R. v. Tortone, [1993] 2 S.C.R.
973
Dante Tortone Appellant
v.
Her Majesty The Queen Respondent
Indexed as: R. v.
Tortone
File No.: 23123.
1993: April 28;
1993: September 2.
Present: Lamer C.J.
and Sopinka, Gonthier, Cory and Major JJ.
on appeal from the court of appeal for
ontario
Criminal law ‑‑
Trial ‑‑ Fairness ‑‑ Narcotics charges -- Accused's
trial conducted intermittently over eight‑month period ‑‑
Trial judge stating that he had seriously considered declaring a mistrial but
had decided not to do so because that would cause undue hardship to accused ‑‑
Accused acquitted on certain charges ‑‑ Acquittals overturned by
Court of Appeal and new trial ordered ‑‑ Whether trial judge erred in
not declaring mistrial.
Criminal law --
Narcotics -- Accused acquitted on certain charges ‑‑ Acquittals
overturned by Court of Appeal and new trial ordered ‑‑ Whether
trial judge erred in failing to consider whether Crown had proved accused guilty
of one of charges.
The accused was
charged with various drug trafficking offences, and with possession of the
proceeds of narcotic trafficking and laundering such proceeds. These latter
charges included counts involving conduct prior to July 1989, counts relating
to early July 1989, and one count alleging that the accused had been in
unlawful possession of the proceeds of narcotic trafficking between April and
July 1989 (the "global count"). The trial was conducted
intermittently over almost eight months. At the conclusion of the Crown's
case, the accused moved to have the charges dismissed. In oral reasons
dismissing the motion, the trial judge said he had had difficulty dealing with
the case because of the intermittent nature of the trial proceedings and had
had to rely entirely on his notes. Three months later he convicted the accused
of the trafficking charges, but acquitted him of the proceeds‑related
charges. In rendering his verdict the trial judge again commented on the
sporadic nature of the proceedings. He said he had seriously considered
declaring a mistrial because the trial proceedings were "extremely
unsatisfactory", but had decided not to because that would cause undue
hardship to the accused. The Court of Appeal allowed the accused's and the
Crown's appeals and ordered a new trial on all of the charges. It was
satisfied on the basis of the trial judge's conclusions as to his difficulties
in dealing with the case that a mistrial should have been declared. It also
found that the trial judge erred in his assessment of the proceeds-related
charges, by seeming to proceed on the basis that the Crown had to prove the
actual amount of money in the accused's possession which was the proceeds of
narcotic trafficking. The accused appealed to this Court from the Court of
Appeal's decision to order a new trial on the charges of which he was
acquitted.
Held (Gonthier and Cory JJ.
dissenting in part): The appeal should be allowed in part.
Per Lamer C.J. and Sopinka and
Major JJ.: The trial judge was correct in not declaring a mistrial on the
charges of which the accused was acquitted. The Court of Appeal's conclusion
that the trial judge must have had the same difficulty with the evidence at the
time of rendering his verdict as he had when dealing with the nonsuit motion
does not necessarily follow, but is based on conjecture. The trial judge may
have improved his understanding of the evidence in the intervening three
months. He could have refreshed his memory by a more thorough review of his
notes, and may have seen a transcript. He may also have gained renewed
appreciation of the evidence from the closing submissions of counsel.
The Court of Appeal
erred in overturning the trial judge's acquittals on the pre‑July and
July proceeds counts. While different inferences of fact may have been drawn
by another judge from the findings of fact at the trial, it is not open to an
appellate court, on a Crown appeal from an acquittal, to interfere with the
inferences of fact drawn by the trial judge simply because the appellate court
would draw different inferences. The acquittal by the trial judge on the
global count cannot be affirmed, however, in light of his finding that some
money must have come into the accused's possession as a result of trafficking
in cocaine. It was open to the trial judge to conclude that although he could
not identify which of the transactions particularized in the various proceeds
counts involved the proceeds of narcotic trafficking, the Crown had proved
beyond a reasonable doubt that at least one of those transactions involved the
proceeds of narcotic trafficking. The accused would then have been convicted
on the global count. The trial judge's failure to direct his mind to this
issue was an error of law.
Per Gonthier and Cory JJ.
(dissenting in part): There is no reason to interfere with the Court of
Appeal's disposition that all the acquittals should be set aside. While the
trial judge did not state the specific nature of the difficulty he was having
at either the time of the nonsuit motion or subsequently, it is nevertheless
clear that the intermittent nature of the hearings had caused him to conclude
that he had not been able to acquire a satisfactory appreciation of the complex
factual record which was required to decide the matters before him on a sound
basis. The persistence of a difficulty is underlined by his reference to it in
the strongest terms both when dealing with the motion and three months later by
way of preface to his reasons for verdict. The suggestion that the trial
judge's recollection improved with the additional lapse of time between the
nonsuit motion and the rendering of a verdict is belied by his comment at the
latter time that the extended and sporadic nature of the trial had been so extremely
unsatisfactory that he gave serious consideration to declaring a mistrial and
that his reason for not doing so was undue hardship to the accused. This
reason cannot justify rendering a verdict on the basis of a trial that is not
fair, be it a conviction or an acquittal. A proper remedy in the event a fair
trial cannot be held within a reasonable delay is a stay of proceedings. The
fact that the trial judge gave reasons referring to the evidence is not
sufficient to allay the concern as to the fairness of the trial. His comments
indicate that he did not consider that the fact-gathering process had provided
him with an adequate basis for a due consideration of the evidence. There was
a variety of testimony and evidence in this case which was necessarily subject
to an assessment regarding credibility. In these circumstances, the presence
of a statement by the trial judge that the fact‑finding process was
inadequate is sufficient grounds for a declaration of a mistrial.
Cases Cited
By Major J.
Referred to: R. v. Morin, [1992] 3 S.C.R.
286; R. v. C. (R.), [1993] 2 S.C.R. 226; Schuldt v. The Queen,
[1985] 2 S.C.R. 592.
By Gonthier J. (dissenting in
part)
R. v. Morin, [1992] 3 S.C.R. 286.
Statutes and Regulations Cited
Criminal
Code, R.S.C., 1985,
c. C‑46, s. 675 .
Narcotic
Control Act, R.S.C.
1970, c. N‑1, ss. 11.1 [ad. 1988, c. 61, s. 13], 11.2
[idem].
Narcotic
Control Act, R.S.C.,
1985, c. N‑1, ss. 19.1 [ad. c. 42 (4th Supp.),
s. 12], 19.2 [idem].
APPEAL from a
judgment of the Ontario Court of Appeal (1992), 9 O.R. (3d) 161, 75 C.C.C. (3d)
50, 57 O.A.C. 13, setting aside the accused's acquittals on narcotics proceeds
charges and ordering a new trial. Appeal allowed in part, Gonthier and
Cory JJ. dissenting in part.
Marc Rosenberg, for the appellant.
D. D. Graham
Reynolds, Q.C.,
and Theresa M. Brucker, for the respondent.
//Major J.//
The judgment of
Lamer C.J. and Sopinka and Major JJ. was delivered by
Major
J. -- The appellant was
charged with: one count of conspiracy to traffic in a narcotic; two counts of
trafficking in narcotics; two counts of possession of narcotics for the purpose
of trafficking; ten counts of possession of the proceeds of narcotic
trafficking, contrary to s. 11.1 of the Narcotic Control Act, R.S.C.
1970, c. N-1 (now s. 19.1); and nine counts of laundering the proceeds of
narcotic trafficking, contrary to s. 11.2 (now s. 19.2) of the Narcotic
Control Act. He was convicted in the Ontario Provincial Court, Criminal
Division of the conspiracy, trafficking and possession of narcotics charges,
but was acquitted of the proceeds-related charges.
The appellant and
the respondent each appealed to the Ontario Court of Appeal, which allowed both
appeals and ordered a new trial on all of the charges: (1992), 9 O.R. (3d)
161, 75 C.C.C. (3d) 50, 57 O.A.C. 13. The appellant now appeals to this Court
as of right from that part of the Court of Appeal's judgment which directed a
new trial on the charges of which he was acquitted. The respondent has not
cross-appealed from the Court of Appeal's decision to order a new trial on the
charges of which the appellant was convicted.
I. Facts
The Crown's case
against the appellant relied primarily upon police surveillance of the
appellant and an alleged co-conspirator, Alejandro Manolio. The trial judge
found that the police surveillance evidence of June 17, 1989 did not advance
the Crown's case, but that the surveillance evidence of June 19, 20, and 28,
1989, and of July 3 to 7, 1989, established a relationship between the
appellant and Manolio.
There was further
surveillance evidence which showed an association between the appellant and two
men, Zevallos and Narvaez. Part of this evidence was that on July 7, 1989, the
appellant and Manolio drove in a Mazda registered in the name of Zevallos to a
school lot and then parked behind a Mustang a short distance from the lot.
Narvaez, who was a passenger in the Mustang, approached the appellant and
Manolio. The appellant, after a short conversation with Narvaez, went to the
passenger side of the Mazda and took out a white plastic bag. He handed the
bag to Narvaez, who then got into a Toyota. The police followed and stopped
the Toyota. The other occupant of the Toyota, Zevallos, was at that time found
in possession of one kilogram of cocaine and $4,200 in Canadian money. The
cocaine was contained in a bag which, at least on the surface, did not appear
to be similar to the package handed to Narvaez by the appellant.
The police arrested
the appellant later on July 7, 1989. The appellant was found upon his arrest
to have approximately $306,000 in cash in the trunk of the car he was driving.
At the same time the police searched an Oldsmobile Toronado (which the
appellant had been observed driving on July 3, 1989), and found 15 kilograms of
cocaine. The evidence indicated that Manolio had more frequent contact with
this car than had the appellant.
The evidence
disclosed that on a number of occasions from April to July 1989, the appellant
was in possession of large amounts of Canadian currency, which he was
exchanging for U.S. currency and Swiss francs. The total amount of currency
that the appellant was shown to have handled over this period was in excess of
$700,000 Canadian. The Crown's theory was that Manolio was the person who did
the actual trafficking in narcotics and that the appellant handled the money.
The appellant
called evidence at trial in an attempt to explain the large amounts of cash he
had handled over the period in question. It was claimed that the appellant and
his brother, who lives in Argentina, were conducting a currency exchange
business. The appellant's brother testified that this business involved buying
Argentinean money with U.S. dollars on the Argentinean black market, then using
the Argentinean money to purchase Canadian dollars on the black market, and
finally shipping the Canadian money to Canada to be exchanged for U.S.
dollars. The appellant's brother stated that the difference between the value
of Canadian and U.S. currency on the Argentinean black market would result in
this type of circular exchange yielding a substantial profit, a claim supported
by the expert testimony of an economist. The appellant also called as
witnesses a relative who testified to having acted on one occasion as a courier
of Canadian currency between Argentina and Canada for the appellant and his
brother, and an Argentinean who testified to having lent $400,000 U.S. to the
appellant's brother. The appellant did not testify.
The appellant's
trial was conducted intermittently over 20 days from November 16, 1989 to July
3, 1990. At the conclusion of the Crown's case, the appellant moved to have
the charges dismissed on the basis that the Crown had failed to adduce any
evidence to prove the essential elements of the offences. The trial judge
dismissed that motion on April 2, 1990. In the course of his oral reasons for
denying the motion, the trial judge commented upon having difficulty dealing
with the case because of the intermittent nature of the trial proceedings and
that he had to rely entirely on his notes.
Three months later,
on July 3, 1990, the trial judge delivered judgment with oral reasons. In
rendering his verdict the trial judge again commented on the sporadic nature of
the proceedings but his comments did not indicate that he had the same
difficulty in dealing with the evidence as he had in April. The trial judge
said he had seriously considered declaring a mistrial because the trial
proceedings were "extremely unsatisfactory", but that he had decided
not to declare a mistrial because that would cause undue hardship to the
appellant. The trial judge then convicted the appellant on the conspiracy,
trafficking and possession of narcotics charges, and acquitted him on the
proceeds-related charges. On July 25, 1990, the trial judge sentenced the
appellant to nine years' imprisonment.
In considering the
trial judge's decision to acquit the appellant on the proceeds-related charges,
it is helpful to divide the proceeds-related charges into separate groups based
on the time periods involved. The proceeds-related charges against the
appellant were counts 6 to 24 on the information dated November 16, 1989.
Counts 6 to 11 and 22 involved allegations of unlawful possession of the
proceeds of narcotic trafficking, and of laundering the proceeds of narcotic
trafficking, between April 28, 1989 and May 24, 1989 ("the pre-July counts").
Counts 12 to 21 and 24 involved allegations of similar illegal conduct by the
appellant in early July 1989 ("the July counts"). Finally, count 23
alleged the appellant had been in unlawful possession of the proceeds of
narcotic trafficking between April 28, 1989 and July 6, 1989 ("the global
count").
II. Judgments in the Courts Below
A. Provincial Court
(i)Application
to have the charges dismissed for no evidence (April 2, 1990)
The trial judge in
rejecting the application stated:
One
of the difficulties I have had in dealing with this case and coming to any
conclusion is the length of time it took to complete the crown's case. This
case started back in about the middle of November of 1989, and proceeded from
time to time into March of this year, and I have had to rely entirely upon my
notes.
In rejecting the
application for a nonsuit, the trial judge applied the proper test when he
said:
I
have gone through my notes on the evidence carefully, and I have come to the
conclusion that there is some evidence, without weighing or assessing it, some
evidence, to support the charges that Mr. Tortone faces, and this includes the
conspiracy charge.
(ii) Trial
verdict (July 3, 1990)
The trial judge
first commented:
A
trial conducted sporadically over this length of time can only be extremely
unsatisfactory to the accused, who has been in custody from the day of his
arrest, the 7th of July, 1989 and cannot be commensurate with the proper
administration of justice. I, from a trial judge's point of view, find such an
extended and sporadic trial extremely unsatisfactory. So much so, that I've
given serious consideration to declaring a mistrial. However, I'm not going to
take that step, since to do so would cause undue hardship to the accused.
In the course of
reviewing the evidence, the trial judge rejected the Crown's contention that
finding the appellant guilty on the conspiracy, possession of narcotics, and
trafficking charges meant that the proceeds-related charges were also proven beyond
a reasonable doubt (the Crown's argument being that there could be no other
explanation for the source of the large amounts of cash the appellant was
handling). He then stated:
Any
evidence of cocaine dealing does not exist before the 5th, 6th or 7th of July,
1989 or perhaps the 19th of June, 1989. It may be valid to suspect the accused
was involved in the cocaine trade as far back as April or May of 1989, but that
cannot be anything more than a suspicion.
The trial judge reviewed the defence
evidence, and concluded that evidence raised a reasonable doubt as to the
pre-July counts:
The
Crown submitted this evidence of supposedly legitimate foreign exchange
transactions should be totally disbelieved because no one carrying on a
legitimate business would operate in such a sloppy, inept and careless way as
described by [the appellant's brother].
I
agree their way of carrying on their money business was incredibly careless;
however, even though I discount that evidence and give it little weight, there
is still some evidence of large amounts of Canadian cash money coming to the
accused from a source other than the cocaine trade.
He then dismissed the pre-July counts.
The trial judge
found that while the evidence had not proved a conspiracy to have commenced in
March 1989, it was established beyond a reasonable doubt that the appellant and
Manolio "entered into such a conspiracy commencing Monday, the 3rd of
July, 1989, and ending on Friday, the 7th of July, 1989." He found the
appellant guilty of the conspiracy charge (over the shorter time period than
that stated in the charge), and of the possession of narcotics and trafficking
charges.
The trial judge
went on to rule that there was a reasonable doubt as to the remaining
proceeds-related charges (the July and global counts):
Due
to there being some evidence that at least some of the money the accused was in
possession of and dealing with was sent to him from Argentina for legitimate
business purposes, and due to there being very little evidence, or perhaps
none, of how much money actually came into the accused's possession as a result
of trafficking in cocaine -- and there must have been some money -- I
reluctantly come to the conclusion that the Crown has failed to establish
beyond a reasonable doubt the remaining money offences, counts 12, 13, 14, 15,
16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 23 and 24. Those counts are dismissed.
[Emphasis added.]
B. Court of Appeal (1992), 9
O.R. (3d) 161
(i) Appeal
by the appellant from the convictions
Goodman J.A. noted
(at p. 165) in reviewing the facts and evidence that because the activities of
the appellant and Manolio "were very complicated and difficult to
follow",
[i]t
is little wonder that the trial judge expressed such consternation about the
intermittent nature of the trial which undoubtedly made it very difficult to
piece together the sequence of the events disclosed by surveillance over such a
lengthy period of time as given in evidence by so many witnesses.
Goodman J.A. would have dismissed a
number of the appellant's grounds of appeal but was satisfied on the basis of
the trial judge's conclusions as to his difficulties in dealing with the case
that a new trial should be ordered.
(ii)
Appeal by the Crown from the acquittals
In dealing with the
argument that the trial judge should have declared a mistrial on all of the
charges, Goodman J.A stated, at p. 170:
In
order to succeed, the Crown must show that the trial judge erred in law. In my
opinion, the evidence with respect to these charges was inextricably interwoven
with the evidence upon which the convictions against Tortone were based. If,
as I have found, the trial judge could not fairly proceed to convict Tortone
for the reasons stated, he erred in law in failing to declare a mistrial. The
same reasoning applies to the trial of the charges of which Tortone was
acquitted.
He also found that the trial judge
erred in his assessment of the proceeds-related charges, by his seeming to
proceed on the basis that the Crown had to prove the actual amount of money in
the appellant's possession which was the proceeds of narcotic trafficking.
As a result, the
Court of Appeal also ordered a new trial on the proceeds-related charges.
III. Points in Issue
The appellant
raises four issues in his appeal to this Court:
1.Did
the Court of Appeal for Ontario err in holding that the failure of the trial
judge to declare a mistrial in relation to counts 6 to 24 of the information
was an error of law upon which the Attorney General of Canada could appeal
pursuant to the provisions of s. 676 of the Criminal Code ?
2.Did
the Court of Appeal for Ontario err in holding that the trial judge erred in
law in failing to declare a mistrial in relation to counts 6 to 24 of the
information?
3.Did
the Court of Appeal for Ontario err in holding that the trial judge misdirected
himself as to the elements of the offences contrary to ss. 11.1(2)(a)
and 11.2(2)(a) of the Narcotic Control Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. N-1
(as amended)?
4.Did
the Court of Appeal for Ontario err in failing to consider whether the Attorney
General of Canada had shown that if the trial judge had properly instructed
himself, his judgment of acquittal would not necessarily have been the same?
IV. Analysis
A. The trial judge's decision not
to declare a mistrial
As the Crown did
not appeal the decision to order a new trial on the charges of which the
appellant was convicted, the question of whether the trial judge erred in
deciding not to declare a mistrial on those charges is not before this Court.
It is only the charges of which the appellant was acquitted that are now in
issue.
The Court of Appeal
held that the trial judge must have had the same difficulty with the evidence
at the time of rendering his verdict (July 3, 1990) as he had when dealing with
the nonsuit motion (April 2, 1990). That conclusion does not necessarily
follow.
The trial judge's
decision on the nonsuit motion in April required only that he consider if there
was some evidence of the essential elements of the charges against the
appellant, but the process of reaching a verdict in July required the trial
judge to actually weigh that evidence. While it is speculative, nonetheless in
the time between April and July, the trial judge may have improved his
understanding of the evidence, he could have refreshed his memory by a more
thorough review of his notes. He may have seen a transcript. He may have
gained renewed appreciation of the evidence from the closing submissions of
counsel. This Court was told on the appeal that the trial judge had detailed
submissions from Crown counsel at the conclusion of the trial. It is
noteworthy that the trial judge did not express the same concerns in reaching
his trial decision as he did when dealing with the nonsuit. It is conjecture
to say he must have had the same difficulty in July as he had in April. It
would also be conjecture to say that this must have been the reason why the
trial judge considered declaring a mistrial. The trial judge did not indicate
in giving his trial verdict why he had considered declaring a mistrial.
Although the trial
judge did not deal exhaustively with the evidence in reaching his decision,
there is no reason to conclude that he was not able to appreciate the
evidence. On the contrary the trial judge gave reasons on the evidence for
his conclusions. This was adequate, particularly as there is no requirement
for a trial judge to comment upon all the evidence in his reasons for
judgment: R. v. Morin, [1992] 3 S.C.R. 286, at p. 296; R. v. C. (R.),
[1993] 2 S.C.R. 226.
In the result the
trial judge was correct in not declaring a mistrial on the charges of which the
appellant was acquitted.
B. The trial judge's findings on
the proceeds charges
The trial judge
found as a fact that there was no more than a suspicion that prior to June 19,
1989, at the earliest, the appellant was involved in a conspiracy to traffic in
cocaine. He also found as a fact that the appellant had raised a reasonable doubt
that large amounts of currency had come into his possession through a foreign
exchange business being operated by the appellant and his brother. On the
basis of these findings, the trial judge went on to conclude as a fact that
there was a reasonable doubt that the appellant was guilty of the pre-July
counts. The trial judge also drew an inference of fact that in light of the
evidence regarding the claimed foreign exchange business, in combination with
the absence of evidence of money coming into the appellant's possession as a
result of cocaine trafficking, the Crown had failed to prove beyond a
reasonable doubt that the appellant was guilty of the July counts and the
global count.
While different
inferences of fact may have been drawn by another judge from the findings of
fact at the trial, it is not open to an appellate court, on a Crown appeal from
an acquittal, to interfere with the inferences of fact drawn by the trial judge
simply because the appellate court would draw different inferences: Schuldt
v. The Queen, [1985] 2 S.C.R. 592. In my view the Court of Appeal erred in
overturning the trial judge's verdict on the pre-July counts and the July
counts.
However, it is open
to an appellate court to overturn a trial judge's verdict where the trial judge
has not directed his mind to an issue or issues that require determination in
order to reach the verdict. In this case, it was necessary for the trial judge
to determine not only whether the Crown had proven that the specific amounts
particularized in the various proceeds counts were the proceeds of narcotic
trafficking, but also whether, even if there were a reasonable doubt on all the
other proceeds counts, the Crown had proven the global count beyond a
reasonable doubt. A finding that there was reasonable doubt as to all the
other proceeds counts would not necessarily lead to a conclusion that there was
also reasonable doubt on the global count.
It was open to the
trial judge to conclude that although he could not identify which of the
transactions particularized in the various proceeds counts involved the
proceeds of narcotic trafficking, the Crown had proven beyond a reasonable
doubt that at least one of those transactions involved the proceeds of narcotic
trafficking. If so, the result should have been to convict the appellant on
the global count, and to acquit him on all the other proceeds counts.
In my view, the
acquittal reached by the trial judge on the global count cannot be affirmed in
light of his findings that there was
. .
. very little evidence, or perhaps none, of how much money actually came into
the accused's possession as a result of trafficking in cocaine -- and there
must have been some money ....[Emphasis added.]
This is an ambiguous statement that is
neither an expression of reasonable doubt nor a satisfaction of sufficient
evidence to convict. It also indicates that the trial judge did not consider
whether, despite there being a reasonable doubt on all the other charges, the
Crown had proved the appellant guilty of the global count. The trial judge's
failure to direct his mind to this issue was an error of law. This can only be
remedied by the Court of Appeal's direction of a new trial.
VI. Conclusion
I would therefore
allow the appeal in part by restoring the acquittals on counts 6 to 22 and 24,
and would confirm the order for a new trial on count 23.
//Gonthier J.//
The reasons of
Gonthier and Cory JJ. were delivered by
Gonthier
J. (dissenting in part)
-- I have had the benefit of the reasons of Justice Major and refer to his
review of the facts and proceedings. While I am in any event in agreement with
him that the conclusion reached by the trial judge on count 23, the global count,
cannot be affirmed, I find no error in the Court of Appeal's understanding of
the statements of the trial judge referring to grounds for a mistrial and its
conclusion that the trial cannot be considered to have been a fair one, that
the acquittals should be set aside as were the convictions and a new trial
ordered. I would accordingly dismiss the appeal.
The central issue
in this case, upon which I respectfully differ from Major J., is as to the
Court of Appeal's finding concerning the fairness of the trial related to the
trial judge's inability to consider all of the evidence in rendering his
verdict. This issue goes to the very heart of the trial process, wherein an
accused is to be tried and the verdict rendered on the basis of the evidence
before the court as a whole. It is one of law with which the Court of Appeal
was entitled to deal and indeed so fundamental that the court was obligated to
do so.
The question arises
by reason of statements made by the trial judge upon dealing with a motion for
nonsuit on April 2, 1990 and when giving his verdict three months
later. As Major J. notes in his reasons, the trial judge in deciding that
motion made special reference to the difficulties which the length of time for
completing the Crown's case caused him. He had had to rely entirely on a
review of his notes as the hearings had run intermittently over a period of
approximately five months. The Crown's case had been completed a month prior
to this motion.
These difficulties
in the evidence-gathering process were once again mentioned by the trial judge
when the verdict was given on July 3, 1990. The relevant passage
reads as follows:
A
trial conducted sporadically over this length of time can only be extremely
unsatisfactory to the accused, who has been in custody from the day of his
arrest, the 7th of July, 1989 and cannot be commensurate with the proper
administration of justice. I, from a trial judge's point of view, find such an
extended and sporadic trial extremely unsatisfactory. So much so, that I've
given serious consideration to declaring a mistrial. However, I'm not going to
take that step, since to do so would cause undue hardship to the accused.
In the Court of
Appeal (1992), 9 O.R. (3d) 161, Goodman J.A. concluded, at p. 169:
His
statements irresistibly leave the impression that the long and sporadic nature
of the trial gave him difficulty in dealing with the evidence. The only reason
that he gave for not declaring a mistrial was "since to do so would cause
undue hardship to the accused".
and (at p. 170):
I
am, however, satisfied that having regard to those statements and the nature of
the evidence, the trial cannot be considered to have been a fair one. Justice
must not only be done, it must be seen to be done.
I agree. The trial
judge viewed the circumstances to be such as to cause him to give serious
consideration to declaring a mistrial and he indicates in effect that he would
have done so but for his concern that this would cause undue hardship to the
accused.
Goodman J.A.
rightly distinguished this case from other appeals which are based on the mere
fact of delay or an inference of prejudice which may be drawn from such a fact.
While the trial
judge did not state the specific nature of the difficulty he was having at either
the time of the nonsuit motion or subsequently, it is nevertheless clear that
the intermittent nature of the hearings had caused the trial judge to conclude
that he had not been able to acquire a satisfactory appreciation of the complex
factual record which was required to decide the matters before him on a sound
basis. In the words of the Court of Appeal (at p. 169):
His
use of the word "entirely" leaves the distinct impression that he had
a somewhat diminished recollection or appreciation of the evidence except as
disclosed by his notes.
The persistence of
a difficulty is underlined by his reference to it in the strongest terms both
when dealing with the motion for nonsuit and three months later by way of
preface to his reasons for verdict. As Major J. mentions, it is
speculative to inquire whether the trial judge may have improved his
recollection of the facts by reference to notes and transcripts in the period
following the hearing of the nonsuit motion. However, the suggestion that the
recollection of the trial judge improved with the additional lapse of time
between that occasion and the rendering of a verdict is belied by his comment
at the latter time that, for him as a judge, the extended and sporadic nature
of the trial had been so extremely unsatisfactory that he gave serious
consideration to declaring a mistrial and that his reason for not doing so was
undue hardship to the accused.
It is remarkable
that the reason for not declaring a mistrial is not that the trial judge has
been able to overcome his difficulties as a judge (this would be the necessary
and only valid reason for doing this), but rather concern for causing prejudice
to the accused, presumably because a mistrial would lead to a new trial. This
reason cannot justify rendering a verdict on the basis of a trial that is not
fair, be it a conviction or an acquittal. A proper remedy in the event a fair
trial cannot be held within a reasonable delay is a stay of proceedings.
Nor is the fact
that the trial judge gave reasons referring to the evidence sufficient to allay
the concern as to the fairness of the trial. The value of the reasons is dependent
upon the grasp their author has of the evidence and the assessment he can make
of it. The judge's comments imply that the deficiency in this respect was such
that he would have declared a mistrial but for the prejudice this would cause
the accused. This indicates that he was aware that the basis for his decision
was flawed though he misapprehended the proper remedy.
The difficulty
which was encountered by the trial judge, which related to the adequacy of the
trial as a process, is very different from the requirement of a properly
motivated judgment which was at issue in R. v. Morin, [1992] 3 S.C.R.
286, to which Major J. makes reference. In that case, the question which
this Court was considering was whether the failure of a trial judge to make reference
to each piece of the evidence in the course of giving reasons, among other
things, constituted an error of law. Sopinka J. concluded at p. 296 that:
A
trial judge must consider all of the evidence in relation to the ultimate issue
but unless the reasons demonstrate that this was not done, the failure
to record the fact of it having been done is not a proper basis for concluding
that there was error in law in this respect. [Emphasis added.]
Even though a trial judge need not
make reference to all the evidence before him in the course of giving reasons
for judgment, the reasons may yet demonstrate that there were significant
inadequacies in the fact-finding process which justify the declaration of a
mistrial. While the trial judge did give reasons for his conclusions in this
case, his comments indicate that he did not consider that the process of fact
gathering had provided him with an adequate basis for a due consideration of
the evidence. I am, with respect, unable to share the conclusion of Major J.
that the trial judge did not indicate in giving his trial verdict his reason
why he had considered declaring a mistrial, and that there is no reason to
conclude that he was not able to appreciate the evidence.
The comments of the
trial judge are particularly significant given the nature of the evidence in
this case. Apart from the complexity of the factual record, there were a
number of issues of credibility which were raised on the evidence. An
opportunity to make reference to and consider the totality of the evidence is
an important part of any process of the assessment of evidence, and
particularly credibility.
The circumstances
of this case are different from those which demand an investigation of the
sufficiency or insufficiency of the evidence. The issue here is not limited to
whether the decision of the trial judge was within the scope of conclusions
which the evidence allowed or mandated. Rather, the propriety of the
conclusions of the trial judge is closely connected to the question of whether
there was a proper consideration of the evidence in the first place. The facts
in this case were such that the evidence upon which both the convictions and
the acquittals were based was to a significant degree the same. It was
correctly noted in the Court of Appeal that the evidence regarding the various
counts was interwoven and interdependent, with the result that conclusions
based on part of the evidence cannot be isolated from inadequacies in the
fact-finding process as a whole. There was a variety of testimony and evidence
which was necessarily subject to an assessment regarding credibility. In these
circumstances, the presence of a statement by the trial judge that the
fact-finding process was inadequate is sufficient grounds for a declaration of
a mistrial.
In these
circumstances, it was appropriate to send the entire matter, including the
counts for which an acquittal was entered, back to trial. While the fairness
and integrity of the trial process, including the fact-finding process, is a
matter of law of concern to both trial and appellate courts, the proper place
for the trial is before a trial judge and not in the Court of Appeal.
Conclusion
In view of the
statements made by the trial judge, the Court of Appeal correctly understood
the position of the trial judge at the time of the consideration of the nonsuit
motion and when rendering a verdict. The statements of the trial judge
demonstrate not only an inadequacy in the basis for his consideration of the
evidence, but also that such an inadequacy was recognized at trial, despite the
fact that it was improperly addressed. The importance which was accorded to
the statements of the trial judge is consistent with the decision of this Court
in Morin, supra, for statements such as that of the trial judge
may evidence an inability to consider all of the evidence in relation to the
ultimate issue. Such a failure cannot be remedied by the provision of a reasoned
decision.
There is,
therefore, no reason in this case to interfere with the disposition of the
Court of Appeal that the acquittals should be set aside and a new trial ordered
in respect of those counts for which acquittals were entered, and I would
accordingly dismiss the appeal.
Appeal allowed in
part, Gonthier and Cory JJ. dissenting in part.
Solicitors for the
appellant: Greenspan, Rosenberg & Buhr, Toronto.
Solicitor for the
respondent: John C. Tait, Ottawa.