Supreme Court of Canada
Lemieux v. R., [1967] S.C.R. 492
Date: 1967-05-23
Florian Lemieux (Plaintiff)
Appellant;
and
Her Majesty The
Queen (Defendant) Respondent.
1967: February 23; 1967: May 23.
Present: Taschereau C.J. and Cartwright,
Fauteux, Judson and Spence JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF APPEAL FOR
ONTARIO.
Criminal law—Breaking and entering—Trap laid
by police—Accused solicited by police informer—Whether offence—Criminal Code,
1953-54 (Can.), c. 51, ss.
292(1)(a), 597(1)(b).
The accused and another man were solicited by
a police informer to undertake to break and enter a dwelling house in Ottawa where the police were waiting for
them. The police, in order to lay the trap, had secured the key from the owner
of the house, who was willing to cooperate in this scheme. The accused had no
thought of breaking and entering this house until approached by the informer.
The accused was convicted of breaking and entering, and his appeal was
dismissed by the Court of Appeal. He was granted leave to appeal to this Court
on the following question of law: Did the trial judge err in law in not
charging the jury as to whether there was a consent to the breaking and
entering?
Held: The
appeal should be allowed, the conviction quashed and a verdict of acquittal
entered.
On the evidence, it was open to the jury to
find that the owner of the house had placed the police officers in possession
of it giving them authority to deal with it as they pleased and that they had
not merely consented to the informer breaking into it with the assistance of
the accused and others, but had urged him to do so. To break into a house in
these circumstances is not an offence. On the assumption on which this appeal
was argued, mens rea was clearly established but
[Page 493]
it was open to the jury to find that,
notwithstanding the guilty intention of the appellant, the actus which
was in fact committed was no crime at all.
Droit criminel—Introduction par
effraction—Piège tendu par la police—Accusé sollicité par un mouchard—Y a-t-il
eu offense—Code Criminel, 1953-54 (Can.), c. 51, arts. 292(1)(a), 597(1)(b).
L’accusé et un autre homme ont été sollicités
par un mouchard d’entreprendre de s’introduire par effraction dans une
résidence à Ottawa où des policiers les attendaient. Dans le but de tendre le
piège, les policiers avaient obtenu la clef du propriétaire de la maison, qui
avait consenti à coopérer dans le projet. L’accusé n’avait pas eu l’intention
de s’introduire par effraction dans cette maison jusqu’à ce que le mouchard le
lui eut proposé. L’accusé a été trouvé coupable de s’être introduit par
effraction, et son appel a été rejeté par la Cour d’Appel. Il a obtenu
permission d’appeler devant cette Cour sur la question de droit suivante: Le
Juge au procès a-t-il erré en droit en n’adressant pas le jury sur la question
de savoir s’il y avait eu consentement à l’introduction par effraction?
Arrêt: L’appel
doit être maintenu, le verdict de culpabilité annulé et remplacé par un verdict
d’acquittement.
Sur la preuve, le jury était libre de trouver
que le propriétaire de la maison avait mis les policiers en la possession
d’icelle, les autorisant d’en faire ce qui leur plairait et que non seulement
les policiers avaient consenti à ce que le mouchard s’y introduise par
effraction avec l’aide de l’accusé et d’autres, mais qu’ils avaient incité ce
dernier à le faire. Dans ces circonstances, l’introduction par effraction dans
une maison n’est pas une offense. Selon l’hypothèse en vertu de laquelle cette
affaire a été plaidée, la mens rea a été clairement établie mais le jury
était libre de trouver que, en dépit de l’intention fautive de l’accusé, l’actus
qui a été en fait commis n’était pas un crime.
APPEL d’un jugement de la Cour d’Appel de
l’Ontario confirmant un verdict de culpabilité. Appel
maintenu.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Court of Appeal
for Ontario affirming the
accused’s conviction. Appeal allowed.
John F. Hamilton, for the appellant.
C.M. Powell, for the respondent.
The judgment of the Court was delivered by
JUDSON J.:—In October of 1964, the appellant,
Florian Lemieux, was tried before a judge and jury on an indictment charging
that he did
on the 17th day of November, A.D. 1963, at
the City of Ottawa in the County of Carleton, unlawfully break and enter the
dwelling house of Benjamin Achbar situated at premises numbered 905 Killeen
Avenue in the said City of Ottawa, with intent to commit an indictable offence
therein, contrary to Section 292(1) (a) of the Criminal Code.
[Page 494]
He was found guilty and sentenced to three
years’ imprisonment. His appeal to the Court of Appeal was dismissed on
February 24, 1965. His appeal to this Court, pursuant to leave granted under s.
597(1) (b) of the Criminal Code is on the following question of
law:
Did the learned Trial Judge err in law in
not charging the jury as to whether there was a consent to the breaking and
entering?
The facts of the case which give rise to this
suggested defence are very unusual. In November of 1963, the Ottawa Police were
very anxious to arrest the members of a gang which was known as the “hooded
gang” and which was engaged in a series of break-ins in the Ottawa area. On November 16, 1963, one R.D. Bard telephoned
an officer of the Ottawa Police Department to inform him that he had
information about this gang. The officer immediately visited Bard at his house
and Bard told him that he wanted money for his information. The officer then
summoned another officer, who came to Bard’s house. Then all three went to see
an inspector of the Ottawa Police Department.
Bard and the first two mentioned officers next
drove to the west end of the City of Ottawa to look for a house where a feigned break-in could be staged. They
went to the neighbourhood of Killeen Avenue and Lenester Street
where Bard pointed out a house at 905 Killeen Avenue belonging to Mr. Benjamin Achbar. Bard knew this house because some
time before he had paved the laneway. The Police obtained the key to Achbar’s
house from Achbar himself and then staked out the premises.
On November 17, 1963, at 7.30 p.m., a car owned by Florian Lemieux drove
past the house. There were three men in the car. Lemieux was driving under the
direction of Bard. The third man was Jean Guindon. The car circled the block
and was then parked near the house. Guindon and. Bard got out of the car.
Lemieux remained behind the wheel. Guindon and Bard went to the side door and
Guindon did the actual breaking with a screwdriver. The Police were waiting
inside. Bard was arrested on the spot. Lemieux was arrested in the car. Guindon
escaped and was arrested a short time later.
Bard was called at trial as a witness for the
Crown. On cross-examination he did not remember what was discussed with the
police on November 16, 1963; did not remember if
[Page 495]
he agreed to take part in the break-in; did not
remember if the matter of a reward was discussed and did not remember that he
had picked out the Achbar house for the purpose of breaking and entering.
Guindon was also called as a Crown witness and
testified that Lemieux knew nothing about the break-in and that he thought that
he was driving Bard to the house for the purpose of enabling Bard to collect
money owing to him. Guindon was declared a hostile witness and a previous
inconsistent statement was put to him in which he had said that he had asked
Lemieux to drive him to the house because he and Bard were going to break in.
Guindon sought to minimize the effect of this statement by pleading lack of
understanding of the contents because of language difficulties, but the two
police officers who took the statement both said that Guindon had spoken to
them in English that night.
Both Guindon and Lemieux were convicted by the
jury. Their appeals to the Court of Appeal were also dismissed. Bard, the
informer, pleaded guilty and received a heavy sentence. His appeal to the Court
of Appeal was allowed and he was acquitted.
Lemieux’s appeal to this Court was argued on the
basis that he knew that he was acting as a driver to take Bard and Guindon to a
house that he had never seen and that these two were going to break in. What he
did not know, however, was that he, along with Guindon, was being led into a
trap. It is quite clear that he and Guindon were solicited by Bard, the
informer, to undertake this break-in. The police had secured the key from the
owner of the house, who was willing to co-operate in this scheme. In the
present case Lemieux had no thought of breaking and entering this house until
he was approached by Bard, who was acting under police instruction. The police
had obtained the consent of the owner to use the premises in the hope that they
would be able to arrest certain criminals.
The case is very different from Rex v.
Chandler, where
an accused who intended to break into a shop sought a key from the servant of
the owner of the shop. This servant informed his master. The key was supplied
and the police were waiting for the shop-breaker when he arrived. The key
[Page 496]
in this case was supplied by the servant only
for the purpose that the criminal might be detected in the commission of the
offence. The criminal was guilty of shop-breaking.
But in Lemieux’s case, the facts are not at all
similar. The police set the whole scheme in motion through Bard. He was to lead
a man who at first had no intention of breaking and entering, who went to the
scene of the crime at Bard’s instigation and who was led into the trap by Bard.
On the evidence it was open to the jury to find
that the owner of the house had placed the police officers in possession of it
giving them authority to deal with it as they pleased and that they had not
merely consented to Bard breaking into it with the assistance of others, but
had urged him to do so. To break into a house in these circumstances is not an
offence.
For Lemieux to be guilty of the offence with
which he was charged, it was necessary that two elements should co-exist, (i)
that he had committed the forbidden act, and (ii) that he had the wrongful
intention of so doing. On the assumption on which the appeal was argued mens
rea was clearly established but it was open to the jury to find that,
notwithstanding the guilty intention of the appellant, the actus which
was in fact committed, was no crime at all.
In my opinion, if the jury had been properly
charged on this aspect of the matter and had taken the view of the facts which
it has been pointed out above it was open to them to take, they would have
acquitted the appellant.
Had Lemieux in fact committed the offence with
which he was charged, the circumstance that he had done the forbidden act at
the solicitation of an agent provocateur would have been irrelevant to
the question of his guilt or innocence. The reason that this conviction cannot
stand is that the jury were not properly instructed on a question vital to the
issue whether any offence had been committed.
I would allow the appeal, quash the conviction
and direct that a verdict of acquittal be entered.
Appeal allowed and conviction quashed.
Solicitor for the appellant: John F.
Hamilton, Toronto.
Solicitor for the respondent: The
Attorney General for Ontario, Toronto.