Supreme Court of Canada
Goldhar
v. The Queen, [1960] S.C.R. 431
Date:
1960-04-11
Jack Goldhar Appellant;
and
Her Majesty The Queen Respondent.
1960: March 8; 1960: April 11.
Present: Kerwin C.J. and Taschereau, Locke, Cartwright,
Fauteux, Abbott and Judson JJ.
Criminal law—Habeas corpus—Conspiracy to traffic in
drugs—Accused held in penitentiary under certificate of sentence issued by
convicting Court—Whether sufficient authority for detention of accused—New
Criminal Code coming into force during alleged period of offence— Whether
sentence should be under new Code—The Supreme Court Act, R.S.C. 1962, c. 259, s. 67—The
Penitentiaries Act, R.S.C. 1952, c. 206, ss. 49(1), 51—The General Sessions
Act, R.S.O. 1950, c. 158, s. 2 —The Criminal Code, 1958-54 (Can.) c. 51, ss.
2(10), 408(l)(d), 413.
The accused was convicted in the Court of General Session of
the Peace for the County of York of conspiracy to traffic in drugs and was
sentenced to 12 years imprisonment, pursuant to s. 408(1) (d) of the new
Criminal Code, which came into force during the period of time within
which the offence was alleged to have been committed. He has been detained in a
penitentiary by the authority of a Calendar of Sentences under the seal of the
Court of General Sessions of the Peace. His appeal from the conviction was
dismissed and leave to appeal to this Court was refused. He then moved for a
writ of habeas corpus which was refused by a judge of this Court. His
appeal from the sentence having been dismissed by the Court of Appeal and leave
refused by this Court, he now appeals from the refusal of the writ.
Held: The appeal should be dismissed; the application
for a writ of habeas corpus was rightly dismissed.
Per Kerwin C.J.: The Calendar was a certificate regular
on its face that the accused had been convicted by a Court of competent
criminal jurisdiction and, therefore, it was impossible to go behind it on an
application for habeas corpus. There was no substance in the objection
that the description of the offence was insufficient; nor did it make any
difference that the Court of General Sessions of the Peace was not a superior
court of criminal jurisdiction.
As to the argument that the sentencing provisions of the
former Code should have been applied, there was nothing to indicate that the
evidence before the jury did not disclose that the conspiracy commenced after
April 1, 1955. The Court of Appeal having heard and dismissed an appeal as to
sentence, any judge in Ontario would be bound by that decision and, therefore,
any judge of this Court, having by virtue of s. 57 of the Supreme Court Act concurrent
jurisdiction with the Court or judges of Ontario, would be similarly bound.
There was now no justification for the idea that, if a person is refused a writ
of habeas corpus by one judge, he may go to each judge in succession to
renew his application.
Per Taschereau, Fauteux, Abbott and Judson JJ.: The
question sought to be determined by the accused—the maximum penalty for the
offence of which he was convicted—would require consideration of the evidence
at trial, and would be tantamount to converting the
[Page 432]
writ into a writ of error or an appeal. The functions of such
a writ do not extend beyond an inquiry into the jurisdiction of the Court by
which process the subject is held in custody and into the validity of the
process upon its face.
The accused was convicted and sentenced by a Court of
competent jurisdiction, the Calendar was a certificate regular on its face, and
the application for the writ was rightly dismissed.
Per Locke and Cartwright JJ.: What was sought by the
accused was an adjudication on the question as to what was the maximum penalty
for the offence of which he was convicted. That was a point which the trial
judge had jurisdiction to decide, and which could be further pursued on appeal.
The writ of habeas corpus is not a writ of course and may be refused
where an alternative remedy by which the validity of the detention can be
determined is available. So long as the sentence of a competent Court stands
unreversed, it is a legal justification for the imprisonment. On the facts of
this case, the writ was rightly refused, and a fortiori it should be
refused now as the very question which the accused seeks to have decided was res
judicata between the parties.
APPEAL from a judgment of Martland J. of the Supreme
Court of Canada, refusing a writ of habeas corpus. Appeal
dismissed.
G. B. Langille, for the appellant.
D.H.W. Henry, Q.C., and L. E. Levy, for
the respondent.
The Chief Justice:—Jack
Goldhar applied to Martland J. under s. 57 of the Supreme Court Act, R.S.C
1952, c. 259, for a writ of habeas corpus ad subjiciendum. That section
reads as follows:
57.(1) Every judge of the Court, except in matters arising
out of any claim for extradition under any treaty, has concurrent jurisdiction
with the courts or judges of the several provinces, to issue the writ of habeas
corpus ad subjiciendum, for the purpose of an inquiry into the cause of
commitment in any criminal case under any Act of the Parliament of Canada.
(2) If the judge refuses the writ or remands the prisoner,
an appeal lies to the Court.
The writ was refused and under the authority
conferred by subs. (2) Goldhar appealed to the Court.
On April 27, 1956, Goldhar had been found guilty in the
Court of General Sessions of the Peace for the County of York in the Province
of Ontario under the first count of an indictment charging that he and others
at the City of
[Page 433]
Toronto, in the County of York and elsewhere in the Province
of Ontario, between the fifteenth day of March and the sixth day of August in
the year 1955, unlawfully did conspire together, the one with the other or
others of them and persons unknown, to commit the indictable offence of having
in their possession a drug, to wit., diacetyl-morphine, for the purpose of
trafficking, an indictable offence under the Opium and Narcotic Drug Act, contrary
to the Criminal Code. On May 4, 1956, he was sentenced by the judge
presiding in the General Sessions of the Peace, His Honour Judge Macdonell, to
twelve years imprisonment in the Kingston Penitentiary. Presumably shortly
thereafter he was taken to the institution where he is now incarcerated.
A search was made by a solicitor on behalf of the appellant
in the Records Office of the Kingston Penitentiary and there was produced to
him a Calendar of Sentences,—Sessions—as being the authority under which the
appellant was detained. That calendar was a certificate, dated May 4, 1956,
signed by the Deputy Clerk of the Peace, York, and under the seal of the Court
of General Sessions of the Peace in and for the County of York, certifying that
the name of the prisoner was "Goldhar, Jack", that the offence was
"conspiracy (to have in possession a drug for the purpose of
trafficking)", that the date of sentence was "4th May, 1956" and
that the sentence was "Twelve years in the Kingston Penitentiary".
Attached to the solicitor's affidavit was a copy of the Calendar of Sentences
and a copy of the indictment with the endorsement of the conviction and
sentence on the back. The affidavit stated that the deponent had been advised
by a stenographer in the Records Office of the penitentiary that the Calendar
is the only document received at such office "when a person is convicted
by a Judge at a Court of General Sessions of the Peace or by a Judge at a
County Court"; and that, "it is only in the situation where a
conviction is registered by a magistrate or the Supreme Court that Form 18 of
the forms set out in the Criminal Code is used as the Warrant of
Committal to Kingston Penitentiary". Furthermore, he was advised that the
Calendar of Sentences,—Sessions was the only authority by which Goldhar was
detained in custody.
[Page 434]
An appeal by Goldhar to the Court of Appeal for Ontario from
his conviction was dismissed and an application for leave to appeal from that
dismissal to this Court was refused. He thereupon launched the motion for a
writ of habeas corpus, which was heard in October and November 1958, and
his appeal from the order of Martland J. came on for hearing in June 1959. It
then appearing that he had not applied to the Court of Appeal for Ontario for
leave to appeal from his sentence, the appeal before us was adjourned in order
to permit him to seek such leave, with permission to renew his appeal to this
Court after the disposition of his application to the Court of Appeal. That
Court granted him leave to appeal from his conviction restricted to the ground:
Whether Section 408(l)(d) of Criminal Code, 1953-54, Ch. 51
is applicable to the conspiracy committed since, if it is not, the maximum
sentence for a conspiracy not specifically named in Criminal Code. R.S.C. 1927,
Ch. 36 is found under Section 573 of said statute, namely seven years.
When, pursuant to such leave, his appeal from sentence
was heard by the Court of Appeal, it was dismissed. An application by him to
appeal to this Court from that dismissal was refused.
Thereupon, pursuant to the leave reserved to him, he renewed his appeal before
us from the order of Martland J. and that appeal was heard on March 7 and 8 of this
year.
Sections 49(1) and 51 of the Penitentiaries Act, R.S.C.
1952, c. 206 enact:
49. (1) The sheriff or deputy sheriff of any county or
district, or any bailiff, constable, or other officer, or other person, by his
direction or by the direction of a court, or any officer appointed by the
Governor in Council and attached to the staff of a penitentiary for that
purpose, may convey to the penitentiary named in the sentence, any convict
sentenced or liable to be imprisoned therein, and shall deliver him to the
warden thereof, without any further warrant than a copy of the sentence taken
from the minutes of the court before which the convict was tried, and certified
by a judge or by the clerk or acting clerk of such court.
51. The warden shall receive into the penitentiary every
convict legally certified to him as sentenced to imprisonment therein, unless
certified by the surgeon of the penitentiary to be suffering from a dangerously
infectious or contagious disease, and shall there detain him, subject to the
rules, regulations and discipline thereof, until the term for which he has been
sentenced is completed, or until he is otherwise legally discharged, but a
convict, if certified by the surgeon to be suffering in
[Page 435]
manner aforesaid, may remain and be kept in his former
custody until his condition in the opinion of the surgeon justifies withdrawal
of the certificate.
By s. 2 of The General Sessions Act, R.S.O.
1950, c. 158, it is provided:
2. The courts of general sessions of the peace shall have jurisdiction
to try all criminal offences except homicide, and the offences mentioned in
section 583 of the Criminal Code (Canada).
Section 583 referred to was in the old Criminal
Code. By s. 2(10) of the new Criminal Code, 1953-54, c. 51, which
came into force April 1, 1955,
"court of criminal jurisdiction" means
(a) a court of general or
quarter sessions of the peace, when presided over by a superior court judge or
a county or district court judge,
............................................................................................
and by s. 413 of the new Code
413. (1) Every superior court of criminal jurisdiction has
jurisdiction to try any indictable offence.
(2) Every court of criminal jurisdiction has jurisdiction to
try an indictable offence other than
...........................................................................................
(Certain offences which do not include that of which the accused was
convicted.)
The Calendar is a certificate regular on its face that
the appellant was convicted by a court of competent criminal jurisdiction and
therefore it is impossible to go behind it on an application for habeas
corpus; Re Trepanier; Re Sproule; In
re Henderson.
There is no substance in the appellant's objection that the
description of the offence in the Calendar as "conspiracy (to have in
possession a drug for the purpose of trafficking)" is insufficient; nor
does it make any difference that the Court of General Sessions of the Peace is
not a superior court of criminal jurisdiction; Rex v. Martin.
While what has been said is sufficient to dispose of the
appeal, reference might be made to the argument on behalf of the appellant that
as he was found guilty of a charge of having conspired between March 15 and
August 6, 1955, and the new Criminal Code came into force on April 1,
1955,
[Page 436]
the provisions of the old Code applied and he could not be
sentenced to more than seven years imprisonment, which was the maximum provided
for under the old Code for conspiracy to commit an indictable offence. Under s.
573 of the old Criminal Code the maximum penalty for conspiracy to
commit an indictable offence was seven years. Under s. 408(1) (d) of
the new Criminal Code the maximum penalty for conspiracy to commit an
indictable offence (other than conspiracy to murder, conspiracy to bring a
false accusation or conspiracy to defile) is the same as the penalty imposed in
respect of the particular indictable offence regarding the commission of which
there has been a conspiracy. In the case of having in possession a drug for the
purpose of trafficking, the maximum penalty, under s. 4(3) (b) of the Opium
and Narcotic Drug Act, is fourteen years. There is nothing to indicate that
the evidence before the jury did not disclose that the conspiracy commenced
after April 1, 1955, and that therefore the new Code would apply. The Court of
Appeal having heard and dismissed an appeal as to sentence any judge in Ontario
would be bound by that decision and I agree with what was held by Gwynne J. in In
re Boucher, by Sedgewick J. in In re
Patrick White and by Girouard J. in In re
Charles Seeley that, therefore, any judge of
this Court, having concurrent jurisdiction with the court or judges of the
Province of Ontario under what is now s. 57 of the Supreme Court Act, would
be similarly bound.
In the Seeley case the order of Girouard J. was
confirmed on appeal on other grounds and Chief Justice Fitzpatrick, speaking
for the Court, referred to the remarks of Lord Herschell in Cox v. Hakes,
where Lord Herschell stated that it was always open to an applicant for a writ
of habeas corpus, if defeated in one court, at once to renew his
application to another, and that a person detained in custody might thus
proceed from court to court until he obtained his liberty. In Smith v. The
King, Chief Justice Anglin stated that had
it been competent for the Court to deal with that
[Page 437]
aspect of the case before him, he would have been disposed
to think Mr. Justice Newcombe right as the latter had decided in the same sense
as in the three earlier cases mentioned above. The dissenting opinion of Lament
J. in Smith v. The King refers to Lord Halsbury's statement, at p. 514
of Cox v. Hakes:—"If release was refused a person detained
might—see Ex parte Partington—make a fresh application to every judge or
every court in turn". Lamont J. also referred to what Lord Herschell had
stated at p. 527 in Cox v. Hakes. Lamont J. also referred to the
decision of the Privy Council in Eshugbayi Eleko v. Government of Nigeria.
However, the judgments in connection with various applications by Edward
Thomas Hastings show that whatever may have been the position at one time,
there is now no justification for the idea that, if a person is refused a writ
of habeas corpus by one judge, he may go to each judge in succession to
renew his application.
From the report in In re Hastings, it
appears that Hastings had been convicted on each count of an indictment
containing five counts. The warrant of commitment sent to the Governor of
Walton Prison, Liverpool, where the applicant was detained, stated:
Whereas ............................................. Edward
Thomas Hastings is and stands covicted of larceny, false pretences and
fraudulent conversion. It is therefore ordered and adjudged by this court that
(he) be sent for corrective training of four years.
The applicant applied for leave to appeal against the
convictions and leave was given in respect of the first and two of the other
counts. The Court of Criminal Appeal quashed the conviction on the first count
and the appeal in relation to the two other counts was dismissed. Pearson J. in
giving the judgment of the Court stated that the applicant had been
"sentenced on each count concurrently", that although leave to appeal
against sentence had not been asked for, the sentence was, in the view of the
Court, reasonable and "the conviction on the first ground is quashed ……
and there will be no alteration of sentence". The report in (1958) 1
W.L.R. is the report of an application for a writ of habeas corpus to
the Queen's Bench Division on the
[Page 438]
ground that his detention was illegal, the main
argument being that no sentence of the Court was ever passed upon him. That
application was denied. Hastings thereupon appealed to the Court of Appeal who refused
to entertain the application on the ground that being a criminal cause or
matter that Court had no jurisdiction; (The Times, July 29, 1958.).
The next step was an application for a writ of habeas
corpus to the Queen's Bench Division differently constituted in In re
Hastings (No. 2). Lord Parker, speaking for himself and
Hilbery and Diplock JJ., referred to the statement of Lord Esher when Cox v.
Hakes was before the Court of Appeal under the title Ex parte Cox,
that "it is not correct to say that under the old system there could
be an application to all the judges in succession". He then remarked that
none of Their Lordships in the House of Lords dissented from Lord Esher's
statement, unless it be Lord Halsbury in the passage quoted. It was pointed out
that the decision in the Eleko case had remained unquestioned except in
an Irish case, but it was held that the applicant, having already once been
heard by a Divisional Court of the Queen's Bench Division, is not entitled to
be heard again by another Divisional Court of the same Division.
The next step appears in In re Hastings (No. 3),
where a Divisional Court of the Chancery Division held that an applicant for a
writ of habeas corpus in a criminal cause or matter, who had once been
heard by a Divisional Court of the Queen's Bench Division, cannot be heard
again by a Divisional Court of the Chancery Division. Finally, to complete the
picture, an appeal from this decision to the Court of Appeal in In re
Hastings (No. 3) was dismissed on the ground that no
appeal lay to the Court of Appeal.
In fact, all reason is consonant with the opposite rule and
it is unthinkable that after the Court of Appeal for Ontario has decided a
point against the accused on the latter's appeal as to sentence, any judge in
that province would decide differently on an application for a writ of habeas
corpus. Under s. 57 of the Supreme Court Act every
[Page 439]
judge of this Court has merely concurrent jurisdiction with
the courts or judges of Ontario to issue a writ of habeas corpus and
upon an appeal to the Court the latter may make only that order which the
single judge would have had power to make.
The appeal should be dismissed.
The judgment of Taschereau, Fauteux, Abbott and Judson JJ.
was delivered by
Fauteux J.:—The
appellant appeals from an order of Martland J. refusing his application for a
writ of habeas corpus ad subjudiciendum.
The question, which counsel for the appellant admittedly
sought to be determined by way of habeas corpus proceedings, is stated
in the reasons for judgment of other members of the Court. In my view, it is
one which would require the consideration of the evidence at trial and which,
in this particular case, extends beyond the scope of matters to be inquired
under a similar process. To hold otherwise would be tantamount to convert the
writ of habeas corpus into a writ of error or an appeal and to confer,
upon every one having authority to issue the writ of habeas corpus, an
appellate jurisdiction over the orders and judgments of even the highest
Courts. It is well settled that the functions of such a writ do not extend
beyond an inquiry into the jurisdiction of the Court by which process the
subject is held in custody and into the validity of the process upon its face.
I agree with the view that the appellant has been convicted
and sentenced by a Court of competent jurisdiction, that the Calendar is a
certificate regular on its face that the appellant has been so convicted and
sentenced and that, with the material before him, Martland J. rightly dismissed
the application for a writ of habeas corpus.
I would, therefore, dismiss the appeal.
The judgment of Locke and Cartwright JJ. was delivered by
Cartwright J.:—This
is an appeal from an order of Martland J. made on November 20, 1958, refusing
the appellant's application for a writ of habeas corpus ad subjiciendum.
[Page 440]
The relevant facts and the history of the proceedings are
set out in the reasons of the Chief Justice.
I do not find it necessary to deal with all the points which
were so fully and ably argued before us. Assuming, contrary to the argument of
counsel for the respondent, that Martland J. had jurisdiction to entertain the
application I am of opinion that he was right to refuse the writ.
Before Martland J. and on the argument of this appeal
counsel agreed that, if any objection could have been made successfully to the
adequacy of the document held by the warden of the Penitentiary as authority
for detaining the appellant, it would have been in order for the warden to
obtain a proper minute or warrant of committal setting out the offence of which
the appellant was convicted in the terms of the indictment. Counsel for the
appellant made it plain that what he sought before Martland J. and before us
was an adjudication on the question whether the maximum penalty for the offence
of which the appellant was convicted was seven years or fourteen years in view
of the circumstance that the indictment alleged a conspiracy between March 15
and August 6 in the year 1955, and if the offence were committed before April
1, 1955, the maximum penalty was seven years while if it were committed after
that date the maximum was fourteen years. In my opinion this is a difficult
question of law; and my brother Fauteux, in giving the judgment of the majority
of the Court in Goldhar v. The Queen, delivered on
November 30, 1959, described it as "undoubtedly one of substance".
It was, however, a point which the learned Judge who
presided at the trial of the appellant in the Court of General Sessions of the
Peace had jurisdiction to decide, and if in the view of the appellant he erred
in law in reaching his decision the proper course for the appellant to pursue
was to appeal to the Court of Appeal.
The writ of habeas corpus ad subjiciendum is a writ
of right and is issued ex debito justitiae, upon it being shown that
there is ground for believing that the applicant is unlawfully held in custody,
so that the Court may inquire into the cause of his imprisonment and in a
proper case order his immediate release; but it is not a writ of course
[Page 441]
and may be refused where an alternative remedy by which the
validity of the detention can be determined is available to the applicant. In Ex
part Corke, Lord Goddard, delivering the
judgment of the Queen's Bench Division in which Slade J. concurred, said that habeas
corpus is not a means of appeal where an accused has been convicted and
sentenced by a court of competent jurisdiction. The remedy in such a case is by
way of appeal; for so long as it stands unreversed the sentence of a competent
court is a legal justification for imprisoning the applicant.
I wish to reserve my opinion as to whether the writ is
available if the warrant of committal shows on its face that the sentence was
one not permitted by law.
When the matter came before Martland J. it appeared from the
material that the appellant had been convicted and sentenced by a court of
criminal jurisdiction having jurisdiction to try the appellant on the charge of
which he was convicted, that an appeal against the conviction had been taken
and dismissed and that no appeal had been taken against the sentence imposed.
On this state of the record, in my view, Martland J. was right in refusing the
writ, for the judgment of His Honour Judge Macdonell unless set aside by the
Court of Appeal furnished a sufficient ground for holding the applicant in
custody.
A fortiori, we should refuse the writ now that the
sentence imposed by His Honour has been affirmed by a judgment of the Court of
Appeal and an application for leave to appeal to this Court from that judgment
has been refused by this Court. The very question which the applicant seeks to
have decided on this application is res judicata between the parties. In
giving the judgment of the Privy Council in Sambasivam v. Public Prosecutor
Federation of Malaya, Lord MacDermott said:
The maxim "Res judicata pro veritate accipitur"
is no less applicable to
criminal than to civil proceedings.
The question of the legality of the sentence imposed on the
applicant has been conclusively determined by a court of competent jurisdiction
and cannot be re-opened; this
[Page 442]
results not from the application of the principle of stare
decisis but from the operation of the rule stated in the maxim quoted
above, "Res judicata pro veritate accipitur".
Since the question of the legality of the sentence imposed
on the appellant has become res judicata nothing would be gained by
endeavouring to form an opinion as to how it should have been answered had it
remained open; I have already said that it appears to me to be one of
difficulty and I venture to express my regret that we have not the benefit of
knowing the reasons which brought the Court of Appeal to the conclusion at
which it arrived.
I would dispose of the appeal as proposed by the Chief
Justice.
Appeal dismissed.
Solicitor for the appellant: M. Robb, Toronto.
Solicitor for the respondent: The Attorney-General
of Ontario.