R. v. Lavallee, [1990] 1 S.C.R. 852
Angelique Lyn Lavallee Appellant
v.
Her Majesty The Queen Respondent
indexed as: r. v. lavallee
File No.: 21022.
1989: October 31; 1990: May 3.
Present: Dickson C.J. and Lamer, Wilson,
L'Heureux-Dubé, Sopinka, Gonthier and McLachlin JJ.
on appeal from the court of appeal for
manitoba
Evidence -- Admissibility
-- Expert evidence -- Battered woman, fearing attack and possible death,
killing spouse -- Defence of self-defence -- Expert witness giving psychiatric
assessment of battered woman -- Assessment based in part on inadmissible
evidence -- Whether or not expert evidence admissible ‑‑ Whether
trial judge's charge to the jury with respect to expert evidence adequate --
Criminal Code, R.S.C., 1985, c. C-46, s. 34(2) (a), (b).
Criminal law -- Battered
women -- Battered woman, fearing attack and possible death, killing spouse --
Defence of self-defence -- Expert witness giving psychiatric assessment of
battered woman -- Assessment based in part on inadmissible evidence -- Whether
or not expert evidence admissible -- Whether trial judge's charge to the jury
with respect to expert evidence adequate.
Appellant, a battered woman
in a volatile common law relationship, killed her partner late one night by
shooting him in the back of the head as he left her room. The shooting
occurred after an argument where the appellant had been physically abused and was
fearful for her life after being taunted with the threat that either she kill
him or he would get her. She had frequently been a victim of his physical
abuse and had concocted excuses to explain her injuries to medical staff on
those occasions. A psychiatrist with extensive professional experience in the
treatment of battered wives prepared a psychiatric assessment of the appellant
which was used in support of her defence of self-defence. He explained her
ongoing terror, her inability to escape the relationship despite the violence
and the continuing pattern of abuse which put her life in danger. He testified
that in his opinion the appellant's shooting of the deceased the final
desperate act of a woman who sincerely believed that she would be killed that
night. In the course of his testimony, he related many things told to him by
the appellant for which there was no admissible evidence. She did not testify
at the trial. The jury acquitted the appellant but its verdict was overturned
by a majority of the Manitoba Court of Appeal.
The issues before this Court
were whether the evidence of the psychiatrist should have been before the court
at all and whether, if it should, the trial judge's instructions with respect
to it were adequate.
Held: The appeal should be allowed.
Per Dickson C.J. and Lamer, Wilson,
L'Heureux-Dubé, Gonthier and McLachlin JJ.: Expert testimony is admissible to assist
the fact-finder in drawing inferences in areas where the expert has relevant
knowledge or experience beyond that of the lay person. It is difficult for the
lay person to comprehend the battered wife syndrome. It is commonly thought
that battered women are not really beaten as badly as they claim, otherwise
they would have left the relationship. Alternatively, some believe that women
enjoy being beaten, that they have a masochistic strain in them. Each of these
stereotypes may adversely affect consideration of a battered woman's claim to
have acted in self-defence in killing her partner. Expert evidence can assist
the jury in dispelling these myths.
Expert testimony relating to
the ability of an accused to perceive danger from her partner may go to the
issue of whether she "reasonably apprehended" death or grievous
bodily harm on a particular occasion. Expert testimony pertaining to why an
accused remained in the battering relationship may be relevant in assessing the
nature and extent of the alleged abuse. By providing an explanation as to why
an accused did not flee when she perceived her life to be in danger, expert
testimony may also assist the jury in assessing the reasonableness of her
belief that killing her batterer was the only way to save her own life.
Expert evidence does not and
cannot usurp the jury's function of deciding whether, in fact, the
accused's perceptions and actions were reasonable. But fairness and the
integrity of the trial process demand that the jury have the opportunity to
hear that opinion.
Here, there was ample
evidence on which the trial judge could conclude, apart from the psychiatrist's
evidence, that the appellant was battered repeatedly and brutally by the
deceased over the course of their relationship. The expert testimony was
properly admitted in order to assist the jury in determining whether the appellant
had a reasonable apprehension of death or grievous bodily harm and believed on
reasonable grounds that she had no alternative but to shoot. Each of the
specific facts underlying the expert's opinion need not be proven in evidence
before any weight could be given to it. As long as there is some admissible
evidence to establish the foundation for the expert's opinion, the trial judge
cannot subsequently instruct the jury to completely ignore the testimony. The
judge must, of course, warn the jury that the more the expert relies on facts
not proved in evidence the less weight the jury may attribute to the opinion.
Per Sopinka J.: The very special facts in R.
v. Abbey, and the decision required on those facts, have contributed to the
development of a principle concerning the admissibility and weight of expert
opinion evidence that is self-contradictory: an expert opinion relevant in the
abstract to a material issue in a trial but based entirely on unproven hearsay
is admissible but entitled to no weight whatsoever. Such an opinion, however,
is irrelevant and therefore inadmissible. A practical distinction exists
between evidence that an expert obtains and acts upon within the scope of his
or her expertise, as in consultation with colleagues, and evidence that an
expert obtains from a party to litigation touching a matter directly in issue.
Where the information upon which an expert forms his or her opinion comes from
a party to the litigation, or from any other source that is inherently suspect,
a court ought to require independent proof of that information. The lack of
such proof will have a direct effect on the weight to be given to the
opinion. Where an expert's opinion is based in part upon suspect information
and in part upon either admitted facts or facts sought to be proved, the matter
is purely one of weight. That was the situation here, and in the
circumstances, the trial judge properly admitted the expert evidence and
adequately charged the jury.
Cases Cited
By Wilson J.
Applied: R. v. Abbey, [1982] 2 S.C.R.
24; considered: State v. Wanrow, 559 P.2d 548 (Wash. 1977); R.
v. Whynot (1983), 9 C.C.C. 449; referred to: Kelliher (Village
of) v. Smith, [1931] S.C.R. 672; R. v. Béland, [1987] 2 S.C.R. 398; R. v. Lyons, [1987] 2 S.C.R.
309; State v. Kelly, 478 A.2d 364 (N.J. 1984); Reilly v. The Queen,
[1984] 2 S.C.R. 396; R. v. Baxter (1975), 33 C.R.N.S. 22; R. v. Bogue
(1976), 30 C.C.C. (2d) 403; State v. Gallegos, 719 P.2d 1268 (N.M.
1986); R. v. Antley (1963), 42 C.R. 384.
By Sopinka J.
Considered: R. v. Abbey, [1982] 2 S.C.R.
24; referred to: City of St. John v. Irving Oil Co., [1966]
S.C.R. 581; Wilband v. The Queen, [1967] S.C.R. 14; R. v. Lupien,
[1970] S.C.R. 263; Ares v. Venner, [1970] S.C.R. 608; R. v. Jordan
(1984), 39 C.R. (3d) 50; R. v. Zundel (1987), 56 C.R. (3d) 1.
Statutes and Regulations Cited
Criminal
Code, R.S.C., 1985, c.
C-46, ss. 34(2) (a), (b), 37 .
Authors Cited
Blackman, Julie.
"Potential Uses for Expert Testimony: Ideas Toward the Representation of
Battered Women Who Kill" (1986), 9 Women's Rights Law Reporter 227.
Crocker, Phyllis.
"The Meaning of Equality for Battered Women Who Kill Men in
Self-Defense" (1985), 8 Harv. Women's L.J. 121.
Delisle, R. J. Evidence:
Principles and Problems, 2nd ed. Toronto: Carswells, 1989.
Ewing, Charles Patrick. Battered
Women Who Kill. Lexington, Mass.: Lexington Books, 1987.
Schiff, Stanley A. Evidence
in the Litigation Process, vol. 1, 3rd ed. Toronto: Carswells, 1988.
Walker, Lenore E. The
Battered Woman. New York: Harper & Row, 1979.
Walker, Lenore E. The
Battered Woman Syndrome. New York: Springer Pub. Co., 1984.
Wardle, Peter. "R.
v. Abbey and Psychiatric Opinion Evidence: Requiring the Accused to
Testify" (1984), 17 Ottawa L. Rev. 116.
Willoughby,
M. J. "Rendering Each Woman Her Due: Can a Battered Woman Claim
Self-Defense When She Kills Her Sleeping Batterer" (1989), 38 Kan. L.
Rev. 169.
APPEAL from judgment of the
Manitoba Court of Appeal (1988), 52 Man. R. (2d) 274, 44 C.C.C. (3d) 113, 65
C.R. (3d) 387, allowing an appeal from acquittal by Scott A.C.J.Q.B. sitting
with jury. Appeal allowed.
G. Greg Brodsky, Q.C., and S. Hoeppner,
for the appellant.
J. G. B. Dangerfield, Q.C., for the respondent.
//Wilson J.//
The judgment of Dickson C.J.
and Lamer, Wilson, L'Heureux-Dubé, Gonthier and McLachlin JJ. was delivered by
Wilson J. -- The narrow issue
raised on this appeal is the adequacy of a trial judge's instructions to the
jury regarding expert evidence. The broader issue concerns the utility of
expert evidence in assisting a jury confronted by a plea of self-defence to a
murder charge by a common law wife who had been battered by the deceased.
1. The Facts
The appellant, who was 22
years old at the time, had been living with Kevin Rust for some three to four
years. Their residence was the scene of a boisterous party on August 30, 1986.
In the early hours of August 31 after most of the guests had departed the
appellant and Rust had an argument in the upstairs bedroom which was used by
the appellant. Rust was killed by a single shot in the back of the head from a
.303 calibre rifle fired by the appellant as he was leaving the room.
The appellant did not testify
but her statement made to police on the night of the shooting was put in
evidence. Portions of it read as follows:
Me and Wendy argued as usual
and I ran in the house after Kevin pushed me. I was scared, I was really
scared. I locked the door. Herb was downstairs with Joanne and I called for
Herb but I was crying when I called him. I said, "Herb come up here
please." Herb came up to the top of the stairs and I told him that Kevin
was going to hit me actually beat on me again. Herb said he knew and that if I
was his old lady things would be different, he gave me a hug. OK, we're
friends, there's nothing between us. He said "Yeah, I know" and he
went outside to talk to Kevin leaving the door unlocked. I went upstairs and
hid in my closet from Kevin. I was so scared... . My window was open and I
could hear Kevin asking questions about what I was doing and what I was
saying. Next thing I know he was coming up the stairs for me. He came into my
bedroom and said "Wench, where are you?" And he turned on my light
and he said "Your purse is on the floor" and he kicked it. OK then
he turned and he saw me in the closet. He wanted me to come out but I didn't
want to come out because I was scared. I was so scared. [The officer who took
the statement then testified that the appellant started to cry at this point
and stopped after a minute or two.] He grabbed me by the arm right there.
There's a bruise on my face also where he slapped me. He didn't slap me right
then, first he yelled at me then he pushed me and I pushed him back and he hit
me twice on the right hand side of my head. I was scared. All I thought about
was all the other times he used to beat me, I was scared, I was shaking as
usual. The rest is a blank, all I remember is he gave me the gun and a shot
was fired through my screen. This is all so fast. And then the guns were in
another room and he loaded it the second shot and gave it to me. And I was
going to shoot myself. I pointed it to myself, I was so upset. OK and then he
went and I was sitting on the bed and he started going like this with his
finger [the appellant made a shaking motion with an index finger] and said
something like "You're my old lady and you do as you're told" or
something like that. He said "wait till everybody leaves, you'll get it
then" and he said something to the effect of "either you kill me or I'll
get you" that was what it was. He kind of smiled and then he turned
around. I shot him but I aimed out. I thought I aimed above him and a piece
of his head went that way.
The relationship between the
appellant and Rust was volatile and punctuated by frequent arguments and
violence. They would apparently fight for two or three days at a time or
several times a week. Considerable evidence was led at trial indicating that
the appellant was frequently a victim of physical abuse at the hands of Rust.
Between 1983 and 1986 the appellant made several trips to hospital for injuries
including severe bruises, a fractured nose, multiple contusions and a black
eye. One of the attending physicians, Dr. Dirks, testified that he disbelieved
the appellant's explanation on one such occasion that she had sustained her
injuries by falling from a horse.
A friend of the deceased,
Robert Ezako, testified that he had witnessed several fights between the
appellant and the deceased and that he had seen the appellant point a gun at
the deceased twice and threaten to kill him if he ever touched her again.
Under cross-examination Ezako admitted to seeing or hearing the deceased beat
up the appellant on several occasions and, during the preliminary inquiry,
described her screaming during one such incident like "a pig being
butchered". He also saw the appellant with a black eye on one occasion
and doubted that it was the result of an accident as she and the deceased
stated at the time. Another acquaintance of the couple recalled seeing the
appellant with a split lip.
At one point on the night of
his death Rust chased the appellant outside the house and a mutual friend,
Norman Kolish, testified that the appellant pleaded with Rust to "leave me
alone" and sought Kolish's protection by trying to hide behind him. A
neighbour overheard Rust and the appellant arguing and described the tone of
the former as "argumentative" and the latter as "scared".
Later, between the first and second gunshot, he testified that he could hear
that "somebody was beating up somebody" and the screams were female.
Another neighbour testified to hearing noises like gunshots and then a woman's
voice sounding upset saying "Fuck. He punched me in the face. He punched
me in the face." He looked out the window and saw a woman matching the
description of the appellant.
Three witnesses who attended
the party testified to hearing sounds of yelling, pushing, shoving and thumping
coming from upstairs prior to the gunshots. It is not disputed that two shots
were fired by the appellant. The first one went through a window screen. It
is not clear where Rust was at the time. The appellant in her statement says
that he was upstairs, while another witness places him in the basement. The
second shot was the fatal one. After the second shot was fired the appellant
was seen visibly shaken and upset and was heard to say "Rooster [the
deceased] was beating me so I shot him," and "You know how he treated
me, you've got to help me." The arresting officer testified that en route
to the police station the appellant made various comments in the police car,
including "He said if I didn't kill him first he would kill me. I hope he
lives. I really love him," and "He told me he was gonna kill me when
everyone left."
The police officer who took
the appellant's statement testified to seeing a red mark on her arm where she
said the deceased had grabbed her. When the coroner who performed an autopsy
on the deceased was shown pictures of the appellant (who had various bruises),
he testified that it was "entirely possible" that bruises on the
deceased's left hand were occasioned by an assault on the appellant. Another
doctor noted an injury to the appellant's pinkie finger consistent with those
sustained by the adoption of a defensive stance.
The expert evidence which
forms the subject matter of the appeal came from Dr. Fred Shane, a psychiatrist
with extensive professional experience in the treatment of battered wives. At
the request of defence counsel Dr. Shane prepared a psychiatric assessment of
the appellant. The substance of Dr. Shane's opinion was that the appellant had
been terrorized by Rust to the point of feeling trapped, vulnerable, worthless
and unable to escape the relationship despite the violence. At the same time,
the continuing pattern of abuse put her life in danger. In Dr. Shane's opinion
the appellant's shooting of the deceased was a final desperate act by a woman
who sincerely believed that she would be killed that night:
... I think she felt, she
felt in the final tragic moment that her life was on the line, that unless she
defended herself, unless she reacted in a violent way that she would die. I
mean he made it very explicit to her, from what she told me and from the
information I have from the material that you forwarded to me, that she had, I
think, to defend herself against his violence.
Dr. Shane stated that his
opinion was based on four hours of formal interviews with the appellant, a
police report of the incident (including the appellant's statement), hospital
reports documenting eight of her visits to emergency departments between 1983
and 1985, and an interview with the appellant's mother. In the course of his
testimony Dr. Shane related many things told to him by the appellant for which
there was no admissible evidence. They were not in the appellant's statement
to the police and she did not testify at trial. For example, Dr. Shane
mentioned several episodes of abuse described by the appellant for which there
were no hospital reports. He also related the appellant's disclosure to him
that she had lied to doctors about the cause of her injuries. Dr. Shane
testified that such fabrication was typical of battered women. The appellant
also recounted to Dr. Shane occasions on which Rust would allegedly beat her,
then beg her forgiveness and ply her with flowers and temporary displays of
kindness. Dr. Shane was aware of the incidents described by Ezako about the
appellant's pointing a gun at Rust on two occasions and explained it as
"an issue for trying to defend herself. She was afraid that she would be
assaulted." The appellant denied to Dr. Shane that she had homicidal
fantasies about Rust and mentioned that she had smoked some marijuana on the
night in question. These facts were related by Dr. Shane in the course of his
testimony.
The appellant was acquitted
by a jury but the verdict was overturned by a majority of the Manitoba Court of
Appeal and the case sent back for retrial.
2. Lower Court Judgments
Manitoba Queen's Bench (Scott A.C.J.Q.B.)
After Dr. Shane testified and
was cross-examined Crown counsel brought an application to have the evidence of
Dr. Shane withdrawn from the jury. The first reason he gave was that the jury
was perfectly capable of deciding the issue on the admissible evidence and that
expert evidence was therefore "unnecessary and superfluous". The
second reason was that Dr. Shane's comment that he found the accused credible
was "wholly improper" in light of her failure to testify as to the
facts upon which Dr. Shane based his opinion. The trial judge denied the
application stating that the Crown's concerns could be met through an
appropriate charge to the jury:
But I understand fully the
concern that the Crown has at this time because a substantial chunk of the
factual evidence that Dr. Shane relied on is simply not evidence in these
proceedings and is not before the jury and my task, even with a very attentive
jury such as this one, is going to be very difficult because of that fact.
But I
think, under the circumstances, that the better course of action and the more
realistic one to follow is to deal with the fact that it is in evidence and to
attempt to explain to the jury as adequately and as fully as I can the
difference between what is evidence and what is not in evidence and the impact
that that ought to have on the weight that they choose to attach to the opinion
of Dr. Shane.
With respect to the
appellant's out-of-court statements, the trial judge cautioned the jury that,
"[a]s with the verbal testimony, you may accept all, part or none of the
statements attributed to Lyn Lavallee and as with all evidence, the real question
is whether the things reported to have been said are true." Later he
introduced Dr. Shane's testimony as follows:
As counsel put it
yesterday, you cannot decide this case on things you didn't hear. You cannot
decide this case on things the witnesses didn't see or hear.
A somewhat different,
though related, evidentiary caution has to be noted with respect to the expert
opinion evidence of Dr. Shane. There were two matters in his evidence, two
facts, two sources of information that he had reference to which are not
evidence in this case and that is the suggestion that people had been smoking
marijuana at the party and the confirmatory evidence, as he called it, received
from the mother of Lyn Lavallee. These are not matters in evidence before you.
For example, there is
absolutely no evidence that anyone was smoking marijuana at this party and you
must not consider that it took place. There is no evidence from the mother of
the accused before you.
The extent to which this
impacts on the weight of the opinion of Dr. Shane is a matter for you to
decide. You must appraise the value of the resulting opinion in light of the
fact that there is no evidence about these matters before you. In terms of the
matters considered by Dr. Shane he is left, therefore, with the deceased's
statement, some supplementary information from the police report and his
interpretation of the hospital records.
If the premises upon which
the information is substantially based has not been proven in evidence, it is
up to you to conclude that it is not safe to attach a great deal of weight to
the opinion. An opinion of an expert depends, to a large extent, on the
validity of the facts assumed by the evidence by the expert.
If
there are some errors and the factual assumptions aren't too important to the
eventual opinion, that's one thing. If there are errors or matters not in
evidence and those matters are substantial, in you view, in terms of the impact
on the expert's opinion, then you will want to look at the value and weight of
that opinion very carefully. It depends on how important you think the matters
were that Dr. Shane relied on that are not in evidence. [Emphasis added.]
The trial judge then reviewed
the evidence given by Dr. Shane regarding the appellant's emotional and mental
state at the time of the killing. He reiterated Dr. Shane's opinion that the
appellant's act was "a reflection of her catastrophic fear that she had to
defend herself". He also drew attention to Dr. Shane's awareness that the
appellant would occasionally be the aggressor despite her denial to him that
she had homicidal fantasies:
[Dr. Shane] noted that at
times Lyn Lavallee would be the aggressor from all of the underlying
hostility. She couldn't leave psychologically because there were steel fences
in her mind and she was tyrannized psychologically. She said she loved him and
he felt that she did.
She denied to him thinking
at any time of killing Kevin Rust. That is to say she did not entertain any
homicidal fantasies and he felt that what she told him was reasonable.
It is the position of the
Crown that Dr. Shane's opinion stands or falls on the veracity of Lyn Lavallee
because he relied so heavily and extensively on what she told him and the
evidence contained in the statement, Exhibit 16. That's for you to decide.
Undoubtably [sic]
she was a very important source, if not the major source, of his information.
Dr. Shane agreed that if what she told him was erroneous, he would have to
reassess his position.
On cross-examination he
reiterated that in his opinion her action was spontaneous to the moment to try
to defend herself. The straw that broke the camel's back was the threat,
"When the others leave you're going to get it.", even though similar
statements had been made to her on other occasions. According to what she told
him, the accused felt compelled to shoot.
Based on the information he
had in his interview, it was his opinion that the acts of the accused were
impulsive and not premeditated. He disagreed with the Crown's suggestion that
Lyn Lavallee took the opportunity when it presented itself.
He
conceded that patients had, on occasion, lied and misled him in the past.
Manitoba Court of Appeal (Monnin C.J.M., Philp and Huband JJ.)
(1988), 52 Man. R. (2d) 274
Writing for himself and
Monnin C.J.M., Philp J.A. begins by observing, at p. 275, that there was
"ample evidence for the jury to conclude that Rust abused the
accused." He adds that it "was a reasonable inference for the jury
to draw that the injuries resulted from Rust's violent and abusive behaviour,
notwithstanding her explanations at the time to the contrary".
Turning to Dr. Shane's
evidence, the majority comments that in the course of stating the factual basis
of his opinions and conclusions, Dr. Shane referred to many facts, incidents
and events which were not before the court in the form of admissible evidence.
These included: the smoking of marijuana on the night of the shooting; the
deterioration of the intimate relationship between the appellant and Rust (the
appellant had told Shane that they were sleeping in separate bedrooms); a
reference to an abortion the appellant had obtained, after which Rust allegedly
threatened to tell her parents that she was a "baby killer";
incidents where Rust would allegedly beg forgiveness from the appellant after
beating her up; the appellant's "incredible remorse" after killing
Rust, and the appellant's denial to Dr. Shane that she harboured homicidal
fantasies about Rust.
Philp J.A. then refers to the
appellant's written statement to the police in which she professed her love for
Rust and her hope that he wouldn't die. At p. 277, he pointed out
"discrepancies and conflicts in the narrative of events in the accused's
statement, and the evidence of witnesses who testified at her trial",
particularly with respect to the location of Rust when the first shot was fired.
With respect to the accused's unsworn statement he concludes at p. 278:
... in the circumstances of this case,
where much of the factual basis for the plea of self-defence lay in the
statement of the accused, the jury ought not to have been told to "give
this evidence no more nor less weight than any other evidence heard by you";
that the frailties of such assertions should have been pointed out.
The
instructions of the trial judge to the jury with respect to the evidence of Dr.
Shane are a more troubling matter. The problem presented by the accused's out
of court statement and comments, in my view, comes to a head in that context.
Philp J.A. then turns to the
judgment of Dickson J. (as he then was) in R. v. Abbey, [1982] 2 S.C.R.
24, a case from this Court dealing with the admissibility of expert evidence
and the use to which it can be put. After quoting from the judgment, Philp
J.A. states at p. 279:
Canadian
authorities support the view that an expert can state to the court the basis
for his opinion, and that it is desirable that he do so. In Abbey,
Dickson, J., confirmed this approach and referred to the "obligation"
of the party tendering evidence of the factual basis for the opinions of
experts, to establish, "through properly admissible evidence, the factual
basis on which such opinions are based". He cautioned: "Before any
weight can be given to an expert's opinion, the facts upon which the opinion is
based must be found to exist."
Referring back to the case at bar, Philp
J.A. comments, at p. 279, that the record did not disclose "the full
extent of these secondhand facts, or their importance in the formation of Dr.
Shane's opinion; nor can one speculate what his opinion might have been had his
inquiries been limited to the admissible evidence properly before the
court."
In his assessment of the
trial judge's charge to the jury, Philp J.A. remarks that the trial judge
properly pointed out that there was no evidence about marijuana smoking on the
night in question, nor was there any evidence before them from the mother of
the appellant. Philp J.A. found this latter warning insufficient. While he
considered the trial judge's general instructions regarding the weight that
should be placed on expert evidence to be proper, he felt that they "did
not go far enough in the circumstances of this case". He gives three
reasons (at p. 280):
Firstly, the comments, placed in
juxtaposition to the trial judge's reference to the "two facts, two
sources of information that (Dr. Shane) had reference to which are not evidence
in this case . . .", lose their impact. The jury may well have concluded
that the trial judge's warning related only to Dr. Shane's reference to the
marijuana, and to the "confirmatory evidence" of the accused's
mother.
Secondly, I think the trial
judge was in error in telling the jury that the police report (presumably, the
document referred to by Dr. Shane as the "police summary of the
incident") was a matter left for Dr. Shane to consider. That document was
not evidence before the court, nor do we know what facts it contained.
Finally,
although the trial judge did not refer to Dr. Shane's interviews with the
accused (and her mother) when he told the jury what matters were left for Dr.
Shane to consider, the conclusion that the jury was to ignore facts related in
these interviews unless they were otherwise established by admissible evidence
(and to weigh Dr. Shane's opinion accordingly) is dispelled by the trial
judge's later references to these interviews.
Philp J.A. then quotes the passages from
the trial judge's charge in which he reviewed Dr. Shane's admission that he would
have to reassess his position if what the appellant had told him was not true.
Philp J.A. also draws attention to the remark by the trial judge that the Crown
emphasized that Shane's opinion would stand or fall on the appellant's
veracity. In Philp J.A.'s view, these aspects of the trial judge's
instructions were also deficient (at p. 281):
With respect, those comments
of the trial judge, so crucial to the plea of self-defence, amounted to a
misdirection. The issue was not just the veracity of the accused (and at this
point, a careful charge with respect to the accused's unsworn self-serving
evidence would have been appropriate). The pivotal questions the jury had to
decide were the extent to which Dr. Shane's opinion was based on facts not
established by admissible evidence; and the weight to be accorded to his
opinion.
Finally, Philp J.A. finds, at p. 281,
that the trial judge's charge fell so short of the standard required in Abbey
that a new trial was warranted:
This was
an unusual case. The accused shot Rust in the back of the head when he was
leaving the bedroom. The accused says Rust loaded the rifle and handed it to
her. Friends of the accused and Rust, including the couple who had planned to
stay overnight, were present in another part of the residence. In these
circumstances, absent the evidence of Dr. Shane, it is unlikely that the jury,
properly instructed, would have accepted the accused's plea of self-defence.
The accused did not testify, and the foundation for her plea of self-defence
was, in the main, her unsworn exculpatory evidence and the hearsay evidence
related by Dr. Shane. Because Dr. Shane relied upon facts not in evidence,
including those related to him in his lengthy interviews with the accused, the
factual basis for his opinion should have been detailed in his evidence.
Philp J.A. concludes by suggesting to the
Crown that they proceed with a charge of manslaughter rather than second degree
murder since a properly instructed jury would, in his opinion, be unlikely to
convict the appellant of the latter offence.
Writing in dissent Huband
J.A. summarizes the basis of Dr. Shane's opinion that the appellant acted out
of a genuine fear for her life. He acknowledges, at p. 282, that
"self-defence in this context finds some support in the evidence presented
to the jury."
Huband J.A. points out the
conflict in the evidence about how the appellant obtained the gun and where
Rust was when the first shot was fired. Noting the appellant's statement to
the police about how frightened of the deceased she was, he states, at p. 282,
that "the significance of the statement is that, if believed, it
establishes some foundation for a psychiatric opinion that she acted out of
fear for her own safety as a person who had been subjected to continuous
abuse." Ezako's evidence confirms that Rust beat the appellant and that,
although the appellant may have "often provoked" the arguments, she
"invariably got the worst of it".
With respect to Dr. Shane's
evidence, Huband J.A. remarks, at p. 273, that in addition to hospital records
and the accused's statement to the police, Dr. Shane "had the advantage of
speaking at length with the accused herself, and also with the mother of the
accused, in formulating his opinion". In Huband J.A.'s view (at p. 283),
the "learned trial judge was well aware of the need to give adequate
warning to the jury as to the weight to be placed upon the testimony of Dr.
Shane. It was quite obvious that Dr. Shane relied upon statements by the
accused and her mother which were unsworn hearsay comments and not part of the
evidence in the case."
Turning to this Court's
judgment in Abbey, Huband J.A. expresses the view, at p. 283, that the
"learned trial judge followed the advice of the Supreme Court of Canada to
the letter":
The learned trial judge
begins by making it clear to the jury that they could not rely on the opinion
of Dr. Shane on matters where there was no supporting evidence. He chose a
good example. In relating what the accused had told him Dr. Shane said that
marijuana had been smoked at the party that evening. None of the witnesses who
testified as to what occurred during the evening mentioned any involvement with
marijuana. Nor is such an involvement indicated in the accused's statement to
the police. Dr. Shane's testimony constitutes no proof that marijuana was
smoked, and to the extent that it became a factor in formulating his opinion,
then his opinion must be discounted.
The learned trial judge
also noted that while Dr. Shane referred to conversations with the accused's
mother, no such evidence had been presented to the jury.
But the
learned trial judge could not tell the jury to disregard Dr. Shane's report in
its entirely. He was required to tell the jury, as he did, that there was some
evidentiary support for Dr. Shane's opinion, -- the accused's own statement and
the hospital records. Indeed, if anything, I think the learned trial judge was
unfair to the accused in not also mentioning the evidence of Mr. Ezako as
constituting evidentiary foundation supporting Dr. Shane's opinion.
Huband J.A. finds that the
trial judge specifically warned the jury that Dr. Shane's conversations with
the accused and her mother extended beyond the evidence before the court when
he told them that "it is not safe to attach a great deal of weight"
to the opinion of an expert when the information on which it is predicated has
not been proven in evidence. After quoting the relevant passage Huband J.A.
comments at p. 284:
I suppose one could argue
that the learned trial judge should have said it is not safe to attach
"any" weight to the opinion rather than it is not safe to attach
"a great deal" of weight to the opinion. He could have said that an
expert's opinion depends "totally" instead of "to a large
extent" on the validity of the factual foundation upon which he has
proceeded. In my view, however, the jury would fully comprehend the import of
the learned trial judge's remarks. After the jury received its instruction and
retired, counsel was invited to comment on the charge ... Crown counsel voiced
no complaints.
.
. .
This
accused was acquitted by a jury of her peers on the basis of self-defence,
which might strike one as being somewhat fanciful. We should not, however,
search out semantic excuses to order a new trial, at high public cost, in the
belief that the jury should have been more skeptical and arrived at a different
verdict.
3. Relevant Legislation
Criminal Code, R.S.C., 1985, c. C-46 :
34. ...
(2) Every one who is
unlawfully assaulted and who causes death or grievous bodily harm in repelling
the assault is justified if
(a) he causes it under reasonable
apprehension of death or grievous bodily harm from the violence with which the
assault was originally made or with which the assailant pursues his purposes,
and
(b) he believes on
reasonable and probable grounds, that he cannot otherwise preserve himself from
death or grievous bodily harm.
4. Issues on Appeal
It should be noted that two
bases for ordering a new trial are implicit in the reasons of the majority of
the Court of Appeal. In finding that "absent the evidence of Dr. Shane,
it is unlikely that the jury, properly instructed, would have accepted the accused's
plea of self‑defence" the Court of Appeal suggests that the evidence
of Dr. Shane ought to have been excluded entirely. The alternative ground for
allowing the Crown's appeal was that Dr. Shane's testimony was properly
admitted but the trial judge's instructions with respect to it were deficient.
Thus, the issues before this Court are as follows:
1. Did
the majority of the Manitoba Court of Appeal err in concluding that the jury
should have considered the plea of self-defence absent the expert evidence of
Dr. Shane?
2. Did
the majority of the Manitoba Court of Appeal err in holding that the trial
judge's charge to the jury with respect to Dr. Shane's expert evidence did not
meet the requirements set out by this Court in Abbey, thus warranting a
new trial?
5. Analysis
(i) Admissibility of Expert Evidence
In Kelliher (Village of)
v. Smith, [1931] S.C.R. 672, at p. 684, this Court adopted the principle
that in order for expert evidence to be admissible "the subject-matter of
the inquiry must be such that ordinary people are unlikely to form a correct
judgment about it, if unassisted by persons with special knowledge". More
recently, this Court addressed the admissibility of expert psychiatric evidence
in criminal cases in R. v. Abbey, supra. At p. 42 of the
unanimous judgment Dickson J. stated the rule as follows:
With
respect to matters calling for special knowledge, an expert in the field may
draw inferences and state his opinion. An expert's function is precisely
this: to provide the judge and jury with a ready-made inference which the
judge and jury, due to the technical nature of the facts, are unable to
formulate. "An expert's opinion is admissible to furnish the Court with
scientific information which is likely to be outside the experience and
knowledge of a judge or jury. If on the proven facts a judge or jury can form
their own conclusions without help, then the opinion of the expert is
unnecessary" (Turner (1974), 60 Crim. App. R. 80, at p. 83, per
Lawton L.J.)
See also R. v. Béland, [1987] 2 S.C.R. 398, at p. 415, in
which McIntyre J. speaks of an expert witness possessing "special
knowledge and experience going beyond that of the trier of fact".
Where expert evidence is
tendered in such fields as engineering or pathology, the paucity of the lay
person's knowledge is uncontentious. The long-standing recognition that
psychiatric or psychological testimony also falls within the realm of expert
evidence is predicated on the realization that in some circumstances the
average person may not have sufficient knowledge of or experience with human
behaviour to draw an appropriate inference from the facts before him or her.
An example may be found in R. v. Lyons, [1987] 2 S.C.R. 309, in which
this Court approved the use of psychiatric testimony in dangerous offender
applications. At p. 366, La Forest J. remarks that "psychiatric evidence
is clearly relevant to the issue whether a person is likely to behave in a
certain way and, indeed, is probably relatively superior in this regard to the
evidence of other clinicians and lay persons".
The need for expert evidence
in these areas can, however, be obfuscated by the belief that judges and juries
are thoroughly knowledgeable about "human nature" and that no more is
needed. They are, so to speak, their own experts on human behaviour. This, in
effect, was the primary submission of the Crown to this Court.
The bare facts of this case,
which I think are amply supported by the evidence, are that the appellant was
repeatedly abused by the deceased but did not leave him (although she twice
pointed a gun at him), and ultimately shot him in the back of the head as he
was leaving her room. The Crown submits that these facts disclose all the
information a jury needs in order to decide whether or not the appellant acted
in self-defence. I have no hesitation in rejecting the Crown's submission.
Expert evidence on the
psychological effect of battering on wives and common law partners must, it
seems to me, be both relevant and necessary in the context of the present
case. How can the mental state of the appellant be appreciated without it?
The average member of the public (or of the jury) can be forgiven for asking:
Why would a woman put up with this kind of treatment? Why should she continue
to live with such a man? How could she love a partner who beat her to the
point of requiring hospitalization? We would expect the woman to pack her
bags and go. Where is her self-respect? Why does she not cut loose and make a
new life for herself? Such is the reaction of the average person confronted
with the so-called "battered wife syndrome". We need help to
understand it and help is available from trained professionals.
The gravity, indeed, the
tragedy of domestic violence can hardly be overstated. Greater media attention
to this phenomenon in recent years has revealed both its prevalence and its
horrific impact on women from all walks of life. Far from protecting women
from it the law historically sanctioned the abuse of women within marriage as
an aspect of the husband's ownership of his wife and his "right" to
chastise her. One need only recall the centuries old law that a man is
entitled to beat his wife with a stick "no thicker than his thumb".
Laws do not spring out of a
social vacuum. The notion that a man has a right to "discipline" his
wife is deeply rooted in the history of our society. The woman's duty was to
serve her husband and to stay in the marriage at all costs "till death do
us part" and to accept as her due any "punishment" that was
meted out for failing to please her husband. One consequence of this attitude
was that "wife battering" was rarely spoken of, rarely reported,
rarely prosecuted, and even more rarely punished. Long after society abandoned
its formal approval of spousal abuse tolerance of it continued and continues in
some circles to this day.
Fortunately, there has been a
growing awareness in recent years that no man has a right to abuse any woman
under any circumstances. Legislative initiatives designed to educate police,
judicial officers and the public, as well as more aggressive investigation and
charging policies all signal a concerted effort by the criminal justice system
to take spousal abuse seriously. However, a woman who comes before a judge or
jury with the claim that she has been battered and suggests that this may be a
relevant factor in evaluating her subsequent actions still faces the prospect
of being condemned by popular mythology about domestic violence. Either she
was not as badly beaten as she claims or she would have left the man long ago.
Or, if she was battered that severely, she must have stayed out of some
masochistic enjoyment of it.
Expert testimony on the
psychological effects of battering have been admitted in American courts in
recent years. In State v. Kelly, 478 A.2d 364 (1984), at p. 378, the
New Jersey Supreme Court commended the value of expert testimony in these
terms:
It is aimed at an area where
the purported common knowledge of the jury may be very much mistaken, an area
where jurors' logic, drawn from their own experience, may lead to a wholly
incorrect conclusion, an area where expert knowledge would enable the jurors to
disregard their prior conclusions as being common myths rather than common
knowledge.
The Court concludes at p. 379 that the
battering relationship is "subject to a large group of myths and
stereotypes." As such, it is "beyond the ken of the average juror
and thus is suitable for explanation through expert testimony." I share
that view.
(ii) The Relevance of Expert
Testimony to the Elements of Self-Defence
In my view, there are two
elements of the defence under s. 34(2) of the Code which merit scrutiny
for present purposes. The first is the temporal connection in s. 34(2) (a)
between the apprehension of death or grievous bodily harm and the act allegedly
taken in self-defence. Was the appellant "under reasonable apprehension
of death or grievous bodily harm" from Rust as he was walking out of the
room? The second is the assessment in s. 34(2)(b) of the magnitude of
the force used by the accused. Was the accused's belief that she could not
"otherwise preserve herself from death or grievous bodily harm"
except by shooting the deceased based "on reasonable grounds"?
The feature common to both s.
34(2) (a) and (b) is the imposition of an objective standard of
reasonableness on the apprehension of death and the need to repel the assault
with deadly force. In Reilly v. The Queen, [1984] 2 S.C.R. 396, this
Court considered the interaction of the objective and subjective components of
s. 34(2) , at p. 404:
Subsection (2)
of s. 34
places in issue the accused's state of mind at the time he caused death. The
subsection can only afford protection to the accused if he apprehended death or
grievous bodily harm from the assault he was repelling and if he believed he
could not preserve himself from death or grievous bodily harm otherwise than by
the force he used. Nonetheless, his apprehension must be a reasonable
one and his belief must be based upon reasonable and probable grounds.
The subsection requires that the jury consider, and be guided by, what they
decide on the evidence was the accused's appreciation of the situation and his
belief as to the reaction it required, so long as there exists an objectively
verifiable basis for his perception.
Since s.
34(2) places in issue the accused's perception of the attack upon him and the
response required to meet it, the accused may still be found to have acted in
self-defence even if he was mistaken in his perception. Reasonable and
probable grounds must still exist for this mistaken perception in the sense
that the mistake must have been one which an ordinary man using ordinary care
could have made in the same circumstances. [Emphasis in original.]
If it strains credulity to
imagine what the "ordinary man" would do in the position of a
battered spouse, it is probably because men do not typically find themselves in
that situation. Some women do, however. The definition of what is reasonable
must be adapted to circumstances which are, by and large, foreign to the world
inhabited by the hypothetical "reasonable man".
I find the case of State
v. Wanrow, 559 P.2d 548 (1977), helpful in illustrating how the factor of
gender can be germane to the assessment of what is reasonable. In Wanrow
the Washington Supreme Court addressed the standard by which a jury ought to
assess the reasonableness of the female appellant's use of a gun against an
unarmed intruder. The Court pointed out that the appellant had reason to
believe that the intruder had molested her daughter in the past and was coming
back for her son. The appellant was a 5'4" woman with a broken leg. The
assailant was 6'2" and intoxicated. The Court first observed, at p. 558,
that "in our society women suffer from a conspicuous lack of access to
training in and the means of developing those skills necessary to effectively
repel a male assailant without resorting to the use of deadly weapons."
Later it found that the trial judge erred in his instructions to the jury by
creating the impression that the objective standard of reasonableness to be
applied to the accused was that of an altercation between two men. At p. 559,
the Court makes the following remarks which I find apposite to the case before
us:
The respondent was entitled
to have the jury consider her actions in the light of her own perceptions of
the situation, including those perceptions which were the product of our
nation's "long and unfortunate history of sex discrimination." Until
such time as the effects of that history are eradicated, care must be taken to
assure that our self-defense instructions afford women the right to have their
conduct judged in light of the individual physical handicaps which are the
product of sex discrimination. To fail to do so is to deny the right of the
individual woman involved to trial by the same rules which are applicable to
male defendants.
I turn now to a consideration of the
specific components of self-defence under s. 34(2) of the Criminal Code .
A. Reasonable
Apprehension of Death
Section 34(2) (a)
requires that an accused who intentionally causes death or grievous bodily harm
in repelling an assault is justified if he or she does so "under
reasonable apprehension of death or grievous bodily harm". In the present
case, the assault precipitating the appellant's alleged defensive act was
Rust's threat to kill her when everyone else had gone.
It will be observed that s.
34(2) (a) does not actually stipulate that the accused apprehend imminent
danger when he or she acts. Case law has, however, read that requirement into
the defence: see Reilly v. The Queen, supra; R. v. Baxter
(1975), 33 C.R.N.S. 22 (Ont. C.A.); R. v. Bogue (1976), 30 C.C.C. (2d)
403 (Ont. C.A.) The sense in which "imminent" is used conjures up
the image of "an uplifted knife" or a pointed gun. The rationale for
the imminence rule seems obvious. The law of self-defence is designed to
ensure that the use of defensive force is really necessary. It justifies the
act because the defender reasonably believed that he or she had no alternative
but to take the attacker's life. If there is a significant time interval
between the original unlawful assault and the accused's response, one tends to
suspect that the accused was motivated by revenge rather than self-defence. In
the paradigmatic case of a one-time barroom brawl between two men of equal size
and strength, this inference makes sense. How can one feel endangered to the
point of firing a gun at an unarmed man who utters a death threat, then turns his
back and walks out of the room? One cannot be certain of the gravity of the
threat or his capacity to carry it out. Besides, one can always take the
opportunity to flee or to call the police. If he comes back and raises his
fist, one can respond in kind if need be. These are the tacit assumptions that
underlie the imminence rule.
All of these assumptions were
brought to bear on the respondent in R. v. Whynot (1983), 9 C.C.C. 449
(N.S.C.A.) The respondent, Jane Stafford, shot her sleeping common law husband
as he lay passed out in his truck. The evidence at trial indicated that the
deceased "dominated the household and exerted his authority by striking
and slapping the various members and from time to time administering beatings
to Jane Stafford and the others" (at p. 452). The respondent testified
that the deceased threatened to kill all of the members of her family, one by
one, if she tried to leave him. On the night in question he threatened to kill
her son. After he passed out the respondent got one of the many shotguns kept
by her husband and shot him. The Nova Scotia Court of Appeal held that the
trial judge erred in leaving s. 37 (preventing assault against oneself or
anyone under one's protection) with the jury. The Court stated at p. 464:
I do not
believe that the trial judge was justified in placing s. 37 of the Code
before the jury any more than he would have been justified in giving them s.
34. Under s. 34 the assault must have been underway and unprovoked, and under
s. 37 the assault must be such that it is necessary to defend the person
assaulted by the use of force. No more force may be used than necessary to
prevent the assault or the repetition of it. In my opinion, no person has the
right in anticipation of an assault that may or may not happen, to apply force
to prevent the imaginary assault.
The implication of the
Court's reasoning is that it is inherently unreasonable to apprehend death or
grievous bodily harm unless and until the physical assault is actually in
progress, at which point the victim can presumably gauge the requisite amount
of force needed to repel the attack and act accordingly. In my view, expert
testimony can cast doubt on these assumptions as they are applied in the
context of a battered wife's efforts to repel an assault.
The situation of the
appellant was not unlike that of Jane Stafford in the sense that she too was
routinely beaten over the course of her relationship with the man she
ultimately killed. According to the testimony of Dr. Shane these assaults were
not entirely random in their occurrence. The following exchange during direct
examination elicited a discernible pattern to the abuse:
Q. How did they react during the tension
that preceded the beatings? How would her...
A. Well, typically before a beating there's
usually some verbal interchange and there are threats and typically she would
feel, you know, very threatened by him and for various reasons.
He didn't like the way she
dressed or if she -- didn't like the way she handled money or she wasn't paying
him enough attention or she was looking at other men, all sorts of reasons, and
she would be defending herself, trying to placate him, which was typical,
saying, you know, trying to calm him down, trying to soothe him, you know, so
nothing violent would happen and sometimes it would work. You know, as
people's experiences indicated or as people who write about this process, if
you will, have indicated.
But often, as reflected by
what she has told me, and the information I have from other people, such as her
mother, often it would fail and she would end up being beaten and assaulted.
Q. And that would be followed by this
forgiveness state?
A. It typically would be
followed by, you know, this make-up period.
Earlier in his testimony Dr. Shane
explained how this "make-up" period would be characterized by
contrite and affectionate behaviour by Rust:
In this
particular case she documented many times, after he would beat her, he would
send her flowers and he would beg her for forgiveness and he would love her and
then the relationship would come back to a sense of equilibrium, if you will. .
. . But then, because of the nature of the personalities, it would occur again.
The cycle described by Dr.
Shane conforms to the Walker Cycle Theory of Violence named for clinical
psychologist Dr. Lenore Walker, the pioneer researcher in the field of the
battered wife syndrome. Dr. Shane acknowledged his debt to Dr. Walker in the
course of establishing his credentials as an expert at trial. Dr. Walker first
describes the cycle in the book The Battered Woman, (1979). In her 1984
book, The Battered Woman Syndrome, Dr. Walker reports the results of a
study involving 400 battered women. Her research was designed to test
empirically the theories expounded in her earlier book. At pp. 95-96 of The
Battered Woman Syndrome she summarizes the Cycle Theory as follows:
A second major theory that
was tested in this project is the Walker Cycle Theory of Violence (Walker,
1979). This tension reduction theory states that there are three distinct
phases associated in a recurring battering cycle: (1) tension building, (2)
the acute battering incident, and (3) loving contrition. During the first
phase, there is a gradual escalation of tension displayed by discrete acts
causing increased friction such as name-calling, other mean intentional
behaviors, and/or physical abuse. The batterer expresses dissatisfaction and
hostility but not in an extreme or maximally explosive form. The woman
attempts to placate the batterer, doing what she thinks might please him, calm
him down, or at least, what will not further aggravate him. She tries not to
respond to his hostile actions and uses general anger reduction techniques.
Often she succeeds for a little while which reinforces her unrealistic belief
that she can control this man ....
The tension continues to
escalate and eventually she is unable to continue controlling his angry
response pattern. "Exhausted from the constant stress, she usually
withdraws from the batterer, fearing she will inadvertently set off an
explosion. He begins to move more oppressively toward her as he observes her
withdrawal. . . . Tension between the two becomes unbearable" (Walker,
1979, p. 59). The second phase, the acute battering incident, becomes
inevitable without intervention. Sometimes, she precipitates the inevitable
explosion so as to control where and when it occurs, allowing her to take
better precautions to minimize her injuries and pain.
"Phase two is
characterized by the uncontrollable discharge of the tensions that have built
up during phase one" (p. 59). The batterer typically unleashes a barrage
of verbal and physical aggression that can leave the woman severely shaken and
injured. In fact, when injuries do occur it usually happens during this second
phase. It is also the time police become involved, if they are called at all.
The acute battering phase is concluded when the batterer stops, usually
bringing with its cessation a sharp physiological reduction in tension. This
in itself is naturally reinforcing. Violence often succeeds because it does
work.
In phase
three which follows, the batterer may apologize profusely, try to assist his
victim, show kindness and remorse, and shower her with gifts and/or promises.
The batterer himself may believe at this point that he will never allow himself
to be violent again. The woman wants to believe the batterer and, early in the
relationship at least, may renew her hope in his ability to change. This third
phase provides the positive reinforcement for remaining in the relationship,
for the woman. In fact, our results showed that phase three could also be
characterized by an absence of tension or violence, and no observable
loving-contrition behaviour, and still be reinforcing for the woman.
Dr. Walker defines a battered
woman as a woman who has gone through the battering cycle at least twice. As
she explains in her introduction to The Battered Woman, at p. xv,
"Any woman may find herself in an abusive relationship with a man once.
If it occurs a second time, and she remains in the situation, she is defined as
a battered woman."
Given the relational context
in which the violence occurs, the mental state of an accused at the critical
moment she pulls the trigger cannot be understood except in terms of the
cumulative effect of months or years of brutality. As Dr. Shane explained in
his testimony, the deterioration of the relationship between the appellant and
Rust in the period immediately preceding the killing led to feelings of
escalating terror on the part of the appellant:
But their
relationship some weeks to months before was definitely escalating in terms of
tension and in terms of the discordant quality about it. They were sleeping in
separate bedrooms. Their intimate relationship was lacking and things were
building and building and to a point, I think, where it built to that
particular point where she couldn't -- she felt so threatened and so
overwhelmed that she had to -- that she reacted in a violent way because of her
fear of survival and also because, I think because of her, I guess, final sense
that she was -- that she had to defend herself and her own sense of violence
towards this man who had really desecrated her and damaged her for so long.
Another aspect of the
cyclical nature of the abuse is that it begets a degree of predictability to
the violence that is absent in an isolated violent encounter between two
strangers. This also means that it may in fact be possible for a battered
spouse to accurately predict the onset of violence before the first blow is
struck, even if an outsider to the relationship cannot. Indeed, it has been
suggested that a battered woman's knowledge of her partner's violence is so
heightened that she is able to anticipate the nature and extent (though not the
onset) of the violence by his conduct beforehand. In her article
"Potential Uses for Expert Testimony: Ideas Toward the Representation of
Battered Women Who Kill" (1986), 9 Women's Rights Law Reporter 227,
psychologist Julie Blackman describes this characteristic, at p. 229:
Repeated
instances of violence enable battered women to develop a continuum along which
they can "rate" the tolerability or survivability of episodes of
their partner's violence. Thus, signs of unusual violence are detected. For
battered women, this response to the ongoing violence of their situations is a
survival skill. Research shows that battered women who kill experience
remarkably severe and frequent violence relative to battered women who do not
kill. They know what sorts of danger are familiar and which are novel. They
have had myriad opportunities to develop and hone their perceptions of their
partner's violence. And, importantly, they can say what made the final episode
of violence different from the others: they can name the features of the last
battering that enabled them to know that this episode would result in
life-threatening action by the abuser.
At p. 236, Dr. Blackman relates the role
of expert testimony in cases where a battered woman kills her batterer while he
is sleeping (or not actively posing a threat her) and pleads self-defence:
Perhaps
the single most important idea conveyed by expert testimony in such a case
pertains to the notion that a battered woman, because of her extensive
experience with her abuser's violence, can detect changes or signs of novelty
in the pattern of normal violence that connote increased danger. Support for
this assertion must come from the woman herself, in her spontaneous,
self-initiated description of the events that precede her action against the
abuser. Only then can testimony from an expert offer scientific support for
the idea that such a danger detection process can occur and can be expected to
be as accurate as the "reasonable man" standard would imply.
Of course, as Dr. Blackman
points out, it is up to the jury to decide whether the distinction drawn
between "typical" violence and the particular events the accused
perceived as "life threatening" is compelling. According to the
appellant's statement to police, Rust actually handed her a shotgun and warned
her that if she did not kill him, he would kill her. I note in passing a
remarkable observation made by Dr. Walker in her 1984 study The Battered
Woman Syndrome. Writing about the fifty battered women she interviewed who
had killed their partners, she comments at p. 40:
Most of the time the women
killed the men with a gun; usually one of several that belonged to him. Many
of the men actually dared or demanded the woman use the gun on him first, or
else he said he'd kill her with it. [Emphasis added.]
Where evidence exists that an
accused is in a battering relationship, expert testimony can assist the jury in
determining whether the accused had a "reasonable" apprehension of
death when she acted by explaining the heightened sensitivity of a battered
woman to her partner's acts. Without such testimony I am skeptical that the
average fact-finder would be capable of appreciating why her subjective fear
may have been reasonable in the context of the relationship. After all, the
hypothetical "reasonable man" observing only the final incident may
have been unlikely to recognize the batterer's threat as potentially lethal.
Using the case at bar as an example the "reasonable man" might have
thought, as the majority of the Court of Appeal seemed to, that it was unlikely
that Rust would make good on his threat to kill the appellant that night
because they had guests staying overnight.
The issue is not, however,
what an outsider would have reasonably perceived but what the accused
reasonably perceived, given her situation and her experience.
Even accepting that a
battered woman may be uniquely sensitized to danger from her batterer, it may
yet be contended that the law ought to require her to wait until the knife is
uplifted, the gun pointed or the fist clenched before her apprehension is
deemed reasonable. This would allegedly reduce the risk that the woman is
mistaken in her fear, although the law does not require her fear to be correct,
only reasonable. In response to this contention, I need only point to the
observation made by Huband J.A. that the evidence showed that when the
appellant and Rust physically fought the appellant "invariably got the
worst of it". I do not think it is an unwarranted generalization to say
that due to their size, strength, socialization and lack of training, women are
typically no match for men in hand-to-hand combat. The requirement imposed in Whynot
that a battered woman wait until the physical assault is "underway"
before her apprehensions can be validated in law would, in the words of an
American court, be tantamount to sentencing her to `murder by installment': State
v. Gallegos, 719 P.2d 1268 (N.M. 1986), at p. 1271. I share the view expressed by
Willoughby in "Rendering Each Woman Her Due: Can a Battered Woman Claim
Self-Defense When She Kills Her Sleeping Batterer" (1989), 38 Kan. L.
Rev. 169, at p. 184, that "society gains nothing, except perhaps the
additional risk that the battered woman will herself be killed, because she
must wait until her abusive husband instigates another battering episode before
she can justifiably act".
B. Lack of Alternatives
to Self-Help
Section 34(2) requires an
accused who pleads self-defence to believe "on reasonable grounds"
that it is not possible to otherwise preserve him or herself from death or
grievous bodily harm. The obvious question is if the violence was so
intolerable, why did the appellant not leave her abuser long ago? This
question does not really go to whether she had an alternative to killing the
deceased at the critical moment. Rather, it plays on the popular myth already
referred to that a woman who says she was battered yet stayed with her batterer
was either not as badly beaten as she claimed or else she liked it.
Nevertheless, to the extent that her failure to leave the abusive relationship
earlier may be used in support of the proposition that she was free to leave at
the final moment, expert testimony can provide useful insights. Dr. Shane
attempted to explain in his testimony how and why, in the case at bar, the
appellant remained with Rust:
She had stayed in this
relationship, I think, because of the strange, almost unbelievable, but yet it
happens, relationship that sometimes develops between people who develop this
very disturbed, I think, very disturbed quality of a relationship. Trying to
understand it, I think, isn't always easy and there's been a lot written about
it recently, in the recent years, in psychiatric literature. But basically it
involves two people who are involved in what appears to be an attachment which
may have sexual or romantic or affectionate overtones.
And the one individual, and
it's usually the women in our society, but there have been occasions where it's
been reversed, but what happens is the spouse who becomes battered, if you
will, stays in the relationship probably because of a number of reasons.
One is that the spouse gets
beaten so badly -- so badly -- that he or she loses the motivation to react and
becomes helpless and becomes powerless. And it's also been shown sometimes,
you know, in -- not that you can compare animals to human beings, but in
laboratories, what you do if you shock an animal, after a while it can't
respond to a threat of its life. It becomes just helpless and lies there in an
amotivational state, if you will, where it feels there's no power and there's
no energy to do anything.
So in a sense it happens in
human beings as well. It's almost like a concentration camp, if you will. You
get paralyzed with fear.
The other
thing that happens often in these types of relationships with human beings is
that the person who beats or assaults, who batters, often tries -- he makes up
and begs for forgiveness. And this individual, who basically has a very
disturbed or damaged self-esteem, all of a sudden feels that he or she -- we'll
use women in this case because it's so much more common -- the spouse feels
that she again can do the spouse a favour and it can make her feel needed and
boost her self-esteem for a while and make her feel worthwhile and the spouse
says he'll forgive her and whatnot.
Apparently, another manifestation
of this victimization is a reluctance to disclose to others the fact or extent
of the beatings. For example, the hospital records indicate that on each
occasion the appellant attended the emergency department to be treated for
various injuries she explained the cause of those injuries as accidental. Both
in its address to the jury and in its written submissions before this Court the
Crown insisted that the appellant's injuries were as consistent with her
explanations as with being battered and, therefore, in the words of Crown
counsel at trial, "the myth is, in this particular case, that Miss
Lavallee was a battered spouse". In his testimony Dr. Shane testified
that the appellant admitted to him that she lied to hospital staff and others
about the cause of her injuries. In Dr. Shane's opinion this was consistent
with her overall feeling of being trapped and helpless:
... she would never say that she'd been
abused by the man with whom she was living and that usually happened because of
this whole process. He would beg her. I mean she would tell me that on
occasions he would beat her and then the police would be called by, I think, on
one occasion a neighbour and he got down on his knees and he begged forgiveness
and he loved her and he felt so terrible about it. And so this would be a
typical scenario. Whenever she would go to the hospital, that he would attempt
to, I think, attempt to have her forgive him and he would love her so much
more.
Again she would feel so
needed and this would start the whole cycle over again.
And he would also blackmail
her on occasions. She had an abortion when she was in the early part of their
relationship and he would blackmail her saying, "You know, I will tell
your parents that you were a baby killer", et cetera.
But
basically the manner in which, I think, she would be prevented from telling the
doctors or other people about the beatings was related to the fact that this
whole process would repeat itself. He would want forgiveness and tell her he
would love her and it would never happen again and she would feel grateful.
She would feel a little loved. It would help her self-esteem again and she
would feel a little safer for a while too. It would allow her to have a sense,
a window of security for a period because she felt so trapped in this
relationship.
The account given by Dr.
Shane comports with that documented in the literature. Reference is often made
to it as a condition of "learned helplessness", a phrase coined by
Dr. Charles Seligman, the psychologist who first developed the theory by
experimenting on animals in the manner described by Dr. Shane in his
testimony. A related theory used to explain the failure of women to leave
battering relationships is described by psychologist and lawyer Charles Patrick
Ewing in his book Battered Women Who Kill (1987). Ewing describes a
phenomenon labelled "traumatic bonding" that has been observed
between hostages and captors, battered children and their parents,
concentration camp prisoners and guards, and batterers and their spouses.
According to the research cited by Ewing there are two features common to the
social structure in each of these apparently diverse relationships. At pp.
19-20, he states:
The first of these common
features is an imbalance of power "wherein the maltreated person perceives
himself or herself to be subjugated or dominated by the other". The less
powerful person in the relationship -- whether battered woman, hostage, abused
child, cult follower, or prisoner -- becomes extremely dependent upon, and may
even come to identify with, the more powerful person. In many cases, the
result of such dependency and identification is that the less powerful,
subjugated persons become "more negative in their self-appraisal, more
incapable of fending for themselves, and thus more in need of the high power
person." As this "cycle of dependency and lowered self-esteem"
is repeated over time, the less powerful person develops a "strong
affective bond" to the more powerful person in the abusive relationship.
The second feature common
to the relationships between battered woman and batterer, hostage and captor,
battered child and abusive parent, cult follower and leader, and prisoner and
guard is the periodic nature of the abuse. In each relationship, the less powerful
person is subjected to intermittent periods of abuse, which alternate with
periods during which the more powerful, abusive person treats the less powerful
person in a "more normal and acceptable fashion."
...
Given the
clear power differential between battered women and their batterers and the
intermittent nature of physical and psychological abuse common to battering
relationships, it seems fair to conclude...that many battered women are
psychologically unable to leave their batterers because they have developed a
traumatic bond with them. [Citations omitted.]
This strong "affective bond"
may be helpful in explaining not only why some battered women remain with their
abusers but why they even profess to love them. Of course, as Dr. Ewing adds,
environmental factors may also impair the woman's ability to leave -- lack of
job skills, the presence of children to care for, fear of retaliation by the
man, etc. may each have a role to play in some cases.
This is not to say that in
the course of a battering relationship a woman may never attempt to leave her
partner or try to defend herself from assault. In The Battered Woman
Syndrome, supra, Dr. Walker notes, at p. 30, that women may sometimes
"react to men's violence against them by striking back, but their actions
are generally ineffective at hurting or stopping the men. They may be
effective in controlling the level of the man's violence against them".
In the case at bar Dr. Shane was aware that the appellant had pointed a gun at
Rust in the past. In direct examination he stated:
And what
would also happen from time to time is that there would be moments where she
would attempt to hit back to defend herself or she may take a weapon to defend
herself in order to prevent herself from being harmed or even, when the
underlying rage may accumulate, if you will, the feeling that she had to do
something to him in order to survive, in order to defend herself.
The same psychological
factors that account for a woman's inability to leave a battering relationship
may also help to explain why she did not attempt to escape at the moment she
perceived her life to be in danger. The following extract from Dr. Shane's
testimony on direct examination elucidates this point:
Q. Now, we understand from the evidence
that on this night she went -- I think you've already described it in your
evidence -- and hid in the closet?
A. Yes.
Q. Can you tell the jury why she, for
instance, would stay in that house if she had this fear? Why wouldn't she so [sic]
someplace else? Why would she have to hide in the closet in the same house?
A. Well, I think this is a
reflection of what I've been talking about, this ongoing psychological process,
her own psychology and the relationship, that she felt trapped. There was no
out for her, this learned helplessness, if you will, the fact that she felt
paralyzed, she felt tyrannized. She felt, although there were obviously no
steel fences around, keeping her in, there were steel fences in her mind which
created for her an incredible barrier psychologically that prevented her from
moving out. Although she had attempted on occasion, she came back in a
magnetic sort of a way. And she felt also that she couldn't expect anything
more. Not only this learned helplessness about being beaten, beaten, where her
motivation is taken away, but her whole sense of herself. She felt this victim
mentality, this concentration camp mentality if you will, where she could not
see herself be in any other situation except being tyrannized, punished and
crucified physically and psychologically.
I emphasize at this juncture
that it is not for the jury to pass judgment on the fact that an accused
battered woman stayed in the relationship. Still less is it entitled to
conclude that she forfeited her right to self-defence for having done so. I
would also point out that traditional self-defence doctrine does not require a
person to retreat from her home instead of defending herself: R. v. Antley
(1963), 42 C.R. 384 (Ont. C.A.) A man's home may be his castle but it is also
the woman's home even if it seems to her more like a prison in the
circumstances.
If, after hearing the
evidence (including the expert testimony), the jury is satisfied that the
accused had a reasonable apprehension of death or grievous bodily harm and felt
incapable of escape, it must ask itself what the "reasonable person"
would do in such a situation. The situation of the battered woman as described
by Dr. Shane strikes me as somewhat analogous to that of a hostage. If the
captor tells her that he will kill her in three days time, is it potentially
reasonable for her to seize an opportunity presented on the first day to kill
the captor or must she wait until he makes the attempt on the third day? I
think the question the jury must ask itself is whether, given the history,
circumstances and perceptions of the appellant, her belief that she could not
preserve herself from being killed by Rust that night except by killing him
first was reasonable. To the extent that expert evidence can assist the jury
in making that determination, I would find such testimony to be both relevant
and necessary.
In light of the foregoing
discussion I would summarize as follows the principles upon which expert
testimony is properly admitted in cases such as this:
1. Expert
testimony is admissible to assist the fact-finder in drawing inferences in
areas where the expert has relevant knowledge or experience beyond that of the
lay person.
2. It
is difficult for the lay person to comprehend the batter wife syndrome. It is
commonly thought that battered women are not really beaten as badly as they
claim, otherwise they would have left the relationship. Alternatively, some
believe that women enjoy being beaten, that they have a masochist strain in
them. Each of these stereotypes may adversely affect consideration of a battered
woman's claim to have acted in self-defence in killing her mate.
3. Expert
evidence can assist the jury in dispelling these myths.
4. Expert
testimony relating to the ability of an accused to perceive danger from her
mate may go to the issue of whether she "reasonably apprehended"
death or grievous bodily harm on a particular occasion.
5. Expert
testimony pertaining to why an accused remained in the battering relationship
may be relevant in assessing the nature and extent of the alleged abuse.
6. By
providing an explanation as to why an accused did not flee when she perceived
her life to be in danger, expert testimony may also assist the jury in
assessing the reasonableness of her belief that killing her batterer was the
only way to save her own life.
Quite apart from Dr. Shane's
testimony there was ample evidence on which the trial judge could conclude that
the appellant was battered repeatedly and brutally by Kevin Rust over the
course of their relationship. The fact that she may have exhibited aggressive
behaviour on occasion or tried (unsuccessfully) to leave does not detract from
a finding of systematic and relentless abuse. In my view, the trial judge did
not err in admitting Dr. Shane's expert testimony in order to assist the jury
in determining whether the appellant had a reasonable apprehension of death or
grievous bodily harm and believed on reasonable grounds that she had no
alternative but to shoot Kevin Rust on the night in question.
Obviously the fact that the
appellant was a battered woman does not entitle her to an acquittal. Battered
women may well kill their partners other than in self-defence. The focus is
not on who the woman is, but on what she did. In "The Meaning of Equality
for Battered Women Who Kill Men in Self-Defense" (1985), 8 Harv.
Women's L.J. 121, at p. 149, Phyllis Crocker makes the point succinctly:
The issue in a self-defence
trial is not whether the defendant is a battered woman, but whether she
justifiably killed her husband. The defendant introduces testimony to offer
the jury an explanation of reasonableness that is an alternative to the
prosecution's stereotypic explanations. It is not intended to earn her the
status of a battered woman, as if that would make her not guilty.
The trial judge, to his credit,
articulated the same principle when introducing Dr. Shane's testimony in the
course of his instructions to the jury. After referring to "the so-called
battered spouse syndrome", he cautions:
Let me say
at the outset that I think it is better that we try not to attach labels to
this. It doesn't matter what we call it. What is important is the evidence
itself and how it impacts on the critical areas of the intent of the accused
and the issue of self-defence.
Ultimately, it is up to the
jury to decide whether, in fact, the accused's perceptions and actions
were reasonable. Expert evidence does not and cannot usurp that function of
the jury. The jury is not compelled to accept the opinions proffered by the
expert about the effects of battering on the mental state of victims generally
or on the mental state of the accused in particular. But fairness and the
integrity of the trial process demand that the jury have the opportunity to
hear them.
(iii) Adequacy of Trial Judge's
Charge to the Jury
The second issue raised in
this case is the adequacy of the trial judge's charge to the jury with respect
to the expert evidence furnished by Dr. Shane. It appears that Dr. Shane
relied on various sources in formulating his opinion -- his series of
interviews with the appellant, an interview with her mother, a police report of
the incident (including information regarding her statement to the police), and
hospital records documenting eight of her visits to emergency departments
between 1983 and 1986. Neither the appellant nor her mother testified at
trial. The contents of their statements to Dr. Shane were hearsay.
In Abbey, supra,
this Court addressed the bases upon which expert evidence that relies on
hearsay is admissible. The accused in that case was charged with importing
cocaine and his defence was insanity. The accused did not testify. A
psychiatrist gave his opinion as to the sanity of the accused and, in the
course of giving the basis for his conclusions, referred to incidents and
hallucinations related to him by the accused for which there was no admissible
evidence. The Crown submitted before this Court that the trial judge
"accepted and treated as factual much of this hearsay evidence"
related to the psychiatrist. Dickson J. found that the point was "well
taken". This was the preliminary finding on which the case was based and
I think it is fair to say that the trial judge in the case at bar clearly did not
make the same mistake as did the trial judge in Abbey. At pp. 44-46 of
his judgment, Dickson J. articulated the hazards inherent in admitting expert
testimony based on hearsay:
The danger, of course, in
admitting such testimony is the ever present possibility, here exemplified,
that the judge or jury, without more, will accept the evidence as going to the
truth of the facts stated in it. The danger is real and lies at the heart of
this case. Once such testimony is admitted, a careful charge to the jury by
the judge or direction to himself is essential. The problem, however, as
pointed out by Fauteux J. in Wilband resides not in the admissibility of
the testimony but rather the weight to be accorded to the opinion. Although
admissible in the context of his opinion, to the extent that it is second-hand
his testimony is not proof of the facts stated.
...
It was appropriate for the
doctors to state the basis for their opinions and in the course of doing so, to
refer to what they were told not only by Abbey but by others, but it was error
for the judge to accept as having been proved the facts upon which the doctors
had relied in forming their opinions. While it is not questioned that medical
experts are entitled to take into consideration all possible information in
forming their opinions, this in no way removes from the party tendering such
evidence the obligation of establishing, through properly admissible evidence,
the factual basis on which such opinions are based. Before any weight can be
given to an expert's opinion, the facts upon which the opinion is based must be
found to exist.
For present purposes I think
the ratio of Abbey can be distilled into the following propositions:
1. An
expert opinion is admissible if relevant, even if it is based on second-hand
evidence.
2. This
second-hand evidence (hearsay) is admissible to show the information on which
the expert opinion is based, not as evidence going to the existence of the
facts on which the opinion is based.
3. Where
the psychiatric evidence is comprised of hearsay evidence, the problem is the
weight to be attributed to the opinion.
4. Before
any weight can be given to an expert's opinion, the facts upon which the
opinion is based must be found to exist.
In the case at bar the trial
judge was clearly of the view that Dr. Shane's evidence was relevant. He would
not have admitted it otherwise. As I stated above, in light of the evidence of
the battering relationship which subsisted between the appellant and the
deceased, the trial judge was correct in so doing.
With respect to the second
point, the trial judge warned the jury generally that they could not
"decide the case on the basis of things the witnesses did not see or
hear," which would seem to include those matters which Dr. Shane neither
saw nor heard. He then gave the marijuana smoking and the confirmatory
evidence of the appellant's mother as two sources of information which were not
evidence in the case. In my opinion, it would have been preferable if the
trial judge had described the interview with the appellant as a source of
inadmissible evidence, the marijuana smoking being an example of inadmissible
evidence from that source. Nevertheless, I think the trial judge makes his
meaning clear to the jury in the subsequent passage:
In terms of the matters
considered by Dr. Shane he is left, therefore, with the deceased's [sic
- he means accused's] statement, some supplementary information from the police
report and his interpretation of the hospital records.
The trial judge thus eliminates the
interview with the appellant and his conversation with her mother as sources of
admissible evidence. Elsewhere he reinforces the rule that the jury can only
consider the admissible evidence. He refers to the hospital visits made by the
appellant:
Another
evidentiary caution is necessary here. Mr. Brodsky, in his remarks, said, as
he did in calling some of the evidence respecting hospital attendances that
this is only a representative sample. He ought not to have said that. It is
not evidence and must be completely disregarded by you. The only evidence
before you are the eight attendances that you heard about and nothing else --
eight attendances and nothing else.
The trial judge's
instructions regarding the weight attributable to Dr. Shane's opinion also
emphasize his distinction between admissible evidence and hearsay:
If the premises upon
which the information is substantially based has not been proven in evidence,
it is up to you to conclude that it is not safe to attach a great deal of
weight to the opinion. An opinion of an expert depends, to a large extent, on
the validity of the facts assumed by the evidence of the expert.
If there
are some errors and the factual assumptions aren't too important to the
eventual opinion, that's one thing. If there are errors or matters not in
evidence and those matters are substantial, in you view, in terms of the impact
on the expert's opinion, then you will want to look at the value and weight of
that expert's opinion very carefully. It depends on how important you
think the matters were that Dr. Shane relied on that are not in evidence.
[Emphasis added.]
I agree with Huband J.A. that
these instructions with respect to weight conform to this Court's judgment in Abbey.
The only complaint can be with the trial judge's attempt to distinguish
admissible from inadmissible evidence. The trial judge was certainly not as
clear as he might have been but I have no hesitation in finding that a retrial
is not warranted on this account.
Given that Dr. Shane relied
extensively on his interview with the appellant, the trial judge drew
particular attention to the additional element of credibility that could affect
the quality of Dr. Shane's opinion:
It is the
position of the Crown that Dr. Shane's opinion stands or falls on the veracity
of Lyn Lavallee because he relied so heavily and extensively on what she told
him and the evidence contained in the statement, Exhibit 16. That's for you to
decide.
Later in the charge, he elaborates:
Undoubtably [sic]
she was a very important source, if not the major source, of his information.
Dr. Shane agreed that if what she told him was erroneous, he would have to
reassess his position.
On cross-examination he
reiterated that in his opinion her action was spontaneous to the moment to try
to defend herself. The straw that broke the camel's back was the threat,
"When the others leave you're going to get it", even though similar
statements had been made to her on other occasions. According to what she told
him, the accused felt compelled to shoot.
Based on the information he
had in the interview, it was his opinion that the acts of the accused were
impulsive and not premeditated. He disagreed with the Crown's suggestion that
Lyn Lavallee took the opportunity when it presented itself.
He
conceded that patients had, on occasion, lied and misled him in the past.
The fourth proposition I have
extracted from Abbey is that there must be admissible evidence to
support the facts on which the expert relies before any weight can be
attributed to the opinion. The majority of the Manitoba Court of Appeal
appears to interpret this as a requirement that each and every fact relied upon
by the expert must be independently proven and admitted into evidence before
the entire opinion can be given any weight.
Dr. Shane referred in his
testimony to various facts for which there was no admissible evidence. The
information was elicited from his interviews with the appellant. It included
the smoking of marijuana prior to the killing, the deterioration of the
intimate relationship between the appellant and Rust, past episodes of physical
and psychological abuse followed by intervals of contrition, the apparent
denial of homicidal fantasies on the appellant's part, and her remorse after
killing Rust.
If the majority of the Court
of Appeal is suggesting that each of these specific facts must be proven in
evidence before any weight could be given to Dr. Shane's opinion about the
accused's mental state, I must respectfully disagree. Abbey does not,
in my view, provide any authority for that proposition. The Court's conclusion
in that case was that the trial judge erred in treating as proven the facts
upon which the psychiatrist relied in formulating his opinion. The solution
was an appropriate charge to the jury, not an effective withdrawal of the
evidence. In my view, as long as there is some admissible evidence to
establish the foundation for the expert's opinion, the trial judge cannot
subsequently instruct the jury to completely ignore the testimony. The judge
must, of course, warn the jury that the more the expert relies on facts not
proved in evidence the less weight the jury may attribute to the opinion.
On my reading of the record
Dr. Shane had before him admissible evidence about the nature of the
relationship between the appellant and Rust in the form of the appellant's
statement to the police and the hospital records. In addition, there was
substantial corroborative evidence provided at trial by Ezako, the emergency
room doctor who testified to doubting the appellant's explanation of her injuries.
There was also the evidence of the witnesses on the night of the shooting who
testified to the appellant's frightened appearance, tone of voice, and conduct
in dealing with Rust. The evidence pointed to the image of a woman who was
brutally abused, who lied about the cause of her injuries, and who was
incapable of leaving her abuser. As Huband J.A. comments in dissent, if the
trial judge erred at all, he was probably remiss in not mentioning the
corroborative evidence of Ezako as buttressing the evidentiary foundation on
which Dr. Shane premised his opinion.
The majority of the Court of
Appeal attached particular significance to the absence of admissible evidence
on the question whether the appellant had homicidal fantasies about Rust. As I
read the evidence the appellant's alleged denial of homicidal fantasies
appeared to add little to Dr. Shane's overall opinion about her mental state on
the night in question. Moreover, the evidence given by Ezako about her being
an aggressor in the past and even pointing a gun at Rust were far more
incriminating in terms of evincing a prior intent to kill than the presence or
absence of homicidal fantasies. The gun pointing incidents were explained by
Dr. Shane as not inconsistent with her victimized condition and not necessarily
indicative of pre-meditation. Clearly, Dr. Shane's explanation was something
the jury could evaluate in the context of all the evidence.
Where the factual basis of an
expert's opinion is a melange of admissible and inadmissible evidence the duty
of the trial judge is to caution the jury that the weight attributable to the
expert testimony is directly related to the amount and quality of admissible
evidence on which it relies. The trial judge openly acknowledged to counsel
the inherent difficulty in discharging such a duty in the case at bar. In my
view, the trial judge performed his task adequately in this regard. A new
trial is not warranted on the basis of the trial judge's charge to the jury.
I would accordingly allow the
appeal, set aside the order of the Court of Appeal, and restore the acquittal.
//Sopinka J.//
The following are the
reasons delivered by
Sopinka J. -- I have read
the reasons of my colleague Justice Wilson, and I agree in the result that this
appeal must be allowed. I find it necessary, however, to add a few words
concerning the interpretation of this Court's decision in R. v. Abbey, [1982] 2 S.C.R. 24.
Abbey has been roundly criticized: see, e.g.,
Schiff, Evidence in the Litigation Process, vol. 1 (3rd ed. 1988), at
pp. 473-76; and Delisle, Evidence: Principles and Problems (2nd ed.
1989), at pp. 477-79. The essence of the criticism is that Abbey sets
out more restrictive conditions for the use of expert evidence than did previous
decisions of this Court (i.e., City of St. John v. Irving Oil Co.,
[1966] S.C.R. 581; Wilband v. The Queen, [1967] S.C.R. 14; and R. v.
Lupien, [1970] S.C.R. 263). Upon reflection, it seems to me that the very
special facts in Abbey, and the decision required on those facts, have
contributed to the development of a principle concerning the admissibility and
weight of expert opinion evidence that is self-contradictory. The
contradiction is apparent in the four principles set out by Wilson J. in the present
case, at pp. 000, which I reproduce here for the sake of convenience:
1. An
expert opinion is admissible if relevant, even if it is based on second-hand
evidence.
2. This
second-hand evidence (hearsay) is admissible to show the information on which
the expert opinion is based, not as evidence going to the existence of the
facts on which the opinion is based.
3. Where
the psychiatric evidence is comprised of hearsay evidence, the problem is the
weight to be attributed to the opinion.
4. Before
any weight can be given to an expert's opinion, the facts upon which the
opinion is based must be found to exist.
The combined effect of
numbers 1, 3 and 4 is that an expert opinion relevant in the abstract to a
material issue in a trial but based entirely on unproven hearsay (e.g., from
the mouth of the accused, as in Abbey) is admissible but entitled to no
weight whatsoever. The question that arises is how any evidence can be admissible
and yet entitled to no weight. As one commentator has pointed out, an expert
opinion based entirely on unproven hearsay must, if anything, be
inadmissible by reason of irrelevance, since the facts underlying the expert
opinion are the only connection between the opinion and the case: see Wardle,
"R. v. Abbey and Psychiatric Opinion Evidence: Requiring the
Accused to Testify" (1984), 17 Ottawa L. Rev. 116, at pp. 122-23.
The resolution of the
contradiction inherent in Abbey, and the answer to the criticism Abbey
has drawn, is to be found in the practical distinction between evidence that an
expert obtains and acts upon within the scope of his or her expertise (as in City
of St. John), and evidence that an expert obtains from a party to
litigation touching a matter directly in issue (as in Abbey).
In the former instance, an
expert arrives at an opinion on the basis of forms of enquiry and practice that
are accepted means of decision within that expertise. A physician, for
example, daily determines questions of immense importance on the basis of the
observations of colleagues, often in the form of second- or third-hand
hearsay. For a court to accord no weight to, or to exclude, this sort of
professional judgment, arrived at in accordance with sound medical practices,
would be to ignore the strong circumstantial guarantees of trustworthiness that
surround it, and would be, in my view, contrary to the approach this Court has
taken to the analysis of hearsay evidence in general, exemplified in Ares v.
Venner, [1970] S.C.R. 608. In R. v. Jordan (1984), 39 C.R. (3d) 50
(B.C.C.A.), a case concerning an expert's evaluation of the chemical
composition of an alleged heroin specimen, Anderson J.A. held, and I
respectfully agree, that Abbey does not apply in such circumstances.
(See also R. v. Zundel (1987), 56 C.R. (3d) 1 (Ont. C.A.), at p. 52,
where the court recognized an expert opinion based upon evidence "... of a
general nature which is widely used and acknowledged as reliable by experts in
that field.")
Where, however, the
information upon which an expert forms his or her opinion comes from the mouth
of a party to the litigation, or from any other source that is inherently
suspect, a court ought to require independent proof of that information. The
lack of such proof will, consistent with Abbey, have a direct effect on
the weight to be given to the opinion, perhaps to the vanishing point. But it
must be recognized that it will only be very rarely that an expert's opinion is
entirely based upon such information, with no independent proof of any of it.
Where an expert's opinion is based in part upon suspect information and in part
upon either admitted facts or facts sought to be proved, the matter is purely
one of weight. In this respect, I agree with the statement of Wilson J. at p. 000, as
applied to circumstances such as those in the present case:
... as long as there is some
admissible evidence to establish the foundation for the expert's opinion, the
trial judge cannot subsequently instruct the jury to completely ignore the
testimony. The judge must, of course, warn the jury that the more the expert
relies on facts not proved in evidence the less weight the jury may attribute
to the opinion.
As Wilson J. holds, the trial
judge's charge to the jury was adequate, and the appeal ought therefore to be
allowed.
Appeal allowed.
Solicitors for the
appellant: Walsh, Micay and Company, Winnipeg.
Solicitor for the
appellant: The Attorney General of Manitoba, Winnipeg.
See Erratum [2009] 1
S.C.R. iv.