Supreme Court of Canada
Welch v. The King, [1951] S.C.R. 537
Date: 1951-04-24
L. T. Welch Appellant;
and
His Majesty
The King Respondent.
1951: February 12, 13; 1951:
April 24.
Present: Rinfret C.J. and
Taschereau, Estey, Locke and Fauteux JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF
APPEAL FOR BRITISH COLUMBIA.
Criminal law—Having
instruments for making bill paper—Whether the manufacturing of paper is
necessary—S. 471 (a) of the Criminal Code.
The having in one's possession
without lawful excuse instruments enabling one to fashion or change a piece of
white paper to resemble Bank of America's bill paper, is an offence within the
meaning of section 471 (a) of the Criminal Code.
APPEAL from the judgment of
the Court of Appeal for British Columbia dismissing appellant's appeal from his
conviction at trial before a jury on a charge of having had in his possession
instruments for making paper intended to resemble the bill paper of the Bank of
America, contrary to s. 471 (a) of the Criminal Code.
J. Stevenson Hall for the
appellant.
H. A. Maclean K.C. for the
respondent.
The judgment of the Chief Justice
and of Taschereau, Estey and Fauteux, JJ. was delivered by:
ESTEY J.:—The appellant was
convicted of having in his "possession instruments for making paper
intended to resemble the bill paper of a body corporate carrying on the
business of banking, to wit, the Bank of America," contrary to the
provisions of s. 471(a) of the Criminal Code. He was unsuccessful
in his appeal to the Court of Appeal in British
Columbia and obtained leave, under s.
1025 of the Criminal Code, to appeal to this Court.
The instruments in his possession
enabled the accused to take a piece of white paper and make it into a Bank of
America traveller's cheque. Counsel for the accused submits that such instruments
are not included in s. 471(a). He would construe this subsection to
include only those instruments which can be used for the manufacture of the
bill paper from its original ingredients and not, therefore,
[Page 538]
to include the making of a piece
of white paper into a bill paper intended to resemble the bill paper of the
Bank of America. S. 471(a) reads:
471. Everyone is guilty of
an indictable offence and liable to fourteen years' imprisonment who, without
lawful authority or excuse, the proof whereof shall lie on him,
(a) makes, begins to
make, uses or knowingly has in his possession, any machinery or instrument or
material for making exchequer bill paper, revenue paper or paper intended to
resemble the bill paper of any firm or body corporate, or person carrying on
the business of banking ;
The foregoing s. 471 follows in
the statute immediately after those dealing with the offence of forgery and is
included with those sections under the heading "Forgery and Preparation
Therefor." It is specifically directed against the preparation for a
forged bill and makes it an offence to be in possession of instruments, without
lawful authority or excuse, that may be used "for making… paper intended
to resemble the bill paper of any firm or body corporate, or person carrying on
the business of banking."
While "exchequer bill
paper" is defined in s. 335(k), bill paper generally, or that of a firm or
body corporate or person carrying on the business of banking, is not defined,
no doubt because each of these bodies selects its own particular bill paper.
The Bank of America, in making its traveller's cheques, used specially designed
paper. The acquisition or making of paper to resemble the bill paper of the
Bank of America would be a step toward, or in preparation of, a completed
forgery of its traveller's cheques. The accused was found to have in his
possession instruments with which he fashioned or changed a piece of white
paper, by impressions or other means, with intent that it would resemble the
bill paper upon which these traveller's cheques were made. It is the possession
of such instruments without lawful authority or excuse that the section makes
an offence.
The submission that, because the
instruments which were in the possession of the accused could not manufacture
bill paper which would resemble that of the Bank of America from its original
ingredients, but could only fashion or change white paper as already indicated,
the accused, in having them in his possession without lawful excuse,
[Page 539]
had not committed an offence
contrary to s. 471 (a) is not tenable. The words "making" and
"manufacturing" are sometimes used synonymously. The word
"making" is, however, a wider term and somewhat more inclusive. The
mere physical fashioning or changing of a given commodity might, in some
circumstances, be described as manufacturing, but, in any event, it is a
making. The instruments in the possession of the accused enabled him to do just
that. He fashioned or changed the white paper with these instruments and made it
into that which he intended would resemble the bill paper of the Bank of
America. The language of this section cannot be given the narrow construction
suggested by counsel for the accused.
Counsel for the accused supported
his suggested construction of s. 471(a) by reference to a number of
cases which were decided under the language of particular statutes and which,
therefore, do not materially assist in the construction of the section here in
question. In one of the more recent, Gamble v. Jordan , the accused was charged with having flock in his
possession "for the purpose of making" certain articles. He had
received from his sister a mattress, the seams of which he had opened, and
"removed the flock with the intention of putting it back in the same covering."
It was held that the accused was neither making nor manufacturing a mattress.
In the language of Avory J., at p. 153:
In one sense a new mattress
may be made out of a secondhand one; new covering may be put upon old stuffing,
or an old cover may be stuffed with new flock. Those are not the operations in
question.
The accused, in the case at bar,
was fashioning or changing a piece of white paper into a paper to be used for
an entirely new and different purpose and without the additions he made it could
not be so used. The white paper had to be changed or fashioned; in a word, it
had to be made to serve that new purpose.
Counsel for the accused referred
to ss. 14, 15, 16 and 20 of the Forgery Act, R.S.C. 1886, c. 165. No
doubt these were present to the mind of Parliament when it enacted s. 471(a)
(or rather its predecessor s. 434(a) in the Criminal Code of 1892
R.S.C., c. 29), which is entirely different in its language and much wider in
its scope. The foregoing
[Page 540]
sections were drafted in more detail
and in that sense are limited in their application and no doubt more favourable
to the contention of counsel for the accused. It is not, however, from a
construction of the language of those sections but rather that of s. 471(a)
that the submission of counsel on behalf of the accused must be determined. The
language of that section sets forth a clear intention on the part of Parliament
to make that which the accused here did an offence.
The appeal should be dismissed.
LOCKE J.:—I am of the opinion that
this appeal should be dismissed for the reasons given by Mr. Justice O'Halloran
in delivering the judgment of the Court of Appeal.
Appeal dismissed.
Solicitor for the
appellant: H. T. Fitzsimmons.
Solicitor for the
respondent: Eric Pepler.