Date: 20090304
Docket: T-2067-07
Citation: 2009 FC 228
Ottawa, Ontario, March 4, 2009
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Barnes
BETWEEN:
RONALD
ALLEN SMITH
Applicant
and
ATTORNEY GENERAL OF CANADA;
MINISTER OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS AND
INTERNATIONAL TRADE;
MINISTER OF PUBLIC SAFETY
Respondents
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
[1]
Ronald
Allen Smith, a Canadian citizen, is a death-row inmate presently incarcerated
in the Montana State Penitentiary at Deer Lodge, Montana. He was
first sentenced to death on March 21, 1983 for the murder of Harvey Madman Jr.
and Thomas Running Rabbit Jr. on August 4, 1982 near Glacier National
Park in Montana.
[2]
Mr.
Smith's application to this Court seeks an Order compelling the Respondent Ministers,
on behalf of the Government of Canada, to assist him in pursuing commutation of
the death penalty by way of an anticipated clemency petition to the Governor of
Montana. He claims relief under the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms
(Charter) and also on the basis of allegations that the Respondents have
breached fundamental principles of fairness by arbitrarily withdrawing
diplomatic assistance from him without consultation or reasons.
[3]
There
is no dispute that the Respondents have recently declined to assist Mr. Smith
with his bid for clemency. Indeed, notwithstanding more than 20 years of prior
support for Mr. Smith, various Ministers and representatives of the present
government have publicly declared that the Government of Canada will no longer
assist Mr. Smith in his efforts to avoid the death penalty in the United
States.
[4]
The
Respondents say that the government's decision is one of high policy falling
within the royal prerogative and that this Court has no authority to intervene
on Mr. Smith's behalf. They deny that they have breached Mr. Smith's Charter
rights or that any duty of fairness arises in this context. In short, they say
that the Government of Canada owes no legal duties of any kind to
Mr. Smith and it is fully entitled to ignore his plea for assistance.
I.
Background
[5]
Mr.
Smith’s legal history in the United States is extensive. It began
with his arrest in Wyoming on August 27,
1982.
On September 20, 1982 he was charged with two counts of aggravated kidnapping
and two counts of homicide. Not long after being charged, Mr. Smith was
offered a plea arrangement. In return for guilty pleas to murder, the State would
not seek the death penalty. Mr. Smith declined the offer and initially
pleaded not guilty, but within three weeks he withdrew his not-guilty pleas,
pleaded guilty and asked to be put to death. On March 21, 1983 Mr. Smith
attended a sentencing hearing and reiterated his request to be put to death.
The Court obliged. Later that year Mr. Smith asked the sentencing Court
to reconsider and to allow him to present psychiatric evidence. Although the
Court did commission psychiatric evidence and re-examined the facts of the
case, the death sentence was affirmed. In 1985 the death sentence was reaffirmed
by the Supreme Court of Montana. In 1990 the United States Court of Appeals
for the Ninth Circuit reversed the death penalty sentence but, following a further
hearing, the death penalty was reinstated in 1992. That sentence was also set
aside in State Court but reinstated yet again following a re-sentencing hearing
in 1995. The record discloses a history of legal errors made by the State
Courts in the 1983 and 1992 sentencing hearings which have so far been
corrected on appeal. Mr. Smith’s appeal from the 1995 sentencing decision
is presently pending in the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit.
Throughout this entire period of more than 25 years Mr. Smith has been
confined on death-row at the Montana State Penitentiary.
[6]
The
Record discloses a long history of interaction between Canadian Consular
officials and Mr. Smith and his legal counsel. Indeed, the Government of
Canada has maintained an interest in Mr. Smith’s case since the time of
his initial incarceration in 1983. Over the succeeding years, consular
officials communicated with some regularity with Mr. Smith, with his
lawyers, with prison officials, with the Office of the Governor of Montana,
with other State officials and with the United States Department of State. In
early 1998, Mr. Smith’s lawyer, Don Vernay, wrote to the Canadian
Consulate General in Minneapolis seeking the assistance
of the Canadian Government in the presentation of “an early clemency petition”
to the Montana Governor. In reply, the Consul General, Robert Déry, advised:
As rules apply differently according to
state and each death row case is different, we do not have a standard procedure
to support a clemency request. Once Mr. Smith is ready to make his
petition for clemency, we will work closely with you to ensure that our
representation on his behalf complements your approach and the legal aspects of
the case.
[7]
Mr. Déry
followed up by writing to the Governor on May 25, 1999 seeking
commutation of Mr. Smith’s death sentence. His letter to the Governor
(written in collaboration with Mr. Smith’s attorney) concluded as follows:
I have reviewed Mr. Smith’s file and
have personally visited him in prison. I believe he is a good candidate for
clemency in that, over time, he has accepted that his actions were wrong and
has expressed remorse. He has a consistent record for good behaviour in prison
and is taking university level courses towards a degree.
I am aware that there are still a number
of avenues which Mr. Smith can appeal; however, it is my understanding
that all judicial or administrative remedies need not be exhausted before an
appeal for clemency is made. I further understand that, under the statutes of Montana, the granting of clemency is
the sole responsibility of the Governor.
The Government of Canada does not
sympathize with violent crime and this letter should not be construed as
reflecting a judgement on Mr. Smith’s guilt or innocence. The practice of
the Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade to seek clemency for
Canadian citizens sentenced to death in foreign countries is based on humanitarian
considerations.
In view of Mr. Smith’s efforts
towards rehabilitation, and the significant mitigating circumstances presented
in his petition for post conviction relief, I believe there are compelling
reasons for commuting his sentence to life in prison. I therefore respectfully
request that you give serious consideration to granting executive clemency to
Mr. Smith.
Nothing of significance seems to have come
from this initial request for clemency apparently because Mr. Smith’s
legal appeals had not then been exhausted. The Record does indicate, though,
that the Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade (DFAIT)
continued to be interested in Mr. Smith’s case and communicated with him
and with his attorneys on a fairly regular basis.
[8]
In
2007 Mr. Smith’s attorneys and Canadian Consular officials focused their
attention once again on the issue of clemency. On February 13, 2007 Canadian
Consul General, Michael Fine, met with legal counsel for the Montana Governor
to discuss Mr. Smtih’s case. In a DFAIT Case Note dated February 21, 2007
the outcome of that meeting was described as follows:
Consul General Michael Fine met with Ann
Brodsky, Legal Counsel for Montana Governor Brian Schweitzer, on February 13,
2007. Mr. Fine also met with Governor Schweitzer on that date but
subject’s case was not discussed as members of the media were present. Ms.
Brodsky indicated that they are still willing to consider options, however,
they are waiting for the conclusion of the current Legislative Session in
mid-April. She also indicated that they would want some type of guarantee that
subject would spend at least five years in prison in Canada should a transfer
occur.
[9]
On
July
19, 2007
Mr. Smith’s attorneys met with the Governor’s staff to discuss clemency.
In an email the next day to Consular Officer Kimberley Lewis, they described
the Governor’s views and the need for the assistance of the Canadian Government
in the following terms:
Further, it was obvious from the meeting
that the Governor is weighing the political considerations/ramifications of a
decision to commute. In that regard, it was equally obvious that the lynch pin
to a decision to commute is going to be the Canadian government and their
desire for Ron Smith’s commutation and return to Canada.
Finally, as you know, Ron has been
incarcerated in the US for 24 years. He is tired
and losing hope of winning in the courts and returning to Canada. He has in recent years
witnessed most of the other death row inmates’ executions. Thus, if we are
unsuccessful in the commutation effort, we anticipate that he will demand that
his appeals be dismissed and that he will “volunteer” to be executed – as did
David Dawson last year.
Thus, in our opinion time is of the
essence for this to move forward. While Don and I can handle the mechanics of
the application for commutation and hearing on that application, realistically
it will only happen if Canada actively pushes for and
negotiates the decision to commute with Governor Schweitzer. In the absence of
a prior agreement of the Governor to commute Ron’s sentence, it would be unrealistic
for us to proceed with a commutation application at this time.
We appreciate all of your help and would
be happy to discuss this more with you. If you have any questions, please feel
free to give us a call.
On September 10, 2007 Mr. Smith’s
attorney, Gregory Jackson, wrote to Ms. Lewis to again emphasize the
importance of Canadian Government assistance:
Consequently, it appears to us that
unless the Canadian Consulate can “carry the ball” and secure a commitment from
Governor Schweitzer on the commutation issue, that we are placed in the
position of pursuing the appeals, risking a loss of that appeal and risking
Ron’s execution or volunteering to be executed. As we are nearing the end of
the appeal process, these are all very real possibilities.
Please let us know your thoughts on the
situation. Thank you again for your assistance.
[10]
The
Canadian Government’s decision to withdraw its longstanding support for
Mr. Smith seems to have been made very quickly and without any widespread
or considered consultation. On October 26, 2007 Randy Boswell, a reporter with
CanWest News Service, asked for a response from DFAIT in connection with a
United States news report referring to earlier clemency deliberations between
the Montana Governor and Canadian officials. The initial response given by
DFAIT was that the government’s clemency policy had not changed and that
support for Mr. Smith’s case would continue on humanitarian grounds. But
on October 30, 2007 Mr. Boswell made further enquires of the Department of
Public Safety and was told that “there are no ongoing efforts by our Government
to seek a commutation of the death penalty for Mr. Smith”. This response
was quickly followed by a number of exchanges in the House of Commons where the
Government was asked to explain its position.
[11]
On
November 1, 2007 the Minister of Public Safety, the Honourable Stockwell Day,
told Parliament that “[w]e will not actively pursue bringing back to Canada murderers
who have been tried in a democratic country that supports the rule of law.”
This was followed by a similar statement in the House by the Government Leader,
the Honourable Peter Van Loan, on November 2,
2007.
[12]
On
November 20, 2007 the Minister of Justice and Attorney General of Canada, the
Honourable Rob Nicholson, told Parliament that each case for clemency
assistance would be examined “on its merits” but “in the case of the individual
[Mr. Smith] who was the multiple murderer” no further help would be forthcoming.
[13]
On
November
22, 2007
Minister Nicholson advised Parliament that the Government’s new clemency policy
was as follows:
What we have indicated, though, and I
will repeat this for the hon. member, is that multiple murderers and mass
murderers who are convicted in a democracy that adheres to the rule of law
cannot necessarily count on a plea for clemency from the Canadian
government and patriation back to this country. That message should be very
clear.
[Emphasis added.]
[14]
Minister
Nicholson’s statement was followed on November 28,
2007
by a statement in Parliament from his Parliamentary Secretary, Rob Moore:
With respect to clemency, as the Minister
of Justice has said, our government will deal with the issue on a case by case
basis. Potentially, if another country will only grant clemency on the basis of
the offender being repatriated to Canada, we may have difficulty inasmuch as an
offender who has committed murder abroad could potentially be eligible for
parole in Canada and subsequently be free to
live in our communities.
As is evident from our ambitious justice
agenda, our government's first priority is to protect Canadians. We would be
abdicating that responsibility by the potential release of a murderer,
particularly one who has committed not one but multiple murders.
I am confident that Canadians do not want
murderers free to roam our streets, especially if they have not served a
sentence proportionate to the seriousness of their crime.
[15]
On
January 31, 2008 the Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Foreign
Affairs, Deepak Obhrai, told Parliament that “[i]n cases where Canadians face
the death penalty abroad, the Government of Canada, on a case by case basis,
based on what is in the best interest of Canada, will continue to consider
whether to seek clemency”.
[16]
On
March
31, 2008
the Minister of Foreign Affairs, the Honourable Maxime Bernier, in a
Parliamentary exchange with the Honourable Irwin Cotler presented what appears
to be the most detailed version of the Government’s policy:
Question No. 194 - Hon. Irwin Cotler:
With regards to Canadians sentenced to
death abroad, does the government have a clemency policy and, if so: (a) when
was this new policy adopted; (b) which Ministers, departments, agencies, and
officials were responsible for the creation of this policy; (c) what factors
are considered in a clemency determination; (d) what specific information is
collected by Foreign Affairs and consular officials when evaluating clemency
requests; (e) what criteria must one meet to be granted clemency; (f) what
process exists for review of clemency determinations by the government; (g)
what oversight process exists for clemency determinations by the government;
(h) how does a person apply for clemency protection under this process; (i) is
there an appeal process for clemency determinations under this policy; and (j)
which Minister, Ministry, Department, Agency, or officials will make clemency
determinations for the government?
Hon. Maxime Bernier (Minister of Foreign
Affairs, CPC):
Mr. Speaker, in response to (a), as of
October 31, 2007, the Government has clearly stated that it will address
requests for clemency on a case by case basis.
In response to (b) and (j), the Minister
of Foreign Affairs has the responsibility under the Department of Foreign
Affairs Act to conduct all diplomatic and consular relations on behalf of the
Government of Canada, which includes any representations to a foreign
government requesting clemency.
In response to (c), (d) and (e), relevant
factors would include all the details of the individual case and reference to
applicable international standards on the death penalty.
In response to (f), (g), (h) and (i), the
Government of Canada's position has been very clear with respect to this matter.
Canadian citizens detained abroad will continue to receive consular assistance.
In cases where Canadians face the death penalty abroad, the Government of Canada will continue to consider
whether to seek clemency on a case by case basis.
[Emphasis added.]
[17]
Except
for the various Parliamentary statements noted above and a variety of similar
press statements attributed to Government Ministers and representatives, the
Respondents have provided no evidence of a new Canadian Government policy on
clemency or with respect to the decision to deny further support to
Mr. Smith’s bid for clemency. The Record before me also establishes that
the Government did not seek any input from Mr. Smith or from his legal
advisors before it decided to withdraw its support.
II. Issues
[18]
(a) Are
the issues raised in this proceeding justiciable and, if the issues are
justiciable, did the Respondents breach a duty of fairness in the manner of
their withdrawal of diplomatic assistance for the Applicant’s pending petition
for clemency?
(b) Does
the government’s asserted policy concerning the provision of diplomatic
assistance for clemency for Canadians facing the death penalty abroad violate
the Charter or contravene ss. 10(2)(a), 10(2)(i) and 10(2)(j) of the Department
of Foreign Affairs and International Trade Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. E-22?
III. Analysis
[19]
The
issues presented by this case are unique and, in some measure, the relief that
Mr. Smith seeks would extend the previously recognized boundaries of
Canadian law.
[20]
The
issue of the extradition of an accused to face potential execution has been
thoroughly addressed by the Supreme Court of Canada in United States of
America v. Burns, [2001] 1 S.C.R. 283. The Burns decision was
followed by Suresh v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2002 SCC 1, [2002] 1 S.C.R. 3, which involved
the issue of deportation to potential torture or death. In both cases, the
Court examined the balance that must be struck between the need to protect the
safety of the public and the importance of maintaining respect for liberty, the
rule of law and the principles of fundamental justice. Neither of these
decisions concerned a situation like that of Mr. Smith who is outside of Canada and,
therefore, beyond the effective control of Canadian authorities.
[21]
In
Burns and Suresh there was found to be a sufficient connection
between the conduct of the Canadian government and the risk of execution or
torture because the government was not “merely a passive participant” in the
processes giving rise to those risks. In both cases the Court prevented the
Government from taking a step which was causally linked to the foreign risks
they each faced. Here the situation is different because the Canadian
government has no control over Mr. Smith and no control of the legal
process which has put him at risk of execution in Montana. The most
that Mr. Smith can expect from his Government is that it exert its influence
on the Montana Governor in support of his bid for clemency. But, as noted
above, the Government wishes to remain passive to his plight.
[22]
The
Respondents say that the Canadian Government owes no justiciable legal duties
to Mr. Smith because the decision not to support him falls squarely within
the Crown prerogative to conduct Canada’s foreign affairs
including the right to speak freely with a foreign state on all such matters. They
also contend that no duty of procedural fairness arises where the interventions
being sought will not be determinative of Mr. Smith’s fate and where their
potential efficacy is a matter of supposed speculation.
[23]
The
Respondents do acknowledge that the general principle of non-justiciability is
subject to constitutional obligations and to situations where individual rights
or private law interests are engaged. But they assert that this case is only
about the government’s decision to adopt a new foreign policy on clemency for
Canadians facing the death penalty in other countries. This, they say, is
fundamentally a matter involving political and morality-based choices lacking a
sufficient legal component to allow for judicial review. In making this
argument the Respondents rely heavily upon the decision of the England and
Wales Court of Appeal in Abbasi v. Secretary of State for Foreign and
Commonwealth Affairs, [2002] All E.R. 70, [2002] E.W.J. No. 4947 (C.A.),
and on the Ontario Court of Appeal decision in Black v.Canada (Prime
Minister)(2001), 54 O.R. (3d) 215, [2001] O.J. No. 1853 (C.A.).
[24]
Abbasi was a case involving
a British citizen who was detained by the United States Government in Guantanamo
Bay,
Cuba. The British
Foreign Office had intervened, in some measure, with the American authorities
on behalf of Mr. Abbasi but he sought an order to compel British officials
to do more. Ultimately the Court declined to grant relief to Mr. Abbasi
and there is no question that this unwillingness to intervene was based on a
recognition of the non-justiciability of executive decisions involving finely
nuanced and multi-faceted political judgments. The decision also applied a
line of “formidable” authorities which had declared matters involving the
content of high-foreign policy and the exercise of “delicate diplomacy” to be
immune from judicial review.
[25]
The
Abbasi decision makes it quite clear, though, that where the application
of foreign policy requires certain criteria to be satisfied, the process of
decision-making – as distinct from its content – may be subject to judicial
review. Thus in cases where the application of policy involves a fair
consideration of relevant factors, the refusal of the decision-maker to even
consider an individual claim to relief may attract judicial review. The Court in
Abbasi also observed that judicial review may be available where the
exercise of executive discretion to refuse support to a citizen was “irrational
or contrary to legitimate expectation”. These qualifications to the
non-justiciability principle were described in the following passages:
99. What then is the nature of the
expectation that a British subject in the position of Mr Abbasi can
legitimately hold in relation to the response of the government to a request
for assistance? The policy statements that we have cited underline the very
limited nature of the expectation. They indicate that where certain criteria
are satisfied, the government will "consider" making representations.
Whether to make any representations in a particular case, and if so in what
form, is left entirely to the discretion of the Secretary of State. That gives
free play to the "balance" to which Lord Diplock referred in GCHQ.
The Secretary of State must be free to give full weight to foreign policy
considerations, which are not justiciable. However, that does not mean the
whole process is immune from judicial scrutiny. The citizen's legitimate
expectation is that his request will be "considered", and that in
that consideration all relevant factors will be thrown into the balance.
100. One vital factor, as the policy
recognises, is the nature and extent of the injustice, which he claims to have
suffered. Even where there has been a gross miscarriage of justice, there may
perhaps be overriding reasons of foreign policy which may lead the Secretary of
State to decline to intervene. However, unless and until he has formed some
judgment as to the gravity of the miscarriage, it is impossible for that
balance to be properly conducted.
[…]
104. The extreme case where judicial
review would lie in relation to diplomatic protection would be if the Foreign
and Commonwealth Office were, contrary to its stated practice, to refuse even
to consider whether to make diplomatic representations on behalf of a subject
whose fundamental rights were being violated. In such, unlikely, circumstances
we consider that it would be appropriate for the court to make a mandatory order
to the Foreign Secretary to give due consideration to the applicant's case.
[…]
106.
We would
summarise our views as to what the authorities establish as follows:
[…]
iv. It is highly likely that any
decision of the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, as to whether to make
representations on a diplomatic level, will be intimately connected with
decisions relating to this country's foreign policy, but an obligation to
consider the position of a particular British citizen and consider the extent
to which some action might be taken on his behalf, would seem unlikely itself
to impinge on any forbidden area.
[26]
The
Ontario Court of Appeal decision in Black contains a thorough and
considered review of the principles of justiciability in the Canadian foreign
policy context. The Court held that it is the subject matter of the power
being exercised and not its source (statutory, prerogative, etc.) that dictates
whether a decision is justiciable. This was said to involve a consideration of
the appropriateness of a Court deciding a particular issue instead of deferring
to other decision-making institutions. Decisions involving pure policy or political
choices in the nature of Crown prerogatives are generally not amenable to
judicial review because their subject matter is not suitable to judicial
assessment. But where the subject matter of a decision directly affects the
rights or legitimate expectations of an individual, a Court is both competent
and qualified to review it. In making this distinction Justice Laskin cited
with approval the House of Lords decision in Council of Civil Service Unions
v. Minister for Civil Service, [1984] 3 All E.R. 935, [1985] A.C. 374 where
at p. 408 Lord Diplock held that even the exercise of a Crown prerogative
was judicially reviewable where an individual is deprived of some benefit or
advantage which had been enjoyed in the past. According to Lord Diplock an
expectation of continuing advantage is only removable by the Crown on rational
grounds and where the affected person has had the opportunity to comment.
[27]
The
interest at stake in the Black case was the potential conferral by the
Queen of a Royal Peerage. Mr. Black made no assertion that he had been
denied procedural fairness but only that the Prime Minister’s negative
intervention with the Queen had been based on wrong legal advice and a mistaken
interpretation of Canadian honours policy. Perhaps in keeping with Canadian
sensibilities, Justice Laskin held that the potential grant of a British honour
did not engage an important individual interest or give rise to real adverse
consequences for Mr. Black. Justice Laskin also discussed the Crown
prerogative of mercy (pardon) which has traditionally been viewed as beyond the
scope of judicial review. Nevertheless, Justice Laskin said that the discretion
to grant a pardon could raise important liberty or personal interests which
would attract procedural rights: see Black, above, at para. 55.
[28]
From
these and other authorities it is clear that, subject to Parliament and to the
Constitution, it is open to the Government of Canada in its assessment of the
public interest to freely change its policies from time to time. The
development of broad public policy is, after all, an exercise of the executive
function which is generally not amenable to judicial review. Similarly, I
accept that the exercise of the prerogative to develop and implement diplomatic
and foreign policy initiatives is generally beyond the scope of judicial
scrutiny.
[29]
At
the other end of the spectrum of government decision-making are decisions of an
administrative character which affect the rights, privileges or interests of an
individual: see Cardinal v. Director of Kent Institution, [1985] 2
S.C.R. 643, 24 D.L.R. (4th) 44 at p. 653 and Black, above, at para. 51.
Such decisions are reviewable and they are subject to the principles of
procedural fairness.
Where Does
this Decision Fit on the Justiciability Continuum?
[30]
In
order to resolve the issue of justiciability in this case it is necessary to
properly characterize the decision under review. The Respondents argue that
the withdrawal of clemency support for Mr. Smith was merely the incidental
consequence of applying a new policy on clemency. Mr. Smith contends that
the Government’s characterization of the decision as a policy choice is mere
camouflage for a decision which very deliberately and singularly targeted him.
[31]
In
my view the Respondents’ argument misses the point. Even if there was a
discernable change in the Government’s clemency policy it is fallacious to say
that that alone constitutes the decision under review in this case. At some
point someone with the authority to do so had to apply any new clemency policy
to Mr. Smith to determine whether he fit within it. That is where
Mr. Smith’s specific and considerable interests were at stake and where
the Government owed him a clear duty of fairness.
[32]
The
Respondents’ justiciability argument is also entirely dependent on the
existence of a new government clemency policy and, on the evidence before me,
it is quite obvious there was no such policy. Various Government
representatives had advanced views on what a new policy ought to be but there
is no evidence of a consensus or of a policy decision being taken by anyone. I
also have no idea who made the de facto decision to withdraw Government
support for Mr. Smith or which of the contradictory statements of policy
were applied to his case.
[33]
If
the new Government policy was represented by the views of Minister Bernier as
stated in Parliament on March 31, 2008, Mr. Smith was entitled to have his
case individually reviewed on the basis of all relevant mitigating and
aggravating factors including applicable international standards on the death
penalty. The Respondents have produced no evidence of any such review and it
is reasonable to conclude that none was done.
[34]
If
the new Government clemency policy was represented by the views of
Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Justice and Attorney General Rob
Moore, as stated in Parliament on November 28, 2007, clemency support was to be
determined on a case by case basis including consideration of the possible
obligation to accept repatriation of the offender to Canada and whether the
sentence already served was appropriate to the seriousness of the crime. This version
of the supposed policy would have required the decision-maker to determine if
repatriation of Mr. Smith was a pre-condition to the grant of clemency.
The evidence on this point is only that the Governor of Montana had raised
repatriation of Mr. Smith and the length of his Canadian incarceration as
issues but that they had not been presented by the Governor as absolute
pre-conditions to clemency.
In any event the Government of Canada did not have the unilateral authority to
agree to those conditions and, accordingly, the Governor of Montana could not
reasonably insist upon their fulfillment as conditions to the grant of
clemency. If repatriation of Mr. Smith was the determinative issue for
assisting his clemency request in accordance with a new Government clemency
policy it was clearly premature for the Government to withdraw its support when
it did. I also have no evidence here that anyone in authority considered the
sufficiency of the 25 years that Mr. Smith has spent on death-row under
threat of execution. While he may not yet have served a sentence proportionate
to the seriousness of his crimes, there still would have to be some
consideration of those facts if the Government’s clemency policy included such
an assessment.
[35]
Even
though the Respondents were unable to produce an official statement of the
Government’s supposed new clemency policy, the Court was invited to divine or
to construct such a policy from the various public statements made by Ministers
of the Crown and by other government representatives. When asked, counsel for
the Respondents indicated that such an analysis would lead the Court to the
following version of the new policy:
The Government will not intervene in
clemency applications by a Canadian facing a capital sentence in a democratic
country that honours the rule of law.
When counsel for the Respondents was then
asked if the above version constituted the Government’s official clemency
policy, the surprising answer was “no”. He asserted only that this version
represented his best attempt to construct the policy from available public
sources and that he was authorized by the Respondents to put it forward on that
basis only.
[36]
It
is perhaps not altogether surprising that the Court was invited to accept that
the Government’s new clemency policy was as stated above. That version would
presumably apply to Mr. Smith because he was sentenced – indeed repeatedly
sentenced – in a democratic jurisdiction which follows the rule of law. That
version of a clemency policy essentially removes any element of discretion in
its application. However, when counsel for the Respondents was asked if that
statement of the policy allowed for any exceptions including situations
involving young offenders or persons with intellectual challenges, his response
was that the policy might be changed if the circumstances required it. In
other words, even that version of the policy was variable if it was found to be
wanting in a particular case.
[37]
In
the end, of course, the Respondents’ arguments about the supposed clemency
policy are wholly without merit. Government policy cannot be created by a
process as amorphous and unaccountable as the one followed here. Government
policy is not and cannot be the sum total of contradictory public statements of
its ministers and spokespersons made inside or outside of Parliament. While
the Government is generally free to change its policies there must still be a
tangible and intelligible articulation of any policy before it can be applied
to a case like Mr. Smith’s. Mr. Smith was entitled to know precisely
what the new clemency policy was before it was applied to his situation. He
could not be expected to discern the policy by sorting through the inconsistent
versions offered by various Government representatives.
[38]
The
decision to withdraw clemency support from Mr. Smith did not involve the
exercise of a legislative function nor can it be properly characterized as a
decision made on broad grounds of public policy. Even with a new clemency policy
the decision to apply it would involve a subject matter of grave and specific concern
to Mr. Smith: see Canada (Attorney General) v.
Inuit Tapirisat of Canada, [1980] 2
S.C.R. 735, 115 D.L.R. (3rd) 1 at para. 30. As was observed by Justice Marc Noël
in Canadian Shipowners Assn. v. Canada, [1995] F.C.J. No. 1420, 103
F.T.R. 170 at para. 24, the more personal the nature of the issue, the more
likely that a government decision will lose its legislative character and the
more the principle of fairness becomes applicable.
[39]
In
R. v. Secretary of State for the Home Department, Ex p Bugdaycay, [1987]
1 All E.R. 940, [1987] AC 514 (H.L.) the significance of the matter in issue
was also said to inform the scope of judicial review or as Lord Bridge stated
at page 531:
[…] The most fundamental of all human
rights is the individual’s right to life and when an administrative decision
under challenge is said to be one which may put the applicant’s life at risk,
the basis of the decision must surely call for the most anxious scrutiny.
In the realm of diplomatic assistance to
citizens in legal trouble in foreign jurisdictions everything pales in
significance to the cause of one’s imminent execution and the corresponding
interest in avoiding it. One would expect, therefore, that any decision by the
Canadian Government to withdraw clemency support for a person in such a
predicament would also attract the most rigorous and anxious scrutiny by the
decision-maker and, where that is not evident, by the supervising Court.
[40]
My
concern, then, is not with the authority of this Court to tell the Canadian
Government how to formulate foreign policy or how to conduct its business with
the Governor of Montana but, rather, with the Court’s obligation to ensure that
the Government’s decisions in that regard are made fairly and with appropriate
regard to Mr. Smith’s legal interests. This is a matter which is
indisputably justiciable and which attracts a duty of fairness.
Estoppel, Reasonable
Expectations and the Duty of Fairness
[41]
I
do not agree with counsel for Mr. Smith that the Government’s prior
support for clemency creates an estoppel in law. There is no evidence that
Mr. Smith has suffered any detriment caused by the Government’s earlier
conduct. I accept that some time and effort has been expended over the years
with a view to engaging the support of the Canadian Government and
Mr. Smith may have sustained some sort of a psychological set back by the
decision to withdraw that support, but those are not matters which satisfy the
requirement for detrimental reliance.
[42]
Mr.
Smith’s interests were, however, particularly affected in this instance because
he was caught in the middle of a transition from a position of full clemency
support to a position of no support. The legal significance of such a reversal
of position for the procedural rights of an interested party was considered by
the Supreme Court of Canada in Mount Sinai Hospital Center v.
Quebec (Minister of Health and Social Services), 2001 SCC 41, [2001] 2
S.C.R. 281 at para. 16 where Justice Binnie observed:
[…] It is true, as the appellant points
out, that the Minister's [page 297] power under s. 138 is framed as a
broad policy discretion to be exercised "in the public interest". Yet
the discretion, however broadly framed, is not unfettered. At the very least
the Minister must exercise the power for the purposes for which it was granted:
Roncarelli v. Duplessis, [1959] S.C.R. 121, at p. 140; Padfield v.
Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food, [1968] A.C. 997 (H.L.), at p.
1030. The Minister must observe procedural fairness in dealing with the
respondents' interests in their application for a permit: Cardinal v.
Director of Kent Institution, [1985] 2 S.C.R. 643; Nicholson v.
Haldimand-Norfolk Regional Board of Commissioners of Police, [1979] 1
S.C.R. 311. Other limitations are more controversial. Where, as here, the
Minister makes representations by word or conduct that someone will receive or
retain a benefit, or that some procedural right will be afforded before a
decision is taken, the availability and/or content of procedural fairness may
be enlarged under the doctrine of legitimate expectation: [authorities
omitted.]
[Emphasis added.]
I have no hesitation whatsoever in finding
that the reversal of the Government’s position after more than 20 years of
unqualified assistance to Mr. Smith gave rise to a reasonable expectation
that any decision to withdraw support would not be applied without a full
consultation with him and with his legal advisors followed by a fair and
objective consideration of the appropriateness of applying any new policy to
the facts of his case. That determination would be required to consider the
implications arising from the Government’s midstream and very late reversal of
the earlier decision to afford him full support. Fairness also requires that
there be a clear articulation of any new clemency policy such that
Mr. Smith could understand it and an appropriate decision-maker could
fairly apply it. Absent such clarity, any resulting decision will always be arbitrary
and unlawful. Finally, Mr. Smith is also entitled to a clear and consistent
articulation of the reasons for the Government’s reversal of its position.
[43]
The
failure by the Government to recognize any of these procedural rights
represents a fundamental breach of the duty of fairness and the decision to
withdraw support from Mr. Smith for clemency must on that basis be set
aside.
Does it
Matter that the Canadian Government Is Not the Ultimate Decision-Maker?
[44]
I
do not agree with the Respondents that the duty of fairness is not engaged in
this case because the actions of the Government will not be determinative of
the clemency outcome. The right to fair treatment is engaged whenever a
decision is “a significant one and has an important impact on the individual”:
see Indian Head School Division No. 19 v. Knight, [1990] 1 S.C.R. 653, 69
D.L.R. (4th) 489 at para. 39. It is not correct to say that the decision to
withdraw support from Mr. Smith was akin to a preliminary investigation
where the result may or may not be considered by the ultimate decision-maker.
From Mr. Smith’s perspective the result of the Government’s decision to
withdraw support is final and he has no other Canadian recourse.
Is the Evidence Concerning the Value of
Government Intervention in the Clemency Process Speculative?
[45]
I
also do not agree with the Respondents’ characterization of the potential value
of the Government’s assistance as speculative. They contend that the impact of
Government support for Mr. Smith’s clemency petition is a matter of
conjecture because there is “no empirical evidence to back up the claim that
foreign governments have a significant influence in executive clemency
proceedings”. While it is true that much of the evidence bearing on this issue
is anecdotal, opinion-based or experiential, it is, in my view, sufficient to
support an inference that Canadian Government support for clemency will, in all
probability, have a significant influence on the Governor’s decision. I also
do not agree that the expression of expert opinion on this issue is of no
weight or value in drawing an inference with respect to an intangible fact –
that is, with respect to a prospective factual determination. For this I rely
upon the following observations by Justice Bertha Wilson in Operation
Dismantle Inc. v. Canada, [1985] 1 S.C.R. 441, 441 18 D.L.R.
(4th) 481, at para. 78:
78 It has been suggested, however,
that the plaintiffs' claim should be struck out because some of the allegations
contained in it are not matters of fact but matters of opinion and that matters
of opinion, being to some extent speculative, do not fall within the principle
that the allegations of fact in the statement of claim must be taken as proved.
I cannot accept this proposition since it appears to me to imply that a matter
of opinion is not subject to proof. What we are concerned with for purposes of
the application of the principle is, it seems to me, "evidentiary"
facts. These may be either real or intangible. Real facts are susceptible of
proof by direct evidence. Intangible facts, on the other hand, may be proved by
inference from real facts or through the testimony of experts. Intangible facts
are frequently the subject of opinion. The question of the probable cause of a
certain result is a good illustration and germane to the issues at hand. An
allegation that the lack of shower facilities at a defendant's brickworks
probably resulted in a plaintiff employee's skin disease may in lay language
appear to be merely an expression of medical opinion, but it is also in law a
determination which the courts can properly infer from the surrounding facts
and expert opinion evidence: see McGhee v. National Coal Board, [1972] 3
All E.R. 1008 (H.L.). Indeed, even a finding that an event "would
cause" a certain result in the future is a finding of intangible fact. For
example, in Fleming v. Hislop (1886), 11 A.C. 686, it was necessary to
determine whether or not the finding "that the ignition of any other heap
or bing of blaes on said farm or in the vicinity of the pursuers' land would
cause material discomfort and annoyance to the pursuers," was a finding of
fact or a finding of law. It was argued that it could not be a finding of fact
because it related to something that was "prospective, future, not actually
in existence". The Earl of Selborne agreed that, since the thing had not
actually happened, a finding of fact as a thing past was impossible. But it was
nevertheless a finding of fact and "there is a fallacy in saying that,
because the word "would" is a word of futurity, the words "would
cause" do not mean something which is properly a fact" (p. 690). See
also on causation as an issue of fact: Alphacell Ltd v. Woodward, [1972]
2 All E.R. 475 per Lord Salmon, at pp. 489-90:
The nature of causation has been
discussed by many eminent philosophers and also by a number of learned judges
in the past. I consider, however, that what or who has caused a certain event
to occur is essentially a practical question of fact which can best be answered
by ordinary common sense rather than abstract metaphysical theory.
The Canadian Government’s past
interventions on Mr. Smith’s behalf provide the best available evidence on the
likely effect of any future intervention. According to a briefing note signed
by Assistant Deputy Minister (Justice) Carolyn Kobernick, those early informal
representations had elicited some qualified sympathy for clemency from the
Governor of Montana:
DFAIT consular officials have requested
clemency for Mr. Smith on humanitarian grounds since 1997. In February 2007,
the Governor of Montana indicated to our Consul General that they were willing
to consider commuting Mr. Smith’s sentence so he could be transferred back to Canada, but that they would want
some type of guarantee that he would spend at least five years in prison in Canada should a transfer occur.
[46]
Even
the affidavit of the prosecuting attorney in Montana, Thomas J. Esch, did not
suggest that Canada’s
intervention would be of no influence to a clemency decision.
[47]
The
evidence from other deponents in this case overwhelmingly establishes the value
of government intervention on behalf of their nationals facing execution in the
United
States. This is
particularly true in a state like Montana “which does not have a
strong history of executing”.
[48]
I
am satisfied that the good faith assistance of the Government of Canada would
be influential in the exercise of the Governor’s discretion. It is not
possible, of course, to say that such assistance would be determinative of the
clemency outcome but, in my view, it is not necessary to go that far just as it
was not a requirement in either Burns or Suresh, above, to
establish that execution or torture were factual certainties.
What Is the
Government Policy on Clemency?
[49]
The
evidence is clear that until various representatives of the Government of
Canada began to publicly discuss Mr. Smith’s case in 2007 Canada’s official
clemency policy was to support clemency for Canadians facing execution in a
foreign state.
According to Mr. Graham, a former Minister of Foreign Affairs, this policy
allowed for no exceptions and was founded on Canada’s principled
objection to the death penalty – a view which evolved since the practice of
execution was ended here in 1962. This is also a position that is consistent
with Canada’s
long-standing international policy to support the universal abolition of the
death penalty. In the absence of any other policy, this is the policy that the
Government must continue to apply in good faith to Mr. Smith’s case.
Charter and
International Law Issues
[50]
I
was invited by counsel for Mr. Smith to consider the lawfulness of the
Respondents’ decision on Charter grounds. While I agree with counsel for
Mr. Smith that the Government’s decision to withdraw clemency support
could raise important Charter concerns of the sort discussed in Burns,
above, and in Suresh, above, I am mindful of the admonition that Charter
questions should not be determined hypothetically and here I can identify no
new government clemency policy which could be the appropriate subject of a
Charter analysis. Suffice it to say that if there is to be a case where a
person’s s. 7 Charter interests will attract a “positive dimension” requiring
the Government to take affirmative action where it has declined to do so, it
will be a case like this one involving the pending execution of a Canadian
citizen.
[51]
It
was argued on behalf of Mr. Smith that the Government’s conduct has caused
actual harm to his bid for clemency and to his s. 7 Charter rights both because
the withdrawal of support after more than 20 years of assistance sent an
implied negative signal to the Governor of Montana and because various Ministers
spoke disparagingly about him in public. This history of active negative
interference with the process unfolding in the United States was said to
constitute a violation of Mr. Smith’s security interests sufficient to
distinguish his case from that of simple government inaction.
[52]
There
is no merit to the argument that a change in the Government’s position concerning
Mr. Smith should alone advance his claim to Charter relief in this
proceeding. Such a decision, if made fairly and lawfully, may carry adverse
consequences but that is not a sufficient basis to support a claim to Charter
relief.
[53]
The
conduct of some Government representatives in this case is, however, more
problematic. The public statements of some representatives of the Government
implied that
Mr. Smith was personally undeserving
of further support. It may be open to the Government to change its policy on
clemency for Canadians facing foreign execution and it would always be appropriate
to explain such a new policy to Canadians. It is another thing altogether to
make specific unfavourable comments about an individual’s case for relief which
might jeopardize his legal status. In the face of Mr. Smith’s tenuous
situation and the highly politicized nature of the clemency process in the United
States,
such political comments from representatives of the Government were
regrettable. I do not, however, have enough evidence from which I could draw
an inference that those unofficial remarks have caused or are likely to cause
actual harm to Mr. Smith’s pending application for clemency such that a Charter
remedy on that basis alone would be warranted, particularly where I am ordering
the Respondents to implement on behalf of Mr. Smith the previous policy of
universal support for all Canadians facing execution in foreign jurisdictions.
[54]
Mr. Smith
also contends that Canada is obliged by the principles of international
law and ss. 10(2)(a), 10(2)(i), and 10(2)(j) of the DFAIT Act to take
positive steps to protect him. While I do agree that the Government’s decision
to deny clemency assistance to Mr. Smith is hard to reconcile with Canada’s
international commitment to promote respect for international human rights
norms including the universal abolition of the death penalty, I do not agree
that this inconsistency creates a positive legal obligation to act. The
imposition of the death penalty in the United States is not of
itself a violation of international law principles and I do not find the words
of s. 10 of the DFAIT Act to be sufficiently explicit to create the kind of
positive duties of diplomatic protection that Mr. Smith asserts. While
the evolution of international law may be in that direction, I am of the view
that the Charter will provide a sufficient basis for protection such that
resort to international law principles will not be required in an appropriate
case.
[55]
I
also do not read the decision of the United Nations Human Rights Committee
(UNHRC) in Roger Judge v. Canada, Communication No. 829/1998, U.N. Doc.
PR/C/78/D/829/1998 (2003), as expansively as counsel for Mr. Smith urged.
That was a decision dealing with deportation to a death-penalty state. It did
not recognize an international obligation any larger than what has already been
recognized by the Supreme Court of Canada in Burns and Suresh,
above: that is to say that Canada must not “expose a person to the real risk”
of the death penalty in another state such as by agreeing to extradition or
deportation without conditions.
[56]
Whether
international law creates positive obligations of diplomatic protection is
essentially no different a question than whether such an obligation will be recognized
within s. 7 of the Charter. It would be unwise to make such a finding in this
case for the same reason that I have declined to resolve the Charter issues
raised by Mr. Smith.
[57]
Although
it was argued on behalf of Mr. Smith that this Court should order the
Respondents to take steps to facilitate Mr. Smith’s return to Canada such an
order would, in my view, be inappropriate. The process of repatriation is
separate from the clemency process and it involves entirely different
considerations. Furthermore, repatriation is dependant upon the success of
Mr. Smith’s petition for clemency making that part of Mr. Smith’s
claim to relief premature.
IV. Conclusion
[58]
In
the circumstances described above the decision by the Government of Canada to
withdraw support for Mr. Smith was made in breach of the duty of fairness, is
unlawful and is set aside. In the absence of any new clemency policy I am
ordering the Government to continue to apply the former policy of supporting
clemency on behalf of Canadians facing the death penalty in any foreign state to
Mr. Smith. Because no new clemency policy has been established, any claim
to relief on Charter grounds is, at best speculative, and I decline to consider
such grounds on that basis. For the same reason, I decline to consider the
application of international law to this case.
Costs
[59]
It
would be appropriate in this case to hear the parties with respect to the issue
of costs. I will therefore allow the Applicant two weeks to prepare a
submission on costs not to exceed 10 pages in length. The Respondents shall
have a further 10 days to respond with a submission not to exceed 10 pages in
length. The Applicant shall then have 3 days to reply not to exceed 5 pages in
length.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT DECLARES
that the Respondents’
decision to withdraw diplomatic support for the Applicant’s claim to clemency
in the State of Montana was made in breach of the duty of procedural
fairness and is therefore unlawful and invalid.
THIS COURT ADJUDGES that the decision by the Respondents to withdraw diplomatic
support for the Applicant’s claim to clemency in the State of Montana is set
aside.
THIS COURT FURTHER
ADJUDGES that the Respondents shall, on behalf of the Government of Canada
and in consultation with the Applicant and his legal advisors, take all
reasonable steps to support the Applicant’s case for clemency before the
Governor of Montana and his advisors in accordance with the current government
policy.
THIS COURT FURTHER
ADJUDGES that the matter of costs be reserved pending the receipt of
further submissions from the parties.
“ R. L. Barnes ”