Smith,
J:—This
matter
is
before
me
on
a
case
stated
at
the
request
of
the
Attorney
General
of
Canada
pursuant
to
section
762
of
the
Criminal
Code.
A
second
and
similar
stated
case
in
the
matter
of
Steve
Dzagic
will
follow
the
result
of
the
first.
The
learned
Provincial
Court
Judge
formulated
the
following
questions:
(1)
Did
I
err
in
law
in
holding
that
section
231(1)(d)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
RSC
1952,
chapter
148
is
inconsistent
with
the
provisions
of
section
8
of
the
Canadian
Charter
of
Rights
and
Freedoms
and
that
it
is
therefore
of
no
force
and
effect?
(2)
Did
I
err
in
law
in
holding
that
the
admission
into
evidence
of
the
seized
material
at
this
time
would
constitute
an
infringement
or
denial
of
the
Defendant’s
rights
or
freedoms
as
guaranteed
by
the
Canadian
Charter
of
Rights
and
Freedoms!
(3)
Did
I
err
in
law
in
holding
that
having
regard
to
all
the
circumstances,
the
admission
of
the
evidence
of
the
Defendant’s
records
would
bring
the
administration
of
justice
into
disrepute
and
that
such
evidence
should
therefore
be
excluded
pursuant
to
the
provisions
of
section
24(2)
of
the
Canadian
Charter
of
Rights
and
Freedoms?
(4)
Did
I
err
in
law
in
holding
that
I
could,
under
section
24(1)
of
the
Canadian
Charter
of
Rights
and
Freedoms,
refuse
to
admit
such
evidence
on
the
grounds
that
such
refusal
is
a
just
and
appropriate
remedy
in
the
circumstances?
Availability
of
Subsection
24(1)
(Charter)
In
the
event
that
the
second
question
is
answered
in
the
affirmative,
it
will
not
be
strictly
necessary
to
give
an
answer
to
the
fourth.
I
pause
nonetheless
to
say
at
the
outset
that
in
my
view
it
is
not,
from
a
practical
point
of
view,
open
to
a
judge
of
first
instance
in
Ontario
to
exclude
evidence
by
way
of
a
remedy
under
subsection
24(1)
of
the
Charter.
Four
members
of
a
five-man
Court
in
our
Ontario
Court
of
Appeal
in
Regina
v
Simmons
(1984),
11
CCC
(3d)
193,
were
of
the
opinion
that
subsection
24(2)
alone
was
intended
to
govern
the
exclusion
of
evidence
where
Charter
rights
have
been
infringed.
The
fifth
member
refrained
from
deciding
that
issue.
The
statement
of
the
Court
was
obiter.
It
sought
still
to
be
accepted
(notwithstanding
Regina
v
Therens
(1983),
5
CCC
(3d)
409,
a
western
case
which
expressed
a
contrary
view),
unless
and
until
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
decides
otherwise.
I
doubt
that
the
distinction
between
ratio
and
obiter
is
anything
but
academic
when
the
opinion
emanates,
for
instance,
from
a
unanimous
Supreme
Court
of
Canada.
And
the
line
between
the
ratio
of
a
case
and
a
mere
obiter
pronouncement
deliberately
made
is
a
very
fine
one
indeed,
if
it
exists
at
all,
when
the
trial
judges
of
this
Province
are
faced
with
an
obiter
statement
of
the
kind
made
in
Simmons
on
an
important
point
of
law
involving
the
Charter
by
a
nearly
unanimous
five-man
panel
of
the
Ontario
Court
of
Ap-
peal.
In
my
opinion,
Regina
v
Chapman,
(1984),
12
CCC
(3d)
1,
cannot
be
read
to
mean
that
subsection
24(1)
of
the
Charter
is
available
to
exclude
evidence.
The
issue
there
was
the
return
of
goods
seized.
The
Facts
The
stated
case
raises
the
constitutional
question
of
whether
paragraph
231(
l)(d)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
RSC
1952
c
148
(the
Act),
is
inconsistent
with
section
8
of
the
Charter.
Subsections
(1)
and
(2)
of
section
231
are
as
follows:
(1)
—
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
(a)
audit
or
examine
the
books
and
records
and
any
account,
voucher,
letter,
telegram
or
other
document
which
relates
or
may
relate
to
the
information
that
is
or
should
be
in
the
books
or
records
or
the
amount
of
tax
payable
under
this
Act,
(b)
examine
property
described
by
an
inventory
or
any
property,
process
or
matter
an
examination
of
which
may,
in
his
opinion,
assist
him
in
determining
the
accuracy
of
an
inventory
or
in
ascertaining
the
information
that
is
or
should
be
in
the
books
or
records
or
the
amount
of
any
tax
payable
under
this
Act,
(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,
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.
(2)
—
The
Minister
shall,
(a)
within
120
days
from
the
date
of
seizure
of
any
documents,
books,
records,
papers
or
things
pursuant
to
paragraph
(l)(d),
or
(b)
if
within
that
time
an
application
is
made
under
this
subsection
that
is,
after
the
expiration
of
that
time,
rejected,
then
forthwith
upon
the
disposition
of
the
application.
return
the
documents,
books,
records,
papers
or
things
to
the
person
from
whom
they
were
seized
unless
a
judge
of
a
superior
court
or
county
court,
on
application
made
by
or
on
behalf
of
the
Minister,
supported
by
evidence
on
oath
establishing
that
the
Minister
has
reasonable
and
probable
grounds
to
believe
that
there
has
been
a
violation
of
this
Act
or
a
regulation
and
that
the
seized
documents,
books,
records,
papers
or
things
are
or
may
be
required
as
evidence
in
relation
thereto,
orders
that
they
be
retained
by
the
Minister
until
they
are
produced
in
any
court
proceedings,
which
order
the
judge
is
hereby
empowered
to
give
on
ex
parte
application.
The
respondent
was
charged
with
a
number
of
counts
of
unlawfully
making
false
or
deceptive
statements
in
his
income
tax
returns
by
failing
to
declare
certain
taxable
income
in
the
years
1977
through
to
1981
and
to
have
wilfully
evaded
the
payment
of
taxes
during
that
period.
The
learned
judge
initially
ruled,
on
September
18,
1984,
that
the
Charter
did
not
apply
and
that,
if
it
did
apply
rendering
the
seizure
unreasonable,
the
admission
in
evidence
of
the
seized
documents,
having
regard
to
all
the
circumstances,
would
not
bring
the
administration
of
justice
into
disrepute.
Upon
receiving
further
and
fuller
argument,
however,
based
more
particularly
on
Hunter
et
al
v
Southam
Inc
(1984),
14
CCC
(3d)
77,
and
Re
Chapman
and
The
Queen
(1984),
46
OR
(2d)
65,
he
set
aside
his
earlier
ruling
and
on
November
5,
1984
held
the
impugned
section
of
the
Act
to
be
of
no
force
and
effect
and
went
on
to
exclude
the
evidence
as
in
his
view
the
admission
would
bring
the
administration
of
justice
into
disrepute.
Exclusion
of
Evidence
Under
Subsection
24(2)
(Charter)
In
my
respectful
view,
he
clearly
erred
in
his
decision
to
exclude.
He
appears
to
have
held
that
the
unconstitutionality
itself
(as
held
by
him)
of
the
section
authorizing
seizure,
coupled
with
the
fact
that
the
goods
seized
were
not
inherently
illicit,
constituted
circumstances
sufficient
to
trigger
the
exercise
of
a
discretion
to
exclude
pursuant
to
subsection
24(2)
of
the
Charter.
In
fact
he
specifically
found
the
conduct
of
the
Revenue
Department
officials
to
have
been
unexceptional
and
such
as
to
not
of
itself
be
calculated
to
bring
the
administration
of
justice
into
disrepute.
I
refer
to
a
telling
passage
in
the
reasons
of
the
Court
delivered
by
Martin,
JA
in
Regina
v
Rao
(1984),
46
OR
(2d)
80
which
appears
at
110:
The
trial
judge,
after
carefully
weighing
all
the
factors,
came
to
the
conclusion
that
to
admit
the
evidence
of
the
seizure
of
the
narcotics
would
bring
the
administration
of
justice
into
disrepute.
I
would
not
have
held
(as
I
think
the
trial
judge
would
have
held)
that
the
admission
of
the
evidence
of
the
seizure
of
the
narcotics
would
bring
the
administration
of
justice
into
disrepute
solely
because
they
were
seized
during
a
warrantless
search
in
circumstances
where
a
warrant
was
required
to
meet
the
constitutional
standard
of
reasonableness
under
s
8
of
the
Charter,
having
regard
to
the
fact
that
the
officers
were
acting
under
the
authority
of
a
statute
duly
enacted
by
Parliament
which
had
not
previously
been
determined
to
be
unconstitutional
or
inoperative
in
whole
or
in
part.
I
also
draw
attention
to
the
fact
that
the
evidence
is
prima
facie
admissible,
if
relevant,
and
the
onus
is
upon
the
respondent
upon
the
Charter
being
infringed
to
show
cause
why
the
evidence
should
not
be
received.
It
is
equally
of
interest
to
point
to
a
division
among
the
members
of
the
court
hearing
The
Queen
v
Duguay
et
al
(unreported)
on
the
correctness
of
drawing
upon
subsection
24(2)
when
the
case
involved
bad
faith
on
the
part
of
experienced
officers,
and
a
deliberate
breach
of
the
Charter
in
a
non-serious
offence.
The
message
it
seems
to
me
is
that
exclusion
will
not
follow
a
declaration
of
unconstitutionality
unless
compelling
reasons
exist.
I
suggested
during
argument
that
a
decision
by
me
adverse
to
the
respondent
on
the
issue
of
admission
of
evidence
would
make
it
unnecessary
to
deal
with
the
constitutionality
of
paragraph
231(l)(d).
The
respondent
indicated
that
if
the
section
was
unconstitutional,
he
wished
to
retain
his
option
to
argue
anew
before
the
Provincial
Court
Judge
the
question
of
the
admission
of
evidence
on
the
basis
of
facts
that
were
not
before
me.
I
therefore
turn
to
the
first
and
main
question
put
to
me.
Constitutionality
of
Paragraph
231(l)(d)
Income
Tax
Act
The
question
posed
is
certainly
not
free
from
difficulty.
In
the
area
of
search
and
seizure,
we
are
now
guided
by
several
Ontario
Appeal
Court
decisions
including
Regina
v
Rao
(1984),
9
DLR
(4th),
542,
Regina
v
Noble
(1984),
16
CCC
(3d),
146,
and
of
course
the
landmark
decision
of
Hunter
et
al
v
Southam
Inc,
(supra).
As
Dickson,
CJ
did
in
Southam,
I
must
note
at
the
outset
that
the
concern
on
this
stated
case
is
the
constitutional
validity
of
the
section
and
not
the
reasonableness
of
the
manner
in
which
the
statutory
authority
was
carried
out.
In
order
to
determine
whether
the
case
at
hand
differs
from
Southam
in
substance,
it
is
necessary
to
look
at
the
approach
taken
by
the
court
in
that
case.
It
spoke
of
an
entitlement
to
a
“reasonable
expectation
of
privacy”.
This
indicated
to
the
Court
that
an
assessment
had
to
be
made
“as
to
whether
in
a
particular
situation
the
public’s
interest
in
being
left
alone
by
government
must
give
way
to
the
government’s
interest
in
intruding
on
the
individual’s
privacy
in
order
to
advance
its
goals,
notably
those
of
law
enforcement”.
This
should
be
so
in
my
view
even
where
the
official
in
authority
proceeded
to
seize
in
the
course
of
a
legitimate
inspection.
I
bear
in
mind
the
American
line
of
cases
that
deal
with
a
summons
issued
for
a
valid
civil
purpose
and
that
have
refused
to
invalidate
them
by
reason
only
that
there
is
a
co-existing
criminal
investigation.
A
provision
such
as
paragraph
231(l)(d)
tends
to
blur
the
line
between
the
two
even
from
the
moment
of
entry
into
the
premises.
On
the
balancing
interests
referred
to
in
Southam,
I
find
the
following
passage
in
the
judgment
to
be
virtually
determinative
of
the
issue
before
me:
If
the
issue
to
be
resolved
in
assessing
the
constitutionality
of
searches
under
s
10
were
whether
in
fact
the
governmental
interest
in
carrying
out
a
given
search
outweighed
that
of
the
individual
in
resisting
the
governmental
intrusion
upon
his
privacy,
then
it
would
be
appropriate
to
determine
the
balance
of
the
competing
interests
after
the
search
had
been
conducted.
Such
a
post
facto
analysis
would,
however,
be
seriously
at
odds
with
the
purpose
of
s
8.
That
purpose
is,
as
I
have
said,
to
protect
individuals
from
unjustified
State
intrusion
upon
their
privacy.
That
purpose
requires
a
means
of
preventing
unjustified
searches
before
they
happen,
not
simply
of
determining,
after
the
fact,
whether
they
ought
to
have
occurred
in
the
first
place.
This,
in
my
view,
can
only
be
accomplished
by
a
system
of
prior
authorization,
not
one
of
subsequent
validation.
On
this
ground
alone
paragraph
231(1)(d)
cannot
stand.
I
confess
to
a
great
deal
of
hesitation
in
striking
down
the
section.
It
appears
on
cursory
reading
to
be
innocuous
enough.
Attempts
at
distinguishing
it
from
“the
authority
to
roam
at
large”
as
section
10
of
the
Combines
Investigations
Act,
RSC
1970
c
C-23,
was
characterized,
are
convincing
at
first.
All
the
departmental
official
is
doing
is
to
conduct
an
audit
which
on
the
face
of
things
and
as
conceded
by
the
respondents,
is
necessary
to
sustain
a
system
of
self-reporting.
In
the
course
of
exercising
his
reasonable
duties,
he
is
given
the
power
to
seize
and
take
away
if
it
appears
to
him
that
there
has
been
a
violation.
The
temptation
which
I
ultimately
felt
the
Southam
case
compelled
me
to
resist,
was
to
declare
the
provision
constitutional,
leaving
the
exercise
of
the
authority
to
seize
subject
to
judicial
control
as
each
case
arose.
On
reflection,
this
kind
of
post
facto
control
would
resemble
the
proverbial
closing
of
the
barn
door.
There
is
a
mechanism
of
control
embodied
in
subsection
2.
Its
essential
defect
is
in
its
inability
to
prevent
unjustified
seizures.
The
argument
advanced
by
the
appellant
that
immediate
seizure
may
be
necessary
to
prevent
loss
or
destruction
of
potential
evidence,
is
in
my
view
without
merit
on
the
issue
of
the
constitutionality
of
the
section
although
it
may
conceivably,
at
least,
justify
warrantless
seizures
in
special
circumstances.
Section
231
of
the
Act
is
an
investigation
section
and
it
should
not
contain
powers
of
adjudication
except
upon
satisfying
the
usual
safeguards
of
probable
cause
as
determined
judicially
by
an
independent
person.
Only
then
were
intrusions
on
privacy
traditionally
sanctioned
by
law.
Subsection
4,
which
is
in
truth
a
seizure
provision,
has
been
struck
down
by
the
Federal
Court
in
MNR
v
Kruger
Inc,
et
al,
[1984]
CTC
506;
84
DTC
6478.
It
will
no
doubt
be
rewritten
in
a
manner
that
conforms
with
the
Charter
in
the
event
that
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
upheld
the
Federal
Court
of
Canada
ruling.
The
only
remaining
seizure
provision
contained
in
paragraph
23
l(l)(d)
should
now
be
declared
unconstitutional.
My
reading
of
Southam
leads
me
to
view
paragraph
231(
l)(d)
as
offensive
in
the
same
manner
as
was
described
and
for
the
same
reasons
as
given
in
the
Southam
case
that
declared
section
10
of
the
Combines
Investigation
Act
of
no
force
and
effect.
The
degree
only
of
encroachment
on
privacy
may
be
different.
But
since
there
are
no
safeguards,
the
potential
for
abuse
even
on
a
plain
reading
of
the
whole
of
subsection
231(1)
is
enormous
in
the
hands
of
an
unscrupulous
official.
As
an
instance
of
abuse,
see
Re
Frank
Pica
et
al
v
Attorney
General
of
Canada,
[1985]
1
CTC
78;
85
DTC
5112.
I
was
referred
to
New
Garden
Restaurant
&
Tavern
Ltd,
et
al
v
MNR,
[1983]
CTC
332;
43
OR
(2d)
417,
a
decision
of
my
brother
White
and
to
Roth
v
The
Queen,
[1984]
CTC
185;
84
DTC
6181,
by
Callon,
J.
I
have
respectfully
declined
to
follow
their
well-reasoned
judgments.
Neither
had
had
the
benefit
of
Southam.
Search
and
seizure
will
generally
go
hand
in
hand.
In
this
case
they
do
not.
What
is
at
issue
is
seizure
only
of
documents
or
things
that
were
made
available
in
the
course
of
an
audit.
I
am
of
the
view
that
no
distinction
should
be
drawn
between
an
unreasonable
seizure
and
an
unreasonable
search.
Section
8
is
directed
to
each
standing
alone
or
to
both
together
and
a
provision
offending
either
one
will
be
struck.
Any
requirement
of
prior
authorization
cannot
logically
apply
with
less
force
to
seizure
by
reason
only
that
it
does
not
follow
an
unauthorized
search.
Retrospectivity
The
question
of
retrospectivity
in
this
instance
is
narrow.
Under
subsection
231(2)
the
Department
is
bound
to
return
the
things
seized
unless
a
judge
otherwise
orders
on
the
basis
of
reasonable
and
probable
grounds
that
a
violation
of
the
Act
took
place.
At
the
time
of
the
seizure,
the
legislative
authority
for
the
seizure
had
not
been
struck
down
since
the
Charter
had
not
been
adopted
and
the
seizure
was
therefore
lawful
and
reasonable.
The
question
is
whether
the
continued
detention
post
Charter
is
a
violation
since
the
statutory
underpinning
for
the
seizure
no
longer
exists
if
it
is
declared
unconstitutional
as
I
am
hereby
holding.
The
Charter
does
not
apply
retrospectively
to
render
unreasonable
a
search
that
was
not
unreasonable
or
unlawful
when
it
took
place.
The
effect
of
now
ordering
the
return
of
what
was
seized
would
be
to
declare
as
unreasonable
what
in
fact
at
the
material
time
was
reasonable.
It
seems
to
me
that
a
judge
would
not
be
bound
to
order
the
return
under
subsection
231(2)
merely
because
paragraph
231(1
)(d)
had
been
declared
inoperative
any
more
than
he
would
be
compelled
to
exclude
the
evidence
under
subsection
24(2)
of
the
Charter.
In
the
result,
the
first
question
is
answered
in
the
negative.
In
so
far
as
the
second
question
is
meant
to
address
the
question
of
retrospectivity,
the
answer
is
yes
and
the
remaining
two
questions
will
also
be
answered
in
the
affirmative.
Order
accordingly.