b.c.g.e.u.
v. british columbia (attorney general), [1988] 2 S.C.R. 214
The
British Columbia Government Employees' Union Appellant
v.
The
Attorney General of British Columbia Respondent
and
The
Attorney General of Canada Intervener
indexed as: b.c.g.e.u. v. british columbia (attorney general)
File
No.: 19518.
1988:
March 3; 1988: October 20.
Present:
Dickson C.J. and Estey*, McIntyre, Lamer, Wilson, La Forest and
L'Heureux‑Dubé JJ.
on appeal from the court of appeal for british columbia
Courts‑‑Jurisdiction‑‑Criminal
contempt‑‑Law courts being picketed in course of legal strike‑‑Superior
court enjoining picketing‑‑Whether or not picketing constituting
criminal contempt.
Constitutional
law‑‑Charter of Rights ‑‑Law courts being picketed in
course of legal strike‑‑Superior court enjoining picketing‑‑Whether
or not injunction denying picketers' s. 7 right to liberty‑‑Whether
or not picketers' rights to be informed of specific offence and to be presumed
innocent under s. 11 (a) and (d) infringed‑‑Whether or not
picketers' right to freedom of expression under s. 2 infringed‑‑Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms, ss. 2 (b), 7 , 11 (a), (d).
Constitutional
law‑‑Division of powers‑‑Criminal law and labour law‑‑Law
courts being picketed in course of legal strike‑‑Superior court
enjoining picketing‑‑Whether or not legality of picketing placed
beyond criminal law because strike lawful and picketing permitted by Labour
Code‑‑Constitution Act, 1867, s. 91(27) .
Appellant
union picketed all law courts in British Columbia in the course of a legal
strike and hoped to reduce court activity to matters of urgency. All persons
who crossed the picket line, however, were considered to have honoured it if
they first obtained a pass from the union. McEachern C.J.S.C. perceived a
constitutional duty on his part to keep the law courts open and, on his own
motion and ex parte, issued an injunction restraining picketing and
other activities calculated to interfere with the operations of any court. The
union moved, pursuant to the terms of the concluding paragraph of the order, to
have the injunction set aside. McEachern C.J.S.C. dismissed the motion and the
British Columbia Court of Appeal unanimously upheld that judgment. The
constitutional questions before this Court queried: (1) whether a provincial
superior court judge could constitutionally enjoin picketing of court‑houses
by a union representing court employees engaged in a lawful strike; (2) whether
an enactment by a provincial legislature or by Parliament could validly deprive
a judge of a Supreme Court of his inherent authority to protect the functions
and processes of his and other courts without an amendment to the Constitution
of Canada; (3) whether the order restraining picketing and other activities
within the precincts of all court‑houses in British Columbia infringed or
denied the rights and freedoms guaranteed by ss. 2 (b), (c), 7 ,
11 (a), (c) and (d) of the Canadian Charter of Rights
and Freedoms ; (4) if so, whether the order was justified by s. 1 of the Charter .
Held: The
appeal should be dismissed; the first constitutional question should be
answered in the affirmative; the second constitutional question needed not be
answered; the third constitutional question should be answered in the
affirmative with respect to s. 2 (b) of the Charter but in the
negative with respect to ss. 7 , 11 (a) and (d); and the fourth
constitutional question should be answered in the affirmative. McIntyre J.
would answer the third constitutional question in the negative and find it
unnecessary to answer the fourth.
Per Dickson
C.J. and Lamer, Wilson, La Forest and L'Heureux‑Dubé JJ.: The rule of law
is the very foundation of the Charter and the courts are directed to
provide a remedy in the event of infringement of the rights guaranteed by the Charter .
Those rights would become merely illusory and the entire Charter
undermined if access to the courts were to be impeded or denied. The picketing,
notwithstanding the picketers' policy of issuing a pass, would inevitably have
had the effect of impeding and restricting de facto access to the
courts; it could only lead to a massive interference with the legal and constitutional
rights of the citizens of British Columbia.
The
picketing of the court‑houses of British Columbia constituted a criminal
contempt. It fell within a category of contempt offences which included,
amongst others, obstructing persons officially connected with the court or its
process and preventing access by the public to courts of law.
The
Chief Justice had jurisdiction to enjoin picketing on his own motion and ex
parte. The act of picketing, while it did not take place strictly within
the court room itself, constituted contempt in the face of the court. Although
the motion was made ex parte, careful account was taken of the
procedural rights at stake. The appellant Union was expressly given the right
to move to have the order set aside and was accorded full rights to present
evidence and argument. The Chief Justice did act upon his own observations but
the case did not involve contested facts.
While
the Labour Relations Board has jurisdiction in relation to what might be
described as the labour relations aspect of picketing, the courts retain full
authority to deal with violations of civil and criminal law arising from
picketing. The order was issued in relation to a criminal contempt and
therefore fell within the federal criminal law power and the inherent (or
common law) jurisdiction of the courts to punish for contempt. Striking court
employees must obey the law in relation to criminal contempt. The legality of
all aspects of picketing was not put beyond the reach of the criminal law or
criminal contempt simply because the strike was lawful and the Labour Code
permitted picketing in the course of a lawful strike.
Even
if the effect of the injunction were to deny the Union members' right to
liberty protected by s. 7 , the denial of that right was fully in accordance
with the principles of fundamental justice. An injunction does not violate s. 7
of the Charter solely because it was granted ex parte:
circumstances can exist where the delay necessary to give notice might result
in an immediate and serious violation of rights. Here, the order constituted a
minimal interference with the procedural rights of those whose course of action
could only result in a massive disruption of the courts' activities and
consequent interference with the legal and constitutional rights of all
citizens of British Columbia.
The
claims arising under s. 11 (a) and (d) failed because no one was
charged with an offence and no penal sanction was imposed upon any offender.
There was no need to notify of an offence when no one was charged with a
specific offence. Similarly, the right to be presumed innocent until proven
guilty was not violated as no finding of guilt had been made. The proceedings
were fair and the requirement of an independent and impartial tribunal was met
for the very purpose of the order was to protect that right.
Peaceful
picketing in the context of a labour dispute contains an element of expression
protected by s. 2 (b). Apart from the Charter , however, the
picketing was unlawful. The issue of whether the law of criminal contempt and
the injunction to enforce the law pass scrutiny under the Charter must
be dealt with pursuant to s. 1 .
Assuring
unimpeded access to the courts is plainly an objective "of sufficient
importance to warrant overriding a constitutionally protected right or
freedom" and relates to a concern which is "pressing and substantial
in a free and democratic society". The means taken to accomplish that
objective satisfied the three‑step proportionality test. First, there was
a rational connection between the injunction and the objective of ensuring
unimpeded access to the courts. Second, the injunction accomplished this objective
by impairing as little as possible the s. 2 (b) rights of the members of
the Union for the Union and its members were free to express themselves in
other places and in other ways so long as they did not interfere with the right
of access to the courts. Finally, there was a proportionality between the
effects of the injunction on the protected right and the objective of
maintaining access to the courts. The injunction was to maintain access to the
courts and to ensure that the courts remained in operation in order that the
legal and Charter rights of all citizens of the province would be
respected.
Per
McIntyre J.: What was enjoined by the court order was conduct calculated to
interfere with court processes and to restrict or limit access to the courts,
conduct clearly unlawful and calculated to interfere with and restrict the
constitutionally protected rights of others. The making of the injunction
therefore involved no infringement of any constitutionally protected right of
the appellant. There was no need to balance conflicting rights here. Resort to
s. 1 , which can only have application where there has been an infringement of a
Charter right, was unnecessary.
Cases
Cited
By
Dickson C.J.
Considered: RWDSU
v. Dolphin Delivery Ltd., [1986] 2 S.C.R. 573; referred to: Re
Johnson (1887), 20 Q.B.D. 68; Golder v. United Kingdom (1975), 1
E.H.R.R. 524; Harrison v. Carswell, [1976] 2 S.C.R. 200; Heather Hill
Appliances Ltd. v. McCormack, [1966] 1 O.R. 12; Morris v. Crown Office,
[1970] 1 All E.R. 1079; R. v. Hill (1976), 73 D.L.R. (3d) 621; R. v.
Froese (1980), 23 B.C.L.R. 181; Ex parte Tubman; Re Lucas, [1970] 3
N.S.W.R. 41; Attorney‑General v. Times Newspapers Ltd., [1974]
A.C. 273; R. v. Davies, [1906] 1 K.B. 32; Poje v. Attorney General
for British Columbia, [1953] 1 S.C.R. 516; Foothills Provincial General
Hospital Board v. Broad (1975), 57 D.L.R. (3d) 758; Churchman v. Joint
Shop Stewards' Committee of the Workers of the Port of London, [1972] 3 All
E.R. 603; Con‑Mech (Engineers) Ltd. v. Amalgamated Union of
Engineering Workers, [1973] I.C.R. 620; R. v. United Fishermen and
Allied Workers' Union (1967), 63 D.L.R. (2d) 356; Balogh v. Crown Court
at St. Alban's, [1974] 3 All E.R. 283; McKeown v. The Queen, [1971]
S.C.R. 446; Better Value Furniture (CHWK) Ltd. v. General Truck Drivers and
Helpers Union, Local 31 (1981), 26 B.C.L.R. 273 (B.C.C.A.) (leave to appeal
to the Supreme Court of Canada refused, [1981] 2 S.C.R. viii); Attorney‑General
of Quebec v. Laurendeau (1982), 145 D.L.R. (3d) 526, 33 C.R. (3d) 40; R.
v. Big M Drug Mart Ltd., [1985] 1 S.C.R. 295; R. v. Oakes, [1986] 1
S.C.R. 103.
By
McIntyre J.
RWDSU
v. Dolphin Delivery Ltd., [1986] 2 S.C.R. 573.
Statutes
and Regulations Cited
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms ,
Preamble, ss. 1, 2(b), (c), 7, 11(a), (c), (d),
24(1).
Constitution Act, 1867, s. 91(27) .
Constitution Act, 1982, s. 52(1) .
Criminal Code, R.S.C. 1970, c. C‑34,
s. 8, as am.
Labour Code, R.S.B.C. 1979, c. 212.
Authors
Cited
Borrie, Sir Gordon. Borrie and Lowe's Law of Contempt,
2nd ed. By Nigel Lowe; consultant editor, Sir Gordon Borrie. London:
Butterworths, 1983.
Jacob, I. H. "The Inherent Jurisdiction of the
Court" (1970), 23 Current Legal Problems 23.
Jowitt, William Allen, 1st Earl. Jowitt's Dictionary
of English Law, 2nd ed., vol. 1. By Earl Jowitt and Clifford Walsh. Second
edition by John Burke. London: Sweet and Maxwell, 1977.
McRuer, Hon. J. C. "Criminal Contempt of Court
Procedure: A Protection to the Rights of the Individual" (1952), 30 Can.
Bar Rev. 225.
Miller, C. J. Contempt of Court. London: Paul
Elek, 1976.
Weiler, Paul. Reconcilable Differences. Toronto:
Carswells, 1980.
APPEAL
from a judgment of the British Columbia Court of Appeal (1985), 64 B.C.L.R.
113, 20 D.L.R. (4th) 399, [1985] 5 W.W.R. 421, dismissing an appeal from a
judgment of McEachern C.J.B.C. (1983), 48 B.C.L.R. 1, 2 D.L.R. (4th) 705,
[1984] 1 W.W.R. 399, 40 C.P.C. 116, dismissing a motion to set aside or vary an
injunction made on his own motion and ex parte, [1983] 6 W.W.R. 640.
Appeal dismissed; the first constitutional question should be answered in the
affirmative; the second constitutional question needed not be answered; the
third constitutional question should be answered in the affirmative with
respect to s. 2 (b) of the Charter but in the negative with
respect to ss. 7 , 11 (a) and (d); and the fourth constitutional
question should be answered in the affirmative. McIntyre J. would answer the
third constitutional question in the negative and find it unnecessary to answer
the fourth.
David
Blair, for the appellant.
Jack
Giles, Q.C., for the respondent.
Graham
Garton, Q.C., and David Stephens, for the
intervener the Attorney General of Canada.
The
judgment of Dickson C.J. and Lamer, Wilson, La Forest and L'Heureux‑Dubé
JJ. was delivered by
1. The Chief Justice‑‑This
case involves the fundamental right of every Canadian citizen to have unimpeded
access to the courts and the authority of the courts to protect and defend that
constitutional right.
I
Facts
2. On
the morning of November 1, 1983, as a result of strike action by the appellant
British Columbia Government Employees Union (the Union) pickets were posted at
the entrances to and within the precincts of, the courts of justice in
Vancouver and at all other courts of justice in the province of British
Columbia. The strike came at a time of the year when all the courts of the
province were in session. The situation, as McEachern C.J.S.C. observed, was
indeed urgent with trials, appeals and chambers due to start that morning in
many locations throughout the province. Some of these cases were criminal and
civil jury trials, and persons were in custody. Counsel, witnesses and jurors
were or should have been en route to the court‑houses. The position of
the appellant Union was clearly set out in an affidavit of its director of
membership services: "The Union hopes that people will support the Union
by honouring the picket line. Honouring the picket line in every instance
involves people exercising their right and freedom not to cross it. The Union
recognizes that persons who cross only upon obtaining a pass have nevertheless
honoured the line and thereby supported the Union in the dispute." The
appellant did issue "picket passes" whereby it purported to authorize
people, including officers of the court, to pass through the picket lines.
3. The
circumstances surrounding the passes were described in an affidavit of Ronald
Fratkin, a member of the Law Society of British Columbia, which reads in part:
2. On or about Wednesday, October 19, 1983, I and
several other members of an ad hoc committee of the Criminal Justice
Section of the Canadian Bar Association met in Vancouver, British Columbia with
Mr. Jack Adams, an officer of the British Columbia Government Employees' Union,
to discuss the potential impact of a possible strike by this Union upon court
services in the Province.
3. At the October 19, 1983 meeting Mr. Adams
expressed the Union's concern about persons in custody and the impact of a
strike upon such persons.
4. At the same meeting Mr. Adams indicated that if
there were a strike followed by picketing of courthouses, passes would be
issued by the Union to assist in providing lawyers to act in Court as duty
counsel to deal with people in custody, including assistance at show cause
hearings.
5. On Monday, October 31, 1983, when it became
clear that a strike by the Union was indeed imminent, I telephoned Mr. Adams [sic]
office. At 1:39 p.m. the same afternoon Mr. Adams' office left a message at my
office confirming that two duty counsel passes would be issued for 222 Main
Street, Vancouver. At approximately 2:15 p.m. that afternoon my office also
received a telephone call from the picket captain (known to me as Becky) for
222 Main Street, Vancouver, requesting that Duty Counsel report to her on the
morning of November 1, 1983 to receive the passes.
...
8. Accordingly, I discussed the problem with the
picket captain at the Provincial Court at 222 Main Street, Vancouver. Shortly
after, I was advised by the picket captain that she had communicated with Union
headquarters and had received immediate approval to facilitate the appearance
of two duty counsel at the Law Courts at 800 Smithe Street, Vancouver.
...
10. While outside the Courthouse at 222 Main
Street, Vancouver, during the morning of November 1, 1983 I had occasion to
observe that the British Columbia Government Employees' Union picket line was
orderly and peaceful. Persons appearing to have business inside the Courthouse
entered and left the building at will and at no time appeared to be impeded in
any way by the picketers.
Leaflets
were distributed by a group known as the British Columbia Law Union urging
members of the public who approached the court‑house to respect the
picket line and to encourage lawyers not to cross it except with the approval
of the union upon the issuance of a picket pass. In a letter written to
McEachern C.J.S.C., a member of the Law Union requested that the courts be
closed, and that all civil and criminal procedures be adjourned "other
than for clear emergency situations as may be agreed upon with the B.C.G.E.U.
and Operation Solidarity". The Chief Justice in response said that he had
a constitutional duty to keep the courts open, not to close them.
4. The
Chief Justice arrived at the Court‑house at 8:00 a.m. and on his own
motion and ex parte issued an injunction in the following terms:
On the Court's own motion, ex
parte, THIS COURT ORDERS that all persons having notice of this Order are
restrained and an injunction is hereby granted restraining them until further
Order from:
(a) gathering, congregating or
picketing at the entrances to the Law Courts of the Provincial, County,
Supreme, or Appeal Courts of British Columbia or within the precincts of the
said Courts; or
(b) from engaging in any activities
whatsoever which are calculated to interfere with the operations of any Court
of Justice in the province or to restrict or limit access of all persons to the
Courts and their precincts.
For greater certainty IT IS FURTHER
ORDERED that this injunction shall extend to and include all those locations
within the province where Courts of Justice are situate in buildings where
other activities are also carried on, but any persons affected by this Order
may apply on 24 hours' notice in writing to the Registrar for directions with
respect to such locations.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that any person
affected by this Order may apply on 24 hours' notice in writing to the
Registrar of this Court at Vancouver for an Order setting aside or varying this
Order.
5. The
order was served on the picketers at the Vancouver Court‑house about 9:30
and 10:10 a.m. and at various later times that day at other court‑houses.
It was universally obeyed.
6. The
Union moved, pursuant to the terms of the concluding paragraph of the Order, to
have the injunction set aside. The application was supported by the Law Union
and was resisted by the Attorney General of British Columbia. McEachern
C.J.S.C. dismissed the motion in written reasons delivered on November 10,
1983. The Union appealed to the British Columbia Court of Appeal and that
appeal was dismissed by unanimous judgment on June 27, 1985.
7. The
Union sought and obtained leave to appeal to this Court. The following
constitutional questions were stated:
1. Does a provincial superior court judge have the
constitutional jurisdiction to make an order enjoining picketing of court‑houses
by or on behalf of a union representing court employees engaged in a lawful
strike?
2. Can an enactment by a provincial legislature or
by Parliament validly deprive a judge of a Supreme Court of his inherent
authority to protect the functions and processes of his and other courts
without an amendment to the Constitution of Canada?
3. Did the order by the Chief Justice of the
Supreme Court of British Columbia dated November 1, 1983 restraining picketing
and other activities within the precincts of all court‑houses in British
Columbia infringe or deny the rights and freedoms guaranteed by ss. 2 (b),
(c), 7 , 11 (a), (c) and (d) of the Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms ?
4. If the order of the Chief Justice of the Supreme
Court of British Columbia dated November 1, 1983 restraining picketing and
other activities within the precincts of all court‑houses in British
Columbia infringes or denies the rights and freedoms guaranteed by ss. 2 (b),
(c), 7 , 11 (a), (c) and (d) of the Charter ,
is the order justified by s. 1 of the Charter and therefore not
inconsistent with the Constitutional Act, 1982?
8. The
Attorney General of Canada intervened before this Court with respect to
questions 1 and 2, taking the position that question 1 should be answered in
the affirmative, and that it was not necessary to answer question 2, but that
if an answer were to be given, it should be affirmative.
II
Judgments
of the British Columbia Courts
Ex parte
injunction (reported at [1983] 6 W.W.R. 640)
9. McEachern
C.J.S.C. framed the issue in the following terms (at p. 641):
The question arises whether it is
proper or permissible for anyone, individually or collectively, deliberately or
accidentally, or directly or indirectly to interfere with the business of the
courts of justice or to interfere with or impede the absolute right of access
all citizens have to the courts of justice.
10. The
Chief Justice answered that question emphatically in the negative. He noted
that in the courts of British Columbia there were literally thousands of cases
set for hearing and disposition on a daily basis. Persons in custody had a
right to apply for bail, persons awaiting trial were entitled to have their
guilt or innocence determined without delay. The British Columbia Supreme
Court's responsibility included the writ of habeas corpus, injunctions
to prevent damage or loss of rights, the custody and protection of children,
the right of occupation of matrimonial homes, the care and protection of
disabled and infirm persons, the filing of documents to prevent the loss of a
cause of action and a myriad of other matters vitally important to the ordinary
citizen. McEachern C.J.S.C. noted as well the vital importance that the courts
be open to the public and to the media: "Justice cannot be found behind
closed doors or picket lines." He emphasized that the issue was not the
personal importance or dignity of judges, but rather the protection and
preservation of the institution of the courts of justice themselves. McEachern
C.J.S.C. carefully distinguished picketing in connection with private
commercial or industrial settings from picketing which interfered with the free
and unrestricted access of all persons to the courts. Picketing which fell into
the latter category, he held, constituted a contempt of court and, in his view,
the court had not only the jurisdiction but, as well, the duty, to defend and
protect its authority and the universal availability of its process. He quoted
the words of Bowen J. in Re Johnson (1887), 20 Q.B.D. 68 (C.A.):
"What is the principle which we
have here to apply? It seems to me to be this. The law has armed the High Court
of Justice with the power and imposed upon it the duty of preventing (by direct
action) and by summary proceedings any attempt to interfere with the
administration of justice."
He
concluded with these words: "The rule of law has not been suspended in
this province."
Motion to
set aside ex parte injunction (reported at (1983), 2 D.L.R. (4th) 705)
11. In
his subsequent judgment, rendered on November 10, 1983, after affidavit
material had been filed by the Union, McEachern C.J.S.C. upheld his original
order and gave extensive reasons for doing so. The Chief Justice emphasized the
centrality of the courts and the judiciary to our constitution and to the rule
of law. He stressed as well the importance of the right of citizens to have
unimpeded and uninterrupted access to the courts and the authority of the
courts to protect and vindicate that right. McEachern C.J.S.C. said (at
pp. 706‑7):
The powers entrusted to the judiciary
by the constitution are essential to the proper organization of society
because, while common law and the legislative branches of the constitution
declare what the rights and obligations of the people are, the judiciary is the
machinery which protects and enforces these rights and obligations. For this
reason, free, unimpeded and uninterrupted access to the courts of justice of
all parties, jurors, witnesses, counsel, court staff and the public is fundamental
to the preservation and enforcement of every legal right, freedom and
obligation which exists under the rule of law.
12. The
Chief Justice carefully reviewed the authorities dealing with criminal contempt
and concluded that "Any conduct which is calculated to interfere with the
proper administration of justice is criminal contempt of court."
13. It
was beyond question, he held, that picketing at a court‑house would have
the effect of deterring witnesses, jurors, lawyers and members of the public
from entering the court‑house to discharge their duties. While the Union
had issued passes to individuals such as duty counsel, permitting them to cross
the picket lines, McEachern C.J.S.C. held that neither the Union nor anyone
else had the right to approve who should or should not have access to the court
and the very thought of licensing anyone to enter the court itself was an
affront to freedom.
14. McEachern
C.J.S.C. held that the authority of the court to protect its process was in no
way pre‑empted by provincial legislation relating to labour disputes or
essential services. Recognizing that the circumstances had to be unusual,
McEachern C.J.S.C. held that where a criminal contempt threatened to disrupt
court proceedings, the court had the authority to move ex mero motu in
order to maintain the proper administration of justice. He held that as he had
direct knowledge of the facts from observation upon entering the court‑house
and, in view of the urgency of the situation, he did have authority to issue
the injunction in the manner in which he had.
15. The
Chief Justice cited examples of important court matters which could not have
been carried on behind a picket line (at pp. 713‑14):
In New Westminster Toy J. was able to continue a most
difficult case and McKenzie J. was able to commence and complete the tragic
case of R. v. Blackman where a young man was found not guilty by reason
of insanity on a charge of murdering six members of his family; Trainor J.
continued a difficult murder trial in Cranbrook; Davies J. held a criminal
assize at Prince Rupert; Callaghan J. held a civil assize at Nanaimo; Lander,
Finch and Wood JJ. were able to commence or continue jury trials in Vancouver;
and all the other busy work of this court at Vancouver was carried on. The
County Court of Vancouver was able to carry on its usual work as well as
complete jury selections in criminal cases involving the attendance of upwards
of 460 jurors; and, so far as I know, most of the work of all courts in most
locations of the province was carried on.
There are many other examples too
numerous to mention which demonstrate beyond any rational possibility of doubt
that a picket line at a court‑house does in fact obstruct the proper
administration of justice.
16. The
Chief Justice noted that the order which he had made only precluded picketing.
It did not purport to require the staff of the courts to resume the discharge
of their duties. When the Union commenced the strike at midnight on October 31,
1983 against the Government of British Columbia the services of all government
employees were withdrawn except certain excluded supervisory personnel and some
who were required for the performance of essential services. Those withdrawn
from service included all the staff (except supervisory personnel) of all the
courts of justice within the province.
British
Columbia Court of Appeal (reported at (1985), 20 D.L.R. (4th) 399)
17. The
decision of McEachern C.J.S.C. was affirmed by a unanimous judgment of the British
Columbia Court of Appeal. Nemetz C.J.B.C. characterized the issue as follows
(at p. 401):
...the real issue before us is whether in a democratic
society any person or bodies of persons can restrict the rights of its citizens
to enjoy the benefits of the rule of law under the protection of an independent
judiciary.
18. Nemetz
C.J.B.C. emphasized the constitutional importance of the independence of the
judiciary and of its right and duty to maintain the rule of law and the
Constitution by guaranteeing unimpeded access to the courts. The Chief Justice
had little doubt that the installation of a picket line surrounding the court‑house
would impede access (at pp. 402‑3):
...a picket line, in British Columbia, triggers in its
citizens an almost universal and automatic response not to cross it. Whether
caused by trade union ethic or fear of reprisal for crossing a picket line, the
response of not crossing the picket line has been described by Dr. Weiler [in Reconcilable
Differences (1980, Carswells Co. Ltd.) at p. 79] as Pavlovian in nature.
Thus when a picket line is established at the entrance to a court‑house,
access is effectively impaired.
19. The
Chief Justice went on to hold that there was undoubted inherent jurisdiction to
issue an injunction to prevent conduct clearly calculated to obstruct and
interfere with the due course of justice. In his view, the very fact that the
Union issued picket passes demonstrated its intention to impede entry to the
courts of those persons who were not accorded such passes.
20. Nemetz
C.J.B.C. noted that nowhere in McEachern C.J.S.C.'s order was there any
suggestion of contempt on the part of those members of the court‑house
staff who, being on a legal strike, withdrew their services. The injunction was
directed to the picketing. The dispute had nothing to do with the courts. It
was a dispute that the Union had with the provincial government.
21. While
the Charter issue was apparently not raised before McEachern C.J.S.C.,
reference to s. 2 (b) and (c) was made in argument before the
British Columbia Court of Appeal. Nemetz C.J.B.C. noted that the matter was not
fully argued, but held that even assuming that the injunction had infringed Charter
rights, such infringement could be demonstrably justified under s. 1 , as the Charter
itself would become an illusion if the public were to be denied access to the
courts.
22. Section
2 (b) and (c) of the Charter read:
2. Everyone has the
following fundamental freedoms:
...
(b) freedom of thought, belief, opinion and
expression, including freedom of the press and other media of communication;
(c) freedom of peaceful
assembly; . . .
23. Before
considering picketing and its effects and the law of contempt, I must advert to
the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms which plays a role of
superordinate importance in this appeal.
III
The Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms
24. The
Union is advancing certain Charter arguments in the present proceedings.
I will deal with those arguments shortly. For the moment I wish to highlight
certain sections of the Charter which, it seems to me, are a complete
answer to anyone seeking to delay or deny or hinder access to the courts of
justice in this country. Let us look first at the preamble to the Charter .
It reads: "Whereas Canada is founded upon principles that recognize the
supremacy of God and the rule of law". So we see that the rule of law is
the very foundation of the Charter . Let us turn then to s. 52(1) of the Constitution
Act, 1982 which states that the Constitution of Canada is the supreme law
of Canada and any law that is inconsistent with the provisions of the
Constitution is, to the extent of the inconsistency, of no force or effect.
Earlier sections of the Charter assure, in clear and specific terms,
certain fundamental freedoms, democratic rights, mobility rights, legal rights
and equality rights of utmost importance to each and every Canadian. And what
happens if those rights or freedoms are infringed or denied? Section 24(1)
provides the answer‑‑anyone whose rights or freedoms, as guaranteed
by this Charter , have been infringed or denied may apply to a court of
competent jurisdiction to obtain such remedy as the court considers appropriate
and just in the circumstances. The rights and freedoms are guaranteed by the Charter
and the courts are directed to provide a remedy in the event of infringement.
To paraphrase the European Court of Human Rights in Golder v. United Kingdom
(1975), 1 E.H.R.R. 524, at p. 536, it would be inconceivable that Parliament
and the provinces should describe in such detail the rights and freedoms
guaranteed by the Charter and should not first protect that which alone
makes it in fact possible to benefit from such guarantees, that is, access to a
court. As the Court of Human Rights truly stated: "The fair, public and
expeditious characteristics of judicial proceedings are of no value at all if
there are no judicial proceedings". And so it is in the present case. Of
what value are the rights and freedoms guaranteed by the Charter if a
person is denied or delayed access to a court of competent jurisdiction in
order to vindicate them? How can the courts independently maintain the rule of
law and effectively discharge the duties imposed by the Charter if court
access is hindered, impeded or denied? The Charter protections would
become merely illusory, the entire Charter undermined.
25. There
cannot be a rule of law without access, otherwise the rule of law is replaced
by a rule of men and women who decide who shall and who shall not have access
to justice. Counsel for the Attorney General of British Columbia posed this
question:
By what authority and on what criteria were the Union
leaders deciding who were to be given passes and who were to be denied them?
I cannot
believe that the Charter was ever intended to be so easily thwarted.
26. I
would adopt the following passage from the judgment of the British Columbia
Court of Appeal (at p. 406):
We have no doubt that the right to
access to the courts is under the rule of law one of the foundational pillars
protecting the rights and freedoms of our citizens. It is the preservation of
that right with which we are concerned in this case. Any action that interferes
with such access by any person or groups of persons will rally the court's
powers to ensure the citizen of his or her day in court. Here, the action
causing interference happens to be picketing. As we have already indicated,
interference from whatever source falls into the same category.
IV
Picketing
and its Effects
27. Picketing
is a crucial form of collective action in the arena of labour relations. A picket
line is designed to publicize the labour dispute in which the striking workers
are embroiled and to mount a show of solidarity of the workers to their goal.
It is an essential component of a labour relations regime founded on the right
to bargain collectively and to take collective action. It represents a highly
important and now constitutionally recognized form of expression in all
contemporary labour disputes. All of that is beyond dispute. In Harrison v.
Carswell, [1976] 2 S.C.R. 200, a majority of this Court stated at
p. 219:
Society has long since acknowledged
that a public interest is served by permitting union members to bring economic
pressure to bear upon their respective employers through peaceful picketing,
but the right has been exercisable in some locations and not in others . . . .
28. On
the other hand, and this is crucial, both courts below have found that the
picketing would inevitably have had the effect of impeding and restricting
access to the courts. There surely can be little doubt as to the correctness of
that conclusion. The very purpose and intent of the picket line in a labour
dispute is to discourage and dissuade individuals from entering the premises
which are being picketed. This is clear from the affidavit material filed by the
appellant Union. One of the great strengths of the trade union movement is the
spirit of solidarity. By standing together as a collective whole, trade
unionists are able to aspire to improved wages and working conditions
unattainable if each individual member were left to his or her own devices.
Solidarity is made manifest when one group of workers is on strike. Fellow
unionists and other sympathetic members of the public are made aware of the
strike by the presence of picketers. Picketing sends a strong and automatic
signal: do not cross the line lest you undermine our struggle; this time we ask
you to help us by not doing business with our employer; next time, when you are
on strike, we will respect your picket line and refuse to conduct business with
your employer.
29. A
picket line ipso facto impedes public access to justice. It interferes
with such access and is intended to do so. A picket line has great powers of
influence as a form of coercion. As Stewart J. said in Heather Hill
Appliances Ltd. v. McCormack, [1966] 1 O.R. 12 (Ont. H.C.), at p. 13:
The picket line has become the sign and symbol of trade
union solidarity and gradually became a barrier‑‑intangible but
none the less real. It has now become a matter of faith and morals and an
obligation of conscience not to breach the picket line and this commandment is
obeyed not only by fellow employees of the picketers but by all true believers
who belong to other trade unions which may have no quarrel at all with the employer
who is picketed.
30. Both
judgments below refer to Paul Weiler's book, Reconcilable Differences,
which summarizes the purpose and effect of a picket line in the province of
British Columbia. At page 79, Dr. Weiler notes:
The crucial variable determining the
impact of peaceful picketing is whether it is addressed to unionized workers.
That kind of picket line operates as a signal, telling union members not to
cross. Certainly in British Columbia the response is automatic, almost
Pavlovian. That response is triggered by a number of factors: the sense of
solidarity among members of the general trade‑union movement; an
appreciation that it is in the self‑interest of each to honour the other
fellow's picket line because in their own dispute they will want the same
reaction from other workers; a concern for the social pressures and ostracism
of other workers if they do not conform to the trade union ethic; the
likelihood that they will face serious discipline from their own trade union.
It might even cost them their jobs, if they defy that ethic and cross a picket
line approved by the trade union movement. In the final analysis, the legal
treatment of picketing must rest upon a realistic appraisal of its industrial
relations role. The picket line is much more than the simple exercise of a
worker's freedom of expression. In a heavily unionized community it is an
effective trigger to a work stoppage by a group of employees.
31. Picketing
of a commercial enterprise in the context of an ordinary labour dispute is one
thing. The picketing of a court‑house is entirely another. A picket line
both in intention and in effect, is a barrier. By picketing the court‑houses
of British Columbia, the appellant Union, in effect, set up a barricade which
impeded access to the courts by litigants, lawyers, witnesses, and the public
at large. It is not difficult to imagine the inevitable effects upon the
administration of justice. As the judgments of McEachern C.J.S.C. and of Nemetz
C.J.B.C. point out, on a daily basis the courts dispose of hundreds of cases in
which fundamental rights are at stake. At the very least, the picketing was
bound to cause delays in the administration of justice and, as has been often
and truly said, justice delayed is justice denied. The picketing would
undoubtedly make it difficult, if not impossible, for the courts to process
criminal cases with despatch. Any person charged with an offence has the right
not to be denied reasonable bail yet potential sureties could have been
discouraged from entering the court‑house to satisfy the requirements of
a judicial interim release order. An accused has the right to a public trial
yet the members of the public not issued passes by the Union might have been deterred
from entering the court‑house. Accused persons have a Charter
right to a fair trial and a statutory right to make full answer and defence.
Witnesses crucial to the defence could well have been deterred from even
requesting a pass to enter the court‑house to give vital evidence. It is
perhaps unnecessary to multiply the examples. The point is clear. Picketing a
court‑house to urge the public not to enter except by permission of the
picketers could only lead to a massive interference with the legal and
constitutional rights of the citizens of British Columbia.
V
Contempt of
Court
32. The
first issue to be addressed, apart from the constitutional aspects of the case,
is whether Chief Justice McEachern and the British Columbia Court of Appeal
were correct in concluding that the picketing of the court‑houses of
British Columbia constitutes a criminal contempt.
33. Chief
Justice McRuer of the High Court of Justice of Ontario, in an address to the
Lawyers Club, Toronto, entitled "Criminal Contempt of Court Procedure: A
Protection to the Rights of the Individual", published (1952), 30 Can.
Bar Rev. 225, at p. 226, said:
A contempt may be either a criminal
contempt or a civil contempt. The difference between contempts criminal and
contempts civil seems to be that contempts which tend to bring the
administration of justice into scorn, or which tend to interfere with the due
course of justice, are criminal in nature, but a contempt in disregarding the
orders of a judge of a civil court is not criminal in nature. It is the
obstruction or interference with the fair administration of justice within
which the law of criminal contempt is concerned, and it has nothing to do with
the personal feelings of the judges; it is not a power to be used for the
vindication of the judge as a person, and no judge should allow his personal
feelings to have any weight in the matter.
34. In
Morris v. Crown Office, [1970] 1 All E.R. 1079 (C.A.), Lord Denning
noted at p. 1081:
The phrase `contempt in the face of the court' has a
quaint old‑fashioned ring about it; but the importance of it is this: of
all the places where law and order must be maintained, it is here in these
courts. The course of justice must not be deflected or interfered with. Those
who strike at it strike at the very foundations of our society. To maintain law
and order, the judges have, and must have, power at once to deal with those who
offend against it. It is a great power‑‑a power instantly to
imprison a person without trial‑‑but it is a necessary power. So
necessary indeed that until recently the judges exercised it without any
appeal.
35. In
some instances the phrase "contempt of court" may be thought to be
unfortunate because, as in the present case, it does not posit any particular
aversion, abhorrence or disdain of the judicial system. In a legal context the
phrase is much broader than the common meaning of "contempt" might
suggest and embraces "where a person, whether a party to a proceeding or
not, does any act which may tend to hinder the course of justice or show
disrespect to the court's authority", "interfering with the business
of the court on the part of a person who has no right to do so",
"obstructing or attempting to obstruct the officers of the Court on their
way to their duties"‑‑See Jowitt's Dictionary of English
Law, vol. 1, 2nd ed., at p. 441.
36. An
intent to bring a court or judge into contempt is not an essential element of
the offence of contempt of court. That was decided in R. v. Hill (1976),
73 D.L.R. (3d) 621 (B.C.C.A.) McIntyre J.A., speaking for a unanimous court
said at p. 629:
Even, however, if the cases could not
be distinguished on their facts, it is my opinion that an intent to bring a
Court or Judge into contempt is not an essential ingredient of this offence. In
Canada the proposition stated in R. v. Gray, [1900] 2 Q.B. 36 at
p. 40, by Lord Russell of Killowen has been accepted. He said:
Any act done or writing published calculated to bring a
Court or a judge of the Court into contempt, or to lower his authority, is a
contempt of Court. That is one class of contempt. Further, any act done or
writing published calculated to obstruct or interfere with the due course of
justice or the lawful process of the Courts is a contempt of Court.
These words have received the approval of the Supreme
Court of Canada in Poje et al. v. A‑G. B.C. (1953), 105 C.C.C.
311, [1953] 2 D.L.R. 785, [1953] 1 S.C.R. 516, and in Re Duncan (1957),
11 D.L.R. (2d) 616, [1958] S.C.R. 41. In my view, they express the law as it
now stands in this country.
The word "calculated" as
used here is not synonymous with the word "intended". The meaning it
bears in this context is found in the Shorter Oxford English dictionary as
fitted, suited, apt: see Glanville Williams Criminal Law: General Part,
2d ed. (1961), p. 66.
See also R.
v. Froese (1980), 23 B.C.L.R. 181 (B.C.C.A.)
37. C.
J. Miller, Contempt of Court (1976), lists the principal heads of
criminal contempt as follows:
1. contempt in the face of the court which involves
disruptive or disrespectful behaviour in the courtroom;
2. contempt through infringing the sub judice
rule which involves conduct likely to influence the outcome of a trial;
3. scandalizing a court or a justice;
4. victimizing jurors, witnesses and other persons
after the conclusion of the proceedings; and
5. publicizing judicial proceedings.
In
addition, Miller includes a residual category of contempt offences in which he
lumps the following: obstructing persons officially connected with the court or
its process, interference with persons under the special protective
jurisdiction of the court, breach of duty by persons officially connected with
the court or its process, forging, altering or abusing the process of the
court, divulging the confidences of the jury room, preventing access by the
public to courts of law, service of process in the precinct of the court, and
disclosing the identity of witnesses.
38. The
branch of contempt that comes close to resembling the problem posed by
picketing is the prevention of public access to the courts, which falls within
Miller's residual category. Although the Australian case Ex parte Tubman; Re
Lucas, [1970] 3 N.S.W.R. 41 (N.S.W.C.A.), Miller cites in support of this
category bears no factual similarity to picketing, Aspey J.A. in that case made
the following comments (at p. 51):
I have no doubt that, when the proceedings of a court
are to be administered as a forum open to the public, any person who, without
lawful authority or justification, prevents or attempts to prevent not only
parties, their legal representatives or witnesses but also members of the
public who are desirous of being present at those proceedings from entering the
court or its precincts could be adjudged guilty of contempt of
court . . . .
39. Acts
which interfere with persons having duties to discharge in a court of justice,
including parties, witnesses, jurors and officers of the court, constitute a
contempt, see e.g. Borrie and Lowe's Law of Contempt (2nd ed. 1983), pp.
205 et seq; Miller, Contempt of Court (1976), at p. 229. In Attorney‑General
v. Times Newspapers Ltd., [1974] A.C. 273 (H.L.), at p. 310, Lord Diplock
observed that contempt included "conduct that is calculated to inhibit
suitors generally from availing themselves of their constitutional right to
have their legal rights and obligations ascertained and enforced in courts of
law . . . ." Such conduct affects not only the
particular interests of the parties to the case but also the public interest in
the due administration of Justice. Similarly, in Golder v. United Kingdom,
supra, at pp. 535‑36, the European Court of Human Rights
upheld the right of access to the courts as a fundamental and universally
recognized principle.
40. Wills
J. in R v. Davies, [1906] 1 K.B. 32, at p. 41, referred to the
"great principle" that courts or the administration of justice exist
for the benefit of the people, that for the benefit of the people their independence
must be protected from unauthorized interference, and that the law provides
effective means by which this end can be secured.
41. Conduct
designed to interfere with the proper administration of justice constitutes
contempt of court which is said to be "criminal" in that it
transcends the limits of any dispute between particular litigants and
constitutes an affront to the administration of justice as a whole: Poje v.
Attorney General for British Columbia, [1953] 1 S.C.R. 516. It follows that
McEachern C.J.S.C. and the British Columbia Court of Appeal correctly concluded
that the picketing of the court‑houses of British Columbia constituted a
criminal contempt.
Procedural
Questions
42. The
Union contends that McEachern C.J.S.C. lacked jurisdiction to enjoin picketing
on his own motion and ex parte. The action taken by the Chief Justice
was admittedly unusual, but so was the situation which confronted him. The case
law does hold that the court may in certain instances act ex mero motu.
In Poje, supra, an injunction had been issued in a labour
dispute. The injunction was disobeyed but the dispute between the immediate
parties had been settled and they accordingly had no interest in taking
contempt proceedings. This Court held that in certain circumstances, a breach
of a court order undermined a court's authority, and that even though the
immediate parties chose not to proceed, the court could act on its own. There
are many other instances where this authority has been upheld and acted upon: Foothills
Provincial General Hospital Board v. Broad (1975), 57 D.L.R. (3d) 758
(Alta. S.C.); Churchman v. Joint Shop Stewards' Committee of the Workers of
the Port of London, [1972] 3 All E.R. 603 (C.A.); Con‑Mech
(Engineers) Ltd. v. Amalgamated Union of Engineering Workers, [1973] I.C.R.
620; R. v. United Fishermen and Allied Workers' Union (1967), 63 D.L.R.
(2d) 356 (B.C.C.A.)
43. The
English authorities were reviewed and summarized in Balogh v. Crown Court at
St. Alban's, [1974] 3 All E.R. 283 (C.A.), at p. 287 and p. 288, by
Lord Denning MR:
Gathering together the experience of
the past, then whatever expression is used, a judge of one of the superior
courts or a judge of assize could always punish summarily of his own motion for
contempt of court whenever there was a gross interference with the court of
justice in a case that was being tried, or about to be tried, or just over‑‑no
matter whether the judge saw it with his own eyes or it was reported to him by
the officers of the court, or by others‑‑whenever it was urgent and
imperative to act at once.
...
This power of summary punishment is a
great power, but it is a necessary power. It is given so as to maintain the
dignity and authority of the judge and to ensure a fair trial. It is to be
exercised by the judge of his own motion only when it is urgent and imperative
to act immediately‑‑so as to maintain the authority of the court‑‑to
prevent disorder‑‑to enable witnesses to be free from fear‑‑and
jurors from being improperly influenced‑‑and the like. It is, of
course, to be exercised with scrupulous care, and only when the case is clear
and beyond reasonable doubt . . . . But properly
exercised, it is a power of the utmost value and importance which should not be
curtailed.
44. Similarly,
there is ample authority for the issuance of ex parte injunctions in
those situations where the delay necessary to give notice to the party sought
to be enjoined will entail the irreparable loss of rights. McEachern C.J.S.C.
faced such a situation on the morning of November 1, 1983. It was, as I have
said, a normal working day for the courts and if the courts were to carry on
with important matters, immediate and decisive action was called for. It was,
in the words of Lord Denning "urgent and imperative to act at once".
45. Although
the act of picketing did not take place strictly within the court room itself,
the courts of British Columbia found, correctly in my view, that it constituted
contempt in the face of the court. The picketing was within the immediate
precincts of the court‑houses, obvious to all who approached the courts,
including the Chief Justice as he entered the Vancouver court‑house that
day, and it was directed against the immediate activity taking place in the
courts. In the Balogh case, supra, the English Court of Appeal
confirmed that the summary power to deal with contempt could be exercised even
though the activity in question did not take place immediately within the court
room. See also McKeown v. The Queen, [1971] S.C.R. 446.
46. McEachern
C.J.S.C. acted ex parte, but it should also be noted that he took
careful account of the procedural rights at stake. The appellant Union was
expressly given the right to move to have the order set aside and this, of
course, happened within two days of the original order. At that time, full
rights to present evidence and argument were accorded to the Union. While the
Chief Justice acted upon his own observations, the case did not involve
contested facts. The argument on the motion to set aside centred upon
applicable legal principles. No one was convicted of contempt and no penalty
was imposed. The effect of the order was really to put the Union and its
members on notice that their conduct constituted a contempt and that if it
continued, penalties would be imposed in the future. If the injunction had been
disobeyed, and if charges of contempt had been brought, it would have been
necessary to invoke the usual procedures and to respect the safeguards
available to anyone charged with a criminal contempt. But that was not the
situation confronting McEachern C.J.S.C. on the morning the picket lines were
set up. As Chief Justice, he had the legal constitutional right and duty to
ensure that the courts of the province would continue to function. His action
went no further than that which was necessary to ensure respect for that most
important principle.
VI
Labour
Legislation
47. The
Union contends that the Labour Code, R.S.B.C. 1979, c. 212, confers
exclusive jurisdiction to enjoin any picketing in connection with a labour
dispute upon the Labour Relations Board of British Columbia.
48. As
the judgments already delivered in this matter point out, both the Labour
Relations Board and the courts of British Columbia have held that while the
Board does have jurisdiction in relation to what might be described as the
labour relations aspect of picketing, the courts retain full authority to deal
with violations of civil and criminal law arising from picketing.
49. It
is well established that the courts have the jurisdiction to defend their own
authority. This jurisdiction is inherent in the very idea of a court. It is
admirably summarized by I. H. Jacob in "The Inherent Jurisdiction of the
Court" (1970), 23 Current Legal Problems 23, at pp. 27‑28:
For the essential character of a superior court of law
necessarily involves that it should be invested with a power to maintain its
authority and to prevent its process being obstructed and abused. Such a power
is intrinsic in a superior court; it is its very life‑blood, its very
essence, its immanent attribute. Without such a power, the court would have
form but would lack substance. The jurisdiction which is inherent in a superior
court of law is that which enables it to fulfil itself as a court of law. The
juridical basis of this jurisdiction is therefore the authority of the
judiciary to uphold, to protect and to fulfil the judicial function of
administering justice according to law in a regular, orderly and effective
manner.
50. In
Better Value Furniture (CHWK) Ltd. v. General Truck Drivers and Helpers
Union, Local 31 (1981), 26 B.C.L.R. 273 (B.C.C.A.), (leave to appeal to the
Supreme Court of Canada refused, [1981] 2 S.C.R. viii), Nemetz C.J.B.C.,
speaking for the majority, said at p. 276:
A difficult question of law is thus
raised, which can only be answered by examining the apposite sections of the
Labour Code. It is to be remembered that the Code came into being in 1973, and
had the effect, inter alia, of transferring from the courts to the labour board
the jurisdiction to deal with provincial labour disputes. As a consequence of
this enactment, it was inevitable that litigation would ensue in order to
delineate the borders of jurisdiction of the courts vis‑a‑vis the
board. One of the first suits had to do with the jurisdiction of the board to
prohibit picketing which forcibly cut off an employer from its mine property.
The board found that it had no jurisdiction to restrain this forcible aspect of
picketing. The board concluded that it had exclusive jurisdiction over the
industrial relations regulation of picketing, such as its object, timing, and
location, while the courts retained jurisdiction over violations of the general
law, both civil and criminal, occurring in the course of picketing (Canex
Placer Ltd. v. C.A.I.M.A.W., [1975] 1 C.L.R.B.R. 269). This position has
been adopted, correctly, in my opinion, by the Supreme Court of British
Columbia in several decisions: All‑town Const. Ltd. v. United
Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of Amer., Loc. 1598, McKay J., 1976
(unreported); Central Native Fishermen's Co‑op. v. B.C. Prov. Council,
[1975] 6 W.W.R. 699, 76 C.L.L.C. 14,040, 61 D.L.R. (3d) 677 (B.C.) (per Toy
J.); Alcan Smelters & Chemicals Ltd. v. Can. Assn. of Smelter &
Allied Wkrs., Loc. 1 (1977), 3 B.C.L.R. 163 (S.C.) (per Macfarlane J.); Miko
& Sons Logging Ltd. v. Penner, [1976] 4 W.W.R. 756, 77 C.L.L.C. 14,063
(per McKay J.); and Pitura v. Lincoln Motors (1978), 9 B.C.L.R. 77, 94
D.L.R. (3d) 421 (sub nom, Pitura v. Lincoln Manor Ltd.) (S.C.) (Per
Munroe J.).
51. Then,
after referring to Labour Code, s. 28, Nemetz C.J.B.C. said at
pp. 278‑79:
A propos s. 28, it is manifest that a
"matter" cannot be the subject of a complaint unless it contravenes
the Labour Code, a collective agreement or the regulations. In respect of s. 31
the same situation obtains: "...the board has and shall exercise exclusive
jurisdiction to hear and determine an application or complaint under this
Act" (the italics are mine). This clearly shows that the board's
jurisdiction is confined to hearing applications or complaints coming under the
Labour Code. Conversely, it follows that there is jurisdiction in the court to
consider any matter that does not involve contraventions of the Labour
Code, a collective agreement or the regulations. This interpretation is
supported by the general scheme of the Act which establishes limits to the
extent of the board's jurisdiction, e.g., s. 32(4), which provides that the
board's consent to an action for damages is required only in a case where the
injury or losses arise as a consequence of conduct contravening the Code. Even
s. 33, granting the board jurisdiction to determine the extent of its own
jurisdiction, is limited to its jurisdiction "under this Act, a collective
agreement or the regulations". This action for damages is brought against
the union for inducing breach of contract by interfering with the contractual
relations between the non‑allied distributor and Better Value. It is an
action in tort, the merits of which can be determined independently of finding
a breach of the Code, its regulations or a collective agreement.
52. Counsel
for the Attorney General of Canada submitted:
(7) The fact the order was issued in relation to a
criminal contempt brings it within the federal jurisdiction under head 91(27)
of the Constitution Act, 1867 , relating to criminal law and procedure.
...
(8) The inherent (or common law) jurisdiction of
the courts to punish for contempt is preserved by s. 8 of the Criminal Code,
R.S.C. 1970, c. 34 [sic], as amended.
...
(9) Control of labour relations of provincial court
employees is prima facie within provincial legislative
jurisdiction . . . .
53. I
agree with counsel's three submissions. Striking court employees, as anyone
else, must obey the law in relation to criminal contempt, just as they are
subject to the legislated offences in the Criminal Code . To argue, as
the Union does, that striking court employees are not controllable by the
federal criminal power in this sense is to suggest that they can ignore the
criminal law with impunity, simply because their labour relations are governed
by provincial labour legislation.
54. The
Union also contends that as the strike was lawful, and as the Labour Code
permits picketing in the course of a lawful strike, the legality of all aspects
of picketing is put beyond the reach of the criminal law or criminal contempt.
This sweeping proposition cannot be accepted. The Labour Code covers
picketing from the aspect of labour relations only. It does not confer a
blanket immunity upon picketers, whatever laws they break. Although lawful for
labour relations purposes, picketing which restricts access to the courts is
not relieved of being classified as criminal under the law of contempt.
VII
The Charter
Claims of the Union
55. The
Charter arguments advanced by the Union apparently did not figure large
in the courts below. As I have indicated, they are not referred to in the
reasons of McEachern C.J.S.C. and although brief mention is made of the Charter
in the reasons of Nemetz C.J.B.C., only s. 2 (b) and (c) are
alluded to. Before this Court, constitutional questions were stated and
reliance was placed on ss. 7 , 11 (a), (c) and (d), as well
as s. 2 (b) and (c). The Union, however, expressly abandoned any
reliance on s. 11 (c) and made no submissions on s. 2 (c). It
remains therefore to consider ss. 2 (b), 7 , 11 (a) and (d).
56. As
a preliminary matter, one must consider whether the order issued by McEachern
C.J.S.C. is, or is not, subject to Charter scrutiny. RWDSU v. Dolphin
Delivery Ltd., [1986] 2 S.C.R. 573, holds that the Charter does
apply to the common law, although not where the common law is invoked with
reference to a purely private dispute. At issue here is the validity of a
common law breach of criminal law and ultimately the authority of the court to
punish for breaches of that law. The court is acting on its own motion and not
at the instance of any private party. The motivation for the court's action is
entirely "public" in nature, rather than "private". The
criminal law is being applied to vindicate the rule of law and the fundamental
freedoms protected by the Charter . At the same time, however, this
branch of the criminal law, like any other, must comply with the fundamental
standards established by the Charter .
Section
2 (b)‑‑Freedom of Expression
57. This
Court has held that picketing in the context of a labour dispute contains an
element of expression which attracts the protection of s. 2 (b): Dolphin
Delivery, supra, at p. 586 and p. 588:
The question now arises: Is freedom
of expression involved in this case? In seeking an answer to this question, it
must be observed at once that in any form of picketing there is involved at
least some element of expression. The picketers would be conveying a message
which at a very minimum would be classed as persuasion, aimed at deterring
customers and prospective customers from doing business with the respondent.
The question then arises. Does this expression in the circumstances of this
case have Charter protection under the provisions of s. 2 (b), and
if it does, then does the injunction abridge or infringe such freedom?
...
The union is making a statement to the general public
that it is involved in a dispute, that it is seeking to impose its will on the
object of the picketing, and that it solicits the assistance of the public in
honouring the picket line. Action on the part of the picketers will, of course,
always accompany the expression, but not every action on the part of the
picketers will be such as to alter the nature of the whole transaction and
remove it from Charter protection for freedom of expression. That
freedom, of course, would not extend to protect threats of violence or acts of
violence. It would not protect the destruction of property, or assaults, or
other clearly unlawful conduct. We need not, however, be concerned with such
matters here because the picketing would have been peaceful. I am therefore of
the view that the picketing sought to be restrained would have involved the
exercise of the right of freedom of expression.
58. The
picketing in the circumstances of the case at bar was peaceful and there were
no threats of violence or acts of violence, nor was there any destruction of
property. What is at issue is the right of the Union and its members to urge
members of the public not to enter the court‑house. It is true that apart
from the Charter , for the reasons just given, the picketing was
unlawful. In Dolphin Delivery, the picketing was also unlawful in that
it constituted the tort of inducing breach of contract. The Court held that the
constitutional validity of an injunction to restrain commission of that tort
had to be determined pursuant to the analysis required under s. 1 of the Charter .
The issue here is whether the law of criminal contempt and the injunction to
enforce the law pass scrutiny under the Charter , and it follows from Dolphin
Delivery that this issue must be dealt with pursuant to s. 1 .
59. Before
considering this issue, I will canvass the other Charter rights alleged
to have been infringed.
Section 7
60. Section
7 of the Charter provides:
7. Everyone has the
right to life, liberty and security of the person and the right not to be
deprived thereof except in accordance with the principles of fundamental
justice.
61. Assuming
for the purposes of the argument that the effect of the injunction was to deny
the Union members' right to liberty protected by s. 7 , the denial of that right
was fully in accordance with the principles of fundamental justice. While ex
parte injunctions are the exception rather than the rule, it is well‑established
that a judge does have the discretion to make such an order in appropriate
circumstances. An injunction plainly does not violate s. 7 of the Charter
solely because it was granted ex parte. Where the circumstances are such
that the delay necessary to give notice might result in an immediate and
serious violation of rights, an ex parte injunction may be issued. The
effect of the injunction was to put the appellants on notice that their conduct
was unlawful and that it would be sanctioned if it continued. In the
circumstances, the order of McEachern C.J.S.C. constituted a minimal
interference with the procedural rights of those who had set out on a
deliberate course of action which could only result in a massive disruption of
the activities of the courts and consequent interference with the legal and
constitutional rights of all citizens of British Columbia. Given that context,
it can hardly be said that the order violated fundamental justice.
Section
11 (a) and (d)
62. Section
11 (a) and (d) provide as follows:
11. Any person
charged with an offence has the right
(a) to be informed
without unreasonable delay of the specific offence;
...
(d) to be presumed
innocent until proven guilty according to law in a fair and public hearing by
an independent and impartial tribunal.
63. At
no stage in the entire history of this matter has there been anyone charged
with an offence nor has any penal sanction been imposed upon any offender. In Attorney‑General
of Quebec v. Laurendeau (1982), 145 D.L.R. (3d) 526, 33 C.R. (3d) 40 (Que.
S.C.), at p. 528, Rothman J. said:
(translation)
I am not convinced, however, that the summary motion for contempt presented by
the Crown in the case at bar constitutes a charge or that the contempt referred
to in the motion constitutes an offence within the meaning of s. 11 (f)
of the Charter .
The exercise by a superior court of
criminal jurisdiction of contempt of court powers is merely an aspect of the
exercise of inherent powers essential to the administration of justice in any
criminal case.
In exercising these inherent powers
the court is not accusing a person of having committed an offence within the
ordinary meaning of that word.
64. Had
the injunction been disobeyed and had proceedings been taken against an
individual for such disobedience, then obviously at that stage, the ordinary
procedural guarantees would apply. However, the matter never reached that
position and no charges were ever made. On this aspect alone, the claims
arising under s. 11 (a) and (d) fail.
65. It
is true, as stated, that McEachern C.J.S.C.'s original order was ex parte
and that no notice was given to the picketers, nor were they afforded an
opportunity to be heard. Had McEachern C.J.S.C. imposed immediate fines or jail
sentences at that stage, a s. 11 (a) claim might well have arisen.
However, there can be no violation of s. 11 (a) when no person was
charged with a specific offence and, hence, there was no one to notify of such
offence.
66. With
reference to s. 11 (d), there was no violation of the right to be
presumed innocent until proven guilty as no finding of guilt has been made
against any individual. For the reasons given under s. 7 , the proceedings were
fair within the meaning of s. 11 (d). As for the requirement of an
independent and impartial tribunal, the very purpose of McEachern C.J.S.C.'s
order was to protect that important right. It would be strange indeed if the Charter
claims of the members of the appellant Union, all standing outside the court‑house,
not charged with any offence and not facing any threat of immediate
imprisonment, were to prevail to the detriment of the Charter rights of
those within the court‑house awaiting bail hearings and trials.
Section 1
67. It
follows from the foregoing that the s. 2 (b) claim falls to be decided
under s. 1 . Freedom of expression protected by s. 2 (b) of the Charter
is obviously a highly valued right as is the individual liberty reflected in a
modern democratic society by the right to strike and the right to picket. A
balance must be sought to be attained between the individual values and the
public or societal values. In the instant case, the task of striking a balance
is not difficult because without the public right to have absolute, free and
unrestricted access to the courts the individual and private right to freedom
of expression would be lost. The greater public interest must be considered
when determining the degree of protection to be accorded to individual
interests.
68. As
already indicated, the picketing constituted a deliberate course of conduct
which could only result in massive disruption of the court process of British
Columbia, and the consequential interference with the legal and constitutional
rights of Canadian citizens. Assuring unimpeded access to the courts is plainly
an objective "of sufficient importance to warrant overriding a
constitutionally protected right or freedom" (R. v. Big M Drug Mart
Ltd., [1985] 1 S.C.R. 295, at p. 352) and relates to a concern which is
"pressing and substantial in a free and democratic society" (R. v.
Oakes, [1986] 1 S.C.R. 103, at pp. 138‑139). The means taken by
McEachern C.J.S.C. to accomplish that objective satisfy the three‑step
proportionality test established by this Court in Oakes.
69. First,
there is a rational connection between the injunction and the objective of
ensuring unimpeded access to the courts.
70. Second,
the injunction accomplished this objective by impairing as little as possible
the s. 2 (b) rights of the members of the Union. The evidence indicated
that if the picketing of court‑houses continued, access would have been
impeded. The injunction left the Union and its members free to express
themselves in other places and in other ways so long as they did not interfere
with the right of access to the courts.
71. Finally,
there was a proportionality between the effects of the injunction on the protected
right and the objective of maintaining access to the court. The injunction, it
is important to recall at this stage, was not intended to vindicate the dignity
of the court or the judges but rather to maintain access to the institution in
our society directly charged with responsibility of ensuring respect for the Charter .
A significant element therefore of the objective of the injunction order was to
protect Charter rights. The Charter surely does not self‑destruct
in a dynamic of conflicting rights. The remarks of Salmon L.J. in Morris v.
Crown Office, supra, at pp. 1086‑87, although not made with
reference to an entrenched constitutional right, are still apposite. The
appellants had been found in contempt for having disrupted a trial to which
they were not parties by staging a protest, shouting slogans and scattering
pamphlets:
Everyone has the right publicly to
protest against anything which displeases him and publicly to proclaim his
views, whatever they may be. It does not matter whether there is any reasonable
basis for his protest or whether his views are sensible or silly. He can say or
write or indeed sing what he likes when he likes and where he likes, providing
that in doing so he does not infringe the rights of others. Every member of
the public has an inalienable right that our courts shall be left free to
administer justice without obstruction or interference from whatever quarter it
may come. Take away that right and freedom of speech together with all the
other freedoms would wither and die, for in the long run it is the courts of
justice which are the last bastion of individual liberty. The appellants,
rightly or wrongly, think that they have a grievance. They are undoubtedly
entitled to protest about it, but certainly not in the fashion they have
chosen. In an attempt, and a fairly successful attempt, to gain publicity for
their cause, they have chosen to disrupt the business of the courts and have
scornfully trampled on the rights which everyone has in the due administration
of justice; and for this they have been very properly punished, so that it may
be made plain to all that such conduct will not be tolerated‑‑even
by students. [Emphasis added.]
72. While
the injunction limited the s. 2 (b) Charter rights of the members
of the Union, that limitation was wholly proportional to the objective of the
order, namely, to maintain access to the courts and to ensure that the courts
remained in operation in order that the legal and Charter rights of all
citizens of the province would be respected.
VIII
Conclusion
73. In
the result, I would dismiss the appeal and answer the constitutional questions
as follows:
Question 1:
Answer: A
provincial superior court judge does have the constitutional jurisdiction to
make an order enjoining picketing of court‑houses by or on behalf of a
union representing court employees engaged in a lawful strike.
Question 2:
Answer: It
is not necessary to answer this question for the purposes of this appeal.
Question 3:
Answer: The
order by the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of British Columbia dated
November 1, 1983 restraining picketing and other activities within the
precincts of all court‑houses in British Columbia did infringe or deny
the rights and freedoms guaranteed by s. 2 (b), of the Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms but did not infringe or deny the rights
guaranteed by ss. 7 , 11 (a) and (d).
Question 4:
Answer: The
order was justified by s. 1 of the Charter and therefore not
inconsistent with the Constitution Act, 1982 .
The
following are the reasons delivered by
74. McIntyre J.‑‑I
have read the reasons for judgment prepared in this appeal by the Chief
Justice. I agree with his result and with his reasons with one exception. I
would not find any infringement of any Charter ‑protected right of
the Union or its members in the judgments of the Trial Court or the Court of
Appeal. Consequently, I would answer question 3 in the negative and it would be
unnecessary to answer question 4.
75. The
Chief Justice has said, and with this I am in full agreement, that the rule of
law is the very foundation of the Charter and that free access to the
courts is essential to the maintenance of the rule of law. He has considered it
inconceivable that:
...Parliament and the provinces should describe in such
detail the rights and freedoms guaranteed by the Charter and should not
first protect that which alone makes it in fact possible to benefit from such
guarantees, that is, access to a court.
In my view,
the right of such free access is Charter ‑protected, and I agree
with the Chief Justice where he said:
There cannot be a rule of law without
access, otherwise the rule of law is replaced by a rule of men and women who
decide who shall and who shall not have access to justice. Counsel for the
Attorney General of British Columbia posed this question:
By what authority and on what criteria were the Union
leaders deciding who were to be given passes and who were to be denied them?
I cannot believe that the Charter was ever
intended to be so easily thwarted.
76. The
injunction granted at first instance enjoined conduct which was calculated to
interfere with the operations of the courts of the Province or to restrict or
limit access to the courts. In this, it is clear that it enjoined the Union and
its members from engaging in conduct which was aimed at the infringement or
limitation of the Charter ‑protected rights of others. In so doing,
I am unable to find that any Charter right of the Union or its members
was affected or limited and, therefore, there is no occasion to resort to s. 1
of the Charter .
77. I
see no parallel here with the Dolphin Delivery case, RWDSU v. Dolphin
Delivery Ltd., [1986] 2 S.C.R. 573. I agree, as said there, that any
picketing involves some element of expression and, further, that it is not
every action accompanying the expression which will alter the transaction and
remove Charter protection. It was also said, however, that protection
would not be accorded to clearly unlawful conduct. The conduct here enjoined
was clearly unlawful and calculated to infringe the Charter rights of
those seeking access to the courts. This cannot be said of Dolphin Delivery
where the illegality of the conduct concerned only an interference with
contractual rights, a tort, the acceptability of which as a limitation imposed
by law might or might not have been supported under s. 1 , whereas the effect of
the picketing in issue here was described by the Chief Justice in these words:
Accused persons have a Charter right to a fair
trial and a statutory right to make full answer and defence. Witnesses crucial
to the defence could well have been deterred from even requesting a pass to
enter the courthouse to give vital evidence. It is perhaps unnecessary to
multiply the examples. The point is clear. Picketing a courthouse to urge the
public not to enter except by permission of the picketers could only lead to a
massive interference with the legal and constitutional rights of the citizens
of British Columbia.
This is not
a case such as Dolphin Delivery which required a balancing of
conflicting rights. What is in issue here is the question of whether any person
or group may have a Charter right to engage deliberately in conduct
calculated to abridge the Charter rights of others. In my view, no such
right can exist and resort to s. 1 , which can only have application where there
has been an infringement of a Charter right, was therefore unnecessary.
78. In
all other respects, I agree with the Chief Justice.
Appeal
dismissed; the first constitutional question should be answered in the
affirmative; the second constitutional question needed not be answered; the
third constitutional question should be answered in the affirmative with
respect to s. 2 (b) of the Charter but in the negative with respect to ss. 7 ,
11 (a) and (d); and the fourth constitutional question should be answered in the
affirmative. McIntyre J. would answer the third constitutional question in the
negative and find it unnecessary to answer the fourth.
Solicitors
for the appellant: Baigent, Jackson, Blair, Vancouver.
Solicitors
for the respondent: Farris, Vaughan, Wills & Murphy, Vancouver.
Solicitor
for the intervener: F. Iacobucci, Ottawa.