Supreme Court of Canada
R. v. Carker, [1967] S.C.R. 114
Date: 1966-12-19
Her Majesty The
Queen (Plaintiff) Appellant;
and
Herbert Carker (Defendant)
Respondent.
1966: November 4; 1966: December 19.
Present: Taschereau C.J. and Fauteux,
Abbott, Martland and Ritchie JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF APPEAL FOR
BRITISH COLUMBIA
Criminal law—Unlawful and wilful damage to
public property—Defence of having acted under threat—Whether trial judge erred
in ruling evidence of compulsion inadmissible—Whether accused in danger as a
result of threats—Criminal Code, 1953-54 (Can.), c. 51, ss. 7, 17, 371, 372.
The respondent was convicted of having
unlawfully and wilfully damaged public property. At trial, he admitted having
damaged the plumbing fixtures in the cell where he was incarcerated but,
through his counsel, he sought to introduce evidence to show that he had
committed this offence under the compulsion of threats and was therefore
entitled to be excused by virtue of s. 17 of the Criminal Code and
that he was also entitled to avail himself of the Common Law defence of
“duress” by virtue of s. 7 of the Code. The nature of this evidence, as
outlined by counsel for the accused, was that the offence had been committed
during a disturbance in the course of which a substantial body of prisoners,
shouting in unison from their separate cells, threatened the respondent, who
was not joining in the disturbance, that if he did not
[Page 115]
break the plumbing fixtures in his cell he
would be kicked in the head, his arms would be broken and he would get a knife
in the back at the first opportunity. The trial judge ruled that the proposed
evidence did not indicate a defence or excuse available at law and ruled the
evidence inadmissible. The Court of Appeal held that the evidence should have
been presented to the jury, quashed the conviction and ordered a new trial. The
Crown appealed to this Court.
Held: The
appeal should be allowed, and the conviction restored.
The trial judge was right in deciding that
the proposed evidence did not afford an excuse within the meaning of s. 17
of the Criminal Code. The question of whether immediate threats of
future death or grievous bodily harm constitute an excuse for committing a
crime within the meaning of s. 17 of the Code and the question of whether
a person can be present within the meaning of that section when he is
locked in a separate cell from the place where the offence is committed are
both questions which depend upon the construction to be placed on
section 17 and they are therefore questions of law and not questions of
fact for the jury. Accepting the outline made by defence counsel as being an
accurate account of the evidence which was available, there was nothing in it
to support the defence that the act was not done wilfully within the meaning of
ss. 371(1) and 372(1) of the Code, and there was accordingly no ground to
justify the trial judge in permitting the proposed evidence.
Droit criminel—Dommage à un bien public
causé illégalement et volontairement—Défense de contrainte exercée par des
menaces—Le juge au procès a-t-il erré en décidant que la preuve de contrainte
était inadmissible—L’accusé était-il en danger comme résultat des menaces—Code
Criminel, 1953-54 (Can.), c. 51, arts. 7, 17, 371, 372.
L’intimé a été trouvé coupable d’avoir causé
illégalement et volontairement du dommage à un bien public. Lors du procès, il
a admis avoir endommagé la tuyauterie dans la cellule de la prison où il était
détenu mais, par l’entremise de son avocat, il a tenté d’introduire une preuve
démontrant qu’il avait commis cette offense sous l’effet de la contrainte
exercée par des menaces et qu’il avait droit en conséquence d’être excusé en
vertu de l’art. 17 du Code Criminel et qu’il avait aussi le droit de se
prévaloir de la défense de droit commun de «coercition» en vertu de l’art. 7 du
Code. La nature de cette preuve, telle qu’exposée par son avocat, était à
l’effet que l’offense avait été commise à l’occasion d’un tumulte durant lequel
une partie considérable des prisonniers, criant tous ensemble à tue-tête de
leurs cellules respectives, avaient menacé l’intimé, qui ne s’était pas joint
au tumulte, que s’il ne brisait pas la tuyauterie de sa cellule on le
frapperait à la tête, on lui briserait les bras et on le poignarderait dans le
dos à la première occasion. Le juge au procès décida que la preuve que l’on
voulait offrir ne démontrait pas une défense ou une excuse disponible en droit
et rejeta la preuve comme n’étant pas admissible. La Cour d’appel jugea que la
preuve aurait dû être présentée au jury, cassa le verdict de culpabilité et
ordonna un nouveau procès. La Couronne en appela devant cette Cour.
Arrêt: L’appel
doit être maintenu et le verdict de culpabilité rétabli.
[Page 116]
Le juge au procès a eu raison de décider que
la preuve que l’on voulait offrir n’était pas une excuse selon le sens de
l’art. 17 du Code Criminel. La question de savoir si des menaces
immédiates de mort future ou de lésions corporelles graves constituent une
excuse pour commettre un crime dans le sens de l’art. 17 du Code et la question
de savoir si une personne peut être présente dans le sens de cet article
lorsqu’elle est enfermée sous clef dans une cellule séparée de l’endroit où
l’offense est commise, sont deux questions qui dépendent de l’interprétation de
l’art. 17 et qui sont en conséquence des questions de droit et non pas des
questions de fait pour le jury. Si l’on accepte l’exposé fait par l’avocat de
l’accusé comme étant un récit fidèle de la preuve qui était disponible, il n’y
a rien dans cet exposé pour supporter la défense que l’offense n’avait pas été
commise volontairement dans le sens des arts. 371(1) et 372(1) du Code, et en
conséquence il n’y avait aucune raison justifiant le juge au procès de
permettre la présentation de cette preuve.
APPEL de la Couronne d’un jugement de la Cour
d’appel de la Colombie-Britannique1, ordonnant un nouveau procès. Appel
maintenu.
APPEAL by the Crown from a judgment of the
Court of Appeal for British Columbia,
ordering a new trial. Appeal allowed.
W.G. Burke-Robertson, Q.C., for the
appellant.
Frank G.P. Lewis, for the respondent.
The judgment of the Court was delivered by
RITCHIE J.:—This is an appeal by the Attorney
General of British Columbia from a judgment of the Court of Appeal1
of that Province, from which Mr. Justice MacLean dissented, and by which
it was ordered that the respondent’s conviction for unlawfully and wilfully
damaging public property and thereby committing mischief, should be set aside
and that a new trial should be had.
At the trial the respondent admitted having
damaged the plumbing fixtures in the cell where he was incarcerated at Oakalla
Prison Farm in British Columbia but, through his counsel, he sought to
introduce evidence to show that he had committed this offence under the
compulsion of threats and was therefore entitled to be excused for committing
it by virtue of the provisions of s. 17 of the Criminal Code
[Page 117]
and that he was also entitled to avail himself
of the common law defence of “duress” having regard to the provisions of
s. 7 of the Criminal Code.
Under the latter section it is provided
that:
Every rule and principle of the common law
that renders any circumstance a justification or excuse for an act or a defence
to a charge continues in force and applies in respect of proceedings for an
offence under this Act… except in so far as they are altered by or are
inconsistent with this Act or any other Act of the Parliament of Canada.
The italics are my own.
I agree with the learned trial judge and with
MacLean J.A. that in respect of proceedings for an offence under the Criminal
Code the common law rules and principles respecting “duress” as an excuse
or defence have been codified and exhaustively defined in s. 17 which
reads as follows:
17. A person who commits an offence under
compulsion by threats of immediate death or grievous bodily harm from a person
who is present when the offence is committed is excused for committing the
offence if he believes that the threats will be carried out and if he is not a
party to a conspiracy or association whereby he is subject to compulsion, but
this section does not apply where the offence that is committed is
treason, murder, piracy, attempted murder, assisting in rape, forcible
abduction, robbery, causing bodily harm or arson.
At the outset of the proceedings at the trial in
the present case and in the absence of the jury, Mr. Greenfield, who acted
on behalf of the accused, informed the Court that he intended to call evidence
of compulsion and duress and he elected to outline the nature of this evidence
which was that the offence had been committed during a disturbance, apparently
organized by way of protest, to damage property at the Prison Farm in the
course of which a substantial body of prisoners, shouting in unison from their
separate cells, threatened the respondent, who was not joining in the
disturbance, that if he did not break the plumbing fixtures in his cell he
would be kicked in the head, his arm would be broken and he would get a knife
in the back at the first opportunity.
The question which the learned trial judge was
required to determine on Mr. Greenfield’s application was whether the
proposed evidence which had been outlined to him indicated a defence or excuse
available at law; he decided
[Page 118]
that it did not and the majority of the Court of
Appeal having taken a different view, the Attorney General now appeals to this
Court.
There can be little doubt that the evidence
outlined by Mr. Greenfield, which was subsequently confirmed by the
evidence given by the ringleaders of the disturbance in mitigation of sentence,
disclosed that the respondent committed the offence under the compulsion of
threats of death and grievous bodily harm, but although these threats were
“immediate” in the sense that they were continuous until the time that the
offence was committed, they were not threats of “immediate death” or “immediate
grievous bodily harm” and none of the persons who delivered them was present in
the cell with the respondent when the offence was committed. I am accordingly
of opinion that the learned trial judge was right in deciding that the proposed
evidence did not afford an excuse within the meaning of s. 17 of the Criminal
Code,
In the course of his most thoughtful judgment in
the Court of Appeal, Mr. Justice Norris had occasion to say:
The question of whether or not a person
threatening was present goes to the question of the grounds for the fear which
the appellant might have. In my opinion a person could be present making a
throat although separated by the bars of the cell. These are all matters which
should have gone to the jury, as was the question of whether or not the threat
of death or grievous bodily harm was an immediate one—a question of degree.
They might well consider that the threat was immediate as being continuous, as
it was in this case, that it would be all the more frightening because of the
uncertainty as to when it actually might happen, and therefore force him to act
as he did.
With the greatest respect it appears to me that
the question of whether immediate threats of future death or grievous bodily
harm constitute an excuse for committing a crime within the meaning of
s. 17 and the question of whether a person can be “present” within the
meaning of that section when he is locked in a separate cell from the
place where the offence is committed are both questions which depend upon the
construction to be placed on the section and they are therefore questions
of law and not questions of fact for the jury. See Vail v. The Queen and The Queen v. Sikyea.
[Page 119]
In support of the suggestion that the threat in
the present case was “immediate and continuous” Mr. Justice Norris relied
on the case of Subramaniam v. Public Prosecutor, in which the Privy Council decided that
the trial judge was wrong in excluding evidence of threats to which the
appellant was subjected by Chinese terrorists in Malaya. In that case it was
found that the threats were a continuous menace up to the moment when the
appellant was captured because the terrorists might have come back at any time
and carried them into effect. Section 94 of the Penal Code of the Federated
Malay States, which the appellant sought to invoke in that case provided:
94. Except murder and offences included in
Chapter VI punishable with death, nothing is an offence which is done by a
person who is compelled to do it by threats, which, at the time of doing it,
reasonably cause the apprehension that instant death to that person will
otherwise be the consequence;…
The distinctions between the Subramaniam case
and the present one lie in the fact that Subramaniam might well have had
reasonable cause for apprehension that instant death would result from his
disobeying the terrorists who might have come back at any moment, whereas it is
virtually inconceivable that “immediate death” or “grievous bodily harm” could
have come to Carker from those who were uttering the threats against him as
they were locked up in separate cells, and it is also to be noted that the
provisions of s. 17 of the Criminal Code are by no means the same
as those of s. 94 of the Penal Code of the Federated Malay States; amongst
other distinctions the latter section contains no provision that the
person who utters the threats must be present when the offence is committed in
order to afford an excuse for committing it.
Both Mr. Justice Norris and
Mr. Justice Branca in delivering their separate reasons for judgment in
the Court of Appeal, expressed the view that the evidence which was tendered
should have been admitted on the issue of whether the respondent acted wilfully
in damaging the prison plumbing or whether he was so affected by the threats
uttered against him as to be incapable of adopting any other course than the
one which he did.
[Page 120]
The relevant provisions of the Criminal Code read
as follows:
372(1) Every one commits mischief who
wilfully
(a) destroys or damages property,…
(3) Every one who commits mischief in
relation to public property is guilty of an indictable offence and is liable to
imprisonment for fourteen years.
On this phase of the matter, Mr. Justice
Norris had this to say:
In making the ruling which he did the
learned trial judge deprived the appellant of what could be a substantial
defence to the charge or an excuse under s. 17 without hearing the
evidence. The jury could not decide whether the act was in fact wilful. This
was not a matter on which the judge might rule. The length to which the
evidence might go to disprove the essentials of the charge or to prove the
requirements of s. 17 could never in the absence of the evidence of witnesses
be apparent either to the learned judge or to the jury.
With the greatest respect, this portion of
Mr. Justice Norris’ reasons for judgment appears to overlook the fact that
“the length to which the evidence might go…” was fully outlined to the learned judge
by counsel for the respondent when he was making the application.
In this regard it is important to bear in mind
the fact that “wilful” as it is used in Part IX of the Criminal Code is
defined in s. 371 (1) which reads, in part, as follows:
371(1) Every one who causes the occurrence
of an event by doing an act or by omitting to do an act that it is his duty to
do, knowing that the act or omission will probably cause the occurrence of the
event and being reckless whether the event occurs or not, shall be deemed, for
the purposes of this Part, wilfully to have caused the occurrence of the event.
The evidence outlined to the learned trial judge
discloses that the criminal act was committed to preserve the respondent from
future harm coming to him, but there is no suggestion in the evidence tendered
for the defence that the accused did not know that what he was doing would
“probably cause” damage. Accepting the outline made by defence counsel as being
an accurate account of the evidence which was available, there was in my view
nothing in it to support the defence that the act was not done “wilfully”
within the meaning of s. 371(1) and 372(1) of the Criminal Code and
there was accordingly no ground to justify the learned trial judge in
permitting the proposed evidence to be called in support of such a defence.
[Page 121]
In view of all the above, I would allow this
appeal, set aside the judgment of the Court of Appeal and restore the
conviction.
Appeal allowed and conviction
restored.
Solicitor for the appellant: G.L. Murray,
Vancouver.
Solicitor for the respondent: D.E.
Greenfield, Vancouver.