R. v. Tremblay, [1993] 2 S.C.R. 932
Jean‑Paul Tremblay, Patricia Tremblay,
Peggy Obas Malval, Doris Tremblay,
Marleine Jean, Robert Bourdeau,
Chantal Girouard, Christiane St‑Louis
et Brigitte Tremblay Appellants
v.
Her Majesty The Queen Respondent
Indexed as: R. v. Tremblay
File No.: 22650.
1993: February 23; 1993: September 2.
Present: La Forest, L'Heureux‑Dubé,
Gonthier, Cory and McLachlin JJ.
on appeal from the court of appeal for quebec
Criminal law ‑‑
Indecent act ‑‑ Bawdy-house ‑‑ Public place ‑‑
Nude dancers performing in individual cubicles ‑‑ Clients permitted
to be nude and to masturbate while watching performance ‑‑ Whether
community tolerance standard offended ‑‑ Criminal Code, R.S.C.
1970, c. C‑34, ss. 193(1), 529(3), (4) (am. S.C. 1985, c. 19,
s. 123, now R.S.C., 1985, c. C‑46, ss. 210(1) , 601(3) , (4) ).
Trial ‑‑ Procedure
‑‑ Motion to amend charge ‑‑ Motion made late in trial ‑‑
Whether or not serious prejudice to accused.
The appellants were charged
with keeping a bawdy-house for the purpose of the practice of indecent acts
contrary to s. 193(1) (now s. 210(1) ) of the Criminal Code . Nude
dancers would perform in individual cubicles for their clients and would assume
a variety of suggestive positions. The clients were permitted to remove their
clothing and many masturbated during the performance. The management strictly
enforced a "no touching" policy and monitored this policy with a peep
hole on each room. The peep hole was not used for purposes of voyeurism.
At trial, the Crown's motion
to amend the charge by deleting the words "the practice of
indecency", and its subsequent motion to include the words "practice
of prostitution" were denied because they would cause serious prejudice to
the accused. The motions were made late in the trial when virtually all the
evidence had been called. The Court of Appeal materially amended the charge
and entered a conviction on the basis of the amended charge. The issues before
this Court are: (1) whether the Crown should have been permitted to amend
the charge substantially, and (2) whether the acts were indecent when
viewed in light of the current standard of community tolerance.
Held (Gonthier and La Forest JJ. dissenting):
The appeal should be allowed.
Per L'Heureux‑Dubé, Cory and
McLachlin JJ.: Although the courts possess reasonably wide powers of
amendment under s. 529(3) (now s. 601(3) ) of the Criminal Code ,
persons accused of a crime must know the charge brought against them in order to
present a full answer and defence. A court can amend an information or
indictment only when the amendment would not result in irreparable prejudice
and only if the evidence can support such a charge. Here, to have permitted
the amendment so late in the trial would have caused irreparable prejudice to
the appellants. It might have been appropriate to allow the proposed amendment
much earlier in the trial proceedings provided an adequate adjournment was
granted to the appellants to prepare their defence to meet the amended
charges. The Court of Appeal's decision to amend the charge materially and
enter a conviction on the basis of the amended charge was extraordinary and
inappropriate.
The "community standard
of tolerance" test for indecency, like the one used in obscenity cases,
involves an analysis of the impugned acts involving several considerations.
These accepted standards of tolerance, which are contemporary and change with
the times, and which reflect the standards of society as a whole, exist and
should not be exceeded. The decision as to whether the acts fall below the
community standard of tolerance rests with the court. The determination must
be made objectively in accordance with the contemporary standards of the
Canadian community, and not merely project a judge's own personal ideas of what
is tolerable.
The degree of harm ‑‑
in the sense of predisposing persons to act in an anti‑social manner ‑‑
is a factor that the courts can consider in determining the community standard
of tolerance. The public harm that might result from the public exposure to
the impugned acts is relevant to the determination of whether or not they are
indecent.
The circumstances surrounding
the act must be taken into account for the community standard of tolerance will
vary from place to place and with the composition of the audience. The purpose
of the performance and the nature of the warning or notice that is given of the
performance may be considered.
The use of expert evidence to
assess the community standard of tolerance is advisable. Here, the trial
judge, in determining this standard, properly considered the expert opinion of
a psychologist and sexologist, a government report studying the problems
associated with pornography and prostitution and a police officer who attended
at the premises.
No complaints were made about
the club's activities, either from neighbours or clients, and this fact too can
be considered in deciding whether there was community tolerance for the acts.
The community tolerated sexually suggestive acts performed by naked dancers and
the acts of both the clients and the dancers came within the range of this
tolerance. Both clients and dancers knew exactly what to expect, consented to
the activities and could leave at will. Whether the acts of simulated
masturbation or masturbation itself are indecent depends on the
circumstances. The lack of physical contact, although not determinative, was
significant since there was little likelihood of physical harm being caused to
either individual. Equally important, the "no contact" rule
ensured that the transmission of infectious sexual diseases was prevented and
so increased the level of the community tolerance for the acts at issue.
Although the premises here
fell within the Criminal Code 's definition of a public place, common
sense indicates that there are great differences between locations which can
come within the definition of public places. The performance of an activity in
a closed room in a house, where only two consenting adults are present, is far
different from carrying out the same activity in a school yard or a public
park. The existence of the monitoring peep hole, even if it were to be used
for consensual voyeurism, was hardly enough to render the act any more public,
in any significant sense, than it was when performed between the two persons
apparently alone in the room. The presence of the peep holes would, if
anything, indicate that the acts were not viewed as indecent by any of the
persons in the room or by the management enforcing their rule against physical
contact.
Per La Forest and Gonthier JJ.
(dissenting): The standard for determining whether or not an act is indecent
is what the community as a whole is prepared to tolerate and not what was
approved of or seen as tasteful by that community. This single standard of
tolerance does not vary with the actual audience and is constant, regardless of
the time, place or manner of the representation at issue inasmuch as those
factors serve to define the audience. The standard is responsive to the
various harms which may be caused by obscene activity or depictions. The
combination of a given content and a representation together constitute the
particular essence of obscenity.
This case did not concern
pornographic material but rather a live performance of sexual activity, by both
the client and the dancer, in a public place. The acts in issue were not in
substance the same as other acts found to be tolerated by the trial judge.
The way in which a
representation occurs can contribute to harmfulness or a lack of tolerance by
the community. The community was concerned about the activities occurring in
the Club and any tolerance that neighbours may have been shown to have had
towards the Club did not account for the activity of the client.
The place where the acts
occurred was public, i.e., a place to which the public has access, either as of
right, or by express or implied invitation. The relative privacy of an
activity, while relevant, is but one of many factors to be considered. The
division of what is private from what is public rests only in part on the
number of persons who may witness the activities in question. It also rests
upon the special set of expectations which the public rightly holds with regard
to what activity will occur only in private, and what may occur in public.
These expectations are not limited to those which may be justified on the basis
that there should be no direct exposure of persons, against their will, to the
activities in question. They extend to the expectations which the public
rightly has in relation to the sphere which is shared by each and every
person. While exposure of persons is one of those harms, there are many others
which are undoubtedly important -- exploitation, degradation, the undue
commercialization of certain activities, and the dangers these harms entail.
There was no evidence to
support the conclusion that masturbation in a public place meets the standard
of community tolerance. The normality of an act in private cannot be directly
relied upon in establishing the tolerance of that act in public when, as here,
the act is in part defined by its public character. The very qualities of an
act which make it normal in private may not make it normal in public, or
tolerated.
The evidence of the expert
witness and the reliance placed on the Fraser Committee were misplaced for,
although they did consider aspects peripheral to the issue of society's
tolerance of masturbation in public, they did not consider that issue itself.
The activity here was not the same as that which occurred in other establishments
and which was tolerated.
The defence of lack of mens
rea was not available. The appellants, although they did not intend to
break the law, did intend to do what they did and to operate the club as they
did, and so cannot avail themselves of this defence. The defence of officially
induced error, too, was not available even though appellants were given reason
by official sources to believe they were not breaking the law. A clear
connection must exist between the inducement relied upon and the activity of
the defendants. The licence (as an establishment for private erotic
conversation), which is the most convincing form of inducement, was for
activities greatly different from the activities actually occurring at the
premises. The defence, moreover, does not operate to prevent the courts from
determining what activity is indecent. The application of the defence is
usually limited to regulatory offences where the reliance placed on the
inducement is more reasonable.
Cases Cited
By Cory J.
Applied: Towne Cinema Theatres Ltd. v. The Queen,
[1985] 1 S.C.R. 494; considered: R. v. Traynor, [1987] O.J.
No. 1943 (Q.L.); R. v. Pelletier (1985), 27 C.C.C. (3d) 77, [1986]
R.J.Q. 595; R. v. St. Pierre (1974), 3 O.R. (2d) 642; referred
to: Patterson v. The Queen, [1968] S.C.R. 157; R. v. De Munck,
[1918] 1 K.B. 635; R. v. Webb, [1963] 3 W.L.R. 638; R. v. Lantay,
[1966] 3 C.C.C. 270; Vézina v. The Queen, [1986] 1 S.C.R. 2; R. v.
Moore, [1988] 1 S.C.R. 1097; R. v. Geauvreau (1979), 51 C.C.C. (2d)
75; Reference re ss. 193 and 195.1(c) of the Criminal Code (Man.),
[1990] 1 S.C.R. 1123; R. v. Doug Rankine Co. (1983), 36 C.R. (3d) 154; R.
v. Butler, [1992] 1 S.C.R. 452; R. v. MacLean and MacLean (No. 2)
(1982), 1 C.C.C. (3d) 412; R. v. Giambalvo (1982), 70 C.C.C. (2d) 324; R.
v. Kleppe (1977), 35 C.C.C. (2d) 168; R. v. Sequin, [1969] 2 C.C.C.
150; R. v. Belanger (1980), 5 W.C.B. 446; R. v. Laliberté
(1973), 12 C.C.C. (2d) 109.
By Gonthier J. (dissenting)
R. v. Butler, [1992] 1 S.C.R. 452; Towne Cinema Theatres
Ltd. v. The Queen, [1985] 1 S.C.R. 494; R. v. Laliberté (1973), 12
C.C.C. (2d) 109; R. v. Lantay, [1966] 3 C.C.C. 270; R. v. De Munck,
[1918] 1 K.B. 635.
Statutes and Regulations Cited
Criminal
Code, R.S.C. 1970, c. C‑34,
ss. 193(1), 529(3), (4) [am. S.C. 1985, c. 19, s. 123], (now R.S.C., 1985,
c. C‑46, ss. 210(1) , 601(3) , (4) ).
Criminal
Code, R.S.C., 1985, c. C‑46,
ss. 150 , 163 , 197 .
Authors Cited
Canada.
Special Committee on Pornography and Prostitution. Report of the Special
Committee on Pornography and Prostitution. (Fraser Committee Report).
Ottawa: 1985.
Roth, Philip. Portnoy's
Complaint. London: Cape, 1969.
APPEAL from a judgment of the
Quebec Court of Appeal, [1991] R.J.Q. 2766, 41 Q.A.C. 241, 68 C.C.C. (3d) 439,
allowing an appeal from acquittal by Fontaine M.C.J., [1989] R.J.Q. 217.
Appeal allowed, La Forest and Gonthier JJ. dissenting.
Robert La Haye and Josée Ferrari, for the appellants.
Germain Tremblay, for the respondent.
The reasons of La Forest
and Gonthier JJ. were delivered by
//Gonthier J.//
Gonthier
J. (dissenting) -- I have had the
benefit of the reasons of Justice Cory. As he states, the two issues in this
appeal are whether the Court of Appeal erred in setting aside the decision of
the trial judge refusing to permit the Crown to amend the charge substantially,
and second, whether the acts in question satisfy the community standard of
tolerance, and are therefore not indecent. I am in agreement with Cory J. in
relation to the first issue, and I am also in agreement with the review of the
facts which he presents as they relate to the activities of the appellants.
However, there are a number of additional facts relevant in particular to the
standard of community tolerance which will be referred to, as required, in the
course of these reasons. I respectfully disagree with him on the second issue
and would dismiss the appeal confirming in the result the decision of the Court
of Appeal.
The Standard of Community Tolerance as Applied to
this Case
The test by which the
indecency of an act is to be determined for the purposes of the charge in this
case is rightly identified by Cory J. as the standard set by what the
community is prepared to tolerate. That test was recently affirmed in R. v.
Butler, [1992] 1 S.C.R. 452, where the relevant standard was confirmed to
be that which the community as a whole, and not a mere segment of it, was
prepared to tolerate, and not what was approved of or seen as tasteful by that
community (at p. 476). This single standard of tolerance does not vary
with the actual audience and is constant, regardless of the time, place or
manner of the representation at issue inasmuch as they serve to define the audience.
The standard is responsive to the various harms which may be caused by obscene
activity or depictions. As I had occasion to note in that case, at
p. 512, it is the combination of a given content and a representation
which together constitute the particular essence of obscenity and, as I stated
at pp. 517-18:
A host of
factors could intervene in the manner of representation to affect the
characterization of the material, among which are the medium, the type or the
use.
The
medium provides a good example....
. . .
the likelihood of harm, and the tolerance of the community, may vary according
to the medium of representation, even if the content stays the same.
While that case concerned s. 163 of the Criminal
Code, R.S.C., 1985, c. C‑46 , and various depictions of sexual
activity, and this case concerns activity under s. 210 of the Code
(formerly R.S.C. 1970, c. C-34, s. 193) rather than a depiction, there is a
representation of sexual activity in both instances: the dancer in this case
performed in a place to which the public had access, to an audience, albeit of
one, who was a member of the public, and the dance was intended for and
addressed to a member of the public against remuneration. As a live
representation, the impact of the dance is considerably stronger than that of a
statue, painting, picture or even movie.
This case, then, does not
concern pornographic material, but rather a live performance of sexual
activity, by both the client and the dancer, in a public place.
In identifying the acts in
question, Cory J. concludes that the performance in question was similar to
dancing performances which were tolerated by the police. He refers to the fact
that unlike most performances which occur in strip bars, in this case, clients
did undress and masturbate when they were in the room viewing the performance
of the dancer. He states at p. 000:
Several
witnesses testified that the only difference between the performance by the
dancers in the Pussy Cat and that of dancers performing in the strip bars was
that the client was permitted to take off his clothes and masturbate. The
actions and movements of the nude dancers performing in bars were not subject
to any police action.
However, in my view the acts
which occurred at the Pussy Cat Club were not in substance the same as those
which, according to the evidence, occurred elsewhere and were found to be
tolerated by the trial judge. This is clear when the three salient features of
the performance, namely its live nature, the public locale and the activity of
the client are considered. This is so even when the activity of the dancer as
a live performance is considered by itself. Johanne Totunov, who was sworn as
a witness for the Crown, had approximately seven years experience as a nude
dancer in Montreal, and had worked at the Pussy Cat Club as a dancer. She
testified that she had never seen a dancer use a vibrator in the course of a
nude dance in a club. This was common practice in the Pussy Cat Club, and it
is a noteworthy aspect of the performance. It changes the quality of the
activity of the dancer as perceived by the client from a dance performance
having an erotic quality into something more in the nature of a demonstration
of sexual activity. The performance was not merely evocative of sexual imagery
and sexuality, but was a performance of a sexual act. Because a vibrator is
used for actual stimulation, the activity from the point of view of the dancer
is actual masturbation, as opposed to a mere simulation of being in a state of
arousal or stimulation. On the basis of the substance of the performance of
the dancer alone, the activity in question is clearly distinguished from what
was done, and found to be tolerated, elsewhere.
The evidence of Constables
Rochon and Cormier does not support the conclusion that the acts of the dancers
in the Pussy Cat Club were sufficiently similar in nature to the acts of
dancers performed and tolerated elsewhere so as to meet the standard of community
tolerance. Constable Rochon states that the acts he saw in the Pussy Cat Club
were not the same as those which he had seen occur elsewhere, and his statement
is uncontradicted. This opinion concerned the nature of the acts, when seen as
a whole. There is no evidence that he had seen dancers use vibrators for acts
of masturbation, nor did he state that other dancing performances included all
the aspects of the performance at the Pussy Cat Club. His evidence on
cross-examination that a number of the parts of the performance at the Pussy
Cat Club were equivalent to acts which formed a part of performances he had
seen elsewhere, does not detract from his overall assessment.
Constable Cormier gave
evidence based on approximately one hundred visits to nude dance clubs which he
had made during five and a half years of service with the drug and morals
division. His testimony was that, when seen as a whole, the dancing at the
Pussy Cat Club was not like that which he had seen elsewhere. In particular, he
testified that he had never seen dancers touching their genitals in the way
they did at the Pussy Cat. He stated that if he had seen such activity, he
would have intervened to do what was "necessary", meaning at a
minimum, to issue a warning. This evidence confirms that even the activity of
the dancer, considered alone, was not similar to the performances of dancers
which were found to occur and be tolerated elsewhere.
In R. v. Butler, supra,
at p. 517, I had occasion to note that the way in which a representation
occurs can contribute to harmfulness or a lack of tolerance by the community.
This case does not concern the depiction of acts of masturbation, or a movie of
a dancer, for example, but those activities themselves. The client was not a
passive observer of a spectacle. It makes the activities in question less an
erotic portrayal, and more like a sexual encounter. The importance of such a
distinction, and how it bears on the tolerance that persons may have towards
the acts in question, is illustrated by the testimony of Dr. Campbell.
The only direct evidence which Dr. Campbell gives regarding tolerance
relates to that of persons in the neighbourhood of the Club towards the acts
that occurred there. It suggests that their tolerance is based upon, and
indeed limited to, the performance of acts where the client would be a mere
passive observer:
[translation] Once he knew what was
happening, they appeared to me -- "Well, okay, that's what's going
on!" -- they wondered -- it was not clear in their minds whether this was
prostitution with sexual intercourse, that was not clear to them; they said to
me, "So exactly what is it?", and I explained, "Well, as I
understand it, they watch", and when I explained that they said "Yes,
okay, now we understand, that's all right". Those were the only persons I
contacted; there is my wife . . ..
This evidence suggests that there was some basis
for the conclusion that the community was concerned about the activities
occurring in the Club, but also that any tolerance that neighbours may have
been shown to have had towards the Club did not account for the activity of the
client.
The second aspect is the
public character of the place in which the acts took place. The definition of
a public place which is adopted in s. 197 of the Criminal Code , but
also in s. 150 in relation to other offences, is very wide indeed. It
includes all places to which the public have access, either as of right, or by
express or implied invitation. It is true, as pointed out by Cory J.,
that there is a spectrum of situations or locales, some of which are more open
and crowded than others. It is also true that this fact is relevant to the
characterization of the acts in question, and that acts which occur in one sort
of public place may be tolerated while those which occur in another may not be.
However, this does not mean
that acts done in a public place that is less exposed than a school yard or a
public park are equivalent to acts which are done in privacy. Cory J.
correctly notes that the dancer would be the only one who would be exposed to
the masturbation of the client, and that she was a consenting adult. On this
basis, it is concluded that the acts were "relatively private".
Although the relative privacy of an activity is relevant, as it may bear on the
expectations of persons, for example, it is but one of many factors which must
be considered. The division of what is private from what is public rests only
in part on the number of persons who may witness the activities in question.
It also rests upon the special set of expectations which the public rightly
holds with regard to what activity will occur only in private, and what may
occur in public. These expectations are not limited to those which may be
justified on the basis that there should be no direct exposure of persons,
against their will, to the activities in question. They extend to the
expectations which the public rightly has in relation to the sphere which is
shared by each and every person. The public sphere is specially attended to by
the law in general, and the Criminal Code in particular, because it is
into that sphere that persons enter to earn a living, to conduct business, and
to enjoy community life. As such, there are certain harms which occur only in
the public realm and which are properly given particular attention as such.
While exposure of persons is one of those harms, there are many others which
are undoubtedly important, and they include exploitation, degradation, the
undue commercialization of certain activities, and the dangers these harms
entail.
The law regulates the activity
occurring in the public sphere for these and many other reasons. One has to
look no further than the structure of the law governing the activities
associated with prostitution to gain an appreciation for the many varied
interests of peace, security, and public order which are secured by the legal
regime governing activity permitted in public. The Criminal Code makes
special reference to the common bawdy-house because the activity occurring in
those houses may well not be tolerated, regardless of the potential for direct
exposure of the general public to the activity: a bawdy-house is
"relatively private", but it is nonetheless singled out for special
attention by the Criminal Code .
It is not necessary for the
purposes of this appeal to address all the policy considerations which support
the wide definition of what is a public place in the meaning which has been
adopted in the Code. If the removal of the activity occurring in a
common bawdy-house from the sight of the general public had of itself a great
significance, there would be little need for s. 210 of the Criminal
Code .
The third aspect of the
activity which occurred at the Pussy Cat Club and which must be noted is the
activity of the client. There is no evidence which supports the conclusion
that masturbation in a public place meets the standard of community tolerance.
Reference was made by the trial judge to the evidence of Dr. Campbell, an
expert witness, and the contents of the Fraser Committee. I have had occasion
to note above that the evidence of Dr. Campbell which bears directly on
the question of tolerance does not support the conclusion that acts of
masturbation in public are tolerated, and indeed suggests the opposite.
Further, the relevance of expert testimony with regard to the understanding of
the community standard of tolerance is limited. This was recognized in Towne
Cinema Theatres Ltd. v. The Queen, [1985] 1 S.C.R. 494,
at p. 515. Two aspects of that decision are relevant here. First,
the opinion of experts is always subject to evaluation by the courts. Second,
and more importantly, the kind of expert testimony which was at issue in that
case was testimony by the Chairman of the Censor Board that a film called Dracula
Sucks, the content of which gave rise to the litigation, did not fall below
the contemporary community standard of tolerance. The evidence there bore
directly on the matter before the Court. The evidence given by Dr. Campbell,
who is concerned with human sexual behaviour and treatment of sexual problems,
is very different. It relates essentially to the normality of the activity of
masturbation which he considered was engaged in by a large portion of the
population, but undoubtedly in a private place. While this testimony may bear
on how persons may view private acts of masturbation, it is not relevant in the
manner accepted at trial. Testimony that an activity is not a perversion may
be directly relevant to excluding that activity from the category of those acts
which would be indecent wherever they occurred. But such a narrow and
straightforward inquiry is not what is at issue here. The normality of an act
in private cannot be directly relied upon in establishing the tolerance of that
act in public when, as here, the act is in part defined by its public
character. All the circumstances of the act must be considered, and the act in
all its features must be examined. There is no doubt that the very qualities
of an act which make it normal in private may not make it normal in public.
The normality of an activity undertaken in private does not demonstrate that
the same activity would be tolerated in public.
The evidence of
Dr. Campbell is that masturbation per se is tolerated, and the only
reference to the specific acts which occurred at the Pussy Cat Club concerns
the toleration which persons would have of clients watching the dancers.
Equally, his testimony that there would be a tendency for tolerance of the acts
in question because of the public health risks which attend prostitution does
not amount to an affirmation that masturbation in a public place is tolerated
by the public.
For similar reasons, I am also
of the view that the reliance placed by the trial judge on the contents of the
Fraser Committee is misplaced. A general review of the nature of the sexual
activity in its many facets with reference to various social problems
associated with these activities is not the same as a review of the societal
tolerance of acts of masturbation in public. The Fraser report does not
address the latter issue.
Not only is there an absence
of evidence supporting the conclusion that masturbation in a public place is
tolerated, the relevant evidence in this case is to the contrary. On the basis
that the client was in a state of undress, Ms. Totunov described the
activity at the Pussy Cat Club as being not comparable to what was done in strip
clubs because it was more "osé" or risqué. This testimony,
particularly when viewed in light of the fact that not only did the clients
undress but they also masturbated while in a state of undress, strongly
supports the conclusion reached by both Constables that when the acts are seen
as a whole, they are not similar in character to those acts apparently
performed and tolerated in strip clubs.
As a result, when all the
evidence is considered, there is no basis upon which the activity in question
can be viewed as essentially the same as that which occurred in other
establishments.
The Court of Appeal referred
to and followed its previous decision in R. v. Laliberté (1973), 12
C.C.C. (2d) 109, a case involving masturbation of clients by masseuses in a massage
parlour. Cory J. refers to that case, and distinguishes it, as he does R.
v. Lantay, [1966] 3 C.C.C. 270, a decision of the Ontario Court of Appeal.
While it is true that in both cases there was physical contact between the
client and the woman offering services, the presence of physical contact did
not in my view form the basis for the conclusion that masturbation in a place
to which the public have access is indecent, or an act of prostitution.
Indeed, the latter decision, which is referred to by the former case, relies
upon the English authority of R. v. De Munck, [1918] 1 K.B. 635. That
case decided at pp. 637-38 that "prostitution is proved if it be
shown that a woman offers her body commonly for lewdness for payment in
return", intercourse was not a requirement. The law has never required
that the most lewd form or variety of an activity which is not tolerated by the
community occur in order that such activity be viewed as indecent. It does not
do so here.
The decision of the Court of
Appeal to reverse the conclusion of the trial judge was correctly based upon a
reconsideration of the evidence, and an application of the law to the facts of
this case. A conclusion that certain activities are indecent is one which is
based on the facts, but in the final analysis is a question of law, since, as
mentioned by Cory J. in his reasons at p. 000, "(t)he decision
whether (the acts in question are) tolerable according to Canadian community
standards rests with the court".
In this case, a consideration
of the evidence leads to the conclusion that there was a manifest error in the
reasoning of the trial judge. I am in agreement with the decision of Brossard
J.A. of the Court of Appeal, at (1991), 68 C.C.C. (3d) 439, at p. 446,
that a consideration of the masturbation by the client leads by itself to the
following conclusion:
(translation) . . . in so
far as it is not private in nature, carried out before a pure stranger, in a
house [the public nature of which] is undeniable, and in a room where he can be
seen by third parties, amply satisfies me so as to find the existence of acts
of indecency.
In my view, the conclusion
must be the same even if it is accepted that viewing by third parties would be
limited to security and control purposes.
In the result, it is necessary
to consider the arguments raised on behalf of the appellants by way of
defences. These arguments were not dealt with below. They may, however, be
briefly disposed of. The defences of lack of mens rea and officially
induced error are put forward on the common basis that the appellants did not
intend to break the law and were given reason, by official sources, to believe
that they were not breaking the law. This basis cannot support a defence of
lack of mens rea when, as here, the accused intended to do the acts they
did and operate the Club in the way they did. As for the defence of officially
induced error, it has no application to the facts of this case, for two
reasons. First, the most convincing form of inducement referred to in this
case, a licence which the appellants obtained, was for activities substantially
different from those which ultimately occurred in the Pussy Cat Club, namely a
"Bureau de conversations érotiques en personne" ([translation] "Establishment for
private erotic conversations"). A clear connection must exist between the
inducement relied upon and the activity of the defendants. Second, the defence
does not operate to prevent the courts from determining what activity is
indecent. The application of the defence is usually limited to regulatory
offences where the reliance placed on the inducement is more reasonable. For
both these reasons, the defences raised in this case cannot succeed.
In the result, I would dismiss
the appeal and affirm the decision of the Court of Appeal on the basis of the
second issue, and direct that the matter be returned to the trial court for
sentencing.
The judgment of
L'Heureux-Dubé, Cory and McLachlin JJ. was delivered by
//Cory J.//
Cory
J. -- There are two principal issues
raised on this appeal. The first is whether the Court of Appeal erred in
setting aside the decision of the trial judge refusing to permit the Crown to
amend substantially the charge late in the trial when virtually all the
evidence had been called. The second is whether the acts described in the
evidence should be considered as indecent when viewed in light of the current
standard of community tolerance.
Factual Background
The appellants were charged
with keeping a bawdy-house at 3668 Ontario St. E. for the purpose of the
practice of acts of indecency contrary to s. 193(1) of the Criminal
Code, R.S.C. 1970, c. C-34, now R.S.C., 1985, c. C-46, s. 210(1) .
An example of the wording of
the charges faced by the appellants can be found in that brought against Robert
Bourdeau:
[translation] Robert
Bourdeau, between March 22, 1988 and April 20, 1988, in Montreal,
judicial district of Montreal, did unlawfully keep a common bawdy‑house
at 3668 Ontario East, by assisting the occupant of premises used for the
purpose of the practice of acts of indecency contrary to s. 193(1) of the Criminal
Code .
The address given is a house.
Affixed to it is a small plaque stating simply the "Pussy Cat".
Advertisements appeared in Montreal newspapers giving the name and address of
the house and stating that nude dancers would perform for individual clients in
a private setting. There were apparently no complaints about the operation of
the house from either neighbours or clients.
When a client came to the
premises, he was allowed to select a dancer from pictures which were shown to
him. He was told that there was to be absolutely no touching; he could not
touch the dancer, nor could she touch him.
The client would be taken to a
private room that was furnished with a mattress and a chair. In that room the
selected dancer would, for a fee of $40, undress and perform an erotic dance
for the client on the mattress. For an additional fee of $10 the dancer would
caress herself with a vibrator while she danced. During the course of the
performance the dancer would assume a variety of suggestive positions while
caressing herself in simulated or actual masturbation. The clients were
invited to remove their clothes. The evidence disclosed that the majority of
them masturbated while the dancer performed.
The rule against physical
contact was strictly enforced. There was a small hole the size of a coin
located in the wall of each room. This permitted the owners of the
establishment to ensure that the rule was respected. The hole in the wall
served no other purpose than surveillance by the management. There is
certainly no indication that it was used by voyeurs.
The Crown sought to amend the
charge by deleting the words "the practice of indecency". The trial
judge refused this motion. The Crown then asked that the charge be amended to
include the words "practice of prostitution". This motion too was
denied on the same grounds as the first, namely that it would cause serious
prejudice to the accused.
After the trial was completed,
the decision was reserved. On November 9, 1988, Fontaine M.C.J. of the
Municipal Court acquitted all the appellants. The Crown launched an appeal and
on September 17, 1991 the Court of Appeal of Quebec allowed the appeal, set
aside the acquittals and convicted the appellants on the charges brought
against them.
Judgments in the Courts Below
Municipal Court (Fontaine M.C.J.), [1989] R.J.Q. 217
For Fontaine M.C.J. the key
issue was whether the Pussy Cat constituted a "bawdy-house" as those
words were defined in the Criminal Code and in the case law. He noted
that there was no evidence either that the house had a reputation for
debauchery or that there had been any complaints made about it by local
residents. The house appeared to be a private dwelling bearing the small
plaque with the words the "Pussy Cat". In his view it therefore did
not come within the definition of a bawdy-house that was explored in Patterson
v. The Queen, [1968] S.C.R. 157.
He then reviewed the evidence
that was presented in order to determine whether the activities in the Pussy
Cat were indecent. He relied upon the testimony of an expert witness called by
the defence. The witness testified that the acts were not indecent but rather
were examples of nonpathological voyeurism and exhibitionism and as such, they
were tolerated by the community provided they were performed in private. As
well the trial judge referred to the Fraser Committee report on pornography.
The trial judge carefully
considered the test for indecency set out in Towne Cinema Theatres Ltd. v.
The Queen, [1985] 1 S.C.R. 494, in these words at p. 224:
[translation] If we apply the
information gathered by the Fraser Committee to the case of the Pussy Cat, we
can quite readily and logically conclude that the Canadian community in general
is prepared to accept that acts of masturbation do not exceed the standards
of decency, provided there is no contact between the persons and provided
they are between consenting adults in private, even if the premises are open to
the public.
This
is particularly so as there is no violence connected with these activities of
sexual self‑stimulation and self‑gratification and, as the expert
witness Dr. Campbell explained, in the circumstances in which they take
place this is neither sexual deviance nor a degrading act; although of course
part of the public may well disagree with such activities, the fact
remains that it is prepared to tolerate other persons engaging in them in
private and discreetly, with no coercion and without disturbing individuals who
do not agree with such activities or do not wish to take part in them.
[Emphasis in original.]
Fontaine M.C.J. found that:
(1) the evidence indicated that the clients of the Pussy Cat knew exactly what
awaited them; (2) none of them was shocked by what happened in there; (3) the
acts of self masturbation were consented to by the adults present; (4) the nude
dancing performed at the Pussy Cat was the same as nude dance shows performed
in bars in which the dancers touched their bodies and which were not interfered
with by the police; (5) there had been no complaints by any private citizens
about the activities in the Pussy Cat; and finally, (6) the acts engaged in at
the Pussy Cat were not pathological and were tolerated by the community. He
concluded that in these circumstances the acts were not indecent acts and
therefore, the Pussy Cat was not a common bawdy-house.
Court of Appeal (1991), 68 C.C.C. (3d) 439, [1991] R.J.Q. 2766
Brossard J.A. (for
the majority)
Brossard J.A. found that
the conclusions drawn by the expert witness with regard to the nature of the
sexual activities which took place at the Pussy Cat and their therapeutic value
was not relevant in determining the only issue in the appeal -- whether
masturbation in a public place constituted an act of indecency. He noted that
the expert did not make a comment on this issue. In his opinion both the Crown
and the defence witnesses devoted a great deal more time to the analysis of the
dancer's movements than those of the client. He stated at p. 446:
(translation) In my view, I
do not even believe it necessary to characterize the acts done by the dancer.
The act done by the client, in so far as it is not private in nature, carried
out before a pure stranger, in a house whose public nature is undeniable, and
in a room where he can be seen by third parties, amply satisfies me so as to
find the existence of acts of indecency. I cannot otherwise characterize the
sexual act of masturbation done by a man in a place where he can be seen and/or
observed by pure strangers.
In the absence of proof to the contrary, he
concluded that masturbation in a location other than the privacy of a room in
one's home, must be considered an act which exceeded the standards of community
tolerance.
With respect to the amendments
to the charges, Brossard J.A. concluded that they would not create any
prejudice to the appellants. In his opinion, the trial judge should not, at
the amendment stage, have considered whether the evidence entered to that point
was sufficient to convict the appellants of prostitution. On this point,
Brossard J.A. decided that there was evidence of prostitution. He concluded
that, under the circumstances, an amendment which limited the charge to the
keeping of a common bawdy-house when the specific provision of the Code
provided that the premises would meet the definition if they were used either
for the purposes of acts of indecency or prostitution was appropriate.
Brossard J.A. turned
finally to the question of whether the acts in question constituted acts of
prostitution. He determined that all of the classic elements of prostitution
were present: solicitation, lewd and even indecent gestures by the dancer to
entice the client, sexual gratification of the client and all of this for
remuneration. Nonetheless, he inquired whether physical contact was necessary
for there to be prostitution. He referred to the decisions in R. v. De
Munck, [1918] 1 K.B. 635, R. v. Webb, [1963] 3 W.L.R. 638, and R.
v. Lantay, [1966] 3 C.C.C. 270, and concluded that it was not.
Accordingly,
Brossard J.A. concluded that the Pussy Cat was a common bawdy-house for
the purpose of committing indecent acts as well as prostitution.
Proulx J.A.
(concurring reasons)
Proulx J.A. allowed the
appeal for reasons that were, in part, different from those of
Brossard J.A.
With respect to the request to
amend the charges presented by the Crown, Proulx J.A. concluded that the
trial judge erred in deciding a procedural matter on the basis of his
assessment of the merits of the issue. On the issue of prejudice, he
determined that the amendment would not affect the fairness of the trial since
its only effect would be to enlarge the scope of the debate on issues of law
which had not already been broached.
Proulx J.A. considered
prostitution to be the sale of sexual favours or the offering of sexual
services in exchange for payment by another. In his view, it is not necessary
for there to be complete sexual relations between the service provider and the
client in order to constitute prostitution. He concluded that both the offer
of sexual services in the newspaper advertisement and the provision of services
by the dancer to her client established that the Pussy Cat was a common
bawdy-house for the purposes of acts of prostitution.
Points in Issue
1.Did the Court
of Appeal err in law when it decided that the amendments to the charge proposed
by the Crown should have been permitted by the trial judge?
2.Did the Court
of Appeal err in law in its conclusion that the impugned acts were indecent in
light of the standard of community tolerance?
Analysis
Should the Information have been Amended?
The Crown brought two motions
to amend the information pertaining to each of the appellants. They were
brought very late in the trial after all the evidence to be called on behalf of
the appellants had been submitted. All that remained was for the Crown to
tender evidence as to whether Robert Bourdeau was a "keeper" within
the meaning of the section.
In the first motion for
amendments, the Crown requested that the words "utilisés à des fins
d'actes d'indécence" ([translation]
"used for the practice of acts of indecency") be struck from the
information. The trial judge rejected this motion stating that if he granted
it, the accused would suffer prejudice. He put his position in this way:
[translation] . . .
one of the reasons which I see that could cause prejudice to the defence is
that all the . . . all these accused persons, from the time ‑‑
and even if you say "Well, your Honour, we are offering, the Crown is
offering the defence an adjournment", for say a month to prepare the
defence ‑‑ all the accused from the outset have obviously focused
their defence on and in terms of the charges brought against them, and so in
terms of premises which were a common bawdy‑house, premises used for the
practice of acts of indecency; and when premises are kept in that way, there is
a defence which is possible. . . .
The Crown's second motion was
to include the words "utilisés à des fins de prostitution et pour la
pratique d'actes d'indécence" ([translation]
"used for purposes of prostitution and for the practice of acts of
indecency") in the informations for each of the accused. This second
motion was also rejected. The trial judge again noted the prejudice that would
result to the accused if such an amendment were to be made at this late stage
of the trial. He also found that the evidence did not support the claim that the
Pussy Cat was being kept for the purpose of prostitution. The Court of Appeal
disagreed with the trial judge on both of these points.
The Criminal Code,
R.S.C. 1970, c. C-34, s. 529(3) (as am. by S.C. 1985, c. 19, s. 123) and
(4) (now ss. 601(3) and (4) ), provides for the amendment of a charge in these
terms:
529. . . .
s (3)
Subject to this section, a court shall, at any stage of the proceedings, amend
the indictment or a count therein as may be necessary where it appears
(a)
that the indictment has been preferred under a particular Act of Parliament
instead of another Act of Parliament;
(b)
that the indictment or a count thereof
(i) fails to
state or states defectively anything that is requisite to constitute the
offence,
(ii) does not
negative an exception that should be negatived,
(iii) is in
any way defective in substance,
and the
matters to be alleged in the proposed amendment are disclosed by the evidence
taken on the preliminary inquiry or on the trial; or
(c)
that the indictment or a count thereof is in any way defective in form.
(4)
The court shall, in considering whether or not an amendment should be made,
consider
(a) the
matters disclosed by the evidence taken on the preliminary inquiry,
(b) the
evidence taken on the trial, if any,
(c) the
circumstances of the case,
(d)
whether the accused has been misled or prejudiced in his defence by a variance,
error or omission mentioned in subsection (2) or (3), and
(e)
whether, having regard to the merits of the case, the proposed amendment can be
made without injustice being done.
By virtue of this section, the
courts now possess reasonably wide powers of amendment. Yet, it remains an
important principle of criminal law that persons accused of a crime must know
the charge brought against them in order to present a full answer and defence (Vézina
v. The Queen, [1986] 1 S.C.R. 2). A court cannot amend an information or
indictment where to do so would cause irreparable prejudice (R. v. Moore,
[1988] 1 S.C.R. 1097). Moreover, a court cannot amend an information unless
the evidence tendered is capable of supporting such a charge.
In the present case it is not
necessary to consider whether evidence of prostitution was disclosed during the
trial. The prejudice that granting the amendment would cause the appellants is
determinative of the issue.
When the motion for the
amendment was brought it was obvious that the appellants had prepared their
defence on the basis that the acts performed were not indecent. In light of
the wording of the original charge the appellants quite properly prepared their
entire defence on this issue. This can be seen from the careful and lengthy
testimony provided by the expert witness on this very question. To have
permitted the amendment at this stage would have caused irreparable prejudice
to the appellants. Perhaps much earlier in the trial proceedings it might have
been appropriate to allow the proposed amendment provided an adequate
adjournment was granted to the appellants to prepare their defence to meet the
amended charges. Undoubtedly, the appellants would have needed time to
consider their position and to consult and retain experts with regard to the
issue as to whether the acts constituted prostitution. That, of course, is
speculation. It is sufficient to say that, in the circumstances of this case,
the trial judge was correct in his conclusion that to grant the amendment at
this late stage would have caused irreparable prejudice to the appellants.
Further, in my view, it was
inappropriate for the Court of Appeal to grant the amendment. It is, I think,
an extraordinary step for an appellate court to amend the charge materially and
then to enter a conviction on the basis of the charge as amended. The
unfairness that results from such a procedure was aptly described by
Zuber J.A. in R. v. Geauvreau (1979), 51 C.C.C. (2d) 75
(Ont. C.A.). At p. 84 he wrote:
It
is part of our law of criminal procedure that a person accused of crime is
entitled to know the charge against him, whether contained in an information or
an indictment, in reasonably specific terms and he is tried on that charge.
This principle retains its vitality even though the formalism of an earlier era
has been diminished and trial Courts now possess reasonably wide powers of
amendment. However, even though criminal procedure has become less technical
and more flexible, the concept of an amendment at an appellate stage involves
difficult considerations. An amendment at trial contemplates a continuing
ability by the accused to meet an amended charge; the appellate stage occurs
long after the evidence has been led, arguments made and facts found. In my
view, it would be an extraordinary step for an appellate Court to materially
amend the charge and uphold a conviction based on the charge as amended. I
would think that such an extraordinary step would require the clearest
statutory basis.
Were the Acts in the Circumstances in which they
were Committed Indecent?
(i) The Nature of the Acts
in Question
After being informed about the
rules of the premises and having chosen the picture of the dancer he wished to
meet, the client was ushered to the room where the performance was to take
place. The sole occupants were the dancer and the client. In the room the
dancer once again explained that there was to be no physical contact.
During the course of the
20-minute performance the dancer talked about sex, took off her clothes and
caressed her body, including her genitals (with or without the vibrator,
depending on the client's choice). Several witnesses testified that the only
difference between the performance by the dancers in the Pussy Cat and that of
dancers performing in the strip bars was that the client was permitted to take
off his clothes and masturbate. The actions and movements of the nude dancers
performing in bars were not subject to any police action. The issue is,
therefore, whether the acts performed in the Pussy Cat were indecent.
(ii)The
Appropriate Test to Determine Indecency: The Community Standard of Tolerance
In Reference re ss. 193 and
195.1(1)(c) of the Criminal Code (Man.), [1990] 1 S.C.R. 1123, Lamer J. (as
he then was), stated at p. 1159 that in determining whether an act is indecent
the "community standard of tolerance" test should be applied. That
test is similar to the one used in obscenity cases. When applied to the issue
of indecency, the community standard test, enunciated in Towne Cinema
Theatres Ltd., supra, involves an analysis of the impugned acts in
light of the following considerations at p. 508:
(i) [there are]
accepted standards of tolerance in the contemporary Canadian community [which
should not be exceeded]; (ii) [these] standards must be contemporary as times
change and ideas change with them, one manifestation being the relative freedom
with which the whole question of sex is discussed; (iii) it is the standards of
the community as a whole which must be considered and not the standards of a
small segment of that community. . . ; (iv) the decision whether [the acts in
question are] tolerable according to Canadian community standards rests with
the court; (v) the task is to determine in an objective way what is tolerable
in accordance with the contemporary standards of the Canadian community, and
not merely to project one's own personal ideas of what is tolerable.
In discussing the meaning of
community standard of tolerance in Towne Cinema Theatres Ltd., supra,
Dickson C.J. at p. 508 stated:
The
cases all emphasize that it is a standard of tolerance, not taste, that
is relevant. What matters is not what Canadians think is right for themselves
to see. What matters is what Canadians would not abide other Canadians seeing
because it would be beyond the contemporary Canadian standard of tolerance to
allow them to see it. [Emphasis in original.]
In the same case, Wilson J.
provided a helpful distinction between tolerance and taste at p. 522:
The
Shorter Oxford English Dictionary defines "toleration" as
"the action or practice of tolerating or allowing what is not actually
approved." It is apparent from this definition that there is a
distinction between that which is not approved and that which is not to be
tolerated.
Wilson J., at p. 523, quoted with approval from
the decision of R. v. Doug Rankine Co. (1983), 36 C.R. (3d) 154 (Ont.),
at p. 173. There Borins Co. Ct. J. made the following assessment in
relation to what may be described as "sex films":
In my opinion,
contemporary community standards would tolerate the distribution of films which
consist substantially of scenes of people engaged in sexual intercourse.
Contemporary community standards would also tolerate the distribution of films
which consist of scenes of group sex, lesbianism, fellatio, cunnilingus, and
anal sex. However, films which consist substantially or partially of scenes
which portray violence and cruelty in conjunction with sex, particularly where
the performance of indignities degrades and dehumanizes the people upon whom
they are performed, exceed the level of community tolerance.
Wilson J. then continued at p. 523:
In drawing this
distinction I do not think that Borins Co. Ct. J. was suggesting that the
average Canadian finds the former type of film to his or her taste or that such
films are inoffensive to most Canadians. Rather, I think that Borins Co.
Ct. J. recognized that whether or not Canadians found the former type of
films distasteful, they were prepared to tolerate their being shown.
More recently in R. v.
Butler, [1992] 1 S.C.R. 452, this Court considered the community standard
of tolerance in order to determine whether the pornographic material in
question constituted such an undue exploitation of sex that it could be
labelled obscene. In that case one of the issues the Court considered was when
a work might cease to be art and becomes, instead, obscene. Sopinka J.
concluded that the final determination of that question might lie with the
degree of harm which could result from public exposure to the impugned
material. At page 485 he stated:
The
courts must determine as best they can what the community would tolerate others
being exposed to on the basis of the degree of harm that may flow from such
exposure. Harm in this context means that it predisposes persons to act in an
anti-social manner as, for example, the physical or mental mistreatment of
women by men, or, what is perhaps debatable, the reverse. Anti-social conduct
for this purpose is conduct which society formally recognizes as incompatible
with its proper functioning. The stronger the inference of a risk of harm the
lesser the likelihood of tolerance. The inference may be drawn from the
material itself or from the material and other evidence. Similarly evidence as
to the community standards is desirable but not essential.
That same consideration of the
degree of harm which may flow from the questioned work must also be relevant to
the determination of the community standard of tolerance with respect to acts
which are said to be indecent.
(iii)The
Circumstances Surrounding the Act; that is to say the Context in Which It Took
Place.
In any consideration of the
indecency of an act, the circumstances which surround the performance of the
act must be taken into account. Acts do not take place in a vacuum. The
community standard of tolerance is that of the whole community. However just
what the community will tolerate will vary with the place in which the acts
take place and the composition of the audience. For example, entertainment
which may be tolerated by the community as appropriate for the patrons of a bar
may well be completely inappropriate for an audience of high school students.
What is acceptable in a stage production performed for adults may be completely
unacceptable if performed for elementary school pupils in a school auditorium.
As well, the nature of the warning or notice that is given of the performance
may be of significance. No one is compelled to attend a performance of a nude
dancer. Nor could it be said that members of the audience were surprised by the
performance if notice of the nature of the dancing has been given. Further,
the purpose of the performance may be a factor to be taken into account. See
for example the reasons of Holden J.A. in R. v. MacLean and MacLean
(No. 2) (1982), 1 C.C.C. (3d) 412 (Ont. C.A.), and
Martin J.A. in R. v. Giambalvo (1982), 70 C.C.C. (2d) 324
(Ont. C.A.).
A number of cases have
properly taken into account the surrounding circumstances in determining
whether the acts were indecent. In R. v. Traynor, [1987] O.J. No. 1943
(Q.L.) (Ont. Prov. Ct., Crim. Div.), the question was whether a
performance in a licensed tavern by a professional singer, dancer and burlesque
performer offended the community standards of tolerance. During the course of
the performance, the dancer removed all of her clothing except her boots and a
g-string while singing a song. She gave the appearance of pressing her breasts
and her genitals against a vertical pole. Nosanchuk Prov. Ct. J. stated,
in my view correctly, that the following factors were significant in his
decision that the performance did not offend the community standards of
tolerance:
1) The
performance took place in a licenced [sic] tavern, publicly advertised
as an adult entertainment lounge;
2) The
prospective patrons were forewarned to stop if offended by total nudity;
3) The accused
was a professionally trained singer, dancer and actress who had appeared in
such a capacity in various parts of the United States, Canada, Australia,
England and Japan;
4) The accused
enjoyed a celebrity status which resulted in her being a guest on national
network television programs hosted by entertainers well known to the North
American public;
5) The
performance was described in the prosecution evidence as essentially funny,
upbeat and comic;
6) The singing
and dancing was described as professional and the gestures of the hands and
legs and the dancing was in rhythm;
7) The entire
act was described as well rehearsed;
8) The audience
was appreciative and well behaved;
9) The
performance of the accused essentially went no further than exposing her bare
breasts and vagina to the patrons in the course of the dance and doing other
gyrating motions on the stage.
Thus, the trial judge held
that while there were undoubtedly Canadians who would not approve of the type
of performance given by the accused, and would find it distasteful, offensive
or unacceptable, it did not offend the community standards of tolerance.
In R. v. Pelletier
(1985), 27 C.C.C. (3d) 77, [1986] R.J.Q. 595, the Quebec Superior Court used
the contextual approach to determine whether the showing at a bar of a video
tape which displayed scenes of cunnilingus, fellatio, lesbianism and sexual
penetration while nude dancers performed on stage offended the community
standards of tolerance. The participants in the video were all nude. On
occasion there were close-up shots of the genitals of the man and of the
woman. In one scene a woman introduced the handle of a feather duster into her
vagina. Another showed a woman observing the sexual antics of the participants
and demonstrating by the movement of her hand on her body that they were a
source of pleasurable stimulation for her.
In determining what the
appropriate level of community standard of tolerance would be in the context of
these specific facts, Boilard J. stated at p. 89 that:
(translation) . . . indecency concerns
sexual behaviour or its representation which is neither obscene nor immoral but
inappropriate according to the Canadian standards of tolerance because of the
context in which it takes place. In other words, indecency is not a function
of the behaviour itself but rather of the circumstances in which it takes
place.
He held that the audience, the place and the
context of the representation were essential elements in the determination of
indecency. Thus, although he was personally disgusted by the performance, he
found that in the context in which it was performed it would not have offended
the community's level of tolerance.
Other cases in which the
circumstances surrounding the act were determinative of the issue of indecency
include R. v. Kleppe (1977), 35 C.C.C. (2d) 168 (Ont. Prov. Ct.), R.
v. Sequin, [1969] 2 C.C.C. 150 (Ont. Co. Ct.), and R. v. Belanger
(1980), 5 W.C.B. 446 (Ont. Co. Ct.).
The Appropriate Consideration of the Evidence in
this Case
In this case the trial judge
properly recognized that the appropriate standard is not what the community
would applaud, appreciate or even accept but rather, the much less stringent
standard of community tolerance. He wrote at p. 223:
[translation] Applying this
test to the present case, one can say the following: what matters and what is
relevant is not what individual Canadians approve for themselves, it is what
individual Canadians are prepared to tolerate as an activity in a particular
place, without it being shocking, revolting or degrading.
In reaching his decision with
regard to the objective standard of community tolerance, the trial judge relied
on three sources of evidence. They were first the expert testimony of Dr.
Michel Campbell, a psychologist, sexologist and professor at the University of
Quebec in Montreal; secondly, the Fraser Committee study on Pornography and
Prostitution in Canada and thirdly, the testimony of a former employee of the
Pussy Cat and of a police officer who attended at the premises. This approach
is eminently reasonable and in accordance with the conclusions of this Court in
Towne Cinema Theatres Ltd., supra. There it was held that the
use of expert evidence to assess the community standard of tolerance is
certainly advisable. Let us then first consider the testimony of
Dr. Campbell.
(i) Dr. Campbell's
Evidence
Dr. Campbell gave a
lengthy and detailed explanation of human sexual behaviour and attitudes. He
testified that the incidents of masturbation had increased to where it can now
be said that some 90 percent of all men and 50 percent of all women engage in
masturbation. In his view the increase was due to a change in attitudes and
beliefs which have progressed from the view that masturbation was a harmful
activity to the present opinion that for most people masturbation is a healthy
and acceptable behaviour.
In the opinion of
Dr. Campbell the acts performed in the Pussy Cat were non-pathological
acts of voyeurism and exhibitionism which did not cause harm to anyone. He
went further and described the acts as constituting "safe sex" since
sexually transmitted diseases could obviously not be contracted through this kind
of activity. He also testified that the acts in question were neither
degrading nor dehumanizing; nor were they perverse. He thus concluded that the
acts were not likely to exceed the standards of tolerance of the majority of
the Canadian population.
He further expressed the view
that Canadians would be more likely to tolerate the activities conducted in the
Pussy Cat than acts of prostitution the classic sense involving sexual
intercourse, since the public health risks were obviously much less.
Furthermore, the fact that the activities in question involved consensual and
heterosexual adults increased the likelihood that they would be tolerated.
Unlike the Court of Appeal, I
am of the view that it was entirely appropriate for the trial judge to take
into account the expert testimony of Dr. Campbell in determining the community
standard of tolerance. That testimony was relevant and helpful in arriving at
an objective appreciation as to what types of sexual behaviour would be
tolerated by the Canadian public. It was on the basis of the statistics
provided by Dr. Campbell, which indicated that most Canadians engage in
masturbation, that the trial judge concluded that the average Canadian was more
likely to tolerate activities which were similar to those in which they engaged
in themselves. Obviously, any perception of what would be tolerated will very
properly be influenced by what is perceived as normal. What is normal will, in
turn, depend upon the extent to which that same activity is engaged in by
others. If the act in question is one that is performed by the majority in the
community then it is impossible to say that the act itself would not be
tolerated by the community. It can then only be the "where" and
"when" of the performance of the act, that is to say its surrounding
circumstances, that could lead to its being found to be outside the range of
community tolerance and therefore indecent. Thus, once the act itself is found
to be tolerated then the inquiry must focus on the circumstances surrounding its
performance. It was then appropriate and reasonable for the trial judge to
take into account and rely upon the expert evidence of Dr. Campbell.
I am supported in this view by
the conclusions of Dubin J.A. as he then was in R. v. St. Pierre
(1974), 3 O.R. (2d) 642. In that case the trial judge had ruled as
inadmissible the testimony of a duly-qualified psychiatrist who stated that
depending on the circumstances, an act of cunnilingus as a preliminary to
sexual intercourse was perfectly normal and was practised by a large proportion
of the population. He also testified that it was a practice which had been
increasing in use over the past 20 years. In reversing the trial judge's
decision to exclude the evidence, Dubin J.A. stated at pp. 649-50:
Attitudes
relating to sexual behaviour are constantly changing. In determining whether
the conduct of the accused was a very marked departure from decent conduct, it
would have been of great assistance to the jury to have been apprised by an
admittedly qualified expert as to sexual practices being carried on in this
country, which are not regarded by many as abnormal or perverted. In the
absence of such evidence the jury would be left to make the determination
dependent solely on their own private views and their own experience.
(ii)The
Report of the Fraser Committee on Pornography and Prostitution
The trial judge also made use
of the report drafted by the Fraser Committee on Pornography and Prostitution.
This committee was established by the Government of Canada to study the
problems associated with pornography and prostitution and to carry out a program
of socio-legal research in support of their work. It held public hearings and
private sessions from coast to coast seeking the views of individuals and
groups of Canadians.
In addition, in order to
assist the Committee in its efforts to understand the current situation with
respect to pornography and prostitution in Canada, the Department of Justice
commissioned a number of studies, one of which was the National Population
Study. In this study a sample of 2,018 Canadians, representative of all parts
of the country except the Yukon and Northwest Territories, answered questions
about pornography. Once again I believe that the trial judge was correct in
relying upon the Fraser Committee Report and the studies it had reviewed. I
would agree with the trial judge's statement at p. 224 that:
[translation] . . .
the recommendations of this Committee are a valuable and important tool for
measuring the threshold of tolerance of Canadians in general for phenomena such
as pornography, prostitution or bawdy‑houses, which it goes without
saying clearly includes the phenomenon of what is indecent or what is not.
. . .
What
matters for the Court is to note that in 1985 the community threshold of
tolerance was measured quite adequately by the Fraser Committee, even though
the recommendations made were not adopted by Parliament. The Court may
therefore take this study into consideration as one factor by which it can
measure the standards of the Canadian community with respect to
"indecent acts" which may be tolerated in so‑called "bawdy‑houses".
[Emphasis in original.]
(iii)Testimony
regarding Police Tolerance of the Performance of Dances at Bars Which were
Similar to Those performed at the Pussy Cat
The respondent contended that
the trial judge erred in taking into consideration the apparent police
tolerance of nude dancing in strip clubs across Canada where the acts performed
were very similar to those performed in the Pussy Cat. The respondent argued
that the trial judge did not base his conclusions regarding police tolerance on
any evidence that was presented at trial and that indeed, there was evidence to
the contrary. Reference was made to the testimony of Constable Claude Cormier
who stated that when he saw nude dancing of the kind undertaken at the Pussy
Cat, he did [translation]
"what was necessary".
However, the transcripts
reveal that there was, in fact, testimony given by Johanne Totunov and
Constable Gilles Rochon, both of whom were witnesses for the Crown, which
indicated that there was a wide degree of police tolerance for
"dancing" which simulated sexual activity and which was similar to
that performed at the Pussy Cat. The evidence quite clearly suggests that
strip tease or nude dances in which the dancer caressed her own genitals and
simulated orgasms were tolerated by the police. Although evidence of police
acceptance of the impugned conduct is not determinative of the community
standard of tolerance, it is, nonetheless, a useful indication of what that
standard might be.
Constable Gilles Rochon, one
of the police officers who attended at the Pussy Cat, first denied that he had
witnessed dancing of a similar nature to that performed in the Pussy Cat.
However, when cross-examined by defence counsel, he admitted that he had seen
dancers in strip clubs lying on the stage, spreading their legs, caressing
their genitals, breasts and simulating orgasms. It would appear that the
performance at the Pussy Cat was no more graphic or sexually specific, that is
to say, no worse than the dancing the police tolerated at the strip bars.
As well, Johanne Totunov, a
former employee of the Pussy Cat and a former nude dancer in Montreal,
testified that it was her experience that the practice of touching the breasts,
buttocks and even, at times, the genitals, was something which had become
tolerated by the Montreal police.
Finally, I would note that
Constable Gilles Rochon testified that on various occasions he had viewed
video films depicting graphic sexual scenes involving anal and vaginal
penetration, masturbation, cunnilingus and fellatio in several strip bars
without concluding that charges should be brought.
Thus, there was ample evidence
upon which the trial judge could properly base his conclusion that activities
similar to those engaged in at the Pussy Cat were tolerated by the police.
This too could be considered an appropriate factor in assessing the community
standard of tolerance for the acts which took place in the Pussy Cat.
The Surrounding Circumstances that were Unique to
this Case
Let us consider the
circumstances that surrounded the acts in this case. As we have seen in this
case the acts, in themselves, of both the clients and the dancers came within
the range of community tolerance. This conclusion with regard to the acts of
masturbation was properly drawn on the basis of the evidence given by Dr.
Campbell on human sexual behaviour and attitudes and on the report of the
Fraser Committee on Pornography and Prostitution. With regard to the
performance of the dances, the conclusion could be properly based upon the
evidence of those who had, in the past, performed in strip bars and the
evidence of police tolerance of activities in strip bars which were similar to
those performed at the Pussy Cat. The inquiry must then focus on the
circumstances which surrounded the activities at the Pussy Cat. It is those
circumstances which will determine whether the activities would be tolerated by
the community.
The Rule Against Physical Contact
It is significant that clients
were warned when they first arrived at the Pussy Cat and again later by the
dancer which they had selected that there was to be no physical contact of any
kind. That was the rule of the establishment and there is no evidence that it
was ever breached. It is true that there was masturbation, or in the case of
the dancer, simulated masturbation. Whether the act of masturbation itself is
indecent must depend on all the surrounding circumstances or the context in which
it takes place. If masturbation can be one of the principal themes of the well
accepted novel, Portnoy's Complaint (1969), by the outstanding author
Philip Roth, it surely cannot have the same connotation of indecency it
possessed in the past.
Although the lack of physical
contact is not determinative of the issue, it is nonetheless highly
significant. The rule ensured that there would be little likelihood that
physical harm or hurt would be done to either individual. Of equal importance
was that it ensured that the transmission of infectious sexual diseases was
prevented. This factor should increase the level of the tolerance of the
community for the acts performed at the Pussy Cat.
I note also that in those
reported cases where masturbation was held to have been indecent it was clearly
established that there was physical contact between the client and the woman
performing the services. See R. v. Laliberté (1973), 12 C.C.C. (2d) 109
(Que. C.A.), and R. v. Lantay, supra.
The Place Where the Acts Took Place
It cannot be forgotten that
the sexual activities were conducted behind closed doors out of the view of the
general public. It is true that the public did have access to the Pussy Cat
premises. Thus it came within the definition of a public place provided by
s. 150 of the Criminal Code, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-46 , which
"includes any place to which the public have access as of right or by
invitation, express or implied". Nonetheless, common sense indicates that
there are great differences between locations which can come within the
definition of public places. Obviously, the performance of an activity in a
closed room in a house, where only two consenting adults are present is far different
from carrying out the same activity in a school yard or a public park.
On this aspect of the case,
the Court of Appeal was concerned with the presence of the small peep hole in
the wall of each room. A former employee of the Pussy Cat testified that
before she accepted a job she looked through the peep holes to satisfy herself
that there was no physical contact between the clients and the dancer. Based
on this evidence the Court of Appeal concluded that the peep holes could well
be used more often than the court was being told. That, I think, is
speculation. There is no evidence that they were used for any purely
voyeuristic purpose. At the most their presence would mean that one other
consenting adult observed the proceedings. This is hardly enough to render the
act any more public, in any significant sense, than it was when performed
between the two persons apparently alone in the room. The presence of the peep
holes would, if anything, indicate that the acts were not viewed as indecent by
any of the persons in the room or by the management enforcing their rule
against physical contact.
Thus although the acts took
place in a public place, as those words are defined in the Criminal Code ,
they were not a blatantly public display. Rather the closed room was
relatively private with only consenting adults present.
The Absence of Harm
There was no harm caused by
the activities. The peep holes, if anything, provided a means of ensuring that
no harm came to the dancers or the clients. As Dr. Campbell observed, the
activities took place between consenting adults who chose to be in a place
which they, at least, would consider relatively private. In these times when
so many sexual activities can have a truly fatal attraction, these acts provided
an opportunity for safe sex with no risk of any infection. The absence of any
risk of harm could properly be taken into account in assessing community
tolerance for the act.
The Informed and Consensual Nature of the Acts
It is clear that everyone
attending the premises knew exactly what they could expect. If they had any
misgivings about being in a room with a naked female they could leave the
premises. Both the clients and dancers knew what the activities entailed.
Both parties in the room consented to the activities. This was a factor that
could be considered in determining if there was community tolerance for the
acts.
Absence of Complaints
There were no complaints about
the Pussy Cat either from its clients or residents. The clients who testified
stated that they were neither shocked nor insulted by what took place within
the establishment. This too can be considered in deciding whether there was
community tolerance for the acts.
Similarity to Accepted Nude Dancing
It is clear from the evidence
that the actions of the dancers at the Pussy Cat were very similar to those of
dancers in strip bars. The performances of the dancers in strip bars were
clearly accepted by the public and by the police. This indicates that there
was indeed a community tolerance for sexually suggestive acts performed by
naked dancers. These actions are not violent and in the milieu of the strip
bar they are accepted or at least tolerated by the community. It follows that
the actions of the dancers in the Pussy Cat would be tolerated by the
community.
Thus, neither the actions of
the dancers nor, in the factual circumstances presented by this case, the acts
of masturbation constituted indecent acts. Here, the surrounding circumstances
were such that the acts would be tolerated by the community and they were
therefore not indecent. This result may seem offensive to some. Yet, it must
be remembered that we are not concerned with standards of good taste. Rather
the question is whether the acts will be tolerated by the community.
Disposition
In the result I would allow
the appeal, set aside the order of the Court of Appeal registering convictions
against the appellants and restore the acquittal of the appellants.
Appeal allowed, La
Forest and Gonthier JJ.
dissenting.
Solicitors for the
appellants: La Haye, Chartrand, Moisan, Boucher, Gaudreau,
Doray, Montréal.
Solicitor for the
respondent: Germain Tremblay, Montréal.