Ludwig,
Prov
Ct
J:—
The
accused
Robert
Marcoux
and
Cecile
Marcoux
were
charged
as
follows:
Count
#1
on
or
about
the
30th
day
of
April,
AD
1979,
did
unlawfully
make,
participate
in,
assent
to
or
acquiesce
in
the
making
of
a
false
statement
in
the
return
of
income
of
Robert
Marcoux
for
the
taxation
year
1978,
filed
by
Robert
Marcoux
as
required
by
the
Income
Tax
Act,
RSC
1952,
Chapter
148
and
amendments
thereto,
by
stating
that
his
net
income
was
a
net
loss
of
$5,757.38
which
statement
was
false
by
reason
of
his
failure
to
report
additional
income
in
the
amount
of
$21,
306.09
for
the
said
taxation
year
and
did
thereby
commit
an
offence
contrary
to
Subsectin
239(1)(a)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
Count
#2
on
or
about
the
30th
day
of
April,
AD
1980,
did
unlawfully
make,
participate
in,
assent
to
or
acquiesce
in
the
making
of
a
false
statement
in
the
return
of
income
of
Robert
Marcoux
for
the
taxation
year
1979,
filed
by
Robert
Marcoux
as
required
by
the
income
Tax
Act,
RSC
1952,
Chapter
148
and
amendments
thereto,
by
stating
that
his
net
income
was
$4,162.38
which
statement
was
false
by
reason
of
his
failure
to
report
additional
income
in
the
amount
of
$55,284.56
for
the
said
taxation
year
and
did
thereby
commit
an
offence
contrary
to
Subsection
239(1)(a)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
Count
#3
on
or
about
the
30th
day
of
April,
AD
1981,
did
unlawfully
make,
participate
in,
assent
to
or
acquiesce
in
the
making
of
a
false
statement
in
the
return
of
income
of
Robert
Marcoux
for
the
taxation
year
1980,
filed
by
Robert
Marcoux
as
required
by
the
Income
Tax
Act,
RSC
1952,
Chapter
148
and
amendments
thereto,
by
stating
that
his
net
income
was
$6,662.94
which
statement
was
false
by
reason
of
his
failure
to
report
additional
income
in
the
amount
of
$17,458.57
for
the
said
taxation
year
and
did
thereby
commit
an
offence
contrary
to
Subsection
239(1)(a)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
Count
#4
on
or
about
the
30th
day
of
April,
AD
1982,
did
unlawfully
make,
participate
in,
assent
to
or
acquiesce
in
the
making
of
a
false
statement
in
the
return
of
income
of
Robert
Marcoux
for
the
taxation
year
1981,
filed
by
Robert
Marcoux
as
required
by
the
Income
Tax
Act,
RSC
1952,
Chapter
148
and
amendments
thereto,
by
stating
that
his
net
income
was
$7,809.77
which
statement
was
false
by
reason
of
his
failure
to
report
additional
income
in
the
amount
of
$9,666.09
for
the
said
taxation
year
and
did
thereby
commit
an
offence
contrary
to
Subsection
239(1)(a)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
Count
#5
between
the
31st
day
of
December,
AD
1977
and
the
1st
day
of
May,
AD
1982,
unlawfully
did
wilfully
evade
the
payment
of
taxes
in
the
amount
of
$23,379.84
imposed
by
the
Income
Tax
Act,
RSC
1952,
Chapter
148
and
amendments
thereto,
in
relation
to
income
received
by
Robert
Marcoux
in
respect
of
his
1978,
1979,
1980
and
1981
taxation
years
in
the
amount
of
$103,715.31
and
did
thereby
commit
an
offence
contrary
to
Subsection
239(1)(d)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
During
the
early
stages
of
the
trial,
evidence
revealed
that
Janice
Richards,
an
employee
of
Revenue
Canada,
as
PN,
Appeals
Officer,
a
field
officer,
became
involved
with
the
Marcoux
file
in
May
1982.
An
initial
interview
took
place
between
Richards
and
Mrs
Cecile
Marcoux
at
the
farm
home
of
Robert
Marcoux
and
Cecile
Marcoux,
near
McLennan,
Alberta.
Robert
Marcoux
was
not
present
by
choice.
Richards
identified
herself
as
Janice
Richards
from
Revenue
Canada.
She
indicated
to
Mrs
Marcoux
what
was
the
purpose
of
her
visit,
asked
a
few
questions
about
the
type
of
records
the
Marcouxs
kept
and
how
they
go
about
doing
their
tax
returns.
Richards
then
asked
for
the
books
and
records
so
that
she
might
start
doing
an
audit
and
verify
the
amounts
reported
and
claimed.
She
obtained
the
following
books
and
records:
1.
Income
Scribblers
(lined
notebooks)
—
5
in
number
2.
Cancelled
cheques
3.
Expense
vouchers
4.
Purchase
contracts
5.
Savings
account
book.
Richards
removed
(seized)
the
above
documents
from
the
Marcoux
residence
and
took
them
initially
to
the
motel
at
Peace
River,
Alberta,
where
she
was
staying.
The
seized
documents
were
used
to
conduct
an
audit.
From
information
gained
in
the
“audit",
she
prepared
a
net
worth
statement
for
the
years
1978,
’79,
and
’80.
Upon
completion
of
her
net
worth
audit,
some
two
or
three
months
later,
she
turned
over
the
file,
including
all
the
documents
seized
by
her,
to
the
“Special
Investigation”
section
of
the
Department
of
National
Revenue.
During
the
course
of
the
audit
(approximately
two
weeks),
Miss
Richards
had
further
conversation
with
the
Marcouxs.
No
other
member
of
the
Department
of
National
Revenue
was
present
during
any
interviews
conducted
by
Richards.
She
had
prepared
a
series
of
questions
in
advance,
which
she
posed
to
the
Marcouxs
and
took
notes
of
answers
given.
She
rewrote
the
notes
later.
At
this
stage
of
the
trial
a
voir
dire
was
entered
into,
to
determine
whether
answers
given
by
the
Marcouxs
to
questions
put
to
them
by
Richards
were
given
voluntarily.
Miss
Richards
knew
that
she
was
operating
under
authority
of
subsection
231(1)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
and
that
she
had
the
authority
to
require
Mr
and
Mrs
Marcoux
to
give
answers
to
questions
put
to
them
by
her.
She
did
not
advise
the
Marcouxs
of
this
aspect
of
her
authority.
She
did
not
show
her
ID
card
to
them.
Normally,
she
would
be
required
to
do
so.
I
find
that
the
Marcouxs
knew
she
was
a
person
in
authority
and
that
she
was
an
agent
from
the
Department
of
National
Revenue.
The
Crown
called
no
further
witnesses
in
the
voir
dire.
The
defence
called
no
witnesses.
Following
a
brief
submission
by
Crown
counsel,
I
found
that
answers
given
to
questions
put
to
the
Marcouxs
by
Richards
were
given
voluntarily
and
will
be
admitted
in
evidence
at
the
trial.
The
Crown
tendered
Exhibits
1
to
17
inclusive,
plus
Exhibits
A,
B,
C
and
D
for
identification
purposes,
as
set
out
on
page
ii
of
Index,
Volume
I
of
transcript
of
these
proceedings.
For
the
purpose
of
expediting
the
trial,
counsel
for
Crown
and
defence
agreed
that
a
voir
dire
be
entered
into
to
determine:
1.
The
admissibility
as
evidence
of
certain
statements
given
by
Robert
and
Cecile
Marcoux
to
Revenue
Canada
officials
November
30,
1982.
2.
Whether
certain
documents
respecting
the
financial
affairs
of
Robert
and
Cecile
Marcoux
seized
by
Revenue
Canada
officials
under
sections
231
(1
)(d)
and
231(3)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
shall
be
excluded
from
evidence.
Evidence
further
showed
that
on
November
30,
1982,
at
about
one
o’clock
p
m,
Mr
Bruce
Lane
accompanied
by
Mr
Paul
Morgenroth,
Special
Investigators
with
the
Department
of
National
Revenue,
met
with
Mr
and
Mrs
Marcoux
at
their
farm
residence.
They
brought
with
them
the
books
and
materials
seized
previously
by
Miss
Richards,
a
prepared
net
worth
statement
comprised
of
two
large
sheets
of
paper
full
of
facts
and
figures,
with
a
number
of
back-up
working
papers.
Mr
Lane
testified
that
he
was
aware
of
the
limited
education
and
limited
knowledge
of
bookkeeping
by
the
Marcouxs.
The
Special
Investigators
gave
Mr
and
Mrs
Marcoux
no
prior
indication
of
the
purpose
of
their
visit,
nor
were
they
shown
the
prepared
net-worth
statements,
nor
were
they
given
an
opportunity
to
look
at
the
books
and
material
which
were
seized
from
them
about
six
months
earlier
by
Janice
Richards.
Mr
Lane
also
had
prepared
a
list
of
40
to
50
questions
to
be
put
to
the
Marcouxs.
Upon
arrival
at
the
Marcoux
residence,
Lane
and
Morgenroth
briefly
flashed
their
Revenue
Canada
identification
cards
at
the
Marcouxs.
Evidence
indicates
that
Mr
and
Mrs
Marcoux
did
not
read
the
ID
cards
shown
to
them,
nor
ere
they
told
what
was
on
the
card
and
what
authority
the
bearer
had.
It
appears
that
the
Marcouxs
knew
that
the
Si's
were
from
the
Department
of
National
Revenue,
and
were
persons
in
authority.
Mr
Lane
discussed
the
net
worth
statements
with
Mr
and
Mrs
Marcoux
and
then
proceeded
to
interrogate
them
for
approximately
three
hours,
from
a
prepared
list
of
questions,
in
the
presence
of
Mr
Morgenroth
No
caution
as
to
their
right
to
remain
silent
was
given
to
the
Marcouxs
prior
to
the
commencement
of
the
interrogation.
Both
Lane
and
Morgenroth
took
notes
during
the
interrogation
by
Lane.
At
the
end
of
questioning
by
Lane,
Mr
Morgenroth
took
over
the
questioning
and
continued
for
a
further
half
hour.
About
halfway
through
his
interrogation
of
Mr
and
Mrs
Marcoux,
Morgenroth
read
them
the
caution
“that
they
have
the
right
to
remain
silent".
Shortly
thereafter,
Morgenroth
made
a
symbolic
return
of
the
documents,
previously
seized
by
Richards,
then
seized
all
those
documents
again,
plus
some
additional
documents,
pursuant
to
paragraph
231
(1)(d)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
I
propose
to
deal
first
with
the
issue
of
admissibility
as
evidence
of
certain
statements
given
by
Robert
and
Cecile
Marcoux
to
Mr
Lane
and
Mr
Morgenroth
on
November
30,
1982.
The
Crown
counsel
took
the
position
that
there
was
no
inducement
or
threat
made
by
the
Revenue
Canada
Special
Investigators
and
therefore,
the
statements
were
freely
and
voluntarily
made
and
should
be
admitted
in
evidence
at
the
trial.
The
Crown
Counsel
argued
that
nothing
the
Sis
said
or
did
throughout
the
interrogations
should
be
interpreted
that
if
they
answered
the
questions,
it
would
be
to
their
advantage
or
that
they
may
be
prejudiced
if
they
did
not
answer.
The
defence
counsel
submitted
that
the
burden
of
proving
beyond
a
reasonable
doubt
that
the
statements
were
voluntarily
made
vests
with
the
Crown.
The
defence
counsel
pointed
out
that
notwithstanding
that
there
was
no
apparent
threat
or
inducement
made
by
the
Sis
to
the
Marcouxs,
the
whole
of
the
evidence
should
be
looked
at
to
determine
whether
the
statements
were
voluntarily
given.
In
reviewing
the
evidence
relating
to
the
interrogation
of
Robert
and
Cecile
Marcoux
by
Lane
and
Morgenroth,
I
make
the
following
findings
of
fact:
1.
The
interrogation
of
Mr
and
Mrs
Marcoux
by
the
Sis
of
Department
of
National
Revenue
continued
for
three
and
one-half
hours;
three
hours
by
Lane,
half
an
hour
by
Morgenroth.
2.
No
break
was
taken
during
the
questioning.
3.
Both
Lane
and
Morgenroth
took
notes
during
the
interrogation.
4.
There
is
no
evidence
to
show
whether
all
that
was
said
by
the
defendants
was
taken
down
or
whether
the
notes
were
selectively
taken.
5.
The
defendants
knew
that
the
Sis
were
persons
in
authority.
6.
During
the
interrogation,
November
30,
1980,
the
books
and
records
of
the
defendants,
which
were
seized
on
May
10,
1985,
were
kept
from
them
during
the
entire
interrogation.
7.
The
interrogation
was
conducted
by
the
Sis
from
a
previously
prepared
set
of
questions
(40
to
50
questions).
8.
Mr
Lane
showed
the
defendants
a
net
worth
statement
which
he
admitted
was
sometimes
difficult
to
understand
and
often
difficult
to
explain.
The
net
worth
statement
he
showed
to
them
was
not
the
final
net
worth
statement
prepared.
The
net
worth
statement
shown
to
the
defendants
was
misleading.
Some
of
the
answers
could
well
have
been
induced
by
the
misleading
information.
9.
Mr
Lane
admitted
that
no
prior
notice
of
the
intended
interrogation
was
given
to
the
defendants
so
that
they
could
have
been
prepared,
or
engaged
an
accountant
or
lawyer
to
assist
them.
10.
No
caution
was
given
to
the
defendants
until
the
final
few
minutes
of
the
three
and
one-half
hour
interrogation.
No
acceptable
explanation
was
given
by
the
Sis
why
the
caution
was
not
administered
to
the
defendants
until
after
the
prepared
questions
were
put
to
them.
I
find
that
the
giving
of
the
caution
was
deliberately
delayed
to
the
end
of
the
main
portion
of
the
interrogation.
11.
The
Sis
knew
that
the
defendants
had
a
very
limited
knowledge
of
bookkeeping,
yet
they
made
matters
more
difficult
by
withholding
from
them
the
bookkeeping
records
and
other
relevant
material
during
the
interview.
If
the
Sis
were
seeking
clarification
of
facts,
what
could
the
Marcouxs
provide
by
way
of
explanation
of
events
which
may
have
happened
as
long
as
five
years
ago,
bearing
in
mind
that
their
own
records
were
being
concealed
from
them?
12.
The
impression
was
given
to
the
defendants
by
the
Sis
that
there
was
an
evasion
of
a
substantial
amount
of
tax
which
was
not
a
true
representation
of
the
facts.
It
was
in
this
atmosphere
that
the
interrogation
was
conducted.
Mr
Lane
admitted
that
he
deliberately
kept
the
Marcouxs
believing
that
there
appeared
to
be
a
lot
more
tax
payable
than
there
in
fact
was.
A
major
portion
of
the
interrogation
was
conducted
on
the
basis
of
an
inaccurate
net
worth
statement
which
was
shown
to
the
defendants.
Statements
were
being
elicited
from
the
defendants
on
the
basis
of
a
hypothesis
placed
before
them,
a
knowingly
inaccurate
and
misleading
hypothesis.
Was
there
an
improper
influence
exercised
upon
the
minds
of
the
defendants?
I
find
that
there
was.
In
order
to
render
the
statements
made
by
the
defendants
to
the
Sis
admissible,
the
Crown
must
prove
beyond
a
reasonable
doubt
that
the
statements
were
freely
and
voluntarily
made:
Park
v.
The
Queen
(1981),
25
CR
64
at
66.
In
this
case,
the
statements
were
apparently
obtained
pursuant
to
paragraph
231
(1
)(c)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act:
231.
(1)
Investigations.—Any
person
thereunto
authorized
by
the
Minister,
for
any
purpose
related
to
the
administration
or
enforcement
of
this
Act,
may,
at
all
reasonable
times,
enter
into
any
premises
or
place
where
any
business
is
carried
on
or
any
property
is
kept
or
anything
is
done
in
connection
with
any
business
or
any
books
or
records
are
or
should
be
kept,
and
(c)
require
the
owner
or
manager
of
the
property
or
business
and
any
other
person
on
the
premises
or
place
to
give
him
all
reasonable
assistance
with
his
audit
or
examination
and
to
answer
all
proper
questions
relating
to
the
audit
or
examination
either
orally
or,
if
he
so
requires,
in
writing,
on
oath
or
by
statutory
declaration
and,
for
that
purpose,
require
the
owner
or
manager
to
attend
at
the
premises
or
place
with
him,
.
.
.
Although
the
defendants
were
bound
by
statute
to
respond
to
questions
put
to
them
by
the
Sis,
this
fact
was
not
communicated
to
them.
The
fact
that
the
statements
were
obtained
from
the
defendants
pursuant
to
statutory
power
of
compulsion,
does
not
ipso
facto
relieve
the
Crown
of
the
burden
of
proving
in
a
voir
dire
that
they
are
admissible
under
the
common
law
test
of
voluntariness.
In
R
v
Tex
(1974),
1
OR
(2d)
280
CA
(leave
to
appeal
to
SCC
denied
December
21,
1973),
Jessup,
JA
stated:
I
am
of
the
opinion
that
the
existence
of
the
statutory
duty
under
s
233
of
the
Criminal
Code
does
not
dispense
with
the
onus
upon
the
Crown
to
establish
that
a
statement
made
pursuant
to
that
section
was
not
otherwise
voluntary.
In
view
of
the
circumstances
surrounding
the
whole
of
the
interrogation,
as
enumerated
above,
I
do
not
accept
the
proposition
of
the
Crown
that
since
there
is
no
inducement
or
threat
made
to
the
accuseds
during
the
interrogation,
that
the
Crown
has
therefore
discharged
its
burden
of
proof
of
voluntariness
and
the
statements
should
be
admitted
in
evidence.
The
rule
governing
the
admissibility
of
statements
given
by
accused
persons
is
directed
against
the
danger
of
improperly
investigated
or
induced
or
coerced
admissions.
Boudreau
v
The
King,
[1949]
3
DLR
81
(SCC).
In
the
case
before
me,
there
is
ample
evidence
to
alert
the
Court
to
be
specially
cautious
in
scrutinizing
and
assessing
all
the
evidence,
accordingly,
the
scope
of
the
inquiry
must
be
broadened
beyond
threats
or
promises
of
favour
to
the
influences
operating
upon
the
accuseds'
minds
and
the
atmosphere
prevailing
when
the
questioning
took
place.
As
Mr
Justice
Rand
stated
in
The
Queen
v
Fitton,
[1956]
SCR
958
at
962:
The
rule
on
the
admission
of
confessions,
which,
following
the
English
authorities,
was
restated
in
Boudreau
v
The
King,
at
times
presents
difficulty
of
application
because
its
terms
tend
to
conceal
underlying
considerations
material
to
a
determination.
The
cases
of
torture,
actual
or
threatened,
or
of
unabashed
promises
are
clear;
perplexity
arises
when
much
more
subtle
elements
must
be
evaluated.
The
strength
of
mind
and
will
of
the
accused,
the
influence
of
custody
or
its
surroundings,
the
effect
of
questions
or
of
conversation,
all
call
for
delicacy
in
appreciation
of
the
part
they
have
played
behind
the
admission,
and
to
enable
a
Court
to
decide
whether
what
was
said
was
freely
and
voluntarily
said,
that
is,
was
free
from
the
influence
of
hope
or
fear
aroused
by
them.
Further,
consideration
of
the
issue
of
admissibility
of
statements
must
not
be
circumscribed
by
judicial
precedent.
Mr
Justice
Spence
in
one
of
the
majority
judgments
in
Horvath
v
The
Queen
(1979),
44
CCC
(2d)
385
(Estey,
J
concurring)
stated
(at
404,
410):
It
is
my
strong
opinion
that
Ibrahim
and
the
many
cases
which
followed
have
not
and
need
not
be
considered
to
have
reduced
the
words
“free
and
voluntary”
in
the
test
as
to
the
admissibility
of
a
statement
made
by
the
accused
to
only
meaning
that
the
statement
has
not
been
induced
by
any
hope
of
advantage
or
fear
or
prejudice,
and
it
is
my
view
that
a
statement
may
well
be
held
not
to
be
voluntary,
at
any
rate,
if
it
has
been
induced
by
some
other
motive
or
for
some
other
reason
than
hope
or
fear
.
.
.
In
my
respectful
opinion,
the
judgment
of
this
Court
in
Fitton
must
be
limited
so
as
not
to
rule
admissible
statements
made
by
the
accused
when
not
induced
by
hope
of
advantage
or
fear
of
prejudice
but
which
are
certainly
not
voluntary
in
the
ordinary
English
sense
of
the
word
because
they
were
induced
by
other
circumstances
such
as
existed
in
the
present
case.
Mr
Justice
Beetz
in
a
separate
majority
judgment
in
Horvath
(Pratte,
I
concurring)
also
decried
the
tendency
to
give
the
voluntariness
test
a
narrow
and
confined
meaning:
In
typical
legal
fashion,
the
test
of
voluntariness
is
expressed
negatively
in
the
Ibrahim
rule
by
reference
to
instances
of
involuntariness:
a
statement
obtained
by
hope
of
advantage
(a
promise),
or
fear
of
prejudice
(a
threat),
exercised,
held
out
or
inspired
by
a
person
in
authority,
is
involuntary
in
the
eyes
of
the
law.
The
question
arises
as
to
whether
the
enumeration
in
the
rule
of
instances
of
involuntariness
is
a
limitative
one.
It
cannot
be
limitative
since
the
rule
is
a
Judge-made
rule
and
anything
said
by
a
Judge
beyond
what
is
necessary
to
decide
the
issue
is
obiter.
Furthermore,
the
principle
which
inspires
the
rule
remains
a
positive
one;
it
is
the
principle
of
voluntariness.
The
principle
always
governs
and
may
justify
an
extension
of
the
rule
to
situations
where
involuntariness
has
been
caused
otherwise
than
by
promises,
threats,
hope
or
fear,
if
it
is
felt
that
other
causes
are
as
Coercive
as
promises
or
threats,
hope
or
fear
and
serious
enough
to
bring
the
principle
into
play.
The
Sis
did
not
give
a
warning
to
Mr
and
Mrs
Marcoux
at
the
commencement
of
the
interrogation.
While
the
presence
or
absence
of
a
warning
is
not
necessarily
decisive
on
the
question
of
admissibility,
it
is
a
factor
and
in
many
cases,
an
important
one.
(Boudreau
v
The
King,
supra,
at
83,
per
Taschereau,
J)
which
requires
close
scrutiny
of
the
evidence
tendered
to
establish
the
voluntary
character
of
the
statements.
(Prosko
v
The
King
(1922),
63
SCR
226
at
237,
per
Anglin,
J).
The
absence
of
a
warning
more
often
than
not
is
fatal
to
the
admission
of
any
statement
obtained:
Unless
it
is
proved
that
prior
to
such
questioning
the
prisoner
was
warned
that
he
was
under
no
obligation
to
answer
questions
put
to
him
and
would
suffer
no
prejudice
by
not
answering,
and
that
anything
he
said
could
be
given
in
evidence
by
the
prosecution
at
his
trial,
it
would
rarely
happen
that
the
trial
Judge
could
be
satisfied
that
the
statements
thus
made
by
the
prisoner
were
free
and
voluntary.
Therefore,
we
think
it
is
in
all
cases
expedient,
and
in
most
cases
essential,
that
before
the
prisoner
is
asked
any
question
he
be
given
such
warning.
(R
v
Price
(1931),
3
DLR
155
at
166
(NBSCAD).)
In
the
case
at
bar,
the
SIs
deliberately
withheld
giving
the
warning
to
the
defendants
until
near
the
end
of
the
interrogation.
Bearing
in
mind
all
the
circumstances
surrounding
the
whole
of
the
prolonged
interrogation,
I
find
it
difficult
to
accept
the
view
that
the
defendants
were
fully
aware
of
what
was
at
stake
in
making
statements
to
persons
of
authority.
Under
the
circumstances,
the
caution
should
have
been
given
at
the
commencement
rather
than
near
the
end
of
the
interview.
The
tactics
of
the
Sis
throughout
the
whole
interrogation
are
somewhat
questionable
and
in
my
view,
went
beyond
what
the
Department
of
National
Revenue
expected
its
agents
to
do.
Circular
No
73-10R2
issued
on
April
24,
1978
as
follows:
23.
The
taxpayer
may
be
interviewed
and
questioned
by
the
investigator
during
the
course
of
the
investigation.
The
taxpayer
is
not
obliged
to
incriminate
himself
and
will
be
given
ample
opportunity
to
make
explanations
or
representations.
A
taxpayer
is
permitted
to
have
his
legal
and
accounting
advisors
present
during
interviews.
Taking
all
the
factors
surrounding
the
interrogations
into
account,
I
find
that
the
defendants
were
exposed
to
a
limited
amount
of
oppression
and
coercion
by
the
Sis.
Oppression
has
been
recognized
in
Canada
as
a
ground
for
ruling
statements
to
be
inadmissible
(Hobbins
v
The
Queen,
[1982]
1
SCR
553
at
556).
In
Horvath,
supra,
at
410,
Mr
Justice
Spence
cited
with
approval
the
following
extract
from
R
v
Priestly
(1966),
51
Cr
App
R
1,
per
Sachs,
J:
There
I
mentioned
that
I
had
not
been
referred
to
any
authority
on
the
meaning
of
the
word
"oppression”
as
used
in
the
preamble
to
the
Judges’
Rules,
nor
would
I
venture
on
such
a
definition,
and
far
less
try
to
compile
a
list
of
categories
of
oppression,
but,
to
my
mind,
this
word
in
the
context
of
the
principles
under
consideration
imports
something
which
tends
to
sap,
and
has
sapped,
that
free
will
which
must
exist
before
a
confession
is
voluntary
.
.
.
Whether
or
not
there
is
oppression
in
an
individual
case
depends
upon
many
elements.
I
am
not
going
into
all
of
them.
They
include
such
things
as
the
length
of
time
of
any
individual
period
of
questioning,
the
length
of
time
intervening
between
periods
of
questioning,
whether
the
accused
person
has
been
given
proper
refreshment
or
not,
and
the
characteristics
of
the
person
who
makes
the
statement.
What
may
be
oppressive
as
regards
a
child,
an
invalid
or
an
old
man
or
somebody
inexperienced
in
the
ways
of
this
world
may
turn
out
not
to
be
oppressive
when
one
finds
that
the
accused
person
is
of
a
tough
character
and
an
experienced
man
of
the
world.
In
displaying
a
complex
and
inaccurate
net
worth
statement
to
the
defendants,
the
SIs
exercised
an
improper
influence
upon
their
minds.
In
R
v
Dreher
(1952),
14
CR
339
at
344,
Egbert,
J
held
that:
The
onus
is
on
the
Crown
to
prove
that
the
statement
sought
to
be
admitted
was
a
free
and
voluntary
statement,
not
only
in
the
sense
that
it
was
made
without
fear
of
prejudice
or
hope
of
advantage,
but
under
circumstances
which
made
it
clear
that
he
deemed
no
improper
influence
was
exercised
upon
the
mind
of
the
accused.
The
moment
the
Crown's
own
witness
—
the
police
officer
to
whom
the
statement
was
made
—
acknowledges
that
by
reason
of
something
he
said
or
did,
the
accused
may
have
been
"misled”
—
at
that
moment
the
Crown
fails
to
satisfy
the
burden
upon
it.
One
further
question
should
be
dealt
with
and
that
is
upon
whom
does
the
burden
of
proof
lie
to
show
whether
the
defendants
were
misled
by
the
Sis?
The
Dreher
case,
supra,
supports
the
proposition
that
the
burden
is
on
the
Crown
to
show
that
the
defendants
were
not
misled.
Egbert,
J
at
345
held
that:
If
the
accused
was
misled
in
making
the
statement
to
Woodworth,
and
the
onus
is
not
on
her
to
show
that
she
was
misled,
but
on
the
Crown
to
show
that
she
was
not,
then
the
factors
and
influences
which
misled
her
in
the
first
instance
continued
throughout
the
evening,
and
probably,
in
fact,
until
she
was
given
another
warning
and
the
improper
impression
induced
by
Woodworth
removed.
In
the
exercise
of
my
discretion,
taking
into
account
all
the
evidence
and
all
facts
and
circumstances
of
the
case,
I
rule
that
all
oral
statements
made
by
the
defendants,
Robert
and
Cecile
Marcoux,
to
the
Revenue
Canada
Sis
on
November
30,
1982
will
not
be
admitted
in
evidence,
the
Crown
not
having
proved
beyond
a
reasonable
doubt
that
the
statements
were
freely
and
voluntarily
given.
The
statements
made
by
the
defendants
to
Morgenroth,
after
the
“caution”
was
given
to
them,
are
inadmissible
in
evidence
as
being
tainted
by
the
same
influences
which
rendered
the
statements
made
prior
to
the
caution
inadmissible.
The
second
issue
to
be
dealt
with
is
whether
documents
respecting
the
financial
affairs
of
Robert
and
Cecile
Marcoux,
seized
by
Revenue
Canada
officials
under
paragraph
231(1)(d)
and
subsection
231(3)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
RSC
1952,
c
148
as
amended,
shall
be
excluded
from
evidence?
The
details
of
the
manner
in
which
Ms
Janice
Richards
obtained
possession
of
the
books
and
records
of
Robert
and
Cecile
Marcoux,
the
defendants,
and
the
subsequent
delivery
by
her
of
the
said
material
to
the
“Special
Investigation”
section
of
the
Department
of
National
Revenue,
and
further
how
the
said
material
and
other
records
were
seized
and
removed
by
the
Special
Investigator,
Mr
Morgenroth,
on
November
30,
1982,
are
set
out
above.
The
Crown
alleges
that
Janice
Richards
had
borrowed
the
documents
in
question
from
the
Marcouxs,
however,
I
find
that
the
documents
were
removed
from
the
Marcoux
residence
in
McLennan
on
or
about
May
10,
1982,
and
have
not
to
this
date
been
returned
to
them.
Although
on
November
30
1982,
Morgenroth
did
hand
the
documents,
momentarily,
to
the
Marcouxs,
and
then,
under
power
vested
in
him
by
Ministerial
authority,
pursuant
to
paragraph
231(1)(d)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
seized
those
books
and
records
and
additional
material.
Objection
has
been
taken
by
defence
counsel
to
the
introduction
of
the
documents
seized
by
Morgenroth,
on
the
basis
that
the
search
and
seizure
pursuant
to
paragraph
231
(1)(d)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
was
in
violation
of
section
8
of
the
Charter
of
Rights
and
Freedoms,
Constitution
Act,
1982.
231.
(1)
Investigations.—Any
person
thereunto
authorized
by
the
Minister,
for
any
purpose
related
to
the
administration
or
enforcement
of
this
Act,
may,
at
all
reasonable
times,
enter
into
any
premises
or
place
where
any
business
is
carried
on
or
any
property
is
kept
or
anything
is
done
in
connection
with
any
business
or
any
books
or
records
are
or
should
be
kept,
and
(d)
if,
during
the
course
of
an
audit
or
examination,
it
appears
to
him
that
there
has
been
a
violation
of
this
Act
or
a
regulation,
seize
and
take
away
any
of
the
documents,
books,
records,
papers
or
things
that
may
be
required
as
evidence
as
to
the
violation
of
any
provision
of
this
Act
or
a
regulation.
Section
8
Charter
of
Rights
and
Freedoms:
“Everyone
has
the
right
to
be
secure
against
the
unreasonable
search
and
seizure”.
At
the
outset
of
the
Crown
argument,
Crown
counsel
admitted
that
paragraph
231(1
)(d)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
is
inconsistent
with
section
8
of
the
Charter
of
Rights
and
Freedoms,
and
that
therefore,
it
is
inoperative
and
has
no
force
or
effect.
The
defence
counsel
raised
the
point
that
subsection
231(3)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
pursuant
to
which
records
were
seized
from
third
parties,
also
contravenes
section
8
of
the
Charter,
and
in
accordance
with
subsection
52(1)
of
the
Constitution
Act,
1982,
is
of
no
force
and
effect.
52.
(1)
The
Constitution
of
Canada
is
the
supreme
law
of
Canada,
and
any
law
that
is
inconsistent
with
the
provisions
of
the
Constitution
is,
to
the
extent
of
the
inconsistency,
of
no
force
or
effect.
Defence
counsel
contended
that
subsection
231(3)
does
not
meet
the
criteria
for
a
valid
statutory
authorization
for
search
and
seizure
dictated
by
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
Southam
v
Hunter
(1984),
55
NR
241
wherein
Dickson,
J
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
concurs
in
the
procedural
safeguards
set
out
by
Prowse,
JA:
(a)
Prior
authorization
of
search
and
seizure
to
an
independent
person
who
is
bound
to
act
judicially
(at
common
law
a
justice);
(b)
Reasonable
and
probable
grounds
to
suspect
that
an
offence
has
been
committed.
(c)
That
something
that
will
afford
evidence
of
an
offence
may
be
recovered
at
the
place
to
be
searched.
(d)
Evidence
before
him
must
be
under
oath.
The
issuance
of
judicial
warrants
authorizing
general
searches
and
seizures
under
subsection
231(4)
has
been
found
to
be
constitutionally
invalid
by
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal
(MNR
et
al
v
Kruger
Inc
et
al,
[1984]
CTC
506;
84
DTC
6478;
Vespoli
et
al
v
The
Queen
et
al,
[1984]
CTC
519;
84
DTC
6489,
it
follows
that
the
completely
arbitrary
and
discretionary
power
of
seizure
from
third
parties
“for
any
purpose
related
to
the
administration
or
enforcement”
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
conferred
by
subsection
231(3)
must
contravene
section
8
of
the
Charter.
I
find
that
in
view
of
the
Crown
concession
that
paragraph
231(1)(d)
is
inconsistent
with
section
8
of
the
Charter,
and
the
decisions
in
Kruger
and
Vespoli,
supra,
by
implication
subsection
231(3)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
is
inconsistent
with
section
8
of
the
Charter
and
therefore
inoperative.
Crown
and
defence
counsel
are
in
agreement
that
the
issue
to
be
determined
is
whether
all
the
documents
seized
by
the
Sis
from
the
defendants,
and
third
parties
under
sections
231
(1)(d)
and
231(3)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
should
be
excluded
from
evidence.
It
has
been
conceded
and
established
that
seizures
made
on
November
30,
1982
and
previously
from
third
parties
were
illegal.
Crown
counsel
submits
that
in
order
for
the
evidence
to
be
excluded
pursuant
to
subsection
24(2)
of
the
Charter,
the
defence
must
show
that
the
admission
of
the
evidence
seized
was
such
a
violation
of
section
8
of
the
Charter
that
it
would
bring
the
administration
of
justice
into
disrepute.
Section
8
of
the
Charter
guarantees
a
broad
and
general
right
to
be
secure
from
unreasonable
search
and
seizure.
Southam
Inc
v
Hunter,
supra.
The
Crown
submission
is
that
the
Department
of
National
Revenue
officers,
Lane
and
Morgenroth
acted
in
good
faith
under
statutory
authority
and
perceived
legal
authority
which
has
not
been
declared
to
be
either
inopera-
tive
or
constitutionally
invalid
and
therefore,
to
admit
the
documentary
evidence
seized
would
not
bring
the
administration
of
justice
into
disrepute.
The
Crown
relies
on
the
decision
of
McNaughton,
Prov
J
Alberta
in
The
Queen
v
Stickney,
Jan
22,
1985
(unreported)
wherein
he
held
that
notwithstanding
that
paragraph
231
(1
)(d)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
is
inoperative,
documents
seized
pursuant
to
that
section
should
be
admitted
in
evidence
since
the
defence
did
not
establish
that
the
action
of
the
officers
of
the
Department
of
National
Revenue
was
unreasonable
and
to
admit
the
documents
would
not
bring
the
administration
of
justice
into
disrepute.
In
arriving
at
his
conclusion,
McNaughton,
Prov
J
found
that:
(a)
The
officers
of
Revenue
Canada
acted
in
good
faith.
(b)
They
had
relied
upon
a
statutory
authority
which
had
not
previously
been
determined
to
be
either
unconstitutional
or
inoperative
in
whole
or
in
part.
The
Crown
argument
that,
since
paragraph
231
(1)(d)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
had
not
been
at
the
time
of
the
seizure
of
the
documents,
declared
by
a
court
to
be
inoperative,
then
the
Sis
acted
in
good
faith
under
that
section.
I
have
considerable
difficulty
in
accepting
that
line
of
reasoning.
The
Charter
of
Rights
and
Freedoms,
the
Constitution
Act,
1982
was
in
full
force
and
effect
upon
proclamation,
April
17,
1982.
It
is
tantamount
to
saying
that
a
statute
is
not
law
until
a
court
declares
it
to
be
so.
Paragraph
231
(1
)(d)
became
inoperative
upon
proclamation
of
the
Charter.
The
Sis
of
the
Department
of
National
Revenue
continued
to
do
their
work
as
they
did
prior
to
the
proclamation
of
the
Charter,
and
for
a
long
time
thereafter,
without
regard
to
the
Charter.
They
chose
to
take
the
expedient
course
of
action,
abeit
illegal.
In
determining
whether
the
search
was
unreasonable
in
the
Stickney
case,
supra,
and
in
The
Queen
v
Heisler
(unreported
version)
(1984),
judgment
of
the
Alberta
Court
of
Appeal,
the
question
of
illegality
of
the
seizure
appears
not
to
have
been
a
significant
factor
in
the
issue
of
“unreasonableness”.
In
the
case
at
Bar,
the
Sis
knew
or
had
come
to
the
conclusion
that
there
were
discrepancies
in
the
records
and
tax
returns
of
the
defendants
prior
to
arriving
at
the
residence
of
the
defendants
on
November
30,
1982.
The
Sls
had
the
defendants'
books
and
records
in
their
possession
for
several
months
prior,
and
in
fact,
had
the
books
in
their
possession
when
they
arrived
at
the
home
of
the
Marcouxs
on
November
30,
1982.
The
Sis
arrived
at
the
residence
of
the
defendants
under
the
pretext
that
they
wanted
to
receive
explanation
and
clarification
of
their
books
and
tax
returns.
If
the
Sis
were
sincere
in
their
quest
for
clarification
of
inaccuracies
they
were
suggesting
were
inherent
in
those
records,
they
would
have
made
those
documents
and
records
available
to
the
Marcouxs
in
advance
of
the
interrogation,
to
enable
them
to
inform
themselves
in
order
that
they
might
be
able
to
respond
to
the
barrage
of
questions
put
to
them.
The
Sis
have,
by
their
act
of
delivering
an
inaccurate
net
worth
statement
to
the
defendants
that
day,
deliberately
deprived
them
of
the
right
and
ability
to
make
a
reasonable
explanation
of
the
net
worth
statement.
By
withholding
the
account
books
and
records
from
the
defendants,
the
action
of
the
SIs
was
grossly
unfair
and
most
unreasonable
and
unnecessary.
Crown
witnesses
admitted
that
there
was
no
sense
of
urgency
to
seize
the
documents.
The
Sis
already
had
the
bulk
of
the
records
in
their
possession.
Lowe
stated
that
he
was
not
concerned
about
the
likelihood
that
records
might
be
destroyed.
There
was
no
threatened
destruction
of
evidence.
In
the
case
at
bar,
the
Sis
entered
a
private
residence.
There
was
no
prior
authorization
for
the
search
and
seizure.
In
this
case,
this
fact
is
specially
important,
since
the
seizure
was
conducted
in
a
private
residence.
In
The
Queen
v
Krezonoski
(1985)
QB
Alberta,
Stratton,
J
considered
an
appeal
from
a
Provincial
Court
decision,
excluding
evidence
seized
and
therefore
inadmissible.
The
seizure
was
made
prior
to
the
proclamation
of
the
Charter
of
Rights.
Stratton,
J
held
at
3
.
.
.
that
apart
from
the
Charter,
the
evidence
would
be
admissible.
At
8
he
made
the
following
comment:
Given
the
present
facts,
I
do
not
consider
it
appropriate
to
exclude
the
evidence.
The
circumstances
here
are
significantly
different
from
those
in
Wright.
One
important
difference
is
that
here
the
search
took
place
in
a
business
office
to
which
the
public
had
free
access,
whereas
in
Wright
the
improper
intrusion
was
to
a
private
dwelling
which
I
consider
more
serious.
In
R
v
Wright
(1983),
29
Alta
LR
(2d)
260
Stratton,
J
excluded
the
evidence
under
subsection
24(1)
of
the
Charter.
In
Wright,
seizure
was
effected
at
a
private
dwelling
house,
pursuant
to
what
he
found
to
be
a
defective
search
warrant.
In
Southam
v
Hunter,
55
NR
241,
Dickson,
J
quotes
with
approval
at
248
Lord
Camden’s
statement
in
Entick
v
Carrington
(1765),
19
State
Tr
1029
at
1067:
Our
law
holds
the
property
of
every
man
so
sacred
that
no
man
can
set
his
foot
upon
his
neighbour’s
without
his
leave;
if
he
does,
he
is
a
trespasser,
though
he
does
no
damage
at
all;
if
he
will
tread
upon
his
neighbour’s
ground,
he
must
justify
it
by
law.
Dickson,
J
goes
on
to
say:
In
my
view,
the
interests
protected
by
s.
8
are
a
wider
ambit
than
those
enunciated
in
Entick
v
Carrington.
Section
8
is
an
entrenched
constitutional
provision.
It
is
not
therefore
vulnerable
to
encroachment
by
legislative
enactments
in
the
same
way
as
common
law
protections.
There
is,
further,
nothing
in
the
language
of
the
section
to
restrict
it
to
the
protection
of
property
or
to
associate
it
with
the
law
of
trespass.
It
guarantees
a
broad
and
general
right
to
be
secure
from
unreasonable
search
and
seizure.
In
R
v
Lajoie
(1983),
8
CCC
(3d)
353
(NWTSC)
in
dealing
with
entry
into
a
private
dwelling
house
for
purpose
of
search
and
seizure
pursuant
to
a
defective
search
warrant,
excluded
the
evidence,
DeWeerdt,
I
found
that
the
officers
acted
in
good
faith,
even
though
mistakenly.
He
further
found
at
363
that
items
seized
as
evidence
of
the
accused
were
obtained
in
a
manner
that
infringed
or
denied
his
right
to
be
secure
against
unreasonable
search.
In
considering
the
question
of
whether
it
has
been
established
that
having
regard
to
all
the
circumstances,
the
admission
of
that
evidence
.
.
.
would
bring
the
administration
of
justice
into
disrepute,
Mr
Justice
de
Weerdt
stated
at
367,
368:
[sic]
The
seizure
here
was
conducted
not
according
to
law,
but
in
spite
of
it.
This
in
itself
makes
the
seizure
unreasonable.
In
Southam
v
Director
of
Investigations,
[1983]
3
WWR
385,
Alberta
CA,
Prowse,
JA
held
at
404
that:
In
the
result,
I
would
allow
the
appeal
and
declare
that
s.
10(3)
and
by
implication
s
10(1)
of
the
Combines
Act
are
inconsistent
with
the
provisions
of
s
8
of
the
Charter
and
are
therefore
of
no
force
and
effect.
I
would
therefore
direct
the
Clerk
of
the
Court
to
return
the
documents
in
his
possession
to
the
appellant
in
ten
days
in
the
event
a
stay
is
not
sought
and
granted.
Having
found
that:
(a)
The
Special
Investigators
of
the
Department
of
National
Revenue
acted
illegally.
(b)
They
did
not
act
in
good
faith.
(c)
The
withholding
of
documents
from
the
defendants
upon
which
they
were
extensively
interrogated
prejudiced
the
defendants
in
making
meaningful
explanations
which
may
have
been
a
contributing
factor
in
the
decision
to
seize
the
records
and
documents,
and
therefore
unreasonable
and
unfair
to
the
defendants.
(d)
The
seizure
was
made
in
a
private
residence
without
prior
authorization.
I
hold
that
the
documents
seized
from
the
Marcoux
home
and
from
third
parties
will
be
excluded
from
evidence
pursuant
to
subsection
24(2)
of
the
Charter
as
their
admission
would
bring
the
administration
of
justice
into
disrepute.
Order
accordingly.