Supreme Court of Canada
Tupper v. R., [1967] S.C.R. 589
Date: 1967-06-26
Jasper Tupper (Plaintiff)
Appellant;
and
Her Majesty The
Queen (Defendant) Respondent.
1967: May 5; 1967: June 26.
Present: Fauteux, Martland, Judson, Ritchie
and Hall JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF APPEAL FOR
ONTARIO.
Criminal law—Possession of housebreaking
instruments—Whether evidence of possession—Instruments normally used for
ordinary purposes—Whether onus on accused to explain—Criminal Code, 1953-54
(Can.), c. 51, ss. 3(4), 295(1).
The appellant was convicted of possession of
housebreaking instruments under s. 295(1) of the Criminal Code. In the
early hours of the morning he had been a passenger in a car which, to his
knowledge, was wrongfully out of the possession of its owner. In the car there
were found three screwdrivers, a flashlight, socks, nylon stockings, a crowbar
and a pair of woollen gloves with leather palms. Some ten days earlier, the
police had seen the appellant and the same driver in the same car at about the
same hour and had found therein similar articles with the exception of the
crowbar. The appellant’s conviction was affirmed by the Court of Appeal. He was
granted leave to appeal to this Court on the following questions of law: (1)
was there any evidence, before the magistrate, of possession by the appellant;
and (2) was the Crown obliged to adduce evidence to show suspicious
circumstances before the onus was cast on the accused to provide an
explanation?
Held: The
appeal should be dismissed.
There was evidence on which the magistrate,
acting judicially, could convict the appellant of possession.
Once possession of an instrument capable of
being used for housebreaking has been shown, the burden shifts to the accused
to show on a balance of probabilities that there was lawful excuse for
possession of the instrument at the time and place in question.
Droit criminel—Possession d’instruments
d’effraction—Preuve de possession—Instruments employés normalement pour des
fins ordinaires—L’accusé a le fardeau de donner une explication—Code criminel,
1953-54 (Can.), c. 51, arts. 3(4), 295(1).
L’appelant a été trouvé coupable de
possession d’instruments d’effraction sous l’art 295(1) du Code
Criminel. Aux petites heures du matin, il était passager dans une
automobile qui, à sa connaissance, était illégalement hors de la possession de
son propriétaire, et dans laquelle ont été trouvés trois tournevis, une lampe
de poche, des bas de nylon, un levier et une paire de gants de laine dont les
paumes étaient en cuir. Dix jours auparavant, la police avait vu l’appelant et
le même conducteur dans la même automobile à peu près à la même heure et y
avait trouvé des objets semblables, à l’exclusion du levier. La déclaration de
culpabilité a été confirmée par la Cour
[Page 590]
d’Appel. L’appelant a obtenu la permission
d’en appeler devant cette Cour sur les questions de droit suivantes: (1) Est-ce
qu’il y avait une preuve de possession par l’appelant devant le magistrat; et
(2) la Couronne devait-elle produire une preuve montrant des circonstances
suspectes avant que le fardeau de fournir des explications ne tombe sur
l’appelant?
Arrêt: L’appel
doit être rejeté.
Le magistrat, agissant juridiquement, pouvait
déclarer l’appelant coupable de possession en se basant sur la preuve
existante.
Lorsqu’il a été démontré qu’il y a possession
d’un instrument pouvant servir aux effractions, l’accusé a alors le fardeau de
démontrer par une balance des probabilités qu’il existait une excuse légitime
pour être en possession de l’instrument à ce moment et à cet endroit.
APPEL d’un jugement de la Cour d’Appel de
l’Ontario confirmant une déclaration de culpabilité. Appel rejeté.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Court of Appeal
for Ontario affirming the
appellant’s conviction. Appeal dismissed.
B.A. Crane, for the appellant.
D.A. McKenzie, for the respondent.
The judgment of Fauteux, Martland, Judson and
Ritchie JJ. was delivered by
JUDSON J.:—The appellant Jasper Tupper was
charged under s. 295(1) of the Criminal Code with possession of
housebreaking instruments. Section 295(1) reads:
295. (1) Every one who without lawful
excuse, the proof of which lies upon him, has in his possession any instrument
for house-breaking, vault-breaking or safe-breaking is guilty of an indictable
offence and is liable to imprisonment for fourteen years.
On October 5, 1965, at 1:50 a.m., the police stopped a car at
James and King Streets in Hamilton. One Donald Richardson was the driver and the appellant was a
passenger in the front seat. The police found in the vehicle:
(1) a yellow-handled screwdriver in the rear
seat;
(2) a Phillips maroon-handled screwdriver on the
front seat on the passenger side;
(3) a red flashlight in the glove compartment;
(4) two white socks in the glove compartment;
[Page 591]
(5) two nylon stockings in the glove
compartment;
(6) a seventeen-inch gooseneck crowbar under the
front seat on the driver’s side;
(7) a pair of grey woollen gloves with leather
palms under the front seat on the driver’s side;
(8) a screwdriver with a three and one-half inch
blade which was inserted in the right-hand woollen glove under the front seat
on the driver’s side.
On September 24, 1965, at 1:45 a.m., the same car had been stopped on Birge Street in Hamilton. Richardson was the
driver and the appellant Tupper was a passenger, together with one other
person. The police had found on this occasion similar articles with the
exception of the crowbar. The police did not lay a charge on this occasion.
Both Richardson, the driver, and the appellant,
Tupper, were convicted. Tupper appealed to the Court of Appeal. His conviction
was affirmed and his sentence increased. With leave, he appeals to this Court
on two questions of law:
1. Whether there was any evidence, before
the magistrate, of possession of the instruments by the Appellant;
2. If the instruments found are capable of
and normally used for ordinary purposes, but may also be used for
housebreaking, is the Crown obliged to adduce evidence to show suspicious
circumstances before the onus is cast on the accused to provide an explanation?
Question 1.
On the question of possession, my opinion is
that there was evidence on which the magistrate, acting judicially, could
convict.
This car was owned neither by Richardson nor by Tupper. It had been
leased by a third person, Edward Ryckman, from Snelgrove Motors on September
23, 1965, for one day. They got it back a month later with an extra 3,000 miles
on the car. The articles were not in the car when it was rented to Ryckman.
Ryckman said they belonged to him and his wife.
The car was first stopped the day after it was
leased by Ryckman, that is, on September 24, 1965, at 1:45 a.m., with
Richardson as driver, Tupper as a passenger, together with a third person. It
was stopped again on October 5,
[Page 592]
1965, and it was in connection with the articles
then found in the car that Richardson and Tupper were charged.
In my opinion, on that occasion, Richardson and
Tupper were both in wrongful possession of the car. The fact that Richardson was driving in these
circumstances does not give him sole possession of the car. They were both in
possession of the car and both as wrongdoers, knowing that the car had been
retained by Ryckman beyond the term of its lease, which was one day.
Richardson and Tupper were not going about their
ordinary business with screwdrivers, flashlights, nylon stockings and a crowbar
in the middle of the day. They were abroad at a highly suspicious time. There
was also evidence that one of the screwdrivers was on the seat on which Tupper
was actually sitting. Screwdrivers are not left haphazardly on the seats of
cars.
On these facts the magistrate could properly
find that both Richardson and Tupper were in possession of these instruments.
Section 3(4) of the Criminal Code reads:
(4) For the purposes of this Act,
(a) a person has anything in
possession when he has it in his personal possession or knowingly
(i) has it in the actual possession or
custody of another person,
or
(ii) has it in any place, whether or not
that place belongs to or is occupied by him, for the use or benefit of himself
or of another person; and
(b) where one of two or more
persons, with the knowledge and consent of the rest, has anything in his
custody or possession, it shall be deemed to be in the custody and possession
of each and all of them.
Question 2.
Leave was given on this question because of a
conflict in the jurisprudence between some of the provinces. On the one side
there are the cases of R. v. Smith;
R. v. Haire; R.
v. McRae. These
cases held that if the tools, although capable of being used for housebreaking,
would normally serve a lawful purpose, the Crown should prove “some event,
overt action, or declaration, to identify the tools with a specific unlawful
purpose”.
[Page 593]
In my opinion, this statement of the law is
erroneous and ignores the plain wording of the section. The English version
reads: “any instrument for house-breaking”; the French version reads: “un
instrument pouvant servir aux effractions de maisons”. The French version makes
the meaning clear. Both versions mean the same thing. An instrument for
house-breaking is one capable of being used for house-breaking.
The principle contended for here is that there
is no onus on the accused to provide an explanation until the Crown has adduced
some evidence from which an inference might be drawn that the accused intended
to use such instruments for the purpose of house-breaking.
I think the law is correctly stated by the
Ontario Court of Appeal in R. v. Gilson
and in the earlier judgment of the Ontario Court of Appeal in R. v. Kernychne
but unreported; R. v. Singleton,
decided in 1956, and in R. v. Jones
Once possession of an instrument capable of
being used for housebreaking has been shown, the burden shifts to the accused
to show on a balance of probabilities that there was lawful excuse for
possession of the instrument at the time and place in question.
I would dismiss the appeal.
HALL J.:—I have read the reasons of my brother
Judson and, with respect to question 1, I agree that there was evidence upon
which the magistrate, acting judicially, could convict and I would dismiss the
appeal.
Question 2 has given me a great deal of concern.
I am, with reluctance, compelled by the wording of s. 295(1) which reads:
295. (1) Every one who without lawful
excuse, the proof of which lies upon him, has in his possession any instrument
for house-breaking, vault-breaking or safe-breaking is guilty of an indictable
offence and is liable to imprisonment for fourteen years.
to agree that, as stated by my brother Judson:
Once possession of an instrument capable of
being used for housebreaking has been shown, the burden shifts to the accused
to show on a balance of probabilities that there was lawful excuse for
possession of the instrument at the time and place in question.
[Page 594]
Whether Parliament intended it or not, s.
295(1), as it reads, permits of no other interpretation. It puts the possessor
of many necessary tools of trade, automobile accessories and tools and hundreds
of similar instruments used and carried daily for routine purposes which might
be capable of being used for house-breaking in the position that merely from
being in possession under the most innocent circumstances, he can be brought
into court and put to the proof that he has a lawful excuse for having a
screwdriver, a flashlight or some other such household tool or instrument in
his car, boat, tool kit or on his person at any given time or place which
includes his home. It can be argued and readily accepted that this may not
happen frequently, but it can and may happen if Parliament really intended what
the section says when, without any qualification as to time or circumstance, it
put the burden of proof on the person in whose possession any such item may be
found.
The interpretation which the wording of the
section compels should, I think, be drawn to Parliament’s attention.
Appeal dismissed.
Solicitors for the appellant: Gowling,
MacTavish, Osborne & Henderson, Ottawa.
Solicitor for the respondent: W.C.
Bowman, Toronto.