Supreme Court of Canada
Boucher v. the King, [1951] S.C.R. 265
Date: 1950-12-18
Aime Boucher Appellant;
and
His Majesty the King Respondent.
Present at first hearing: Rinfret C.J. and
Kerwin, Taschereau, Rand and Estey JJ.
Present at second hearing: Rinfret CJ. and
Kerwin, Taschereau, Rand, Kellock, Estey. Locke, Cartwright and Fauteux JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF KING'S BENCH,
APPEAL SIDE, PROVINCE OF QUEBEC
Seditious libel—Religious pamphlet
distributed by Witness of Jehovah—Seditious intention—Good faith—Whether
incitation to violence is necessary element of seditious libel—Whether jury was
properly charged—Criminal Code, R.S.C. 1927, c. 36, s. 133 (as amended by S. of
C. 1936, c. 29, s. 4) and s. 133A (as enacted by S. of C. 1930,, c. 11, s. 2).
Neither language calculated to
promote feelings of ill-will and hostility between different classes of His
Majesty's subjects nor criticizing the courts is seditious unless there is the
intention to incite to violence or resistance to or defiance of constituted
authority.
The definition of a seditious
intention given in Stephen's Digest of the Criminal Law, 8th Ed. p. 94, to the
extent that it differs from the foregoing, disapproved.
Appellant was convicted by a jury of
having published a seditious libel, by distributing copies of a pamphlet
containing alleged seditious passages, to several persons at St. Joseph, in the
district of Beauce,
[Page 266]
in the province of Quebec, contrary
to s. 134 of the Criminal Code. The conviction was affirmed by a majority in the Court of King's
Bench (Appeal Side). An appeal to this Court was allowed on grounds of
misdirection and improper rejection of evidence. On the first hearing of this
appeal, heard by a Court of five judges, the majority ordered a new trial.
Application was then made, and granted, to have the appeal reargued before a
full Court of nine judges. On the reargument, it was conceded on behalf of the
Crown that the conviction should be quashed due to errors in the trial judge's
charge, and the only question which remained was as to whether there was
evidence upon which a properly instructed jury could find the appellant guilty
of publishing a seditious libel by reason of the publication of the pamphlet
here in question.
Held: (Reversing the judgment appealed from) the Chief Justice,
Taschereau, Cartwright and Fauteux JJ. dissenting, that the accused should be
acquitted as there was no evidence, either in the pamphlet or otherwise, upon
which a jury, properly instructed, could find him guilty of the offence charged.
Per Rinfret
C.J. (dissenting) : Since the Criminal Code has dealt with the matter, the Courts must administer the law
respecting seditious libel in accordance with the Canadian legislation and not
in accordance with statements by commentators in England. Section 133(4) of the
Code makes it clear that
the advocating of force is not the only instance in which an accused could be
found guilty of a seditious intention. Moreover, it does not belong to this
Court to pass upon any other passage of the charge than those referred to in
the dissent in the Court of Appeal, nor to decide itself whether there was any
ground for coming to the conclusion that the document was or was not a
seditious libel. What the jury alone had to decide was: (a) whether the document
contained matters which were producing or had a tendency to produce feelings of
hatred and ill-will; (b) whether the accused pointed out these matters in order
to their removal; and (c) whether he did so in good faith, This Court has no
authority to decide these questions, more particularly in view of the fact that
the jurisdiction of this 'Court in criminal eases is limited to the points of
dissent in the Court of Appeal (which, in this case, were exclusively on the
ground that the charge was incomplete and erroneous in certain respects and had
exceeded the limitations imposed by the rules of law).
Per Taschereau,
Cartwright and Fauteux JJ. (dissenting) : That, although to render an intention
to create ill-will and hostility between different classes of His Majesty's
subjects seditious there must be an intention to incite resistance to lawfully
constituted authority (and this cannot be found to have been the intention
here) ; at common law an intention to vilify the administration of justice and
bring it into hatred or contempt or to excite disaffection against it is a
seditious ' intention, the Criminal Code has not altered the law in this respect and as the words of the
pamphlet furnish evidence upon which a properly instructed jury could
reasonably find the existence of that intention, there should be a new trial.
(The history of the law relating to a
seditious intention considered and the authorities reviewed).
[Page 267]
APPEAL from the judgment of the Court of
King's Bench, appeal side, province of Quebec, dismissing,
Letourneau C.JA and Galipeault JA dissenting, appellant's appeal from his
conviction, at trial before a jury, on the following charge: "Que le ou vers
le 11 décembre, 1946, h St Joseph dans le district de Beauce, le dit Aimé Boucher
de Ste Germaine a publié des libelles séditieux contenues dans un fascicule intitulé "La haine ardente du Québec pour Dieu,
pour Christ et pour la liberté est un sujet de honte pour tout
le Canada", en les exhibant en public ou les faisant lire ou les montrant ou les délivrant, ou
les faisant montrer ou délivrer dans le but de les faire lire par quel-qu'un,
le tout malicieusement et contrairement au
code Criminel du Canada, spécialement aux articles 133, 134 et 318.
The points of dissent in the Court below, to
which this Court was limited in its consideration of this case, were as
follows:
1) That references in the charge to the facts
proven in the case appealed more to the religious or national sentiments of
the jury than to the latter's reason;
2) That the trial judge should not have
undertaken to establish that some of the statements in the document were
erroneous, after he had properly ruled that the truth of the statements was
immaterial;
3) That the trial judge misdirected himself
when he told the jury that it ought to find the accused guilty if it thought
that the document was of a nature to insinuate that in Quebec the
administration of justice was biased, that the clergy controlled the Courts,
and that there existed in that Province an apparent hate for God and Christ and
Freedom;
4) That a certain objection to a question put
by the defence and of a nature to establish the good faith of the accused
should not have been maintained;
5) That the trial judge misdirected himself
when he stated that he could not see where the jury could find that there was a
doubt in this case.
[Page 268]
A. L. Stein K.C., W. G. How and D. B.
Spence for appellant at the first hearing.
A. Lacourcière K.C. for respondent at the
first hearing.
W. G. How for appellant at the second hearing.
L. H. Gendron K.C. for respondent at the
second hearing.
THE CHIEF JUSTICE (dissenting):
There has been a rehearing in this appeal, but the appellant has failed to
convince me that I should modify the reasons for judgment which I had written
after the first hearing and which were as follows:
The appellant was convicted by a jury of
publishing a seditious libel contrary to Section 133 of the Criminal Code and
the conviction was affirmed by the Court of King's Bench (Appeal Side) of the
Province of Quebec, the
Chief Justice of the Province of Quebec and Galipeault J.A. dissenting.
This Court is limited to the consideration of
the points of dissent. Galipeault J.A. states in his reasons that he would have
ordered a new trial "m'arrêtant uniquement aux griefs de l'appelant à
l'encontre de la charge du Juge". Likewise Chief Justice Letourneau
dissented exclusively on the ground that the trial judge's charge to the jury
was incomplete and erroneous in certain respects and that it had exceeded the
limitations imposed by the rules of law. He also would have granted a new
trial. The majority of the Court of King's Bench (Appeal Side) was of opinion
that no fault could be found in the learned judge's charge and the appeal of
the accused should be dismissed.
Very properly Chief Justice Letourneau avoided
discussing the circumstances of the trial, in view of the fact he thought that
a new trial should be granted to the appellant, and I feel that I should do the
same.
His reasons for dissent were that references in the
charge to the facts proven in the case appealed more to the religious or
national sentiments of the jury than to the latter's reason. He also thought
that since the learned judge had ruled in the course of the trial that the
truth of the statements contained in the libel was immaterial,
[Page 269]
the learned judge
should not have undertaken to establish that these statements were erroneous.
Further, the Chief Justice considered that the learned trial judge had
misdirected himself when he said that, if the jury was of the opinion that the
incriminated document was of a nature to insinuate that in the Province of
Quebec the administration of justice was biased, that the Catholic clergy
controlled the Courts, and that there existed in that Province an apparent hate
for God and Christ and Freedom, then the jury ought to find the accused guilty.
The learned Chief
Justice also found fault with the ruling of the presiding judge to the effect
that a certain objection to a question put by Counsel for the defence and of a
nature to establish the good faith of the accused should not have been
maintained.
In addition to the
above, the dissent also expresses the view that when dealing with the question
of reasonable doubt, at the request of Counsel for the defence, the learned
trial judge misdirected himself again when he stated that in the present case
he could not see where the jury could find that there was a doubt.
Finally, the dissent
also refers to a direction alleged to have been made by the trial judge in reference
to the good faith of the accused, that after the jury had read the incriminated
document they would have to decide if such document was really of a nature to
re-establish good will between the Witnesses of Jehovah and the people of the
Province of Quebec, which, the accused had stated in evidence, was his purpose
in publishing the document; and when, after the charge had been delivered to
the jury, the learned presiding judge was asked to inform the jury as to the
nature of a blasphematory libel and a defamatory libel as contrasted to a
seditious libel, the learned judge defined both defamatory and blasphematory
libel, but he added:
This was not the accusation brought against
the accused. I do not believe that there is here in the document anything blasphematory.
C'est plutôt un libelle séditieux qui a été produit.
The dissent finds that
such a declaration on the part of the trial judge was of a nature to influence
the verdict. The learned Chief Justice, therefore, concluded that the
[Page 270]
charge was erroneous, both on the ground of
misdirection and non-direction and that, as a consequence, the verdict was
tainted with illegality.
Now those are the grounds of dissent. It does
not belong to this Court to pass upon any other passage of the charge of the
learned trial judge, nor to decide itself whether there was any ground for
coming to the conclusion that the document now in question, and for which the
accused was brought to trial, was or was not a seditious libel. If this Court
were to so decide, it would attribute to itself a finding which is exclusively
the province of the jury. As an illustration of this, I might point out that
under Section 133 (a) of the Criminal
Code the question of the good faith of the accused
forms a necessary part of the circumstances to which the jury must direct its
attention; and, of course, good faith is essentially a matter left to the jury,
properly directed, and regarding which this Court has no right to interfere.
I would be willing to accept some of the reasons
of the learned Chief Justice of the Province of Quebec, and to say that, on
some of the points he refers to, the charge was incomplete and perhaps even
erroneous, although, with respect, I do not agree with him in his
interpretation of some of the statements made by the trial judge.
I may say, at once, without referring to any of
the passages in the document distributed by the accused, that I agree with the
rule laid down by Lord Cairns in Metropolitan Railway Company v. Jackson and would apply it to the present case:
The Judge has a certain duty to discharge,
and the jurors have another and a different duty. The judge has to say whether
any facts have been established by evidence from which negligence may be
reasonably inferred; the jurors have to say whether, from those facts, when
submitted to them, negligence ought to be inferred. It is, in my opinion, of
the greatest importance in the administration of justice that these separate
functions should be maintained, and should be maintained distinct. It would be
a serious inroad on the province of the Jury, if, in a case where there are
facts from which negligence may reasonably be inferred, the Judge were to
withdraw the case from the jury upon the ground that, in his opinion,
negligence ought not to be inferred; and it would, on the other hand, place in
the hands of the jurors a power which might be exercised in the most arbitrary
manner, if they were at liberty to hold that negligence might be inferred from
any state of facts whatever.
[Page 271]
In the present case all that was necessary for
the Crown to do was to file the document and to prove that the accused had
published it within the meaning of the law. That is what the learned trial
judge stated and meant when he said:
J'en conclus done, et sur ce point vous
devez suivre ma direction, que la preuve de la Couronne a été complète par le
fait d'avoir produit le pamphlet et le fait d'en avoir prouvé la distribution.
This sentence cannot be understood otherwise
than to say that the Crown had adduced all the evidence necessary to allow the
jury to render a verdict on the accusation, but it does not mean that the Crown
had proven its case.
Far from agreeing with the dissenting judgment
of the learned Chief Justice where he quotes the presiding judge as saying:
... si vous croyez qu'un document de cette
nature peut laisser croire à nos canadiens de langue anglaise que dans la
province de Québec, la justice n'est pas observée, que le clergé a le contrôle
sur les tribunaux et enfin, qu'il y a dans la Province de Québec une haine
ardente pour le Christ, pour Dieu et pour la liberté, dans ce cas-là, vous
devez condamner Boucher.
And where he says that the remarks of the trial
judge were "of a nature to prejudice and vitiate the verdict", I
would point out that such a passage should not have been detached from its
context. The whole passage reads as follows:
Si vous trouvez qu'il n'y a rien de
séditieux dans cet article, vous devez acquitter Bouclier. D'un autre côté, si
vous l'avez lu, après en. avoir apprécié tous les termes qu'il contient, vous
croyez qu'il peut en. résulter dans la Province de Québec un élément de
discorde et de trouble qui peut devenir sérieux, si vous croyez qu'un document
de cette nature peut laisser croire à nos canadiens de langue anglaise que dans
la Province de Québec, la justice n'est pas observée, que le clergé a le
contrôle sur les tribunaux et enfin, qu'il y a dans la Province de Québec une
haine ardente pour le Christ, pour Dieu et pour la liberté, dans ce cas-là,
vous devez condamner Boucher.
It is, therefore, apparent that the learned
judge was there telling the jury that if they found nothing seditious in the
document they had to acquit Boucher, but that if, on the contrary, they thought
there was something seditious in it, in the nature of what he enumerates in the
passage, then they ought to condemn him. I cannot find anything objectionable
in that way of presenting the matter to the jury.
[Page 272]
Then in respect of the objection to certain
evidence which is mentioned in the dissenting judgment and the fact that it was
maintained by the learned judge, my humble view is that the question to which
the objection was maintained was illegal and that it was properly maintained.
In that instance Boucher was asked to state the impression he intended to
convey by a reading of the pamphlet, according to what he himself thought and
his appreciation of the pamphlet. Surely it did not exclusively belong to the
accused to state to the jury what he intended to convey; it was for the jury
itself to come to a conclusion as to what the document conveyed to the people
among whom it was distributed. Again the passage of the charge quoted by the
learned Chief Justice is as follows:
Vous lirez ce document-là, Exhibit P-1, et
vous déciderez si réellement il est de nature à ramener la bonne entente entre
les témoins de Jéhovah et les gens de la province de Québec.
This is merely a reference to the fact that
Boucher had claimed that he had distributed the document in order to
"ramener la bonne entente entre les témoins de Jéhovah et les gens de la
province de Québec"; and the learned judge was telling the jury that,
having read the pamphlet, it was for them to decide whether it was of a nature
to bring about what Boucher had contended.
The learned Chief Justice also points to the
sentence in the charge:
C'est plutôt un libelle séditieux qui a été
produit.
The meaning of that sentence is quite clear,
more particularly if it is read in conjunction with the context. The learned
trial judge had been asked by Counsel for the accused to instruct the jury on
the nature of blasphematory and defamatory libel. He gave the instruction
asked for and then concluded by saying:
But in this case you are not concerned with
either of those. The document which has been filed, if anything, is rather a
seditious libel.
With due respect, I cannot find any other
meaning to that sentence which, of course, so understood cannot be held to be
objectionable.
That concludes my analysis and review of the
dissenting judgment of the learned Chief Justice of Quebec. I am of opinion
that the several points to which I have just referred
[Page 273]
were not well taken.
However, I would otherwise agree with the remainder of his reasoning and, on
that account, I am of opinion that a new trial should be ordered in this case.
Now, dealing with a
general review of the case, I would first observe that the French version of
the document is the one to which the attention of the jury should be brought,
because admittedly the region in which it was distributed is largely, if not
exclusively, French speaking. The document in French would, therefore, be the
one that could affect the people among which it was published. Having read it
several times I would say without hesitation that it contains statements upon
which the jury might reasonably come to the conclusion that such statements are
in the nature of seditious libels; and, applying the language of Lord Cairns in
the Metropolitan Railway Company case (supra), my view would be that the pre-siding judge
could direct the jury that it might reasonably infer that the document could be
looked upon, under Canadian law, as a seditious libel. It would, of course, be
for the jurors to say whether, when submitted to them, guilt ought to be
inferred. Merely as an illustration of what I have in mind I would refer to the
several passages where the document says that the French Canadian Courts are so
much under the influence of the Catholic priests that they are thereby induced
to confirm infamous sentences and to render judgments not according to their
judicial duties and oath, but as a result of the influence of -the priests.
Here is the passage to
which I refer. The French version reads:
Toutes les cours Canadiennes Françaises
étaient tellement sous l'influence sacerdotale qu'elles confirmèrent la
sentence infâme, et ce ne fut que lorsque la cause fut portée en Cour Suprême
du Canada que le jugement fut renversé.
The English version
reads:
All the French Canadian courts were so
under priestly thumbs that they affirmed the infamous sentence, and it was not
until the case reached the Supreme Court of 'Canada that judgment was reversed.
Perhaps it should be
noted here that the statement that the judgment was reversed by the Supreme
Court of Canada
[Page 274]
is a falsity. The judgment in question is that
of Brodie v. The King, having been reported, it is therefore public and it is sufficient to
refer to that judgment 'to see that it is absolutely incorrect to say that
there was a reversal. The Supreme Court merely quashed the indictment and the
conviction on the ground that the necessary averments were omitted and the
necessary ingredients were lacking in the indictment preferred against the
appellants and that their absence constituted defects in matters of sub-stance.
But the Court stated that the Crown was at liberty "to prefer a fresh
indictment if so advised."
In Canada it should not be forgotten that the
criminal law of the country is contained in the Criminal Code; and as was
pointed out in Brodie v.
The King:
It cannot be that the criminal law should
be administered as though there were no code.
The sections of the Criminal Code referring to
seditious libel are sections 133 and 133A. This was first enacted by section
123, chap. 25, 55-56 Victoria (1892), the section then having four paragraphs.
In 1906, by sec. 132, chap. 146 of the Revised Statutes of Canada adopted in
that year, sec. 123, above mentioned, was amended by the deletion of paragraph
one of that section. In 1927 when the subsequent Revised Statutes of Canada
were adopted this section 132, of chap. 146, R.S.C. 1906, was retained without
amendment as sec. 133. By chap. 29, 1936 S.C., a fourth paragraph was added to
sec. 133. In addition in 1930 a new section 133A, was enacted by chap. 11 of
the Statutes of Canada of that year, and that section was retained without
amendment in the amendments of 1947.
Under the law as it stood at the material time,
that is when the appellant distributed what is alleged to have been the
seditious libel, section 133 stated that "a seditious libel is a libel
expressive of a seditious intention".
It was argued by Counsel for the appellant that
the Code does not define "seditious intention". Of course,
subsection (4) of section 133. enacts that "everyone shall be presumed to
have a seditious intention who publishes, or circulates any writing, printing
or document in which it is advocated or who teaches or advocates, the use,
without
[Page 275]
the authority of law, of force, as a means of
accomplishing any governmental change within Canada"; but the subsection
begins by the words "without limiting the generality of the meaning of
the expression 'seditious intention' ". Therefore, we have it here that
the advocating of force is not the only instance in which an accused could be
found guilty of a "seditious intention".
Then if we turn to section 133A, also in force
when the present appellant was proven to have distributed the seditious libel,
the legislator there indicated certain cases where one would not be deemed to
have had a seditious intention only because he intends in good faith
(c) to point out, in order to their
removal, matters which are producing or have a tendency to produce feelings of
hatred and ill-will between different classes of His Majesty's subjects.
Of course, one cannot but be impressed by the
analogy of that section added in 1930 with sections 114 and 115 of Stephen's
"Digest of the Criminal Law", as they were at the time of the
drafting of the Criminal
Code in Canada in 1892, and also by the definition
of "sedition" given by Russell "On Crime", Vol. 1, 9th
edit., p. 87.
But the very fact that the Canadian Code has
dealt with the matter compels the Canadian Courts to administer the law with
regard to seditious libel in accordance with the Canadian legislation and not
in accordance with statements by commentators in England, or even with pronouncements
by judges administering justice in Great Britain. Indeed that was the very
ruling of the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council in Wallace-Johnson v. The King, where it was held that the provisions of the Gold Coast Criminal
Code were clear and unambiguous and intended to contain as far as possible a
full and complete statement of the law of sedition in the Colony, and that,
therefore, the English common law as expounded in a judgment rendered in
England was inapplicable. Under Part I of the Canadian Criminal Code (sections
8 et seq.) the Courts in this country can refer to the law of England only in
so far as a matter has not been dealt with by the Canadian Parliament. Even if
in section 133, as it was originally enacted, we did not find sufficient to
decide what Parliament thought should be considered as a seditious
[Page 276]
intention, we certainly have some indication of
the legislator's mind in subsection (4) as it now stands and as it was
introduced by the amendment of 1936. As already pointed out, what is stated
there as creating a presumption of seditious intention is qualified by the
words "without limiting the generality of the meaning of the
expression".
Section 133A, introduced in 1930, by chap. 11 of
the Statutes of Canada of that year, undoubtedly contains some indication of
the legislator's view of what constitutes seditious intention under the law of
Canada. Subsection (c) refers to the pointing out of matters which are producing
or have a tendency to produce feelings of hatred and ill-will between different
classes of His Majesty's subjects and it says that if one only intends "in
order to their removal, to point out such matters", he shall not be deemed
to have a seditious intention if he "intends it" in "good
faith". It necessarily follows that even pointing out these matters in
order to their removal will not relieve an accused of the guilt of seditious
intention unless he did it in good faith. Therefore, if you have a matter which
is producing, or has a tendency to produce feelings of hatred and ill-will
between different classes of His Majesty's subjects, a jury would be justified
in finding that a man, under Canadian jurisdiction, ought to be found guilty of
seditious libel, unless the jury comes to the conclusion that the man in
question pointed out these matters "in order to their removal" and
that he did so "in good faith."
In my humble view, therefore, it is unnecessary
in the present case to refer to any pronouncements either in Great Britain, and
less so in the United States, as the learned Counsel for the appellant invited
us to do, because here in Canada we have the precise legislation on the issue;
and what the jury alone has to decide here with regard to Boucher is :
(1) Whether the document which he distributed
contained matters which were producing, or had a tendency to produce feelings
of hatred and ill-will between classes of His Majesty's subjects; ;
(2) Whether he pointed out these matters in
order to their removal; and
[Page 277]
(3) Whether he did
so in good faith.
These three questions
are strictly the province of the jury. I cannot see by what authority this
Court should decide that Boucher pointed out these matters in order to their
removal, or that he did so in good faith, more particularly in view of the fact
that the Supreme Court of Canada's jurisdiction in criminal cases is limited to
point of dissent in the Court of Appeal. There was absolutely no dissent on
these matters in the Court below. The dissenting opinions of Letourneau C.J.
and of Galipeault J.A. are expressly limited to misdirections, or non-directions,
in the
learned trial judge's charge; and the only points which this Court has to
decide are whether the alleged misdirections, or non-directions, are really to
be found in the charge, and the consequence can only be that there should be a
new trial, if they are so found.
I would not like to
part this appeal, however, without stating that to interpret freedom as licence
is a dangerous fallacy. Obviously pure criticism, or expression of opinion,
however severe or extreme, is, I might almost say, to be invited. But, as was
said elsewhere, "there must be a point where restriction on individual
freedom of expression is justified and required on the grounds of reason, or
on the ground of the democratic process and the necessities of the present
situation". It should not be understood from this Court--the Court of last
resort in criminal matters in Canada-that persons subject to Canadian
jurisdiction "can insist on their alleged unrestricted right to say what
they please and when they please, utterly irrespective of the evil results
which are often inevitable". It might well be said in such a case, in the
words of Milton, "Licence they mean when they cry liberty", or as
expressed Mr. Edouard Herriot, "La liberté doit trouver sa imite dans l'autorité
légale".
For these reasons in is
particular appeal, the conviction should be set aside on the grounds of
misdirection and non-direction, and a new trial should be directed.
KERWIN J.‑This is an appeal by the accused
from a decision of the Court of King's Bench (Appeal Side) for the Province of
Quebec, affirming
his conviction for
[Page 278]
publishing a seditious libel contrary to section
133 of the Criminal Code. Chief Justice Letourneau dissented and, as Mr. Justice Galipeault
agreed with his reasons, reference thereto may conveniently be made throughout
as expressing the dissent with which this Court is concerned. Prior to the
hearing, we dismissed a motion by the Crown to quash the appeal on the ground
that the dissent was on questions of fact alone because we are all of opinion
that there was dissent on questions of law.
The charge against the accused is that he
published a seditious libel by distributing copies of a pamphlet to several
persons at St. Joseph, in the District of Beauce, which pamphlet contained
certain alleged seditious pass-ages. The editors of the pamphlet are stated
therein to be Watch Tower Bible and Truth Society, Toronto, Ont., and the
accused is a member of Jehovah's Witnesses. There is no doubt as to the
publication by the accused in the manner charged but the question is whether
what he published constituted the criminal offence known as seditious libel.
Section 133 of the Criminal Code under which
the charge was laid must be considered together with section 133A enacted in
1930, and these now read:
133. Seditious words are words expressive of a seditious intention.
2. A seditious libel is a libel expressive
of a seditious intention.
3. A seditious conspiracy is an agreement
between two or more persons to carry into execution a seditious intention.
4. Without limiting the generality of the
meaning of the expression "seditious intention" everyone shall be
presumed to have a seditious intention who publishes, or circulates any
writing, printing or document in which it is advocated, or who teaches or
advocates, the use, without the authority of law, of force, as a means of
accomplishing any govern-mental change within Canada.
133A. No one shall be deemed to have a
seditious intention only because he intends in good faith,‑
(a) to show that His Majesty has been
misled or mistaken in. his measures; or
(b) to point out errors or defects in the
government or constitution of the United Kingdom, or of any part of it, or of
Canada or of any province thereof, or in either House of Parliament of the
United Kingdom or of Canada, or in any legislature, or in the administration of
justice; or to excite His Majesty's subjects to attempt to procure, by lawful
means, the alteration of any matter in the state; or,
(c) to point out, in order to their
removal, matters which are producing or have a tendency to produce feelings of
hated and ill-will between different classes of His Majesty's subjects.
[Page 279]
Subsection 4 of section 133 was' enacted in
1936, at which time Parliament repealed the much discussed section 98, but for
our purposes subsection 4 need not be considered. With the exception of this
subsection, these enactments follow the corresponding provisions of the Draft
Criminal Code, prepared by the Commissioners in England and while
"seditious intent" is nowhere defined in our Code, it has always been
accepted that the definition proposed by the Commissioners accurately sets
forth the law of England on the subject. This definition had been adopted by
the Commissioners almost verbatim from that found in Stephen's Digest of the
Criminal Law. As explained by Cave J. in Reg. v. Burns, the latter had the
authority not only of Mr. Justice Stephen but also of the very learned judges
who were associated with him in drafting the proposed English Criminal Code. On
the following page, Cave J. points out that Mr. Justice Stephen was a judge of
very great accuracy and that, for the proposition laid down in his Digest for
seditious libel, there was to be found undoubted authority. The authorities and
the history of the matter are set out in Volume 2 of the History of the
Criminal Law of England by the same author at p. 298 et seq. That definition
should be adopted as the law of Canada.
The definition appears as article 114 in the 8th
edition of Stephen's Digest and, together with article 115, are as follows:
ARTICLE 114
SEDITIOUS INTENTION DEFINED
A seditious
intention is an intention to bring into hatred or contempt, or to excite
disaffection against the person of, Ills Majesty, his heirs or
successors, or the government and constitution of the United Kingdom, as by law
established, or either House of Parliament, or the administration of justice,
or to excite His Majesty's subjects to attempt otherwise than by lawful means,
the alteration of any matter in Church or State by law established, or to
incite any person to commit any crime in disturbance of the peace, or to raise
discontent or disaffection amongst His Majesty's subjects, or to promote
feelings of ill-will and hostility between different classes of such subjects.
An intention to show that His Majesty has
been misled or mistaken in his measures, or to point out errors or defects in the
government or constitution as by law established, with a view to their
reformation, or to excite His Majesty's subjects to attempt by lawful means the
alteration of any matter in Church or State by law established, or to point
out,
[Page 280]
in order to their removal, matters which
are producing, or have a tendency to produce, feelings of hatred and ill-will
between classes of His Majesty's subjects, is not a seditious intention.
ARTICLE 115
PRESUMPTION AS TO INTENTION
In determining whether the intention with
which any words were spoken, any document was published, or any agreement was
made, was or was not seditious, every person must be deemed to intend the consequences
which would naturally follow from his conduct at the time and under the
circumstances in which he so conducted himself.
The accused as one of
the members of Jehovah's Witnesses distributed a pamphlet in which complaint
was made of what was said to have occurred with reference to some of those
members. He was entitled to complain of what he conceived to be existing
grievances and, in so doing, he was not restricted to a calm and dispassionate
exposé, such as might be expected in a court of law.
Specifically, he was
entitled to point out what he alleged were errors or defects in the administration
of justice and also, in order to effect their removal, matters which were
producing, or had a tendency to produce, feelings of hatred and ill-will
between the residents of the Province of Quebec and Jehovah's Witnesses.
Evidence could be led by the accused in an endeavour to show the truth of these
statements as it would be relevant, but as was admitted by counsel for the
accused, relevant only, to the question whether the accused intended to point
out those matters in good faith as provided by section 133A of our Code.
Chief Justice
Letourneau points out that after ruling that the truth or falsity of the
allegations made in the pamphlet was immaterial, the trial judge, at various
times, picked out various passages in the pamphlet and, referring to each,
said: "C'est encore une fausseté". I agree with the Chief
Justice that the issue of good faith was not put accurately to the jury.
The question of
seditious libel is always one of great delicacy, requiring from the trial judge
an instruction distinctly drawing to the attention of the jury the various
elements that must be found before they may convict of the offence charged and
applying the law to the evidence in the record. I agree with the Chief Justice
that this was not done in the present case. The main element which
[Page 281]
it was necessary for
the jury to find was an intention on the part of the accused to incite the
people to violence or to create a public disturbance or disorder: Reg. v.
Burns supra; Reg. v. Sullivan;
Rex v. Aldred;
The King v. Gaunt not reported but referred to in a note in 64 L.Q.R. 203.
The use of strong words is not by itself sufficient nor is the likelihood that
readers of the pamphlet in St. Joseph de Beauce would be annoyed or even
angered, but the question is, was the language used calculated to promote
public disorder or physical force or violence. In coming to a conclusion on
this point, a jury is entitled to consider the state of society or, as it is
put by Chief Justice Wilde in his charge to the jury in The Queen v. Fussell‑
You cannot, as it seems to me, form a
correct judgment of how far the evidence tends to establish the crime imputed
to the defendant, without bringing into that box with you a knowledge of the
present stale of society, because the conduct of every individual in regard to
the effect which that conduct is calculated to produce, must depend upon the
state of the society in which he lives. This may be innocent in one state of
society, because it may not tend to disturb the peace or to interfere with the
right of the community, which at another time, and in a different state of
society, in consequence of its different tendency, may be open to just censure.
This, it should be
noted, was said at a trial at the Central Criminal Court before the Chief
Justice, Baron Parke and Maule J. An instruction to the same effect was given
in Reg. v. Burns supra by gave J., of whose charge it is stated
generally, at page 88 of the 9th edition of Russell on Crime, that the present
view of the law is best stated therein. Reference might also be made to the
words of Coleridge J. in his charge to the jury in the later case of Rex v.
Aldred:‑
You are entitled also to take into account
the state of public feeling. Of course there are times when a spark will
explode a powder magazine; the effect of language may be very different at one
time from what it would be at another.
While the jury must
consider the question of good faith in accordance with section 133A of our
Code, it will be noticed that that section specifically states that no one
shall be deemed to have a seditious intention only because he intends in
good faith to show or point out the matters
[Page 282]
mentioned. The jury should be charged that if
they find good faith on the part of the accused, and if in their opinion there
is nothing more in the case, the accused is entitled to an acquittal; but, if
in addition to that good faith, there was an intention on the part of the
accused to create public disorder or promote physical force, or that
notwithstanding the motives of the accused the natural tendency of the words
(and therefore the intention) was to create such disturbances, then they would
be entitled to find a verdict of guilty.
The decision of the Judicial Committee in Wallace-Johnson v. The King, is not of assistance as there it was held merely that the provisions of
the Gold Coast Criminal Code were clear and unambiguous, and intended to
contain as far as possible a full and complete statement of the law of sedition
in the Colony, and that, therefore, the English common law as expounded in the Burns
Case was inapplicable. Nor are the quoted decisions in the Supreme and
other Courts of the United States of any real help. Many of them deal with the
"clear and present danger" doctrine in construing statutes with
reference to the applicability of the First and Fourteenth Amendments to the
Federal Constitution and all depend upon that Constitution and laws which are
alleged to infringe its provisions. It is strictly unnecessary to consider
Chief Justice Letourneau's dissent that the trial judge did not charge the jury
sufficiently or properly on the question of reasonable doubt but even if the
dissent be not well-founded, the charge in this respect exhibits the very
minimum that could be held to be sufficient and is not to be recommended.
There was evidence in the document itself,
taken, as it must be, with all the other circumstances, upon which a jury after
a proper charge as outlined above, could find the accused guilty, and the
conviction should, therefore, be set aside and a new trial directed.
Since the distribution of my reasons in this
appeal, there has been a reargument as a result of which I have been persuaded
that the order suggested by me is not the proper one to make. With the
exception of the last
[Page 283]
paragraph, what I have already said may stand,
with the following additions. The intention on the part of the accused which is
necessary to constitute seditious libel must be to incite the people to
violence against constituted authority or to create a public disturbance or
disorder against such authority. To what is stated previously that "the
question is, was the language used calculated to promote public disorder or
physical force or violence", there should be added that that public
disorder or physical force or violence must be against established authority.
An intention to bring the administration of justice into hatred or contempt or
exert disaffection against it is not seditious unless there is also the
intention to incite people to violence against it. So far as the decision in R.
v. M'Hugh
is in conflict with this opinion, it should not be followed.
Whatever else might be said of the contents of
the pamphlet, there is not in it, read in the light of all the surrounding
circumstances, any evidence upon which a jury, properly instructed, could find
the appellant guilty of the crime with which he was charged. The conviction
should be set aside and a judgment and verdict of acquittal entered.
TASCHEREAU J. (dissenting):‑At the first hearing of this appeal, the
Court did not agree as to the ingredients that are necessary to constitute the
offence of seditious libel. Upon application, a new hearing was granted and
heard by the full Court, and in view of the opinions now expressed by the majority,
it is settled I think that generally speaking, the writings complained of
must, in addition to being calculated to promote feelings of ill-will and
hostility between different classes of His Majesty's subjects, be intended to
produce disturbance of or resistance to the lawfully constituted authority.
But as pointed out by my brother Cartwright,
there is another definition of seditious intention which I think, must be
accepted. I agree with him that an intention to bring the administration of
justice into hatred or con-tempt or to excite disaffection against it, is a
seditious
[Page 284]
intention. In the
present case, there is I think sufficient evidence upon which a properly
instructed jury could find that there was a seditious intention.
I have no doubt, that
in view of the defective charge of the trial judge, this appeal cannot be
dismissed, and I would therefore for the reasons given by my brother Cartwright,
quash the conviction and direct a new trial.
RAND J.:‑For the reasons given by me following the first argument, I
would allow the appeal, set aside the verdict and conviction and enter judgment
of not guilty.
(The reasons given by
Mr. Justice Rand, following the first argument, read as follows).
This appeal arises out
of features of what, in substance, is religious controversy, and it is
necessary that the facts be clearly appreciated. The appellant, a farmer,
living near the town of St. Joseph de Beauce, Quebec, was convicted of
uttering a seditious libel. The libel was contained in a four page document
published apparently at Toronto by the Watch Tower Bible & Tract Society,
which I take to be the name of the official publishers of the religious group
known as The Witnesses of Jehovah. The document was headed "Quebec's
Burning Hate for God and Christ and Freedom Is the Shame of all Canada" :
it consisted first of an invocation to calmness and reason in appraising the
matters to be dealt with in support of the heading; then of general references
to vindictive persecution accorded in Quebec to the Witnesses as brethren in
Christ; a detailed narrative of specific incidents of persecution; and a
concluding appeal to the people of the province, in protest against mob rule
and gestapo tactics, that through the study of God's Word and obedience to its commands,
there might be brought about a "bounteous crop of the good fruits of love
for Him and Christ and human freedom". At the foot of the document is an
advertisement of two books entitled "Let God be True" and "Be
Glad, Ye Nations", the former revealing, in the light of God's Word, the
truth concerning the Trinity, Sabbath, prayer, etc., and the latter, the facts
of the endurance of Witnesses in the crucible of "fiery persecution".
[Page 285]
The incidents, as
described, are of peaceable Canadians who seem not to be lacking in meekness,
but who, for distributing, apparently without permits, bibles and tracts on
Christian doctrine; for conducting religious services in private homes or on
private lands in Christian fellowship; for holding public lecture meetings to
teach religious truth as they believe it of the Christian religion; who, for
this exercise of what has been taken for granted to be the unchallengeable
rights of Canadians, have been assaulted and beaten and their bibles and
publications torn up and destroyed, by individuals and by mobs; who have had
their homes invaded and their property taken; and in hundreds have been charged
with public offences and held to exorbitant bail. The police are declared to
have exhibited an attitude of animosity toward them and to have treated them
as the criminals in provoking by their action of Christian profession and
teaching, the violence to which they have been subjected; and public officials
and members of the Roman Catholic Clergy are said not only to have witnessed
these outrages but to have been privy to some of the prosecutions. The document
charged that the Roman Catholic Church in Quebec was in some objection-able
relation to the administration of justice and that the force behind the
prosecutions was that of the priests of that Church.
The conduct of the
accused appears to have been unexceptionable; so far as disclosed, he is an
exemplary citizen who is at least sympathetic to doctrines of the Christian
religion which are, evidently, different from either the Protestant or the
Roman Catholic versions: but the foundation in all is the same, Christ and his
relation to God and humanity.
The crime of seditious
libel is well known to the Common Law. Its history has been thoroughly examined
and traced by Stephen, Holdsworth and other eminent legal scholars and they are
in agreement both in what it origin-ally consisted and in the social
assumptions underlying it. Up to the end of the 18th century it was, in
essence, a contempt in words of political authority or the actions of
authority. If we conceive of the governors of society as superior beings,
exercising a divine mandate, by whom
[Page 286]
laws, institutions and administrations are given
to men to be obeyed, who are, in short, beyond criticism, reflection or censure
upon them or what they do implies either an equality with them or an
accountability by them, both equally offensive. In that lay sedition by words
and the libel was its written form.
But constitutional conceptions of a different
order making rapid progress in the 19th century have necessitated a
modification of the legal view of public criticism; and the administrators of
what we call democratic government have come to be looked upon as servants,
bound to carry out their duties accountably to the public. The basic nature of
the Common Law lies in its flexible process of traditional reasoning upon
significant social and political matter; and just as in the 17th century the
crime of seditious libel was a deduction from fundamental conceptions of government,
the substitution of new conceptions, under the same principle of reasoning,
called for new jural conclusions: Bourne v. Keane.
As early as 1839 in Rex v. Neale,
Littledale, J., in his charge to the jury, laid it
down that "you are to consider ... whether they meant to excite the
people to take the power into their own hands, and meant to excite them to
tumult and disorder ; the people have a right to discuss any grievances they
have to complain of but they must not do it in a way to excite tumult",
which Stephen, in Vol. 2 of his History of the Criminal Law at page 375, sums
up : "In one word, nothing short of direct incitement to disorder and
violence is a seditious libel". Coleridge, J. in Rex v. Aldred, used these words: "The man who is accused may not plead the
truth of the statement he makes as a defence to the charge; nor may he plead
the innocence of his motive. That is not a defence to the charge. The test is
not either the truth of the language or the innocence of the motive with which
he publishes it. The test is this: was the language used calculated, or was it
not, to promote public disorder or physical force": (85 Sol, J. (1941),
251). The language used must, obviously, be related to the particular matters
in each case complained of.
[Page 287]
This development is to be considered also in the
light of the practice in administering the law of seditious words followed
after Fox's Libel Act of 1792. The jury in such cases by its right under the
statute to bring in a general verdict, must, in addition to the publication of
the libel and its meaning, have found a seditious intention. That meant more
than the issue of the writing knowing what it contained. The Act was
interpreted as requiring the libel to have been published with an illegal intention.
The word "intention" was not always clearly differentiated from
indirect purpose or motive, but if the intention, as envisaging immediate or
proximate response, regardless of a remote object of whatever nature, was
illegal, the libel was seditious.
Stephen suggests a theoretical continuity of the
law by taking that Act to have made material those consequential allegations
such as of ill-will, disaffection, etc., with which the early indictments were
liberally encumbered, but which were looked upon as formal or assumed as
necessary effects of the libel otherwise seditious. But if that is sound, then
we must have regard to the sense which they then bore; and it would seem to be
clear that they signified feelings and attitudes toward established authority.
The definition of seditious intention as
formulated by Stephen, summarised, is, (1) to bring into hatred or con-tempt,
or to excite disaffection against, the King or the Government and Constitution
of the United Kingdom, or either House of Parliament, or the administration of
justice; or (2) to excite the King's subjects to attempt, otherwise than by
lawful means, the alteration of any matter in Church or State by law
established; or (3) to incite persons to commit any crime in general disturbance
of the peace; or (4) to raise discontent or disaffection amongst His Majesty's
subjects; or (5) to promote feelings of ill-will and hostility between
different classes of such subjects. The only items of this definition that
could be drawn into question here are that relating to the administration of
justice in (1) and those of (4) and (5). It was the latter which were brought most
prominently to the
[Page 288]
notice of the jury, and it is with an
examination of what in these days their language must be taken to mean that I
will chiefly concern myself.
There is no modern authority which holds that
the mere effect of tending to create discontent or disaffection among His
Majesy's subjects or ill-will or hostility between groups of them, but not
tending to issue in illegal conduct, constitutes the crime, and this for
obvious reasons. Freedom in thought and speech and disagreement in ideas and
beliefs, on every conceivable subject, are of the essence of our life. The
clash of critical discussion on political, social and religious subjects has
too deeply become the stuff of daily experience to suggest that mere ill-will
as a product of controversy can strike down the latter with illegality. A superficial
examination of the word shows its insufficiency: what is the degree necessary
to criminality? Can it ever, as mere subjective condition, be so? Controversial
fury is aroused constantly by differences in abstract conceptions; heresy in
some fields is again a mortal sin; there can be fanatical puritanism in ideas
as well as in mortals; but our compact of free society accepts and absorbs
these differences and they are exercised at large within the frame-work of
freedom and order on broader and deeper uniformities as bases of social
stability. Similarly in discontent, affection and hostility: as subjective
incidents of controversy, they and the ideas which arouse them are part of our
living which ultimately serve us in stimulation, in the clarification of
thought and, as we believe, in the search for the constitution and truth of
things generally.
Although Stephen's definition was adopted
substantially as it is by the Criminal Code Commission of England in 1880, the
latter's report, in this respect, was not acted on by the Imperial Parliament,
and the Criminal Code of this country, enacted in 1891, did not
incorporate its pro-visions. The latter omits any reference to definition
except in section 133 to declare that the intention includes the advocacy of
the use of force as a means of bringing about a change of government and by
section 133A, that certain actions are not included. What the words in (4) and
(5) must in the present day be taken to signify is the use of language which,
by inflaming the minds of people into
[Page 289]
hatred, ill-will,
discontent, disaffection, is intended, or is so likely to do so as to be deemed
to be intended, to dis-order community life, but directly or indirectly in
relation to government in the broadest sense: Phillimore, J. in R. v. Antonelli "seditious libels
are such as tend to disturb the government of this country ... ". That may
be through tumult or violence, in resistance to public authority, in defiance
of law. This conception lies behind the association which the word is given in
section 1 of chapter 10, C.S. Lower Canada (1860) dealing with illegal oaths:
To engage in any seditious, rebellious or
treasonable purpose;
and the corresponding
section 130 of the Criminal Code:
To engage in any mutinous or seditious
purpose.
The baiting or
denouncing of one group by another or others without an aim directly or
indirectly at government, is in the nature of public mischief : R. v. Leese
& White-head; and
incitement to unlawful acts is itself an offence.
This result must be
distinguished from an undesired reaction provoked by the exercise of common
rights, such as the violent opposition to the early services of the Salvation
Army. In that situation it was the hoodlums who were held to be the lawless and
not the members of the Army: Beatty v. Gillbanks. On the allegations in
the document here, had the Salvationists been arrested for bringing about by
unlawful assembly a breach of the peace and fined, had they then made an
impassioned protest against such treatment of law abiding citizens, and had
they thereupon been charged with seditious words, their plight would have been
that of the accused in this case.
These considerations
are confirmed by section 133A of the Code, which is as follows:
WHAT IS NOT SEDITION.‑No one shall be
deemed to have a seditious intention only because he intends in good faith,‑
(a) to show that His Majesty has been
misled or mistaken in his measures; or
(b) to point out errors or defects in the
government or constitution of the United Kingdom, or of any part of it, or of
Canada or any province thereof, or in either House of Parliament
[Page 290]
of the United Kingdom or of Canada, or in
any legislature, or in the administration of justice; or to excite His
Majesty's subjects to attempt 'to procure, by lawful means, the alteration of
any matter in the state; or,
(c) to point out, in order to their
removal, matters which are producing or have a tendency to produce feelings of
hatred and ill-will between different classes of His Majesty's subjects.
This, as is seen, is a fundamental provision
which, with its background of free criticism as a constituent of modern
democratic government, protects the widest range of public discussion and
controversy, so long as it is done in good faith and for the purposes
mentioned. Its effect is to eviscerate the older concept of its anachronistic
elements. But a motive or ultimate purpose, whether good or believed to be good
is unavailing if the means employed is bad; disturbance or corrosion may be
ends in themselves, but whether means or ends, their character stamps them, and
intention behind them as illegal.
The condemned intention lies then in a residue
of criticism of government, the negative touchstone of which is the test of
good faith by legitimate means toward legitimate ends. That claim was the real
defence in the proceedings here but it was virtually ignored by the trial
judge. On that failure, as well as others, the Chief Justice of the King's
Bench and Galipeault, J. have rested their dissent, and with them I am in
agreement.
But a further question remains. In the circumstances,
should the appellant be subjected to a second trial? Could a jury, properly
instructed and acting judicially have found, beyond a reasonable doubt, a
seditious intention in circulating the document? In the heading is the chief
source of resentment but there are also statements, such as the insinuation of
the part played by the Church in judicial administration and the role of some
of the clergy in the prosecutions, which offend likewise. Now these allegations
are inferences and conclusions drawn from the facts and incidents presented in
detail which the accused was' ready with evidence to prove, and it is obvious
that they and the matters from which they are deduced, must be read together.
When it is said that Quebec hates Christ, it is hate sub modo; it means that to
persecute is to hate, and that to hate those who follow and love Him, i.e. the
[Page 291]
Witnesses, for what they do in His service, is
to hate Him. Only in that manner can the real intention evidenced by the
document be appreciated.
The writing was undoubtedly made under an
aroused sense of wrong to the Witnesses; but it is beyond dispute that its end
and object was the removal of what they considered iniquitous treatment. Here
are conscientious professing followers of Christ who claim to have been denied
the right to worship in their own homes and their own manner and to have been
jailed for obeying the injunction to "teach all nations". They are
said to have been called "a bunch of crazy nuts" by one of the magistrates.
Whatever that means, it may from his standpoint be a correct description; I do
not know; but it is not challenged that, as they allege, whatever they did was
done peaceably, and, as they saw it, in the way of bringing the light and peace
of the Christian religion to the souls of men and women. To say that is to say
that their acts were lawful. Whether, in like circumstances, other groups of
the Christian Church would show greater forebearance and earnestness in the
appeal to Christian charity to have done with such abuses, may be doubtful. The
courts below have not, as, with the greatest respect, I think they should have,
viewed the document as primarily a burning protest and as a result have lost
sight of the fact that, expressive as it is of a deep indignation, its
conclusion is an earnest petition to the public opinion of the province to
extend to the Witnesses of Jehovah, as a minority, the protection of impartial
laws. No one would suggest that the document is intended to arouse
French-speaking Roman Catholics to disordering conduct against their own government,
and to treat it as directed, with the same purpose, towards the Witnesses
themselves in the province, would be quite absurd; in relation to the courts,
it is, to use the language of section 133A, pointing out, "in order to
their removal", what are believed to be "matters which are producing
or have a tendency to produce feelings of hatred and ill-will between different
classes of His Majesty's subjects." That some of the expressions, divorced
from their context, may be extravagant and may arouse resentment,
[Page 292]
is not, in the circumstances, sufficient to take
the intention of the writing as a whole beyond what is recognized by section
133A as lawful.
Where a conviction is set aside, this Court must
dispose of the appeal as the justice of the case requires; and where the
evidence offered could not, under a proper instruction, have supported a
conviction, the accused must be discharged: Schwartzenhauer v. The King ; Manchuk v.
The King;
Savard and Lizotte v. The King.
I would, therefore, allow the appeal, set aside
the conviction, and order judgment of acquittal to be entered.
KELLOCK J.:‑In opening his argument,
counsel for the Attorney General admitted that the charge of the learned trial
judge was so defective it could not be supported. Accordingly, the appeal must be
allowed and the conviction of the appellant, confirmed as it was by the Court
of Appeal with
two members dissenting, must be set aside, and the only question which arises
is as to the order which this court should make. The appellant contends that
there is no evidence upon which a jury, properly instructed, could find the
appellant guilty of seditious libel beyond a reasonable doubt by reason of the
publication of the pamphlet here in question. On the other hand, the respondent
submits there should be a new trial. In the determination of this question, it
is necessary at the outset to consider the true nature of the offence charged.
By sec. 133 (a) of the Criminal Code, seditious
libel is defined as
a libel expressive of a seditious
intention.
Subsection 4 reads as follows:
Without limiting the generality of the
meaning of the expression "seditious intention" everyone shall be
presumed to have a seditious intention who publishes or circulates any writing,
printing or document in which it is advocated, or who teaches or advocates, the
use, without the authority of law, of force, as a means of accomplishing any
govern-mental change within Canada.
So far as the Code is concerned,
"seditious intention" is not defined apart from this subsection, and
except for
[Page 293]
s. 133A, one is forced
back to the common law. The pamphlet here in question does not, of course, come
within the said subsection.
Counsel for the
Attorney General founds himself upon the definition given in Russell, 9th Ed.,
p. 87. This is essentially the definition laid down by Sir James Stephen in his
"Digest of the Criminal Law", which first appeared in 1877.
It is not necessary to
discuss the whole law of seditious libel, but only so much as is relevant to
the points of difference between the parties, namely, whether or not incitement
to violence is a necessary ingredient, and whether that part of the definition
which states that an intention "to promote feelings of ill-will and
hostility between different classes of His Majesty's subjects", taken
literally and by itself, is sufficient.
Stephen's complete
definition was adopted by the Royal Commissioners in England in s. 102 of their
draft code. In a note the Commissioners state that it is as accurate a
statement of the existing law as they could make. Their references in support
of this statement are set out in Crankshaw, 5th Ed. at p. 542. I have read all
of these, but I can find no support in any of them for the second point stated
as a bald proposition without more. The only case in which such language
appears at all in any of the references given is O'Connell
v. The Queen,
where it is included with
other matter in a number of the counts of the indictment there in question, but
nowhere does it appear alone as constituting a count. Moreover, the indictment
in O'Connell's case was not for seditious libel but for conspiracy. At p. 234
Tindal L.C.J. in advising the House of Lords, said:
Indeed there can be no question but that
the charges contained in the first five counts do amount, in each to the legal
offence of conspiracy, and are sufficiently described therein. There can be no
doubt but that the agreeing of divers persons together to raise discontent and disaffection amongst
the liege subjects of the Queen; to stir up jealousies, hatred and ill-will
between different classes of Her Majesty's subjects; and especially to promote
among Her Majesty's subjects in Ireland feelings of ill-will and hostility
towards Her Majesty's subjects in the other parts of the United Kingdom, and
especially in England; which charges are found
[Page 294]
in each of the five counts which first
appear in the indictment-do form a distinct and definite charge in each,
against the several defendants, of an agreement between them to do an illegal
act,
Lord Campbell, who alone of all the members of
the House refers to this matter, says at p. 403 that he considers that any
person who deliberately attempts to pro-mote feelings of ill-will and hostility
between different classes of Her Majesty's subjects-to make the English be
hated by the Irish or the Irish to be hated by the English-is guilty of a
"most culpable proceeding", and that if several combine to do so they
commit a "misdemeanor." Lord Campbell does not equate "culpable
proceeding" and "misdemeanor." The latter is technically the
only offence mentioned and if Lord Campbell intended to describe an offence in
each case he certainly knew how to do so.
As is frequently mentioned in the authorities,
probably no crime has been left in such vagueness of definition as that with
which we are here concerned, and its legal meaning has changed with the years.
It is relevant, therefore, to refer to some extent to its history. It is traced
by Stephen himself in Vol. II of his "History of the Criminal Law of
England" at p. 299 ff. He points out that two different views may be taken
of the relation between rulers and their subjects. If, on the one hand, the
ruler is regarded as the superior of the subject, and being by the nature of
his position presumably wise and good, the rightful ruler and guide of the
whole population, it must necessarily follow that it is wrong to censure him
openly; that even if he is mistaken, his mistakes should be pointed out with the
utmost respect; and that whether mistaken or not, no censure should be cast
upon him likely or designed to diminish his authority. On the other hand, if
the ruler is regarded as the agent and servant, and the subject as the wise and
good master who is obliged to delegate his power to the 'so-called ruler
because, being a multitude, he cannot use it himself, it is obvious that the
result must be the opposite. In this view, every member of the public who
censures the ruler for the time being exercises in his own person the right
which belongs to the whole of which he forms a part. He is finding fault with
his servant. If
[Page 295]
others think differently, they can take the
other side of the dispute, and the utmost that can happen is that the servant
will be dismissed and another put in his place or perhaps that the arrangement
of the household will be modified. The author says that to those who hold this
latter view fully and carry it out to all its consequences, there can be no
such offence as sedition. There may indeed be breaches of the peace which may
destroy or endanger life, limb or property, and there may be incitements to
such offences, but no imaginable censure of the government, short of a censure which has an immediate
tendency to produce such a breach of the peace, ought
to be regarded as criminal. Stephen then makes the statement that each of the
above views has had a considerable share in moulding the law of England.
with the practical result of producing the compromise
which I have tried to express in the articles of my Digest.
Holdsworth, in Vol. VIII of his History, refers
to the two views outlined by Stephen and says that the first of these views was
the accepted view in the 17th century, but that the second was gathering
strength during the latter part of the 18th century.
and is now the accepted view.
He does not speak of a "compromise"
and founds him-self on R. v. Lovett,
per Littledale J. at 466, and R. v. Sullivan, per Fitzgerald J. at
58.
In R. v. Lovett (1) the court was
concerned with a handbill containing three resolutions passed by a large number
of people assembled, calling themselves the "General Convention", in
which they complained of the use in Birmingham of the metropolitan police from
London, the first resolution calling the police "an unconstitutional force
from London". The third complained of the arrest of a Dr. Taylor, calling
it a summary and despotic arrest and stating that it afforded another
convincing proof
of the absence of all justice in England,
and clearly shews that there is no security for life, liberty or property till
the people have some control over the laws they are called upon to obey.
The indictment charged that the defendant
intended "to incite divers liege subjects of the Queen to resist the laws
and to resist the persons so being part of the metropolitan
[Page 296]
police force in the due
execution of their duty, and to bring the said force into hatred and contempt,
and to procure unlawful meetings, and to cause divers liege subjects of the
Queen to believe that the laws of this kingdom were unduly administered, and
intending to disturb the public peace, and to raise discontent in the minds of
the subjects of the Queen, and raise and excite tumult and disobedience to the
laws."
Littledale J., in his
charge to the jury, said: "if this paper has a direct tendency to cause
unlawful meetings and disturbances, and to lead to a, violation of the laws,
that is sufficient to bring it within the terms of this indictment, and it is a
seditious libel."
Stephen, at p. 375,
says with respect to this charge:
In one word, nothing short of a direct
incitement to disorder and violence is a seditious libel.
It therefore clearly
appears that in the view of Stephen himself, his definition must be read at the
least as implying an intention to incitement to violence. In confirmation of
this view, the following appears on p. 381 of the same' work:
The question would be whether the writer's
object was to procure a remedy by peaceable means, or to promote disaffection
and bring about riots.
It is noteworthy that
the draft code of the Royal Commissioners was not accepted by Parliament, and
in my opinion, incitement to violence toward constituted authority, i.e.
government in the broad sense, or resistance having the same object, is, upon
the authorities, a necessary ingredient of the intention.
In R. v. Sullivan,
Fitzgerald J., in the
course of his address to the grand jury, said at p. 45:
Sedition is a crime against society, nearly
allied to that of treason, and it frequently precedes treason by a short
interval. Sedition in itself is a comprehensive term, and it embraces all those
practices, whether by word, deed or in writing, which are calculated to disturb
the tranquillity of the State, and lead ignorant persons to endeavour to
subvert the Government and the laws of the empire. The objects of sedition are
generally to induce discontent and insurrection and stir up opposition to the
Government, and bring the administration of justice into contempt; and the very
tendency of sedition is to incite the people to insurrection and rebellion.
Sedition has been described as disloyalty in action, and the law considers as
sedition all those practices which have for their object
[Page 297]
to excite discontent or dissatisfaction, to
create public disturbance, or to lead to civil war; to bring into hatred or
contempt the Sovereign or the Government, the laws or constitution of the
realm, and generally all endeavours to promote public disorder.
At p. 50 the learned
judge also said:
... there is no
sedition in censuring the servants of the Crown, or in. just criticism on the
administration of the law, or in seeking redress of grievances or in the fair
discussion of all party questions. You should remember that you are the
guardians of the liberty and freedom of the press, and that it is your duty to put an innocent interpretation on
these publications if you can. But if, on the other
hand, from their whole scope, you are coerced to the conclusion that
their object and tendency is to foment discontent and disaffection, to excite
to tumult and insurrection, to promote the objects of a treasonable
conspiracy, to bring the adminisration [sic] of justice into disrepute, or to
stir up the people to hatred of the laws and the constitution, then you may, if
you think fit, and you ought to find the bills, and send the case to be tried
by a petit jury.
In R. v. Antonelli,
Phillimore J. as he then
was, in the course of his charge said:
Seditious libels are such as tend to
disturb the government of this country...
Stephen at page 298 of
the same work, in referring to seditious offences, says:
All these offences presuppose
dissatisfaction with the existing government, and censure more or less express
upon those by whom its authority is exercised and the offences themselves
consist in the display of this dissatisfaction in the various manners
enumerated.
While the paragraph
begins with the sentence,
The second class of offences against
internal public tranquillity consists of offences not accompanied by or leading
to open violence.
the author had already
said on page 242:
Another class of offences against public
tranquillity are those in. which no actual force is either employed or
displayed, but in which steps are taken tending to cause it. These are the formation of secret societies, seditious conspiracies,
libels or words spoken.
In R. v. Aldred, Coleridge J., in the course of his summing
up, said at page 3, with reference to the charge before him:
The word "sedition" in its
ordinary natural signification denotes a tumult, an insurrection, a popular
commotion, or an uproar; it implies violence or lawlessness in some form.
The learned judge
continued:
The test is not either the truth of the
language or the innocence of the motive with which he published it, but 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?
[Page 298]
In R. v. Burdett,
Best J. at page 131 told
the jury they were to decide whether the paper there in question was a sober
address to reason or an appeal to their passion calculated to incite them to
acts of violence and uproar. If the latter, it was a seditious libel. At page
376 of his History, Stephen says that the law as to political libels has not been
developed or altered in any way since this case.
Lord Cockburn, in the
introduction to his "Examination of Trials for Sedition in Scotland",
says at page 8:
The guilt, when analized, resolves into
disrespect towards the authority of the State; meaning by disrespect all
criminal obloquy or ridicule, or defiance; and by the State, not merely the
supreme power, but all the high political bodies and officers that represent it. The quality
indicated by the term political (or by some equivalent term) is essential;
because there are many merely public officers or bodies, who, as they represent
none of the power of the State, can scarcely be the objects of seditious
attack. I do not see how the East India Company or the Bank of England could,
as such, be libelled seditiously. To give the attack the quality of
seditiousness, it must be capable of being justly viewed as a contempt of
public authority. Hence the usual objects of the offence are, the sovereign,
the Houses of Parliament, the administrators of justice, public officers and
departments wielding and representing the State's power or dignity. It is the
public majesty that must be assailed, and that must be required to be
protected. Sedition is the same thing, in principle, against the State, with
the misconduct of the member of the private society who, because he dislikes
something that is done, insults the president and defies the majority. The
guilt of sedition is often described as consisting of its tendency to produce
public mischief and so it is. But it is not every sort of mischief that will
exhaust the description of the offence. It must be that sort of mischief that
consists in, and arises out of directly and materially obstructing public
authority.
At page 20 Lord
Cockburn quotes from Starkie at page 525, as follows:
The test of intrinsic illegality must, in
this as in other cases, be decided by the answer to the question-Has the
communication a plain tendency to produce public mischief, by perverting the
mind of the subject, and creating a general dissatisfaction with the
Government? .. . It may be said, Where is the line to be drawn? ... To this it
may be answered that, to render the author criminal, his publication must have
proceeded from a malicious mind; bent, not upon making a fair communication,
for the purposes of exposing bad measures, but for the sake of exciting tumult
and dissatisfaction.
Baron Hume, in his work
published in 1844, says at page 558 of Vol. I:
For the characteristic of sedition lies in
the forwarding, preparing and producing such a state of things as may naturally
issue in public trouble and commotion; and it is thus a different sort of guilt
from that of those who are actively engaged in the tumult or rising, if any
ensue.
[Page 299]
Further, riot and sedition differ in their
scope and object. Sedition is a State crime; which is levelled against the
government, structure of laws, or political order of the land; or at least has
relation to some object of public and general concernment; in regard to which,
if any hostile rising ensue, the offender shall be guilty of no lower crime
than treason. Whereas the objects of riot or convocation of the lieges ... are
matters of local and private grievance; things in which a particular place or
neighbourhood only is interested, and such as in nowise tend to challenge the
authority or unsettle the order or economy of the State ... The crime of
sedition lies therefore in the stirring of such humours, as naturally tend to
change and commotion in the State.
All these authorities
are uniform in support of the view which I have above expressed.
In Regina v. Burns,
Cave J., in the course of
his charge to the jury as to what was seditious, referred to the definition of
Stephen J. and the draft code, and stated that the defendants before him were
charged with the seditious intentions, first to incite Her Majesty's subjects
to 'attempt otherwise than by lawful means the alteration of some matter in
church or state by law established, and second to promote feelings of hostility
between different classes of Her Majesty's subjects. After stating that these,
and particularly the second, were somewhat vague and general, he went on to say
at page 363:
... if you think
that those defendants, if you trace from the whale matter laid before you that
they had a seditious intention to incite the people to violence, to create
public disturbances and disorder, then undoubtedly you ought to find them
guilty. If from any sinister motive, as for instance, notoriety, or for the
purpose of personal gain, they desired to bring the people into conflict with
the authorities, or to incite them tumultuously and disorderly to damage the
property of any unoffending citizens, you ought undoubtedly to find them
guilty. On the other hand, if you come to the conclusion that they were
actuated by an honest desire to alleviate the misery of the unemployed-if they
had a real bona fide desire to bring that misery before the public by
constitutional and legal means, you should not be too swift to mark any hasty
or ill-considered expression which they might utter in the excitement of the
moment.
At page 366:
What you are asked to decide on is whether
the prisoners ... did upon this occasion, in Trafalgar Square, incite the
people whom they were addressing to redress their grievance by violence. Did
they intentionally incite ill-will between different classes in such a way as
to be likely to lead to a disturbance of the public peace?
Even on the footing of
the law laid down in this case, if an intention to incite ill-will between
different classes of
[Page 300]
subjects is sufficient,
that incitement, in the view of Cave, J., must be such as naturally leads to
violence. In connection with the above decision, however, a writer in 85
Solicitor's Journal at page 252 says that there is no direct precedent for the
inclusion in the definition of publishing a seditious libel, of incitement of
ill-will and hostility between different classes of subjects. This writer says
that O'Connell v. The King, ubi cit., is often quoted as an authority
for such a view and that Stephen J. had relied apparently on the words of
Tindal L.C.J. to which I have already referred. This writer again points out,
however, that that case was a case of conspiracy and not of sedition, and goes
on to say that stirring up and creating ill-will between classes was the
subject of a criminal charge in R. v. Leese,
reported in The Times of the 22nd of December, 1936, the two classes there
being Jews and non-Jews, but the offence charged was not that of seditious
libel or seditious words, but of public mischief. It is to be noted that the
actual indictment in Burn's' case did not rely alone upon an intention to stir
up ill-will between different classes of subjects, but the intention alleged
was of
wickedly, maliciously and seditiously contriving
and intending the peace of our said Lady the Queen, and of this realm, and of
the liege subjects of our said Lady the Queen, to disquiet and to disturb, and
the liege subjects of our said Lady the Queen, to incite and to move to
contempt, hatred and dislike of the Government established by law within this realm, and to incite and to
move and persuade great numbers of the liege subjects of our said Lady the
Queen to insurrections, riots, tumults, and breaches of the peace, and to stir
up jealousies, hatred and ill-will between different classes of the said liege
subjects, and to prevent by force and arms the execution of the laws of this
realm, and the preservation of the public peace.
and it was alleged that
the words complained of were spoken
of and concerning the Government as
established by law within this realm, and of and concerning the Commons House
of Parliament and the members thereof, and of and concerning divers liege
subjects of our said Lady the Queen whose names are to the jurors aforesaid
unknown.
The actual subject
matter of the trial before Cave, J. therefore, was not simply an indictment
charging words spoken tending to create ill-will between classes of subjects
simpliciter, but incitement of such ill-will inter alia, all directed against
government.
[Page 301]
In my opinion, there is
a great distinction between the subject matter of Burns' case and that
of Leese's case. It cannot be that words which, for example, are
intended to create ill-will even to the extent of violence between any two of
the innumerable groups into which 'society is divided, can, without more, be
seditious. In my opinion, 'to render the intention seditious, there must be an
intention to incite to violence or resistence or defiance for the purpose of
disturbing constituted authority. I do not think there is any basis in the
authorities for defining the crime on any lower plane.
The title of the
pamphlet here in question is, "La haine ardente du Québec pour Dieu, pour
Christ, et pour la liberté est un sujet de honte pour tout le Canada." The opening paragraph proceeds to plead for
a calm and sober consideration of the evidence presented in the pamphlet in
support of the title. It is clear that the author identifies the sect (and I do
not use the word in any offensive sense) of Jehovah's Witnesses with the
servants of Christ. His point is that the experiences of members of the sect in
the province, as detailed in the pamphlet (which the 'defence proposed to prove
by evidence to which the Crown effectively objected) establish that those who
were instrumental, directly or indirectly, in bringing about the occurrences
described, must be considered, as the title states, as hating Christ because,
notwithstanding any lip-service to Him, such conduct towards His servants (the
Witnesses) speaks louder than words.
The pamphlet recites
'at considerable length instances of destruction of Bibles, of mob violence,
even on private property, unrestrained by the police, who, instead of arresting
the mobsters, arrested the unoffending Witnesses engaged in distributing Bibles
or Bible leaflets. It is alleged that the latter were subjected 'to heavy
fines, prison sentences and delay in the disposition of these charges, as well
as to the exaction of exorbitant bail. The pamphlet concludes on the note that
the
force behind Quebec's suicidal hate is
priest domination. Thousands of Quebec Catholics are so blinded by the priests
that they think they serve God's cause in mobbing Jehovah's witnesses.
[Page 302]
The author quotes St.
John 16:2 as foretelling this, and he proceeds to say that such a course will
lead to destruction. The reader is asked to avoid this by turning from
following men and traditions to the study and the following of Bible teaching.
The pamphlet indicates
that there existed, in certain sections of the province at least, a strong
feeling against the Witnesses, and the argument for the Crown, on the basis
that incitement of ill-will between classes is sufficient, was that the
publication of this pamphlet would increase such ill-will and subject those
engaged in its distribution to attack. In my opinion, it cannot fairly be said
that the pamphlet is open to any such construction. There was no doubt
opposition on the part of numbers of people to the Witnesses. The pamphlet says
so. But the stated object of the pamphlet was to plead for its removal. It is
impossible, in my opinion, to say that the intention of the author of the
pamphlet, or of the appellant, was to foment this opposition or to stir up
ill-will against himself and the fellow members of his sect, certainly not to
the point of disturbing constituted authority. To say that the advocacy of any
belief becomes a seditious libel, if the publisher has reason to believe that
he will be set upon by those with whom his views are unpopular, bears, in my
opinion, its own refutation upon its face and finds no support in principle or
authority. Any such view would elevate mob violence to a place of supremacy.
Christianity itself, in any form, could hardly exist on the basis of such a
view of the law. The Code itself protects places of worship from
violence and disturbance and the decision in Beatty
v. Gillbanks,
establishes that the
lawbreakers are those who resort to violence rather than those who exercise the
right of free speech in advocating religious views however such views may be
unacceptable to the former. The occasions of violence described in the pamphlet
here in question were of a nature differing not at all from the situation
described in the case just mentioned.
I conclude, therefore,
subject to one aspect of the matter to be mentioned, that there was no evidence
upon which
[Page 303]
a jury, properly
instructed, could reasonably infer a seditious intention on the part of the
appellant. How far short the pamphlet falls of that set forth by Fitzgerald J.
in Sullivan's case already cited, needs no amplification.
Although little or no
mention was made on behalf of the Crown of any reflection in the pamphlet upon
the courts or the administration of justice in the province as bringing it
within a proper definition of the offence charged, the matter should be
referred to.
In Russell 9th Ed. p.
241, the author states that public attacks on courts of justice have in some
instances been treated as
a form of sedition. He refers to O'Connell v. R.; R. v. Gordon; R. v. Collins. On the other hand,
the writer in 85 Solicitor's Journal 251, says that "old cases in which
reflections on judges have been punished are in reality cases of contempt of
court and are no precedent for the crime of sedition."
In The King v. Almon, certain libellous
passages upon the Court of King's Bench and the Chief Justice were made the
subject of contempt proceedings. In McLeod v. St. Aubyn, a similar case, Lord Morris refers to committals for contempt of this
character as having become obsolete in England, the courts being satisfied to
leave to public opinion attacks or comments derogatory or scandalous to them.
However, in Regina v. Gray,
and in R. v. New Statesman,
convictions were had for contempt in respect of such statements.
At the present time,
therefore, in England, matter of the character here in question, if made the
subject of criminal process at all, appears to be treated as contempt of court
rather than as seditious libel. Such matter may, of course, be regarded from
the standpoint of seditious libel if intention of the necessary character be
established. A definition set forth in Vol. IX of Halsbury's Laws of England at
302, so far as relevant on this aspect of the matter, is:
A seditious
intention is an intention‑
(1) to bring into hatred or contempt, or to
excite disaffection against
... the administration of justice,
[Page 304]
to which I would venture to add, "the end
and purpose being to defeat its functioning." In O'Connell v. The
Queen,
for instance, a case of conspiracy, the 8th count
includes the following:
with the intent to induce Her Majesty's
subjects to withdraw the adjudication of their differences with and claims
upon each other from the cognizance of the said tribunals by law established,
and to submit the same to the judgment and determination of other tribunals to
be constituted and contrived for that purpose.
The 9th count includes:
and to assume and usurp the prerogative of
the Crown in the establishment of courts for the administration of the law.
In considering this aspect of the matter, it is
essential, in the present case, to keep in the forefront of one's mind what has
already been said as to the burden of the pamphlet, and the pamphlet itself
should be read as a whole. It does not speak generally of the administration of
justice in the province, nor of the courts generally, and the references to
the courts are bracketed with references to the local legislative bodies and
the local police in their attitudes and conduct towards the sect of Jehovah's
Witnesses.
Everything put forward by the writer to the
charge of these bodies, like all other matter of which the pamphlet complains,
is lumped under the heading, "Hateful Persecution of Christians."
This is but one aspect of the single protest running from the beginning to the
end. The sect is identified by the author, in exclusive terms, with the
servants of Christ. (It is one of the tenets of these people that they alone
are the custodians of Christian truth.) The argument is that the conduct
complained of, because it is directed against His servants, can be motivated
only by hate for Him, notwithstanding what may be said to the contrary by those
who are regarded 'as persecutors. All of this leads up to the plea, with which
the pamphlet concludes, for the study of God's Word, the Bible, by those whose
conduct is complained of, and if studied, love for Christ will replace the
hatred, with a consequent cessation of the causes of complaint. Whatever might
be the result as establishing contempt of court if the expressions with regard
to the courts could be singled out from the criticisms of the other persons and
agencies with which the pamphlet
[Page 305]
deals, such a course is
not possible in the present case. The complaint is one and indivisible. As it
is abundantly plain, in my opinion, for the reasons already given, that the
intention behind the portions of the pamphlet to which I have referred earlier
in this judgment is to obtain cessation of the conduct complained of, it is not
possible to ascribe a different motive to the statements with reference to the
courts. There is therefore no basis for ascribing to the author or publisher of
the pamphlet an intention to defeat the functioning of the administration of
justice, without which it cannot be seditious.
The Code, in s. 133(a),
expressly provides that
No one shall be deemed to have a seditious
intention only because he intends in good faith
(b) to point out errors or defects in ...
the administration of justice; or to excite His Majesty's subjects to attempt
to procure, by lawful means, the alteration of any matter in the state; or
(c) to point out, in order to their
removal, matters which are producing or have a tendency to produce feelings of
hatred and ill-will between different classes of His Majesty's subjects.
For the reasons given,
it is not possible to construe the pamphlet as evidencing any intention other
than that which I have already described, and as there was no affirmative
evidence on the point outside the pamphlet, the offence charged failed as a
matter of evidence. As a necessary result, the question of good faith, a matter
normally for the jury, does not arise, and the pamphlet falls within what is,
by the statute, expressly excluded from the realm of that which is seditious.
I would therefore allow
the appeal, quash the conviction and direct an acquittal.
ESTEY, J.:‑This is an appeal under sec. 1023 of the Criminal Code on
questions of law raised in the dissenting opinions of the learned Judges in the
Court of King's Bench (Appeal Side) of the Province of Quebec. The appellant was convicted of seditious
libel in that he did on or about the 11th of December, 1946, at. St. Joseph
"dans le district de Beauce," distribute a pamphlet entitled "La
haine ardente du Québec pour Dieu, pour le Christ, et pour
[Page 306]
la liberté, est un sujet de honte pour tout le
Canada." Upon appeal this conviction was affirmed,
Chief Justice Letourneau and Mr. Justice Galipeault dissenting.
The pamphlet consists of four pages entitled as
aforesaid which the appellant admitted he had read and distributed. The main
issue is, therefore, whether the appellant had a seditious intention in
distributing and thereby publishing the pamphlet.
There were several points raised in the dissenting
opinions but it will be sufficient to confine the discussion to two of them,
namely, that the learned trial Judge in charging the jury (a) did not
sufficiently define "seditious intention", (b) did not adequately
explain to the jury the place and meaning of "reasonable doubt."
A "seditious libel" is defined in sec.
133 of the Criminal Code,
the material part of which reads:
133. Seditious words are words expressive
of a seditious intention.
2. A seditious libel is a libel expressive
of a seditious intention.
A "seditious intention" is not defined
in either sec. 133 or in any other part of the Code and we must therefore
look to the common law. It will there be found that the definition in Stephen's
"Digest of the Criminal Law", 5th ed., p. 70, and described by 'the
commissioners who pre-pared the draft of the English Code to be "as
accurate a statement of the existing law as we can make", is generally
accepted.
This is set out in sec. 102 of the Draft Code:
A seditious intention is an intention to bring
into hatred or contempt, or to excite disaffection against the person of Her
Majesty, or the Government and Constitution of the United Kingdom or of any
part of it as by law established, or either House of Parliament, or the
administration of justice; or to excite Her Majesty's subjects to attempt to
procure otherwise than by lawful means the alteration of any matter in Church
or State by law established; or to raise discontent or disaffection amongst Her
Majesty's subjects; or
to promote feelings of ill-will and
hostility between different classes of such subjects:
Provided that no one shall be deemed to
have a seditious intention only because he intends in good faith to show that
Her Majesty has been misled or mistaken in her measures; or
to point out errors or defects in the
Government or Constitution of the United Kingdom or of any part of it as by law
established, or in the administration of justice, with a view to the
reformation of such alleged errors or defects; or to excite Her Majesty's subjects
to attempt to procure by lawful means the alteration of any matter in Church or
State by law established; or
[Page 307]
to point out in order to their removal
matters which are producing or have a tendency to produce feelings of hatred
and ill-will between different classes of Her Majesty's subjects,
Seditious words are words expressive of or
intended to carry into execution or to excite others to carry into execution a
seditious intention.
While the foregoing
definition has never been enacted as part of our Criminal Code, the
proviso was enacted in our first Code in 1892 as part of sec. 123 (S. of C.
1892, c. 29) and was deleted by an amendment in 1919 'and re-enacted in 1930
and is now sec. 133A (S. of C. 1930, c. 11, s. 2).
The learned trial Judge
did not discuss a "seditious intention" in the terms of or in terms
similar to those in the foregoing definition more than to say that a seditious
intention is one "to provoke feelings of ill-will and hostility between
different classes of His Majesty's subjects," and expressed it in French
as follows:
... le libelle
séditieux c'est la publication ou la distribution d'un pamphlet, ou d'un écrit
injurieux, blessant, et qui peut provoquer de la haine et de la discorde parmi
les différentes classes de sujets de Sa Majesté.
However vague and
indefinite the words "ill-will and hostility" may be when read as
part of the foregoing definition of sedition, they are certainly more so when,
as in this case, they were stated to the jury as separate and apart therefrom.
Cave, J. in Rex v.
Burns,
referred to the foregoing definition as somewhat vague and general and
particularly that portion reading "ill-will and hostility between
different classes of Her Majesty's subjects." This vague and general
character is further emphasized in "Law of the Constitution", Dicey,
9th ed., p. 244, where, after pointing out that the law permits publication of
statements indicating "the Crown has been misled, or that the government
has committed errors, ... and, in short, sanctions criticism of public affairs
which is bona fide intended to recommend the reform of existing institutions by
legal methods," the learned author concludes:
But any one will see at once that the legal
definition of a seditious libel might easily be so used as to check a great
deal of what is ordinarily considered allowable discussion, and would if
rigidly enforced be inconsistent with prevailing forms of political agitation.
[Page 308]
The foregoing
emphasizes the importance of intention and the necessity of a trial Judge
explaining to a jury, in such a case as here, the meaning of "intention to
promote feelings of ill-will and hostility between different classes" of
His Majesty's subjects as an essential in the offence of sedition.
In determining whether
a seditious intention is present in a particular case, the language of
Fitzgerald, J. in Rex v. Sullivan, adopted by Cave, J. in Rex v. Burns, (supra), is pertinent:
Sedition has been described as disloyalty
in action, and the law considers as seditious all those practices which have
for their object to excite discontent or disaffection, to create public
disturbances, or to lead to civil war; to bring into hatred or contempt the
sovereign or the government, the laws or constitution of the realm, and
generally all endeavours to promote public disorder.
Stephen's "History
of the Criminal Law of England" Vol. 2, p. 375:
In one word, nothing short of direct
incitement to disorder and violence is a seditious libel.
Rex v. Burns, (supra), and other authorities rather indicate that
an intention to incite something less than violence is sufficient, and that the
offence of sedition is committed if it be established that the parties charged
intentionally incited ill-will and hostility between different classes of
citizens in such a manner as may be likely to cause public disorder or
disturbance. It will be recognized that one may freely and forcefully express
his views within the limits defined by the law. Those engaged in campaigns or
controversies of a public nature may cause feelings of hatred and ill-will but
it does not at all follow that those taking part therein and causing these
feelings are acting with a seditious intention. The essential, with-out which
there cannot be sedition, is the presence of a seditious intention as above
defined and which is a fact to be determined on the evidence adduced in each
case.
The defence contended
that the appellant's conduct came within the provisions of sec. 133A (c) .
133A. No one shall be deemed to have a
seditious intention only because he intends in good faith,‑
(c) to point out, in order to their
removal, matters which are producing or have a tendency to produce feelings of
hatred and ill-will between different classes of His Majesty's subjects.
[Page 309]
The appellant's
position is therefore that hatred and ill-will already existed between
different classes in Quebec and that in the publication of this pamphlet he was
only setting forth those matters which had and were producing hatred and
ill-will between different classes with the intention, in good faith, that
they might be removed.
The presence of these
issues requires that the definition of sedition should have been explained and
so related to the facts of this case that the jury would be assisted in
understanding the issues and the relevant factors to be considered in arriving
at their conclusions. With great respect the above quotation from the learned
Judge's charge does not satisfy either of these requirements.
I therefore agree with
the learned Chief Justice and Mr. Justice Galipeault that the charge of the
learned trial Judge was under the circumstances inadequate.
Then with respect to
the contention that the learned trial Judge did not adequately charge the jury
relative to the burden of proof and reasonable doubt, I am also in agreement
with the learned Judges who dissented.
The learned trial Judge
at the outset stated to the jury:
D'autre part, si la Couronne n'a pas établi
le bien fondé de l'acte d'accusation, l'accusé devra être acquitté.
and in the course of
his address stated:
J'en conclus donc, et sur ce point vous
devez suivre ma direction, que la preuve de la Couronne a été complète par le
fait d'avoir produit le pamphlet et le fait d'en avoir prouvé la distribution.
Then referring to sec.
133A the learned Judge stated:
Cet amendement veut dire qu'il n'y a pas de
libelle dans le cas où un accusé prouve qu'il était de bonne foi.
and also :
... si vous croyez
qu'un document de cette nature peut laisser croire à nos canadiens de langue
anglaise que dans la Province de Québec, la justice n'est pas observée, que le
clergé a le contrôle sur les tribunaux et enfin, qu'il y a dans la Province de
Québec une haine ardente pour le Christ, pour Dieu et pour la Liberté, dans ce
cas là, vous devez condamner Boucher.
Up to that point the
learned trial Judge had made no reference to reasonable doubt. Toward the end
of his charge he called the attention of the jury to the request
[Page 310]
of counsel for the defence that they should be
instructed to give the benefit of the doubt to the accused. He then explained
that:
Dans toute action, dans toute offense, le
juge doit toujours dire aux jurés que s'il y a un doute, j'entends un doute
raisonnable basé sur les faits, ils doivent en donner le bénéfice à l'accusé,
mais il faut que ce doute soit sérieux, non pas un doute basé sur la pitié. Dans la présente cause, je ne vois pas sur quoi pourrait porter le
doute.
Again at the conclusion of his address when
counsel for the appellant asked that they be further instructed as to their
duty with respect to reasonable doubt, the learned trial Judge stated:
Messieurs les jurés, si vous aviez un doute
que ce document là ne soit séditieux, vous en donnerez le bénéfice du doute h
l'accusé.
It was not then, nor had it been explained to
the jury that the burden rested upon the Crown to prove the essentials of the
crime and if upon the whole of the evidence they had any reasonable doubt they
should find the accused not guilty. Instead of that, as would appear from the
above quotation commencing "si
vous croyez", the jury might well conclude that
the proof of the Crown had been sufficient and that if they believed the
pamphlet would lead those Canadians speaking the English language to believe as
he stated in the above quotation they must find Boucher possessed a seditious
intention. Further, referring to the question of good faith, the jury might
well have erroneously concluded from the instruction given that the burden
rested upon the accused. Under the circumstances of this case the learned
trial Judge should have charged the jury in language to the effect that if upon
the whole of the evidence, the language of the pamphlet as well as the oral
evidence, they were not convinced beyond any reasonable doubt that the
appellant had a seditious intention in distributing the pamphlet they should
find him not guilty. Woolmington
v. Director of Public Prosecutions; Rex v. Steane.
With respect, the learned trial Judge did not
adequately explain to the jury the position and effect of reasonable doubt. On
the contrary he may have in effect taken the
[Page 311]
question entirely out
of the hands of the jury by stating, just before concluding his address:
Dans la présente cause, je ne vois pas sur
quoi pourrait porter le doute.
The jury having been
misdirected, the question arises whether the conviction should be quashed and a
new trial directed or the accused discharged.
Sec. 1024(1) reads as
follows:
1024. (1) The Supreme Court of Canada shall
make such rule or order thereon, either in affirmance of the conviction or for
granting a new trial, or otherwise, or for granting or refusing such
application, as the justice of the case requires, and shall make all other
necessary rules and orders for carrying such rule or order into effect.
In Manchuk v. The
King,
it was held that "this Court has authority, not only to order a new
trial, or quash the conviction and direct the discharge of the prisoner, but
also to give the judgment which the Court of Appeal for Ontario was empowered
to give in virtue of s. 1016(2)." The same observation would apply to sec.
1014(3), where it is provided:
Subject to the special provisions contained
in the following sections of this Part, when the Court of Appeal allows an
appeal against conviction it may,‑
(a) quash the conviction and direct a judgment
and verdict of acquittal to be entered; or
(b) direct a new trial; and in either case
may make such other order as justice requires.
Where, apart from the
evidence held inadmissible, there is evidence from which the jury may find the
accused guilty a new trial was directed: Allen v. The King. But where, apart from
the evidence improperly admitted there is no evidence which in law would
support a verdict this Court directed that the conviction be quashed and a
verdict of acquittal directed: Schwartzenhauer v. Rex.
It is therefore
important to determine whether there was any evidence which in law would
support a verdict of guilty which in this case would include a finding that the
appellant in distributing this pamphlet acted with a seditious intention.
The Crown asked the
jury to find the intention of the accused from the language of this four-page
pamphlet.
[Page 312]
Nine excerpts from it were specifically embodied
in the indictment. These, however, cannot be read separate and apart, but
rather their meaning and effect must be deter-mined by reading and construing
them in relation to the statements in the pamphlet as a whole.
The pamphlet is entitled, as already stated,
"La haine ardente du Québec, pour Dieu, pour le Christ, et pour la
liberté, est un sujet de honte pour tout le Canada." In the first paragraph the reader is requested to "calmly and
soberly and with clear mental faculties reason on the evidence presented in
support of the above-headlined indictment." Then follows a recitation of
facts and circumstances in support of the conclusions that the witnesses of
Jehovah are ill-treated and their freedom to worship according to the tenets of
their religion denied; and that this condition exists because members' of the
judiciary, police and groups of citizens are directed and controlled by the
priests of the Roman Catholic 'Church. All of which the pamphlet declares to be
contrary to the principles of Christianity and that "such blind course
will lead to the ditch of 'destruction. To avoid it turn from following men and
traditions, and study and follow the Bible's teaching; that was Jesus'
advice." This is the appeal made to all who read this pamphlet. It does
not disclose an intention, nor reading the pamphlet as a whole can it be
concluded that it is calculated to incite persons or classes of persons to acts
or conduct leading to public disorder or disturbance. On the contrary, the
pamphlet stresses the view that if the plea therein contained is acted upon the
existent ill-will and hatred will disappear and the interference complained of
will no longer exist. In these circumstances it is difficult to conclude that
the appellant in distributing and publishing this pamphlet was doing so with a
seditious intention.
We are not, however, left in this ease with
respect to a seditious intention to the construction of the pamphlet alone. The
appellant gave evidence on his own behalf. He explained that he was a minister
of the witnesses of Jehovah, that hatred and ill-will already existed against
[Page 313]
Jehovah's Witnesses and
that he had read the pamphlet and distributed it, as he explained:
R. Dans le désir de faire connaitre les
choses qu'il y a dans le pamphlet pour faire transformer les persécutions
passées contre les témoins de Jéhovah pour que tous les gens de bonne volonté
connaissent les choses ... pas pour soulever de la haine ou pour soulever du
trouble comme sont venus le dire les témoins qu'il n'y avait pas au de
soulèvement.
………….
Q. Quand vous avez distribué cela, dans
quel dessein était-ce?
R. Dans le dessein que les gens verraient
que le monde après avoir pris connaissance de ce qu'il y a dans ce pamphlet
voit le gouverne-ment et que les autorités prennent Ies moyens pour reformer
des choses et qu'il n'y ait plus de persécutions, c'était justement dans ce
dessein là pour que les hommes de bonne volonté voient pour prêcher la paix et
demeurent en paix, tandis que vous les voyez parler de haine tout le temps.
The appellant
specifically denied that he had any intention of creating public disorder; on
the contrary he stated that he desired to establish peace between the Roman
Catholics and the witnesses of Jehovah. He stated:
... je l'ai étudié,
je l'ai lu et j'ai vu des faits.
Apart from this general
declaration, he deposed that it was his own child, eleven years of age,
referred to in the pamphlet who, because of her religious views, was expelled
from her school.
The learned trial Judge
in the course of his charge suggested that the distribution of this pamphlet
was a ludicrous or strange way to effect a reconciliation. The conduct of the
appellant may not only, in the opinion of the learned trial Judge, but of many
others, be ludicrous or strange. That, however, is quite apart from the question
whether the appellant had, upon the whole of the evidence, a seditious
intention.
The good faith of the
appellant in distributing this pamphlet was directly in issue under sec.
133A(c). He, in the course of his evidence as above indicated, adopted as true
the statements in the pamphlet. The truth of the pamphlet is not a defence to a
charge of sedition but if the facts set out in the pamphlet are untrue,
evidence to that effect would have gone far to have shown the appellant did
not act in good faith. No such evidence was adduced.
[Page 314]
The learned trial Judge himself observed in the
course of his address:
Nous n'approuvons pas ces actes qui peuvent
être commis contre les témoins de Jéhovah, mais vous pouvez vous demander s'ils
ne peuvent pas s'expliquer.
The conduct on the part of any group in Canada
which denies to or even interferes with the right of the members of any
religious body to worship is a matter of public concern. The pamphlet, in the
conception of the appellant as he deposed, discusses such an interference. He
pledged his oath that it sets forth facts and circumstances which establish
this interference with repect to the rights of the Witnesses of Jehovah to
worship in the Province of Quebec and that hatred and ill-will exist toward
them. He believed the plea set forth in the pamphlet would remove that hatred
and ill-will and the interference would cease. He therefore, as he deposed, in
good faith and for that purpose published and distributed the pamphlet. No
evidence was introduced to contradict any of these factors and therefore the evidence
here adduced brings this position of the appellant within the provisions of
sec. 133A, already quoted.
The facts as set forth in the pamphlet may be
inaccurately stated, even incorrect and the comments unjustified. The
statements in it may be objectionable, even repugnant to some and provoke
ill-will and hatred. That, however, is not sufficient. It still remains to be
proved as a fact that the accused acted with a seditious intention. Under sec.
133A that intention does not exist if the appellant's conduct was within that
section and he was acting in good faith. The evidence of good faith on behalf
of the defence is consistent with the intent and purpose of the pamphlet as
therein expressed and no evidence has been adduced to the contrary. The onus
rested upon the Crown through-out to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the
accused acted with a seditious intention and this record does not disclose any
evidence that would properly sustain a verdict that the accused possessed such
an intention.
The appeal should be allowed, the conviction
quashed and a judgment and verdict of acquittal directed to be entered.
[Page 315]
I would clarify my
previous reasons by adding that a seditious intention must be founded upon
evidence of incitement to violence, public disorder or unlawful conduct
directed against His Majesty or the institutions of the Government.
This intention, which
the pamphlet makes plain, I have reviewed in my previous reasons. The judges,
members of the Legislature and the police were all criticized upon the same
basis and with the same intention. We are here concerned only with the offence
of sedition. With great respect, I am of the opinion that in all cases the
intention to incite violence or public disorder or unlawful conduct against His
Majesty or an institution of the State is essential. This pamphlet,
particularly when considered with due regard to the provisions of section 133A,
as I previously stated, does not disclose any evidence that would properly
support a verdict that the accused possessed a seditious intention.
The appeal should be
allowed, the conviction quashed and a judgment and verdict of acquittal
directed to be entered.
LOCKE J.:‑The charge upon which the appellant was found guilty was that
of publishing a seditious libel. It is conceded on behalf of the Crown that the
conviction must be quashed clue to errors in the judge's charge, the nature of
which it is unnecessary under these circumstances to discuss. For the Crown it
is contended that a new trial should be ordered; for the accused that as there
was no evidence of a seditious intention on his part his acquittal should be
directed.
That the accused
published the pamphlet in question to various persons was proven. If there is
any evidence that this was done with a seditious intention, it must be found in
the document itself. In so far as it may be said to indicate a seditious intent
as reflecting upon the administration of justice, it reads as follows:
What of her judges that impose heavy fines
and prison sentences against them (Jehovah's witnesses) and heap abusive
language upon them and deliberately follow a malicious policy of again and
again postponing cases to tie up tens of thousand of dollars in exorbitant
bails and keep hundred of cases pending?
[Page 316]
and:
Here are some instances revealing Quebec's
hatred for God's Word as well as for freedom: In Hull, E. M. Taylor,
septuagenarian, of Namur, Quebec, was sentenced to seven days in prison for
having distributed Bibles without a permit. In Recorder's Court his attempted
explanation was curtly ended by the recorder's ordering him off to prison. Two
of Jehovah's witnesses were arrested for distributing free a Bible pamphlet,
charged with sedition, and sentenced to 60 days imprisonment or $300 fine. All
the French Canadian courts were so under priestly thumbs that they affirmed the
infamous sentence and it was not until the case reached the Supreme Court of
Canada that judgment was reversed.
and:
But regardless of this decision (an Order
of McKinnon, J.) the lawless arrests of Jehovah's witnesses continue almost
daily in Montreal and district, and in the Recorder's 'Courts they are
subjected to abusive tirades. For example, in June of 1946 Recorder Leonce
Plante denounced the witnesses as a "bunch of crazy nuts," set cash
bail as high as $200 and threatened that if some witnesses came before him
again bail would be $1,000. At present, 1946, there are about 800 charges
stacked up against Jehovah's witnesses in Greater Montreal, with property bail
now involved being $100,000 and cash bail more than $2,000. Court cases are
adjourned time after time, to inconvenience and increase expense for Jehovah's
witnesses. To have their cases heard, during one short period the witnesses had
to appear on 38 different occasions.
A further reference to
the courts reads:
Why, Catholic domination .of Quebec courts
is so complete that in the courtrooms the imagery of the crucifix takes the
place of the British Coat of Arms, which appears in other courts throughout the
Dominion.
but this, in my
opinion, cannot be said, in itself or when read together with the remainder of
the pamphlet, to afford any evidence of a seditious intent. The pamphlet
contains in addition charges that the Legislature has passed laws that are
unfair to Jehovah's Witnesses and of misconduct on the part of the Provincial
Police and of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, but it is not contended that
these are libels published with a seditious intent.
While in some
jurisdictions as in India and the Gold Coast seditious conduct or a seditious
intention have been defined by statute, this has not been done in Canada.
Section 133 of the Criminal Code declares that seditious words are words
expressive of a seditious intention and that a seditious libel is a libel
expressive of a seditious intention, while section 133(a) declares that no one
shall be deemed to have a seditious intention in certain defined circumstances.
When the Code was drafted in 1892 and
[Page 317]
introduced into
Parliament it contained a clause defining a seditious intention in terms
similar to those contained in section 102 of the Criminal Code which
was drafted but never adopted in England and which accepted Stephen's
definition, but this was rejected in the House of Commons.. While the
definition of a seditious intention given in the current edition of Stephen's
Digest, or that of sedition given in Russell on 'Crimes, have been taken in
various Canadian cases as accurately expressing the common law, so far as I am
aware the authorities said to justify these definitions have not been closely
examined to determine whether they justify these respective statements of the
law nor, so far as I can ascertain has it been considered whether, in view of
the alteration of the respective functions of the Sovereign and the elected
representatives of the people since the days preceding the passing of the Bill
of Rights in 1688, the old authorities are to be accepted as now binding.
Sir James Fitzjames
Stephen's definition in substantially its present form was first enunciated by
him in the first edition of his Digest of the Criminal Law of England published
in 1877. In the current edition of that work the definition, in so far as it is
relevant to the present question, reads:
A seditious intention is an intention to
bring into hatred or contempt or to excite disaffection against the
administration of justice.
The matters are stated
disjunctively and must be considered separately. The words used are
"hatred or con-tempt against the administration of justice," which
must necessarily, I think, include the manner of its administration by
individual judges or others discharging judicial functions. Assuming this and
the accuracy of the definition, in my opinion, the first three of the
quotations from the pamphlet, without more, afford evidence proper to be
submitted to a jury of an intention to excite contempt or hatred of the
individuals referred to, or of the manner in which justice had been
administered by them in the particular matters referred to. If, on the other
hand, to Stephen's definition should be added "with the intention of
inciting resistance to or disobedienice of the law or the
[Page 318]
authority of the state," which, I think,
more correctly defines the offence, I think the pamphlet affords no evidence.
In Stephen's History of the Criminal Law of
England (vol. 2, p. 301), the learned author states that the first definite
instance he had found of a law relating to a quasi-seditious offence was a
provision of the first Statute of Westminster passed in the year 1275 (Edw. 1,
cap. 34) which provided a penalty for the publishing of false news or tales
whereby discord may grow between the King and his people or "the great men
of the realm." In the case de Libellis Famosis,
the reason for Sir Edward Coke's opinion that a libel
against a magistrate or public person is a greater offence than one against a
private person is thus stated: (p. 255)
... for it concerns not only the breach of
the peace, but also the scandal of government; for what greater scandal of
government can there be than to have corrupt or wicked magistrates to be
appointed and constituted by the King to govern his subjects under him? And
greater imputation to the state cannot be than to suffer such corrupt men to
sit in the sacred seat of justice, or to have any meddling in or concerning the
administration of justice.
Coke used the three expressions "the
King", "the government" and "the state", and at a time
when the judges held office at the King's pleasure. This view of the law
appears to have been adopted in the case of libellous statements upon those
holding other offices in the gift of the Queen as in Udall's case, where a Puritan Minister was charged with having published a libel
upon certain of the bishops: the report shows that the judges considered that
publishing a libel with a malicious intent against the bishops regarding the
exercise of powers vested in them by the Queen was a seditious libel upon Her
Majesty and the state and Udall was condemned to death. The court apparently
proceeded upon the same ground in Rex v. Darby.
At this time it is clear that, at least in the mind
of King James II, the judges were his nominees expected to do his bidding. In a
note to the report of the trial of The Seven Bishops,
it appears that following the acquittal of the
bishops the King dismissed Holloway
[Page 319]
and Powell JJ., each of
whom had expressed the opinion that there was no libel "and would have
meditated some further severity if his following reign would have allowed
it." In that view of the position of the judges there was perhaps some
foundation for a contention that .a reflection upon their honesty or capacity
was a reflection upon the King. I think the change that took place following
the accession to the Throne of William and Mary in 1688 bears upon the present
question. While it was not so declared in the Bill of Rights, from the time
William III came to the Throne the commissions of the judges were by their
terms to endure during their good behaviour and not merely at the King's
pleasure, and this was expressly provided by the "Act for the
Limitation of the Crown and Better Securing the Rights and Liberties of the
Subject" (12-13 Wm. III, cap. 2). In effect the change brought about
by the revolution of 1688 was to transfer the sovereignty from the King to the
House of Commons. While the change came gradually the executive power of the
Crown was by degrees transferred to what has been termed "a board of
control chosen by the legislature out of persons whom it trusts and knows to
rule the nation (Taswell-Langmead's Const. Hist. 10th Ed. p. 668). While the
personal influence of the sovereign over the administration of affairs
continued to be exercised in varying degrees between the revolution of 1688 and
the passing of the Reform Bill in 1832, when it may properly be said that the
control of the affairs of the nation was finally assumed by the elected
representatives of the people, parliamentary government by means of a ministry,
nominally the King's servants but really representing the will of the party
majority for the time being in the House of Commons, was fully and finally
established under George I and George II. During Lord North's administration,
however, from 1770 to 1782, the personal influence of George III was constantly
exerted, he reserving to himself all of the patronage and nominating and
promoting the English and Scottish judges, appointing and translating bishops
and dispensing other preferments in the Church (May Const. Hist.; i.58).
[Page 320]
An examination of the
reports of trials for seditious conduct during the 18th century indicates a
gradual change in the grounds upon which they were based. While in R. v.
Tutchin,
which was a proceeding for publishing a seditious libel upon the Ministers
of the Crown and upon the Navy, Holt, L.C.J. said that it had always been
looked upon as a crime to "procure animosities as to the management
of" the government, and in R. v. Francklin, where the charge was
of seditiously contriving to traduce the administration of His Majesty's
government and Ministers of state and to bring "His present Majesty in his
administration of the government into suspicion or ill-opinion of his liege
subjects," the Attorney-General who prosecuted fell back on Coke's
statement of the law as to a libel upon a public person and Lord Raymond, C.J.
made it clear that he considered the reflections made upon the officers of the
government were seditious as reflections upon the King, the charge against Lord
George Gordon in 1787 did not proceed upon that footing. The first of the two
indictments against Gordon charged him, inter alia, with intending to excite a
general disaffection among His Majesty's subjects towards the administration of
justice and the Attorney-General argued that his object in writing the petition
in question was to call upon the prisoners to resist the execution of the laws
that they had broken and to provoke His Majesty's subjects to rise in defence
of the injured persons.
In Rex v. Cobbett, the accused was
charged with publishing certain libels on the Earl of Hardwicke, Lord
Lieutenant of Ireland, Lord Redesdale, Lord High Chancellor, the Honourable
Francis Osborne, one of the justices of the Court of King's Bench in Ireland
and Alexander Marsden, an Under-Secretary in the office of the Chief Secretary of
the Lord Lieutenant. The prosecution arose out of the publication in England by
Cobbett of a number of letters which were thereafter shown to have been written
by the Honourable Robert Johnson, a justice of the Court of Common Pleas in
Ireland. These contained, in addition to charges against the capacity of the
Lord Lieutenant,
[Page 321]
statements reflecting
upon both the capacity and honesty of Lord Redesdale and Osborne, J. and
statements attacking the conduct of the government in Ireland and of certain
officers of the government. Of the six counts in the indictment two contained
allegations that the publications were seditious. The second charged in part
the publication of divers:
scandalous, malicious and seditious matters
and things of and concerning the said part of the said United Kingdom and the
persons employed by our said Lord the King in the administration of the
government of the said pant of the said United Kingdom and of and concerning
the said Charles Osborne, so being such justice as aforesaid and the said
Alexander Marsden, so being such under-secretary as aforesaid.
and the fourth charged
the accused with:
unlawfully, maliciously and seditiously
devising and intending as last aforesaid and also further unlawfully,
maliciously and seditiously devising and intending to traduce, defame and
vilify the said John Lord Redesdale, so being such chancellor and privy
councillor.
Lord Ellenborough in
addressing the jury said in part: (p. 50)
The question for your consideration is
whether this paper is such as would be injurious to the individuals and whether
it is calculated to be injurious to the particular interest of the country. It
is no new doctrine that if a publication be calculated to alienate the
affections of the people by bringing the government into disesteem, whether the
expedient be by ridicule or obloquy, the person so conducting himself is
exposed to the inflictions of the law. It is a crime. It has ever been
considered as a crime; whether it be wrapped in one form or in another. The case
of the King v. Tutchin decided in the time of lord chief justice Holt
has removed all ambiguity from this question; and although at the period when
that case was decided great political contentions existed, the matter was not
again brought before the judges by any application for a new trial.
Concluding he said: (p.
54)
If you are of opinion that the publications
are hurtful to the individuals or to the government you will find the defendant
guilty.
It would appear that if
Lord Ellenborough considered that the matters referred to in the second and
fourth counts amounted to seditious conduct, and this does not appear to me to
be clear, it was not upon the ground that to impute misconduct to the judges
was a reflection upon the Xing but rather that they were so as calculated to
alienate the affections of the people from the government or to bring it into
"disesteem." While in R. v. Hart and White, the accused were
charged with unlawfully and
[Page 322]
maliciously devising and intending to bring the
administration of justice in England into hatred and contempt by publishing a
libel, the charge was not of seditious conduct and while Grose, J. in charging
the jury said that the letters were "most wicked, gross and abominable
libels" he did not suggest that they were seditious.
In Stephen's History (p. 373) it is said that
since the Reform Bill of 1832 prosecutions for seditious libel have been so
rare in England that they can be said practically to have ceased. I am unable
to find any reported case in England since Cobbett's case in 1804 in which
words or writings calculated or intended to bring either the administration of
justice by the courts, or its administration by partcular judges, into contempt
have been made the basis of proceedings for seditious conduct. There are,
however, three cases originating in Ireland: O'Connell v. R.;
R. v. Sullivan and The Queen v. McHugh. The charge against Daniel O'Connell and others was that of seditious
conspiracy and the trials took place at a time of great political unrest in
Ireland. While this case is referred to by Stephen as one of the authorities
for his definition of a seditious intention it does not, in my humble opinion,
support the portion of that definition which we are now considering. The charge
in O'Connell's case was of seditious conspiracy and there were eleven counts in
the indictment. The proceedings were initiated in the Court of Queen's Bench in
Ireland and the question of the sufficiency of the indictment was considered in
the House of Lords where the opinion of Chief Justice Tindal and six of the
judges was asked by the Law Lords in advance of their decision in the matter.
As pointed out by Chief Justice Tindal each count of the indictment charged one
conspiracy or unlawful agreement and no more and, in so far as the conspiracy
"to diminish the confidence of Her Majesty's subjects in the tribunals
duly and lawfully constituted for the administration of justice" was
included in the counts other than the tenth, it was included with other acts as
together constituting the offence said to be described in the count. The charge
was that the accused did "unlawfully,
[Page 323]
maliciously and
seditiously combine, conspire, confederate and agree with each other" in
the manner alleged in the various counts. If any support is to be found for
this part of Stephen's definition in this case, it must be derived from what
was said as to the tenth count which differed from the eighth and ninth in that
it charged as an offence to conspire to bring into hatred and disrepute the
tribunals established by law in Ireland for the administration of justice and
to diminish the confidence of Her Majesty's subjects in Ireland in the
administration of the law, since here that aspect of the matter is divorced
from other charges of unlawful acts. Tindal, C.J. said in part that an
agreement by various persons to raise discontent and disaffection among people
and to stir up hatred and ill-will between different classes and to promote
feelings of ill-will and hostility in Ireland against the people of England was
an illegal act, but says nothing to the effect that such conduct was seditious.
As to the alleged conspiracy to bring the general administration of the law
into disrepute and diminish the confidence of Her Majesty's subjects in it, he
said that such an agreement was "to effect purposes in manifest violation
of the law." Since the charge as to each of the counts was that the
accused did unlawfully, maliciously and seditiously conspire and since to
conspire together to commit any offence punishable at law undoubtedly amounted
to a criminal conspiracy and was an illegal act, this does not appear to
advance the matter. Lord Denman (p. 364) who said that he did not agree with
the judges in thinking that there were only two objectionable counts and that
there were other counts open to very serious objection said in part:
I should be sorry to preclude myself by
anything which I may now say from giving a judicial opinion against counts so
generally stated and charging as an unlawful act a conspiracy to excite
disaffection with the existing tribunals for the purpose of procuring a better
system. I am. by no means clear that there is anything illegal involved in
exciting disapprobation of the courts of law for the purpose of having other
courts substituted more cheap, efficient and satisfactory.
Lord Campbell (p. 403)
who said that he had no doubt that there were various good counts in the
indictment said that:
A conspiracy to effect an unlawful purpose,
or to effect a lawful purpose by unlawful means, is, by the common law of
England, an
[Page 324]
indictable offence; and it is fit that, if
several persons deliberately plot mischief to .an individual or to the State,
they should be liable to punishment, although they may have done no act in
execution of their scheme.
As to the subject
matter of the tenth count he said without referring to the language of the
count that:
A conspiracy generally to bring into
discredit the administration of justice in the country, with a view to alienate
the people from the government, would certainly be a misdemeanour.
He pointedly refrained
from saying that to speak in a manner intended or calculated to bring the
administration of justice into disrepute simpliciter was seditious con-duct or
that to conspire with others to do so amounted to a seditious conspiracy.
The second of the Irish
cases is R. v. Sullivan and Pigott,
where the charge was seditious libel of Her Majesty's government. In a
lengthy charge to the grand jury Fitzgerald, J. after saying that sedition is
a crime against society, nearly allied to that of treason, attempted to define
the offence and in the course of doing so said that: (p. 45)
The objects of sedition generally are to
induce discontent and insurrection, .and stir up opposition to the Government,
and bring the administration of justice into contempt; and the very tendency of
sedition is to incite the people to insurrection and rebellion.
The charges followed by
a year the uprising in Ireland as a result of the Fenian conspiracy and the
learned judge said further (p. 47):
Assuming you find the articles to be
seditious-that they were published with the intent laid in. the
indictment-namely, to spread, stir up, and excite disaffection and sedition
amongst the Queen's subjects, to excite hatred and contempt towards Her
Majesty's Government and administration, to encourage, foster, and keep alive
the Fenian conspiracy, to spread information and intelligence respecting that
conspiracy amongst its members in this country, and to keep them and other
evil-disposed persons well informed of the acts and proceedings of their
brother conspirators in America
they should find a bill
and, having said this, proceeded to say that while every man is free to write
as he thinks fit he must not under the pretence of freedom "bring justice
into contempt or embarrass its functions." Since these statements were
made in a charge to a grand jury the learned judge did not refer to authorities
and there is thus no indication as to what he relied upon to support the
[Page 325]
statement last referred
to. My own view is that he intended his last remark to be read in conjunction
with what he had said earlier and accordingly meant that to endeavour to
promote public disorder or defiance of the law by bringing the administration
of justice into contempt was seditious conduct: if he did not mean this, I
think, with respect, that the statement was inaccurate as a statement of the
common law.
The last of the Irish
cases to which I have referred is The Queen v. McHugh, where the accused was
charged with publishing a wicked, scandalous and malicious libel of and
concerning the administration of justice, intending to bring it into contempt
and to scandalize and vilify William Drennan Andrews (Andrews, J.) and, the
jurors by whom a certain action had been tried. The indictment did not charge
that the conduct was seditious but the court did not consider that this was
necessary. O'Brien, L.C.J. adopted Stephen's definition regarding conduct
intended to bring the administration of the law into contempt and said that
while a judge in his judicial character should always welcome fair criticism of
his judicial conduct, deliberate misconduct in his judicial character must not
be imputed, and that to say of a judge that he was actuated by any other motive
than a simple desire to arrive at the truth and to mete out justice impartially
was seditious. Other authority for this sweeping statement is not given.
Murphy, J. concurred with the Lord Chief Justice, Gibson, J. stated that an intent
to bring the administration of justice into contempt is a seditious intent,
Madden, J. agreed and referred to the charge to the jury by Grose, J. in R.
v. Hart.
There, however, as above stated, the charge was not of publishing a
seditious libel.
There are two reported
cases in Canada in which it may be said that this part of Stephen's definition
was applied. The first of these is R. v. Brodie and
Barrett.
The case does not appear
to have been otherwise reported and the decision in this Court which quashed
the conviction on the ground that the indictment did not disclose any offence
does not affect the matter under consideration. Brodie
[Page 326]
and others were
charged, as parties to a seditious conspiracy. This was based upon their having
distributed in the City of Quebec a number of pamphlets with what was said to
have been a seditious intention. These pamphlets included extravagant charges
against the clergy, "big business" and against practically every
branch of the government which, it was said, was contaminated and improperly
influenced, and said that there would be no peace so long as the unholy
alliance of "commercial and political oppressive power with hypocritical
religion" continued to exist. They contained also other statements
particularly offensive to the Protestant and Roman Catholic clergy. The charges
made were so sweeping that they may well have been considered as including an
attack upon the manner in which justice was administered. The learned judges of
the Court of King's Bench (Appeal Side) adopted Stephen's and Russell's
statements as to what constituted seditious con-duct and, apparently
considering that the pamphlets were really an attack against all organized
authority, upheld the conviction.
In Duval v. R., all the accused, also members of Jehovah's
Witnesses, were charged with seditious conspiracy in connection with the
distribution of pamphlets which contained, among other extravagant statements,
the following:
Satan has become the prince of the earth
and humanity is in his grip; all human institutions are in his control; the
church, the financial bodies, the political governments, the bar, the bench,
have become corrupt and serve the purposes of Satan, who has blinded humanity.
Following the decision
of the Court in Brodie's case the conviction for conspiracy was
sustained. It does not appear that in either of these cases in Quebec the
question as to whether conduct designed to bring the administration of law into
contempt without more was seditious was considered. In view of the nature of
the other statements it was perhaps thought unnecessary to do so.
While the charge in R. v. Burns et al,
was not based upon words
impugning the administration of justice or the conduct of judges or other
judicial officers, Mr. Justice Cave in the course of his charge to the jury
read Stephen's definition of a seditious intention and said that for every
[Page 327]
proposition there laid
down there was to be found un-doubted authority. The charge against John Burns
and the other accused, briefly stated, was of intending to incite
insurrections, riots, tumults and breaches of the peace and to stir up hatred
between different classes of the King's 'subjects and to prevent by force the
execution of the laws of the realm and the preservation of the public peace.
The approval expressed by Cave, J. of Stephen's definition must be considered,
however, with further statements that he made to the jury such as (p. 359):
There is undoubtedly no question .at all, as the learned Attorney-General has
said, of the right of meeting in public, and the right of free discussion is
also perfectly unlimited, with the exception, of course, that it must not be
used for the
purpose of inciting to a breach of the peace or to a violation of the law.
and further (p. 363) :
If you think that these defendants, if you
trace from the whole matter laid before you that they had a seditious intention
to incite the people to violence, to create public disturbances and disorder,
then undoubtedly you ought to find them guilty.
While in so far as the
charge approved that portion of Stephen's definition relating to an intention
to bring into hatred or contempt or to excite disaffection against the
administration of justice, the statement of Cave, J. is obiter, when the charge
is read as a whole it appears to me to be properly construed as saying that
such an intention is seditious if intended to incite a breach of the peace or a
violation of the law.
If what was said by
Fitzgerald, J. in Sullivan's case was not intended by him to bear the meaning
I suggest, it must have been based on the view of the law expressed by Coke in
1606, by Holt, L.C.J. in Tutchin's case in 1704, and by Lord
Ellenborough in Cobbett's case in 1804. The passage from Lord Holt's
charge to the jury, referred to by Lord Ellenborough, as reported in 14 St. Tr.
at p. 1128, reads:
To say that corrupt officers are appointed
to administer affairs is certainly a reflection on the government. If people
should not be called to account for possessing the people with an ill opinion
of the government, no government can subsist. For it is very necessary for all
governments that the people should have a good opinion of it. And nothing can
be worse to any government, than to endeavour to procure animosities, as to the
management of it; this has been always looked upon as a crime, and no
government can be safe without it be punished.
[Page 328]
It is not a matter for
surprise that there has been difficulty in defining an offence the nature of
which in this and in other cases has been stated in such general terms. In
Donogh's History and Law of Sedition (3rd Ed. p. 5) it is said that when the
report of the Select Committee regarding the proposed amendments to the Penal
Code for India was presented by Stephen in 1870, he said there was a very long
history about seditious libel compiled from various authorities contained in
Russell on Crime, that the law was "very vaguely expressed" and that
he hoped that someone might soon reduce to a few short sentences the great mass
of dicta on the subject. This he himself attempted to do seven years later in
his Digest. Writing of this in his History of the Criminal Law published in
1883 (p. 298) Stephen, after referring to the contrasting views of the position
of the Sovereign, the one that he is the agent and servant of his people, the
other that being the superior of his subjects and by the nature of his position
presumably wise and good, the rightful ruler and guide of the whole population,
it must necessarily follow that it is wrong to censure him openly, said (p. 300):
These are the extreme views each of which
has had a considerable share in moulding the law of England with the practical
result of producing the compromise which I have tried to express in the
articles of my Digest. It has no claim to that quasi-mathematical precision,
which even in the most careful writings is rarely, if ever, attainable, but I
think it is sufficiently distinct to afford a practical guide to judges and
juries in the discharge of duties which are now seldom imposed upon them. I
will now attempt to sketch the history of the various legal controversies which
have for the present ended in this compromise.
I think when the cases
are examined the sense in which the word "compromise" is intended is
not clear since the portion of the definition we are now concerned with appears
to be founded on the conception of the law stated as afore-said in Cobbett's
case, which in turn appears to be consistent with the view expressed by
Sir Edward Coke in 1606.
In his charge to the
jury in R. v. Lambert and Perry,
Lord Ellenborough said that the prosecution treated the language complained
of as a libel upon the person of the King and upon his administration of the
government of the Kingdom and that if it meant that His Majesty during his reign
had taken an erroneous view of the interests of
[Page 329]
the country and imputed
nothing but honest error, he was not prepared to say that that of itself was
libellous. If, however, it be assumed for the purpose of argument that to
intend to reflect upon the wisdom or judgment of the occupant of the Throne by
words or writings be a seditious intention, to impugn the honesty or capacity
of a judge or of a recorder or of several of them cannot, in my opinion, be any
evidence of such an intention. Judges of the Superior Courts in England, as in
Canada, are appointed by patents from the Crown and hold office during good
behaviour. While thus appointed in His Majesty's name, they have been for a
very long time indeed chosen by the government in power, a Cabinet chosen from
the elected representatives of the party holding the majority in Parliament.
In accordance with long established constitutional practice the occupant of the
Throne, and in Canada his representative, acts on the advice of his Ministers
and it appears to me quite impossible to suggest that a libel upon one chosen
to administer justice in this manner can conceivably be considered as a
reflection upon the Sovereign. If it were so in the case of the judges, it
would presumably be so in the case of all persons holding offices under patents
from the Crown upon the principle upon which Udall was convicted in the year
1590, such as certain of the dignitaries of the established Church in England
and Ministers of His Majesty's Provincial governments in Canada. Is it to be
said that to adversely criticize the conduct or impugn the motives of the
occupants of such an office would evidence an intention to reflect in any
manner upon the occupant of the Throne? In the case of the recorders in the
Province of Quebec appointed by the Lieutenant-Governor in Council under the
provisions of the Cities and Towns Act (R.S.Q. 1941, c. 233, s. 643), it appears to me
equally impossible to say that a reflection upon their honesty or capacity is a
reflection upon the Sovereign. Assuming Coke's statement accurately declared
the common law of England at that time, the reason which formed its basis has
disappeared with the changed status of the judges and the manner in which they
are chosen and
[Page 330]
appointed and this is,
in my opinion, no longer the law either in England or Canada: cessante ratione
legis cessat ipsa lex.
For this reason, I
think also it is error to say that at the present time to reflect upon the
capacity or honesty of one or more judges or recorders in a manner calculated
to bring them and the manner in which the law is administered by them into
contempt is seditious as a reflection upon His Majesty's Ministers or the
government responsible for their selection and appointment. Taswell-Langmead (10th
Ed. p. 740), speaking of the period following the passing of the Bill of
Rights, says that the press soon became the favourite instrument of party
warfare and that each party when in power endeavoured to crush its opponents by
prosecuting as seditious libels all publications which supported the
opposition. There were from time to time up to the period shortly prior to 1832
some prosecutions of this nature in England but there have been, so far as I
can find, none such since that date. The right of free public discussion upon
all matters affecting the state and its government, subject only to the
restraint imposed by the laws both civil and criminal as to defamation, and in
the case of the administration of justice to the law as to contempt of court,
has long since become firmly established. It is the right of His Majesty's
subjects to freely criticize the manner in which the government of the country
is carried on, the conduct of those administering the affairs of government
and the manner in which justice is administered, subject to these restraints.
The criminal law as to defamatory libel is declared in Canada in the Criminal Code.
Section 317 defines a
defamatory libel and section 324 declares 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. The existence of this right of
public discussion is wholly inconsistent with a rule of law that judges or
others administering justice or Ministers of the Crown are immune from
criticism on the ground that to impugn their honesty or capacity is a
reflection upon the government. It is very much too late
[Page 331]
in the day to say that
"if a publication be calculated to alienate the affections of the people
by bringing the government into disesteem, whether the expedient be by ridicule
or obloquy" it is a crime.
The question remains
whether it is accurate to say that "a seditious intention is an intention
to excite disaffection against the administration of justice" as stated by
Stephen. This, in my opinion, depends upon the meaning to be assigned to the
word "disaffection." The word is defined in the Oxford English
Dictionary as "absence or alienation of affection or kindly feeling,
dislike, hostility”: and in a different sense "political alienation or
discontent; a spirit of disloyalty to the government or existing
authority." When the Indian Penal Code was drafted in 1870 Stephen advised
against defining the word, saying that it was difficult to define but
impossible to mistake. Donogh (3rd Ed. p. 72) reports him as saying: "and
so courts of equity would not define fraud lest fraud were committed outside
the definition." Only if disaffection be construed as meaning resistance
to or disobedience of the law or the authority of the state is it accurate, in
my opinion. The statements complained of in the present matter cannot be said
to evidence any such intention.
I concur in the opinion
of my brother Kellock that that portion of Stephen's definition which declares
that "to intend to promote feelings of ill-will and hostility between
different classes of such subjects" is a seditious intention, without
more, is inadequate as a statement of the common law and I agree with his
conclusion upon this aspect of the matter.
I would allow this
appeal, quash the conviction and direct the acquittal of the accused.
The dissenting judgment
of Cartwright and Fauteux M. was delivered by
CARTWRIGHT J.:‑On a consideration of all the evidence given
at the trial of the appellant and of the charge to the jury of the learned
trial judge, I am in agreement with, what I understand to be, the unanimous
opinion of the court, that the conviction of the appellant must be set
[Page 332]
aside; and I think that
the learned counsel for the Crown was right in his
decision not to argue that it should be upheld. The question debated before us
was as to whether we should order a new trial or direct a verdict of acquittal
'to be entered.
No relevant evidence
tendered by the Crown appears to have been rejected and if, as the appellant
contends, on the evidence in the record no jury properly instructed could
reasonably have convicted him of the offence charged, it would not, I think, be
proper to direct a new trial.
There was ample
evidence in the record that the appellant had read the pamphlet, which the
Crown submits is a seditious libel, and had distributed copies to several
persons. There is no evidence of a seditious intention on the part of the
appellant except such as is furnished by the pamphlet itself. It is scarcely
necessary to say that the words of a document published with knowledge of its
contents may in themselves furnish ample evidence of a seditious intention.
A great portion of the
able arguments addressed to us was directed to the question whether the
document was, on its face, capable of supporting the inference that it was
intended to promote feelings of ill-will and hostility between different
classes of His Majesty's subjects and if so whether such an intention, without
more, is a seditious one. In my opinion it would have been open to the jury to
infer from the words of the document that it was intended to promote feelings
of ill-will and hostility between different classes of His Majesty's subjects;
and if such intention is, of itself, a seditious intention it would, I think,
be proper to direct a new trial as, while the question whether such an
inference could be drawn would be for the Judge, the question whether it ought
to be drawn would be for the jury.
Undoubtedly several
text-writers of high authority do give as one of several definitions of a
seditious intention, the definition referred to above. To the definitions
quoted in the reasons for judgment of other members of the court may be added
that in Halsbury's Laws of England (2nd Edition) Volume 9, page 302: "A
seditious intention is
[Page 333]
an intention ... to
promote feelings of ill-will and hostility between different classes of such
subjects."
The obvious objection
to accepting this as a sufficient definition, unless we are bound by authority
to do so, is that such acceptance would very seriously curtail the liberty of
the press and of individuals to engage in discussion of any controversial topic.
It is not easy to debate a question of public interest upon which strong and
conflicting views are entertained without the probability of stirring up, to a
greater or less degree, feelings of ill-will and hostility between the groups
in disagreement.
The reasons of my
brother Kellock bring me to the conclusion that the definition quoted above
ought not to be accepted without qualification, and that before a writing can
be held to disclose a seditious intention 'by reason of being calculated to
promote feelings of ill-will and hostility between different classes of His
Majesty's subjects it must further appear that the intended, or natural and
probable, consequence of such promotion of ill-will and hostility is to produce
disturbance of or resistance to the authority of lawfully constituted
government. I do not think that, on the evidence in the record in this case, a
jury could properly find that the pamphlet in question was calculated to have
such effect by reason of its tendency to promote such feelings of ill-will
between classes. If the words of the pamphlet did not disclose any other sort
of seditious intention I would not favour the ordering of a new trial.
There is, however,
another definition of seditious intention found in many of the text-writers
which in my opinion requires consideration, although comparatively little
stress was laid upon it in argument.
The definition in
Halsbury's Laws of England (2nd Edition) Vol. 9, page 302, commences as'
follows:
A seditious intention is an intention--(1)
to bring into hatred or contempt, or to excite disaffection against the King or
the Government and Constitution of the United Kingdom, or either House of
Parliament, or the administration of justice.
For the purpose of
considering its application to the case at bar this definition may be shortened
to read, "A seditious intention is an intention to bring into hatred or
contempt, or to excite disaffection against the administration of
justice."
[Page 334]
This definition is
qualified by the paragraph which follows:
But an intention is not seditious if the
object is to show that the King has been misled or mistaken in his measures, or
to point out errors or defects in the Government or Constitution with a view to
their reformation, or to excite the subjects to attempt by lawful means the
alteration of any matter in Church or State by law established, or to point
out, with a view to their removal, matters which are producing, or have a
tendency to produce, feelings of hatred and ill-will between classes of the
King's subjects.
It will be observed
that this definition corresponds almost exactly with that in Stephen's Digest of the
Criminal Law, 8th Edition, pages 94 and 95, which in turn is very similar to
that set out in Section 102 of the Draft 'Code. The relevant words of the
definition in the Draft Code are:
A seditious intention is an intention to
bring into hatred or contempt or to excite disaffection against ... the
administration of justice ...: Provided that no one shall be deemed to have a
seditious intention only because he intends in good faith ... to point out
errors or defects ... in the administration of justice, with a view to the
reformation of such alleged errors or defects.
In the report of the
Commissioners on the Draft Code, at page 20, they make the following statement:
"Section 102, relating to seditious offences, is taken without alteration
from the Bill. It appears to us' to state accurately the existing law as stated
in the authorities noted in the margin of the Draft Code. On this very delicate
subject we do not undertake to suggest any alteration of the law."
The marginal note to
section 102 of the Draft Code is as follows:
This is as accurate a statement of the
existing law as we can make, See 60 Geo. 3 & I Geo. 4, c. 8. O'Connell v.
R. 11, Cl. & F. 155,234. R. v. Lambert &
Perry, 2 Camp. 398 R. v. Vincent, 9 C. & P. 91. We are unable to assent to the proposition that 33
Geo. 3, c. 29 (Irish Act) is declaratory of the common law.
The two statutes to
which reference is made in the marginal note and the cases of R. v. Lambert
and Perry and R. v. Vincent, do not assist in the solution of the
question with which we are immediately concerned.
In O'Connell v. Reg.,
the 8th, 9th and 10th
counts in the indictment are set out at pages 163 and 164 of the report as
follows:
8th Count-That the said defendants,
unlawfully and seditiously intending, etc., to bring into disrepute and to
diminish the confidence of Her Majesty's subjects in the tribunals duly and
lawfully constituted
[Page 335]
in Ireland for the administration of
justice; on, etc. with force, etc. at etc., unlawfully, maliciously and
seditiously did combine, conspire, con-federate, and agree with each other and
with divers other persons whose names are to the jurors unkown, to bring into
hatred and disrepute the tribunals by law established in Ireland for the
administration of justice, and to diminish the confidence of Her said Majesty's
liege subjects in Ireland in the administration of the law therein, with the
intent to induce Her Majesty's subjects to withdraw the adjudication of their
differences with and claims upon each other from the cognizance of the said
tribunals by law established and to submit the same to the judgment and
determination of other tribunals to be constituted and contrived for that
purpose, in contempt, etc.
The 9th count was the same as the 8th,
omitting from the introductory part the words "in Ireland," after
the words "duly and lawfully constituted"; and in the Iast part of
the count, after the words "administration of the law therein,"
omitting the allegation as to withdrawing the 'adjudication of differences, and
substituting the following: "and to assume and usurp the prerogative of
the Crown in the establishment of Courts for the administration of the law, in
contempt," etc.
The 10th count was the same as the 8th in
the introductory part, but the charge was in general terms, that the defendants
unlawfully, maliciously, and seditiously did combine, conspire, confederate,
and agree with each other and with divers other persons whose names are
unknown, to bring into hatred and disrepute, the tribunals by law established
in Ireland for the administration of justice, and to diminish the confidence of
Her Majesty's liege subjects in Ireland in the administration of the laws
therein, in contempt, etc.
It will be observed
that in each of these counts the intention "to bring into hatred and
disrepute the tribunals by law established for the administration of justice
and to diminish the confidence of Her Majesty's subjects therein" was
described as seditious.
The first question
submitted by the House of Lords for the consideration of the Judges is set out
at page 231 of the report as follows:
Are all or any, and if any, which, of the
counts in the indictment bad in law; so that if such count or counts stood
alone in the indictment, no judgment against the defendants could properly be
entered up on them?
The answer to this
question insofar as it relates to Counts 8, 9 and 10 is found at pages 235 and
236. The judges were unanimously of opinion that these three counts were good
in law. There is nothing in the reasons of the Law Lords who by a majority of
three to two rejected the final result arrived at by the majority of the judges
which throws any doubt upon the opinion that the counts set out above were good
in law and that, had they stood alone
[Page 336]
in the indictment,
judgment against the defendants could properly have been entered up on them.
While, as' has been pointed out, this case was one of seditious conspiracy it
appears to me to furnish support for the view that an 'intention to bring the
administration of justice into hatred and disrepute and to diminish the
confidence of His Majesty's subjects therein is a seditious intention.
In Odgers on Libel and
Slander, 6th edition at page 432, there is the following statement:
We have already
dealt with such contemptuous words as are defamatory of the Courts of Law, or
of individual Judges, or of the administration of justice as a whole; such
words are seditious and punishable as such. (see ante p. 426).
The reference to page
426 is to the following passage:
It is a misdemeanour to speak or publish of
any Judge of a Superior Court words which would be libellous and actionable per
se, if written and published of any other person holding a public office.
It is also a misdemeanour to speak or
publish words defamatory of any Court of Justice or of the administration of
the law therein, with intent to obstruct or invalidate its proceedings, to
annoy its officers, to diminish its authority and dignity or to lower it in
public esteem [sic].
Such words, whether spoken or written, are
punishable on indictment or information with fine or imprisonment or both. They
are also in every such case a contempt of Court punishable summarily by the
Court itself with fine or commitment, as to which see post, Chap. XX.
It is immaterial whether the words be
uttered in the presence of the Court, or at a time when the Court is not
sitting and at a distance from it (Crawford's Case, 13 Q.B. 613; 18 L.J.Q.B. 225)
; nor need they necessarily refer to the Judges in their official capacity.
But there is no sedition in just criticism
on the administration of the law. "A writer may freely criticize the
proceedings of courts of justice and of individual judges-nay, he is invited to
do so, and to do so in a free, and fair, and liberal spirit. But it must be
without malignity, and not imputing corrupt or malicious motives" (per
Fitzgerald, J., in R. v. Sullivan, 11 Cox, ,C.C. at p. 49). "It
certainly is lawful, with decency and candour, to discuss the propriety of the
verdict of a jury, or the decisions of a judge, ... but if the extracts set out
in the information contain no reasoning or discussion, but only declamation and
invective, and were written, not with a view to elucidate the truth, but to
injure the characters of individuals, and to bring into hatred and contempt the
administration [sic] of justice in the country, "then the defendants have
transgressed the law, and ought to be convicted (per Grose, J., in R. v.
White and Another, 1 Camp. 369, n).
To assert that a Judge had been bribed, or
that in any particular ease he had endeavoured to serve his own interest, or
those of his friends or of his party, or wished to curry favour at Court, or
was influenced by fear of the Government or of any great man, or by any motive
other than a simple desire to arrive at the truth and to mete out justice
impartially, is seditious.
[Page 337]
The passage just quoted is contained in the
chapter dealing with "seditious words" and it is, I think, clear that
in the opinion of the learned author words calculated to bring the
administration of justice into hatred or contempt are punishable either on
indictment as being a seditious libel or summarily as being a contempt of
court.
The case of R. v. White and Another 1 Camp.
359 (n), mentioned above, is more fully reported sub nom R.
v. Hart and White.
It appears that one Chapman and one Bennet had
both been tried for murder before Leblanc, J. and a jury and had been found not
guilty. The defendants Hart and White published letters criticizing these
verdicts and reflecting in disparaging terms on the Judge and members of the
jury.
They were tried upon an information preferred by
the Attorney-General containing several counts. The sub-stance of the charge
was that the accused "intending to bring the administration of justice and
the trial by jury as by law established in England into hatred and contempt
among the liege subjects of our said Lord the King and to raise and excite disaffection
and discontent in the minds of the liege subjects of our said Lord, the King
... did publish a certain scandalous, malicious and defamatory libel of and
concerning the said respective trials of the said William Chapman and Thomas
Bennett and of and concerning the verdicts aforesaid according to the tenor and
effect following, (the libel was here set out) to the great scandal and
disgrace of the administration of public justice in England."
Other counts included an allegation of intention
"to traduce, defame and vilify the said Sir Simon Leblanc and the jurors
and to bring the said Sir Simon Leblanc and the jurors into public hatred and
contempt."
A reading of the charge to the jury of Grose, J.
which is set out in full commencing at page 1190 of the Report makes it clear
that in his opinion the accused ought to be found guilty if the jury reached
the conclusion that the document in question was published with the intention
of maligning and vilifying the administration of justice
[Page 338]
in the country and
casting a stigma upon it, and there is nothing in the charge to suggest that
there was any further ingredient necessary to complete the offence.
In Russell on. Crimes,
9th Edition at page 87, the definition is given in the following words:
Sedition consists in acts, words, or
writings intended or calculated, under the circumstances of the time, to
disturb the tranquility of the State, by creating ill-will, discontent,
disaffection, hatred, or contempt towards the person of the King, or towards the
Constitution or Parliament, or the Government, or the established institutions
of the country, or by exciting ill-will between different classes of the King's
subjects, or encouraging any class of them to endeavour to disobey, defy, or
subvert the laws or resist their execution, or to create tumults or riots, or
to do any act of violence or outrage or endangering the public peace.
When the offence is committed by means of
writing, or print, or pictures, it is termed seditious libel.
The offence is a misdemeanour indictable at
common law.
It will be observed
that this definition does not make any express reference to the courts or to
the administration. of justice, although the courts would presumably be
included in the expression "the established institutions of the
country." At page 88, the writer says,
According to the older authorities it is
seditious wantonly to defame or indecorously to calumniate that economy, order
and constitution of things which make up the general system of the law and
government of the country; and more particularly to degrade or calumniate the
person and character of the sovereign, or the administration of his government
by his officers and ministers of state, or the administration of justice by his
judges, or the proceedings of either House of Parliament.
I am not able to
determine whether, by the form of expression used, the learned author intends
to convey the opinion that an intention to degrade or calumniate the
administration of justice is no longer in law regarded as seditious; but I am
inclined to think that he did not intend to express this view, as the text
immediately continues with the statement that the present view of the law is
best stated in R. v. Burns. The learned author proceeds to quote at
length from the charge to the jury of Cave, J., in that case, including the
following passage at page 92, in which Cave, J. was quoting with approval from
the charge of Fitzgerald, J. to the jury in Reg. v.
Sullivan,
Viewing the case in a free, bold, manly and
generous spirit towards the defendant, if you come to the conclusion that the
publications indicted are not seditious libels, or were not published in the
sense imputed to
[Page 839]
them you are bound, and I ask you in the
name of free discussion, to find a verdict for the defendant. I need not remind
you of the worn-out topic to extend to the defendant the benefit of the doubt.
If on the other hand, on the whole spirit and import of these articles, you are
obliged to come to the conclusion that they are seditious libels, and that
their necessary consequences are to excite contempt of Her Majesty's Government,
or to bring the administration of the law into contempt and impair its
functions-if you come to that conclusion either as to the articles or prints,
or any of them, then it becomes your duty honestly and fearlessly to find a
verdict of conviction upon such counts as you believe are proved.
It will be observed
that in the passage quoted the necessary consequences, which the learned judge
said would render the publications seditious' libels, are stated disjunctively
and that one of them is "to bring the administration of the law into
contempt and impair its functions."
In Archbold's Criminal
Pleading, Evidence and Practice 32nd Edition at page 1238, it is said: "Libels
on a judge or a jury may, in certain events be seditious," and at page
1146, "to impute corruption to judges has been said to be seditious."
Many of the cases cited
by the respective authors in support of the definition of "seditious
intention", above referred to, i.e., "to bring into hatred or
contempt or to excite disaffection against the administration of justice",
do not touch upon the point now under consideration but deal only with other
branches of the definition of seditious intention. I have not found in any of
the cases cited any expression which appears to me to be inconsistent with the
above definition or to suggest that it omits any essential ingredient. The
definition appears to me to have the sup-port of the text-writers mentioned
above, of the Commissioners who reported on the Draft Code (Lord Blackburn,
Barry, J., Lush, J. and Sir James Stephen, later Stephen, J.) of Grose, J. in
R. v. White and Hart (supra), of Fitzgerald, J. in R. v. Sullivan
(supra), of Cave, J. in R. v. Burns (supra) and of a court
consisting of Lord O'Brien, L.C.J. and Murphy, Gibson and Madden, J.J. in Reg.
v. M'Hugh.
The last mentioned case
appears to me to be directly in point. Two men had been indicted and convicted
before Andrews, J. and a jury on a charge of conspiracy and
[Page 340]
M'Hugh was charged with
publishing a libel in regard to their trial. The information set forth that the
defendant M'Hugh,
being au evil disposed person, wickedly and
maliciously contriving and .intending to bring the administration of justice in
this kingdom into contempt, and to scandalize and vilify the said William
Drennan Andrews and the jurors by whom the said issue was so tried as
aforesaid, and to cause it to be believed that the said jurors had violated
their oaths as such jurors, on the 16th day of December, in the year aforesaid
wickedly and maliciously did print and publish, and cause to be printed and published,
a certain false, wicked, scandalous and malicious libel of and concerning the
administration of justice in this kingdom, and of and concerning the said Right
Honourable William Drennan Andrews and the jurors by whom the said issue was so
tried as aforesaid, according to the tenor and effect following:
(Here followed the libel, which in
substance and effect, was a scandalous and malicious libel, concerning the
administration of justice in Ireland, and concerning the Judge and jury who had
tried the case.)
to the great scandal and reproach of the
administration of justice, in contempt of our Lady the Queen and her laws, to
the evil example of all others in the like case offending, and against the
peace of our Lady the Queen, her Crown and dignity.
There were other counts
in the information but they were substantially to the same effect.
It will be observed
that neither the word "seditious?' nor any similar word was used anywhere in
the information. The matter came before the court on a demurrer by the Attorney
General to pleas, made by the accused which might have been good in a
case of defamatory libel but not in a case of seditious libel and one of the
questions for the court was whether or not the information charged a seditious
libel. The following passages appear to me to be relevant to the point under
consideration; at page 577 in the judgment of O'Brien, L.C.J.:
The question remains, are the libels
complained of seditious libels? The word "seditious" is certainly not
used in the information, but we are all of opinion that it is not a word of
art, and that, if the substance of what is a seditious libel is stated, this is
enough. In the long history of seditious libels it has never been decided that
it was essential to employ in the pleading the words "seditious" or
"seditiously". On the contrary, there are cases in the books, which
have been referred to during the argument in which, though the prosecutions
were plainly for seditious libels, the words "seditious" or
"seditiously" were not used.
At the same page:
Have we then in this case, in substance,
the essential elements of a seditious libel? No doubt the words complained of
are defamatory, but have we in the averments what is equivalent to the
allegation of a seditious intent? This brings me to the consideration of what
is the
[Page 341]
legal definition of a seditious intent. It
is correctly stated in the late Mr. Justice Stephen's work on the criminal law.
He there defines a "seditious intention" to be "an intention to
bring into hatred or contempt, or to excite disaffection against, the person of
Her Majesty, her heirs or successors, or the Government and Constitution of the
United Kingdom as by law established, or either Houses of Parliament, or the administration of the law" ... I stop here and do not give the full definition. I give only the
relevant portion. An intention, then, to bring into hatred or contempt the
administration of the law falls within the definition of seditious intent.
This being so, I turn to the information to
ascertain whether what constitutes a seditious intent is sufficiently alleged
therein. I find that it is alleged "that Patrick A. M'Hugh, wickedly and
maliciously contriving and intending to bring the administration of justice in
this Kingdom into contempt," did publish the libel complained of. This is
the intent alleged against the defendant, and it is one of the intents which
make libellous matter seditious. I am therefore of opinion that what is
complained of is a seditious libel.
At page 579:
As I have already stated, if these articles
refer at all to Mr. Justice Andrews, it is in his judicial character that they
refer to him. In his private personal character a Judge receives no more
protection from the law than any other member of the community at large ; and
even in his judicial character, he should always welcome fair, decent, candid,
and I would add, vigorous criticism of his judicial conduct; but, on the other
hand, deliberate misconduct in his judicial character must not be imputed. If a
Judge deliberately misconducts himself in his judicial office, the Constitution
has provided a remedy-his removal.
The law in this respect is correctly stated
by Mr. Odgers in his book on libel. He says to assert that a judge has been
bribed, or that in any particular case he had endeavoured to serve his own
interests, or those of his friends, or his party, or had wished -to curry
favour at Court, or was influenced by fear of the Government, or of any great
man, or by any other motive than a simple desire to arrive at the truth, and to
mete out justice impartially, is seditious.
At page 584 in the
judgment of Gibson, J.:
An intent to bring the administration of
justice into contempt is a seditious intent, and not the less so because it is
associated with aspersions on the Judge or jury who tried a particular case.
The information here alleges what the law defines to be a seditious intent. The
thing is there though the word is not.
At page 587 in the
judgment of Madden, J.:
Probably none of the attempts which have
been made to define a seditious intention, or rather to enumerate various kinds
of intention which the law regards as seditious, are completely satisfactory or
exhaustive. But it is clear that an intention to bring the administration of
justice into hatred or contempt amounts to such an intention. The intention is,
in each instance, something different from the defamatory writing. The character
of the writing may be strong, and in some cases irresistible, evidence of the
existence of an intention to bring the administration of justice into
contempt. In other cases a jury might fairly believe that a charge was brought,
against persons engaged in the conduct
[Page 342]
of a trial, for the purpose, not of
vilifying, but of purifying, the administration of justice. In such a case the
defendant ought to be acquitted, because the intention, which is the essential
part of the offence, was not proven as charged.
In my opinion at Common
Law an intention to bring into hatred or contempt or to create disaffection
against the administration of justice is a seditious intention and I do not
find anything in the provisions of the Criminal Code to negative this
view. Section 133 (4) of the Criminal Code defines one type of seditious
intention but the opening words of that subsection "Without limiting the
generality of the meaning of the expression 'seditious intention' ", make
it clear that in the view of Parliament that definition is not exhaustive.
In section 133 (a) it
is provided that "no one shall be deemed to have a seditious intention
only because he intends in good faith ... to point out errors or defects ... in
the administration of justice." The wording of this proviso seems to
indicate the view of Parliament that under some circumstances an attack on the
administration of justice is to be regarded as seditious.
If it is suggested that
there is an inconsistency in rejecting the definition of seditious intention
contained in the Draft Code as incomplete insofar as it deals with the intention
to create ill-will and hostility between different classes of His Majesty's
subjects and accepting it as accurate insofar as it deals with the intention to
bring the administration of justice into hatred and contempt, the answer is
that, in my view, the former branch of the definition is not supported by
authority, whereas the latter is.
It is true that
strictly speaking none of the authorities to which I have made reference are
binding upon this court but I do not think we should disturb a current of
authority, which appears to me to extend over many years and against which I
can find no reported judgment, unless we were clearly of the opinion that such
authority was wrong in principle. Far from entertaining any such view, it
appears to me that it is right in principle. It is easy to imagine many cases
where an intention to create ill-will and hostility between different classes
of His Majesty's subjects would not include the intention, or have the probable
effect, of an interference with the due processes of lawfully constituted
authority; but it seems to me that
[Page 343]
such an interference
must of necessity result from bringing the administration of justice into
hatred or contempt or exciting disaffection against it.
It is not necessary to
adopt everything that was said by Wilmot, J. in his opinion in Almon's case, which, although never delivered as a
judgment of the court, has been quoted and accepted as a high authority in many
subsequent judgments, but the following passage from page 259 appears to me to
be relevant.
The Constitution has provided very apt and
proper remedies for correcting and rectifying the involuntary mistakes of
judges, and for punishing and removing them for any voluntary perversions of
justice. But if their authority is to be trampled on by pamphleteers and
news-writers, and the people are to be told that the power, given to the Judges
for their protection, is prostituted to their destruction, the Court may retain
its power for some little time, but I am sure it will instantly lose all its
authority; and the power of the Court will not long survive the authority of
it.
The opinion in Almon's Case was prepared in a case of attachment for contempt
and not in a case of indictment for libel. It has been suggested that a
publication which amounts to a criminal contempt of the court by "scandalizing
the Court" should be proceeded against, if at all, as a contempt and not
as a seditious libel. It seems to me that where the nature of a publication
appears to the Attorney-General to merit the institution of criminal proceedings
against its publisher it is his responsibility to decide whether the matter
should be brought before the courts by way of contempt proceedings or by
indictment for seditious libel.
There is, I think, much
to be said in favour of the view that, where it is intended to commence
criminal proceedings against a person for publishing matter said to be
calculated to bring the administration of justice into hatred and contempt, it
is better that such proceedings should be taken by way of indictment so that
the accused may have the benefit of a trial by jury, rather than by summary
proceedings for contempt, in which, it has sometimes been said, the judge is at
once judge of the law, of the fact, of the intention and of the sentence, and
his decision is without any power of review. (See Sir John Fox, Contempt of
Court (1927) page 42).
[Page 344]
It cannot be
successfully argued that because a matter appears to be a criminal contempt of
Court it may not also be a seditious libel. Section 15 of the Code recognizes
that an act or omission may constitute several different offences and this was
true also at Common Law (vide; e.g. Wemyss v.
Hopkins,
Regina v. King.
To briefly summarize my
conclusions, I am of opinion that an intention to bring the administration of
justice into hatred or contempt or to excite disaffection against it is a
seditious intention ; that an intention in good faith to point out errors or
defects in the administration of justice is not a seditious intention and that
it is the right of every citizen to criticize freely and vigorously the proceedings
of the courts of justice, the decisions of the judges, and the verdicts of
juries.
I think that in the
case at bar, and in the case of every charge of publishing a seditious libel,
where the gravamen of the charge is the alleged intention to bring the administration
of justice into hatred and contempt, the question to be left to the jury is
whether the real intention of the person charged was to vilify the
administration of justice, destroy public confidence therein and to bring it
into contempt; or whether the publication, however vigorously worded, was
honestly intended to purify the administration of justice by pointing out,
with a view to their remedy, errors or defects which the accused honestly
believed to exist. As in all cases tried by a jury, there is a preliminary
question for the Court whether there is any evidence on which a jury could
reasonably find the existence of the guilty intention. If in the Court's
opinion there is such evidence the case should be left to the jury, who after
being instructed as to what is and what is not a guilty intention should be reminded
that if they are in doubt as to the true intention of the accused it is their
duty to acquit him.
As, in my opinion,
there should he a new trial in the case at bar, it is not desirable that I
should say more than is necessary about the evidence in the record. It appears
to me that the words of the pamphlet furnish evidence upon which a properly
instructed jury could reasonably
[Page 345]
find the existence of
an intention to bring the administration of justice into hatred or contempt or
to create disaffection against it.
I have particularly in
mind the following two passages:
... et que faut-il
penser de ses juges qui imposent de lourdes amendes ainsi que des sentences de
prison à ces personnes, qui les invectivent d'un langage injurieux, et qui suivent
délibérément une politique malicieuse en ajournant maintes et maintes fois les
causes, afin de retenir engagé des dizaines de milliers de dollars en
cautionnements exhorbitants, et afin de garder des centaines de causes
pendantes? Ces législateurs, ces corps de police et ces
juges du Québec montrent-ils ainsi leur amour pour la liberté? Honnêtement,
croyez-vous que ces fruits sont le produit de l'amour, ou celui de la haine? "Vous les connaîtrez donc à leurs fruits." (Matthieu 7:20,
Crampon).
Toutes les cours Canadiennes Françaises
étaient tellement sous l'influence sacerdotale qu'elles confirmèrent la
sentence infâme, ...
While, as has been
already mentioned, the greater part of the argument before us was devoted to
other aspects of the case, the two passages, just quoted, were set out verbatim
in the indictment, were mentioned in the charge to the jury of the learned
trial Judge and were dealt with both by Counsel for the Crown and by Counsel
for the Appellant in their Factums and in their oral argument.
The first quoted
passage appears to me to be a direct imputation to the Judges of the Province
of Quebec, not of mistake but of malice, in the performance of their judicial
duties. The last quoted passage appears to me to fall directly within the passage
from Odgers which was approved by O'Brien, L.C.J. in R. v. M'Hugh in the
quotation set out above. It is, I think, an assertion that all those Courts in
Quebec which dealt with a certain case affirmed a sentence, described not as
erroneous but as infamous, and did so because they were influenced by something
other than a simple desire to arrive at the truth and to mete out justice
impartially.
For all of the above
reasons, I am of opinion that the Appeal should be allowed, the conviction set
aside and a new trial ordered.
Appeal allowed, conviction quashed and
acquittal directed.
Solicitor for the appellant: W. G. How.
Solicitor for the respondent: A. Lacourcière.
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