Supreme Court of Canada
The Queen v. White, [1956] S.C.R.
154
Date: 1955-12-22
Her Majesty
The Queen And G. J. Archer (Defendants) Appellants;
and
R. C. White (Plaintiff)
Respondent.
1955: October 24, 25, 26;
1955: December 22.
Present: Kerwin C.J., Taschereau,
Rand, Kellock, Estey, Locke and Abbott JJ. Estey J. did not take part in the
judgment on account of illness.
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF
APPEAL FOR BRITISH COLUMBIA
Certiorari—Disciplinary
measures against member of R.C.M.P.—Whether writ available to review
proceedings—R.C.M.P. Act, R.S.C. 1952, c. 241.
This was an application by the respondent, a former member of
the R.C.M.P., for certiorari to remove into the Supreme Court of British
Columbia a record of convictions under the hand of the appellant Archer, a
Superintendent of the R.C.M.P., whereby the respondent was convicted of four
disciplinary charges laid under s. 30 of the R.C.M.P. Act. The trial
judge held that certiorari did not lie since the principles denying review of
disciplinary decisions of military tribunals applied in the present case. The
Court of Appeal reversed this judgment on the ground that the military cases
were not applicable.
Held: The appeal should be allowed and the judgment at
trial restored.
[Page 155]
Per Kerwin C.J., Taschereau, Rand and Kellock JJ.:
Parliament has specified the punishable breaches of discipline and has equipped
the R.C.M.P. with its own courts for dealing with them. Unless the powers given
those courts to deal with domestic discipline are abused to such a degree as
puts action taken beyond the purview of the statute or unless the action is
itself unauthorized, that internal management is not to be interfered with by
any superior court. Nothing has been alleged here and supported by evidence to
show that the proceedings infringed or were outside the authority of either the
statute or those underlying principles of judicial process deemed annexed to
legislation unless impliedly excluded. Little assistance is to be received from
the decisions in matters arising out of the disciplinary or other
administration of other bodies.
Per Locke J.: The proper determination of this matter
does not depend on whether or not the decisions as to the right of certiorari
in courts martial proceedings are applicable. The right of the civil courts to
intervene by way of certiorari is undoubted where it is shown that there has
been either a want of or an excess of jurisdiction in proceedings taken under
ss. 30 and 31 of the R.C.M.P. Act. The proceedings authorized under
these two sections are of a judicial and not executive or administrative
character, and the officer conducting them is obligated to act judicially.
The authority to impose the penalties provided by the Act for
offences defined by the Act does not rest on the agreement of the member made
at the time of his enlistment, but upon the terms of the statute itself, and it
is only those powers authorized to be exercised by that statute that may be
invoked against him. There was nothing in the material filed on the application
to sustain the charges of fraud, bias or excess of or want of jurisdiction. (In
re Mansergh (1861 1 B. & S. 400), Rex v. Army Council: ex
parte Ravenscroft (86 L.J.K.B. 1087) and Heddon v. Evans (35
T.L.R. 642) referred to).
Per Abbott J.: The necessity for maintaining high
standards of conduct and discipline in the R.C.M.P. is just as great as it is
for the armed forces, and in this respect there is no distinction in principle
between the two bodies. Therefore, the authorities which hold that the courts have
no power to interfere with matters of military conduct and military discipline
generally are applicable to matters involving the conduct and discipline of a
force such as the R.C.M.P. The appellant Archer was not acting as a court or
judge, but was an officer dealing summarily with breaches of conduct and
discipline and was administering discipline in accordance with the statute and
regulations to which the respondent voluntarily submitted when he joined the
Force.
APPEAL from the judgment of
the Court of Appeal for British Columbia ,
reversing the judgment of the trial judge on an application for a writ of
certiorari.
D. H. W. Henry, Q.C. and
E. R. Olson for the appellants.
A. Bull, Q.C. for the
respondent.
[Page 156]
The judgment of Kerwin C.J., Taschereau,
Rand and Kellock JJ. was delivered by:—
RAND J.:—This is an appeal from a
judgment of the Court of Appeal for British
Columbia reversing
an order of Wood J. in the Supreme Court refusing certiorari to bring up a
conviction made in a proceeding under the Royal Canadian Mounted Police Act,
R.S.C. 1952, c. 241. The respondent White was a constable of that Force and the
appellant Archer a superintendent by whom the conviction was made.
The complaint against White
contained four charges, the substance of which was that on November 24, 1952 he
conducted himself in a manner unbecoming a member of the Force by condoning the
consumption of intoxicating liquor by a female juvenile, by occupying a room in
a hotel with such a person, by associating with a female of questionable
character, by counseling another constable, his junior in rank, to register at
the hotel under an assumed name, and by being intoxicated, however slightly,
contrary to paragraphs (t), (v) and (c) of s. 30 of the
Police Act. These charges were heard by the superintendent on the 19th and 20th
of January, 1953 and the respondent was convicted of all except that of
counseling his junior to do the act mentioned. A penalty of $100 and a
reduction in rank from corporal to constable was imposed. The fine was reduced
by the Commissioner to $50. Subsequently as of March 31, 1953 White was
dismissed from the Force.
The application set forth fifteen
grounds. In substance they embraced fraud in obtaining the conviction; want and
excess of jurisdiction in procedural irregularities, by the improper admission
of and want of sufficient evidence, in the disqualification of the
superintendent through bias, through being an "advocate or partisan or in
collusion with the prosecution" and in that two of the charges were not
triable by such a tribunal; that the applicant was not advised of the
superintendent's authority to compel witnesses to appear on behalf of the
defence; that a full answer and defence were not allowed, that the charge
"did not in fact constitute any offence as shown in the evidence pur-
[Page 157]
porting to substantiate the
offence"; and by the acceptance of evidence "pertaining to five
separate offences" and adjudicating thereon.
S. 30 of the Act, describing 24
police offences, provides that
every member of the Force,
other than a commissioned officer, who is charged with…
(c) intoxication,
however slight;
(t) scandalous or
infamous behaviour;
(v) conduct
unbecoming a member of the Force …may be forthwith placed under arrest and
detained in custody, to be dealt with under the provisions of this Part.
By s. 31,
(1) The Commissioner, the
Deputy Commissioner and Assistant Commissioner, a superintendent or other
commissioned officer at any post or in any district may, forthwith, on a charge
in writing of any one or more of the offences mentioned in this Act or any
regulation made under the authority hereof being preferred against any member
of the Force, other than a commissioned officer, cause the person so charged to
be brought before him and he shall then and there, in a summary way,
investigate the said charge, and, if proved on oath to his satisfaction, shall
thereof convict the offender; every commissioned officer for the purpose of
this section is empowered to administer the necessary oaths in dealing with a
charge in a summary way.
(2) Any such offender is
liable to a penalty not exceeding one month's pay, or to imprisonment, with
hard labour, for a term, not exceeding one year, or to both fine and
imprisonment, and also to reduction in rank, in addition in any case to any
punishment to which the offender is liable, with respect to such offence, under
any other law in force in the Northwest Territories or the Yukon Territory, or
in the province in which the offence is committed.
S-s. (3) deals with stoppage of
pay when the offender is convicted of absence without leave; s-s. (4) provides
for the case of damage to or loss of Government or other property, for which
the offender may be required to pay, and in the case of rendering himself unfit
for duty, hospital and medical bills incurred; s-s. (6) permits lesser
punishments to be imposed, such as confinement to barracks, reduction in
seniority, extra fatigues or other similar duties, or being reprimanded,
admonished or warned. S. 33 directs that the penalties exacted shall form a
fund applicable to the payment of rewards for good conduct or meritorious
service, the establishment of libraries and recreation rooms
[Page 158]
and for other objects beneficial
to the members of the Force. By s. 43 all fines and sentences of imprisonment
with the record of investigation are to be forthwith reported to the
Commissioner by whom, in his discretion, they may be mitigated or reversed.
In addition to this internal
procedure, for desertion, abstention from duties without leave, refusal to do
duty, refusal to deliver up clothing, arms and accoutrements on discharge or
dismissal, the offender is liable, on summary conviction, to fine and
imprisonment. The demarcation between the two classes seems significant and its
explanation appears to be this: the delinquencies in s. 30 are strictly of
domestic discipline, that is, the member, by joining the Force, has agreed to
enter into a body of special relations, to accept certain duties and
responsibilities, to submit to certain restrictions upon his freedom of action
and conduct and to certain coercive and punitive measures prescribed for
enforcing fulfillment of what he has undertaken. These terms are essential
elements of a status voluntarily entered into which affect what, by the general
law, are civil rights that is, action and behaviour which is not forbidden him
as a citizen.
As gathered from the statute,
what is set up is a police force for the whole of Canada to be
used in the enforcement of the laws of the Dominion, but at the same time
available for the enforcement of law generally in such provinces as may desire
to employ its services. From the beginning it has been stamped with
characteristics of the Army: the mode of organization, its barrack life, the
uniform, address and bearing of the members, esprit de corps and discipline. On
joining the Force he engages for a term of service not exceeding five years, an
engagement which he may be compelled to fulfil, and oaths of allegiance and of
office are taken. That character, essential in the early days of police
functioning in the unsettled territories of the West, has become the badge of
the Force and its record is a matter of common knowledge throughout the
country. It is significant to this feature that by s. 10(2) of the Act it is
declared that
Notwithstanding the
provisions of any Act inconsistent herewith, the Governor in Council has power
to prescribe the rank and seniority in the militia that officers of the Force
shall hold for the purpose of seniority and command when they are serving with
the militia.
[Page 159]
and that by s. 41 of the Militia
Act, R.S.C. 1927, c. 132 it was provided that
Commissions of officers of
the Royal Canadian Mounted Police Force serving with the Militia by order of
the Governor in Council shall for the purpose of seniority and command be
considered equivalent to commissions issued to the officers of the Militia of
corresponding rank from their respective dates according to the following
scale, that is to say:—
Commissioner—as lieutenant-colonel;
Assistant commissioner—on
appointment, as major,—after three years' service, as lieutenant-colonel;
Senior superintendent—as
major;
Other superintendents—as
captains; …
Parliament has specified the
punishable breaches of discipline and has equipped the Force with its own
courts for dealing with them and it needs no amplification to demonstrate the
object of that investment. Such a code is prima facie to be looked upon as
being the exclusive means by which this particular purpose is to be attained.
Unless, therefore, the powers given are abused to such a degree as puts action
taken beyond the purview of the statute or unless the action is itself
unauthorized, that internal management is not to be interfered with by any
superior court in exercise of its long established supervisory jurisdiction
over inferior tribunals. The question, therefore, is whether or not in the
application made before Wood J., including the materials furnished by
affidavit, anything has been alleged and supported by evidence to show that the
proceedings infringed or were outside the authority of either the statute or
those underlying principles of judicial process to be deemed annexed to
legislation unless excluded by its implications.
S. 31 directs and authorizes a
superintendent in a summary way to "investigate" the charge and if
proved "on oath to his satisfaction" to convict. What is being
carried out is not a trial in the ordinary sense but an enquiry for the purpose
of administration and the mere fact that Parliament has authorized fines and
imprisonment does not affect that fact: the contemplated standards of conduct
and behaviour of members of the Force are being maintained.
Many of the grounds taken are the
usual objections to an ordinary conviction, but that mistakes the nature of
what is challenged. On fraud there is not a semblance of evidence offered: and
as for the others I put all of them aside except that alleging bias in the
superintendent. If,
[Page 160]
taking into account the statutory
provisions and the principles mentioned, the officer sitting in judgment on the
constable is biased, then he would be disqualified unless, having regard to the
character of the Force and to the persons upon whom the function of discipline
has been conferred, that conclusion is negatived.
Like an army group, the rank and
file are in close association with officers; there is a daily interchange of
orders, instructions and reports, and the general conduct and performance of
the men comes under continuous and close observation. All are in duty bound to
see that in every respect the standards of efficiency and obedience are
preserved, and this is the special obligation of officers. In such a self-contained
establishment the governing traditions gradually evolved become the instinctive
inheritance of one generation of members from another. When s. 31 authorizes a
superintendent "or other commissioned officer at any post or in any
district" to investigate charges and on proof to his satisfaction to
convict the offender, it contemplates an administration of discipline by men
sharing a special life in which those who are to be judged participate.
It was said that the
superintendent had been furnished with statements of what had taken place and
had edited or formulated the charges, but such steps in disciplinary
administration, if only for the purpose of formal accuracy, are inevitable. He
was said, during the course of the hearing, to have had dinner with the
prosecutor, an inspector of the Force, and one of the witnesses: but whatever
the purpose and however questionable the judgment exercised by the
superintendent, it could not on what is before the Court nullify the
proceedings. Parliament has placed reliance for the proper execution of this
important function in the responsibility and integrity of these officers. The
very existence of the Force as it is conceived depends upon this administration
by men of high character, and the Act contemplates the proceedings of
discipline to be what may be called as of domestic government. If, within the
scope of authority granted, wrongs are done individuals, and that is not beyond
possibility, the appeal must be to others than to civil tribunals, or, as in
the case of the Army, they must be looked upon as a necessary price paid for
the vital purposes of the Force.
[Page 161]
Most of the offences enumerated
in s. 30 call for judgment based on long experience in the service. The daily
round of duty of the superintendent and other officers and the knowledge and
information of the experience and vicissitudes of the Force inevitably reaching
them were known to Parliament which gave to them the power of disciplinary
adjudication; and if the circumstances objected to here were to be held to
invalidate such investigations the intendment of the statute would, in large
degree, be frustrated. The Commissioner and his staff preserve and create the
standards and they are best able to appreciate departures from them.
We were referred to a great many
decisions in matters arising out of the disciplinary or other administration of
such bodies as ordinary police forces, fire departments, licensing and local
boards, but from these I receive little assistance. The nearest analogy is the
law of the Army. In Sutton v. Johnstone ,
although the reasons of Gould J., delivering the opinion of the judges, are not
available, the House of Lords seems to have held that no action lay for
malicious prosecution in a court-martial and in Dawkins v. Lord
Rokeby , that
judgment was treated generally to have been to that effect by Willes J. in a
dictum which remitted to the military law itself the only remedy for such a
wrong: in Dawkins v. Lord Rokeby , an
action for libel, the absolute privilege of those engaged in legal proceedings
of common law courts, judges, counsel, witnesses, was declared for military
courts of enquiry: and in Dawkins v. Paulet
, in an action for libel in a letter written to a superior officer in the
course of military duty a replication that the letter had been written
maliciously was held bad.
What the expression "disciplinary
powers" means includes at least sanctions wielded within a group executing
a function of a public or quasi-public nature where obedience to orders and
dependability in carrying them out are, for the safety and security of the
public, essential and their maintenance of standards the immediate duty of
every member. This distinguishes the case from such bodies as legal or medical
societies of which the members carry on
[Page 162]
their profession independently of
the governing body which, in this respect, is concerned only with the
investigation of complaints placed before it.
It was argued by the Attorney
General of Canada that the disciplinary jurisdiction in the case before us was
within the scope of criminal law as committed to the Dominion by the
Confederation Act and that, therefore, no appeal lay to the Court of Appeal
from the refusal of Wood J. to issue the order, but in the view I take of the
case, I find it unnecessary to pass upon that contention.
I would, therefore, allow the
appeal, set aside the judgment of the Court of Appeal and restore the order of
the court of first instance. There will be no costs in this Court or in the
Court of Appeal.
LOCKE J.:—Upon the application of
the respondent, a summons was issued out of the Vancouver Registry of the
Supreme Court of British Columbia on July 4, 1953, directed to the appellant
Archer, a Superintendent of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, to the Attorney
General of British Columbia and two other named officers of the Force, giving
notice that the appellant would on July 20, 1953,
move for a writ of certiorari to remove into that court a certain record
of convictions under the hand of the said Archer, as Superintendent, made on
January 22, 1953, whereby the respondent was found guilty of four charges laid
under the provisions of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police Act.
In support of the application,
the respondent filed his own affidavit and those of eight other persons
containing statements which, it was apparently thought, supported the right of
the applicant to claim the issue of such a writ.
The summons came on for hearing
before Wood J. and was dismissed. That learned Judge was of the opinion that
the Royal Canadian Mounted Police Force was constituted on a military basis,
that the principles applicable to the issuance of writs of certiorari in
relation to the proceedings of military tribunals applied to disciplinary
measures such as this taken against constables of the Force, and that certiorari
did not lie. Holding this view, he did not discuss the facts disclosed in the
various supporting affidavits or the question as to whether they disclosed any
want of jurisdiction on the part of the Superintendent to find the
[Page 163]
respondent guilty of the charges,
or as to whether there had been any act done by him in excess of his
jurisdiction.
The respondent appealed to the
Court of Appeal and, by
the unanimous judgment of that court, the appeal was allowed. The formal order
of the Court adjudges:—
That the said appeal be and
the same is hereby allowed and this matter be and it is hereby remitted to the
Supreme Court of British Columbia for hearing and determination.
It would appear from the reasons
for judgment delivered by the learned Chief Justice of British Columbia,
speaking on behalf of the Court, that the only question considered was as to
whether certiorari would lie to remove into court convictions under the
hand of a Superintendent of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police Force. Differing
from the view expressed by Wood J., the Court expressed the opinion that the
cases dealing with writ of certiorari in the case of convictions by Army
Courts Martial, of which Rex v. Army Council: ex parte Ravenscroft
is an example, were inapplicable to proceedings of the nature referred to under
the Royal Canadian Mounted Police Act (c. 160, R.S.C. 1927; c. 241,
R.S.C. 1952). No opinion was expressed as to whether the affidavits filed on
the application before Wood J. justified the granting of the writ and that
question has, accordingly, been neither considered or determined in either
court.
The procedure for obtaining the
issue of writs of certiorari in British
Columbia is to be found in the Crown
Office Rules (civil), which are simply a transcript of the English Rules of
1886 and, for convenience of reference, the English numbering was adopted in British Columbia. Rule 28 provides that the application shall, except in vacation, be
made for an order nisi to show cause. It has been held in England that,
while the writ is demandable as of absolute right by the Crown, it is granted
to the subject at the discretion of the court (Short and Mellor Crown
Practice, 2nd Ed. 15). The cases cited support this statement.
While cause was shown against an
order nisi, no material was filed by those to whom the summons was
directed.
Had the dismissal of the
application been made by Wood J. in the exercise of his judicial discretion, or
had
[Page 164]
the Court of Appeal done more
than to determine as a matter of law that the principles which have been
enunciated in dealing with applications for writs of certiorari directed
to proceedings before courts martial were inapplicable, it would be necessary
for us to consider whether any appeal lay to this Court, by reason of the
provisions of s. 44 of the Supreme Court Act. In these circumstances,
the question does not arise.
The charges laid against the
respondent, of which he was found guilty, were declared to be offences by s. 30
of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police Act (c. 160 R.S.C. 1927) and
punishable under the provisions of s. 31. The punishment imposed was a penalty
of $100 and reduction in rank from Acting Corporal to First Class Constable.
The Superintendent also recommended, though not as part of the punishment, that
the respondent be dismissed from the Force.
Under the Rules and Regulations
for the government of the Force approved by the Governor General in Council,
any member of the Force other than a Commissioned Officer, feeling himself
aggrieved by a recommendation made for his dismissal or by a conviction and
punishment awarded him under the provisions of s. 31 of the Act, may appeal to
the Commissioner in writing. The respondent availed himself of this privilege
and, in the result, the Commissioner reduced the penalty to $50. He, however,
exercising the powers vested in him by the Act, dismissed the respondent from
the Force.
I do not think that the proper
determination of this matter depends on whether or not the decisions as to the
right of members of the Armed Forces to invoke the aid of a writ of certiorari
in proceedings held before courts martial are applicable. A consideration of c,
35 of the Statutes of 1873, by which the Police Force in the Northwest
Territories which subsequently became known as the Northwest Mounted Police,
and later, by virtue of c. 28 of the Statutes of 1919, the Royal Canadian
Mounted Police, was constituted, and of the subsequent statutes dealing with
the matter, with their provisions patterned upon those to be found in Acts
relating to armies, both in Canada and England, in relation to organization and
discipline, lends strong support, in my opinion, to the view that there is
[Page 165]
no sound reason why the
principles which have been adopted as to the manner in which proceedings before
courts martial may be examined and, if found to be in excess of jurisdiction,
quashed in proceedings taken in civil courts, should not apply to proceedings
of the nature in question here under the Royal Canadian Mounted Police Act.
It was, apparently, considered necessary at the very outset, when the Force was
originally constituted and sent into the unsettled areas of the Northwest Territories, that discipline should be maintained in the same manner as had been
found necessary in Military Forces. While conditions have changed, the same
plan has been followed in the various Acts by which the original legislation
has been amended and extended and which have culminated in the Act which
appears as c. 241 of R.S.C. 1952. There may well be circumstances in time of
war when the application of these principles to proceedings taken by Armed
Forces on active service might be governed by different principles upon grounds
of public policy, but this need not be considered in dealing with the present
case.
It is unnecessary, in my opinion,
to say more than this, that, where it is shown upon an application for a writ
under the Crown Office Rules and the proceedings thereafter taken, there has
been either a want of jurisdiction or an excess of jurisdiction in proceedings
taken under ss. 30 and 31 of the Act, the right of the court to intervene by
way of writ of certiorari is undoubted. That this is equally so in the
case of the proceedings of courts martial in the Army appears to me equally
undoubted.
In the present matter, s. 31 of
the Act authorizes a Superintendent or other Commissioned Officer, on a charge
in writing of any one or more of the offences mentioned in the Act or in any
regulation made under its authority being preferred against any member of the
Force, to cause the person charged to be brought before him:—
and there, in a summary way,
investigate the said charge and, if proved on oath to his satisfaction, shall
thereof convict the offender.
While the offences mentioned in
s. 30 are mainly of a character which, in Army parlance, would be described as
contrary to good order and military discipline, and the purpose of penalizing
them is clearly for the maintenance of discipline in the Force, the proceedings
authorized are
[Page 166]
none the less, in my opinion, of
a judicial and not executive or administrative character, and the officer
conducting the proceedings is obligated to act judicially.
In Re Mansergh ,
Cockburn C.J. said in part (p. 406).:—
I quite agree that where the
civil rights of a person in military service are affected by the judgment of a
military tribunal, in pronouncing which the tribunal has either acted without
jurisdiction or has exceeded its jurisdiction, this Court ought to interfere to
protect those civil rights: e.g. where the rights of life, liberty or property
are involved, …
The decision in Rex v. Army
Council: ex parte Ravenscroft is not, in my opinion, an authority to the
contrary. In that case, the application was for a rule nisi for a mandamus
to the Army Council, commanding them to cause a court of inquiry to reassemble
and determine, according to law, the case against Colonel Ravenscroft on the
grounds that, by a court of inquiry which had been held in France, he had been
condemned on certain charges properly classified as breaches of discipline
without his defence being fully heard, and that the statutory rules of
procedure governing courts of inquiry had not been complied with. The statement
of Viscount Reading C.J. (p. 508) that he had:—
no doubt that this Court has
no power to interfere with matters of military conduct and purely military law
affecting military rules for the guidance of officers or discipline generally.
cannot be taken as a statement
that, where in proceedings directed to the maintenance of good order and
military discipline there is an excess of jurisdiction or convictions are
rendered in matters beyond the jurisdiction, the courts are powerless to
intervene. To so hold would be contrary to long established authority. Thus, in
the case of Humphrey Wade in 1784, referred to in a note to Richard
Blake's Case , Lord
Mansfield C.J. granted a rule directed to General John Bell, to show cause why
Wade, a sergeant of Marines then in military custody, should not be discharged.
In Blake's Case, before Lord Ellenborough C.J. the Attorney General did
not oppose the granting of the rule nisi. As was pointed out by Lord
Mansfield in Burdett v. Abbott , by
becoming a soldier a man does not cease to be a citizen. The cases are reviewed
by McCardie J. in
[Page 167]
Heddon v. Evans . The
following passage from the judgment in that case appears to me to accurately
state the position of a member of the Armed Fores (p. 643):—
The compact or burden of a
man who entered the Army, whether voluntarily or not, was that he would submit
to military law, not that he would submit to military illegality. He must
accept the Army Act and Rules and Regulations and Orders and all that they
involved. These expressed his obligations; they announced his military rights.
To the extent permitted by them his person and liberty might be affected and his
property touched. But save to that extent, neither his liberty nor his person
or property might be lawfully infringed. Where, indeed, the actual rights he
sought to assert were given not by the common law, but only by military law,
then it might well be that in military law alone could he seek his remedy. For
if a code at once provided the right and also the remedy, it might rightly be
said that he must look to the code alike for the remedy and its method of
enforcement. If, however, the rights which he sought to assert were fundamental
common law rights, such as immunity of person or liberty, save in so far as
taken away by military law, then the common law right might be asserted in the
ordinary Courts.
This statement applies, in my
opinion, equally to a member of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, the rights
of its members, in this respect, being at least not less than those of members
of the Armed Forces. The authority of the Superintendent and the Commissioner
of the Force to impose the penalties provided by the Act for offences defined
by the Act does not rest on the agreement of the member made at the time of his
enlistment, but upon the terms of the statute itself, and it is the powers
authorized to be exercised by that statute, and none other, that may be invoked
against him.
I do not find in the material
filed on the application before Wood J. any evidence to warrant the issue of
the writ. There is nothing to sustain the charges of fraud, bias or excess or
want of jurisdiction, either in the affidavit of the respondent or in the
supporting affidavits. The complaints that there was an absence of legal
evidence to support the findings or of evidence as to the age of the Witness
Moraes are not matters that go to the jurisdiction (11 Hals. (Simonds Ed.) 62).
While, with respect, I am unable
to agree with the reasons which led the learned Judge to dismiss the
application, I think it should have been dismissed for the reasons I have
stated. I would, accordingly, allow this appeal and set aside the judgment appealed
from. I think there should be no costs, either in this Court or in the Court of
Appeal.
[Page 168]
In view of my conclusion, I
refrain from expressing an opinion as to whether an appeal properly lay to the
Court of Appeal.
ABBOTT J.:—The principal question
in issue in this appeal is whether or not Orderly Room proceedings held under
the Royal Canadian Mounted Police Act, R.S.C. 1952, c. 241, are subject
to review by way of certiorari.
The respondent White, a non-commissioned
member of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, was charged with intoxication,
scandalous behaviour and conduct unbecoming a member of the Force in breach of
s. 30, sub-ss. (c), (t) and (v) of the said Act.
Following an orderly room hearing
before the appellant Archer, a superintendent of the Royal Canadian Mounted
Police, held under s. 31 of the Act, respondent was found guilty of the conduct
complained of, demoted to the rank of constable, and fined $100.
Upon appeal to the Commissioner,
in accordance with the Act, the pecuniary penalty was reduced to $50 and
respondent was subsequently dismissed from the Force. Respondent then applied
to the Supreme Court of British Columbia for a writ of certiorari to
remove into that Court the record of the proceedings before the appellant Archer,
for the purpose of having the same quashed on the ground inter alia that
the said appellant acted without or in excess of jurisdiction and was biased.
The application was dismissed by Wood J. on the ground that the proceedings in
question were not subject to review on certiorari. The merits were not
considered. On appeal , this
judgment was reversed and the matter referred back to the Supreme Court for
hearing and determination.
This appeal is by special leave
from the judgment of the Court of Appeal for British Columbia.
The Royal Canadian Mounted
Police Act and the regulations made thereunder constitute a code of law
regulating the recruitment, administration and discipline of the Force.
Although not part of Canada's
armed forces, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police are in many respects organized
on a military basis, and the terms of recruitment and the provisions made for
uniforms, quarters, rations, discipline
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and pensions closely resemble
those of the Army, Navy and Air Force. The necessity for maintaining high
standards of conduct and of discipline in the Royal Canadian Mounted Police is
just as great as it is for the armed forces, and in this respect I can see no
distinction in principle between the two bodies.
In my opinion, therefore, the
authorities which hold that the Courts have no power to interfere with matters
of military conduct and military discipline generally are applicable to matters
involving the conduct and discipline of a force such as the Royal Canadian
Mounted Police. See Rex v. Army Council ex parte Ravenscroft
and the authorities discussed and approved therein.
In every application for certiorari
the real test must be the nature and character of the proceedings which are the
subject of such application. That nature and character can be ascertained by an
examination of the results to which such proceedings may lead. Applying that
test to the present case, in my opinion the appellant Archer was an officer
dealing summarily with breaches of conduct and discipline and was administering
discipline in accordance with the statute and regulations to which the
respondent voluntarily submitted when he joined the Force.
No doubt commanding officers, in
hearing charges involving breaches of discipline, should act in a judicial
manner. In the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, as in the Army, Navy and Air
Force, under the regulations and in the interest of the prisoner, Orderly Room
proceedings involving breaches of discipline may and often do follow the forms
of law. Nevertheless in such proceedings, in my view, a commanding officer is
acting not as a court or judge but as an officer administering discipline.
In the result, therefore, in my
opinion the proceedings before Superintendent Archer were not subject to review
by way of certiorari and I would allow the appeal and set aside the
judgment of the Court below. There should be no costs.
Appeal allowed; no
costs.
Solicitor for the
appellants: F. P. Varcoe.
Solicitors for the
respondent: White & Shore.