Supreme Court of Canada
Hadden v. The Queen, [1968] S.C.R. 258
Date: 1968-02-08
John Bruce Hadden Appellant;
and
Her Majesty The
Queen Respondent.
1967: November 20, 21; 1968: February 8.
Present: Cartwright C.J. and Fauteux,
Abbott, Martland, Judson, Ritchie, Hall, Spence and Pigeon JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF APPEAL FOR
BRITISH COLUMBIA
Criminal law—Habitual criminal—Whether
accused leading consistently a criminal life—Criminal Code, 1953-54 (Can.), c.
51, s. 660(2)(a).
Following his conviction on a charge of theft
of one can-opener, of a value not in excess of $50, committed on July 31, 1963,
the appellant was found to be an habitual criminal and sentenced to preventive
detention. The report of the magistrate to the Court of Appeal showed that of
the 14 offences of which he found the appellant had been convicted previously,
the first two were for vagrancy and the third, in 1947, was for breaking and
entering and theft. All subsequent convictions were either for having
possession of drugs (4 offences) or for petty theft (7 offences). The last
conviction was in December 1962 and the punishment was a term of 6 months
imprisonment. There had been a period of less than three months between the
date of his release from prison, on May 5, 1963, and the commission of the
substantive offence on July 31, 1963. The Court of Appeal found that it had not
been shown that the magistrate had erred in principle in finding that the
appellant was an habitual criminal. The appellant was granted leave to appeal
to this Court.
Held (Fauteux,
Abbott, Martland and Ritchie JJ. dissenting): The appeal should be allowed and
the sentence of preventive detention quashed.
Per Cartwright
C.J. and Judson, Hall, Spence and Pigeon JJ.: There was no evidence that since
his release early in May 1963, the appellant was leading a criminal life,
persistently or otherwise, except the commission of the substantive offence on
July 31, 1963. This was not a case where the commission of the substantive
offence could in itself furnish sufficient evidence that the appellant was
leading persistently a criminal life.
Per Fauteux,
Abbott, Martland and Ritchie JJ., dissenting: It has been established
that the appellant was leading persistently a criminal life as required by
s. 660(2)(a) of the Criminal Code. It is open to the Court
to conclude that the accused is leading persistently a criminal life if he
repeatedly commits the same kind of offence and if the time elapsing between
the commission of the offence prior to the substantive offence and the commission
of the substantive offence is short, without necessarily having to have
evidence of criminal acts or associations during that short period. The pattern
of conduct which has been established of the commission of thefts shortly after
release from
[Page 259]
custody, coupled with the short lapse of time
after release and prior to the commission of the substantive offence, was good
evidence of persistence in leading a criminal life.
Droit criminel—Repris de justice—L’accusé
menait-il continûment une vie criminelle—Code criminel, 1953-54 (Can.), c. 51,
art. 660(2)(a).
Ayant été trouvé coupable du vol, commis le
31 juillet 1963, d’un ouvre-boîtes d’une valeur n’excédant pas $50, l’appelant
a été déclaré repris de justice et une sentence de détention préventive lui a
été imposée. Le rapport fourni à la Cour d’Appel par le magistrat fait voir que
des 14 infractions pour lesquelles le magistrat a trouvé que l’appelant avait
été déclaré coupable antérieurement, les deux premières sont pour vagabondage
et la troisième, en 1947, pour entrée par effraction et vol. Toutes les autres
déclarations subséquentes de culpabilité sont soit pour possession de
stupéfiants (4 infractions) ou pour larcin (7 infractions). La dernière
déclaration de culpabilité a été enregistrée en décembre 1962 et l’appelant a
été condamné à 6 mois d’emprisonnement. Il s’est écoulé moins de 3 mois entre
la date de sa mise en liberté le 5 mai 1963 et celle de l’infraction dont il
s’agit, le 31 juillet 1963. La Cour d’Appel a statué qu’il n’avait pas été
démontré que le magistrat avait erré en principe en déclarant que l’appelant
était un repris de justice. L’appelant a obtenu la permission d’en appeler à
cette Cour.
Arrêt: L’appel
doit être accueilli et la sentence de détention préventive doit être annulée,
les Juges Fauteux, Abbott, Martland et Ritchie étant dissidents.
Le Juge en
Chef Cartwright et les Juges Judson, Hall, Spence et Pigeon: Sauf le fait
d’avoir commis l’infraction du 31 juillet 1963, il n’y a aucune preuve que
depuis sa mise en liberté au début du mois de mai 1963, l’appelant avait mené
une vie criminelle, avec persistance ou autrement. Il ne s’agit pas ici d’un
cas où l’infraction de l’offense substantive est en elle-même une preuve
suffisante que l’appelant menait avec persistance une vie criminelle.
Les Juges
Fauteux, Abbott, Martland et Ritchie, dissidents: Il a été établi que
l’appelant menait avec persistance une vie criminelle au sens de l’art. 660(2)(a)
du Code Criminel. La Cour peut conclure que l’accusé mène avec
persistance une vie criminelle s’il a commis à maintes reprises le même genre
d’infractions et si le temps écoulé entre la dernière infraction et celle qui
donne lieu à la sentence, est de courte durée. La preuve d’actes criminels ou
d’associations criminelles durant cette courte période n’est pas nécessaire. Le
genre de vie révélé par une série de vols commis peu de temps après la remise
en liberté suivis d’un bref intervalle de liberté avant l’infraction, est une
bonne preuve de la persistance à mener une vie criminelle.
APPEL d’un jugement de la Cour d’Appel de la
Colombie-Britannique,
confirmant une sentence de détention préventive. Appel maintenu, les juges
Fauteux, Abbott, Martland et Ritchie étant dissidents.
[Page 260]
APPEAL from a judgment of the Court of Appeal
for British Columbia,
affirming a sentence of preventive detention. Appeal allowed, Fauteux, Abbott,
Martland and Ritchie JJ. dissenting.
T.R. Berger, for the appellant.
W.G. Burke-Robertson, Q.C., for the
respondent.
The judgment of Cartwright C.J. and Judson, Hall
and Spence JJ. was delivered by
THE CHIEF JUSTICE:—This is an appeal, brought
pursuant to leave granted by this Court on October 10, 1967, from a judgment of
the Court of Appeal for British Columbia1 pronounced on April 20, 1965,
dismissing an appeal against a sentence to preventive detention imposed on the
appellant by His Worship Magistrate D.D. Hume at Vancouver on March 16, 1964,
in lieu of the sentence of seven months imprisonment imposed on him by His
Worship Magistrate Lorne H. Jackson on August 1, 1963, upon his conviction on
that date on a charge that at the City of Vancouver on July 31, 1963, he
committed theft of one can-opener, of a value not in excess of fifty dollars,
the property of F.W. Woolworth Company Limited.
On October 23, 1963, while the appellant was in
custody in Oakalla Prison Farm, he was served with a notice, pursuant to
s. 662 of the Criminal Code, that an application to find him to be
an habitual criminal and that it was therefore expedient for the protection of
the public to sentence him to preventive detention would be made on Friday,
November 8, 1963, to a magistrate other than Magistrate Lorne H. Jackson. This
notice specified twenty-four convictions previous to the conviction on August
1, 1963, mentioned above and hereinafter referred to as “the substantive
offence”, and concluded as follows:
B. Other Circumstances
26) That you are an habitual associate of
criminals.
27) That you are a drug addict and an
habitual associate of drug addicts.
28) That during your periods of freedom you
have not had regular gainful employment.
29) That after brief periods of freedom you
have consistently returned to your criminal way of life.
[Page 261]
The hearing before Magistrate Hume did not
commence until March 13, 1964; by that time the appellant had been released
from custody. It appeared that the appellant had received notice that the
hearing would proceed on March 13, 1964, but he did not appear; counsel who had
been representing him was given permission to withdraw and the hearing
proceeded ex parte.
At the conclusion of the hearing the learned
Magistrate gave a brief oral judgment as follows:
I find the accused is a habitual criminal
and I sentence him to preventive detention. Issue a warrant for his arrest.
An appeal having been taken, the Magistrate
furnished a report to the Court of Appeal. In paragraph 10 of this report it
was stated that convictions of the three indictable offences for which the
accused was liable to a term of five years or more were proved, that they were
on charges of having possession of drugs and were those specified in
paras. 15, 16 and 19 of the notice of application. On reference to that
notice it appears that those convictions were as follows:
(a) At Vancouver, on April 21, 1953;
sentence, imprisonment for 3 years and a fine of $200.00 or a further term of 2
months;
(b) At Vancouver, On October 2, 1956;
sentence, imprisonment for 2 years and 6 months;
(c) At Vancouver, on July 22, 1959;
sentence, imprisonment for 2 years.
Paragraphs 11, 12 and 13 of the Magistrate’s
report are as follows:
11. The convictions which were proved
against the accused since 1945 are as follows:—
1947 Vagrancy A
1947 Vagrancy A
1947 Breaking and entering and theft
1950 Drugs in possession
1953 Drugs in possession
1956 Drugs in possession
1958 Theft under fifty dollars
1959 Theft under fifty dollars
1959 Drugs in possession
July 1961 Theft under $50.00—2 months
September 1961 Theft under $50.00—2 months
December 1961 Theft under $50.00—4 months
May 1962 Theft under $50.00—6 months
December 1962 Theft under $50.00—6 months
[Page 262]
12. Evidence presented by the Crown to
substantiate paragraph ‘B’ of the Notice of Application, that is other
circumstances, was given as follows:—
|
June 1959
|
Seen with Charles Codd, George
Harrop, known drug addicts, at which time the accused admitted he was
unemployed and had no funds.
|
|
March 1961
|
Seen by Constable Monk with Violet
Young and Papenak, known drug addicts, at which time the accused admitted six
drug convictions.
|
|
June 1961
|
Seen by Constable Aitchison with
Joseph Rawley, who admitted a criminal record.
|
|
September 16, 1961
|
He admitted to Constable Hoyle that
he was at that time a drug addict.
|
|
November 1961
|
Seen by Constable Watt with Charles
Allan, a person who admitted a criminal record and being a drug addict.
|
|
March 1963
|
Seen by Corporal Forgopa (RCMP) with
Gordon Kravenia and Vance Lawson, known addicts.
|
(It appears from the transcript, and was agreed
by counsel before us, that this last item is an error. The date should read
March 1953, not March 1963.)
13. In view of the accused’s lengthy record
for drugs and his most recent convictions since 1961 for theft, I found that he
was leading persistently a criminal life and was hence an habitual criminal,
and that it was expedient for the protection of the public to sentence him to
preventive detention; and as he was not present in court I instructed the
prosecutor to issue and have exercised a warrant for his arrest.
In the Court of Appeal the question which is now
before us was dealt with in one sentence as follows:
In our view it has not been shown that the
learned magistrate in the court below erred in principle which had been applied
by him and approved in this court in many cases, either in the matter of the
finding that the appellant is a habitual criminal, nor the conclusion drawn by
the Magistrate that it is expedient in the interests of the public that this
appellant be sentenced to preventive detention.
The remainder of the reasons given by the Court
of Appeal deals with the question, which was not raised before us, whether the
learned magistrate had the right to proceed with the hearing and give his
decision in the absence of the accused.
The report of the learned magistrate shows that
of the fourteen offences of which he found the appellant had been convicted the
first two were for vagrancy and the third, in 1947, was for breaking and
entering and theft (of two
[Page 263]
electric clippers and a quantity of cigarettes).
All subsequent convictions were either for having possession of drugs (four
offences) or for petty theft (seven offences). The last conviction was in
December 1962 and the punishment was a term of 6 months imprisonment. According
to the evidence of P.C. Needham the appellant was released about May 5, 1963.
This witness testified that he “checked” the appellant on May 12, 1963. He
says:
I have here 5:35 p.m. on May the 12th which
is Sunday, May 12, 1963, I checked this man in the 100 East Hastings. At this
time he told me he was living at Room 15 at the Colonial Hotel by himself. He
was on Social Assistance. He had Fifty Cents in his pockets. He said he had
been on Social Assistance for three or more years and at this time he admitted
having been released from prison one week earlier having served a six months
sentence.
It will be observed from paragraph 12 of the
magistrate’s report, quoted above, that the evidence of circumstances other
than previous convictions upon which the magistrate relied related to occasions
the latest of which was November 1961.
It has been held in a unanimous judgment of this
Court in Kirkland v. The Queen that
the time at which the Crown must show that an accused is leading persistently a
criminal life is the time of the commission of the substantive offence.
In the case at bar there is no evidence that
since his release early in May 1963 the appellant was leading a criminal life,
persistently or otherwise, except the commission of the substantive offence on
July 31, 1963. In some circumstances the commission of the substantive offence
may in itself furnish sufficient evidence that the accused is leading
persistently a criminal life, but this is not one of such cases.
P.C. Needham gave evidence in regard to the
substantive offence. He told of going to the Manager’s Office at F.W. Woolworth
Company’s store on West Hastings Street, at 5.10 p.m. on July 31, 1963, in
response to a radio call and finding the accused there. The Manager charged the
appellant with having stolen a can-opener of the value of
[Page 264]
two dollars and ninety-nine cents and the
following day the appellant pleaded guilty to this charge. P. C. Needham
testified as follows:
At the time of this arrest, he had a
appearance of being mildly intoxicated but there was no smell of liquor on his
breath and when questioned about this he admitted being—having had goof balls
earlier.
* *
*
MR. MORRISON: NOW, you said something about
a goof ball, Constable, what do you mean by that?
A. Well, this is the term that—well, we
asked him if he had been drinking and—
THE COURT: Who asked him?
A. I did, your Worship, during the normal
course of the primary investigation and he denied drinking and I suggested
that—by way of suggestion on my part that he had taken goof balls and he
agreed.
MR. MORRISON: What do you understand by the
term, goof balls?
A. It is some chemical preparation taken by
persons addicted to drugs which they can obtain more easily and a lot less
expense and the effect is similar. This is what I am made to understand.
The picture is of a man “mildly intoxicated” by
“goof balls” stealing a can-opener worth $2.99 rather than of one persisting in
leading a criminal life. The facts are even more consistent with yielding to a
sudden impulse than were those in. Kirkland’s case, supra.
No doubt the record shows that the appellant has
for years been addicted to the use of drugs and from time to time commits petty
thefts. In my opinion, the evidence accepted by the learned magistrate fails to
establish that the appellant was, at the time of committing the substantive
offence, leading persistently a criminal life and this is sufficient to dispose
of the appeal.
As is pointed out in the reasons of my brother
Martland, it was also contended on behalf of the appellant that even if he
could properly be found to be an habitual criminal, it was not proper to impose
a sentence of preventive detention upon him but it is unnecessary to deal with
that submission in these reasons.
I would allow the appeal and quash the sentence
of preventive detention.
The judgment of Fauteux, Abbott, Martland and
Ritchie JJ. was delivered by
MARTLAND J.:—This is an appeal from a judgment
of the Court of Appeal for British Columbia,
which dis-
[Page 265]
missed the appellant’s appeal against a sentence
for preventive detention which had been imposed upon him. The facts giving rise
to this appeal are stated in the reasons of the Chief Justice. The Court of
Appeal found that it had not been shown that the learned magistrate in the
court below erred in principle in the matter of finding that the appellant was
an habitual criminal.
On this issue, the main argument of the
appellant was that it had not been established that he was “leading
persistently a criminal life”, as required by s. 660(2)(a) of the Criminal
Code, which is one of the necessary elements contained in the definition of
an habitual criminal.
The evidence at trial established the following:
1. A series of fifteen convictions (including
that for the substantive offence on August 1, 1963) since the year 1945.
2. He had been convicted in 1950, 1953, 1956 and
1959 of having drugs in his possession.
3. Between 1958 and 1962 the appellant had been
convicted seven times for theft of an article of a value of less than fifty
dollars. The substantive offence, for which he was convicted on August 1, 1963,
was of a similar nature.
4. There had been a period of less than three
months between the date of his release from prison, about May 5, 1963, and the
commission of the substantive offence. When interviewed by a police officer
about a week after that release from detention the appellant said that he was
on Social Assistance and had been on such assistance for three or more years.
5. Detective Devries, of the Vancouver City
Police Force, who had observed the appellant, when he committed the last
offence, prior to the substantive offence, on December 6, 1962, testified that
he had known the appellant for ten years and that the appellant is a user of
narcotics. Asked as to his character and reputation in the community, he said:
Well, in my opinion, as far as he is
concerned, he always hangs down around the 100 Block East Hastings and Skid
Road and I have never known him to make any advance to employment or get out of
the rut he is in.
[Page 266]
In answer to another question, he said:
Yes, I have been on the Drug Squad for a
period of three years or more and also walk the beat in that area for a number
of years and the 100 Block East Hastings is the main hangout for drug addicts
and criminals.
The appellant contends that there was no
evidence that the appellant was engaged in crime between the date of his
release from custody and the commission of the substantive offence and submits
that, without this, the appellant cannot be found to be an habitual criminal
within the requirements of s. 660(2)(a).
In Kirkland v. The Queen, this Court agreed with the statement of
Lord Reading L.C.J. in R. v. Jones,
that:
The legislature never intended that a man
should be convicted of being a habitual criminal merely because he had a number
of previous convictions against him.
That statement was made in a case which involved
the adequacy of a summation to the jury by the Chairman of a Quarter Sessions,
which contained the statement:
If you think his record justifies this
charge of being a habitual criminal it is your duty to find that he is a
habitual criminal.
While it is true that a criminal record alone
does not necessarily involve a finding that at the time the substantive offence
was committed, the accused is leading persistently a criminal life, if the
accused repeatedly commits the same kind of offence, and if the time elapsing
between the commission of the offence prior to the substantive offence and the
commission of the substantive offence is short, in my opinion it is open to the
court, considering the matter, to conclude that the accused is leading
persistently a criminal life, without necessarily having to have evidence of
criminal acts or associations during that short period.
The evidence in the present case establishes a
clear pattern of conduct. In each case noted below the charge involved was
theft.
|
Date of Conviction
|
Sentence
|
|
July, 1961....................................................................
|
2 months
|
|
September, 1961.......................................................
|
4 months
|
|
May, 1962....................................................................
|
6 months
|
|
December, 1962........................................................
|
6 months
|
[Page 267]
Within three months of his release after the
last of the above sentences, the appellant committed theft once again.
In the Kirkland case, it was said that
there had been cases in the Court of Criminal Appeal in which the nature of the
substantive offence viewed in the light of the previous record of the accused
was in itself evidence that he was leading a persistently criminal life, but
that the cases of this kind cited by counsel were all cases in which the
substantive offence was of a nature which showed premeditation and careful
preparation.
The fact of premeditation and careful
preparation in relation to the substantive offence may certainly be evidence of
persistence in leading a criminal life. In my opinion it is not the only kind
of evidence, in cases of this kind, which can establish such persistence, and I
do not regard the Kirkland case as laying this down as a matter of law.
That case was decided upon its own facts, as this one must be. In my view the
pattern of conduct which has been established of the commission of thefts
shortly after release from custody, coupled with the short lapse of time after
release and prior to the commission of the substantive offence, is equally good
evidence of persistence in leading a criminal life. The case of R. v. Yates is an example of this kind.
Counsel for the appellant contended that Part
XXI of the Criminal Code was not intended to apply in respect of the
commission of the sort of crimes committed by the appellant in this case, which
involved no violence and were not of a serious nature. In my opinion, if the
application of Part XXI is to be restricted in this way, that is a matter for
Parliament and not to be achieved by judicial decision. Section 660, in
requiring, as a prerequisite of a person being found to be an habitual
criminal, the commission of three indictable offences for which there is a
liability to imprisonment for five years or more, has defined the nature of the
crimes in respect of which Part XXI can apply.
[Page 268]
It was also contended, on behalf of the
appellant, in the alternative, that, even if he could properly be found to be
an habitual criminal, it was not proper to impose a sentence of preventive
detention upon him. In view of the fact that the majority of this Court have
decided that the evidence in this case fails to establish that the appellant
was persistently leading a criminal life, a necessary requirement to his being
found to be an habitual criminal within para. (a) of subs. (2) of
s. 660 of the Criminal Code, it is unnecessary for me to deal with
those submissions in these reasons.
In my opinion the appeal should be dismissed.
PIGEON J.:—I have had the opportunity of reading
the reasons for judgment of the Chief Justice in this appeal. I concur in his
view that there is no evidence that the appellant, since his release early in
May 1963, was leading a criminal life, persistently or otherwise, except the
commission of the substantive offence on July 31, 1963, and that this is not of
itself sufficient evidence in the circumstances of this case. Therefore, I
would allow the appeal and quash the sentence of preventive detention.
Appeal allowed, FAUTEUX, ABBOTT,
MARTLAND and RITCHIE JJ. dissenting.
Solicitor for the appellant: T.R. Berger,
Vancouver.
Solicitor for the respondent: W.G.
Burke-Robertson, Ottawa.