Supreme Court of Canada
Marcotte
v. The King, [1950] S.C.R. 352
Date:
1950-06-01
M. Marcotte Appellant;
and
His Majesty The King Respondent.
1950: May 30; 1950: June 1.
Present: Rinfret C.J. and Kerwin, Tasehereau, Kellock and
Cartwright JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF KING'S BENCH, APPEAL SIDE,
PROVINCE OF QUEBEC
Criminal law—Appeal—Special leave—Jurisdiction—Whether
statute giving new right of appeal is retrospective—New trial—Starting point of
proceedings—Same indictment—11-12 Geo. VI, c. 39, s. 42, enacting s. 1025 (1)
Criminal Code.
Held: The amendment to section 1025 (1) of the Criminal
Code, by which any person whose conviction on an indictable offence has
been affirmed by a Court of Appeal may, on any question of law, with special
leave granted by a judge, appeal to this Court, creates a new right of appeal
"which cannot be construed retrospectively so as to cover cases that arose
prior to the new legislation. (Boyer v. The King, [1949] S.C.R. 89.)
[Page 353]
Held: Even though a new trial ordered by the Court of
Appeal was heard subsequent to the coming into force of the new legislation,
appellant cannot avail himself of the amendment as the new trial is not the
starting point of the proceedings—it is merely the reconsideration of the case
under the same indictment.
APPEAL from the judgment of the Court of King's Bench,
appeal side, province of Quebec , dismissing appellant's appeal from his
conviction on a murder charge.
Valmore Bienvenue, K.C. for the appellant.
H. M. Loranger, K.C. for the respondent.
The judgment of the Court was delivered by:
Taschereau, J.:
In September, 1947, the appellant was originally charged with the murder of
Marcel Boileau, and was found guilty in October of the same year. In September,
1948, the Court of King's Bench of the Province of Quebec (Appeal Division)
ordered a new trial which was held in November, 1948, and a second verdict of
murder was rendered by the jury. The Court of King's Bench (Appeal Division)
unanimously confirmed this finding in September, 1949.
Special leave to appeal to this Court was granted on the
21st day of October, 1949.
The respondent now raises the question of jurisdiction of
this Court and submits that the appellant, having been charged in September,
1947, is still subject to the law, as it existed at that time, and that he may
not therefore, even with the permission of one judge, appeal to this Court on a
question of law, as he would have the undisputable right, if the proceedings
had originated on or after the 1st of November, 1948, date on which the new
amendment came into force.
There can be no doubt that special leave to appeal granted
by a judge of this Court under the new amendment, on a question of law, does
not confer jurisdiction on this Court, if otherwise this jurisdiction does not exist.
Special leave to appeal is a condition precedent to the right to appeal, but
the latter is subordinate to the power
[Page 354]
of this Court to hear such an appeal. Moreover, I may add
that when the application for special leave was heard, the question of
jurisdiction of the Court was not raised.
Before the 1st of November, 1948, an accused person,
convicted of a crime, and whose conviction had been unanimously affirmed
by a Court of Appeal, could appeal to this Court by special leave, under
section 1025 of the Criminal Code, only when the judgment of the Court of
Appeal came in conflict with the judgment of any other Court of Appeal in a
like case. However, since the 1st of November, 1948, the law has been amended,
and now any person convicted of an indictable offence, whose conviction has
been affirmed by a Court of Appeal, may on any question of law, with special
leave granted by one judge, appeal to this Court. The jurisdiction of the Court
has thus been considerably extended.
When the appellant made his application for special leave,
he did not attempt to show that the judgment of the Court of Appeal conflicted
with the judgment of another Court of Appeal in a like case, but merely raised
questions of law which he argued, were sufficient under the new 'amendment to
allow his appeal to be heard by the full Court.
It is now said on behalf of the respondent that section 1025
of the Criminal Code as amended, applies only to proceedings that originated
after the 1st of November, 1948, and that in view of the unanimous judgment
of the Court of Appeal, it was imperative upon the appellant in order to obtain
special leave, to show the existence of a conflict.
With this proposition, I entirely agree, as I do not think
that the new amendment which creates a new right of appeal, can be construed
retrospectively, so as to cover cases that arose prior to the legislation. It
is true that the new trial was heard in November, 1948, at a date subsequent to
the coming into force of the new legislation, but this new trial ordered by the
Court of Appeal under the provisions of section 1014 of the Criminal Code, is
not the starting point of the proceedings. It is merely the reconsideration of
a case previously heard in October, 1947, which in the opinion of the Court of Appeal
had
[Page 355]
been illegally tried. The indictment is the same, and the
new trial is therefore the continuation of proceedings started prior to the new
amendment.
In the case of Boyer v. The King ,
the unanimous judgment of the Court of Appeal was given on the 30th of
November, 1948, one month after the coming into force of the amendment. On
behalf of the appellant it was argued that the judgment of the Court of Appeal,
being posterior to the new legislation, he could take advantage of the amendment
and obtain leave to appeal on a question of law. The Chief Justice ,
after consultation with all the members of this Court, held that the amendment
created a new right of appeal, and had no retroactive effect. It therefore did
not apply to pending cases, which, in the view of the Chief Justice, continued
to be governed by the former ss. 1 of s. 1025 Cr. C.
I fail to see how the present case can be distinguished from
the Boyer case, and I would therefore quash the appeal for want of
jurisdiction.
Appeal quashed.
Solicitor for the appellant: Valmore Bienvenue.
Solicitor for the respondent: H. M. Loranger.