here.
[34]
These
legislative provisions, international instruments and court decisions are all
strong indications that subsection 6(1) of the Charter is engaged by the
impugned provisions of the International Transfer of Offenders Act.
[35]
Nevertheless,
the Minister invites us to find that the right to enter and to remain in Canada is not
engaged by these legislative provisions. The Minister advances three
propositions to support his assertion : 1) the concerned offenders are in any
event imprisoned and the legislation simply provides for the management by
Canada of the foreign sentences to which the offenders are subject; 2) the
offenders would have no right to enter Canada were it not for the legislation;
and 3) the international treaty scheme pursuant to which the legislation was
adopted provides for the unqualified right of participating states to refuse
the transfer of an offender. I find none of these propositions persuasive.
[36]
Dealing
with these propositions in reverse order, the fact that the 1977 Treaty on
the execution of penal sentences between Canada and the
United States does not qualify the consent which Canada must provide
for the transfer of an offender under the treaty has no bearing whatsoever on
the constitutional rights of the concerned offenders. First, the treaty was
entered into prior to the coming into force of the Charter, and it would
be curious indeed if the rights guaranteed by the Charter would somehow
be subservient to prior treaty instruments. The Minister has submitted no
authority to support such a proposition. Second, though the treaty itself
requires the consent of Canada and does not provide for any fettering of
this consent, this does not mean that Canadian legislation fettering that
consent cannot be adopted. In fact, the Minister’s discretion to consent to an
offender transfer was substantially fettered in 2004 through the adoption by
Parliament of the International Transfer of Offenders Act. I see no
reason why the Charter itself could not also fetter that discretion.
[37]
I
also reject the proposition that subsection 6(1) of the Charter is not
engaged by the legislation since offenders would have no right to enter Canada where it not
for the legislation. Though it is true that offenders imprisoned in foreign
jurisdictions cannot in fact exercise their right to enter and remain in Canada, this
situation results from the superior force of the foreign jurisdiction over the
offenders, and not from the loss of the right itself by the offenders. The very
purpose of the International Transfer of Offenders Act and its related
treaty system is to facilitate the repatriation of offenders to their countries
of citizenship, and to thus facilitate, in the case of Canadian citizens, the
exercise of their right to enter and to remain in Canada.
[38]
Finally,
this brings me to the proposition that what is at issue in a transfer request
under the International Transfer of Offenders Act is not a mobility
right, but rather the transfer of the supervision of a prison sentence.
[39]
Obviously,
imprisonment in Canada restricts Charter mobility rights of
offenders in Canada. However, we
are not concerned here with a restriction on the mobility rights of an offender
sentenced in Canada, but rather
with the mobility rights of a Canadian citizen incarcerated in a foreign
jurisdiction.
[40]
In
the case of an offender incarcerated in a foreign jurisdiction, the restriction
on the offender’s mobility rights under the Charter resulting from the
foreign incarceration is only effected for the purposes of the Charter after
the offender is transferred to Canada pursuant to the International Transfer
of Offenders Act: see section 13 of the act. The definition of “sentence”
in the Corrections and Conditional Release Act, S.C. 1992, c. 20 (as
amended by the International Transfer of Offenders Act) is instructive
in this regard [emphasis added]:
“sentence” means a sentence of imprisonment and includes
a sentence imposed by a foreign entity on a Canadian offender who has been
transferred to Canada under the International Transfer of Offenders Act […];
|
« peine » ou « peine d’emprisonnement » S’entend
notamment […] d’une peine d’emprisonnement imposée par une entité étrangère à
un Canadien qui a été transféré au Canada sous le régime de la Loi
sur le transfèrement international des délinquants
|
[41]
Prior
to a transfer to Canada pursuant to the legislation, from the perspective of
the Charter, no sentence of incarceration restricting mobility rights
has been recognized by Canadian authorities. The fact that the Canadian citizen
committed an offence in a foreign jurisdiction, and the fact that he is
detained in a foreign jurisdiction, do not restrict de jure the right.
Consequently, there is no legal restriction to the Charter right
resulting from imprisonment in a foreign jurisdiction, though of course there
is a practical impediment to the exercise of that right resulting from the
foreign imprisonment itself.
[42]
However,
once the foreign jurisdiction expresses its consent to transfer an offender to Canada, that
practical impediment is lifted. Thereafter, the only legal restriction
to that offender’s right to enter and remain in Canada guaranteed
under subsection 6(1) of the Charter is the required consent of the Minister
pursuant to the International Transfer of Offenders Act.
[43]
Consequently,
an offender’s Charter right to enter and to remain in Canada is engaged
once a request for a transfer to Canada is approved by the
foreign jurisdiction. This is so notably in light of the fact that the Corrections
and Conditional Release Act does not apply to that Canadian citizen prior
to the Minister’s consent under the International Transfer of Offenders Act.
[44]
The Minister
recognizes that if the American authorities deported the appellant to Canada, subsection
6(1) of the Charter would be engaged. If this Charter provision
is engaged when a Canadian citizen is deported from a foreign jurisdiction to Canada, I fail to
grasp why it would not be engaged in the context of a transfer of a Canadian
citizen from a foreign jurisdiction. The Minister’s reasoning transforms the
foreign sentence of a Canadian citizen into a legal exile from Canada in the event
the foreign jurisdiction agrees to allow the Canadian citizen to serve his
sentence in Canada. This, in my
opinion, is not only contrary to the Charter, but also contrary to the Canadian
Bill of Rights, which curtails arbitrary exile.
[45]
I consequently
find that the right to enter and to remain in Canada is infringed by the International
Transfer of Offenders Act.
[46]
In
closing on the infringement inquiry, I add that the concerned Charter
right should not be lightly discarded. As discussed further below, the Charter
analysis in this case results in the conclusion that the legislative scheme
at issue here is justified under section 1 of the Charter. But this
legislative scheme was not the one in force prior to 2004 and may well change
in the future. To refuse in principle the engagement of the Charter in
all offender transfers to Canada would consequently, in my considered opinion,
be contrary to the very purposes which lead to enshrining in the Charter
the right of all citizens, even bad citizens, to enter and to remain in Canada. The noble
purposes underlying the Charter would be lost if the legislation under
which such refusals are made was not subject to scrutiny under section 1.
[47]
The
engagement of the Charter in this case also serves an important purpose
even if the impugned provisions of the International Transfer of Offenders
Act are justified under section 1. Indeed, the Minister’s power to consent
or to refuse such a transfer must be exercised in accordance not only with the
provisions of the legislation, but also in accordance with the Charter.
Since a Charter right is engaged in these circumstances, the Minister
must therefore take into account the offender’s Charter rights,
including his rights under subsection 6(1), in reaching his decision: see by
analogy with extradition Canada (Justice) v. Fischbacher, 2009 SCC 46,
[2009] 3 S.C.R. 170 at paras. 36, 38 and 39; Németh v. Canada (Justice), 2010 SCC 56
at para. 65.
d) Are the impugned provisions of the
act justified under section 1 of the Charter?
[48]
Having
found that subsection 8(1) and paragraphs 10(1)(a) and 10(2)(a) of the International
Transfer of Offenders Act infringe on the right to enter and to remain in
Canada guaranteed under subsection 6(1) of the Charter, it is now
necessary to determine if these legislative provisions are justified under
section 1 of the Charter.
[49]
The
analysis used for such purpose is the one first set out in the well known case
of R. v. Oakes, supra. This analysis has been recently summarized
as follows in Health Services and Support – Facilities Subsector Bargaining
Assn. v. British Columbia, 2007 SCC 27, [2007] 2 S.C.R. 391 at
paras. 138-139:
The analysis for assessing whether or not a law violating
the Charter can be saved as a reasonable limit under s. 1 is set out in Oakes.
A limit on Charter rights must be prescribed by law to be saved under s.
1. Once it is determined that the limit is prescribed by law, then there
are four components to the Oakes test for establishing that the limit is
reasonably justifiable in a free and democratic society (Oakes, at
pp. 138-40). First, the objective of the law must be pressing and
substantial. Second, there must be a rational connection between the
pressing and substantial objective and the means chosen by the law to achieve
the objective. Third, the impugned law must be minimally impairing.
Finally, there must be proportionality between the objective and the measures
adopted by the law, and more specifically, between the salutary and deleterious
effects of the law (Oakes, at p. 140; Dagenais v. Canadian
Broadcasting Corp., [1994] 3 S.C.R. 835, at p. 889).
The s. 1 analysis focuses on the particular context of the
law at issue. Contextual factors to be considered include the nature of the
harm addressed, the vulnerability of the group protected, ameliorative measures
considered to address the harm, and the nature and importance of the infringed
activity: Thomson Newspapers Co. v. Canada (Attorney General), [1998]
1 S.C.R. 877, and Harper v. Canada (Attorney General), [2004] 1 S.C.R.
827, 2004 SCC 33. This said, the basic template of Oakes remains
applicable, and each of the elements required by that test must be
satisfied. The government bears the onus of establishing each of the
elements of the Oakes test and hence of showing that a law is a
reasonable limit on Charter rights on a balance of probabilities (see Oakes,
at pp. 136-37).
(i) Is
the limit prescribed by law?
[50]
There
is no dispute here that the limits to the right to enter and remain in Canada set out in
the impugned provisions of the International Transfer of Offenders Act
are prescribed by law.
(ii) Is the
objective or purpose for which the limit is imposed pressing and substantial?
[51]
The
appellant and the intervener both rightfully recognize that the security of
Canada and the prevention of offences related to terrorism or to organized
crime are pressing and substantial objectives (at paragraph 23 of the
appellant’s Memorandum and at paragraph 42 of the intervener’s Memorandum).
[52]
This
is consistent with teachings of the judiciary, notably the Supreme Court of
Canada’s decision in Suresh v. Canada, [2002] 1 S.C.R. 3 at paras. 85
and 89 to 92 reached in the context of deportation proceedings, and the
decision of this Court in Kamel v. Canada, supra.
(iii) Is the
limit rationally connected to the objective or purpose?
[53]
There
also appears to be a prima facie rational connection between, on the one
hand, the security of Canada and the prevention of offences related to terrorism
or to organized crime and, on the other hand, the authority of the Minister to refuse the transfer
of an offender under the International Transfer of Offenders Act. Logic,
reason and common sense seem to readily establish a causal relationship between
the pressing and substantial objectives at issue and refusing a transfer to an
offender whose return to Canada would constitute a threat to these
objectives. This rational connection seems moreover clearly established where,
as in this case, the offender has been found guilty of serious offences
connected to organized criminality.
[54]
Yet,
the appellant and the intervener contend that such a rational connection is not
self-evident. Rather, they assert that the safety of Canadians and the security
of Canada would be better served by allowing all Canadian offenders imprisoned
abroad to be transferred to Canada, including offenders posing threats to the
security of Canada or likely to commit terrorist or organized crime offences,
thus allowing these offenders to be directly supervised by Canadian authorities
pursuant to Canada’s correctional system. This, they say, is consistent with
the objectives of rehabilitation and reintegration stated in section 3 of the International
Transfer of Offenders Act. They therefore contend that Parliament was
irrational and acted contrary to the Charter when it granted the Minister
the authority to refuse offender transfers on the basis of threats to the
security of Canada, or of
likely offences of terrorism or of organized criminality.
[55]
I
do not accept these contentions. Though I do not dispute that Canada’s
correctional system can, in most circumstances, adequately protect Canadian
citizens from convicted terrorists, organized crime members or felons
threatening the security of Canada, Parliament has decided that it may be
preferable, in certain circumstances, not to allow convicted offenders who pose
such threats to be allowed to serve their sentence in Canada. I cannot conclude
that this legislative choice is itself irrational.
[56]
Indeed,
I do not find it irrational for Parliament to empower the Minister to refuse the transfer
of a convicted terrorist if it is reasonable to believe that the incarceration
of that terrorist in Canada would result in
retaliatory terrorist attacks on Canadian citizens. Likewise, I do not find it
irrational for Parliament to empower the Minister to refuse the transfer
of an international drug cartel kingpin if it is reasonable to believe that
such a transfer would result in attacks on Canadian prison guards or would facilitate
the criminal operations of that offender or of his criminal organization. These
are clear cases were the Minister could properly refuse a transfer to Canada.
[57]
Of
course, these examples are extreme, and not all the offenders convicted of
security or related offences, or of offences related to terrorism or organized
crime, pose a threat to Canada or to Canadians should
they serve their foreign sentences in Canada. There are some cases which clearly justify
refusing a transfer on the grounds set out by Parliament, and other cases where
such a refusal would clearly be inappropriate and contrary to the Charter
right at issue. Many cases will however fall between these two extremes. This
is precisely why Parliament has empowered the Minister to decide each
individual case on its particular facts, taking into account pertinent
circumstances and prescribed factors.
[58]
The
legislative framework in which the Minister’s discretion is exercised is therefore
reasonable and it is clearly rationally linked to the pressing and substantial
objectives at hand. First, the Minister’s discretion is strongly fettered by specific
enumerated factors which must be considered, including notably whether the
offender’s return to Canada would constitute a threat to the security of Canada
(paragraph 10(1)(a) of the act) or whether the offender will, after the
transfer to Canada, commit a terrorism offence or criminal organization offence
(paragraph 10(2)(a) of the act). These are serious and important constraints on
the Minister’s discretion. Second,
the scheme of the legislation allows the offender to make prior representations
to the Minister through a written
request in which all pertinent factors and circumstances can be addressed
(section 7 of the act).
Third, the Minister must provide written
reasons if he refuses his consent to the transfer (section 11 of the act).
Finally, the decision of the Minister is subject to judicial review before the
Federal Court, and the decision of that court is itself subject to appeal to
this Court and ultimately, in appropriate cases, to the Supreme Court of
Canada.
(iv) Does the
limit minimally impair the right?
[59]
The
minimal impairment must be understood and analysed keeping in mind that the
concerned offender has been found guilty of an offence by a foreign
jurisdiction, in this case the United States, and is already incarcerated by
that foreign jurisdiction. The legislation only provides for the enforcement
of an offender’s sentence in Canada in accordance with the laws of Canada. Consequently, a refusal
under the legislation for the pressing and substantial objectives set out
therein results in the offender serving his sentence in the foreign
jurisdiction in accordance with the laws of the jurisdiction in which he
committed an offence, rather than in Canada.
[60]
The
principal practical impacts of the refusal are thus twofold: first, the
offender will not be incarcerated in Canada, thus limiting potential visits
from family and friends in an incarceration facility more easily accessible to
them, and second, the offender will lose the benefit of Canada’s correctional
system, including the benefit of a statutory release, parole or other
conditional release under the Corrections and Conditional Release Act
which may, in certain circumstances, allow for an earlier albeit supervised
release from incarceration than what the offender would have otherwise
benefited from in the foreign jurisdiction.
[61]
Concerning
the first practical impact, it is useful to keep in mind that though the Corrections
and Conditional Release Act takes into account an offender’s accessibility
to his home community and family in inmate placement decisions, it does not
guarantee such a placement to offenders in Canada. Though it is preferable for an offender
sentenced in Canada to be incarcerated in
an institution which is easily accessible for family visits, this is not always
possible, and in certain cases not desirable. Consequently, the fact that the
refusal of a transfer under the International Transfer of Offenders Act could result
in the offender remaining incarcerated in a foreign institution which may be
more difficult to access for visits from family or friends is not in itself
sufficient to constitutionally override the impugned provisions of the act.
[62]
I
now consider the second practical impact. Though for some offenders the loss of
the perceived “benefit” of a potential earlier conditional release under the
Canadian correctional system may be unfair, I do not agree that this
consequence of the transfer refusal is in fact unfair or affects the rights of
the offenders to such an extent as to constitutionally invalidate the impugned
legislative provision in the context where the offender’s return to Canada
would constitute a threat to the security of Canada or would result in a
terrorism offence or a criminal organization offence.
[63]
These
offenders have committed offences in foreign jurisdictions. Barring exceptional
circumstances, there is nothing unfair or unreasonable in the fact that these
offenders are subject to the incarceration systems of the foreign jurisdictions
in which they committed their offences. Canada’s entire extradition system is in fact based on
this premise.
[64]
The
Supreme Court of Canada has already found that the right to remain in Canada is minimally impaired
by extradition procedures which can result in the conviction and incarceration
of a Canadian citizen in a foreign jurisdiction. The same logic applies here.
As noted by La Forest J. in United States v. Cotroni, supra, at
pp. 1488-89:
The more
serious attack of the respondents is based on the second component of the
proportionality test. In R. v. Oakes, supra, Dickson C.J.
observed that "the means, even if rationally connected to the objective .
. . should impair `as little as possible' the right or freedom in
question". The objective of transnational crimes, the respondents
say, can, in the circumstances of the present cases, be achieved without
infringing on the right set forth in s. 6(1) of the Charter by
prosecuting them in Canada.
The
difficulty I have with this approach is that it seeks to apply the Oakes
test in too rigid a fashion, without regard to the context in which it is to be
applied. It must be remembered that the language of the Charter,
which allows "reasonable limits", invites a measure of flexibility
[…]
[65]
Likewise
here, the prevention of threats to the security of Canada, or of offences of
terrorism or of organized criminality, invites a measure of flexibility in the
analysis.
(v) Is the
legislation proportionate in its effect?
[66]
The
fact that a convicted offender would have to serve his sentence in a foreign
jurisdiction for crimes committed in that jurisdiction must be assessed in
light of the importance of the pressing and substantial objectives reflected in
paragraphs 10(1)(a) and 10(2)(a) of the International Transfer
of Offenders Act.
This is moreover the case since there appears to be no other reasonable method
of achieving these pressing and substantive objectives in the case of offenders
convicted and incarcerated in a foreign jurisdiction.
[67]
In
circumstances where the transfer “would constitute a threat to the security of Canada” or if “in the Minister’s opinion, the offender
will, after the transfer, commit a terrorism offence or criminal organization
offence”, it is hard to imagine what other reasonable measure could be devised
to impair to a lesser extent the offender’s right.
(e)
Conclusions
[68]
I
have concluded that the provisions of paragraphs 10(1)(a) and 10(2)(a) of the International
Transfer of Offenders Act constitute prima facie infringements to
the right guaranteed by subsection 6(1) of the Charter, but are
nevertheless reasonable limits to that right as can be demonstrably justified
in a free and democratic society pursuant to section 1 of the Charter.
[69]
In
deciding a request for a transfer under the International Transfer
of Offenders Act, the Minister must thus be alive not only to the terms of
the legislation itself, but also to the Charter right of the offender
under subsection 6(1). Consideration of the Charter right by the Minister
will, in most cases, be subsumed in his consideration of the factors set out in
the legislation.
[70]
Thus,
the Minister’s decision is subject to judicial review not only on
administrative law grounds, but equally on Charter grounds in light of
the fact his decision itself engages a Charter right. The reviewing
court’s role is to determine whether the Minister considered the relevant facts
and the relevant constitutionally defensible factors set out in the
legislation, and reached a defensible conclusion based on those facts and those
factors. This is primarily a form of administrative law review to be conducted
in accordance with applicable administrative law standards, which of course
remain informed by the Charter. This approach does not however change
the applicable standard of review, which remains reasonableness. This standard
of review does not minimize the protection afforded by the Charter, but
rather recognizes that in the case of the international transfer of an offender,
the proper assessment under subsection 6(1) of the Charter involves
primarily a fact-based balancing test: see by analogy with extradition Lake
v. Canada (Minister of Justice), supra at paras. 34 to 41.
[71]
In
this appeal, the appellant does not challenge the reasonableness of the
decision of the Minister. The only challenge before us concerns the constitutional
validity of the impugned provisions of the legislation. As I have already
found, the impugned provisions of the legislation are constitutional.
Consequently, I would dismiss the appeal with costs to the respondent.
“Robert M. Mainville”
NADON J.A.
[72]
I have had
the benefit of reading the Reasons of my colleague Mainville J.A. for
dismissing the appeal. While I agree with his disposal of the appeal, I do so
on different grounds. More particularly, I agree with his justification
analysis under section 1 of the Canadian Charter of Human Rights and Freedom
(the “Charter”), but disagree with his conclusion that the International
Treatment of Offenders Act (the “Act”) violates the appellant’s
right to enter Canada under subsection 6(1) of the Charter.
[73]
I need not
repeat the facts or the submissions which the parties made in support of their
respective positions as they have been carefully and thoroughly reviewed by
Mainville J.A.
[74]
Before
stating my reasons for dismissing the appeal, it is important to note that the
appellant does not challenge the Minister’s decision on any ground other than
that the provisions on which the Minister relies in making his decision are
unconstitutional. In other words, the appellant does not challenge the
Minister’s determination that his transfer to Canada to serve out his sentence “would
constitute a potential threat to the safety of Canadians and the security of Canada”. Rather, he says that
subsection 8(1) and paragraphs 10(1)(a) and 10(2)(a) of the Act – which
allow the Minister to consider whether an offender’s return to Canada could
constitute a threat to the security of Canada or whether, in the Minister’s opinion,
the offender will commit, after his transfer, a terrorism or criminal
organization offence – violate his right to enter Canada under subsection 6(1)
of the Charter and that, as a result, the Minister’s decision cannot
stand.
[75]
In
dismissing the appellant’s judicial review application, Harrington J. concluded
that subsection 8(1) and paragraphs 10(1)(a) and 10(2)(a) of the Act
were constitutional. In so concluding, he relied on the reasons he gave in
dismissing the appellant’s son’s judicial review application of the Minister’s
decision to refuse his transfer to Canada to serve out his U.S. sentence, in Divito v. Canada,
2009 FC 1158. At paragraphs 12, 13 and 17 of his Reasons, Harrington J. wrote:
[12] As I indicated in Kozarov
v. Canada (Minister of Public Safety
and Emergency Preparedness),
2007 FC 866, [2008] 2 F.C.R. No. 377 at paragraphs 27 and 28, ‘‘current
restrictions on the mobility’’ of Mr. DiVito, in this case, ‘‘arise from his
own actions, his own criminal activities. A natural and foreseeable consequence
of a criminal conviction …’’.
[28] However the American
authorities have put a condition on his transfer. The condition is that he
serve his sentence here. Upon his transfer he could not immediately invoke his
constitutional right as a citizen to leave Canada. His freedom would properly be
restricted in accordance with the Corrections and Conditional Release Act.
I have come to the conclusion that neither section 8 of the International
Transfer of Offenders Act which requires the consent of the offender, the
foreign entity and Canada, nor subsections 10(1) (b) and (c) which call upon
the Minister to consider whether Mr. Kozarov has social or family ties here or
whether he left or remained outside Canada with the intention of abandoning
Canada as his place of permanent residence offends his mobility rights under
the Charter.
[13] Consequently, I
conclude that the Act does not violate Mr. DiVito’s mobility rights. On the
contrary, I find, as Justice Kelen did in Getkate v. Canada (Minister of
Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2008 FC 965, that the Act
constitutes a reasonable limit as can be demonstrably justified in a free and
democratic society (section 1 of the Charter).
…
[17] The case of Mr.
Kozarov illustrates the limits on mobility rights. Mr. Kozarov appealed the
decision, but was released by the U.S.
authorities before the appeal could be heard. The Court of Appeal refused to
hear the case because it was moot: Kozarov v. Minister of Public Safety and
Emergency Preparedness, 2008 FCA 185. Similarly, if the U.S. authorities pardoned Mr. DiVito
tomorrow, he would have an absolute right to return to Canada. He would even be deported to Canada.
[76]
To
complete the learned Judge’s reasoning, I reproduce paragraph 27 of his Reasons
in Kozarov v. Canada (Minister of Public Safety
and Emergency Preparedness),
2007 FC 866, [2008] 2 F.C.R. No. 377 (“Kozarov”)::
[27] Mr. Kozarov’s
current restrictions on his mobility arise from his own actions, his own
criminal activities. A natural and foreseeable consequence of a criminal
conviction is that the state in which the offence is committed and in which the
offender may be found may incarcerate him. Once Mr. Kozarov serves his
sentence, he has the absolute right, as a citizen, to return here. The same
holds true if his current sentence were commuted, or if he were pardoned. All
citizens, unlike foreigners and permanent residents, have that constitutional
mobility right (see Catenacci v. Canada (Attorney General), 2006 FC 539, 144 C.R.R. (2d)
128).
[77]
Thus,
Harrington J. found that the appellant’s right under subsection 6(1) of the Charter
was not infringed by the impugned provisions and that, in any event, those
provisions constituted a reasonable limit to his right to enter Canada under
section 1 of the Charter.
[78]
I
substantially agree with Harrington J., but would add the following.
[79]
First, let
me say at the outset that I agree with Mainville J.A. that an immigration
officer must allow a person to enter Canada
if the officer is satisfied that the person is a Canadian citizen. Thus, if the
appellant had been brought to the Canadian border and released unconditionally
by the American authorities, there can be no doubt that he would have been
allowed to enter Canada. In United States of
America v. Cotroni, [1989] 1 S.C.R. 1469, the Supreme Court of Canada held
at page 1482 that: “… an accused may return to Canada following his trial and acquittal or, if
he has been convicted, after he has served his sentence”.
[80]
Harrington
J. put it similarly in Kozarov at paragraph 27, where he said that Mr.
Kozarov would have an absolute right to enter Canada once he had served his
sentence in the United States (see also: Getkate v. Canada (Minister of
Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2008 FC 965; Curtis v. Canada
(Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2010 FC 943, at
paragraph 30).
[81]
However,
the appellant is not simply claiming that Canada must admit him; but rather, he is
claiming that Canada must admit him in order to
administer his sentence. He makes that claim because the United States has
neither pardoned him nor commuted his sentence; its approval of his transfer is
premised on Canada undertaking to administer his
sentence.
[82]
I cannot
agree with the proposition that Canada
is refusing to allow the appellant to enter Canada. Although it is beyond dispute that Canada cannot prevent one of its
citizens from entering the country, such is not the situation before us.
Rather, Canada is refusing to administer the appellant’s sentence and the
result of that refusal is that the appellant is unable to enter Canada because the United States will not release him. In
essence, Canada’s refusal to administer the appellant’s sentence does not
constitute a violation of his right to enter Canada under subsection 6(1) of the Charter
because there is an insufficient causal connection between Canada’s refusal and the appellant’s
inability to enter
[83]
In Blencoe
v. British Columbia (Human Rights Commission), 2000 SCC 44 (“Blencoe”),
the Supreme Court held that there must be a “sufficient causal connection”
between state action and the harm suffered by a claimant for the Charter
to be triggered (paragraph 60) (see also: R. v. D.B., 2008 SCC 25). I
see no such connection in this case. The appellant’s inability to enter Canada
stems from his decision to engage in the traffic of cocaine in Florida, the
resulting conviction and sentence for that act in the United States and the
United States’ demand that Canada administer the remainder of his sentence. None
of these actions are, in my view, state actions, since none is “a [matter]
within the authority of Parliament” under paragraph 32(1)(a) of the Charter
(see: R. v. Hape, 2007 SCC 26, paragraph 103). Thus, none of these
actions is capable of causing a Charter violation.
[84]
In other
words, Canada’s contribution to the appellant’s inadmissibility to enter Canada is indirect and secondary.
The direct causes are his criminal acts, his conviction and sentencing, coupled
with the United
States’
insistence that Canada administer his sentence. Had
the appellant not trafficked cocaine, he would no doubt be able to enter Canada at any time. If the United
States did not require Canada to administer his sentence,
he would also be able to enter Canada at any time. Consequently,
these events are the direct causes of the appellant’s inability to enter Canada.
[85]
In my
respectful view, the Minister’s refusal to administer the appellant’s sentence
can only be found to constitute a sufficient cause of the violation of the
appellant’s right to enter if it is viewed entirely in isolation from its
surrounding context. Such an approach, however, would be inconsistent with the
Supreme Court’s approach in Blencoe, where the events leading up to the
appellant filing a human rights complaint were found to be central to the
Court’s analysis.
[86]
In Blencoe,
a majority of the Court found that the state action at issue was not a
sufficient cause of the harm suffered by the claimant and so his Charter
rights were not infringed. There, the claimant asserted that the delayed
processing of his complaint by the BC Human Rights Commission had caused harm
to his psyche and reputation. The Court disagreed, even though, viewed in
isolation, this delay caused harm to the claimant. The majority found that the
most prejudicial impact on the claimant resulted from the allegations which led
to his being ejected from Cabinet and the related media treatment. These events
all occurred prior to the government action at issue; that is, before the
complaint came before the Commission. Thus, the events leading up to the human
rights complaint were central to the Court’s finding that there was an
insufficient causal link between the delay by the Commission and the harm
suffered by the claimant.
[87]
Similarly,
the appellant’s illegal actions, his conviction in the United States and the
latter’s insistence that Canada administer his prison
sentence all occurred before the Minister refused to admit the appellant. Thus,
the reasoning in Blencoe is applicable because the appellant is in an
analogous position.
[88]
What the
appellant seeks in the present matter is, in my respectful view, a declaration
that subsection 6(1) of the Charter grants him a constitutional right to
serve his foreign prison sentence in Canada
once the foreign country has agreed to transfer him. There is no such right to
be found under subsection 6(1). To repeat, the appellant is not asserting his
right to enter Canada, but rather is asserting that
Canada must allow him to enter so
that he may serve the remainder of his prison sentence here. I see nothing in
the language of subsection 6(1) of the Charter, or in the authorities
which have dealt with that provision, which suggest that that provision
includes a right to serve one’s foreign prison sentence in Canada.
[89]
I
therefore conclude that the Minister’s decision refusing to administer the
appellant’s United States prison sentence in Canada does not violate his right to enter this
country under subsection 6(1) of the Charter. On that basis, I would
dismiss the appeal with costs.
“M. Nadon”
“I agree.
Johanne
Trudel J.A.”