R. v.
Deruelle, [1992] 2 S.C.R. 663
Her Majesty
The Queen Appellant
v.
Joseph Leon
Deruelle Respondent
Indexed as:
R. v. Deruelle
File No.:
22305.
1992: May
1; 1992: July 9.
Present:
Lamer C.J. and La Forest, L'Heureux‑Dubé, Sopinka, Gonthier, McLachlin
and Stevenson*
JJ.
on appeal
from the nova scotia supreme court, appeal division
Criminal
law ‑‑ Motor vehicles ‑‑ Breathalyzer demand for sample
of breath or blood ‑‑ Time limit ‑‑ Whether demand must
be made within two hours of offence ‑‑ Criminal Code, R.S.C., 1985,
c. C‑46, s. 254(3) .
The
accused was the driver of a car involved in a single‑vehicle accident
which occurred at 3:30 a.m. Because he was slightly injured in the
accident, he was sent by ambulance to a hospital. The investigating police
officer reported the accident to another officer at 5:20 a.m., informing
him that the driver of the car was, in his opinion, impaired by alcohol. The
second officer arrived at the hospital at 5:26 a.m. to obtain a breath or
blood sample from the accused. The accused had wandered off, and was found at
5:45 a.m. At 5:54 a.m., after consultation with a doctor, the officer
informed the accused of his right to counsel and demanded a blood sample. The
accused refused and was accordingly charged with refusing to comply with a
demand under s. 254(5) of the Criminal Code . Under s. 254(3),
"[w]here a peace officer believes . . . that a person is
committing, or at any time within the preceding two hours has committed
. . . an offence under section 253 , the peace officer may, by
demand made to that person forthwith or as soon as practicable, require that person
to provide" a breath or blood sample. The trial judge dismissed the
charge because in his view s. 254(3) requires that a blood sample demand
be made within two hours of the time when the impaired driving offence was
committed. The Court of Appeal, in a majority decision, dismissed the Crown's
appeal. This appeal is to determine whether the police must make their
breathalyzer demand within two hours of the offence, or whether they need only
form a belief that a person has committed an impaired driving offence within
the previous two hours.
Held: The
appeal should be allowed.
Section 254(3)
should be interpreted as requiring only that a peace officer form a belief that
an impaired driving offence has been committed by the suspect within the past
two hours. A demand made pursuant to that belief must follow forthwith or as
soon as practicable, but this may fall outside the two‑hour limit. The
formation of the belief and the resulting demand need not be concurrent. The
language of the section does not describe a solitary event, but rather is split
into two temporal modes. The present and retrospective tense used for the
formation of the peace officer's belief ("believes . . . that a
person is committing, or at any time within the preceding two hours has
committed") must be contrasted with the timing of the demand, which is in
the present and future tense ("by demand made to that person forthwith or
as soon as practicable").
The
broader breathalyzer scheme of the Criminal Code , which is designed to
ensure that breath or blood samples are obtained as quickly as possible after
the alleged impaired driving offence, supports this view. The two‑hour
limit in s. 254(3) contributes to the objective of the scheme by forcing
prompt police investigation, and by requiring the police to take the sample as
soon as practicable. This specific purpose, which goes to the admissibility of
the sample into evidence, can be distinguished from the purpose of the time
limit in the presumption section, s. 258(1) (c), which provides a
procedural shortcut for the police, but only if the breath or blood sample is
obtained within two hours of the alleged offence. Where, as here, the breath
or blood sample is taken more than two hours after the commission of the
alleged offence, the Crown loses the benefit of the presumption but nothing
more. The evidence obtained is still admissible, provided the officer who
demanded the breath or blood samples formed a belief that within the preceding
two hours the accused had committed a drinking and driving offence.
Cases Cited
Not
followed: R. v. Willis (1974), 5 Nfld. & P.E.I.R.
398; R. v. Goodyear (1988), 70 Nfld. & P.E.I.R. 256; referred to:
R. v. Pavel (1989), 53 C.C.C. (3d) 296; R. v. Hitchner (1989), 13
M.V.R. (2d) 37; R. v. Hamm (1973), 15 C.C.C. (2d) 32; R. v. May
(1971), 16 C.R.N.S. 392; R. v. Burnison (1979), 70 C.C.C. (2d) 38; R.
v. Therens, [1985] 1 S.C.R. 613; R. v. Thomsen, [1988] 1 S.C.R. 640;
R. v. Green, [1992] 1 S.C.R. 614.
Statutes and
Regulations Cited
Criminal Code, R.S.C., 1985,
c. C‑46 [am. c. 27 (1st Supp.), s. 36 ], ss. 253 [rep.
& sub. c. 32 (4th Supp.), s. 59 ], 254(3), (5), 256, 258(1)(c).
Authors
Cited
McLeod, Roderick M., John D. Takach and Murray D.
Segal. Breathalyzer Law in Canada, vol. 2, 3rd ed.
Toronto: Carswell, 1986.
APPEAL
from a judgment of the Nova Scotia Supreme Court, Appeal Division (1990), 100
N.S.R. (2d) 423, 272 A.P.R. 423, 62 C.C.C. (3d) 44, 27 M.V.R. (2d) 266,
dismissing the Crown's appeal from the dismissal by Campbell Prov. Ct. J. of
the charge against the accused of refusing to comply with a demand for a blood
sample. Appeal allowed.
Kenneth
W. F. Fiske and Denise C. Smith, for the appellant.
Patricia
A. Fricker and Allan F. Nicholson, for the respondent.
//La
Forest J.//
The
judgment of the Court was delivered by
La Forest J. -- This appeal
concerns the meaning of the time limit within which a breathalyzer demand must
be made by the police under s. 254(3) of the Criminal Code, R.S.C.,
1985, c. C‑46 . The provision reads as follows:
254. . . .
(3) Where a peace
officer believes on reasonable and probable grounds that a person is
committing, or at any time within the preceding two hours has committed, as
a result of the consumption of alcohol, an offence under section 253, the
peace officer may, by demand made to that person forthwith or as soon as
practicable, require that person to provide then or as soon thereafter as is
practicable
(a) such samples of the person's
breath as in the opinion of a qualified technician, or
(b) where the peace officer has
reasonable and probable grounds to believe that, by reason of any physical
condition of the person,
(i) the person may be incapable of providing a sample of
his breath, or
(ii) it would be impracticable to obtain a sample of the
person's breath,
such samples of the person's blood, under the
conditions referred to in subsection (4), as in the opinion of the qualified
medical practitioner or qualified technician taking the samples
are necessary to enable proper analysis to be made in
order to determine the concentration, if any, of alcohol in the person's blood,
and to accompany the peace officer for the purpose of enabling such samples to
be taken. [Emphasis added.]
As can be
seen, s. 254(3) requires the police to act within two hours of the
suspected impaired driving offence, but the lower courts have taken different
approaches to the question of which of two events must take place within this
time span. One interpretation is that the police must make their breathalyzer
demand within two hours of the offence. The other is that the police need only
form a belief that a person has committed an impaired driving offence within
the previous two hours. Under the latter approach, the actual demand by the
police could be made after the expiry of the two‑hour limit. This is the
issue requiring determination in this case.
Facts
The
respondent, Joseph Leon Deruelle, was the driver of a car involved in a single‑vehicle
accident which occurred at 3:30 a.m. on October 27, 1989 at Framboise, Cape
Breton, Nova Scotia. The accident was investigated by a Constable Watson of
the RCMP, who formed the opinion that the respondent was impaired by alcohol.
Because the respondent was slightly injured in the accident, he was sent by
ambulance to the Sydney City Hospital. Constable Watson then telephoned the
RCMP detachment in Sydney, reporting the accident to a Constable Smith at 5:20
a.m. Watson informed Smith that the driver of the car was, in his opinion,
impaired by alcohol.
Constable
Smith proceeded to the hospital to obtain either a breath or blood sample from
the respondent. Smith arrived at the hospital at 5:26 a.m., only to discover
that the respondent had wandered off. He was found at 5:45 a.m. sitting in a
hallway between two locked doors. At 5:54 a.m., after consultation with a
doctor, Constable Smith informed the respondent of his right to counsel and
demanded a blood sample. The respondent refused to comply with the demand, and
was accordingly charged under s. 254(5) of the Criminal Code .
At
trial in the Provincial Court of Nova Scotia, the Crown called one witness,
Constable Smith. The respondent offered no evidence. Campbell Prov. Ct.
J. dismissed the charge because in his view s. 254(3) of the Criminal
Code requires that a blood sample demand be made within two hours of the
time when the impaired driving offence was committed. An appeal to the Supreme
Court of Nova Scotia, Appeal Division was dismissed, Macdonald J.A.
dissenting: (1990), 100 N.S.R. (2d) 423, 272 A.P.R. 423, 62 C.C.C. (3d) 44, 27
M.V.R. (2d) 266 (hereinafter cited to N.S.R.). Leave to appeal to this Court
was granted on June 13, 1991: [1991] 1 S.C.R. xiii.
Judicial
History
The
facts of the case were not disputed at trial. Accordingly, Campbell Prov.
Ct. J. found that the issue before him was confined to whether the two‑hour
time limit in s. 254(3) relates to the time when an officer forms the
belief that an impaired driving offence has occurred, or to the time when a
demand for a breath or blood sample is actually made to the suspect.
Following
the decision of the Prince Edward Island Supreme Court in R. v. Willis
(1974), 5 Nfld. & P.E.I.R. 398, Judge Campbell held that the demand must be
made within two hours of the impaired driving offence. Since the demand in
this case came more than two hours after the respondent's accident, the charge
was dismissed.
On
the appeal to the Supreme Court of Nova Scotia, Appeal Division, Freeman J.A.
gave the principal majority reasons. He found that the "plain
meaning" and "simple logic" of s. 254(3) require the
linkage of the two‑hour time limit to the making of the demand by the
police. His reasons are encapsulated in the following passage, at pp. 425‑26:
The words of s. 254(3) must be given
their clear, ordinary meaning. For purposes of the present issue the operative
words for a demand under s. 254 are: "where a peace officer believes
. . . he may, by demand . . . require . . ."
"Believes" is in the
present tense. In my opinion, this means that the belief must be subsisting
and ongoing, at least until the words of the demand have been pronounced.
There is nothing in the subsection suggesting that a formerly held belief can
be put on hold, its effects preserved frozen in time until it can be used. A
continuing belief is, in my opinion, a condition precedent to a valid demand.
Section 254(3) is silent as to when the peace officer's belief may be
formulated. The scheme of the subsection is such that reference to the
formulation of the belief is unnecessary. If a belief within the meaning of
s. 254(3) is held at the time of the demand, it does not matter at what
earlier time that belief was formed, provided the demand is made "forthwith
or as soon as practicable" after it is formed. What is essential is that
the belief be actually held on reasonable and probable grounds at the very
moment when the demand is given; it must be a belief that the person to whom it
is given "is committing, or at any time within the preceding two hours has
committed, as a result of the consumption of alcohol, an offence under section
253".
Freeman J.A.
concluded that Constable Smith's belief expired at 5:30 a.m., and the demand
made after that point was out of time.
In
reviewing the case law on this aspect of s. 254(3) , Freeman J.A.
acknowledged obiter statements from other appellate courts which
suggested that the relevant event is the formation of the police officer's
belief: see R. v. Pavel (1989), 53 C.C.C. (3d) 296 (Ont. C.A.); R.
v. Hitchner (1989), 13 M.V.R. (2d) 37 (Alta. C.A.). However, he favoured
the opposite interpretation stated in R. v. Willis, supra, and in
R. v. Goodyear (1988), 70 Nfld. & P.E.I.R. 256 (Nfld. S.C. T.D.).
Jones J.A.
wrote brief concurring reasons which focus on the breathalyzer scheme rather
than on the text of the subsection. In his view, the two‑hour limits
found in ss. 256 and 258 of the Code determine the meaning of the
limit in s. 254(3) . On this point he stated, at p. 429:
Obviously Parliament regarded these
time limits as significant and intended strict compliance with the provisions
before a sample could be admitted into evidence. It would have been a simple
matter to provide in the subsequent sections that where the sample is obtained
pursuant to a demand under s. 254(3) the results of the tests are
admissible in evidence.
As these sections refer to the time
of the offence it leads me to the conclusion that the demand under
s. 254(3) is related to the time of the offence.
Jones J.A.
favoured a linkage to the time of demand as it resulted in an objective test
under s. 254(3) , which in his view was preferable to the subjective test
created when the relevant event is the formation of a belief by the police. Finally,
Jones J.A. agreed with Freeman J.A. that any ambiguity in this penal
provision should be resolved in favour of the accused.
In
dissent, Macdonald J.A. maintained that the only practicable
interpretation of the subsection was to link the time limit to the formation of
a belief by the police. He cited the circumstance where police formulate their
belief on hearsay evidence but cannot get to the driver to make a demand within
the two‑hour limit. In his view, the provision was designed to accommodate
the police in this circumstance, by requiring only that they form their belief
within two hours of the offence. He found support for his interpretation in
the Hitchner and Pavel decisions, and in the comments of Culliton
C.J.S. in R. v. Hamm (1973), 15 C.C.C. (2d) 32 (Sask. C.A.).
Macdonald
J.A. rejected the argument of his colleague Jones J.A. that the meaning of
s. 254(3) must be determined by reference to s. 258. In his view, a
reading of the entire breathalyzer scheme suggested that ss. 254 and 258
have discrete purposes, and should not be read with a view to incorporating the
terms of the latter into the former. He concluded that s. 258 is an
evidentiary provision and nothing more; it provides the police with a
presumptive shortcut when the breath or blood sample is taken within two
hours. A sample taken after two hours was still admissible, and thus the two‑hour
limit in s. 258 need not parallel the more flexible limit in
s. 254(3) . Accordingly, Macdonald J.A. would have allowed the appeal.
Issue
Simply
put, then, the issue in this case is whether the two‑hour limit referred
to in s. 254(3) of the Criminal Code applies to the making of the
breath or blood sample demand, or to the formation of the peace officer's
belief on reasonable and probable grounds that a person is committing or has
committed, as a result of the consumption of alcohol, an offence under s. 253
of the Code.
Analysis
In
my view s. 254(3) should be interpreted as requiring only that a peace
officer form a belief that an impaired driving offence has been
committed by the suspect within the past two hours. A demand made pursuant to
that belief must follow forthwith or as soon as practicable, but this may fall
outside the two‑hour limit. The language of the subsection and the
broader breathalyzer scheme of the Criminal Code both support this
view. It follows that I am largely in agreement with the dissenting judgment
of Macdonald J.A.
In
the court below, Freeman J.A. found that the "plain meaning" of
s. 254(3) demands an interpretation that the formation of the belief and
the resulting demand must be concurrent ‑‑ that is, when the demand
is made the officer's belief must still be fresh. I do not agree. The
language of the section does not describe a solitary event. Rather, it is
split into two temporal modes. First, there is the present and retrospective
tense: "Where a peace officer believes . . . that a person is
committing, or at any time within the preceding two hours has committed
. . . an offence under section 253 . . . (he may make
a demand)". (Emphasis added.) This must be contrasted with the timing of
the demand, which is in the present and future tense: "by demand made to
that person forthwith or as soon as practicable". (Emphasis added.)
In my view, the past and future tenses are not linked by the wording of the
section. Belief and demand may be concurrent (i.e., when the demand is
made "forthwith") but it is not correct to suggest that they must
be concurrent.
Looking
beyond the text of the provision, the breathalyzer scheme of the Code is
designed to ensure that breath or blood samples are obtained as quickly as
possible after the alleged impaired driving offence. This overriding objective
is achieved through various mechanisms found in specific Code
provisions. While the general objective is the same throughout the scheme, the
specific purposes of each mechanism are different. As such, the fact that the
provisions constitute a "scheme" does not mandate a unitary
interpretation contrary to the language of each individual provision. The two‑hour
limit in s. 254(3) contributes to the objective of the scheme by forcing
prompt police investigation, and by requiring the police to take the sample as
soon as practicable. This specific purpose, which goes to the admissibility of
the sample into evidence, can be distinguished from the purpose of the time
limit in the presumption section, s. 258(1)(c). The latter
provides a procedural shortcut for the police, but only if the breath or blood
sample is obtained within two hours of the alleged offence. As such, it is
concerned with the quality of the evidence obtained by the police, rather than
its admissibility.
Counsel
for the respondent argued that s. 254(3) is meant to prevent breath or
blood samples taken long after the fact from being used in evidence, and as
such the section must be interpreted as requiring a demand within two hours.
This is something of a red herring, as neither the demand nor the formation of
a belief controls the timing of the sample. Rather, the sample need only be
taken as soon as is practicable after the demand. In other words, even if a
demand is made within two hours, there may be long delays in some cases before
the sample can practicably be taken. As such, "stale" samples will
still be received in evidence no matter which interpretation of s. 254(3)
is accepted in this appeal. Of course that does not end the matter, as another
provision ‑‑ s. 258(1)(c) ‑‑ will govern
the use of the sample evidence at trial.
The
invalid premise that s. 258(1)(c) governs admissibility is at the
heart of the interpretational approach of Jones J.A. in the court below. This
approach was first advanced by Barry J. in Goodyear, supra, and
was stressed by counsel for the respondent during this appeal. The dissenting
reasons of Macdonald J.A. provide an apt response to this approach, at
pp. 432‑33:
Because alcohol is metabolized by the
human body, the result of a breath or blood sample analysis in actual fact is
not the same as the alcohol/blood concentration at the time the accused
committed the alleged offence. Section 258(1)(c) and (d) provides the Crown
with a procedural shortcut in the form of a presumption that the concentration
of alcohol in the blood of the accused at the time of the alleged offence was
the same as determined by the breath or blood analysis. The benefit of the
presumption saves the Crown from calling expert evidence as to what the actual
blood‑alcohol concentration was at the time the alleged offence was
committed based on the results of the analysis of the sample of blood or
breath. In order to take advantage of this presumption, the prosecution must
establish amongst other things that the breath or blood samples were taken not
later than two hours after the alleged offence was committed.
Where, as here, the breath or blood
sample is taken more than two hours after the commission of the alleged
offence, the Crown loses the benefit of the presumption but nothing more,
provided the officer who demanded the breath or blood samples formulated a
belief that within the preceding two hours the accused had committed a drinking
and driving offence.
The position taken by Barry, J., in R.
v. Goodyear, supra, as expressed at p. 261 of the report was
that the two hour time period stipulated in what is now s. 254(3) of the Code
is the same two hour time period prescribed by what is now 258(1)(c). In other
words, Mr. Justice Barry interprets s. 254(3) as requiring that the
belief, the demand and the breath or blood sample be formulated, given and
taken within two hours of the alleged offence. I agree with the judgment in R.
v. Pavel, supra, that s. 254(3) cannot reasonably bear such
interpretation.
I do not read the presumption
sections (ss. 253(1)(c) and (d)) which are purely evidentiary as relating back
to the substantive provisions of s. 254(3) of the Code so as to
require not only that the requisite belief be formulated within two hours of
the alleged offence, but also that the breath or blood sample demand, let alone
the taking of such samples, also be done within such two hour period.
As Macdonald
J.A. suggests, it is now settled law that a failure to comply with the
provisions of s. 258 robs the Crown of the benefit of the presumption
therein but nothing more. The evidence obtained is still admissible: see R.
v. May (1971), 16 C.R.N.S. 392 (Alta. S.C.); R. v. Hamm, supra;
R. v. Burnison (1979), 70 C.C.C. (2d) 38 (Ont. C.A.). This point was
made by this Court at the hearing and was conceded by counsel for the
respondent. I note, however, that McLeod, Takach and Segal in Breathalyzer
Law in Canada (3rd ed. 1986), at pp. 12‑40 to 12‑49,
suggest that this proposition is still open for debate. In my view, however,
the analysis of the Saskatchewan Court of Appeal in Hamm put this issue
to rest some years ago.
During
the hearing of this appeal, counsel for the respondent conceded that
s. 258(1)(c) does not govern admissibility. This concession
reduced her argument on the breathalyzer scheme to this: the scheme is
preoccupied with a two‑hour limit, and consequently such a limit should
be attached to the making of the demand by the police. However, this is far
too tenuous a link to influence the interpretation of the provision in
question. The specific objective of s. 254(3) does not depend upon
attaching the time limit to the demand. Whether the limiting event is the
belief or the demand, the overriding requirement in the subsection is that the
sample be obtained as soon as is practicable. Thus, both interpretations under
consideration in this appeal will impose some requirement of promptness on the
police. However, the interpretation urged by the respondent would be unfair to
the police in some circumstances.
Macdonald
J.A. raises an obvious example of a situation in which the section can operate
unfairly to the police, at p. 433:
In certain circumstances, although the peace officer
formulates the belief required by s. 254(3) within two hours of the
alleged offence, he may not be able to give the breath or blood sample demand
within such two hour period. Since the requisite belief may be formulated on
hearsay evidence, the situation can arise where the peace officer formulates
the belief some distance away from where the person who committed the alleged
offence is. It may take a peace officer some considerable time to reach that
person and give the breath or blood demand. It may be partly due to such
possibility that Parliament saw fit to provide that the demand for a breath or
blood sample had to be given forthwith after the required belief was formulated
or if it couldn't be given forthwith, then it had to be given "as soon as
practicable".
Another
example arises when the police investigate an impaired driving offence, only to
find that the driver has fled the scene, or has wandered off. By interviewing
witnesses and examining the scene, the police may form a reasonable belief that
the driver was impaired. However, a demand will not be possible until the
driver is found. This may take more than two hours, but a breath sample may
still be relevant at that later time. If the demand is to be the limiting
event, then these relevant breath samples will be unfairly excluded from
evidence.
The
authorities cited by the parties are of little assistance in resolving this
appeal. For the most part, judgments on both sides of the issue fail to
justify their interpretation of the subsection. The exception is Goodyear,
although its reasoning is flawed as demonstrated above. The respondent placed
considerable reliance on past references to the two‑hour limit by this
Court. These are found in the judgments of Le Dain J. in R. v. Therens,
[1985] 1 S.C.R. 613, and R. v. Thomsen, [1988] 1 S.C.R. 640, which
considered the right to counsel with respect to breathalyzer samples and
roadside screening devices. In particular, the following passage from Thomsen,
at p. 651, was cited:
In our reasons for judgment in Therens, both
Estey J. and I, in comparing s. 234.1(1) and s. 235(1) [now
s. 254(3) ], also attached importance to the fact that Parliament chose to
use the word "forthwith" without qualification in s. 234.1(1) but the
words "forthwith or as soon as practicable" and "then or as soon
thereafter as is practicable" in s. 235(1). In the end, however,
it was the two‑hour operating limit under s. 237(1) [now
s. 258(1)] for the breathalyzer test that was seen as affording a
possibility of contact with counsel prior to compliance with a s. 235(1)
demand. [Emphasis added.]
The
respondent argues that this in some way links the two-hour time limit to the
demand. As I read Le Dain J.'s reasons, however, the point of this passage is
simply to illustrate that in the normal case the police will have nearly two
hours to complete the breathalyzer test and still benefit from the presumption
under s. 258, and that in this time span it is reasonable to allow the driver
to contact counsel. I see nothing in his comments that suggests that the
demand must as a matter of law be made within the two‑hour period.
In
the court below, the majority suggested that any ambiguity in a penal provision
should be resolved in favour of the accused. Indeed, I took exactly the same
position on a different portion of s. 254(3) in my reasons in R. v. Green,
[1992] 1 S.C.R. 614. However, in my view the same ambiguity does not exist in
this case. While it is true that s. 254(3) is not a model of clarity, in
this instance the intent of Parliament is sufficiently clear that there is no
need for the aid of that canon of statutory construction.
For
these reasons, I would allow the appeal, set aside the order of the Appeal
Division of the Supreme Court, substitute a conviction for the acquittal
entered below, and remit the matter to the Provincial Court for the imposition
of sentence.
Appeal
allowed.
Solicitor
for the appellant: The Attorney General of Nova Scotia, Halifax.
Solicitors
for the respondent: Patricia A. Fricker and Allan F. Nicholson, Sydney.