Hawkshaw
v. The Queen, [1986] 1 S.C.R. 668
Allin
Ross Hawkshaw Appellant;
and
Her
Majesty The Queen Respondent.
File
No.: 17308
1985:
January 28; 1986: May 22.
Present:
Dickson C.J. and Beetz, Estey, McIntyre, Lamer, Wilson and Le Dain JJ.
on
appeal from the court of appeal for ontario
Criminal
law‑‑Obscenity‑‑Accused charted with making obscene
publication‑‑Charge brought because of obscene photograph taken by
accused‑‑No evidence of publication or intention to publish‑‑Whether
including of word “publication” in charge an essential averment or mere
surplusage‑‑Criminal Code, R.S.C. 1970, c. C‑34, s. 15991)(a),
(8).
Appellant
was charged under s. 159(1) (a) of the Criminal Code in that he
"unlawfully did make an obscene publication, to wit: a photograph of an
act of gross indecency". There was evidence at the preliminary hearing to
support findings that the photograph was taken by the appellant and that the
photograph was obscene, but none as to an intention to publish it. The
committing magistrate decided that the word "publication" in the
charge was surplusage. An order for certiorari to quash the committal, granted
in the Supreme Court of Ontario, was set aside on appeal. At issue here was
whether an intent to publish an obscene photograph was an essential ingredient
for conviction of the accused under the charge as framed. Argument also centred
on the applicability of the test for obscenity under s. 159(8) of the Criminal
Code .
Held:
The appeal should be allowed.
The
test of obscenity laid down in s. 159(8) of the Criminal Code should
apply to the issue of obscenity in charges under the Criminal Code , whether
based on publication or not.
Section
159(1) (a) of the Criminal Code creates a number of offences which
are separate and apart. One of these offences, the making of an obscene
photograph, does not involve any necessary element of publication.
The
word "publication" introduced an element of publication into the
indictment. To be given any meaning the indictment as framed must have
encompassed something more than the mere making of a photograph. The surplusage
rule--that words in the indictment are said to be surplus in the sense that
they need not be proved in order to prove conviction--was inapplicable here in
that it would prejudice the accused.
The
accused could well have concluded that evidence of an intent to publish or
evidence of actual publication would form a necessary part of the Crown's case.
Although it might be possible to conclude, on a detailed analysis of the
meanings to be attributed to the word "publication" used in this
context, that neither an intent to publish nor an actual publication was
involved the accused should not be confronted with this sort of exercise in
making his response to a criminal charge.
Cases
Cited
Dechow
v. The Queen, [1978] 1 S.C.R. 951; Vézina and Côté v. The Queen,
[1986] 1 S.C.R. 2, applied; R. v. Hicklin (1868), L.R. 3 Q.B.
360, not followed; Skogman v. The Queen, [1984] 2 S.C.R. 93; R. v.
Munster (1960), 34 C.R. 47; R. v. Modenese (1962), 38 C.R. 45; Brodie
v. The Queen, [1962] S.C.R. 681; R. v. Schell (1973), 13
C.C.C. (2d) 342; R. v. McCormick, York Co. CT. (Ont.), January 10, 1980,
unreported, referred to.
Statutes
and Regulations Cited
Criminal
Code, R.S.C. 1970, c. C-34, s. 159(1)(a), (8).
APPEAL
from a judgment of the Ontario Court of Appeal (1982), 69 C.C.C. (2d) 503, 39
O.R. (2d) 571, allowing an appeal from a judgment of Osler J. allowing an
application to quash an order of Nadeau Prov. Ct. J. for committal to trial.
Appeal allowed.
Patrick
S. Duffy, Q.C., for the appellant.
Susan
Ficek, for the respondent.
The
judgment of the Court was delivered by
1. McIntyre
J.‑‑The principal question with which this
appeal is concerned is whether an intent to publish an obscene photograph is an
essential element for the conviction of a person charged, under s. 159(1) (a)
of the Criminal Code , that he "unlawfully did make an obscene
publication, to wit: a photograph of an act of gross indecency".
2. A commercial film developer
delivered to the police a series of photographs which it had received for
development. One of the photographs was the basis for the charge in this case.
The Crown elected to proceed by indictment. The appellant elected trial by
judge alone and a preliminary hearing was held.
3. At the preliminary hearing there was
evidence from which a properly instructed jury could find that the photograph
was taken by the appellant and that it was itself of such nature that it
afforded evidence of obscenity. There was, however, no evidence of any
intention to publish the photograph. The committing magistrate committed for trial
despite the absence of such evidence. He concluded that the word
"publication" in the charge was surplusage‑‑a non‑allegation‑‑which
did not form an essential ingredient of the charge.
4. An application was made before Osler J.
in the Supreme Court of Ontario for certiorari to quash the committal
(reported at (1981), 62 C.C.C. (2d) 289). The motion succeeded. Osler J. was of
the view that evidence of an intent to publish was a necessary element for the
proof of the charge and that to commit for trial in the absence of such
evidence was an excess of jurisdiction. This ruling, given his view of the
elements of the charge against the accused, was consistent with the majority
judgment in this Court in Skogman v. The Queen, [1984] 2 S.C.R. 93.
5. The Crown appeal to the Court of Appeal
(Howland C.J.O., Brooke and Cory JJ.A.) was allowed with Brooke J.A. dissenting
(reported at (1982), 69 C.C.C. (2d) 503). Howland C.J.O., for the majority,
reviewed the authorities dealing with the construction of s. 159 and its
predecessors. He came to the conclusion that publication was not an essential
element of the charge. The word "publication" where used in the
charge was, in his view, surplusage. He was also of the view that on a
construction of s. 159(1) (a) of the Criminal Code a separate
offence of making an obscene photograph had been created. A conviction could be
obtained therefore in the absence of evidence of an intent to publish. There
was then evidence before the committing magistrate which would justify a
committal and the committal order was restored. The majority was also of the
view that the test for obscenity to be applied in cases under s. 159(1)(a)
of the Code should be that set out in s. 159(8) whether publication was
involved or not. This displaced the common law test of obscenity laid down by
Cockburn C.J. in R. v. Hicklin (1868), L.R. 3 Q.B. 360, at p. 371.
Brooke J.A. (in dissent) expressed the view that, given the construction of s.
159 in its complete context, publication is an element in the commission of an
offence under s. 159(1) (a). He would have upheld the reviewing court's
order to quash. In this Court the argument centred on the question of
publication and on the applicability of the test for obscenity under
s. 159(8) .
6. The leading case on the interpretation
of s. 159(8) of the Code is Dechow v. The Queen, [1978] 1 S.C.R.
951. Dechow arose out of the prosecution of a sex shop operator under s.
159(1)(a) of the Code. There the appellant was charged that he:
...unlawfully did have in
his possession, for the purpose of distribution, obscene materials consisting
of written matter, pictures, models, preparations, tape recordings, and other
devices, equipment and paraphernalia.
The appellant was convicted and the conviction was
upheld on a trial de novo. An appeal was taken to the Ontario Court of
Appeal on the question of whether the obscenity test laid down in s. 159(8) of
the Criminal Code applied to the articles which were the subject matter
of the case. The appellant's appeal was dismissed. The appellant appealed to
this Court upon the following question of law:
Did the Court of Appeal
err in holding that s. 159(8) of the Criminal Code applied to the articles
found by the trial judge to be obscene and that consequently the trial judge
did not err in holding that s. 159(8) provided the sole test of obscenity in respect
of those articles?
Ritchie J., speaking for the majority of the Court
(Martland, Ritchie, Pigeon, Beetz and de Grandpré JJ.) held that the
meaning of the word "publication" where it appears in s. 159(8) must
be determined not from the verb "to publish" but from the noun itself
meaning "that which is published". However, the manner in which the
offending articles were displayed in the shop when taken together with the
printed descriptions attached to the articles constituted an element of
publication. This would qualify the objects as publications within the meaning
of s. 159(8) of the Code. It followed that the test set out in the
subsection would apply. No question of the appli‑ cability of the Hicklin
rule arose. Ritchie J. concluded his judgment, however, by saying, at p. 968:
...I do not find it
necessary to consider what test is to be applied in determining whether or not
matters other than publications are obscene.
7. Laskin C.J., for the minority (the Chief
Justice and Judson, Spence and Dickson JJ.), did not regard the offending
articles as publications. He nevertheless concluded that the test in s. 159(8)
should be applied in considering the question of obscenity. The Chief Justice
expressed the view that where the Criminal Code had provided the
definitive test of obscenity which displaced the common law Hicklin
test, then in the interests of consistency that test should be applied in all
cases of obscenity. He would have applied the s. 159(8) test in obscenity cases
not involving publications. He said, at pp. 962‑63:
I am
not only satisfied to regard s. 159(8) as prescribing an exhaustive test of
obscenity in respect of a publication which has sex as a theme or
characteristic but I am also of the opinion that this Court should apply that
test in respect of other provisions of the Code, such as ss. 163 and
164, in cases in which the allegation of obscenity revolves around sex
considerations. Since the view that I take, in line with that expressed by
Judson J. in the Brodie case, is that the Hicklin rule has been
displaced by s. 159(8) in respect of publications, I would not bring it back
under any other sections of the Code, such as ss. 159, 163 and 164, to
provide a back‑up where a sexual theme or sexual factors are the basis
upon which obscenity charges are laid and the charges fail because the test
prescribed by s. 159(8) has not been met.
...
It is
reasonable for a Court to apply the statutory standard, prescribed by
Parliament as a definition of an offence of a generic character, when it is
called upon to determine, in allied provisions of the Criminal Code , the
sense in which the expression of some offence, made punishable in other
circumstances, should be taken. Where no constitutional considerations are
involved but only the interpretation and application of the words of
Parliament, the judicial approach should be in the direction of consistency of
meaning of the same word used by Parliament where that word is a designation of
an offence which is a distributive one by reason of the specification of
different situations in which it may be committed. So it is with obscenity in
the various provisions of the Code under which it is an offence. If the
issue under any of those provisions is sexual exploitation, either alone or in
association with any of the subjects mentioned in s. 159(8) , then I think it
the proper course for this Court to apply in all such cases the standard or
test that s. 159(8) prescribes for publications.
In my view, Laskin C.J. was not in conflict with the
majority on this point. The majority had clearly left the question open. As has
been pointed out, Howland C.J.O., for the majority in the Court of Appeal,
adopted the reasons of Lasking C.J. in Dechow and applied the s. 159(8)
test. He said, at p. 513:
I am in
agreement with the above view expressed by Laskin C.J.C. that the test of
obscenity to be applied in the case of offences under s. 159(1) (a),
where no publication is involved, should be the same as the test prescribed
under s. 159(8) in respect of publications. This would appear to be the proper
course to follow in the interests of consistency. There is no justification for
applying a different test of obscenity for non‑publication offences.
It is my view that he was right in law to do so. In my
opinion, the test of obscenity laid down in s. 159(8) should apply to the
issue of obscenity in charges under the Criminal Code whether based on
publication or not. For the reasons outlined by Laskin C.J. in Dechow,
the Hicklin test is no longer applicable in Canada in such cases.
8. Turning now to the case at bar, s.
159(1) (a) of the Criminal Code provides:
159. (1) Every one commits an offence who
(a) makes, prints,
publishes, distributes, circulates, or has in his possession for the purpose of
publication, distribution or circulation any obscene written matter, picture,
model, phonograph record or other thing whatsoever, or
This section creates a number of offences, one of which,
that of making an obscene picture, is said to be the subject of this charge. It
is an offence which is separate and distinct from the other offences there
mentioned and it involves no necessary element of publication. The various
offences are separated by commas and one does violence to no rule of
construction in recognizing them as separate concepts. I am in agreement with
Howland C.J.O. in this respect. After discussing various authorities, such as R.
v. Munster (1960), 34 C.R. 47; R. v. Modenese (1962), 38 C.R. 45; Brodie
v. The Queen, [1962] S.C.R. 681; R. v. Schell (1973), 13 C.C.C. (2d)
342; R. v. McCormick, York Co. Ct. (Ont.), Ferguson Co. Ct. J., Jan. 10,
1980, unreported, and Dechow v. The Queen, supra, he said, at p.
515:
There
are no dicta in the Dechow case to suggest that publication is a
prerequisite to every offence under s. 159(1) (a). On the contrary, both
the reasons of the majority and the minority recognize the need to consider the
test for obscenity in cases of non‑publications. The majority also
recognized that s. 159(8) only applied to publications. Furthermore, some of
the offences included in s. 159(1) (a) such as "possession for the
purpose of publication, distribution or circulation" relate to a point of
time before publication has occurred.
9. The real question raised in this case
then is not whether there is a separate offence of making an obscene article,
but whether the Crown in framing the indictment in this case has alleged the
separate offence of making an obscene publication. The committing judge and the
majority in the Court of Appeal considered the word "publication" in
the indictment could be disregarded as mere surplusage. This approach left a
simple charge of making an obscene photograph on which there was evidence which
would warrant a committal.
10. The surplusage rule‑‑by which
a word or words in an indictment are said to be surplus in the sense that they
need not be proved in order to procure a conviction‑‑may not be
applied where it would prejudice an accused. This matter was recently canvassed
in this Court in Vézina and Côté v. The Queen, [1986] 1 S.C.R. 2, where
Lamer J., speaking for the unanimous Court, reviewed the authorities on the
question. He commenced his discussion with the statement, at p. 26:
Similarly,
the "surplusage rule", which as noted above, is the converse of s.
510(3), must also be seen as subject to the proviso that the accused not be
prejudiced in his or her defence.
Then after reviewing the apposite authorities he
concluded, by saying, at p. 28:
In
summary, the early Canadian cases on the "surplusage rule", e.g.
R. v. Coote (1903), 8 C.C.C. 199 (B.C.S.C.), do not specifically mention
the issue of prejudice, but many of the more recent cases, specifically those
noted above, expressly and repeatedly underline the issue of prejudice.
Prejudice to the accused is in my view, a clear limitation to the invocation of
the "surplusage rule".
11. It remains now to consider whether the
treatment as surplusage of the word "publication" in the indictment before
the Court would cause prejudice to the accused appellant. The word
"publication", as used in the indictment, is capable of two differing
meanings. It could have the meaning ascribed to the noun
"publication", that is, "that which is published", or it
could have the meaning of the verb "to publish". In either case an
element of publication is introduced into the indictment. This being so, can it
be said that the Crown has alleged the separate offence of making an obscene
photograph? If the answer is "yes", the word "publication"
must be disregarded. If the word is to be given any meaning, then something
more than the mere making of an obscene photograph has been alleged. The
accused could well have concluded that evidence of an intent to publish or evidence
of actual publication would form a necessary part of the Crown's case. A
finding that the word is largely surplus would surely prejudice an accused who
had committed himself to a defence against an allegation involving publication.
It may be possible on a detailed analysis of the meanings which could be
attributed to the word "publication" in this context to conclude that
no intent to publish or no actual publication is involved. This is not,
however, the sort of exercise which should confront an accused in making his
response to a criminal charge.
12. It is, therefore, my opinion that on the
indictment as framed, evidence was required of publication or an intent to
publish. The committal without such evidence cannot be sustained on the basis
of the majority decision of this Court in Skogman, supra. I would
therefore allow the appeal and restore the order of Osler J. quashing the
committal.
13. Before leaving this case, I would observe
that the Crown was faced with a genuine dilemma in framing its indictment. The
offence alleged is found in s. 159 of the Criminal Code . This section,
in its various subsections, creates several offences relating to obscene
objects. Some of them involve publication or some element of public exposure,
others do not. The only definition of obscenity is in subs. (8). It refers only
to publications. There is then no statutory provision defining obscenity
applicable to non‑published material.
14. The Crown in framing its indictment
attempted to apply the section by characterizing the offending object as a
publication‑‑presumably, to invoke the definition of obscenity in
subs. (8)‑‑and described the offending object as a photograph. This
approach led to the confusion which could have confronted the accused and which
has led to the allowance of this appeal. The Crown's approach to this matter,
in view of the wording of the section, may be understandable. The difficulty it
creates, however, should not be visited upon the accused. Section 159 of the Criminal
Code , by limiting the statutory definition of obscenity to publications,
creates on its face a problem which, in my view, has been solved or at least
accommodated in Dechow, supra. Its effect is to apply the
definition of obscenity in s. 159(8) of the Code wherever the word is
employed in the Code, whether for publication or not. This obviates the
need for any use of the word "publication" in framing indictments
where no publication is alleged. In the absence of a statutory amendment, this
approach would give effect to s. 159 , as a whole, and in my view should be
adopted.
Appeal allowed.
Solicitor for the appellant: Patrick
S. Duffy, Toronto.
Solicitor for the respondent:
Ministry of the Attorney General, Toronto.