Date: 20060907
Docket: T-1613-05
Citation: 2006 FC 1064
Ottawa, Ontario,
September 7, 2006
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Simon Noël
BETWEEN:
WILLIAM
ROBINSON
Applicant
and
ATTORNEY
GENERAL OF CANADA
Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND
JUDGMENT
[1]
This is an
application for judicial review of an August 24, 2005 decision of the
Independent Chairperson (Chairperson) at Mountain Institution (Mountain) which
convicted William Robinson (Applicant) of a serious disciplinary offence
pursuant to subsection 40(j) of the Corrections and Conditional Release Act,
S.C. 1992, c. 20 (CCRA) for possession of an unauthorized item.
I. Facts and History of the Case
[2]
William Robinson
arrived at Mountain, a medium security federal institution on March 23, 2005.
[3]
On March 26, 2005,
and again on April 6, 2005 due to the misplacement of his initial application,
the Applicant applied for admission into Mountain’s
Methadone Maintenance Treatment Program (Methadone Program).
[4]
While being
interviewed for admission into the Methadone Program, the Applicant was advised
that he would only be admitted into the Methadone Program if he was currently
using heroin on an ongoing basis. More specifically, the Applicant would have
to test positive for heroin on three occasions before being admitted into the
Methadone Program (Applicant’s Record, Applicant’s Affidavit, Exhibit A, page 34). In response to this information, the
Applicant advised the interviewers that he was engaged in obtaining and
injecting heroin and that he was using a home-made injection rig to use heroin
at Mountain (Applicant’s Record, Applicant’s Affidavit, Exhibit A, page 34).
[5]
On or about April
29, 2005, the Applicant alleges that an unknown Correctional Service Canada
(CSC) Officer (unknown Officer) visited his cell to inquire about his injection
rig (Applicant’s Record, Applicant’s Affidavit, Exhibit A, page 34). At that time, the
Applicant states he admitted to being in possession of an injection rig and
produced it to the unknown Officer. The Applicant alleges the unknown Officer
advised him that he was there to see the injection rig on the instructions of
Mark Buddha, a Methadone Program Staff Member, but that the Applicant could
keep the injection rig (Applicant’s Record, Applicant’s Affidavit, Exhibit A, page 34).
[6]
On May 5, 2005, CSC
Officers MacDonald and Vizina acting on information that the Applicant was in
possession of an injection rig searched the Applicant’s cell and found the injection rig in a smoke detector. On
that same day, an officer decided that an informal resolution in accordance
with section 41 of CCRA would not be appropriate (see Respondent’s Record, Inmate Offence Report and Notification of Charge,
page 5). On May 9, 2005, the Applicant was charged under subsection 40(j) of
the CCRA for possession of an unauthorized item, namely for being in possession
of the injection rig. Three weeks later on May 31, 2005, the Applicant was
charged with a separate offence under subsection 40(k) of the CCRA for
injecting heroin into his body.
[7]
On May 31, 2005, the
Applicant was accepted into the Methadone Program and treatment began on June
10, 2005. On June 27, 2005, Jay Jones, a legal advocate with the Prisoners’ Legal Services (PLS), wrote a letter to the Warden of
Mountain fully explaining the Applicant’s situation and asking that the
subsection 40(j) and 40(k) charges against the Applicant be withdrawn on a
number of grounds, including that the Applicant was now attending the Methadone
Program (“the letter”).
[8]
On July 20, 2005 the
Applicant attended a disciplinary hearing for the subsection 40(k) charge for
injecting heroin. The Applicant, who was self-represented at the hearing,
advised the hearing’s Chairperson that he had not received a
response to the letter to the Warden asking that the charges against him be
withdrawn. The Applicant therefore asked the Chairperson to adjourn the
hearing pending the Warden’s response. The Chairperson refused to
grant the adjournment and continued with the hearing. The Chairperson found
the Applicant guilty of the subsection 40(k) charge.
[9]
On August 24, 2005 a
hearing was held for the subsection 40(j) charge for possession of an
unauthorized item. Once again the self-represented Applicant informed the
Chairperson of the letter written to the Warden.
[10]
At the hearing, the
Applicant submitted as a defence to the subsection 40(j) charge that he was
implicitly authorized to be in possession of the injection rig by the actions
of the unknown Officer who visited his cell on or about April 29, 2005. The
Applicant could not identify the unknown Officer but stated that Mr. Mark
Buddha could testify to confirm the unknown Officer’s visit. The Chairperson refused to call Mr. Buddha as a
witness. At the conclusion of the hearing, the Chairperson found the Applicant
guilty of the subsection 40(j) charge for possession of an unauthorized item.
[11]
This judicial review
only demands a reconsideration of the finding of guilt on the section 40(j)
charge for possession of an unauthorized item. The finding of guilt on the
section 40(k) charge is not being challenged as part of this judicial review.
II. Issues
[12]
The issues are the following:
1. What
is the standard of review to be applied to decisions of the Chairperson at a
disciplinary hearing conducted under the CCRA?
2. Did
the Chairperson breach section 31 of the Corrections and Conditional Release
Regulations, S.O.R./92-620 (CCRR) and thus violate procedural fairness by
failing to require the attendance of Mr. Buddha at the hearing for the section
40(j) charge for possession of an unauthorized item?
3. Did
the Chairperson adequately consider whether CSC took all reasonable steps to
resolve the matter informally pursuant to section 41 of the CCRA? If not, did
the Chairperson err in law by failing to consider whether appropriate informal
resolution was attempted?
4. Did the
Chairperson err in law in convicting the Applicant of a disciplinary offence
contrary to subsections 40(j) and 43(3) of the CCRA?
III. Analysis
1. What
is the standard of review to be applied to decisions of the Chairperson at a
disciplinary hearing conducted under the CCRA?
[13]
The proper standard
of review for decisions made pursuant to hearings conducted under the CCRA has
been addressed by the Federal Court of Appeal in Sweet v. Canada (Attorney
General), 2005 FCA 51. In Sweet, Justice Malone found that the
correctness standard applied to questions of law which include issues of
procedural fairness, whereas the reasonableness standard would apply to the
application of legal principles to fact and the standard of patent
unreasonableness would apply to pure findings of fact (Sweet v. Canada
(Attorney General), above, at paragraphs 14-16).
¶ 14
In assessing the standard of review for prisoners' grievance decisions, the
Applications Judge adopted the analysis set out by Lemieux J. in Tehrankari v.
Correctional Service of Canada (2000), 188 F.T.R. 206 (T.D.) at paragraph 44.
After conducting a pragmatic and functional analysis, Lemieux J. concluded that
a correctness standard would apply if the question involved the proper
interpretation of the legislation, a standard of reasonableness simpliciter
would apply if the question involved an application of the proper legal
principles to the facts, and a patently unreasonable standard would apply to
pure findings of fact.
¶ 15
The Applications Judge determined that the issues in this case required the
proper interpretation of the Act and Regulations before that interpretation
could be applied to the facts of the situation. This suggests review on a
correctness standard and I am in agreement with that assessment.
¶ 16
An issue not specifically dealt with by the Applications Judge is whether the
appellant was afforded the benefits of natural justice and procedural fairness with
regard to the decision to discharge him from the RTC Programme. Questions of
procedural fairness are questions of law and require review on a correctness
standard (see C.U.P.E. v. Ontario (Minister of Labour), [2003] 1 S.C.R. 539 at
paragraph 100).
[14]
Consequently, in the
case at hand, the standard of review of correctness will be applicable to the
issue of the violation of procedural fairness as well as the issue of the
proper interpretation of section 41 of the CCRA.
2. Did
the Chairperson breach section 31 of the CCRR and thus violate procedural
fairness by failing to require the attendance of Mr. Buddha at the hearing for
the subsection 40(j) charge for possession of an unauthorized item?
[15]
At the hearing for
the subsection 40(j) charge for being in possession of the injection rig, the
Applicant submitted as a defence that an unknown Officer who visited his cell
on or about April 29, 2005 authorized him to be in possession of the rig. The
letter written by PLS to the Warden of Mountain explains this defence as
follows:
1) Implicit
Authorization
We submit that the
injection right did not constitute an ‘unauthorized
item’ as it had been
implicitly authorized as an expected and necessary criterion for obtaining
methadone treatment. In broad terms, the existence of the methadone treatment
program’s criteria
acknowledges that prisoners will possess rigs and consume heroin. In more
narrow terms, Mr. Robinson’s
injection rig and use of heroin had been implicitly authorized by the methadone
intake staff and that authorization was later confirmed by the officer who came
to see it but decline to take it on or about April 29, 2005.
[Applicant’s Record, Letter to
Warden, page 35]
The letter was submitted to the Chairperson and thus the
Chairperson at the hearing for the section 40(j) charge was aware of the
defence that the applicant was attempting to mount. At the hearing, although
the Applicant could not name the unknown Officer, he submitted to the
Chairperson at numerous times that Mr. Buddha could support his claim that an
unknown Officer visited his cell and authorized him implicitly to possess the
injection rig.
[16]
In addition to
confirming the visit by the unknown Officer to the applicant’s cell and the unknown Officer’s reasons for doing so, Mr. Buddha’s testimony would be helpful in explaining the Methadone
Program and the use of the three positive tests as an admission criterion to
the program as was explained in the letter. Thus, the testimony of Mr. Buddha
would serve a treble purpose: 1) to help identify the anonymous Officer 2)
explain the reasons for the Officer’s visit to the applicant’s cell and, 3) explain the Methadone Program and its
admission criteria.
[17]
The Applicant made
his desire to have Mr. Buddha testify at his hearing on at least three
occasions. Among the requests was the following exchange with the Chairperson:
MR. ROBINSON: I don’t know the name of the
officer. That’s what we went through
before. Mark Buddha’s the one who told the
officer –
CHAIRPERSON: Yeah, I
cannot – I cannot accept as
evidence that someone told you – we don’t know who that someone is …
MR. ROBINSON: I know,
but –
CHAIRPERSON: But we
went throught this before.
…
MR. ROBINSON: And I
told you to get a hold of him.
CHAIRPERSON: Well, we
through the same thing. I’m not changing my mind about – about –
MR. ROBINSON: I’m just saying if we got
a hold of Mark Buddha –
…
CHAIRPERSON: … You are saying officer
told you some things. Without the name of the officer to whom I like to ask
questions, I cannot accept as evidence that someone actually told you, although
negatively …
MR. ROBINSON: But you
can accept that evidence when I tell you that Mark Buddha’s the one who had the
officer come to my house. Now that there’s where Mark Buddha turned around and phoned
the officer and had the officer …
CHAIRPERSON: He said he
said that. I don’t want hearsay.
MR. ROBINSON: No, it
isn’t he said he said
that. Mark Buddha --
[Applicant Record,
Llanes Affidavit, transcript of the proceeding, page 17-18]
Each
of the Applicant’s requests for Mr. Buddha’s presence were either ignored by the Chairperson or were
denied by the Chairperson on the basis that it was the unknown Officer and not
Mr. Buddha who should be summoned as a witness as only he could confirm the
facts the Applicant was alleging.
[18]
Paragraph 31(1)(a)
of the CCRR states the following:
31. (1) The person who conducts a hearing of
a disciplinary offence shall give the inmate who is charged a reasonable
opportunity at the hearing to
(a) question witnesses through the
person conducting the hearing, introduce evidence, call witnesses on the
inmate's behalf and examine exhibits and documents to be considered in the
taking of the decision;
|
31. (1) Au cours de
l'audition disciplinaire, la personne qui tient l'audition doit, dans des
limites raisonnables, donner au détenu qui est accusé la possibilité :
a)
d'interroger des témoins par l'intermédiaire de la personne qui tient
l'audition, de présenter des éléments de preuve, d'appeler des témoins en sa
faveur et d'examiner les pièces et les documents qui vont être pris en
considération pour arriver à la décision;
|
Paragraph 31(1)(a) of the
CCRR establishes some of the procedural entitlements guaranteed to inmates at
hearings for a disciplinary offence. In addition, the Federal Court of Appeal
in Ayotte v. Canada (Attorney General), 2003 FCA 429 (paragraph 9),
adopts the six principles listed by Justice Denault in Hendrickson v. Kent
Institution Disciplinary Court (1990), 32 FTR 296, to further explain the
procedural entitlements that are owed to an inmate at a hearing for a
disciplinary offence:
In Hendrickson v.
Kent Institution Disciplinary Court (Independent Chairperson) (1990), 32 F.T.R. 296 (F.C.T.D.), the
Honourable Mr. Justice Denault identified the following six principles based on
the Martineau case, supra, in particular, that apply to the prosecution
of disciplinary offences in the prison environment:
1. A hearing conducted
by an independent chairperson of the disciplinary court of an institution is an
administrative proceeding and is neither judicial nor quasi-judicial in
character.
2. Except to the extent
there are statutory provisions or regulations having the force of law to the
contrary, there is no requirement to conform to any particular procedure or to
abide by the rules of evidence generally applicable to judicial or
quasi-judicial tribunals or adversary proceedings.
3. There is an
overall duty to act fairly by ensuring that the inquiry is carried out in a
fair manner and with due regard to natural justice. The duty to act fairly
in a disciplinary court hearing requires that the person be aware of what the
allegations are, the evidence and the nature of the evidence against him and be
afforded a reasonable opportunity to respond to the evidence and to give his
version of the matter.
4. The hearing is not
to be conducted as an adversary proceeding but as an inquisitorial one and there
is no duty on the person responsible for conducting the hearing to explore
every conceivable defence, although there is a duty to conduct a full and fair
inquiry or, in other words, examine both sides of the question.
5. It is not up to this
Court to review the evidence as a court might do in a case of a judicial
tribunal or a review of a decision of a quasi-judicial tribunal, but merely to
consider whether there has in fact been a breach of the general duty to act
fairly.
6. The judicial
discretion in relation with disciplinary matters must be exercised sparingly
and a remedy ought to be granted "only in cases of serious injustice"
(Martineau No. 2, p. 360).
[Emphasis in original]
[19]
Moreover, in Armstrong
v. Canada, [1989] 28
F.T.R. 89, Justice Teitelbaum interpreted the procedural fairness guarantees
found in the Penitentiary Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. P-5 as rep. by Corrections and Conditional Release Act, S.C. 1992, c. 20, s.214 and the Penitentiary Service
Regulations, C.R.C.
1978, c. 1251 (repealed),
legislation which predeceased the CCRA and the CCRR respectively. In what
concerned an inmate’s ability to summon witnesses at a
disciplinary offence hearing, Justice Teitelbaum found that (Armstrong v.
Canada, 28 F.T.R. 89 at paragraph 50):
In cases where a
witness or witnesses are readily available to be questioned and a request to
have the witness testify is made by an inmate, the request should normally be
granted if it is determined that what the witness would testify to could or
would be a significant factor in determining the guilt or innocence of the
inmate.
[20]
In the situation at
hand, the Chairperson failed to permit Mr. Buddha to be called as a witness,
even though the Applicant continually alleged that Mr. Buddha could testify as
to the unknown Officer’s visit to the Applicant’s cell and the nature of this visit, testimony which could potentially
permit the Applicant to mount a full defence to the disciplinary charge he was
facing. Furthermore, Mr. Buddha’s testimony could have supported some of
the argumentation made in the letter on the Methadone Program. The only reason
stated by the Chairperson for not having Mr. Buddha’s testimony was that it would be hearsay of comments made
by the unknown Officer (Applicant’s Record, Llanes Affidavit, transcript
of the proceeding, page 17). That is not a proper refusal in the present
circumstances. The Chairperson was aware of the defence of implicit
authorization that the Applicant was trying to mount as he had read the letter
and had acknowledged the arguments that it contained (Applicant’s Record, Llanes Affidavit, transcript of the proceeding,
page 17-18).
CHAIRPERSON: … Then your lawyer
raised four points. One, implicit authorization: “We submit that the
injection rig did not constitute an unauthorized item as it had been implicitly
authorized as [indiscernible] necessary criteria for obtaining methadone
treatment.” And it was implicitly
authorized by the methadone intake staff. I don’t accept this face that were authorized…
Given that having the name of the
anonymous Officer from Mr. Buddha could have allowed the unknown Officer to
testify in support of the Applicant and Mr. Buddha’s testimony could have given support to the applicant’s defence that he was implicitly authorized to be in
possession of the injection rig so as to satisfy the Methadone Program’s admittance criteria, the Chairperson should have
permitted Mr. Buddha to testify.
[21]
In the situation at
hand, as mentioned above, Mr. Buddha’s testimony was potentially pivotal to
the Applicant establishing a full defence to the disciplinary charge in
question. Consequently, the Chairperson’s failure to call Mr. Buddha as a
witness is a violation of the procedural fairness entitlements guaranteed to
inmates at disciplinary offence hearings under paragraph 31(1)(a) of the CCRR.
3.
Did the Chairperson adequately consider whether CSC took all reasonable
steps to resolve the matter informally pursuant to section 41 of the CCRA? If
not, did the Chairperson err in law by failing to consider whether appropriate
informal resolution was attempted?
[22]
Subsection 41 of the
CCRA states that:
41.
(1) Where a staff member believes on reasonable grounds that an inmate has
committed or is committing a disciplinary offence, the staff member shall
take all reasonable steps to resolve the matter informally, where possible.
(2) Where an
informal resolution is not achieved, the institutional head may, depending on
the seriousness of the alleged conduct and any aggravating or mitigating
factors, issue a charge of a minor disciplinary offence or a serious
disciplinary offence.
|
41. (1)
L’agent
qui croit, pour des motifs raisonnables, qu’un
détenu commet ou a commis une infraction disciplinaire doit, si les
circonstances le permettent, prendre toutes les mesures utiles afin de régler
la question de façon informelle.
(2) À
défaut de règlement informel, le directeur peut porter une accusation d’infraction
disciplinaire mineure ou grave, selon la gravité de la faute et l’existence
de circonstances atténuantes ou aggravantes.
|
[23]
The Federal Court of
Appeal in Laplante v. Canada (Attorney General), [2003] 4 F.C. 1118 at
paragraph 11, found that as a corollary to the section 41 obligation that
Correctional Service staff take reasonable steps to resolve disciplinary
matters informally, is the right of inmates to demand that steps be taken,
where reasonably possible, to resolve the matter informally.
The obligation found in
section 41 is an obligation imposed on an officer of the Correctional Services
and not the Board. Corresponding to this obligation on the officer is a right
of the inmate to demand of the Correctional Services that steps be taken, where
possible, to resolve the matter informally, that is, in a dejudicialized way […] Suffice it for me to
say at this point that this obligation to dejudicialize where possible is an
important component of the disciplinary system established by the Act and its
purposes, as set out in section 38, to “encourage inmates to conduct themselves in a
manner that promote the good order of the penitentiary, through a process that
contributes to the inmates’ rehabilitation and successful reintegration into the
community”. In this context, a
policy centered on informal resolution rather than excessive judicialization
can be readily understood.
Moreover at paragraph
13 of the Laplante decision, Justice Létourneau writing for the panel states:
In practice, this
power of the Board to ensure compliance with the rights of an inmate charged
with disciplinary offences means this in case of a breach of the duty under
subsection 41(1). When informed of a violation of the inmate's right under
subsection 41(1), and satisfied that the duty imposed by that provision has not
been respected, the chairperson of the Board may suspend the hearing of the
complaint and return the matter to the institutional head so that the latter
can evaluate the appropriateness of attempting an informal resolution. I hasten
to explain that the role of the Board chairperson is limited to this referral
back. It is not his role to interfere in the negotiation of an informal
settlement that Parliament has imposed on the Correctional Services, which are
responsible therefore. Similarly, it is not the chairperson's job to substitute
his opinion for that of the institutional head who, before laying a charge of
disciplinary offence, concluded that an informal resolution could not be
achieved or was not possible in the circumstances. Should an attempt at an
informal resolution prove to be appropriate, the institutional head to whom the
matter was returned takes reasonable steps to that end. If this is successful,
the institutional head may withdraw the complaint he had filed. If this is
unsuccessful or if an informal resolution is not possible in the circumstances,
the head so informs the chairperson of the Board who then proceeds with the
hearing of the complaint. (My emphasis)
[24]
In the case at hand,
the Applicant attempted to resolve matters informally by writing the letter to
the Warden with aid of the PLS. The Warden, at the time of both of the Applicant’s hearings, had failed to respond to the letter. At the
hearing for the section 40(k) charge for injecting heroin, the Applicant
formally requested that the hearing be adjourned until a response from the
Warden was received. The Chairperson refused to grant the adjournment. The
interchange between the Chairperson and the Applicant was the following
(Applicant’s Record, tab 2, Llanes Affidavit,
Exhibit B, pp.23-24):
CHAIRPERSON: Well let
me put that straight here. I’m going to read it, but before I do, I want to explain to
you, the fact that your lawyer’s communicating with the warden on two charges, one of them
is related to this hearing, that’s not preventing me from proceeding.
…
CHAIRPERSON: Unless
the institution’s not ready, we’re going to proceed.
…
CHAIRPERSON: How it
make sense to you when I mention that well that communication, you, your
lawyer, and the warden is going on, does not mean that I have no jurisdiction
to proceed.
[25]
The same issue, namely the consequences of the attempt at
informal resolution through the writing of the letter, was brought up by the
Applicant at his second hearing for the section 40(j) charge for being in
possession of an unauthorized object. At this second hearing the Chairperson
stated (Applicant’s
Record, Llanes Affidavit, transcript
of the proceeding, page 19):
CHAIRPERSON: … The informal
resolution is something to be achieved before a charge was laid. It is not
after that after the fact the situation is corrected, and I’m happy for you.
You get what you want, I guess. But that is not an informal resolution thing.
The statute’s there for everyone
to read. Not, I if the entirety of your defence is based on this letter, I
mean, I cannot, I do not find anything that is legally sound. Informal resolution
should be ahead, not before… [sic]
[26]
In the Laplante
decision, Justice Létourneau explained that the obligation to take reasonable
steps to resolve matters informally, where possible, is an obligation of the
officers of Correctional Services and not the obligation of the Board hearing
the disciplinary offence. However, Justice Létourneau also found that “the Board has the power to satisfy itself that the inmate’s rights under the disciplinary system have been respected
and, if need be, to take steps to safeguard them”
(Laplante v. Canada (Attorney General), above, at paragraph 11 and 13).
[27]
Justice Létourneau
further explains the Chairperson’s powers in what concerns section 41 of
the CCRA in the Laplante decision (Laplante v. Canada (Attorney
General), above, at paragraph 20):
In short, the
chairperson of a Board plays an important role in the administration of the
disciplinary system. His duties and powers are conditioned by the objectives
and principles of this system. Sometimes his powers are explicit, sometimes
they are implicit. On other occasions, they flow from his function and his
jurisdiction as a disciplinary tribunal. In order to maintain the integrity of
the disciplinary system, its ultimate purpose and its objectives, and to ensure
enforcement of an inmates right to have an attempt made at informal resolution,
the chairperson who is satisfied that the mandatory provisions of section 41
have not been complied with has, in my opinion, the power to return the matter
for this purpose to the institutional head. This is an effective and
inexpensive way of guaranteeing compliance with an obligation imposed on the
Correctional Services and the correlative right conferred on the inmate.
Thus, the Board or in the
case at hand the Chairperson, has the power to ensure CSC Officers comply with
the rights of an inmate charged with an offence to have matters resolved
informally. If convinced that an inmate’s right under section 41 to have matters
settled informally has not been respected, then the Board, as per Justice
Létourneau, “may suspend the hearing of
the complaint and return the matter to the institutional head so that the
latter can evaluate the appropriateness of attempting an informal resolution” (Laplante v. Canada
(Attorney General), above, at paragraph 12).
[28]
The Respondent
states that the Chairperson’s duty to refer matters back to the
institutional head for informal resolution is a discretionary step. In support
of this statement, the Respondent refers to Knight v. Canada, 2005 FC 727
at paragraphs 14-16, where Justice Blais states:
¶ 14
The applicant submits that a duty existed on behalf of the Chairperson to refer
the matter to the Kent Institutional Head to consider informal resolution and
to review the charge. Both parties agree that the Chairperson does indeed have
that authority, but disagree as to whether that power is discretionary or
mandatory.
¶ 15
The empowering section in this case is 41 of the CCRA which states that:
41.(1) Where a staff
member believes on reasonable grounds that an inmate has committed or is
committing a disciplinary offence, the staff member shall take all reasonable
steps to resolve the matter informally, where possible.
¶ 16
It is quite clear that the informal resolution of disciplinary offences is an
important aspect of dealing with the offence, but is not a mandatory step.
[29]
I agree with the
reasoning of Justice Blais that there is no obligation on the Chairperson to
refer the matter back to the Institution Head where informal resolution has not
been attempted. This being said, the issue in the case at hand, unlike that in
Knight, is not the Chairperson’s failure to send the matter back so
that it could be resolved informally, but whether the Chairperson failed to
properly consider whether the inmate’s section 41 rights were respected.
[30]
In the case at hand,
the Chairperson did not consider or properly understand what was owed to the
inmate under section 41, as the Chairperson failed to consider the Applicant’s section 41 rights at all. The Chairperson during the
hearing explains to the Applicant that as a Chairperson he has no role to play
in the informal resolution process as it is a process that is to be undertaken
before any charges are laid (see quotation at paragraph 25 of the present
decision).
[31]
The Chairperson’s explanation of the informal resolution process is
erroneous as it cannot be reconciled with the decisions in Laplante and Knight.
In Laplante, Justice Létourneau
addresses the issue of whether section 41 of the CCRA can be raised at any
point. He finds that (Laplante
v. Canada (Attorney General), above, at paragraph 21):
… subsection 41(1)
gives an inmate a relative right (where possible) to have all reasonable steps
taken to resolve the issues in dispute informally. This right must be cited at
the earliest opportunity before the chairperson of the Board, failing which,
like the other rights of an inmate, it is subject to the waiver principle…
In the case hand, the Applicant did
bring the letter to the attention of the Chairperson at both his hearings. The
Chairperson in both cases refused to consider the inmate’s section 41 rights, as he wrongly believed that informal
resolution under section 41 of the CCRA could only occur in the time period
before disciplinary charges were laid.
[32]
Consequently, the
Chairperson’s interpretation of section 41 would
void the section of meaning. If section 41 only imposed an obligation that
informal resolution be attempted before a charge was laid, Justice Létourneau’s finding in Laplante
that the Chairperson plays an important role in ensuring the enforcement an
inmate’s right to informal
resolution would be meaningless as the Chairperson is not involved in the
penitentiary disciplinary system until charges are laid and thus could never
actual play a role in safeguarding an inmate’s right to informal resolution.
[33]
The Chairperson’s failure to understand the importance of informal
resolution at all stages of the penitentiary disciplinary process resulted in
his failure to consider whether CSC had properly met their obligation to
attempt to resolve the matter informally. Although the Chairperson was not
obliged to take action to have the matter settled informally, the Chairperson
is required to at minimum to turn his mind to the issue of whether the
Applicant’s right under section 41 were respected,
something that was never done in the case.
[34]
The failure of the
Chairperson to understand section 41 and to properly consider whether the
Applicant’s right to informal resolution was
respected constituted an error of law.
[35]
The Applicant has asked for costs. Since the Applicant brought
forward issues of importance that have been found to have been wrongly
addressed by the Chairperson, I will grant costs in his favour in accordance
with Rule 400 of the Rules for
Regulating the Practice and Procedure in the Federal Court of Appeal and the
Federal Court,
S.O.R./98-106.
[36]
I will not deal with
the remaining issue as I am of the opinion that the decision of the Chairperson
in what concerns the section 40(j) charge for being in possession of an
unauthorized item should be quashed as the procedural fairness guarantees
established in the CCRR were violated and the Chairperson erred in law in his
interpretation of the CCRA. Consequently, I have no way of determining whether
the finding of guilt on the section 40(j) charge was appropriate.
JUDGMENT
THE COURT ORDERS THAT:
- The
application for judicial review is allowed with costs and the decision of the
Chairperson dated August 24, 2005 is quashed.
FEDERAL
COURT
NAMES OF COUNSEL AND
SOLICITORS OF RECORD
DOCKET: T-1613-05
STYLE OF CAUSE: WILLIAM
ROBINSON v. ATTORNEY GENERAL FOR
CANADA
PLACE OF HEARING: Vancouver, British Columbia
DATE OF HEARING: August 30, 2006
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
AND JUDGMENT Mr.
Justice Simon Noël
DATED: September 7, 2006
APPEARANCES:
Mr. Mark A. Redgwell
for Applicant
Mr. Edward
Burnet for
Respondent
SOLICITORS OF RECORD:
Barrister/Solicitor for
Applicant
Abbotsford, British Columbia
John H. Sims, Q.C. for
Respondent
Deputy Attorney General of Canada