Supreme Court of Canada
SAUMUR v. CITY OF QUEBEC, [1953] 2 S.C.R. 299
Date: 1953-10-06
LAURIER SAUMUR (Plaintiff)
APPELLANT;
AND
THE CITY OF QUEBEC (Defendant)
RESPONDENT
AND
THE ATTORNEY GENERAL FOR QUEBEC
INTERVENANT.
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF QUEEN'S BENCH,
APPEAL SIDE, PROVINCE OF QUEBEC
1952, Dec. 9, 10, 11, 12, 15, 16, 17, 1953,
Oct. 6
PRESENT: Rinfret C.J. and Kerwin,
Taschereau, Rand, Kellock, Estey, Locke, Cartwright and Fauteux JJ.
Constitutional law—Validity of municipal
by-law—Prohibition to distribute pamphlets etc. in the streets without
permission from chief of police—Whether interference with Freedom of Worship
and of the Press—Whether criminal legislation—Statute of 1852 of Old Province
of Canada, 14-15 Vict., c. 175—Freedom of Worship Act, R.S.Q. 1941, c.
307-B.N.A. Act, ss. 91, 92, 93, 127—By-Law 184 of City of Quebec —Noncompliance
with Rule 30 of Supreme Court of Canada.
By an action in the Superior Court
of Quebec, the appellant, a member of Jehovah's Witnesses, attacked the
validity of a by-law of the City of Quebec forbidding distribution in the
streets of the City of any book, pamphlet, booklet, circular, tract whatever
without permission from the Chief of Police. The action was dismissed by the
trial judge and by a majority in the Court of Queen's Bench (Appeal Side). In
this Court the appellant declined to contend that the by-law was invalid
because a discretion was delegated to the Chief of Police.
Held: (reversing the decision appealed from), that the by-law did not
extend so as to prohibit the appellant as a member of Jehovah's Witnesses from
distributing in the streets of the City any of the writings included in the
exhibits and that the City, its officers and agents be restrained from in any
way interfering with such distribution.
Per Kerwin
J.:—Whether or not the Freedom of Worship Act whenever originally
enacted (it is now R.S.Q. 1941, c. 307) be taken to supersede the
pre-Confederation Statute of 1852 (14-15 Vict., c. 175), the specific terms of
the enactment providing for freedom of worship have not been abrogated. Even
though it would appear from the evidence that Jehovah's Witnesses do not
consider themselves as belonging to a religion, they are entitled to "the
free exercise and enjoyment of (their) Religious Profession ,and Worship"
and have a legal right to attempt to spread their views by way of the printed
and written word as well as orally; and their attacks on religion generally,
and one in particular, as shown in the exhibits filed, do not bring them within
the exception "so as the same be not made an excuse for licentiousness or
a justification of practices inconsistent with the peace and safety of the
Province", and their attacks are not "inconsistent with the peace and
safety of the Province" even when they are directed particularly against
the religion of most of the Province's residents. As the by-law may have its
effect in other cases and under other
[Page 300]
circumstances, if not otherwise
objectionable, it is not ultra vires the City of Quebec, but since it is
in conflict with the freedom of worship of the appellant, it should be
declared that it does not extend so as to prohibit the appellant as a member of
Jehovah's Witnesses from distributing in the streets any of the writings
included in the exhibits.
Furthermore, since both the right
to practise one's religion and the freedom of the press fall within "Civil
Rights in the Province", the Legislature had the power to authorize the
City to pass such by-law.
Per Rand
J.:—Since the by-law is legislation in relation to religion and free speech and
not in relation to the administration of the streets, and since freedom of
worship and of the press are not civil rights or matters of a local or private
nature in the Provinces, the subject-matter of the by-law was beyond the
legislative power of the Province.
Per Kellock
J.:—The by-law is ultra vires as it is not enacted in relation to
streets but impinges upon freedom of religion and of the press which are not
the subject-matter of legislative jurisdiction under s. 92 of the B.N.A.
Act.
Per Estey
J.: Since the right to the free exercise and enjoyment of religious profession
and worship is not a civil right in the province but is included among those
upon which Parliament might legislate for the preservation of peace, order and
good government, s. 2 of c. 307 of the Revised Statutes of Quebec, 1941, could
not be enacted by the province under any of the heads of s. 92 of the B.N.A. Act.
By-law 184 is legislation in relation to and interferes with that right; it
is therefore in conflict with the Statute of 1852 and authority for its
enactment could not be given to the City by the Legislature. Even if s. 2 of c.
307 was intra vires, the by-law would be in conflict there—with and,
therefore, could not be competently passed by the City because it was not
authorized by the terms of its charter.
Per Locke
J.:—The belief of the Jehovah's Witnesses and their mode of worship fall within
the meaning of the expression "religious profession and worship" in
the preamble of the Statute of 1852 and in s. 2 of c. 307 of the Revised
Statutes of Quebec, 1941.
The true purpose and nature of the
by-law is not to control the condition of the streets and traffic but to impose
a censorship upon the distribution of written publications in the streets. The
right to the free exercise and enjoyment of religious profession and worship
without discrimination or preference, subject to the limitation expressed in
the concluding words of the first paragraph of the Statute of 1852, is not a
civil right of the nature referred to under head 13 of s. 92 of the B.N.A. Act,
but is a constitutional right of all the people of the country given to them by
the Statute of 1852 or implicit in the language of the preamble of the B.N.A.
Act. The Province was not therefore empowered to authorize the passing of
such a by-law restraining the appellant's right of freedom of worship.
The by-law further trenches upon
the jurisdiction of Parliament under head 27 of s. 91 of the B.N.A.
Act. It creates a new criminal offence and is ultra vires.
Per Rinfret
C.J. and Taschereau J. (dissenting) :—The pith and substance of this general
by-law is to control and regulate the usage of streets in regard to the
distribution of pamphlets. Even if the motive of the City was to prevent the
Jehovah's Witnesses from distributing their literature in the streets, that
could never be a reason to render the
[Page 301]
by-law illegal or unconstitutional,
since the City had the power to pass it: usage of the streets of a municipality
being indisputably a question within the domain of the municipality and a local
question.
Freedom of worship is not a subject
of legislation within the jurisdiction of Parliament. It is a civil right
within the provinces. The provisions of the by-law are not covered by the
preamble to s. 91 of the B.N.A. Act, nor have they the character of a
criminal law. Furthermore, even if the right to distribute pamphlets was an act
of worship, freedom of worship is not an absolute right but is subject to
control by the province.
Per Cartwright
and Fauteux JJ. (dissenting) :—It was within the competence of the Legislature
to authorize the passing of this by-law under its power to legislate in
relation to (1) the use of highways, since the legislative authority to permit,
forbid or regulate their use for purposes other than that of passing and
repassing belongs to the provinces; and (2) police regulations and the
suppression of conditions likely to cause disorder, since it is within the
competence of the Legislature to prohibit or regulate the distribution in the
streets of written matter having a tendency to insult or annoy the recipients
thereof with the possible result of giving rise to disorder, and perhaps
violence, in. the streets. An Act of a provincial legislature in relation to
matters assigned to it under the B.N.A. Act is not rendered invalid
because it interferes to a limited extent with either the freedom of the press
or the freedom of religion.
APPEAL from the judgment of the Court of
Queen's Bench, appeal side, province of Quebec,
affirming, Bertrand J.A. dissenting, the decision of the trial judge and
holding that By-law 184 of the City of Quebec was valid.
W. Glen How for
the appellant.
E. Godbout Q.C. for
the respondent.
L. E. Beaulieu Q.C. and Noël Dorion Q.C. for the intervenant.
The dissenting judgment
of Rinfret C.J. and Taschereau J. was delivered by
The CHIEF JUSTICE: Dépouillée
de son extravagante mise-en-scène et réduite à sa véritable dimension, cette
cause, à mon avis, est vraiment très simple. Elle n'a sûrement pas l'ampleur et
l'importance qu'ont tenté de lui donner les Témoins de Jéhovah par le
truchement de M. Laurier Saumur, l'appelant, se désignant comme un missionnaire-évangéliste.
Il s'agit de la
validité d'un règlement municipal et il y a probablement eu des centaines et
des centaines de causes de ce genre depuis la Confédération. Si, par contre, cette
[Page 302]
catégorie de causes n'a
pas été soumise très fréquemment à la Cour Suprême du Canada, c'est uniquement
à raison de son peu d'importance relative et de son application restreinte,
dans chaque cas, au territoire de la municipalité concernée.
Voici le texte du
règlement attaqué:
Règlement n° 184
1° Il est, par le présent règlement,
défendu de distribuer dans les rues de la Cité de Québec, aucun livre,
pamphlet, brochure, circulaire, fascicule quelconque sans avoir au préalable
obtenu pour ce faire la permission par écrit du Chef de Police.
2° Toute personne
qui contreviendra au présent règlement sera passible d'une amende avec ou sans
les frais, et b défaut du paiement immédiat de ladite amende avec ou sans les
frais, selon le cas, d'un emprisonnement, le montant de ladite amende et le
terme d'emprisonnement à être fixé par la Cour du Recorder de la Cité de
Québec, ê. sa discrétion; mais ladite amende ne dépassera pas cent dollars, et
l'emprisonnement n'excédera pas trois mois de calendrier; ledit emprisonnement
cependant, devant cesser en tout temps avant l'expiration du terme fixé par le
paiement de ladite amende et des frais, selon le cas; et si l'infraction est
réitérée, cette récidive constituera, jour par jour, après sommation ou
arrestation, une offense séparée.
L'appelant, invoquant
sa qualité de sujet de Sa Majesté le Roi et de résident dans la Cité de Québec,
alléguant en outre qu'il est un missionnaire-évangéliste et l'un des Témoins de
Jéhovah, déclare qu'il considère de son devoir de prêcher la Bible, soit
oralement, soit en distribuant des publications sous forme de livres,
opuscules, périodiques, feuillets, etc., de maison en maison et dans les rues.
Il prétend que le
règlement n° 184, reproduit plus haut, a pour effet de rendre illégale cette
distribution de littérature sans l'approbation écrite du Chef de
Police de la Cité de Québec. Il ajoute qu'en sa qualité de citoyen canadien il
a un droit absolu à l'expression de ses opinions et que cela découle de son
droit à la liberté de parole, la liberté de la presse
et le libre exercice de son culte envers Dieu, tel que garanti par la
Constitution britannique non écrite, par l'Acte de l'Amérique britannique du
Nord généralement, et 'également par les Statuts de la province de Québec,
spécialement la Loi concernant la liberté des cultes et le bon ordre dans
les églises et leurs alentours (S.R.Q. 1941, c. 307).
[Page 303]
Il allègue que la Cité
de Québec et la province de Québec n'ont aucune juridiction, soit en loi, soit
constitutionnellement, pour adopter un règlement tel que ci-dessus, et que ce
dernier est ultra vires, inconstitutionnel, illégal et nul.
D'après lui, ce
règlement aurait été adopté, le 27 octobre 1933, expressément pour empêcher les
activités évangéliques des Témoins de Jéhovah et ce règlement est arbitraire,
oppressif, partial et injustifié; il est, en outre, discriminatoire,
vindicatif et constitue un abus de pouvoir.
Il demande qu'il soit
déclaré que ce règlement n'est pas autorisé par la Charte de la Cité de Québec
et qu'à tout événement, en ce qu'il tente de limiter la liberté de parole et la
liberté de la presse, il empiète sur la juridiction du Parlement du Canada et,
en particulier, du Code criminel.
L'appelant se
plaignait, en plus, de la délégation illimitée et arbitraire en faveur du Chef
de Police, ainsi qu'elle est contenue dans le règlement, mais à l'audition
devant cette Cour il a déclaré qu'il abandonnait ce moyen.
Il allègue que, par
application du règlement, il a été illégalement arrêté et poursuivi et qu'à la
date de l'institution de l'action, une information était encore pendante
contre lui à la Cour du Recorder de la Cité de Québec, bien que la poursuite de
cette information ait été arrêtée par bref de prohibition alors inscrit devant
la Cour du Banc du Roi (en appel).
La déclaration de
l'appelant conclut donc que le règlement n° 184 de la Cité de Québec, du moins
en autant qu'il est lui-même concerné, soit déclaré ultra
vires, inconstitutionnel, illégal et nul; que les
Statuts de la province de Québec, en autant qu'ils prétendent autoriser
l'adoption de ce règlement par la Cité de Québec, soient également déclarés ultra
vires, inconstitutionnels et illégaux; et que la Cour émette une injonction
permanente empêchant la Cité de 'Québec, ses officiers, ses agents et ses
représentants de tenter de mettre en vigueur le règlement n° 184, à défaut de
quoi ils soient condamnés pour mépris de cour et aux pénalités que cela
comporte.
L'intimée, la Cité de
Québec, a plaidé que le règlement n° 184 était une loi municipale légalement
passée dans l'exercice des pouvoirs de réglementation de la Cité et
[Page 304]
conforme à son acte
d'incorporation; que la loi de la province, en vertu de laquelle le règlement
a été adopté, est constitutionnelle, légale et valide; que le règlement
concerne la propreté, le bon, ordre, la paix et la sécurité publiques, la
prévention de troubles et émeutes et se rapporte à l'économie intérieure et au
bon gouvernement local de la ville; que le demandeur a systématiquement
contrevenu à ce règlement de façon délibérée et s'est obstinément refusé à s'y
soumettre; qu'il n'a jamais demandé et, par conséquent, n'a pu obtenir de
permis pour distribuer ses pamphlets dans la ville de Québec et qu'il a ignoré
d'une manière absolue si le règlement est susceptible de le priver d'aucun de
ses droits, ayant préféré y désobéir de son plein gré. Comme conséquence,
l'appelant fut condamné suivant la loi par un tribunal compétent.
La plaidoirie écrite
allègue, en outre, que l'appelant n'est pas un ministre du culte et que
l'organisation dont il fait partie n'est pas une église ni une religion. Au
contraire, les pamphlets ou tracts qu'elle insiste à distribuer sans
autorisation ont un caractère provocateur et injurieux, ne sont pas des gestes
religieux mais des actes anti-sociaux qui étaient et sont de nature à troubler
la paix publique et la tranquillité et la sécurité des paisibles citoyens dans
la Cité de Québec, où ils risquent de provoquer des désordres. Il est malvenu
en fait et en droit d'invoquer des libertés de parole, de presse et de culte,
qui ne sont aucunement concernées en l'occurrence; il n'a jamais été persécuté
et, si la Cité de Québec a mis en vigueur son règlement, ce ne fut que pour
remplir ses obligations envers le bien commun, l'ordre public exigeant que le
règlement soit dûment appliqué dans la Cité.
Après une longue
enquête et la production de quelque chose comme soixante-quinze exhibits, avec
en plus des mémoires rédigés par l'abbé Gagné, le très révérend Doyen Evans, le
rabbin Frank et M. Damien Jasmin, le juge de première instance a maintenu la
défense et rejeté l'action de l'appelant. Ce jugement a été confirmé dans son
intégrité par la Cour du Banc de la Reine (en appel), (les honorables juges Barclay, Marchand,
Pratte et Hyde), l'honorable juge Bertrand se déclarant dissident.
[Page 305]
L'honorable juge de
première instance commence par dire dans son jugement qu'il est d'avis que la preuve
offerte en cette cause était en grande partie inutile et illégale, mais qu'il l'a permise parce qu'il n'a pas voulu restreindre la liberté de discussion
et qu'il a désiré fournir à toutes les parties l'opportunité d'exposer leurs
théories et leur doctrine.
Sur la question de
savoir si la doctrine prêchée par les Témoins de Jéhovah est une religion ou
non, il déclare qu'il ne se prononce pas parce que, suivant lui, il était
appelé à décider seulement si le règlement attaqué était ultra vires. Après
avoir cité les articles 335, 336 et 337 de la Charte de la Cité de Québec, il
se déclare d'avis que le conseil de cette dernière avait obtenu de la
Législature de Québec le pouvoir d'adopter le règlement en litige.
Disons tout de suite
que le texte de ces articles de la Charte ne laisse aucun doute sur ce point de
vue et ce n'est pas là-dessus que l'appelant a insisté.
A ce sujet, cependant,
le jugement de la Cour Supérieure contient le paragraphe suivant:
...Il ne s'agit pas
d'une prohibition absolue.
De plus, le règlement ne fait aucune
distinction. Il s'applique à tous les citoyens et n'a en soi aucun caractère
discriminatoire. Naturellement, il peut prêter à des abus, mais dans cette
cause, on ne se plaint nulle part qu'il y en ait eus. Il n'a pas été prouvé que
ce règlement avait été passé spécialement dans le but de limiter les activités
du demandeur et des témoins de Jéhovah; au contraire, il s'applique à tous,
quelles que soient leur nationalité, leur doctrine ou leur religion.
L'honorable juge
examine ensuite la question de savoir si la Cité avait le droit de déléguer ses
pouvoirs à son Chef de Police et il conclut dans l'affirmative. Il cite deux
décisions de la Cour d'Appel de Québec sur ce point et arrive à la conclusion
que le principe de délégation de pouvoir, en pareil cas, lui paraît admis, du
moins dans l'état actuel de la jurisprudence. Mais, comme nous l'avons fait
remarquer, nous n'avons plus à nous occuper de ce prétendu motif d'illégalité
puisque, à l'audition devant nous, le procureur de l'appelant a déclaré
formellement qu'il abandonnait ce moyen.
Le savant juge analyse
ensuite le jugement de la Cour Suprême du Canada, rendu en 1938, sur la
législation de la province de l'Alberta: "An Act to Ensure the Publication
of accurate News and Information"; également
[Page 306]
l'arrêt de la Cour du
Banc du Roi de Québec dans la cause de Vaillancourt v. la Cité de Hull. A
la suite de cette analyse, il déclare en venir à la
conclusion que le règlement n° 184 est intra vires, valide et légal. Il
fait remarquer que l'appelant ne pouvait guère se plaindre sans avoir d'abord
demandé un permis, ce qu'il a négligé et refusé de faire. C'est ainsi qu'il
aurait pu prétendre que l'officier chargé d'émettre des permis
commettait des injustices à son égard et agissait d'une façon discriminatoire
en lui refusant l'autorisation requise. C'est alors qu'il aurait eu un recours
devant les tribunaux en se plaignant qu'il avait essuyé un refus injuste et
arbitraire et que l'on agissait envers lui d'une manière oppressive.
Comme le fait remarquer
M. le Juge Barclay:
...The Appellant complains of attacks and
disorders. If this state of affairs is brought about by the contents of the
pamphlets distributed it may well be that their distribution should be
prohibited. I refrain from any comment on the contents of these publications,
although they have been put before us by the Appellant. If a demand for a
licence to distribute them be refused, then that question will be of
importance, but not until then.
Le principal jugement en
la Cour du Banc de la Reine a été écrit par M. le Juge Pratte. Il fait remarquer que les arrêts
rendus aux États-Unis ne sauraient avoir le moindre effet devant les 'tribunaux
canadiens parce que la constitution des États-Unis garantit en termes formels
la liberté d'expression et la liberté des cultes, tandis que chez-nous, au
Canada, la situation juridique est différente. "La vérité, ici comme en
Grande-Bretagne, c'est que, contrairement à ce qui est aux États-Unis, le
peuple n'a pas abdiqué le pouvoir de légiférer en la matière, et que le cadre
dans lequel peut s'exercer la liberté que nous connaissons est susceptible
d'être modifié par l'autorité législative compétente".
L'honorable juge fait
observer:
...que les rues sont destinées à permettre
le passage d'un endroit à un autre (Harrison v. Duke of Rutland (1893), 1 Q.B., p. 142; Hickman v. Massey
(1900), 1 Q.B. 752. C'est
là leur fin première, à laquelle toute autre utilisation qu'on voudrait en
faire est nécessairement subordonnée. Et s'il arrive que les rues soient
utilisées pour d'autres fins, c'est seulement à la faveur d'un privilège
spécialement octroyé, ou en raison d'une tolérance à laquelle l'autorité
compétente doit toujours pouvoir mettre fin lorsqu'elle juge que l'intérêt
public le requiert. Il faut bien qu'il
[Page 307]
en soit ainsi, pour empêcher que l'exercice
du droit de se servir des rues suivant leur destination ne soit gêné par ceux
qui voudraient détourner les voies publiques de leur fin première, ou que
l'usage de la rue pour une fin autre que celle de passer ne devienne une cause
de désordre.
Un peu plus loin,
l'honorable juge ajoute:
...S'il n'est point
douteux que l'usage des rues doive être réglementé, il est aussi certain que,
d'une façon générale, ce pouvoir de règlementation est du ressort de l'autorité
locale. I1 n'est point nécessaire de la démontrer ici, car l'appelant le
reconnaît…
Tandis que les dispositions du Code
criminel sont destinées à assurer la sécurité de l'État et It maintenir un
degré minimum de moralité par tout le pays, le règlement attaqué lui, a
seulement pour but de prévenir l'utilisation des rues de la cité pour une fin
contraire à leur destination et que l'autorité locale compétente ne jugerait
pas opportun de tolérer.
M. le Juge Hyde
s'accorde d'une façon générale avec ses deux collègues, mais il réfère en
particulier au jugement de la Cour Suprême dans la cause de Provincial
Secretary of Prince Edward Island v. Egan, après avoir dit:
...Here there is no question but that the
municipality has the power to enact by-laws for regulation of the use of its
public thoroughfares and the prevention of nuisances thereon,
et il cite ce passage
du jugement de la Cour, rendu par l'honorable Juge Rinfret, à la page 415:
...The right of building highways and of
operating them within a province, whether under direct authority of the
Government, or by means of independent
Companies or municipalities, is wholly within the purview of the Province (O'Brien
v. Allen, 30 S.C.R. 340), and so is the right to provide for the safety of
circulation and traffic on such highways. The aspect of that field is wholly
provincial, from the point of view of the use of the highway and of the use of
the vehicles. It has to do with the civil regulation of the use of highways and
personal property, the protection of the persons and property of the citizens,
the prevention of nuisances and the suppression of conditions calculated to
make circulation and traffic dangerous. Such is amongst others, the provincial
aspect of section 84 of The Highway Traffic Act.
Disons tout de suite
que le règlement en litige n'est rien autre chose qu'un règlement de police; il
est basé primordialement sur le fait que les rues ne doivent pas être utilisées
pour fins de distribution de documents. L'usage normal des rues est celui de la
circulation à pied ou en voiture (Voir Dillon "On Municipal
Corporations", 5° éd., p. 1083; McQuillin "On Municipal
Corporations", 2° éd., vol. 3, p. 936 et suivantes; même volume, p. 61, n°
938).
[Page 308]
Faisons remarquer d'abord que la Charte de la
Cité de Québec est antérieure à la Confédération (29-30 Vict. c. 57). La Cité
n'est pas régie par la Loi
des Cités et Villes, S.R.Q. 1941, c. 233, mais il
n'est pas hors de propos de référer à cette loi pour se rendre compte de
l'étendue des pouvoirs qui y sont conférés pour la réglementation des rues.
Le conseil y est attribué (art. 424) le pouvoir
général de faire des réglements "pour assurer la paix, l'ordre, le bon
gouvernement, la salubrité, le bien-être général et l'amélioration de la
municipalité". Plus spécialement (art. 426, par. 10), il peut
"réglementer ou empêcher les jeux et les amusements sur les rues, allées,
trottoirs ou places publiques"; il a le pouvoir général de nommer des
agents de police ou constables avec autorité et juridiction dans 'les limites
de la municipalité (par. 16a).
Il peut (art. 428) "prohiber, empêcher et
supprimer les attroupements, rixes, troubles, réunions désordonnées et tous
spectacles ou amusements brutaux ou dépravés"; "permettre, moyennant
le paiement d'une licence, et réglementer l'affichage de
placards"; "empêcher qu'aucune congrégation ou réunion pour le culte
religieux ne soit troublée dans ses exercices, même prohiber la distribution,
aux portes des églises, 'le dimanche, de toutes feuilles volantes ou circulaires
imprimées". Enfin et spécifiquement, sujet aux dispositions de la Loi
relative aux rues publiques (S.R.Q. 1941, c. 242)—à laquelle il n'est pas
nécessaire de référer plus amplement—en vertu de l'article 429, le conseil peut
faire des règlements de la plus grande étendue pour l'ouverture et l'entretien
des rues, des trottoirs et des places publiques, pour en réglementer l'usage,
empêcher et faire cesser tout empiétement; prescrire la manière de placer les
enseignes, poteaux d'enseignes, auvents, poteaux de téléphone, de télégraphe et
d'électricité, abreuvoirs pour chevaux, rateliers et autres obstructions;
faire disparaître toute nuisance ou obstruction sur les trottoirs, rues, allées
et terrains publics et empêcher qu'ils ne soient encombrés de voitures ou
d'autres choses; réglementer la vitesse des véhicules dans les limites de la
municipalité; réglementer l'usage des bicycles et des automobiles et les
empêcher de circuler sur certaines rues; réglementer ou défendre l'usage de voitures
bruyantes dans les rues et places publiques; réglementer ou défendre l'exhibition,
ou le port, ou la distribution
[Page 309]
de bannières, placards,
annonces et prospectus ou autres articles dans les, près des, ou sur les rues,
allées, trottoirs et places publiques; réglementer ou empêcher le déploiement
de drapeaux, bannières et enseignes à travers les rues et places publiques, et
réglementer, permettre moyennant un permis, ou défendre la construction et
l'usage de tableaux à affiches et enseignes le long ou près des rues, allées et
places publiques ou sur les lots vacants ou ailleurs.
Cette longue
énumération fait bien voir jusqu'à quel point les municipalités ont le contrôle
de leurs rues, en vertu de la loi générale.
Le règlement attaqué
est strictement du même ordre d'idée.
Il est non moins clair
que l'Acte de l'Amérique britannique du Nord 1867, dans la distribution
qu'elle fait des pouvoirs législatifs, aux paragraphes 91 et 92 attribue, dans
chaque province, à la Législature, le pouvoir exclusif de faire des lois
relatives aux institutions municipales dans la province (par. 8), à la
propriété et les droits civils dans la province (par. 13) et généralement à
toutes les matières d'une nature purement locale et privée dans la province
(par. 16).
Il serait vraiment
fantastique de prétendre que quelques-uns des pouvoirs ci-dessus mentionnés et
que l'on trouve dans la Loi des Cités et Villes de la province de
Québec, pourraient relever du domaine fédéral. Je ne me représente pas
facilement le Parlement fédéral entreprenant d'adopter des lois sur aucune de
ces matières (Voir le jugement du Conseil Privé dans Hodge v. The Queen).
Je ne comprends pas,
d'ailleurs, que le procureur de l'appelant dirige son argumentation à
l'encontre de ce principe général. Il demande à la Cour de s'écarter du texte(
du règlement et il cherche à y trouver un motif qui serait celui, qu'il avait
déjà allégué dans sa déclaration, "que ce règlement avait été passé
spécialement dans le but de limiter les activités du demandeur et des Témoins
de Jéhovah".
[Page 310]
Il est à remarquer que
le règlement lui-même ne dit rien de tel; il s'applique à tous, quelle que soit
leur nationalité, leur doctrine ou leur religion. Mais, en plus, le juge de
première instance a décidé en fait qu'il "n'a pas été prouvé que ce
règlement avait été passé spécialement dans ce but". D'autre part, en
matière d'excès de pouvoirs, c'est toujours au mérite ("pith and
substance") de la législation qu'il faut s'arrêter. Ce que le règlement
vise est uniquement l'usage des rues pour fins de distribution. En outre que,
ainsi que l'a décidé le juge de la Cour Supérieure, aucun motif, aucune
arrière-pensée n'a été dévoilée par la preuve faite à l'enquête, c'est une idée
erronée que de chercher à attribuer un motif à une loi qui n'en mentionne pas.
Un règlement peut être valide même si le but du conseil municipal est mauvais.
J'avoue trouver étrange
que l'on mette même en discussion le pouvoir des corporations municipales de
réglementer de la façon la plus absolue l'usage de leurs rues et d'en exercer
le contrôle. Notre Cour s'est prononcée là-dessus d'une façon catégorique dans
l'affaire de Winner v. S.M.T. (Eastern) Limited & Attorney General of
Canada. La majorité des juges a exprimé alors l'avis, même
lorsqu'il s'agissait d'un cas de droit international, qu'une loi provinciale
pouvait valablement stipuler que, dans les limites de la province du
Nouveau-Brunswick, un bureau ("board"), en vertu de "The Motor
Carrier Act", pouvait empêcher M. Winner, un propriétaire de ligne
d'autobus, demeurant à Lewiston, dans l'État du Maine, États-Unis, de faire des
arrêts dans les rues du Nouveau-Brunswick pour y prendre des passagers dont la
destination était à l'intérieur du Nouveau-Brunswick.
En ce qui me concerne,
je n'ai pas eu à me prononcer sur ce point, parce que je suis arrivé à mes
conclusions pour des raisons différentes de celles de la majorité, mais je n'ai
aucune hésitation à ajouter que, si j'eusse eu à le faire, je me serais accordé
avec la majorité sur ce sujet.
En envisageant le
règlement qui nous a été soumis, il est à remarquer, je le répète, que le texte
de ce règlement ne fait aucune allusion au caractère religieux des tracts ou
des feuillets qui sont visés. Je ne saurais me rendre à l'idée que, pour décider
de la validité de ce règlement, il
[Page 311]
faille aller au-delà de
ce qu'il dit et se demander si la Cité de Québec en l'adoptant avait un motif
ultérieur. Cela n'importe pas du 'tout. Si une corporation municipale a le pouvoir de
prohiber ou de contrôler l'usage de ses rues, nous n'avons pas à nous demander
quel a pu être son motif; pas plus, par exemple, qu'en reconnaissant à tout
citoyen le droit d'interdire l'accès de sa maison, on puisse disputer le motif
qui le pousse à en agir ainsi. Il se peut que sa raison soit qu'il ne veuille
pas laisser entrer un communiste dans sa maison; même si c'est là son motif
caché ou son arrière-pensée, 'cela ne lui enlève pas son droit absolu de
défendre l'accès de sa maison à qui que ce soit. La Cité de Québec eut-elle eu
même dans l'idée-ce que le règlement ne fait pas voir—de prendre ce moyen d'empêcher
les Témoins de Jéhovah de distribuer leurs feuillets et leurs tracts, cela
n'aurait jamais pour résultat de rendre sa décision illégale, ni surtout
inconstitutionnelle.
La seule question que
les tribunaux ont à examiner est celle de savoir si la Cité de Québec avait le
pouvoir d'adopter ce règlement. Nous n'avons pas à chercher derrière le texte
qu'elle a adopté pour voir quel a pu être son but en ce faisant. J'irai même
plus loin et je dirai que l'usage des rues d'une municipalité est
indiscutablement une question du domaine municipal et une question locale. Je
cherche encore en vertu de quoi on pourrait prétendre que cette matière ne
tombe pas exclusivement dans la catégorie des sujets attribués aux provinces en
vertu de l'article 92 de l'Acte de l'Amérique britannique du Nord; et,
dans ce cas, même s'il est admis que le droit de culte est du domaine fédéral,
le pouvoir de contrôle des rues municipales, étant un sujet spécifiquement
attribué aux provinces, il aurait préséance sur le pouvoir supposé du Parlement
fédéral de légiférer en matière de culte. Il est de jurisprudence constante
que du moment qu'un sujet est spécialement attribué au domaine provincial par
l'article 92, il a préséance et priorité sur tout pouvoir que prétendrait exercer
le fédéral, en vertu des pouvoirs généraux mentionnés dans l'article 91.
Il n'y a pas si
longtemps que l'on a eu, dans la Cité d'Ottawa, l'exemple d'une loi provinciale
qui permettait à une municipalité d'empêcher la pratique des jeux commercialisés
le dimanche, qui, cependant, sous un certain aspect,
[Page 312]
doit être considérée
comme un exercice qui empièterait sur l'observance du Jour du Seigneur et
serait donc, si l'on admettait la prétention que je discute, du domaine des
cultes et d'un caractère religieux. Cette loi provinciale est dans les statuts
de la province d'Ontario et jusqu'ici nul ne s'est avisé d'en soulever
l'inconstitutionnalité.
La question de juridiction
ne peut jamais dépendre de la valeur des raisons qui sont données, pas plus
dans un règlement que dans un jugement. Ce que l'appelant soulève et ce qu'il
demande à la Cour de prononcer, c'est que la Cité de Québec n'avait pas le
pouvoir d'adopter ce règlement. Il ne pourra jamais justifier cette conclusion
en prétendant que la Cité l'a .adopté pour un motif erroné.
En réalité, le
véritable argument que l'appelant tente de faire prévaloir c'est que ce
règlement l'empêche d'exercer son culte ou, comme il l'allègue pour les fins de
la cause, sa religion.
Je partage absolument
l'opinion du juge de première instance et celle de la majorité de la Cour du
Banc de la Reine (en appel) à l'effet que le règlement attaqué ne fait rien de
tel. Tout d'abord, ce n'est pas un règlement qui prohibe: c'est un règlement
qui permet, sous certaines restrictions.
Je répète que
l'appelant devant la Cour se trouve, à cet égard, dans une position
défectueuse, parce qu'il n'a pas soumis au Chef de police de la Cité de Québec
les pamphlets qu'il avait l'intention de distribuer. Comme l'affirme la
défense, il a préféré ignorer absolument le règlement et procéder à faire sa
distribution sans en demander la permission. Il en résulte que nous ne savons
pas ce que l'appelant voulait distribuer et nous ne connaissons nullement la nature
de ces tracts.
Il y a lieu, par
conséquent, de limiter notre investigation à la question de savoir si vraiment
l'appelant, par ce règlement, est empêché de pratiquer sa religion; et il faut
encore restreindre le débat à la question de savoir si l'appelant, par suite de
ce règlement, ne peut pas distribuer des pamphlets religieux dans les rues de
la Cité de Québec. Car il est évident que, sur ce chapitre, il faut que le
règlement prohibe la distribution des pamphlets religieux que
[Page 313]
l'appelant voudrait
disséminer. Cet argument ne vaut nullement à l'encontre de la prohibition de
distribuer tout autre pamphlet.
Ironie du sort, les
Témoins de Jéhovah qui, dans leurs publications, affirment catégoriquement non
seulement qu'ils ne constituent pas une religion, mais qu'ils sont opposés à
toute religion et que les religions sont une invention du démon, sont
maintenant devant les tribunaux du Canada pour demander protection au nom de la
religion; et, à cette fin, à l'encontre de la constitutionnalité des lois
municipales de la province de Québec, ils sont contraints d'invoquer une loi
de la province de Québec, à savoir: la Loi concernant la liberté des cultes
et du bon ordre dans les églises et leurs alentours (c. 307, S.R.Q. 1941).
Cette loi, invoquée par
eux, contient l'article suivant:
2. La jouissance et
le libre exercice du culte de toute profession religieuse, sans distinction ni
préférence. mais de manière à ne
pas servir d'excuse la licence ni à autoriser des pratiques incompatibles avec
la paix et la sûreté de la province, sont permis par la constitution et les
lois de cette province à tous les sujets de Sa Majesté qui y vivent. S.R. 1925,
c. 198, a. 2.
C'est bien ainsi que
l'appelant a posé le problème dans sa déclaration :
...his unqualified right as a Canadian
citizen to the expression of his views on the issues of the day and in
employing thereby his right of freedom of speech, freedom of the press and free
exercise of worship of Almighty God as guaranteed by the unwritten British
Constitution, by the provisions of the British North America Act generally and,
in particular, in its preamble and sections 91, 92 and 129, as well as by the
statute of the Province of Quebec generally and in particular, by "An Act
Respecting Peddlers", (R.S.Q. 1941, Chapter 230, especially section 8
thereof) ; and by "An Act Respecting Licences", (R.S.Q. 1941, Chapter
76, especially section 82 thereof); and by "An Act Respecting Freedom of
Worship and the Maintenance of Good Order In and Near Places of Public
Worship", (R.S.Q. 1941, 'Chapter 307, especially section 2 thereof) ;
Il n'y a pas lieu de
s'arrêter à la référence à la Loi concernant les colporteurs et à la Loi des
licences.
Le procureur de
l'appelant ne s'est pas non plus expliqué sur ce qu'il entend par "the
unwritten British Constitution" comme gouvernant les pouvoirs respectifs
du Parlement canadien et des Législatures provinciales (tels qu'ils sont
définis dans les articles 91 et 92 de l'Acte de l'Amérique britannique du
Nord). C'est cette loi qui contient la Constitution du Canada et le Conseil
Privé, à plusieurs
[Page 314]
reprises, a déclaré que
les pouvoirs ainsi distribués entre le Parlement et les législatures couvraient
absolument tous les pouvoirs que pouvait exercer le Canada comme entité
politique. Mais l'appelant prétend que la question de l'exercice du culte est
exclusivement de la juridiction du Parlement fédéral et, en particulier, que
les prescriptions du règlement attaqué seraient couvertes par le début de
l'article 91 qui autorise l'adoption de "lois pour la paix, l'ordre et le
bon gouvernement du Canada", ou la Loi
criminelle.
Au sujet de la première
prétention, il suffit de poursuivre la lecture de l'article 91 pour constater
que le pouvoir du Parlement fédéral relativement à la paix, l'ordre et le bon
gouvernement du Canada se bornent à toutes les matières ne tombant pas dans les
"catégories de sujets exclusivement assignés par le présent acte aux
Législatures des provinces". Comme il a été invariablement décidé par le
Conseil Privé et conformément, d'ailleurs, au texte précis que nous venons de
citer, dès que la matière est couverte par l'un des paragraphes de l'article
92, elle devient du domaine exclusif des législatures de chaque province et
elle est soustraite à la juridiction du Parlement fédéral. Naturellement, nous
ne parlons plus ici du contrôle des rues municipales, car il est évident que,
dans ce cas, les paragraphes 8, 13 et 16 de l'article 92 (comme d'ailleurs nous
l'avons vu plus haut) attribuent cette juridiction exclusivement aux
législatures. Mais, si nous comprenons bien la prétention, c'est que la
garantie de l'exercice du culte doit venir du Parlement fédéral et n'appartient
pas aux législatures. Nous disons bien qu'elle doit venir, car il est très
certain que, pour le moment, elle n'existe pas ailleurs que dans la Loi concernant la liberté des cultes invoquée par l'appelant dans sa déclaration (S.R.Q. 1941, c. 307).
La difficulté
qu'éprouve ici l'appelant résulte de plusieurs raisons:
Premièrement:—Son droit
de distribuer des pamphlets religieux ne constitue pas l'exercice d'un culte
d'une profession religieuse.
Deuxièmement :—A tout
événement, la jouissance et le libre exercice du culte d'une profession
religieuse ne jouit pas, en vertu du chapitre 307, S.R.Q. 1941; d'une autorisation
[Page 315]
absolue, mais il faut
que ce culte s'exerce "de manière à ne pas servir d'excuse à la licence,
ni à autoriser des pratiques incompatibles avec la paix et la sûreté de la
province".
Troisièmement :—L'exercice
du culte est un droit civil et, par conséquent, tombe sous le paragraphe 13 de
l'article 92 de l'Acte de l'Amérique britannique du Nord. Il est donc du
domaine provincial.
Le premier point
ci-dessus dépend d'une question de fait. Or, l'appelant a fait entendre comme
témoin un monsieur Hayden C. Covington, qui s'est décrit comme "ordained
minister of the gospel, and lawyer, 124 Columbia Heights, Brooklyn, New
York". Au cours de ce témoignage, ce témoin a identifié un nombre considérable
de publications dont il a déclaré qu'elles contenaient la doctrine des Témoins
de Jéhovah, en ajoutant: "They comprise the official view, doctrines and
principles advocated and taught by Jehovah's Witnesses at the date of publication of
each of such books". Or, clans toutes ces publications, il est affirmé que
les Témoins de Jéhovah ne sont pas une religion; que, au contraire, leur but
est de combattre toutes les religions et que la religion est une invention du
démon. Nous avons déjà, au début de ce jugement, fait allusion à cette doctrine.
Dans les circonstances,
il m'est impossible de voir en vertu de quoi les Témoins de Jéhovah pourraient
invoquer la liberté du culte qui est prévue dans le chapitre 307 des Statuts
Refondus de Québec 1941. D'ailleurs, il serait exagéré de prétendre que, par
application du chapitre 307, aucune manifestation religieuse ne pourrait être
empêchée par règlement. C'est ainsi qu'il est de pratique courante que les
municipalités ne permettent pas la vente d'insignes ("tag-days"),
pour fins de bienfaisance, sans une autorisation qui est réservée au conseil;
et je n'entretiens pas le moindre doute qu'une corporation municipale a le
pouvoir d'interdire les processions religieuses dans ses rues, quelle que soit
la nature ou le caractère de ces processions. J'ai même eu connaissance de règlements
municipaux qui défendaient aux églises de sonner les cloches pour appeler les
fidèles aux exercices religieux.
[Page 316]
Pour ce qui est du
deuxième point ci-dessus mentionné, il faut réitérer que l'article 2 du
chapitre 307 ne permet pas la jouissance et le libre exercice du culte d'une
profession religieuse d'une façon absolue. Il faut que cela ne
"serve pas d'excuse à la licence, ni à des pratiques incompatibles avec la paix
et la sûreté de la province". C'est le texte même de la loi.
Si donc, à l'encontre
de la preuve, il fallait décider que les Témoins de Jéhovah pratiquent un
culte, il n'en faudrait pas moins, en vertu du texte de la Loi concernant la
liberté des cultes, que la province ou la municipalité ait le droit de
contrôler cet exercice "de manière à ne pas servir d'excuse à la licence,
ni à autoriser des pratiques incompatibles avec la paix et la sûreté de la province".
Puisque les Témoins de
Jéhovah prétendent que leur profession religieuse consiste à distribuer des
tracts religieux, il s'ensuit que la province ou la municipalité, à laquelle la
province délègue ce pouvoir, a le droit d'examiner les pamphlets religieux que
l'on entend distribuer, de façon à en autoriser ou non la distribution.
A cet égard, je le
répète, les Témoins de Jéhovah, ayant pris la position qu'ils ne demanderaient
pas l'autorisation et qu'ils ne soumettraient pas la littérature qu'ils
voulaient distribuer, nous n'avons aucune preuve au dossier susceptible de nous
permettre de savoir si cette littérature tombait ou non dans les exceptions
prévues par l'article 2 du chapitre 307. Mais, si nous nous croyions justifiés
de prendre pour acquit que cette littérature serait de la même nature que les
livres et les tracts qui ont été produits au dossier, ou encore qu'elle
contiendrait les déclarations faites par le vice-président Covington, il serait
inconcevable qu'une municipalité ne put empêcher la circulation dans ses rues
de. cette littérature que son conseil pourrait certainement considérer comme
constituant de la licence ou des pratiques incompatibles avec la paix et la
sûreté de la province; et, dès lors, comme tombant dans l'exception exprimée
dans l'article 2.
Voici, en effet, ce
qu'on trouve dans le témoignage de M. Covington:
Q. Are you informed that the religion of a
greater part of the people in this province and in this city is Roman Catholic?—A. Yes, I have that information.
[Page 317]
En fait, il est notoire
que 90 pour cent de la population de la Cité de Québec est catholique romaine
et 45 pour cent de la population du Canada appartient à la même religion.
On lui demande alors de
lire les passages suivants des publications des Témoins de Jéhovah:
...Religion is the adulteress and
idolatress that befriends and commits religious fornication with the political
and commercial elements. She is the lover of this world and blesses the world
from the balcony of the Vatican and in the pulpits. Religion, whose most
powerful representative has ruled from Rome for sixteen centuries, traces her
origin all the way back to Babylon of Nimrod's founding, and organized religion
deservedly bears the name Babylon I will shew unto thee the judgment of the
great whore (or idolatress) that sitteth upon many waters: with whom the kings
of the earth have committed fornication, and the inhabitants of the earth have
been made drunk with the wine of her fornication full of abominations and
filthiness of her fornication; and upon her forehead was a name written,
MYSTERY, BABYLON THE GREAT, THE MOTHER OF HARLOTS AND ABOMINATIONS OF THE
EARTH.
Les citations qui
précèdent sont tirées de l'exhibit D-49, aux pages 345 et 346.
Après avoir mis le
témoin Covington en présence des extraits ci-dessus, l'avocat de la Cité de
Québec lui demande :
Q. Do you consider that writing such books
with such insults against another religion, in fact the religion practised by
the people of this province or city, a proper means of preaching the gospel?—A.
I do.
Et au cours de cette
réponse, il dit :
...history abundantly attests to the fact
that the Roman Catholic Hierarchy has had relationship with the world and has
had part tacitly in the wars between the nations and the destruction of
nations.
Un peu plus loin:
Q. Do you consider necessary for your organization
to attack the other religions, in fact, the Catholic, the Protestant and the
Jews?—A. Indeed. The reason for that is because the Almighty God commands that
error shall be exposed and not persons or nations.
La Cour demande au même
témoin :
Q. You are the only witnesses of the truth?—A.
Jehovah's Witnesses are the only witnesses to the truth of Almighty God
Jehovah... Q. Is the Roman Catholic a true church?—A. No.
Q. Is it an unclean woman?—A. It is
pictured in the Bible as a whore, as having illicit relationship with the
nations of this world, and history proves that fact, history that all have
studied in school.
A un autre point de
vue, ce même témoin déclare:
If obedience to a law of the state or
nation would compel them (les Témoins de Jéhovah) to thereby violate God's law,
they will obey God rather than men.
[Page 318]
Ce que, d'ailleurs, il
avait déjà affirmé peu de temps auparavant au cours de son témoignage, à une
demande de la Cour:
Q. Notwithstanding the laws of the country
to the contrary?—A. Notwithstanding the laws of the country to the contrary.
Qui oserait prétendre
que des pamphlets contenant les déclarations qui précèdent, distribués dans une
cité comme celle de Québec, ne constitueraient pas une pratique incompatible
avec la paix et la sûreté de la Cité ou de la province? Quel tribunal
condamnerait un conseil municipal qui empêcherait la circulation de pareilles
déclarations? Et je n'ai choisi que quelques passages dans des livres et des
tracts qui fourmillent de semblables affirmations. La décence, d'ailleurs, me
commanderait de ne pas en citer davantage. Et cela ne me paraît pas nécessaire pour démontrer qu'une municipalité, dont 90 pour cent de la
population est catholique, a non seulement le droit, mais le devoir, d'empêcher
la dissémination de pareilles infamies.
Enfin, le dernier point
c'est la question que l'exercice des cultes est un droit civil qui relève de la
juridiction des législatures provinciales. C'est ainsi que l'ont considéré les
provinces de la Saskatchewan et de l'Alberta, qui ont adopté des lois
intitulées: An Act to Protect Certain Civil Rights (1947, 11 Geo. VI, c.
35). L'objet de la loi est déclaré dans le préambule comme étant "to
protect certain civil rights" et l'article 3 de la Loi stipule:
...Every person and every class of persons
shall enjoy the right to freedom of conscience, opinion and belief, and freedom
of religious association, teaching, practice and worship.
La province de
'l'Alberta a un statut semblable.
Il est intéressant, sur
ce point, de référer à 'l'interprétation donnée par le Conseil Privé de
l'expression "civil rights" dans l'Acte de Québec de 1774, dans la
cause de Citizens Insurance Company of Canada v. Parsons :
...It is to
be observed that the same words, "Civil rights" are employed in the
Act of 14 Geo. 3, c. 83, which made provision for the Government of the
province of Quebec, Sect. 8 of that Act enacted that His Majesty's Canadian
subjects within the province of Quebec should enjoy their property, usages, and
other civil rights, as they had before done, and that in all matters of
controversy relative to property and civil rights resort should be had to the
laws of Canada, and be determined agreably to the said laws. In this statute
the words "property" and "civil rights"
[Page 319]
are plainly used in their largest sense;
and there is no reason for holding that in the statute under discussion they
are used in a different and narrower one.
Il suffit de signaler
la contradiction de l'argumentation du procureur de l'appelant qui, d'une part,
allègue l'inconstitutionnalité de la Charte de Québec, en invoquant, d'autre
part, qu'elle est en conflit avec la Loi concernant la liberté des cultes
(S.R.Q. 1941, c. 307) de cette même province de Québec. Il est
indiscutable que la législature qui a adopté le chapitre 307 avait la
compétence voulue pour adopter la Charte de la Cité de Québec, en vertu de
laquelle le règlement 184 a été édicté.
En plus, d'ailleurs, le
chapitre 307 n'est rien autre chose qu'une loi déclaratoire d'un statut
antérieur à la Confédération, dont le procureur de l'appelant a fait grand
cas. On la trouve dans les Statuts Revisés du Canada de 1859, c. 74, qui est
lui-même la reproduction d'une loi de 1851.
Et alors entre en cause
l'article 129 de l'Acte de l'Amérique britannique du Nord 1867, en
vertu duquel toutes les lois en vigueur en Canada lors de l'Union continuent
d'exister, entre autres, dans la province de Québec, "comme si l'Union
n'avait pas eu lieu": Elles peuvent "être révoquées, abolies ou
modifiées par le Parlement du Canada ou par la législature de la province
respective, conformément à l'autorité du Parlement ou de cette législature, en
vertu du présent acte". Mais, il n'y a pas lieu de se demander ici si la,
révocation était du ressort du Parlement fédéral ou de la Législature de Québec
ou d'Ontario, parce que telle révocation n'a pas eu lieu. Le Parlement du
Canada a nullement révoqué ou modifié cette loi antérieure à la Confédération
et, par conséquent, en vertu même de l'article 129 de la Constitution, cette loi a continué
d'être en vigueur dans la province de Québec "comme si l'Union n'avait pas
eu lieu". En vain l'appelant a-t-il prétendu qu'un règlement de ce genre
avait le caractère d'une loi criminelle et serait, dès lors, du domaine
du Parlement du Canada, en vertu du paragraphe 27 de l'article 91 de
l'Acte de l'Amérique britannique du Nord. Ce règlement n'a aucunement
l'aspect de la définition d'un acte criminel. On peut voir, sous ce rapport, ce
que dit Lord Hewart dans Thomas v. Sawkins, et également, dans la même cause, les commentaires de
Avory J.
[Page 320]
Nous avons là une
situation semblable à celle qui fut étudiée par cette Cour dans la cause de Provincial
Secretary of Prince Edward Island v. Egan, déjà citée plus haut. La Cour Suprême du Canada ne
faisait alors que réitérer ce qui avait été dit dans In Re McNutt, et surtout dans Bédard v. Dawson, où cette Cour a maintenu la validité d'un statut de
Québec autorisant la Cour à ordonner la fermeture d'une maison de désordre sur
le principe qu'il s'agit là d'une matière de propriété et de droit civil et qui
ne tombe pas sous le coup de la Loi criminelle. D'ailleurs, les
provinces ont le pouvoir d'aider à l'application du droit criminel en tentant
de supprimer le crime et le désordre, comme le faisait remarquer le Juge en
chef Duff dans l'affaire des Lois de la province d'Ontario relatives aux enfants
abandonnés ou négligés.
Sur le tout, je n'ai
donc aucune hésitation à dire que le règlement attaqué est légal, valide et
constitutionnel et que les jugements qui l'ont déclaré tel doivent être confirmés,
avec dépens.
KERWIN J.:—The appellant Saumur is a member of
Jehovah's Witnesses and by action, brought in the Superior Court of Quebec,
asks that by-law 184 of the City of Quebec, passed October 27, 1933, be
declared to 'be-both on its face and in so far as he is concerned—ultra vires,
unconstitutional, illegal, null and void and be quashed and set aside for all
legal purposes. The Superior Court, and the Court of Queen's Bench (Appeal
Side) with
Bertrand J. dissenting, dismissed the action and hence this appeal.
Clause 2 of the
by-law provides penalties for the breach of clause 1, the important provision,
which is in these words:—
lo.—It is, by the present by-law forbidden
to distribute in the streets of the City of Quebec, any book, pamphlet,
booklet, circular, tract whatever without having previously obtained for so
doing the written permission of the Chief of Police.
Counsel for the
appellant declined to contend that the by-law was invalid because a discretion
was delegated to the Chief of Police. Counsel for the respondent, the City of
Quebec, and for the intervenant, the Attorney General
[Page 321]
of Quebec, did not deal
with the point and nothing is therefore said about it. However, an argument was
advanced based upon a pre-Confederation statute of 1852 of the old Province of
Canada, 14-15 Viet. e. 175, the relevant part of which provides:—
the free exercise and enjoyment of
Religious Profession and Worship, without discrimination or preference, so as
the same be not made an excuse for acts of licentiousness, or a justification
of practices inconsistent with the peace and safety of the Province, is by the
constitution and laws of this Province allowed to all Her Majesty's subjects
within the same.
Section 129 of the British
North America Act, 186'7, enacts:—
129. Except as otherwise provided by this
Act, all Laws in force in Canada, Nova Scotia, or New Brunswick at the Union,
and all Courts of Civil and Criminal Jurisdiction, and all legal Commissions,
Powers, and Authorities, and all Officers, Judicial, Administrative and
Ministerial, existing therein at the Union, shall continue in Ontario, Quebec,
Nova Scotia, and New Brunswick respectively, as if the Union had not been made;
subject nevertheless (except with respect to such as are enacted by or exist
under Acts of the Parliament of Great Britain or of the Parliament of the
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland) to be repealed, abolished, or
altered by the Parliament of Canada, or by the Legislature of the respective
Province, according to the Authority of the Parliament or of that Legislature
under this Act.
By virtue of this
section that part of the pre-Confederation statute extracted above continued
to operate in the Province of Quebec at the time of the coming into force of
the British North America Act. Since then the Quebec Legislature enacted
legislation practically in the same words, and certainly to the same effect,
which legislation has been continued from time to time and is now found in
section 2 of R.S.Q. 1941, e. 307, The Freedom of Worship Act. Whether or
not such legislation be taken to supersede the pre-Confederation enactment, no
statutes such as the Quebec City Charter, in the general terms in which they
are expressed, and whenever originally enacted, have the effect of abrogating
the specific terms of the enactment providing for freedom of worship.
It appears from the
material filed on behalf of the appellant that Jehovah's Witnesses not only do
not consider themselves as belonging to a religion but vehemently attack
anything that may ordinarily be so termed but in my view they are entitled to
"the free exercise and enjoyment of (their) Religious Profession and
Worship." The Witnesses attempt to spread their views by way of the
printed and
[Page 322]
written word as well as
orally and state that such attempts are part of their belief. Their attacks on
religion generally, or on one in particular, do not bring them within the
exception "so as the same be not made an excuse for licentiousness or a
justification of practices inconsistent with the peace and safety of the
Province." While several definitions of "licentious" appear in
standard dictionaries, the prevailing sense of that term is said to be
"libertine, lascivious, lewd." To certain biblical expressions the
pamphlets, etc., of Jehovah's Witnesses which they desire to distribute attach
a meaning which is offensive to a great majority of the inhabitants of the
Province of Quebec. But, if they have a legal right to attempt to spread their
beliefs, as I think they have, the expressions used by them in so doing, as
exemplified in the exhibits filed, do not fall within the first part of the
exception. Nor in my opinion are their attacks "inconsistent with the
peace and safety of the Province" even where they are directed
particularly against the religion of most of the Province's residents. The
peace and safety of the Province will not be endangered if that majority, do
not use the attacks as a foundation for breaches of the peace.
Confined to the
argument now under consideration, the above reasons do not justify a
declaration that the by-law is ultra vires the City of Quebec since, if not
otherwise objectionable, the by-law may have its effect in other cases and under
other circumstances; but they do Warrant a declaration that the by-law does not
extend so as to prohibit the appellant as a member of Jehovah's Witnesses from
distributing in the streets of Quebec any book, pamphlet, booklet, circular or
tract of Jehovah's Witnesses included in the exhibits and an injunction
restraining the City, its officers and agents from in any way interfering with
such actions of the appellant.
The appellant further
contended that the by-law should be declared illegal on the ground that the
Provincial Legislature has no power to authorize the Council of the City of
Quebec to pass a general by-law prohibiting the distribution of books,
pamphlets, etc., in the City streets. At first he argued that the
subject-matter of any such legislation and by-law falls under section 91 of the
British North
[Page 323]
America Act and not section 92, but later changed his
position by arguing that neither Parliament nor the Provincial Legislatures
possessed the requisite power. I am unable to agree with either of these
submissions. I do not find it helpful to refer to rights conferred by early
treaties or sanctioned by Imperial Statutes dealing with the old colonies and
subdivisions of what is now Canada since it, is well-settled that the British
North America Act has conferred all powers of legislation either upon
Parliament or the Legislatures of the Provinces and that there is no field in
which the one or the others may not operate: Bank of Toronto v. Lambe :
Their Lordships have to construe the express
words of an Act of Parliament which makes an elaborate distribution of the
whole field of legislative authority between two legislative bodies, and at the
same time provides for the federated provinces a carefully balanced
constitution, under which no one of the parts can pass laws for itself except
under the control of the whole acting through the Governor-General. And the
question they have to answer is whether the one body or the other has power to
make a given law.
Attorney General for
Ontario v. Attorney General for Canada (Companies Reference) :
In 1867 the desire of Canada for a definite
Constitution embracing the entire Dominion was embodied in the British North
America Act. Now, there can be no doubt that under this organic instrument the
powers distributed between the Dominion on the one hand and the provinces on
the other hand cover the whole area of self-government within the whole area of
Canada. It would be subversive of the entire scheme and policy of the Act to
assume that any point of internal self-government was withheld from Canada.
In my view the right to
practise one's religion is a civil right in the Province under head 13 of
section 92 of the British North America Act just as much as the right to
strike or lock-out dealt with by the Judicial Committee in Toronto Electric
Commissioners v. Snider.
That decision, as has been often remarked, was made inter partes, and at
page 403 Viscount Haldane states:—
Whatever else may be the effect of this
enactment (The Industrial Disputes Investigation Act, 1907, of Caanda), it is
clear that it is one which could have been passed, so far as any Province was
concerned, by the Provincial Legislature under the powers conferred by s. 92 of
the British North America Act. For its provisions were concerned directly with
the civil rights of both employers and 'employed in the Province. It set up a
Board of Inquiry which could summon them before it,
[Page 324]
administer to them oaths, call for their
papers and enter their premises. It did no more than what a Provincial
Legislature could have done under head 15 of s. 92, when it imposed punishment
by way of penalty in order to enforce the new restrictions on civil rights. It
interfered further with civil rights when, by s. 55 it suspended liberty to lock-out
or strike during a reference to a Board. It does not appear that there is
anything in the Dominion Act which could not have been enacted by the Legislature
of Ontario, excepting one provision. The field for the operation of the Act was
made the whole of Canada.
For the same reason I
also think that freedom of the press is a civil right in the Province. In Re
Alberta Information Act,
Sir Lyman Duff stated a short ground considered by him (and Davis J.)
sufficient to dispose of the question as to whether Bill No. 9 of the
Legislative Assembly of Alberta, "An Act to Ensure the Publication of
Accurate News and Information" was intra vires the Legislature of
that Province. With the greatest respect I am unable to agree with that part of
his ensuing reasons for judgment commencing at the foot of page 132 and continuing
to the end of page 135, and particularly the following statement:— "Any
attempt to abrogate this right of public debate or to express the traditional
forms of the exercise of the right (in public meeting and through the press),
would, in our opinion be incompetent to the Legislature of the Province."
Also, with respect, I must dissent from the views of Cannon J. upon this topic
as expressed in the same report.
We have not a Bill of
Rights such as is contained in the United States Constitution and decisions on
that part of the latter are of no assistance. 'While it is true that, as
recited in the preamble to the British North America Act the three
Provinces expressed a desire to be federally united with a constitution similar
in principle to that of the United Kingdom, a complete division of legislative
powers being effected by the Act, I assume as it was assumed in Re
Adoption Act,
(with reference, it is true, to entirely different matters) that Provincial
Legislatures are willing and able to deal with matters of importance and
substance that are within their legislative jurisdiction. It is perhaps
needless to say that nothing in the foregoing has reference to matters that
are confined to Parliament.
[Page 325]
As to both freedom of
religion and freedom of the press, with relation to the use of highways in the
Province, I have already stated my view in Winner v.
S.M.T.,
that highways, generally
speaking, fall within "Property and Civil Rights in the Province"
under head 13 of section 92 of the British North
America Act. As to what
are the rights of the public in highways, it is sufficient to refer to
Woolrych's Laws of Ways, p. 3:— "The King's highway is a public passage
for the King and his subjects" and Pratt and McKenzie's Law of Highways,
19th ed. pp. 1 and 2:—"The right of the public in a highway is an easement
of passage only-a right of passing and repassing. In the language of pleading,
a party can only justify passing along, and not being in, a highway".
The appeal should be
allowed and a declaration and injunction granted in the terms set out above.
Although he does not secure all that he claims, the appellant is entitled to
his costs of the action and of the appeal to the Court of Queen's Bench (Appeal
Side). He is also entitled to his costs of the present appeal except that
nothing should be allowed for the preparation of a factum. Rule 30 of the Rules
of this Court provides for the contents of the factum or points of argument of
each party, Part 3 whereof is to consist of "A brief of the argument
setting out the points of law or fact to be discussed." This Rule was not
complied with by the appellant filing two volumes containing 912 mimeographed
pages together with an appendix thereto of 86 mimeographed pages. The costs
awarded the appellant are payable by the respondent, the City of Quebec: No
order should be made, as to costs for or against the intervenant,
the Attorney General of
Quebec.
RAND J.:—The appellant seeks a declaration that
by-law No. 184, of the City of Quebec, passed in October, 1933, is beyond the
legislative power of the province:—
1. It is by the present by-law forbidden to
distribute in the streets of the City of Quebec any book, pamphlet, booklet,
circular, or tract whatever without having previously obtained for so doing the
written, permission of the Chief of Police.
Contravention is
punishable by fine, with imprisonment in default of payment. No question is
raised that the by-law is not authorized by the city charter, and the grounds.
[Page 326]
upon which it is
challenged are that it infringes the freedom of religious worship, secured by a
statute to which I shall later refer, and that it trenches upon the
jurisdiction of the Dominion in restraining freedom of communication by
writings.
The practice under it
is undisputed and as stated to us by counsel is this: when a license is sought,
a copy of the document or writing proposed to be distributed is brought to the
police department and there the chief officer, acting with or without the city
solicitor or others, or in his absence, an official representing him, peruses
the writing; if there is nothing in it considered from any standpoint to be
objectionable, the license issues; if there is, suggestions are made that the
offending matter be removed, but if that is not done the license is refused.
As in all controversies
of this nature, the first enquiry goes to the real nature and character of the
by-law; in what substance and aspect of legislative matter is it enacted? and
we must take its objects and purposes to be what its language fairly embraces.
The by-law places no restriction on the discretion of the officer and none has
been suggested. If, under cover of such a blanket authority, action may be
taken which directly deals with matters beyond provincial powers, can the fact
that the language may, at the same time, encompass action on matters within provincial
authority preserve it from the taint of ultra vires? May a court enter
upon a delineation of the limits and contours of the valid and invalid areas
within it? Must the provision stand or fall as one or can it be severed or
otherwise dealt with? These are the subsidiary questions to be answered.
What the practice under
the by-law demonstrates is that the language comprehends the power of
censorship. From its inception, printing has been recognized as an agency of
tremendous possibilities, and virtually upon its introduction into Western
Europe it was brought under the control and license of government. At that
time, as now in despotisms, authority viewed with fear and wrath the uncensored
printed Word: it is and has been the bête noire of dogmatists in every field
of thought ; and the seat of its legislative control in this country becomes a
matter of the highest , moment.
[Page 327]
The Christian religion,
its practices and profession, exhibiting in Europe and America an organic
continuity, stands in the first rank of social, political and juristic
importance. The Articles of Capitulation in 1760, the Treaty of Paris in 1763,
and the Quebec Act of 1774, all contain special
provisions placing safeguards against restrictions upon its freedom, which were
in fact liberations from the law in force at the time in England. The Quebec
Act, by sec. 5, declared that His Majesty's subjects,
professing the religion of the Church of
Rome of and in the said Province of Quebec, may have, hold and enjoy, the free
exercise of the religion ,of the Church of Rome, subject to the King's
supremacy ...
and, by sec. 15, that
no ordnance touching religion ... shall be
of any force or effect until the saine shall have received His Majesty's
approbation.
This latter provision,
in modified form, was continued by sec. 42 of the Constitutional Act of
1791:‑
whenever any act or acts shall … in any
manner relate to or affect the enjoyment of or exercise of any religious form
or mode of worship
the proposed Act was
to be laid before both Houses of Parliament and the assent of the Sovereign
could be given only if within thirty days thereafter no address from either
House to withhold assent had been presented. The Union Act of 1840, sec.
42, contained a like provision. In each of the latter Acts existing laws were
continued by secs. 33 and 46 respectively. From 1760, therefore, to the present
moment religious freedom has, in our legal system, been recognized as a
principle of fundamental character; and although we have nothing in the nature
of an established church, that the untrammelled affirmations of religious
belief and its propagation, personal or institutional, remain as of the
greatest constitutional significance throughout the Dominion is unquestionable.
This is confirmed by a
consideration of legislative powers conferred by the same statutes. By sec. 12
of the Quebec Act, the legislative council, with the consent of the governor,
could make ordnances, generally, for the "peace, welfare and good
government" of the province. By sec. 8, the Canadian subjects were to hold
their property and possessions "together with all customs and usages
relating
[Page 328]
thereto and all other
their civil rights" as before the capitulation so far as they might be
consistent with their new allegiance; and in all matters of controversy
relating to property and civil rights "resort should be had to the laws of
Canada" as the rule for decision. By sec. 11 the criminal law of England
was to be administered. The change of sovereignty had necessarily brought with
it the public law of England, and so far as its provisions might conflict with
the local laws and usages they would prevail.
In 1852, cap. 175 of
14-15 Viet. (Canada) was with the specified assent of Her Majesty enacted:—
Whereas the recognition of legal equality
among all Religious Denominations is an admitted principle of Colonial
Legislation; And whereas in the state and condition of this Province, to which
such a principle is peculiarly applicable, it is desirable that the same should
receive the sanction of direct Legislative Authority, recognizing and declaring
the same as a fundamental principle of our civil polity: Be it therefore
declared and enacted by the Queen's Most Excellent Majesty, by and with the
advice and consent of the Legislative Council and of the Legislative Assembly
of the Province of Canada, constituted and assembled by virtue .of and under
the authority of an Act passed in the Parliament of the United Kingdom of Great
Britain and Ireland, and intituled, An Act to reunite the Provinces of Upper
and Lower Canada, and for the Government of Canada, and it is hereby declared and
enacted by the authority of the saine, That the free exercise and enjoyment of
Religious Profession and Worship, without discrimination or preference, so as
the same be not made an, excuse for acts of licentiousness, or a justification
of practices inconsistent with the peace and safety of the Province, is by the
constitution and laws of this Province allowed to all Her Majesty's subjects
within the same.
That law is now
embodied in cap. 307, sec. 2 of R.S.Q. 1941.
By cap. 118 of the
Imperial Statutes of 1854, sec. 42 of the Act of Union, 1840, was repealed and it was provided that the Governor
might, in Her Majesty's name, assent to any bill of the Legislature of Canada
or for Her Majesty to assent to any such bill reserved for the signification of
Her pleasure, although the bill should not have been laid before the Houses of
Parliament.
Finally, the Confederation Act of 1867 effected a distribution of legislative
power for the "peace, order and good government of Canada" between
the Dominion and the provinces. Sec. 6 of cap. 118, 1854, remains unrepealed
save by the effect upon it of that Act: and it would appear that its provisions for
assent and reservation are incompatible with the provincial status.
[Page 329]
The only powers given
by sec. 92 of the Confederation Act which have been suggested to extend
to legislation in relation to religion are nos. 13, Property and Civil Rights,
and 16, Matters of a merely local or private nature in the province. The
statutory history of the expression "Property and Civil Rights"
already given exhibiting its parallel enactment with special provisions
relating to religion shows indubitably that such matters as religious belief,
duty and observances were never intended to be included within that collocation
of powers. If it had not been so, the exceptional safeguards to Roman Catholics
would have been redundant.
Strictly speaking,
civil rights arise from positive law; but freedom .of speech, religion and the
inviolability of the person, are original freedoms which are at once the
necessary attributes and modes of self-expression of human beings and the
primary conditions of their community life within a legal order. It is in the
circumscription of these liberties by the creation of civil rights in persons
who may be injured by their exercise, and by the sanctions of public law, that
the positive law operates. What we realize is the residue inside that
periphery. Their significant relation to our law lies in this, that under its
principles to which there are only minor exceptions, there is no prior or
antecedent restraint placed upon them: the penalties, civil or criminal, attach
to results which their exercise may bring about, and apply as consequential
incidents. So we have the civil rights against defamation, assault, false
imprisonment and the like, and the punishments of the criminal law; but the
sanctions of the latter lie within the exclusive jurisdiction of the Dominion.
Civil rights of the same nature arise also as protection against infringements
of these freedoms.
That legislation
"in relation" to religion and its profession is not a local or
private matter would seem to me to be self-evident: the dimensions of this
interest are nationwide; it is even today embodied in the highest level of the
constitutionalism of Great Britain; it appertains to a boundless field of
ideas, beliefs and faiths with the deepest roots and loyalties; a religious
incident reverberates from one end of this country to the other, and there is
nothing to which the "body politic of the Dominion" is more
sensitive.
[Page 330]
There is, finally, the
implication of sec. 93 of the Confederation, Act which deals with
education. In this section appear the only references in the statute to
religion. Sub-sec. (i) speaks of "Denominational Schools" and
preserves their existing rights and privileges. Subsec. (ii) extends to the
separate schools "of the Queen's Protestant and Roman Catholic
subjects" in Quebec the same "powers, privileges and duties"
then conferred and imposed upon the separate schools of the "Queen's Roman
Catholic subjects" in Upper Canada. Subsec. (iii) provides for an appeal
to the Governor-General in Council from any act or decision of a provincial
authority "affecting any right or privilege of the Protestant or Roman
Catholic minority of the Queen's subjects in relation to education".
Subsec. (iv) declares that in the event of any failure on the part of the
provincial authority to observe or enforce the provincial laws contemplated by
the section, Parliament may provide for the execution of the provisions of the
section. On the argument advanced, and apart from the question of criminal law,
these vital constitutional provisions could be written off by the simple
expedient of abolishing, as civil rights and by provincial legislation, the
religious freedoms of minorities, and so, in legal contemplation, the
minorities themselves.
So is it with freedom
of speech. The Confederation Act recites the desire of the three
provinces to be federally united into one Dominion "with a constitution
similar in principle to that of the United Kingdom. Under that constitution,
government is by parliamentary institutions, including popular assemblies
elected by the people at large in both provinces and Dominion: government
resting ultimately on public opinion reached by discussion and the interplay
of ideas. If that discussion is placed under license, its basic condition is
destroyed: the government, as licensor, becomes disjoined from the citizenry.
The only security is steadily advancing enlightenment, for which the widest
range of controversy is the sine qua non.
In the Reference re The
Accurate News and Information Act of Alberta,
Sir Lyman Duff deals with this matter. The proposed legislation did not
attempt to prevent discussion of affairs in newspapers but rather to compel
the publication of statements as to the true and exact objects
[Page 331]
of governmental policy
and as to the difficulties of achieving them. Quoting the words of Lord Wright
in James v. Commonwealth,
that freedom of discussion means "freedom governed by law" he
says at p. 133:—
… it is axiomatic that the practice of this
right of free public discussion of public affairs, notwithstanding its
incidental mischiefs, is the breath of life for parliamentary institutions.
He deduces authority to
protect it from the principle that the powers requisite for the preservation of
the constitution arise by a necessary implication of the Confederation Act
as a whole. He proceeds:—
But this by no means exhausts the matter.
Any attempt to abrogate this right of public debate or to suppress the
traditional forms of the exercise of the right (in public meeting and through
the press) would, in our opinion, be incompetent to the legislatures of the
provinces, or to the legislature of any one of the provinces, as repugnant to
the provisions of The British North America Act, by which the Parliament of
Canada is established as the legislative organ of the people of Canada under
the Crown, and Dominion legislation enacted pursuant to the legislative authority
given by those provisions. The subject matter of such legislation could not be
described as a provincial matter purely; as in substance exclusively a matter
of property and civil rights within the province, or a matter of private or
local within the province. It would not be, o quote the words of the judgment
of the Judicial Committee in Great West Saddlery Co. v. The King (1921) 2 A.C. 91, at 122, "legislation directed solely to the purposes
specified in section 92"; and it would be invalid on the principles
enunciated in that judgment and adopted in Caron v. The King (1924) A.C.
999, at 1005-06.
Conceding aspects of
regulation of newspapers to be within provincial powers, he adds that
in this region of constitutional practice,
it is not permitted to a provincial legislature to do indirectly what cannot be
done directly.
Cannon J. expressed
similar views:—
Freedom of discussion is essential to
enlighten public. opinion in a democratic State; it cannot be curtailed without
affecting the right of the people to be informed through sources independent of
the government concerning matters of public interest. There must be an
untrammelled publication of the news and political opinions of the political
parties contending for ascendancy. As stated in the preamble of The British
North America Act, our constitution is and will remain, unless radically
changed, "similar in principle to that of the United Kingdom." At the
time of Confederation, the United Kingdom was a democracy. Democracy cannot be maintained
without its foundation: free public opinion and free discussion throughout the
nation of all matters affecting the State within the limits set by the criminal
code and the common law.
[Page 332]
What is proposed before
us is that a newspaper, just as a. religious, political or other tract or
handbill, for the purposes of sale or distribution through use of streets, can
be placed under the uncontrolled discretion of a municipal officer; that
is, that the province, While permitting all others, could forbid a newspapers
or any writing of a particular colour from being so disposed of. That public
ways, in some circumstances the only practical means available for any appeal
to the community generally, have from the most ancient times been the avenues
for such communications, is demonstrated by the Bible itself: in the 6th verse
of ch. xi of Jeremiah these words appear: "Proclaim all these .words in
the cities of Judah, and in the streets of Jerusalem"; and a more
objectionable interference, short of complete suppression, with that
dissemination which is the "breath of life" of the political
institutions of this country than that made possible by the by-law can scarcely
be imagined.
But it is argued that
the by-law relates not to religion or free speech at all but to the
administration of streets. Undoubtedly the city may pass regulations for that
purpose but within the general and neutral requirement of license by the by-law
a number of equally plausible objects may be conjectured. No purpose whatever
is indicated much less specified by the language; its sole effect is to create
and vest in a functionary a power, to be exercised for any purpose or reason he
sees fit, disclosed or undisclosed. The only practice actually followed is not
remotely connected with street regulation: matters of traffic interference, of
nuisance, of cleanliness or anything of like character would be within the
city's authority, but these are no more to be inferred than others. A suggested
possible purpose is to deal with writings that might provoke breaches of the
peace by persons who dislike what they contain, but the same observation
applies: that matter or purpose is not prescribed, and, assuming it to be
within the provincial purview, on which I express no opinion, it would be only
one of a number of objects of equal speculative inclusion within the enactment,
some of which relate to matters beyond provincial powers. The alternatives of
interpretation are whether of that group of objects, one being valid the by-law
in its entirety is valid, or whether one being invalid, the
[Page 333]
by-law in its entirety
falls; or shortly, can legislation embracing such a combination of unspecified
possibilities be upheld?
It was urged by Mr.
Beaulieu that the city as proprietor of the streets has authority to forbid or
permit as it chooses, in the most unlimited and arbitrary manner, any action or
conduct that takes place on them. The possibilities of such a proposition can
be easily imagined. But it misconceives the relation of the province to the public
highways. The public entitled to use them is that of the Dominion, whose
citizens are not of this or that province but of Canada. What has been confided
to the provinces is the regulation .of their use by that public.
Conceding, as in the
Alberta Reference, that aspects of the activities of religion and free speech
may be affected by provincial legislation, such legislation, as in all other
fields, must be sufficiently definite and precise to indicate its subject
matter. In our political organization, as in federal structures generally, that
is the condition of legislation by any authority within it: the courts must be
able from its language and its relevant circumstances, to attribute an
enactment to a matter in relation to which the legislature acting has
been empowered to make laws. That principle inheres in the nature of
federalism; otherwise, authority, in broad and general terms, could be
conferred which would 'end the division of powers. Where the language is
sufficiently specific and can fairly be interpreted as applying only to matter
within the enacting jurisdiction, that attribution will be made; and where the
requisite elements are present, there is the rule of severability. But to
authorize action which may be related indifferently to a variety of
incompatible matters by means of the device of a discretionary license cannot
be brought within either of these mechanisms; and the Court is powerless, under
general language that overlaps exclusive jurisdictions, to delineate and
preserve valid power in a segregated form. If the purpose is street regulation,
taxation, registration or other local object, the language must, with
sufficient precision, define the matter and mode of administration; and by no
expedient which ignores that requirement can constitutional limitations be
circumvented.
[Page 334]
I would, therefore,
allow the appeal, direct judgment declaring the by-law invalid, and enjoin the
respondent City from acting upon it. The costs will be as proposed by my
brother Kerwin.
KELLOCK J. :—This appeal arises out of an action brought by the
appellant against the respondent city, the Attorney General for the province
intervening, for a declaration that a by-law, No. 184, of the city, passed
October 27, 1933, as well as the provincial legislation constituting the city
charter in so far as such legislation may be said to authorize the said by-law,
are ultra vires. The appellant contends that the said legislation and
by-law are neither of them within any of the classes of matters assigned by
section 92 to the legislatures of the provinces, but that their subject matter
lies exclusively within the legislative jurisdiction of Parliament under
section 91. The appellant invokes the provisions of the pre-Confederation
statute of 1852, 14-15 Victoria, Ch. 175, which provides for religious freedom
throughout the then province of Canada. This statute was continued in force by
section 129 of the British North America Act and has never been
repealed.
The appellant, .a
member of the sect or denomination "Jehovah's Witnesses", alleges
that the right to preach the Christian Gospel both orally and by means of the
distribution of printed matter is secured to him by the terms of the statute
of 1852 equally with all other religious denominations. Appellant alleges that
in so doing by this latter means, he has been illegally arrested and imprisoned
under the said by-law at the instance of the respondent and that an additional
charge is pending against him thereunder.
In his declaration the
appellant also attacked the by-law upon the ground that the delegation of the
power of licensing therein contained was incompetent to the city council, but
the appellant does not wish to argue this contention in this court.
The learned trial judge
considered the by-law in question to be a mere "police" regulation,
having to do with the maintenance of order and good government in the city and
accordingly within the general powers granted by the city charter. The learned
judge did not amplify this statement.
[Page 335]
The Court of Appeal dismissed the appeal, Bertrand J.,
dissenting. Marchand J., did not, so far as the record shows, deliver any
reasons. Pratte J., considered the by-law as one relating only to the "use
of streets", a subject-matter of legislation he 'considered to be entirely
within provincial jurisdiction. The learned judge also considered that the
by-law did not trench upon such an exclusive mater of legislative jurisdiction
as criminal law.
Barclay J., concurred
generally with Pratte J. and he affirmed a statement he had made in an earlier
decision, viz., "I fail to see how a mere police regulation governing the
distribution in the streets or public places" of printed matter
"without previously obtaining a written permission is, per se, an attack
upon the freedom of the press."
Hyde J. also agreed
with Pratte J. The learned judge also referred to the Reference with respect to
the Accurate News and Information Act of Alberta, and, in particular,
to the judgments of Duff J., as he then was, and of Cannon J., and distinguished
the case at bar on the ground that the by-law in question was one dealing
merely with the "use of streets".
Bertrand J.,
dissenting, considered the by-law to be in essence one of censorship, and as
trenching upon the right of freedom of worship and profession. In his opinion
the by-law was not within the city's charter, which does not mention such
matters. The learned judge regarded the argument put forward on behalf of the
respondent and the intervenant that the by-law was merely "une simple
mesure de protection contre l'encombrement des rues et place publiques" as
involving too great confidence on their pari in the naiveté of the court. With
respect to the construction of the Act of 1852, he was of opinion that the
words "mais de manière à ne pas servir d'excuse à des actes d'une licence
effrénée, ni à autoriser des pratiques incompatibles avec la paix et la sûreté
de la province" had reference only to "des actes criminels en soi ou
tellement contraires aux moeurs des pays chrétiens qu'ils puissent faire
l'object de règlements spéciaux pourvu toutefois qu'ils ne portent pas atteinte
à la liberté des cultes." In this view, the learned judge did not consider
it necessary to deal with the question of the freedom of the press.
[Page 336]
Before this court the
respondent seeks to support the by-law as legislation in relation to the
"use of streets" or as police regulations with relation to public
order, and reliance is placed upon section 92(8), (13) and (16) of the British
North America Act.
For the appellant it is
contended that the by-law is so wide in its terms that even if authorized by
the relevant provisions of the city charter, both the by-law and the charter
provisions are ultra vires as trenching upon freedom of religion, the
subject-matter of the statute of 1852, and liberty of the press, both
subject-matters of legislation, in the appellant's contention, exclusively
within the jurisdiction of Parliament.
The question,
therefore, which lies at the threshold of the case is as to the true nature and
character of the by-law. Paragraph 1 reads as follows:
It is, by the present by-law, forbidden to
distribute in the streets of the City of Quebec, any book, pamphlet, booklet,
circular, tract whatever without having previously obtained for so doing the written
permission of the Chief of Police.
Paragraph 2 provides a
penalty for distribution without license.
It will be observed
that the by-law is perfectly general in its terms and that while it prohibits
in the absence of a licence, at the same time it contemplates, fully as much,
distribution at the unfettered will of the municipal official to whom is
delegated the power to grant or to refuse to grant licences. The by-law affords
no guide whatever for the regulation from any standpoint of the prohibition or
permission for which it provides. To borrow language used in another connection
by Lord Watson in Union Colliery Company v. The Queen, "the leading
feature" of this by-law consists in this that it establishes no rule or
regulation for its application except that nothing but that which is permitted
by the censor may be distributed. What he permits will appear in the streets.
What he refuses will not. The grant or refusal of a licence will depend upon
the contents of the document proposed to be distributed and the will of the
censor. To equate such a by-law to by-laws which are purely prohibitory is to
lose sight of the real
[Page 337]
nature of the by-law
here in question. This has largely contributed to the error into which the
courts below have, in my opinion, fallen.
Counsel not only for
the respondent but for the intervenant as well, agree that such is the character
of the by-law, and counsel for the respondent stated that it had been so
administered by the respondent, its officers and servants. In so stating
counsel has admitted nothing more than is clear from the record itself. A
single illustration will suffice.
In case No. 51647 in
the Superior Court, Saumur v. Recorder's Court, referred to by the
respondent in its factum, the plaintiff was convicted under the by-law here in
question. A writ of habeas corpus subsequently issued was quashed by the
Superior Court, whose judgment was affirmed by the Court of Appeal, Galipeault
J., dissenting. In the course of his reasons, the learned judge of first instance,
Boulanger J., in quashing the writ, said:
J'admets que le règlement ,est rédigé en
termes assez généraux pour servir à restreindre la liberté de parole ou la
liberté de religion, ou la liberté tout court quand cela devient nécessaire
comme mesure de police et quand la liberté menace de tourner à la licence et de
compromettre la paix de la municipalité.
J'admets aussi que les pourvoira donnés au
directeur de la police sont larges et qu'ils peuvent servir à censurer des publications de caractère religieux.
I shall have something
to say subsequently with respect to the limitation upon the exercise of the
power given to the chief of police which the learned judge reads into the
by-law. For the moment, I quote his language for the purpose of showing that
the 'administration of the by-law is from the standpoint of the contents of the
literature proposed to be distributed. Galipeault J. had this to say in the
same case:
Comme on le voit, le savant juge Iui-même
(Boulanger J.) est d'avis que le règlement dans sa rédaction comme dans sa
substance quel que soit la but que la cité de Québec ait voulu obtenir, peut
porter atteinte "à la liberté de parole, ou la liberté de religion, ou la
liberté tout court" ...
J'estime que la législation se rapportant
aux droits ou à liberté de parole, de pensée, de critique, de la presse en
général, n'est pas du domaine de la législature, mais relève du Parlement du
'Canada qui, par son droit statutaire, le Code Criminel, a légiféré en la
matière.
The learned judge reads
the by-law as it is itself expressed, without any limitation whatever.
[Page 338]
Speaking for the
majority of the court below, Pratte J., says:
En effet, il suffit seulement de songer ce
que pourrait … résulter de la distribution à tout venant d'écrits offensants
pour les habitants de la localité; ou encore, au sort fait aux parents dont
les enfants seraient sans cesse exposés à recevoir dans la rue des écrits
susceptibles de troubler leur esprit, ou propageant des doctrines réprouvées
par ceux qui ont non seulement le droit mais le devoir de veiller à leur
éducation ...
Clearly, therefore, the
by-law is not directed to the mere physical act involved in the handing to
another of a document but has in view the contents of the document and the
desirability or 'otherwise, in the view of the chief of police, as to its
circulation. A document refused a licence would not involve anything more from
the standpoint of obstruction of the highway or the impeding of those using it,
than one with respect to which a licence is granted, and both documents, if
discarded by the recipients, would equally be a source of litter. The by-law,
however, is not concerned with such matters. Nothing more is needed, in my
opinion, to discern the real nature and character of the by-law, namely, to
provide that some material may reach the public using the streets, while the
rest may not.
Being perfectly general
in its terms and setting no standard by which the official it names is to be
governed in granting or refusing licences, the by-law can be used, as it has
been, to deny distribution of its literature to one religious denomination,
while granting that liberty to another or others. The by-law is equally capable
of being applied so as to permit distribution of 'the literature of one
political party while denying that right to all others, or so as to refuse to
allow the selling in the streets ,of some newspapers while permitting others.
In any or all of these cases, the same physical acts would be involved
'occasioning the same degree of obstruction, if obstruction there would be.
Nothing more is needed to demonstrate, in my opinion, that such a by-law was
not enacted "in relation to" streets but in relation to the minds of
the users of the streets.
If the by-law were one
which prohibited all distribution in the streets, entirely different
considerations would very well apply. It is a confusion of thought, in my
opinion, to regard by-law 184 as in the same category with purely prohibitive
by-laws, as the intervenant seeks 'to do and as was done by the court below.
Pratte J., for example, refers to
[Page 339]
In re Kruse. The by-law in question in that case,
however, provided that "no person" should play any musical instrument
on a highway within a specified distance of a house after being requested by
the occupant to desist. Entirely different considerations are applicable to
such by-laws, and judgments with respect to 'them have no application, in my
opinion, to a by-law such as No. 184, which is as much permissive as it is
prohibitory.
Assuming, for the
purposes 'of argument, that the by-law here in question might, in actual
administration by the official mentioned therein, be administered solely to
prevent literature reaching the streets which might cause disturbance or
nuisance therein, and that a by-law expressly so limited would be within
provincial competence, the present by-law is not so limited in its terms. Its
validity is not to be judged from the standpoint of matters to which it might
be limited, but upon the completely general terms in which it in fact is
couched.
No citation of
authority is needed to establish the proposition that civil regulation of the
use of highways is a matter within the jurisdiction of provincial legislatures,
but there is a distinction between legislation "in relation to" a
subject-matter within s. 92 and legislation which may have an effect upon such
matters; Attorney General for Saskatchewan v. Attorney General for Canada, per Viscount Simon.
It is only legislation "in relation to" matters within section 92 which
is committed to the provincial legislatures.
In the judgment in the
court below and in argument on behalf of the intervenant in this court, some
relevance was found to the case at bar in the decision of this court in Provincial
Secretary of Prince Edward Island v. Egan.
In that case it was held that a provincial statute providing for suspension
of a licence to drive a motor car upon conviction under section 285(4) of the
Criminal Code of driving while intoxicated, was valid. In my opinion it would
be impossible to draw any analogy between the provincial legislation there in
question and legislation such as by-law No. 184. It would scarcely be argued
that the decision in
[Page 340]
Egan's case would afford any ground of support for
provincial legislation which sought to make the grant or refusal of a licence
to operate a motor car on a highway dependent upon the religious denomination
to which the driver belonged or the sectarian character of the literature
carried in the vehicle. Such legislation would not be legislation in relation
to highways at all, although no doubt it would affect traffic seeking to use
the highways. There can be no question but that the legislation in question in Egan's
case was "in relation to" highways and safety on the highways.
Legislation which is concerned not primarily with highways at all but with
other subjects must depend for its validity upon the legislative competence of
the legislature with respect to such subjects.
There is equally no
analogy, in my opinion, between a by-law restricting a designated area in a
municipality to private residences, for example, and one which would exclude
from such a designated area buildings erected by one religious denomination.
By-laws of the former character, being purely prohibitory, are usually
recognized as valid provincial legislation, but they would be in an entirely
different category from the latter, if it could be conceived that a by-law of
the latter type would be enacted. Reference may be made to Toronto v. Roman
Catholic Separate Schools Trustees,
per Viscount Cave L.C.
The same may be said of
the type of by-law in question in In re Cribbin and the City of Toronto, which provided that
No person shall on the Sabbath Day, in any
public park in the City of Toronto publicly preach, lecture or declaim.
Had the by-law there in
question been expressed to be applicable to persons of a particular religious
persuasion only, entirely different considerations would have applied to the
question of its constitutional validity.
Bedard v. Dawson, is also relied upon by the intervenant. Again
it is to be observed that the legislation there in question provided that
It shall be illegal for any person who owns or occupies any house or building ... to use or
allow any person to use
the same as a disorderly
house.
[Page 341]
It is perfectly true,
as stated by Duff J., as he then was, at p. 685, that
The legislation impugned seems to be aimed
at suppressing conditions calculated to favour the development of crime rather
than at the punishment of crime. This is an aspect of the subject in respect of
which the provinces seem to be free to legislate.
If, however, the
legislation there under consideration had been operative so as to interfere
with rights which are not the subject of legislative jurisdiction under s. 92,
other considerations would have applied. The question in the case at bar is as
to whether by-law 184 impinges upon such matters.
This brings me to the
first ground upon which the by-law is attacked, namely, the rights granted by
the Act of 1852. That statute, so far .as material, is as follows:
Whereas the recognition of legal equality
among all Religious Denominations is an admitted principle of Colonial
Legislation; And whereas in the state and condition of this Province, to which such
a principle is peculiarly applicable, it is desirable that the same should
receive the sanction of direct Legislative Authority, recognizing and declaring
the same as a fundamental principle of our civil policy: Be it therefore
declared and enacted by the Queen's Most Excellent Majesty, by and with the advice and consent of the
Legislative Council and of the Legislative Assembly of the Province of Canada
... That the free exercise and enjoyment of Religious Profession and Worship,
without discrimination or preference, so as the same be not made an excuse for
acts of licentiousness, or a justification of practices inconsistent with the
peace and safety of the Province, is by the constitution and laws of this
Province allowed to all Her Majesty's subjects within the same.
The respondent
strenuously argued that the Jehovah's Witnesses were not entitled to rely upon
the Act as they were not a "religious denomination" within the
meaning of the statute. It was further contended that because the appellant had
refused to apply for a licence under the by-law before bringing the present
action, this amounted to an "act of licentiousness" or a
"practice inconsistent with the peace and safety of the province"
within the meaning of the statute. With respect I am of opinion that neither
contention is tenable. So far as the second is concerned, in my opinion, the
language of the statute has no effect beyond removing protection from
particular "acts" or "practices" which are in themselves
illegal by the common or statute law. The statute does not mean, for instance,
that if a sect practises polygamy, it becomes disentitled to rely on the
statute for all purposes. It merely means that the statute
[Page 342]
affords no defence to
polygamy. The same would apply in the case of any literature circulated by the
appellant or those associated with him.
Mr. Beaulieu argues
that "the free exercise and enjoyment of Religious Profession and
Worship" in the statute do not cover more than the carrying on of
religious exercise in some place of worship. In that view the statute would
have nothing to say with regard to such a matter, for example, as the
dissemination of religious views or material, e.g., the Scriptures themselves,
outside such places of worship.
I do not think the
statute is to be so narrowly construed. It recites that "the recognition of
legal 'equality among all Religious Denominations" was an admitted
principle of colonial legislation and that it was desirable that that principle
should receive legislative sanction "as a fundamental principle of our
civil polity". By sec. V of the Act of 1774 it was "the free exercise
of the Religion of the Church of Rome" which was granted. The principle of
legal equality provided for by the Act of 1852 can mean no less than this. I
would adopt the language of the writer in Volume II, "La Revue
Critique", p. 130, where he says:
From this principle of our public law flow
the rights and liberties which are dearest to our mixed population; liberty of
conscience, freedom of public worship and freedom of the press in religious
matters .... Every person has a right to speak, write and print his opinion
upon any religious question or point of controversy, without permission from
the government or from any one else.
The Christian religion
would hardly have survived had it permitted itself 'to be circumscribed in
accordance with the argument of Mr. Beaulieu. From the beginning it has
propagated itself by the written as well as the spoken word. The Scriptures
themselves are a sufficient illustration of this. That propagation by such
means was not, however, limited to the Scriptures is a matter of common
knowledge. This is conveniently illustrated by the Canadian Act of 1843, 7
Victoria, c. 68: "An Act to Incorporate the Church Societies of the United
Church of England and Ireland in the Dioceses of Quebec and Toronto." By
the preamble one of the purposes of incorporation was "for circulating in
the said Dioceses, respectively, the Holy Scriptures, the Book of Common Prayer
of the said Church, and such other
[Page 343]
Books and Tracts, as
shall be approved by the Several Central Boards or Managing Committee."
It is undoubted that,
under a by-law of the nature of by-law 184, the circulation of such material as
the above would be impossible except with permission of the censor. This aspect
of religious freedom would thereby be interfered with. The question is,
therefore, 'as to the competency of provincial legislation in this field. In
support of the by-law, it is said that this is a subject matter within the
category of "civil rights in the province."
In considering this
contention certain historical matters are relevant. Under the Quebec Act of
1774, 14 Geo. III, c. 83, provision is made for the government
of the Province of Canada, which included, inter alia, all of the present
provinces of Ontario and Quebec. By section VIII it is provided that all His
Majesty's Canadian subjects within the province, with the exception of
religious orders and communities, might hold and enjoy "their Property and
Possession, together with all Customs and Usages relative thereto, and all
other their Civil Rights, in as large, ample and beneficial Manner"
as if certain previously made proclamations, etc., had not been made. And it
was further provided that in all matters of controversy "relative to Property
and Civil Rights" resort should be had to the laws of Canada as the
rule for decision of the same and that all causes which might 'thereafter be
instituted in any of the courts of justice 'should, with respect to "such
Property and Rights" be determined agreeably to the said laws and customs
of Canada until varied' by subsequent enactment.
It is plain from other
provisions of the statute that "Property and Civil Rights" do not
include the right of exercise and profession of religion, as to which express
provision was made elsewhere.
By section V it is
enacted
That his Majesty's Subjects, professing the
Religion of the Church of Rome of and in the said Province of Quebec, may have,
hold, and enjoy, the free Exercise of the Religion of the Church of Rome,
subject to the King's supremacy, declared and established by .an Act, made in
the first year of the Reign of Queen Elizabeth .... and that the Clergy of the
said Church may hold, receive, and enjoy, their accustomed Dues and Rights,
with respect to such Persons only as shall profess the said Religion.
[Page 344]
Section VI enacts that
Provided nevertheless, That it shall be
lawful for his Majesty, his Heirs or Successors, to make such Provision out of
the rest of the said accustomed Dues and Rights, for the Encouragement of the
Protestant Religion, and for the Maintenance and Support of a Protestant,
Clergy within the said Province, as he or they shall, from Time to Time, think
necessary and expedient.
Section XII provides
for the government of the province by a council, but Section XV provides that
"no Ordinance touching Religion ... ." is to be of any force or
effect until the same shall have received the approval of His Majesty. Section
XI confirms English criminal law 'as the law of the province.
By section XVII
provision is made for "Courts of Civil, Criminal and Ecclesiastical"
jurisdiction.
In 1791 the Constitutional
Act, 31 Geo. III, c. 31, was passed. This statute provided for the division
of the province into two separate provinces of Upper 'and Lower Canada, and for
a separate legislative council and assembly for each, with power to make laws
for the peace, welfare and good government 'of each of the provinces. All laws
previously existing were to continue until repealed or varied under the
authority 'of the Act.
Section XLII provided,
however, that with respect to any Act or Acts which might be passed by the
legislative council or assembly of either of the provinces varying or repealing
the matters covered by Sections V and VI of the Act of 1774 or which
"shall in any Manner relate to or affect the Enjoyment or Exercise of any
religious Form or Mode of Worship; or shall impose or create any Penalties,
Burthens, Disabilities, or Disqualifications in respect of the same" or
should affect the enjoyment of the dues or rights of any "Minister,
Priest, Ecclesiastic, or Teacher, according to any religious Form or Mode of
Worship in respect of his said Office or Function" should, before assent
should be given to it, be laid before both Houses of Parliament in Great
Britain, and His Majesty was prohibited from assenting to any such Act in case
either House within thirty days should present an address to His Majesty to
withhold assent therefrom.
[Page 345]
In 1792, by 32 Geo. III,
c. I, the Legislature of Upper Canada, after reciting the provision in the
Imperial Act of 1774 providing "that in all matters of controversy
relative to Property and Civil Rights, resort should be had to the laws of
Canada, as the rule for the decision .of the same", and
that that part of the former Province of Quebec then included within Upper
Canada having become inhabited principally by persons familiar with the laws of
England, this provision was repealed and it was enacted by Section III that
"from and after the passing of this Act, in all matters of controversy
relative to Property and Civil Rights, resort shall be had to the Laws
of England, as the rule for the decision of the same." Section VI,
however, expressly provided that nothing in the statute should vary or
interfere or be construed to vary or interfere, with any "of the
subsisting provisions respecting Ecclesiastical rights or dues within
this Province."
In 1840, by 3-4
Victoria, c. 35, the two provinces were reunited under one legislative council
and assembly. Section XLII again provided that whenever any bill should be
passed containing any provisions
which shall in any Manner relate to or
affect the Enjoyment or Exercise of any Form or Mode of Religious Worship, or
shall impose or create any Penalties, Burdens, Disabilities, or
Disqualifications, in respect of the same,
every such bill, prior
to assent, should be laid before both Houses of Parliament of the United
Kingdom, and within thirty days thereof, in case either House of Parliament
should address Her Majesty to withhold Her assent from any such bill, it should
not be lawful for Her Majesty to signify Her assent. This section was altered
in 1854, by 17-18 Vic., c. 118, s. 6, empowering the Governor to give the
Queen's assent.
In the meantime, the
Act of 1852, c. 175, was passed by the local legislature in 1851 and, as
required by the statute of 1840, was assented to by Her Majesty at Westminster
on May 15, 1852.
It would therefore
appear plain from all this legislation that, commencing with the statute of
1774, the phrase "property and civil rights" did not include the
right to the exercise and enjoyment of religious profession, that being a
[Page 346]
matter the subject of
special provision in each case, and, by the statute of 1852, made a fundamental
principle of the constitution
of the entire country.
It is, of course, well
settled that the right to hold any view in matters of religious belief is not a
civil right at all except in relation to title to property. In Forbes v.
Eden,
the appellant, a clergyman of the Episcopal Church of Scotland, brought
action for a declaration that it was ultra vires of the church to amend
its canons and that he was entitled to celebrate Divine Worship and to
administer the sacraments and other rites of the church in accordance with the
original canons. The appellant had not been deprived of his status and had
sustained no damage. The respondents, in their defence, relied upon the
principle that courts of civil jurisdiction will not take cognizance of questions
as to religious doctrine or discipline except for the purpose of enforcing
"civil rights" or redressing "civil wrongs".
The following from the
opinions of members of the House are sufficient :
Lord Chelmsford L.C.
.at 573:
The Court had therefore, o consider whether
it could properly entertain the question of the reduction of the canons upon
the ground that they were a departure from the doctrine and discipline of the
Scotch Episcopal Church at the time the appellant became its minister. Now this
it refused to do, as it was a mere abstract question involving religious
dogmas, and resulting in no civil consequences which could justify the
interposition of a Civil Court.
Lord Colonsay, 588:
A Court of Law will not interfere with the
rules of a voluntary association unless to protect some civil right or interest
which is said to be infringed by their operation. Least of all will it enter
into questions of disputed doctrine, when not necessary to do so in reference
to civil interests.
The same principle
underlies the decision in the Free Church case ; see the judgment of Lord James of
Hereford at p. 655.
This principle was well
understood in Canada before 1867. In 1857, by the statute 20 Victoria, c. 43,
provision was made for the appointment of commissioners to reduce into one code
"those provisions of the laws of Lower Canada which relate to civil matters
and are of a general and
permanent character." In their second report, dated May 22,
[Page 347]
1860, the majority of
the commissioners, in discussing the scope of their terms of reference, refer
to a disagreement among the commissioners on this point.
At page 149 of Vol. I,
the majority say:
On one hand, it is pretended that the laws
to be codified are exclusively those upon which the provincial parliament has
the right to legislate, and therefore that all those which proceed from or make
part of the imperial laws should be omitted. On the other hand it is pretended
that the codification required should extend to all classes of categories of
laws in force in the province, provided they refer to civil matters, from whatever source they come, and that the objection would only be
valid in case it should be proposed to repeal or alter these laws, which has
never been contemplated; but is without force, for a case like the present,
where it is only intended to announce their existence.
The latter view was
that of the majority and, while the draft code in its first title" is
concerned with the enjoyment and loss of "civil rights", it does not
deal with the subject matter of the Act of 1852, although it does deal with the
loss of civil rights occasioned by the taking of religious vows upon entry into
a religious order. The majority view was adopted by the legislature in the code
of 1866, the relevant provisions being found in Articles 18, 30 and 34 of the
first title.
In speaking of the loss
of civil rights consequent upon the taking of religious vows, the majority say
also, at page 153:
One of the Commissioners is, however, of
opinion that the religious profession
no longer exists legally in this province, at least so as to produce civil
death; that the cession of the country has 'abolished it, by putting an end to
the state of things upon which its existence depended; that, moreover, it is
contrary to the laws of public order and incompatible with certain civil and religious rights
pertaining equally to all classes of the population. For these reasons set
forth in the special report already mentioned, the present article 20 and the
second paragraph of article 17 are only adopted by two of the Commissioners.
They are of opinion
that whatever may have been the principle, the origin and the source of the
laws on this subject, to establish that it is in force in this country, it is
only necessary to show that it was admitted and put into 'execution in France,
until its abolition in 1789, as forming part of the civil laws; that as
such it was introduced into Canada at its settlement. and that since it has
been constantly followed and practised as well before as since the cession of
the country, which, far from abolishing it by implication or otherwise, has,
on the contrary, given rise to treaties and legislative provisions, which by
granting to the inhabitants of the country the free exercise of their
religion and the enjoyment of their civil laws, have thereby
confirmed and continued the existence of the law in question, which makes part
of the one and is intimately connected with the other.
[Page 348]
In the view of the
codifiers, therefore, and in that of the legislature, freedom of worship and
profession was not a "civil right" and certainly nota civil right
"within" the province of Lower Canada.
It has been decided by
the Judicial Committee that "Property and Civil Rights" in the Act of
1774, although "used in their largest sense" have exactly the same
meaning in the statute of 1867; Citizens Insurance Company v. Parsons, per Sir Montague
Smith. Section 94 of 1867 authorizes Parliament to make provision for the
uniformity of all or any of the laws relative to "property and civil
rights" in Ontario, Nova Scotia and New Brunswick with the consent of
those provinces.
As pointed out in the Parsons
case, at page 110:
The Province of Quebec is omitted from this
section for the obvious reason that the law which governs property and civil
rights in Quebec is in the main the French law as it existed at the time of the
cession of Canada, and not the English law which prevails in the other
provinces.
It is equally obvious
that so far as the law relating to freedom of worship and profession is
concerned, that law was not the French law but rather the statute of 1852,
which applied equally to both of the Canadas.
Mr. Justice Mignault in
Volume I has the following at p. 131:
Les droits sont les facultés ou avantages
que les lois accordent aux personnes. Ils sont civils, politiques ou publics
Certains droits existent qui, à proprement
parler, ne sont ni civils ni politiques; tels sont les droits de
s'associer, de s'assembler paisiblement et sans armes, de pétitionner, de
manifester sa pensée par la voie de la presse ou autrement, la liberté
individuelle et enfin la liberté de conscience. Ces droits ne sont point des
droits civils, car ils ne cone stituent point des rapports de
particulier à particulier; ce ne sont pas non plus de véritables droits politiques, puisqu'on les exerce sans
prendre aucune part au gouvernement du pays. Quelques personnes les rangent
dans une classe particulière sous la dénomination de droits publics.
"I consider"
says Lord Bacon, "that it is a true and received division of law into ius
publicum and ius privatum, the one being the sinews of property, and
the other of government." See Holland, "Jurispurdence" 13th
ed. p. 366. The same learned author places
"the relation, if
any, between church and state" as in the realm of constitutional law,
which is, of course, a branch of public law.
[Page 349]
Pagnuelo, in his work
"de la Liberté Religieuse en Canada" treats the subject-matter of the
Act of 1852 (correctly in my opinion) as within this field. At p. 257 the learned
author says:
Cependant le droit public s'etablissait
dans le pays, et finalement la législature Bas-Canadienne, anticipant les
décisions des premiers juges et légistes d'Angleterre, déclarait en 1851 par la
seule force de la conscience intime de l'état social de la colonie, quels sont
les principes de notre constitution politique quant aux affaires religieuses.
Similarly, the writer
in La Revue Critique Vol. II, which I have already quoted in part, says at p.
130:
To sum up the discussion, it may confidently
be concluded that it is a fundamental maxim of law in. Canada, consecrated both
by the French and the British constitutions of the country, by imperial
statutes and treaties, by the peculiar jurisdiction and by repeated decisions
of our counts, that all the churches in the colony are free and independent of
civil or judicial intervention in spiritual matters.
From this principle of our public law flow
the rights and liberties which are dearest to our mixed population: liberty of
conscience, freedom of public worship and freedom of the press in religious
matters.
Galipeault J., also, in
Saumur v. la Cité de Québec, in referring to the subject-matter of the
very by-law here in question, says, (and in my opinion, with respect, perfectly
correctly)
Et il convient de nous rappeler que nous
sommes ici en matière de droit public plutôt qu'en matière de droit.
Any contention that the
right to the exercise of religion is a mere "civil right" is,
therefore, for 'these reasons, quite untenable in my opinion. Even if such a
matter could be so regarded, it would not be a civil right "within the
province".
The British North
America Act itself
indicates, in my opinion, that the subject-matter of religious profession is
not a matter of provincial legislative jurisdiction within any of the heads of
s. 92.
By s. 93 it is enacted
that a provincial legislature may legislate "in relation to"
education but subject, inter alia, to the provision that
(1) Nothing in any such Law shall
prejudicially affect any Right or Privilege with respect to Denominational
Schools which any Class of Persons have by Law in the Province at the Union.
[Page 350]
The "class"
in s-s. (1) must, as stated by the Judicial Committee in Ottawa Separate
Schools v. Mackell, be a
class determined "according to religious belief". The right or
privilege preserved by s-s. (1) 'to such a class with respect to its
denominational schools is such only as existed "by law" at the time
.of Union. It would in my opinion be absurd to say that a provincial legislature,
while it cannot strike at the right of any such class to impart religious
instruction to its adherents, may nevertheless legislate so as to affect or
destroy the religious faith of the denomination and thus affect or entirely do
away with all necessity for religious instruction in that faith.
S-ss. (3) and (4) of s.
93 provide that
(3) Where in any Province a System of
Separate or Dissentient Schools exists by Law at the Union or is thereafter
established by the Legislature of the Province, an Appeal shall lie to the
Governor General in Council from any Act or Decision of any Provincial
Authority affecting any Right or Privilege of the Protestant or Roman Catholic
Minority of the Queen's Subjects in relation to Education:
(4) In case any such Provincial Law as from
Time to Time seems to the Governor General in Council requisite for the due
Execution of the Provisions of this Section is not made, or in case any
Decision of the Governor General in Council on any Appeal under this Section is
not duly executed by the proper Provincial Authority in that Behalf, then and
in every such Case, and as far only as the Circumstances of each Case require,
the Parliament of Canada may make remedial Laws for the due execution of the
Provisions of this Section and of any Decision of the Governor General in
Council under this Section.
In Roman Catholic
Separate School Trustees v. The King,
Viscount Haldane said:
Their Lordships are of opinion that where
the head of the executive council in Canada is satisfied that injustice has
been done by taking away a right or privilege which is other than a legal one
from the Protestant or Roman Catholic minority in relation to education, he may
interfere. The step is one from mere legality to administrative propriety, a
totally different matter. But it may be that those who had to find a new
constitution for Canada when the British North America Act was passed in 1867,
came to the conclusion that a very difficult situation could be met in no other
way than by transferring the question from the region of legality to that of
administrative fairness.
Accordingly, even
though its legislation in matters of education may be intra vires, a provincial
legislature may be restrained by the federal executive if, in the view of the
latter, its intervention is called for within the terms of s. 93. It can hardly
be that although the express power of the
[Page 351]
provincial legislatures
as to education is thus restricted where matters of religious belief are
involved, there nonetheless exists a jurisdiction under some head of s. 92 to
legislate as to matters of religious profession and worship itself which could,
conceivably, reduce s-ss. (3) and (4) to a dead letter. In my view any such
view is untenable.
I therefore conclude
that it is incompetent for a provincial legislature to legislate with respect
to the subject-matter of the statute of 1852 and that by-law 184, couched as it
is in general terms, purports to interfere with the rights granted by the
statute, and is consequently ultra vires.
I have not overlooked
that the Legislatures of Ontario and Quebec have, since Confederation,
purported to re-enact the statute of 1852. The question of the competency of
this legislation has, however, so far as I am aware, not been previously
judicially considered. No doubt the provisions of the 1852 statute relating to
rectories were matters of provincial legislative jurisdiction.
There are other
standpoints also from which the by-law is equally invalid. In so far as the
by-law may be said to have in view the prohibition of the publication of blasphemous
libel, it would be clearly outside the comptence of a provincial legislature as
impinging upon the criminal law. As pointed out by Lord Parker in Bowman v.
Secular Society Limited
:
In my opinion to constitute blasphemy at
common law there must be such an element of vilification, ridicule, or
irreverence as would be likely to exasperate the feelings of others and so lead
to a breach of the peace. I cannot find that the common law has ever concerned
itself with opinion as such, or with expression of opinion, so far as such
expression is compatible with the maintenance of public order. Indeed there is
express authority that heresy as such is outside the cognizance of a criminal
Court unless the heretic by setting up conventicles or otherwise endangers the
peace: see Hawkins' pleas of the Crown, vol. 1, p. 354.
Again, at page 451,
Lord Parker adopted the language of Coleridge J. in Shore v. Wilson,
as follows:
There is nothing unlawful at common law in
reverently doubting or denying doctrines parcel of Christianity, however
fundamental. It would be difficult to draw a line in such matters according to
perfect orthodoxy, or to define how far one might depart from it in believing
or teaching without offending the law. The only safe, and, as it seems to me,
practical rule, is that which I have pointed at, and which depends on the
sobriety and reverence and seriousness with which the teaching, or believing,
however erroneous, are maintained.
[Page 352]
The offence of blasphemy
is, of course, expressly covered by section 198 of the Criminal Code.
Again, in so far as the
by-law may be said to be directed at seditious literature,
nothing short of direct incitement to
disorder and violence is a seditious libel;
Rex v. Aldred , per Coleridge J.
Lower down on the same
page the learned judge said:
The test is this: was the language used
calculated, or was it not, to promote public disorder or physical force or
violence in a matter of state.
The same result obtains
in so far as the by-law could be said to be directed against the publication of
libelous matter regarded from the standpoint of public law. Libel in its aspect
other than as giving rise to an action for damages as at the instance of the
person defamed, is a crime. Odgers, Sixth Edition, at page 7, has the
following: "A libel is a crime: a slander on a private individual is
not." On the same page the authors refer to the judgment of Lush J., in R.
v. Holbrook,
as follows:
Libel on an individual is, and has always
been, regarded as both a civil injury and a criminal offence … It is ranked
amongst criminal offences because of its supposed tendency to arouse angry
passion, provoke revenge, and thus endanger the public peace
However this may be,
the by-law is not limited in terms to such matters but .extends to all matters
to which the censor may see fit to apply it. As it is capable of application
to matters beyond the ambit, of s. 92, it must be held to be invalid.
In the Reference re the
Alberta Accurate News and Information Act,
there was in question a bill the relevant provisions of which, for present
purposes, imposed upon those concerned in the publication of newspapers in the
province, at the direction of the chairman of a provincial board, the
obligation of publishing statements furnished by him having for their object
the correction or amplification of any statement relating to any policy or
activity of the government of the province which had already been published by
the newspaper concerned, and requiring the newspaper to make returns setting
out every source from which any information had emanated with respect to any
statement contained in the newspaper, and
[Page 353]
the names, addresses
and occupations of all persons by whom such information had been furnished as
well as the name and address of the writer of any editorial, article or news
item.
Three members of this
court dealt with this legislation from a standpoint which is relevant to the
case at bar. Duff, C.J., with whom Davis J., agreed, after referring to the
provisions of the British North America Act relating to the Senate and
the House of Commons, said at page 133:
The preamble of the
statute, moreover, shows plainly enough that the constitution of the Dominion
is to be similar in principle to that of the United Kingdom. The statute
contemplates a Parliament working under the influence of public opinion and
public discussion. There can be no controversy that such institutions derive
their efficacy from the free public discussion of affairs, from criticism and
answer and counter-criticism, from attack upon policy and administration and
defence and counter-attack; from the freest and fullest analysis and
examination from every point of view of political proposals
The right of public discussion is, of course,
subject to legal restrictions; those based upon considerations of decency and
public order, and others conceived for the protection of various private and
public interests with which, for example, the laws of defamation and sedition
are concerned. In a word, freedom of discussion means, to quote the words of
Lord Wright in James v. Commonwealth, (1936) A.C. 578, at 627, "freedom
governed by law".
Even within its legal limits, it is liable
to abuse and grave abuse, and such abuse is constantly exemplified before our
eyes; but it is axiomatic that
the practice of this right, of free public discussion of public affairs,
notwithstanding its incidental mischiefs, is the breath of life for parliamentary
institutions.
We do not doubt that (in addition to the
power of disallowance vested in the Governor General) the Parliament of Canada
possesses authority .to legislate for the protection of this right. That
authority rests upon the principle that the powers requisite for the protection
of the constitution itself arise by necessary implication from The British
North America Act as a whole (Fort Frances Pulp & Power Co. Ltd. v.
Manitoba Free Press Co. Ltd. (1923) AC. 695); and since the
subject-matter in relation to which the power is exercised is not exclusively a
provincial matter, it is necessarily vested in Parliament.
But this by no means exhausts the matter.
Any attempt to abrogate this right of public debate or to suppress the
traditional forms of the exercise of the right (in public meeting and through the
press) would, in our opinion be incompetent to the legislatures of the
provinces, or to the legislature of any one of the provinces, as repugnant to
the provisions of The British North America Act, by which the Parliament of
Canada is established as the legislative organ of the people of Canada under
the Crown, and Dominion legislation enacted pursuant to the legislative
authority given by those provisions. The subject-matter of such legislation
could not be described as a provincial matter purely; as in substance
exclusively a matter of property and civil rights within the province, or a
matter private or local within the province. It would not be, to quote
[Page 354]
the words of the judgment of the Judicial
Committee in Great West Saddlery Co. v. The King, (1921) 2 A.C.
91, at 122, "legislation directed solely to the purposes specified in
section 92"; and it would be invalid on the principles enunciated
in that judgment and adopted in Caron v. The King, (1924) A.C. 999, at
1005-06.
The learned Chief Justice
then referred to the question as to the validity of the legislation before the
Court, considered as an independent enactment with no relation to the other
provincial legislation there in question and, conceding that 'there was "a
very wide field in which the provinces undoubtedly ,are invested with
legislative authority over newspapers", continued:
But the limit, in our opinion, is reached
when the legislation effects such a curtailment of the exercise of the right of
public discussion as substantially to interfere with the working of the
parliamentary institutions of Canada as contemplated by the provisions of The
British North America Act and the statutes of the Dominion of Canada. Such a
limitation is necessary, in our opinion., "in order," to adapt the
words quote above from the judgment in Bank of Toronto v. Lambe (1887) 12
A.C. 575, "to afford scope" for the working of such parliamentary
institutions. In this region of constitutional practice, it is not permitted to
a provincial legislature to do indirectly what cannot be done directly (Great
West Saddlery Co. v. The King (1921) 2 A.C. 91, at 100).
Whether the learned
Chief Justice was of opinion that the legislation in question in that case was
incompetent to parliament as well as to a provincial legislature, it is not
necessary to consider. It was clearly, in the opinion of the learned Chief
Justice, beyond provincial competence.
I respectfully agree
with this view, in the light of which it is plain that by-law 184 cannot be
supported as within any of the heads of legislative jurisdiction conferred upon
the provinces by section 92. If provincial legislation could validly authorize
;a by-law such as that here in question, it could legislate so as to prevent
the distribution within the whole or any part of the province, of pamphlets or
newspapers published elsewhere within or without the province. This is clearly
contrary to the law as envisaged by Duff, C.J.
In the same case,
Cannon J. said at p. 144:
The bill does not regulate the relations of
the newspapers' owners with private individual members of the public, but deals
exclusively with expressions of opinion by the newspapers concerning government
policies and activities. The pith and substance of the bill is to regulate the
press of Alberta from the viewpoint of public policy by preventing the public
from being misled or deceived as to any policy or activity of the Social Credit
Government and by reducing any opposition to silence or bring upon it ridicule
and public contempt.
[Page 355]
I agree with the submission of the
Attorney-General for Canada that this bill deals with the regulation of the
press of Alberta, not from the viewpoint of private wrongs or civil injuries
resulting from any alleged infringement or privation of civil rights which
belong to individuals, considered as individuals, but from the viewpoint of
public wrongs or crimes, i.e., involving a violation of the public rights
and duties to the whole community, considered as a community, in its social
aggregate capacity.
The learned judge
referred to the sections of the Criminal Code dealing with seditious
words and publications and pointed out that while at first in England criticism
of any government policy was regarded as a crime, since the passing of Fox's
Libel Act in 1792 it is not criminal, as the Canadian Criminal Code now
provides, to point out errors in the government of the country and to urge
their removal by lawful means. The learned judge then continued:
Now, it seems to me that the Alberta
legislature by this retrograde Bill is attempting to revive the old theory of
the crime of seditious libel by enacting penalties, confiscation of space in
newspapers and prohibitions for actions which, after due consideration by the
Dominion Parliament, have been declared innocuous and which, therefore, every
citizen of Canada can do lawfully and without hindrance or fear of punishment.
It is an attempt by the legislature to amend the Criminal Code in this respect
and to deny the advantage of sec. 133(a) to the Alberta newspaper publishers.
Under the British system, which is ours, no
political party can erect a prohibitory barrier to prevent the electors from
getting information concerning the policy of the government. Freedom of
discussion is essential to enlighten public opinion in a democratic State; it
cannot be curtailed without affecting the right of the people to be informed
through sources independent of the government concerning matters of public
interest. There must be an untrammelled publication of the news and political opinions
of the political parties contending for ascendancy. As stated in the preamble
of The British North America Act, our constitution is and will remain, unless
radically changed, "similar in principle to that of the United
Kingdom." At the time of Confederation, the United Kingdom was a
democracy. Democracy cannot be maintained without its foundation: free public
opinion and free discussion throughout the nation of all matters affecting the
State within the limits set by the criminal code and the common law. Every
inhabitant in Alberta is also a citizen of the Dominion. The province may deal
with his property and civil rights of a local and private nature within the
province; but the province cannot interfere with his status as a Canadian
citizen and his fundamental right to express freely his untrammelled opinion
about government policies and discuss matters of public concern. The mandatory
and prohibitory provisions of the Press Bill are, in my opinion, ultra vires
of the provincial legislature. They interfere with the free working of the
political organization of the Dominion. They have a tendency to nullify the
political rights of the inhabitants of Alberta, as citizens of Canada, and
cannot be considered as dealing with matters purely private and local in that
province. The federal parliament is the sole authority to curtail, if deemed
expedient and in the public interest, the freedom of the press
[Page 356]
in discussing public affairs and the equal
rights in that respect of all citizens throughout the Dominion. These subjects
were matters of criminal law before Confederation, have been recognized by
Parliament as criminal matters and have been expressly dealt with by the
criminal code. No province has the power o reduce in that province the
political rights of its citizens as compared with those enjoyed by the citizens
of other provinces of Canada. Moreover, citizens outside the province of
Alberta have a vital interest in having full information and comment,
favourable and unfavourable, regarding the policy of the Alberta government and
concerning events in that province which would, in the ordinary course, be the
subject of Alberta newspapers' news items and articles.
With the same
reservation already made with respect to the judgment of Duff C.J., in the same
case, I agree that such a subject-matter of legislation is at any rate beyond
the jurisdiction conferred by any, of the heads of s. 92 and, accordingly, the
provisions of the by-law here in question cannot stand. With respect to the
charter, I would construe its provisions as not intended to authorize such a
by-law; Reference re Minimum Wage Act.
I would therefore allow
the appeal. The appellant is entitled to a declaration that the said by-law is ultra
vires the respondent and the respondent, its officers and agents are
restrained from in any way attempting to enforce its provisions. I agree with
the order as to costs proposed by my brother Kerwin.
ESTEY, J.:—The City of Quebec, on October 23,
1933, enacted By-law 184, the material portion of which reads as follows:
It is, by the present by-law forbidden to
distribute in the streets of the City of Quebec, any book, pamphlet, booklet,
circular, tract whatever without having previously obtained for so doing the
written permission of the Chief of Police.
The .appellant submits
that the by-law is legislation that interferes with "the free exercise and
enjoyment of religious profession and worship," authority for the
enactment of which the Province could not give to the City of Quebec as under
the B.N.A. Act only the Parliament of Canada can competently enact such
legislation.
Counsel for the City
and the Province of Quebec submit that the by-law is but legislation on the
part of the City in relation to its power over the public streets and in particular
was enacted to avoid a nuisance and to protect the health of the citizens and
the cleanliness of the City.
[Page 357]
That a by-law passed
for such purposes would be competently authorized by ss. 335, 336 and 337 of
the charter granted by the Province to the City of Quebec (19 Geo. V. S. of Q.,
Ch. 95) is not contested. It is, therefore, unnecessary to set forth these
provisions further than to point out that it is expressly stated in s. 337 that
the by-laws of the City of Quebec shall not be "inconsistent with the law
of Canada or of this Province ..."
In this regard it is
important to observe that s. 2 of Ch. 307, R.S.Q. 1941, reads:
2. The free exercise and enjoyment of
religious profession and worship, without discrimination or preference,
provided the same be not made an excuse for acts of licentiousness, or a
justification of practices inconsistent with the peace and safety of the
Province, are by the constitution and laws of this Province allowed to all His
Majesty's subjects living within the same.
This s. 2 has been in
the statute law of the Province of Quebec since at least 1888 (R.S.Q. 1888,
Art. 3439). With some minor changes in expression this provision is found in a
statute enacted in 1851 (S. of C. 14-15 Vict., Ch. 175) at a time when the problems
arising out of clergy reserves were engaging the minds of the Members of
Parliament.
Under s. 42 of the Act
of Union, 1840, it was provided, inter alia, that a bill in
relation to or affecting the enjoyment or exercise of any form or mode of
religious worship should not come into force until assented to by Her Majesty.
This was in force when the legislation of 1851 was enacted which, in accordance
therewith, was transmitted to London and Her Majesty assented thereto on May
15, 1852.
It is also significant,
and its importance was stressed throughout the hearing of this appeal, that in
the Treaty of Paris, 1763, the following is included:
4. … His Britannick Majesty on his side,
agrees to grant the liberty of the Catholick religion to the inhabitants of Canada:
he will in consequence give the most precise and most effectual orders that his
new Roman Catholick subjects may profess the worship of their religion
according to the rites of the Romish Church, as far as the laws of Great
Britain permit. …
While the treaty, in
Art. 4, refers to Nova Scotia, or Acadia, and Canada as separate entities and
is open to the construction that the foregoing applied only to Canada, this is
clarified when the boundaries, of the British and
[Page 358]
French territories on the
Continent of America are fixed in Art. 7, which concludes with the words:
The stipulations inserted in the IVth
article, in favour of the inhabitants of Canada, shall also take place with
regard to the inhabitants of the countries ceded by this article.
It, therefore, appears
that the foregoing portion of Art. 4 was intended to apply to all of the
British Dominions in North America.
This right granted by
the Treaty of Paris has been preserved by The Quebec Act of 1774, The
Constitutional Act of 1791, and The Act of Union of 1840. The
existence of this right and the provisions of the Act of 1851 would be present
to the minds of those who drafted and the Members of Parliament who enacted the
B.N.A. Act. It must be assumed, therefore, that it was intended legislation
in relation thereto would come within the provisions of the B.N.A. Act and be
competently enacted either by the Parliament of Canada or the provincial
legislature as therein provided. The circumstances under which the Treaty of
Paris and the legislation of 1851 were prepared and adopted suggest the
provisions of each of these here referred to were both intended to promote
peace, order and good government in the country as a whole. This conclusion
finds support from the fact that the foregoing quotation was placed in Art. 7
of the Treaty of Paris, which commences with the words "In order to
re-establish peace on solid and durable foundations, " It is also
emphasized both by the preamble of the Act of 1851 rand in the operative part
by the limitation imposed upon the free exercise and enjoyment of religious
profession and worship. In the preamble it is set out that
the recognition of legal equality among all
Religious Denominations is an admitted principle of Colonial Legislation; And
... . in the state and condition of this Province ... . it is desirable that
the same should receive the sanction of direct Legislative Authority,
recognizing and declaring the same as a fundamental principle of our civil
polity:
and then in the
operative part a limitation is imposed to the effect that its exercise and
enjoyment should not be "made an excuse for acts of licentiousness, or a
justification of practices inconsistent with the peace and safety of the
Province."
[Page 359]
It will also be
observed that in the declaration of this right in the Act of 1851 no penalty is
provided for infraction thereof. That would indicate that such was left to the
field of criminal law where, in principle, it would seem to belong. The right
of the free exercise and enjoyment of religious profession and worship, is a
personal, sacred right for which, history records, men have striven and fought.
Wherever attained they have resisted restrictions and limitations thereon in
every possible manner. In one sense it may be styled a civil right, but it does
not follow that it would be included within the phrase "Property and Civil
Rights in the Province" within 'the meaning of s. 92(13) of the B.N.A.
Act. On the contrary it would rather seem that such a right should be
included among those upon which the Parliament of Canada might legislate for
the preservation of peace, order and good government.
Moreover, having regard
to 'the nature and character of the right which was, by the Treaty of Paris,
given "to the inhabitants of the countries ceded" and the legislation
of 1851 where it, is in the preamble thereto stated "legal equality among
all Religious Denominations is an admitted principle of Colonial
Legislation" and such "a fundamental principle of our civil polity"
that legislative sanction should be given thereto, it would appear that if the
draftsmen and those enacting the B.N.A. Act had intended 'that
legislation in relation to this right should be enacted by the province and
effective in a part, rather than by the Parliament of Canada and, therefore,
effective in the country as a whole, that express language to that effect would
have been embodied in that enactment, more particularly as by that Act
"one Dominion under the Crown with a constitution similar in principle to
that of the United Kingdom" was created.
Furthermore, if such
had not been the intention of those preparing and enacting the B.N.A. Act it would seem most unlikely that under s.
93 thereof they would have given, in relation to education, the exclusive
legislative authority to the provincial legislature and then have specifically
reserved an appeal "to the Governor General in Council from any Act or
Decision of any Provincial Authority affecting any Right or Privilege of the
Protestant or Roman Catholic
[Page 360]
minority .of the Queen's subjects in relation to education" and given power to
the Parliament of Canada to enact legislation, in the absence of appropriate
provincial legislation, requisite for the due "Execution of the
Provisions" of s. 93 and necessary to give effect to its decision upon any
appeal under that section.
It, therefore, appears
that legislation in relation to this right comes within the description and
classification referred to by Sir Montague E Smith in Russell v. The Queen, where his Lordship,
when considering the competence of the Parliament of Canada to enact The
Canada Temperance Act, 1878, stated:
Laws of this nature designed for the
promotion of public order, safety, or morals, and which subject those who
contravene them to criminal procedure and punishment, belong to the subject of
public wrongs rather than to that of civil rights. They are of a nature which
fall within the general authority of Parliament to make laws for the order and
good government of Canada, and have direct relation to criminal law, which is ope of the enumerated classes of subjects
assigned exclusively to the Parliament of Canada. It was said in the course .of
the judgment of this Board in the case of the Citizens Insurance Company of Canada v. Parsons (7
App. Cas. 96) that the two sections (91 and 92) must be read together, and the
language of one interpreted, and, where necessary, modified by that of the
other. Few, if any, laws could be made by Parliament for the peace, order, and
good government of Canada which did not in some incidental way affect property
and civil rights; and it could not have been intended, when assuring to the
provinces exclusive legislative authority on the subjects of property and civil
rights, to exclude the Parliament from the exercise of this general power
whenever any such incidental interference would result from it. The true nature
and character of the legislation in the particular instance under discussion
must always be determined, in order to ascertain the class of subject to which
it really belongs. In the present case it appears to their Lordships, for the
reasons already given, that the matter of the Act in question does not properly
belong to the class of subjects "Property and Civil Rights" within
the meaning of sub-sect. 13.
The provision of the
enactment of 1851 (assented to in 1852), being legislation under s. 91 of the B.N.A.
Act, by virtue of s. 129 thereof continued in force after Confederation
and thereafter could be repealed, abolished or altered by the Parliament of
Canada but not by a provincial legislature. It has never been repealed or
altered by that Parliament and, therefore, remains in force. The enactment,
therefore, of s. 2 of ch. 307 by the Province of Quebec, being legislation in
relation to this right, could not be enacted under either heading (13)
(Property and Civil
[Page 361]
Rights in the Province)
or (16) (Generally all Matters of a merely Local or Private Nature in the
Province) of s. 92 of the B.N.A. Act.
The Act of 1851 being
still in force, it is necessary to examine the by-law to determine whether, in
its true nature and character, it is legislation in relation to the free exercise
and enjoyment of religious profession and worship or to the exercise of power
over the public streets.
The by-law contains neither
preamble nor language that expressly sets forth with what intent and purpose it
was passed. It is contended, as already stated, that it was passed to prevent
the existence of a nuisance, to protect the health of the people and the
cleanliness of the city. Distribution of pamphlets and other printed matter has
taken place since time immemorial and it is significant that no instance was
mentioned where the distribution of such ever constituted a nuisance or an
interference with the health of the people or the cleanliness of the city. If,
as it may be conceded, the distribution of pamphlets or other printed matter
might be done in a manner to create a nuisance, impair the health and make the
city unclean, such an unusual 'circumstance could be dealt with apart from any
such by-law as here in question. Moreover, it is pertinent to observe that the
by-law contains no direction to the Chief of Police that might guide or assist
him in determining whether in a given instance the distribution might
constitute a nuisance, undermine the health of the people or impair the
cleanliness of the city. This would appear a significant omission, more
particularly as the by-law was passed in 1933 at a time when Jehovah's
Witnesses were being brought before the courts of the Province for various
offences, and in the course of the hearing of this appeal it was stated and not
contradicted that distribution under this by-law has been refused only to
Jehovah's Witnesses. The fact that the appellant had made no application does
not, therefore, affect the issues in this appeal. In these 'circumstances Mr.
Justice Bertrand appears to accurately state the real intent and purpose or
pith and substance of this by-law:
La tentative de la dite Cité de Québec de
présenter son règlement comme une simple mesure de protection contre
l'encombrement des rues et places publiques ne nous oblige pas d'être naïfs au
point de croire à leurs protestations de bonne foi, car en étudiant mes notes,
j'ai été obligé de
[Page 362]
prendre connaissance des différentes causes
qui nous ont été soumises, ainsi qu'à la Cour Suprême du Canada. Sur le sujet,
j'y ai constaté que les personnes en autorité dans plusieurs villes de cette
province ont traité les témoins de Jéhovah comme des criminels. Les notes du
savant Juge Rand, dans la cause de Boucher, entre autres, m'ont convaincu d'une
véritable persécution religieuse.
It is, however,
contended that the 'by-law does not interfere with any act of worship on the
part of Jehovah's Witnesses. It is conceded that the appellant and other
citizens may believe what appears to them to be consistent with their
conception of truth and that they have the right "to worship God in their
own way." In this connection it is important to observe that the statute
of 1851 protects "the free exercise and enjoyment of religious profession
and worship." This provision contemplates that subject to the proviso
contained therein individuals may select their own form of religious profession
and worship. It is hardly necessary to observe that the foregoing does not in
any way prevent a provincial legislature enacting legislation within its own
jurisdiction that may affect the right 'of religious profession and worship.
Moreover, the language
of the foregoing provision ought not to receive a narrow or restricted
construction. History plainly indicates that in England the Roman Catholics and
other religious bodies and in France the Protestants were denied that which is
declared in the foregoing section. Indeed, it was 'a religious controversy in
this country, mainly in respect of clergy reserves and matters incident
thereto, that led to the enactment of this provision in 1851.
In clear and
unambiguous language the Legislature of 'that day ensured freedom of religious
profession and worship and the Parliament of Canada has not seen fit to repeal,
alter or amend this statutory provision. In these circumstances it is the duty
of the courts to give effect thereto and, in particular, in the adjudication of
particular cases, to see that it is not used to defeat the very end the statute
was intended to maintain.
It may be pointed out
that even if s. 2 of ch. 307, R.S.Q. 1941, was intra
vires, this By-law 184 would be in conflict
therewith and, therefore, could not be competently passed by the City of Quebec
because it was not authorized by the terms "of its charter.
[Page 363]
The parties hereto
expressly asked that the decision be reached quite apart from any issue that
might be raised with respect to delegation of authority within the terms of
By-law 184.
I am, therefore, of the
opinion that the appeal should be allowed and a judgment directed declaring the
by-law invalid and an injunction restraining the City from acting thereunder. I
agree with my brother Kerwin as to the disposition of costs.
LOCKE J. :—The preamble to chapter 175 of the
Statutes of the Province of Canada for the year 1851 reads as follows:‑
Whereas the recognition of legal equality
amongst all Religious Denominations is an admitted principle of Colonial
Legislation: And whereas in the state and condition of this Province, to which
such a principle is peculiarly applicable, it is desirable that the same should
receive the sanction of direct Legislative Authority recognizing and declaring
the same as a fundamental principle of our civil polity: Be it therefore
declared and enacted by the Queen's Most Excellent Majesty, by and with the
advice and consent 'of the Legislative Council and of the Legislative Assembly
of the Province of Canada constituted and assembled by virtue of and under the
authority of an Act passed in the Parliament of the United Kingdom of Great
Britain and Ireland, and intituled, An Act to re-unite the Provinces of Upper
and Lower Canada, and for the Government of Canada, and it is hereby declared
and enacted by the authority of the same, That the free exercise and enjoyment
of Religious Profession and Worship, without discrimination or preference, so
as the same be not made an excuse for acts of licentiousness, or a
justification of practices inconsistent with the peace and safety of the
Province, is by constitution and laws of this Province allowed to all Her
Majesty's subjects within the same.
The statute was
reserved for the signification of Her Majesty's pleasure and the Royal assent
given by Her Majesty in Council on May 15th, 1852.
This statute was in
force when the British North America Act of 1867 was passed by the
Imperial Parliament. It could not, in my opinion, be repealed by the Province
of Quebec or by the Legislature of any other province of Canada (Dobie v.
Temporalities Board).
Whether it would be intra vires Parliament to repeal the Act, in
view of the language of the preamble to the British North America Act, is a
matter to be decided when that question arises. It does not arise in the
present case. Parliament has passed no legislation purporting to repeal the Act.
[Page 364]
In the Revised Statutes
of Quebec of 1888 there appeared as Article 3439 the following:—
The free exercise and enjoyment of
religious profession and worship without discrimination or preference so as the
same be not made an excuse for acts of licentiousness or a justification of
practices inconsistent with the peace and safety of the Province are by the
constitution and laws of this Province allowed to all Her Majesty's subjects within
the same.
This provision is
continued as section 2 of chapter 307 of the Revised Statutes of Quebec 1941.
If this section was an attempt to confer substantive rights and not merely a
recital of the rights declared by the Statute of 1852, the section dealt with
matters which were beyond the powers of the Province unless, as is contended by
the respondent in the present matter, under Head 13 of section 92 of the British
North America Act the Province was empowered to legislate as to the free
exercise and enjoyment of religious profession and worship within the Province.
The articles of the
City charter under which the by-law attacked in the present proceedings was passed
are 335 and 337 and read:—
335. The council
may, at any of its meetings at which the absolute majority of its members are
present, pass by-laws for the following purposes: For the good order, peace,
security, comfort, improvement, cleanliness, internal economy and local
government of the said city; for the prevention and suppression of all nuisances,
and ,of all acts, matters and things in. the said city, opposed, contrary or
prejudicial to the order, peace, comfort, morals, health, improvement,
cleanliness, internal economy or local government of the said city.
And for the greater certainty, but not so
as to restrict the scope of the foregoing provision or of any power 'otherwise
conferred by this charter, it is hereby declared that the authority and
jurisdiction of the city council extends and shall hereafter extend to all
matters hereinafter mentioned, that is to say:
1. The raising of money by taxation;
2. The borrowing of money on the city credit;
3. Streets, lanes, and highways, and the
right of passage above, across, along, or beneath the same;
4. Sewers, drains and waterworks;
5. Parks, squares and ferries;
6. Licenses for trading and peddling;
7. The public peace and safety;
8. Health and sanitation;
9. Vaccination and inoculation;
10. Public works and improvements;
11. Explosive substances;
12. Nuisances;
[Page 365]
13. Markets and abattoirs;
14. Decency and good morals;
15. Masters and servants;
16. Water, light, heat, electricity and
railways;
17. The granting of franchises and privileges
to persons or companies;
18. The inspection of food.
337. In order to give full effect to
articles 335 (and 336, and to extend and complete the same, so as to secure
full autonomy for the city and to avoid any interpretation of such articles or
their paragraphs which might be considered as a restriction, of its powers, the
city is authorized to adopt, repeal or amend and carry out all necessary
by-laws concerning the proper administration of its affairs, peace, order and
safety, as well as all matters which may concern or affect public interest and
the welfare of the citizens; provided always that such by-laws be not
inconsistent with the laws of Canada or of this Province, nor contrary to any
special provision of this charter.
The by-law attacked was
enacted in the year 1933 by the Council of the City and reads:—
IT IS ORDAINED and
ENACTED by the by-law of the Municipal Council of the City of Quebec and the
said Council ORDAINS and ENACTS as follows, to wit:—
1. It is by the present by-law forbidden to
distribute in the streets of the City of Quebec any book, pamphlet, booklet,
circular, tract whatever without having previously obtained for so doing the
written permission of the Chief of Police.
2. Any one contravening the present by-law
shall be liable to a fine, with or without costs, and in default of immediate
payment of said fine, with or without costs, as the case may be, to an
imprisonment, the amount of the said fine and the term of imprisonment to be
fixed by the Recorder's Court of the City of Quebec, at its discretion, but the
said fine shall not exceed one hundred dollars and the imprisonment shall not
'exceed three months ,of the calendar, said imprisonment nevertheless shall
cease at any time before the expiration of the term fixed by the said
Recorder's Court, upon payment of the said fine or of the said fine and costs,
as the case may be, and if said infraction is repeated, said repetition of
offence shall constitute day by day, after summons or arrest, a separate
offence.
While, on the face of
it, the by-law may be said to be directed to the controlling of the condition
of the streets of the City by preventing the accumulation of litter from circulars
or pamphlets distributed in the streets being thrown away, or of traffic on the
streets which might be impeded by the presence of persons distributing such
writings, the course of the trial, the factums filed on behalf of the
respondent and intervenant and the argument addressed to us make it quite clear
that the purpose of the by-law and its real nature are something entirely
different.
[Page 366]
The trial was held
before Casgrain, J. Part of the evidence tendered on behalf of the present
appellant was that of Mr. H.C. Covington, a minister of the religious organization
known as Jehovah's Witnesses and Vice-President of the legal governing body of
that organization. In describing the nature of the religious belief of
Jehovah's Witnesses and of their activities, he said in part:—
Jehovah's witnesses are an unincorporated
body of missionary evangelists, their primary purpose being to preach the
gospel of God's Kingdom throughout the whole world, as a witness, in execution
of the commission recorded in Matthew 24:14, and this body is a missionary
society preaching throughout the whole world, in every country, under the sun,
save and except Russia.
Jehovah's witnesses preach the gospel as
missionary evangelists world-wide, including Quebec, by calling from door to
door, doing missionary work, visiting the people and explaining to them about, God's
Kingdom as the only hope of mankind. That's the primary introduction to the
people, and if they find people who are disinterested, they pass on to the next
house. If they find persons interested, they stay and talk with them about the
Bible and concerning God's Kingdom. And if the interested people desire to have
them call back or re-visit, they do so. That is what we call revisiting for
back-calls, revisiting for the purpose of answering questions and explaining
Bible prophecy concerning God's Kingdom. And in addition to that method of
preaching, Jehovah's witnesses hold Bible studies in the homes of the people
where groups of from 2 to 15 or more people attend regularly each week. In
these studies, the missionary evangelist presides as minister, and then he
explains where these texts are to be found in the Bible. And that work is
carried on throughout the whole world, including Canada and Quebec. Jehovah's
witnesses, in preaching missionary evangelical work, employ primarily the
facilities of the press. Printed literature is prepared by Jehovah's witnesses
and left with the people for the purpose of leaving with them printed sermons
concerning God's Kingdom as the only hope for mankind, and every one of
Jehovah's witnesses employs this facility of the press in addition to the word
as a method of preaching and teaching. In addition, Jehovah's witnesses also
preach from the pulpit, from the platform, to public gatherings, just like the
orthodox clergy.
Jehovah's witnesses differ primarily
between themselves and the orthodox clergy in that Jehovah's witnesses go to
the people with their message and talk to them in their homes, instead of
forcing the people to come to them to some meeting. Jehovah's witnesses do
employ public meetings, but in addition to that, the great part of their
missionary work is done by Jehovah's witnesses going to the home, and that is exactly
the way Jesus Christ and the apostles did it. Jesus Christ and the apostles,
according to the Bible, went from house to house and door to door, for
instance, St. Paul and St. Luke, and in Matthew 28:20, and 1 Peter, 2nd
Chapter, 21st verse, Peter says that all those followers of the Lord Jesus
Christ, who was the first minister, should follow in his footsteps, in Christ's
steps. The new text uses the word "house" in the gospel more than 120
times. And Jehovah's witnesses therefore employ this primitive method of
preaching and teaching. It is not only a biblical way, but we have found from
practice that that is the only way of getting this message to the people
effectively.
[Page 367]
Mr. Covington said
further that they considered the distribution of literature in which they
sought to convey their belief to others was a necessary and vital part of their
activities and way of worship. The Bible he referred to as their text book and
declared their belief in God and in his Son Jesus Christ as the Saviour and
Redeemer of mankind. Speaking of other religious organizations, he said:‑
We do not judge other people, we
emphatically take the view that other religious organizations that have
departed from the Christian principles are teaching errors that lead mankind
into the battle of destruction at Armageddon, and for that reason we hold the
truth of the Bible so that any honest person, whether Catholic, Protestant or
Jew, or non-Catholic or non-Jew, will see the truth and get on the highway that
leads to life and avoid destruction at Armageddon. We do not pass judgment on
any man, we merely act as witnesses to people, preaching what is to be found in
the Bible.
By way of defence, the
respondent called a number of witnesses, including a Roman Catholic priest, a Rabbi,
a Clergyman of the Church of England ,and a Professor of Philosophy, to give
evidence on such diverse subjects as to what were the elements of a religion,
as to whether preaching alone was a religious act, whether the belief of the
Jehovah's witnesses, as disclosed in a number of periodicals and pamphlets
which it was shown were circulated by them, Was in fact a, religion, whether
the activities of the witnesses were in fact religious activities, what was
"the meaning in philosophy" of religious freedom "as regards
modern civilization", whether the distribution of religious tracts in the
homes of the people was a violation of religious liberty and as to whether
they thought it permissible to disobey the law if to obey it was contrary to
their religious beliefs.
The claim of the
appellant included the claim that he was being restrained in his right to the
free exercise and enjoyment of religious profession and worship guaranteed to
him by the Freedom of Worship Act of the Province. The respondent City had
pleaded by paragraph 17 of its Defence that:—
Le demandeur n'est pas un ministre du culte
et l'organisation dont il fait partie n'est pas une église ni une religion; au
contraire, les actions illégales du demandeur, en accord avec celles d'autres
membres du groupement appelé "Témoins de Jéhovah", lorsqu'ils
distribuent des pamphlets ou tracts d'un caractère provocateur ,et injurieux,
ne sont pas des gestes religieux mais des actes anti-sociaux qui ont été et
sont de nature à troubler la paix publique et la tranquilité et la sécurité des
paisibles citoyens particulièrement dans la cité de Québec, et risquent d'y
provoquer des désordres.
[Page 368]
These witnesses were
apparently called as experts. The question for the learned trial Judge to
decide on this issue was whether the belief of Jehovah's Witnesses and their
mode of worship fell within the meaning of the expression "religious
profession and worship" in the preamble of the Statute of 1852. Covington
had stated the nature .of that belief and his evidence was not contradicted and
its truth cannot be questioned. Counsel for the appellant objected to the
admission of the evidence of these witnesses, but his objections were
overruled. The matter was not one upon which expert evidence was admissible and
none of this evidence should have been received.
I see no difficulty in
interpreting the simple and clear language of the preamble of the Statute of
1852 nor of section 2, of the Provincial Statute of 1941 if, contrary to my
opinion, the latter statute touches the matter. To claim that those who believe
in God and in his Son Jesus Christ .do not hold a religious belief and that to
profess that belief and attempt to communicate it to others, in the manner
which the Jehovah's Witnesses believe they are commanded to do by the Bible, is
not exercising a religious profession and an act of worship is, in my opinion,
untenable.
In the factum filed on
behalf of the respondent, lengthy extracts are given from various publications
of Jehovah's Witnesses, some .of which appear to me to be expressed in
intemperate language and are no doubt obnoxious to others who entertain other
Christian beliefs as well as to people of the Jewish faith. The purpose of
bringing these lengthy quotations to our attention is apparently in an endeavour
to establish that the faith of Jehovah's Witnesses and their mode of worship
are not entitled to the protection of the Statute of 1852 and the Quebec
statute, and also to support the view that the effect of distributing this
literature in a province where the people are predominantly of the Roman
Catholic faith will be to provoke disorders.
The learned counsel for
the respondent, at the commencement of his argument, said with commendable
frankness that the by-law was directed against the contents of the documents.
This was made abundantly clear by the proceedings at the trial and is, in my
opinion, quite beyond dispute. If anything further were needed to demonstrate
[Page 369]
that the purpose of the
by-law is to impose a censorship, it is to be found in the evidence given on
behalf of the respondent. Among the witnesses called by the City was a Mr.
Ohman, described as an Evangelist of the Seventh Day Adventist Church, who had
obtained a permit which allowed him to sell the religious literature .of his
faith from house to house. According to this witness, he had received a good
reception when he applied for his permit. Saumur did not apply for a permit,
being advised apparently that as the by-law was ultra vires it was
wholly ineffective, but the whole attitude adopted on behalf, of the City makes
it plain that had he done so the permit would have been refused. Apparently,
the Chief of Police of the City of Quebec, did not object to the teachings of
the Seventh Day Adventists while disapproving that of Jehovah's Witnesses.
On behalf of the
intervenant it has been contended before us that, assuming the belief of the
Jehovah's Witnesses is one entitled otherwise to the protection of the Statute
of 1852 or the Provincial Statute, he may be deprived of that right by or under
the authority of a statute of the Provincial Legislature. The argument is based
on the contention that the rights so given to the people .of Canada to complete
freedom in these matters is a civil right of which they may be deprived by
appropriate legislation by the Province. It is further contended, though rather
faintly, that the legislation may be justified under Head 16 as being 'a matter
of a merely local or private nature in the province.
In the factum of the
intervenant the matter is thus expressed:—
Under our constitution there is no
religious freedom except within the limits determined by the competent
legislative authority. No such authority is known other than the provincial
authority; religious teaching as a matter of fact is part of the realm of
education reserved to the provinces; besides, religious freedom is one of the
civil rights also reserved to the provinces.
The reference to rights
reserved to the provinces in respect of religious teaching refers, of course,
to the provisions of section 93 of the British North America Act. If the
argument is sound, then the holding of religious services by 'the adherents of
any faith designated by the Legislature may be prohibited.
[Page 370]
This argument put
forward, so far as I am aware, for the first time in any reported case in
Canada since Confederation raises questions which are of profound importance
to all of 'the people of this country. Not only the right of freedom of worship
would be affected but the exercise of other fundamental rights, such as that of
free speech on matters of public interest and to publicly disseminate news,
subject only to the restraints imposed by 'the Criminal Code and to such
civil liability as may attach to the publication of libelous matters, might be
restrained or prohibited. The language of the by-law is perfectly general and
if this contention of the intervenants be right the Chief of Police might
forbid the 'distribution in the streets of circulars or pamphlets published by
one political party while allowing such distribution by that party which he
personally favoured. It is well, in my opinion, 'that it be made clear that
this right is involved in the decision of this case. Once a right of censorship
of the contents of religious publications is established, the dissemination of
the political views of writers by circulars or pamphlets delivered on the
streets may equally be prohibited or restrained.
The idea of imposing
censorship upon the distribution of political and religious publications is not
of course new. After the Restoration in England, the Licensing Act of 1662 prohibited any private person to publish any book or
pamphlet unless it were first licensed: law books by the Lord Chancellor,
historical or political books by the Secretary of State and all other books by
the Archbishop of Canterbury or the Bishop of London or by the Chancellor or
Vice-Chancellor of one of the universities. Authors and writers 'of works
considered 'obnoxious were liable to capital punishment or to be flogged or fined
or imprisoned, according to the nature of the offence (Taswell-Langmead
Constitutional History, 10th Ed. p. 739). At the Accession of James II in 1685,
the Licensing Act was revived for several years and was thus
in force at the Revolution and was once more revived in 1692 for one year, but a
further attempt to revive it in 1695 was negatived by the Commons and
thenceforth the censorship of the press ceased to be part of the law of
England. The history of the restriction of religious liberty in England and
upon the freedom of the
[Page 371]
press is traced in
Taswell-Langmead's work, commencing at p. 728. At p. 744 of this work the
learned author, after referring to the changes brought about by the Reform
Act of 1832, said 'that from that year the freedom of the press has
been 'completely established and the utmost latitude of criticism and invective
has been allowed it in discussing the actions of the Government and of all
public men and measures.
The purpose of this
by-law is to establish a censorship upon the distribution of written
publications in the City of Quebec. It is not the distribution of all
pamphlets, circulars or other publications in the streets which is prohibited
but of those in respect of which the written permission of the Chief of Police
has not been obtained.
In the preamble to the British
North America Act the opening paragraph says:—
Whereas the Provinces of Canada, Nova
Scotia and New Brunswick have expressed their desire to be federally united
into one Dominion under the Crown of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and
Ireland with a constitution similar in principle to that of the United Kingdom.
and, after reciting
that such a union would conduce to the welfare of the provinces, it is said
that it is expedient not only that the constitution of the legislative
authority in the Dominion be provided for but also that the nature of the
Executive Government therein be declared. At the time this Act was passed,
the Act of 1852 declaring the right to freedom of religious belief and worship
was in force in Canada and gave to the inhabitants of the provinces the same
rights in that respect as were then enjoyed by the people of the United
Kingdom.
It has, I think, always
been accepted throughout Canada that, while the exercise of this right might be
restrained under the provisions of the saving clause of the statute of 1852 by
criminal legislation passed by Parliament under Head 27 of section 91, it was
otherwise a constitutional right of all the inhabitants of this country. An
examination of the reports 'of the arguments advanced by the parties to the
litigation which ensued following the passing of the Manitoba School Act of
.1890 (Barrett v. City of Winnipeg
and Brophy v. Attorney General of Manitoba),
[Page 372]
makes it clear that it was
common ground .as between the litigants that the Province might not in any
manner limit or restrict the right of the Roman Catholic minority to the free
exercise and enjoyment of Religious Profession and Worship. Dubuc, J., later
Chief Justice of the Court of King's Bench for Manitoba, who dissented from the
judgment of the majority on the appeal from Killam, J. is the only one of the
Judges who considered Barrett's case who made any reference to the
matter. At p. 360 of 7 M.R., he said:—
The State may hold that ignorance is an
evil to be remedied by public instruction and may see that certain secular
subjects, which are known to form the basis of a proper education, be taught in
schools assisted by public money. But in a community composed, of different
elements, the State should not ignore the particular conditions, wants and just
claims of an important class of citizens, especially when such important class
are, in every respect, loyal and law-abiding subjects, and there is nothing in
their wants and claims clashing with the rights of other classes, or contrary
to, or conflicting with, the letter, the spirit or the true principles of the
Constitution. The liberty of conscience is one of the fundamental principles
of our Constitution. What the Roman Catholics ask in claiming the right to
maintain their denominational schools is only the carrying out, to the full
extent, of that fundamental principle. The desirability of having religious
instruction combined with secular teaching in schools is, as stated by my
brother Killam, considered as of the utmost importance by very many Protestants
as well as by Roman Catholics.
The constitutional
right to which Dubuc, J. referred was either that given by the Statute of 1852,
or that which, in my opinion, is implicit in the language of 'the preamble of
the British North America Act.
Whether the right to
religious freedom and the right to free public discussion of matters' of public
interest and the right to disseminate news, subject to the restrictions to
which I have above referred to, differ in their nature, it is unnecessary to
decide. The former of these rights is, however, certainly not the lesser of
them in Canada. Unless they differ, had the powers of censorship vested by the
by-law in the Chief of Police of the City of Quebec been exercised by
preventing the distribution of the written views of a political party (and they
may be so used) rather than the religious views of Saumur, the opinion of Sir
Lyman
[Page 373]
Duff, C.J. in the
Reference as to The Accurate News and Information Act of the Province of
Alberta,
would be directly to the contrary of the argument advanced on behalf of the
intervenant.
It is true that in that
case The Accurate News and Information Act was considered by all of the
members of the Court who considered the various matters referred to them, as a
bill which was a part of the general scheme of social credit legislation, the
basis of which was the Alberta Social Credit Act and presupposed as a
condition of its operation that the latter Act was validly enacted and
that since it was ultra vires the ancillary and dependent legislation
must fall with it. Nonetheless, Sir Lyman Duff expressed his considered view as
to the right of a province to restrain public discussion upon affairs of public
interest and Davis, J. agreed with him. The Act in question set up what was in
effect a censorship of the newspapers of the province and would have imposed
upon them the obligation of publishing a statement to be prepared by an
official appointed by the Government "as to the true and exact objects of
the policy of the Government." The learned Chief Justice, after referring
to the manner whereby under the constitution established by the British
North America Act legislative power for Canada is vested in one Parliament
consisting of the Sovereign, the Senate and the House of Commons, said in part
(p. 133) :—
It can be said that these provisions
manifestly contemplate a House of Commons which is to be, as the name itself
implies, a representative body; constituted, that is to say, by members elected
by such of the population of the united provinces as may be qualified to vote.
The preamble of the statute, moreover, shows plainly enough that the constitution
of the Dominion is to be similar in principle to that of the United Kingdom.
The statute contemplates a parliament working under the influence of public
opinion and public discussion. There can be no controversy that such
institutions derive their efficacy from the free public discussion of affairs,
from criticism and answer and counter-criticism, from attack upon policy and
administration and defence and counterattack; from the freest and fullest analysis and examination from every point of
view of political proposals...
The right of public discussion is, of course,
subject to legal restrictions; those based upon considerations of decency and
public order, and others conceived for the protection of various private and
public interests with which, for example, the laws of defamation and sedition
are conearned. In a word, freedom of discussion means, to quote the words of
Lord Wright in Tames v. Commonwealth, 1936 A.C. 578 at 627, 'freedom
governed by law.'
[Page 374]
We do not doubt that (in addition to the
power of disallowance vested in the Governor General) the Parliament of Canada
possesses authority to legislate for the protection of this right. That
authority rests upon the principle that the powers requisite for the protection
of the constitution itself arise by necessary implication from The British
North America Act as a whole (Fort Frances Pulp & Power Co. Ltd. v.
Manitoba Free Press Co. Ltd. 1923, A.C. 695), and since the subject-matter in relation to which the
power is exercised is not exclusively a provincial matter, it is necessarily
vested in Parliament.
But this by no means exhausts the matter.
Any attempt to abrogate this right of public debate or to suppress the
traditional forms of the exercise of the right (in public meeting and through
the press) would, in our opinion, be incompetent to the legislatures of the
provinces, or to the legislature of any one of the provinces, as repugnant to
the provisions of The British North America Act, by which the Parliament of
Canada is established as the legislative organ of the people of Canada under
the Crown, and Dominion legislation enacted pursuant to the legislative
authority given by those provisions. The subject matter of such legislation
could not be described as a provincial matter purely; as in substance
exclusively a matter of property and civil rights within the province, or a
matter private or local within the province. It would not be, to quote the
words of the judgment of the Judicial Committee in Great West Saddlery Co.
v. The King, 1921, 2 A.C. 91, at 122, legislation directed solely to the purposes
specified in section 92; and it would be invalid on the principles
enunciated in that judgment and adopted in Caron v. The King, 1924, A.
C. 999 at 1005-6.
The question, discussed in argument, of the
validity of the legislation before us, considered as a wholly independent
enactment having no relation to the Alberta Social Credit Act, presents no
little difficulty. Some degree of regulation of newspapers everybody would
concede to the provinces.
Indeed, there is a very wide field in which
the provinces undoubtedly are invested with legislative authority over
newspapers; but the limit, in our opinion, is reached when the legislation
effects such a curtailment of the exercise of the right of public discussion as
substantially to interfere with the working of the parliamentary institutions
of Canada as contemplated by the provisions of the British North America Act
and the statutes of the Dominion of Canada. Such a limitation is necessary, in
our opinion, 'in order,' to adapt the words quoted above from the judgment in Bank
of Toronto v. Lambe, 1887, 12 A.C. 575, 'to afford scope' for the working of such parliamentary
institutions. In this region of constitutional practice, it is not permitted to
a provincial legislature to dc indirectly what cannot be done directly (Great
West Saddlery Co. v. The King, 1921, 2 A. C. 91 at
100).
After quoting section
129 .of the British North America Act which, inter alia, continued all
laws in force in Canada, Nova Scotia and New Brunswick at the Union, until
repealed, abolished, or altered by the Parliament of Canada or the Legislature
of the respective Province,
[Page 375]
according to the
authority of the Parliament or of that Legislature under this Act, he
continued:—
The law by which the right of public
discussion is protected existed at the time of the enactment of The British
North America Act and, as far as Alberta is concerned, at the date on which the
Alberta Act came into force, the 1st of September, 1905. In our opinion (on the
broad principle of the cases mentioned which has been recognized as limiting
the scope of general words defining the legislative authority of the Dominion)
the Legislature of Alberta has not the capacity under section 129 to alter that
law by legislation obnoxious to the principle stated.
With this opinion in
its entirety I respectfully agree and I have heard no reasoned argument against
any of its conclusions. It may be said, with at least equal and I think
greater force, that the right to the free exercise and enjoyment of religious
profession and worship without discrimination or preference, subject to the
limitations expressed in the concluding words, of the first paragraph of the
Statute of 1852, existed at the time of the enactment, of the British North
America Act and was not a civil right of the nature referred to under Head
13 of section 92 of the British North America Act.
Cannon, J. considered
the question of the validity of the bill independently of the fact that it was
part of the general scheme of social credit legislation and must accordingly be
held ultra vires, since the Alberta Social Credit Act was itself
beyond the powers of the Legislature. He expressed the view that The
Accurate News and Information Act was an attempt by the Legislature to
amend the Criminal Code and deny the advantage of section 133(a) to the
Alberta newspapers' publishers, and so ultra vires. He was further of
the opinion that the powers of the Province to deal with the property and civil
rights of its citizens did not enable it to interfere with their fundamental
rights to express freely their untrammelled opinion about Government policies
and discuss matters of public concern. Crocket, Kerwin and Hudson, JJ.,
considering that the bill must of necessity be held ultra vires, since
the Alberta Social Credit Act was found to be beyond the powers of the
Legislature, did not express any opinion on the matters which I have referred
to above. If there has been expressed any judicial opinion on this subject,
however, contrary to that expressed by Sir Lyman Duff and by Davis and Cannon,
JJ., we have not been referred to it.
[Page 376]
The right of which
Dubuc, J. spoke in Barrett's ease in the passage above referred to was a
right of the subjects of Her Majesty under the constitution of the United
Kingdom referred to in the preamble of the British North America Act when
that statute was passed in 1867. The effect of the Statute of 1852 and that of
1867 was to continue that right in the people of Canada as a constitutional
right and one which, in my opinion, did not fall within the category of civil
rights under Head 13 of section 92. I have had the advantage of reading the
opinion of my brother Kellock and I agree with his reasons and with his
conclusion on this aspect of the matter.
The distinction between
this and the by-law considered in In Re Cribbin and the City of Toronto, and in Toronto
Corporation v. Roman Catholic Separate Schools Trustees49 is, in
my opinion, quite clear. In Cribbin's case the City of Toronto had
passed a by-law providing that no person should on the Sabbath Day in any
public park, square, garden, etc. in the City publicly preach, lecture or
declaim. One of the objections to the by-law was apparently that it violated
what is referred to in the judgment of Galt, C.J. as the constitutional right
of all persons to hold meetings and make speeches in public parks. The argument
on behalf of Cribbin does not indicate that it was objected that the by-law
infringed any religious right of the applicant and the matter was not
considered 'on that basis. What completely distinguishes the case, however, is
that it applied to all persons of every religious denomination or belief. Had
it 'applied to those of one religious denomination only while not to others and
had the point been argued and decided, the case would have some application to
the present matter.
In City of Toronto
Corporation v. The Trustees of the Roman Catholic Separate Schools, a by-law passed by
the City under section 399a of the Municipal Act prohibited the
erection 'of buildings in 'a certain district, except for use as private
residences. The by-law was attacked by the trustees who desired to erect a separate
school in the
[Page 377]
area. Dealing with an
argument based upon section 93 of the British North America Act, Viscount
Cave, L.C. said (p. 88) :—
In their Lordships' opinion this provision
has no application to the present case. It is a restriction upon the power of
the Province to make laws in relation to education, but does not prevent the
provisions of the Municipal Act with reference to building, and other matters
relating to the health and convenience of the population, from applying to
denominational schools as well as to other buildings.
Had the by-law
prohibited the erection of a Roman Catholic school in the area while permitting
those of other religious denominations, the case would directly touch the
present matter.
The appellant further
contends that the by-law is ultra vires the City and to authorize it ultra
vires the Province of Quebec, since it trenches upon the jurisdiction of
Parliament under Head 27 of section 91. The answer of the intervenant and of
the City to this contention is that in pith and substance the by-law does not
deal with crime but is directed to the prevention of crime. On the strength of
decisions such as Hodge v. The Queen
and Bedard v. Dawson
they contend the by-law to be intra vires.
An examination of the
history of the legislation dealing with offences against religion in
Taswell-Langmead's Constitutional History and Hallam's History of England
shows that the statutes dealing with what were declared to be offences against
religion were all penal in their nature. In the Criminal Code, under the
heading "Offences against Religion", sections 198 to 201 deal with
the offence of blasphemous' libel and acts interfering with the free exercise
of religious worship by the people of Canada. Section 198 provides that whether
'any particular published matter is a blasphemous libel or not is a question of
fact and does not define the offence. It does, however, declare that no one is
guilty of a blasphemous libel for expressing in good faith and indecent
language, or attempting to establish by arguments used in good faith and
conveyed in decent language, any opinion whatever upon any religious subject.
The Criminal Code also
deals with libels in terms that go far to express in statutory form the rights
of the Canadian people to freedom of speech in regard to matters of public
[Page 378]
interest. After
defining a defamatory libel by section 317, sections
322, 323 and 324 provide that it is not an offence to publish in good faith,
for the information of the public, a fair report of the proceedings of the
Senate and House of Commons, or any committee thereof, or of the public proceedings
before any court exercising judicial authority, or any fair comment upon any
such proceedings: that no one commits an offence by publishing in good faith, in
a news-paper, a fair report of the proceedings of any public meeting if such
meeting is lawfully convened for a lawful purpose and is open to the public,
and if such report is fair and accurate, and if the publication of the matter
'complained 'of is' for the public benefit and if the defendant does not refuse
to insert in a conspicuous place in the newspaper in which the report appeared
'a reasonable letter or document of explanation or contradiction by or on
behalf of the prosecutor: and that no one commits an offence by publishing any
defamatory matter which he, on reasonable grounds, believes to be true, and
which is relevant to any subject of public interest, the public discussion of
which is for the public benefit.
I am quite unable to
accept the contention of the intervenant that the real purpose of this by-law is to
prevent public disorders, or that it is other than to provide a means to
prevent the dissemination of religious views which are not approved by the
authorities. The publication 'of religious writings which offend people
entertaining different religious beliefs to those of the publisher is not 'confined
to any particular religious denomination or to those which adhere to any
particular religious belief. It is also a matter of common knowledge that
political writings expressed in pamphlets, circulars and newspapers have many
times in the past, and no doubt will many times in the future, cause anger and
resentment on the part of those entertaining different political views. If it
be accepted for the purpose of argument that the distribution of such
literature might induce some persons to commit acts of violence, it is for
Parliament to decide whether this should be declared an offence in the Criminal
Code. Parliament has not seen fit to pass such legislation and the Province
is without any jurisdiction to do so. The appellant in the present matter has
exercised what, in my opinion, is his constitutional
[Page 379]
right to the practice
of his religious profession and mode of worship, and if doing so provokes other
people to commit crimes of violence he commits no offence (Beatty v. Gilbanks).
In Hodge v. The
Queen, the Judicial Committee held that the Liquor License Act of 1877 of
Ontario, which prescribed regulations in the nature of police or municipal
regulations of a merely local character for the good government of taverns, did
not in respect of those sections interfere with the general regulation of
trade and commerce, but came within the jurisdiction of the Province to
legislate in regard to municipal institutions in the Province under Head 8, the
imposition of punishment for enforcing 'any law of the Province made in
relation to any matter coming within any of the classes of subjects enumerated
in section 92 under Head 15, and generally all matters of a merely local or
private nature under Head 16. In Bedard v. Dawson, a Quebec statute
which authorized the Judge to order the closing of a disorderly house was held intra
vires, as it dealt with a matter of property and civil rights by providing
for the suppression of a nuisance and not with criminal law by aiming at the
punishment of a crime. I think these cases have no application to the present
matter, where the true purpose of the by-law is not to regulate traffic in the
streets but to impose a censorship on the written expression of religious views
and their dissemination, a constitutional right of all of the people of
Canada, and to create a new criminal offence.
I would allow the
appeal and direct that judgment be entered declaring the by-law invalid and
enjoin the respondent city from acting upon it. I agree with the order as to
costs proposed by my brother Kerwin.
The dissenting judgment
of Cartwright and Fauteux, JJ. was delivered by:—
CARTWRIGHT J.:—This is an appeal from a judgment of
the Court of Queen's Bench, Appeal Side,
affirming the judgment of Casgrain J. whereby the action of the appellant,
asking that by-law 184 of the City of Quebec, passed on the 27th October, 1933,
be declared to be-both on its face and insofar as the plaintiff is concerned-ultra
vires,
[Page 380]
unconstitutional,
illegal, null and void and be quashed and that the Statutes of the Province of
Quebec insofar as they purport to authorize the enactment of such by-law be
similarly declared ultra vires, was dismissed.
At the outset it is to
be observed that the question submitted to us for decision has been narrowed
in the following respect. Counsel for the appellant, at an early stage of the
hearing before us, expressly abandoned the argument that the by-law in question
is invalid because of unlawful delegation of discretion to the Chief of Police
and stated that it was his position that if it is within the powers of the
Legislature of the Province of Quebec to authorize the City of Quebec to pass
the by-law it has done so. The question was thereupon raised from the bench
whether the Court should permit counsel to take this position, since to do so
might well bring about the result that the Court would be giving its opinion on
a constitutional issue of importance which did not require decision in this
particular proceeding. However, it was the view of the majority of the Court
that counsel for the appellant was entitled to limit his attack on the judgment
of the Court of Queen's Bench to such grounds as he chose to put forward and
this view was made clear to all counsel. Consequently counsel for the appellant
did not discuss the questions whether there was an unauthorized delegation to
the Chief of Police and whether the enabling statutes conferred the power upon
the. City to enact the by-law and counsel for the respondent and for the
intervenant were not called upon to deal with these aspects of the matter and
said nothing about them. In answer to a question from the bench put to counsel
for the appellant during his reply he stated explicitly that he invited the
Court to deal with the matter as if the relevant legislation of the Province of
Quebec had expressly conferred upon the City power to pass the by-law in the
very words in which it has been passed.
Under these
circumstances the question we are called upon to decide is simply whether it is
within the powers of the Provincial Legislature to authorize the City to pass
the by-law, which so far as relevant, reads as follow:—
1. It is, by the present by-law forbidden
to distribute in the streets of the City of Quebec, any book, pamphlet,
booklet, circular, tract whatever without having previously obtained for so
doing the written permission of the Chief of Police.
[Page 381]
Section 2 of the by-law
prescribes penalties for its breach.
It is first necessary
to determine the proper construction of the by-law. In doing so we must give to
the words used their plain meaning in everyday language and when this is done I
think it clear that what is prohibited is the distribution, without the
permission of the Chief of Police, of printed matter of the kind described in
the by-law in the streets of the City. The distribution of such matter anywhere
else, as for example in private houses is not affected by the by-law. There is
evidence in the record to indicate that the officials charged with the
enforcement of the by-law have not so construed it and have instituted
proceedings against persons, as for an infraction of the by-law, on the ground
that such persons had distributed written matter at private residences in the
City. Such evidence does not seem to me to be relevant to the proper
construction of the by-law. It is only if the words of the by-law are ambiguous
that we may resort to extraneous aids in its interpretation and the words used
appear to me to be clear and unambiguous. The fact, if be the fact, that the
by-law has been misinterpreted, can affect neither its proper construction nor
the question of its validity.
In my view, legislation
authorizing the city to pass this by-law is prima facie, in relation to
either or both of two subjects within the provincial power which may be conveniently
described as (i) the use of highways, and (ii) police regulations and the
suppression of conditions likely to cause disorder. I propose to deal with
these in the order mentioned.
The judgments of this
Court in O'Brien v. Allen
and in Provincial Secretary of Prince Edward Island v. Egan, establish that the
use of highways in the province is a subject matter within the provincial
power. The following passages may be referred to. In O'Brien v. Allen
(supra) at page 342, Sedgewick J., delivering the unanimous judgment of
the Court said:—
... It has never
been doubted that the right of building highways, and of operating them,
whether under the direct authority of the Government or by means of
individuals, 'companies or municipalities, is wholly within the purview of the
provincial legislatures, and it follows that whether they be free public highways
or subject to a toll authorized by legislative enactment, they are none the
less within the provincial power.
[Page 382]
In Provincial Secretary of Prince Edward
Island v. Egan (supra) at
page 417, the present Chief Justice of Canada, then Rinfret J., delivering the
judgment of himself, Crocket and Kerwin, JJ. referred to the last quoted passage
with approval and ,continued:—
The aspect of that field is wholly
provincial, from the point of view both, of the use of the highway and of the
use of the vehicles. It has to do with the civil regulation of the use of
highways and personal property, the protection of the persons and property of
the citizens, the prevention of nuisances and the suppression of conditions
calculated to make circulation and traffic dangerous.
In a separate judgment,
at page 403, Sir Lyman Duff C.J.C. expressed his concurrence with Rinfret J.
At page 417, Hudson J.
said :—
The Province undoubtedly has the right to
regulate highway traffic and, for that purpose, to license persons to use
highways. The right to license also involves a right to control and, when
necessary, to revoke the licence.
It is said, however,
that it is beyond the power of the Province to deny the ordinary use of the
highways to any member of the public. Certain passages in the judgment of Rand
J. in Winner v. S.M.T. (Eastern) Ltd.,
particularly at pages 918 to 920, would require careful consideration if
the by-law purported to deny to any persons or classes of persons the right to
use the highways for the purpose of passing and repassing, but the by-law in no
way interferes with this right. Its operation is limited to prohibiting the
distribution of printed matter in the streets, without a licence. In my
opinion, the common law is correctly stated in Pratt and Mackenzie's Law of
Highways (19th Edition) at pages 1 and 2:—
The right lof the public in a highway is an easement of passage only—a right, of passing
and repassing. In the language of pleading, a party can only justify passing along, and not being in, a highway.
In 1 Roll. Abr. 392
tit. "Chimin", cited in Halsbury (2nd Edition) Vol. 16 page 238, it
is said:—
In a highway the King hath but the passage
for himself and his people.
In Ex Parte Lewis, Wills J. said:—
The only 'dedication' in the legal sense
that we are aware of is that of a public right of passage, .of which the legal
descniption is a 'right for all her Majesty's subjects at all seasons of the
year freely and at their will to pass and repass without let or hindrance.
[Page 383]
I agree with the
submission of counsel for the intervenant that a member of the public has no
legal right in or on a highway beyond such right to pass and repass and that
the use of the highway for other purposes is a mater not of right but of
tolerance. In Ex Parte Lewis (supra) at page 197, Wills J. says:—
Things are done every day, in every part of
the kingdom, without let or hindrance, which there is not and cannot be a legal
right to do, and not unfrequently are submitted to with a good grace because
they are in their nature incapable, by whatever amount of user, of growing into
a right.
It appears to me to
follow from the judgments in O'Brien v. Allen (supra) and Provincial
Secretary of Prince Edward Island v. Egan (supra) that the legislative
authority to permit, forbid or regulate the use of the highways for purposes
other than that of passing and repassing belongs to the Province.
Dealing next with the
subject of police regulations and the suppression of conditions likely to cause
disorder, it appears that this Court has decided that the Province has power to
legislate in relation to such manners.
In Bedard v. Dawson, Idington J. said:—
As to the argument addressed to us that the
local legislatures cannot legislate to prevent crime, I cannot assent thereto
for in a very wide sense it is the duty of the legislature to do the utmost it
can within its power to anticipate and remove, so far as practicable, whatever
is likely to tend to produce crime;
and on the same page he
continued:—
There are many instances of other nuisances
which can be better rectified by local legislation within the power of the
legislatures over property and civil rights than by designating them crimes and
leaving them to be dealt with by Parliament as such.
At the same page Duff
J., as he then was, said:—
The legislation impugned seems to be aimed
at suppressing conditions calculated to favour the development of crime rather
than at the punishment of crime. This is an aspect of the subject in respect of
which the provinces seem to be free to legislate.
In Reference re the
Children's Protection Act of Ontario,
Sir Lyman Duff C.J., delivering the unanimous opinion of the Court said at
page 403:—
Moreover, while, as subject matter of
legislation, the criminal law is entrusted to the Dominion Parliament,
responsibility for the administration of justice and, broadly speaking, for
the policing of the country, the
[Page 384]
execution of the criminal law, the
suppression of crime and disorder, has from the beginning of Confederation been
recognized as the responsibility of the provinces and has been discharged at
great cost to the people; so also, the provinces, sometimes acting directly,
sometimes through the municipalities, have assumed responsibility for
controlling social conditions having a tendency to encourage vice and crime.
Reference may also be
made to the decision of the Judicial Committee in Lymburn v. Mayland.
It follows from these
authorities that it is within the competence of the Legislature of the Province
to prohibit or regulate the distribution, in the streets of the municipalities
in the Province, of written matter having a tendency to insult or annoy the
recipients thereof with the possible result of giving rise to disorder, and
perhaps violence, in the streets.
It is said, however, if
I have correctly apprehended the argument for the appellant, that even if the
legislation in question appears prima facie to fall within the powers of
the Provincial Legislature under the two heads with which I have dealt above it
is in reality an enactment destructive of the freedom of the press and the
freedom of religion both of which are submitted to be matters as to which the
Province has no power to legislate. In support of such submission counsel
referred to a large number of cases decided in the Courts .of the United States
of America but I am unable to derive any assistance from them as they appear to
be founded on provisions in the Constitution limiting the power to make laws in
relation to such matters. Under the British North America Act, on the
other hand, the whole range of legislative power is committed either to
Parliament or the Provincial Legislatures and competence to deal with any
subject matter must exist in one or other of such bodies. There are thus no
rights possessed by the citizens of Canada which cannot be modified by either
Parliament or the Legislature, but it may often be a matter of difficulty to
decide which of such bodies has the legislative power in a particular case.
[Page 385]
It will be convenient
to first examine the appellant's argument in so far as it deals with the
freedom of the press. In Blackstone's Commentaries (1769) Vol. 4, at pages 151
and 152 it is said:—
The liberty of the press is indeed
essential to the nature of a free state: but this consists in laying no
previous restraints upon publications, and not in freedom from censure for
criminal matter when published. Every freeman has an undoubted right to lay
what sentiments he pleases before the public: to forbid this, is to destroy the
freedom of the press: but if he publishes what is improper, mischievous, or
illegal, he must take the consequence of his, own temerity. To subject the
press to the restrictive power of a licenser, as was formerly done, both before
and since the revolution, is to subject all freedom of sentiment to the prejudices
of one man, and make him the arbitrary and infallible judge of all controverted
points in learning, religion, and government. But to punish (as the law does at
present) any dangerous or offensive writings, which, when published, shall on a
fair and impartial trial be adjudged of a pernicious tendency, is necessary for
the preservation of peace and good order, of government said religion, the only
solid foundations of civil liberty.
Accepting this as an
accurate description of what is commonly understood by the expression
"the liberty of the press", as heretofore enjoyed by the inhabitants
of Canada, it is clear that By-law No. 184 does infringe such liberty to a
limited extent. It does, to adapt the words of Blackstone, lay some previous
restraint upon publication. So far as the by-law is concerned every individual
is left free to print and publish any matter he pleases except that one
particular method of publication is conditionally denied to him. He is
forbidden to publish such matter by distributing it in the streets of the City
of Quebec without having previously obtained for so doing the written
permission of the Chief of Police. I will assume, as is argued for the
appellant, that the by-law contemplates that the Chief of Police will examine
the written matter in respect of which he is asked to grant a permit and that
his decision, whether to grant or refuse it, will be based on the view which he
takes of the contents of such matter; that if he regards it as harmless, he
will grant the permit, and that if he thinks it is calculated to provoke
disorder by annoying or insulting those to whom it is distributed he will
refuse the permit. It is urged that power to restrict the liberty of the press
even to the limited extent provided in the by-law, is committed exclusively to
Parliament under the opening words of section 91 or under head 27 of that
section and further that Parliament has fully occupied the field by enacting
those
[Page 386]
provisions of the
Criminal Code which deal with blasphemous libel, seditious libel, speaking
seditious words, spreading false news, defamatory libel, and publishing obscene
matter. If I have followed the argument correctly, it is that as Parliament
has enacted that certain publications are to be deemed criminal it has by
implication declared that all other publications are lawful and that consequently
the Legislature has no power to deal with any other type of publication. I am
unable to accept this conclusion.
In my view, freedom of
the press is not a separate subject matter committed exclusively to either
Parliament or the Legislatures. In some respects, Parliament, and in others,
the Legislatures may validly deal with it. In some aspects it falls within the
field of criminal law, but in others it has been dealt with by Provincial
legislation, the validity of which is not open to question, as for example
"The Libel and Slander Act" R.S.O. 1950 Cap. 204, and the similar
acts in the other provinces. If the subject matter of a Provincial enactment
falls within the class of subjects enumerated in section 92 of the British
North America Act such enactment does not, in my opinion, cease to be intra
vires of the legislature by reason of the fact that it has the effect of
cutting down the freedom of the press. The question of legislative competence
is to be determined not by inquiring whether the enactment lays a previous
restraint upon publication or attaches consequences after publication has
occurred but rather by inquiring whether in substance the subject matter dealt
with falls within the Provincial power. I have already indicated my view that
the Province has power under the two headings which I have discussed above to
authorize the passing of the by-law in question.
It is next necessary to
consider the argument that the by-law is invalid because, as it is alleged, it
interferes with freedom of religion. While it was questioned before us, I will,
for the purposes of this argument, assume that the system of faith and worship
professed by the body to which the plaintiff belongs is a religion, and that
the distribution of printed matter in the streets is a practice directed by its
teachings.
[Page 387]
It may well be that
Parliament alone has power to make laws in relation to the subject of religion
as such, that that subject is, in its nature, one which concerns Canada as a
whole and so cannot be regarded as of a merely local or private nature in any
province or as a civil right in any province; but we are not called upon to
decide that question in this appeal and I express no opinion upon it. I think
it clear that the provinces, legislating within their allotted sphere, may
affect the carrying on of activities connected with the practice of religion.
For example, there are many municipal by-laws in force in cities in Ontario,
passed pursuant to powers conferred by the Provincial Legislature, which
provide that no buildings other than private residences shall be erected on
certain streets. Such by-laws are, in my opinion, clearly valid although they
prevent any religious body from building a church or similar edifice on such
streets. Another example of Provincial Legislation which might be said to
interfere directly with the free exercise of religious profession is that
under which the by-law considered in Re Cribbin v. The City of Toronto was passed.
That was a by-law of the City of Toronto which provided in part:—
No person shall on the Sabbath-day, in any
public park, square, garden, or place for exhibition in the city of Toronto,
publicly preach lecture or declaim.
The by-law was attacked
on the ground, inter alia, that it was unconstitutional but it was
upheld by Galt C.J. and in my opinion, his decision was right. No useful
purpose would be served by endeavouring to define the limits of the provincial
power to pass legislation affecting the carrying on of activities connected
with the practice of religion. The better course is, I think, to deal only with
the particular legislation now before us.
For the appellant,
reliance was placed upon the Statute of Canada (1851) 14-15 Victoria, Chapter
175, re-enacted in substantially identical terms as R.S.Q. 1941 Cap. 307. I
will assume, for the purposes of the argument, that counsel for the appellant
is right in his submission that it is to the pre-Confederation Statute that we
should look. In the relevant portion of that statute it is enacted:—
That the free exercise and enjoyment of
Religious Profession and Worship, without discrimination or preference, so as
the same be not
[Page 388]
made an excuse for acts of licentiousness,
or a justification of practices inconsistent with the peace and safety of the
Province, is by the constitution and laws of this Province allowed to all Her
Majesty's subjects within the same.
I do not think that, on
a proper construction, this statute absolves a religious body or an individual
member thereof from obedience to any Act of Parliament or of the Legislature
which happens to conflict with the teachings of such body. To give an example,
if I am right in my view that Re Cribbin v. City of Toronto (supra) was
rightly decided I do not think that an individual could have successfully
argued that the by-law, although otherwise valid, did not apply to him because
it was one of his beliefs and a teaching of the body to which he belonged that
he must preach not only in churches, chapels or meeting houses or on private
property but also in parks and public places.
It is argued, on the
authority of Dobie v. Temporalities Board,
that the Legislature could not repeal this pre-Confederation Statute. I
will assume that this is so but I think it clear from the opinions delivered in
this Court in Reference In Re Bowaters Pulp and Paper Mills Ltd., in which Dobie v.
Temporalities Board was fully considered, that although the Province could
not repeal the Act in toto it can modify its effects by any subsequent
legislation provided such legislation is within the field assigned to the
Province. Leges posteriores priores contrarias
abrogant. I therefore do not think that the by-law is
rendered invalid by reason of its alleged interference with the right of the
appellant to practise the religion of his choice.
To summarize, I am of
opinion that it was within the competence of the Legislature to authorize the
passing of the by-law in question under its power to legislate in relation
to (i) the use of highways, and (ii) police regulations and the suppression .of
conditions likely to cause disorder; and that such legislation is not rendered
invalid because it interferes to the limited extents indicated, above with
either the freedom of the press or the freedom of religion. It follows that I
would dismiss the appeal.
[Page 389]
Before parting with the
matter, I wish, at the risk of repetition, to emphasize that, because of the
position taken by counsel at the argument, I am deciding only that it was
within the power of the Legislature of the Province of Quebec to authorize the
City to pass the by-law in question. I have not considered whether the relevant
legislation did actually authorize its passing as that question was with-drawn
from our consideration and counsel for the respondent and intervenant were not
called upon to deal with it. I wish also to make it plain that I do not intend,
by implication or otherwise, to express any opinion as to whether or not it
would have been within the powers of the Legislature to authorize the passing
of a similar by-law which was not, as I have held the one before us to be,
limited in its operation to what may be done in the streets.
I would dismiss the
appeal with costs.
Appeal allowed with costs.
Solicitors for the Appellant: Sam S. Bard and W. G. How.
Solicitors for the Respondent: Pelletier, Godbout & Leclerc.
Solicitor for the Intervenant: Noël Dorion.
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