SUPREME COURT OF
CANADA
Between:
Stanley James Willier
Appellant
and
Her Majesty The Queen
Respondent
‑ and ‑
Attorney General of Ontario, Attorney
General of British Columbia,
Director of Public Prosecutions of Canada,
Criminal Lawyers’ Association of Ontario,
British Columbia Civil Liberties
Association and
Canadian Civil Liberties Association
Interveners
Coram: McLachlin C.J. and Binnie,
LeBel, Deschamps, Fish, Abella, Charron, Rothstein and Cromwell JJ.
Reasons for Judgment:
(paras. 1 to 45)
Concurring Reasons:
(paras. 46 to 47)
Concurring Reasons:
(para. 48)
|
McLachlin C.J. and
Charron J. (Deschamps, Rothstein and Cromwell JJ. concurring)
Binnie J.
LeBel and Fish JJ.
(Abella J. concurring)
|
______________________________
R. v. Willier, 2010 SCC 37, [2010] 2
S.C.R. 429
Stanley James Willier Appellant
v.
Her Majesty The Queen Respondent
and
Director of Public Prosecutions of Canada,
Attorney General of Ontario, Attorney General
of British Columbia, Criminal Lawyers’ Association
of Ontario, British Columbia Civil Liberties
Association and Canadian Civil Liberties
Association Interveners
Indexed as: R. v.
Willier
2010 SCC 37
File No.: 32769.
2009: May 12;
2010: October 8.
Present: McLachlin C.J. and
Binnie, LeBel, Deschamps, Fish, Abella, Charron, Rothstein and
Cromwell JJ.
on appeal
from the court of appeal for alberta
Constitutional law — Charter of Rights —
Right to counsel — Counsel of choice — Accused’s counsel of choice unavailable — Accused spoke instead to duty counsel — Adequacy of advice received
— Incriminating statement made during police interrogation — Whether accused’s
right to counsel breached — Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms,
s. 10 (b).
Following W’s arrest for murder, the police
informed him of his right to counsel and facilitated a brief telephone
conversation with duty counsel. Offered another opportunity to speak to
counsel the next day, he made an unsuccessful attempt to call a specific lawyer.
When informed that the lawyer was unlikely to call back before his office
reopened the next day and reminded of the immediate availability of duty
counsel, W opted to speak with the latter a second time. W expressed
satisfaction with the advice he had received from duty counsel. The police
officer told W that he would proceed with the interview, but that W would be
free at any time during the interview to stop and call a lawyer. W did not
attempt to contact his lawyer again before providing a statement to the police
during the investigative interview that followed. The trial judge later ruled
on a voir dire that the statement was voluntary. However, he held that
W’s right to counsel under s. 10 (b) of the Charter had been
breached, as he was denied a reasonable opportunity to consult counsel of his
choice before the interview. Further, W’s two conversations with duty counsel
were insufficient given their brevity to satisfy his right to a meaningful
opportunity to instruct counsel. The statement was excluded and W was
acquitted. A majority of the Court of Appeal found no Charter breach,
reversed the acquittal, and ordered a new trial.
Held: The
appeal should be dismissed.
Per
McLachlin C.J. and Deschamps, Charron, Rothstein and Cromwell JJ.: W
did not suffer a violation of his s. 10 (b) right to counsel. In no
way did the police interfere with W’s right to a reasonable opportunity to
consult with counsel of choice by simply reminding him of the immediate
availability of duty counsel after his unsuccessful attempt to call a
particular lawyer. When W stated his preference to wait, police reasonably
informed him that it was unlikely that his lawyer would be quick to return his
call given that it was a Sunday, and reminded W of the immediate availability
of duty counsel. W was not told that he could not wait to hear back from his
lawyer, or that duty counsel was his only recourse. There is no indication
that his choice to call duty counsel was the product of coercion. The police
had an informational duty to ensure that W was aware of the availability of
duty counsel, and compliance with that duty did not interfere with his right to
a reasonable opportunity to contact counsel of choice. W was properly
presented with another route by which to obtain legal advice, an option he
voluntarily chose to exercise.
Further, the brief interval between W’s
attempt to contact his lawyer and the start of the investigative interview did
not deprive him of a reasonable opportunity to contact counsel of choice. The
brevity of the interval must be viewed in light of all the circumstances prior
to the commencement of the interview. After speaking with duty counsel, W
expressed satisfaction with that advice. He did not pursue any further
opportunity to contact his lawyer, though he was offered an open‑ended
invitation to contact counsel prior to and throughout the interview. If W
maintained any continuing desire to speak with his lawyer, or wait for him to
call back, he was not diligent in exercising that right. There is little more
that the police could have done in these circumstances to afford W a reasonable
opportunity to exercise his rights under s. 10 (b).
Unless a detainee indicates, diligently and
reasonably, that the advice he or she received is inadequate, the police may
assume that the detainee is satisfied with the exercised right to counsel and
are entitled to commence an investigative interview. While s. 10(b)
requires the police to afford a detainee a reasonable opportunity to contact
counsel and to facilitate that contact, it does not require them to monitor the
quality of the advice once contact is made. To impose such a duty on the
police would be incompatible with the privileged nature of the solicitor‑client
relationship. In this case, despite the brevity of W’s conversations with duty
counsel, W gave no indication that these consultations were inadequate. On the
contrary, he expressed his satisfaction with the legal advice to the
interviewing officer, prior to questioning. W is not entitled to express such
satisfaction, remain silent in the face of offers from the police for further
contact with counsel, remain silent in the voir dire as to the alleged
inadequacies of the actual legal advice received, and then seek a finding that
the advice was inadequate because of its brevity.
Per
Binnie J.: The situation here is not comparable to that in the companion
case of R. v. Sinclair, 2010 SCC 35, [2010] 2 S.C.R. 310. W expressed
satisfaction with the advice obtained from legal aid prior to the interview.
He did not pursue any further opportunity to contact his lawyer of choice
though he was invited to do so.
Per LeBel,
Fish and Abella JJ.: W was given ample opportunity to exercise the
s. 10 (b) Charter rights that he was claiming, but failed to
exercise them with diligence.
Cases Cited
By
McLachlin C.J. and Charron J.
Distinguished: R. v. Prosper, [1994] 3 S.C.R. 236; referred to: R.
v. Sinclair, 2010 SCC 35, [2010] 2 S.C.R. 310; R. v. McCrimmon, 2010
SCC 36, [2010] 2 S.C.R. 402; R. v. Bartle, [1994] 3 S.C.R. 173; R. v.
Suberu, 2009 SCC 33, [2009] 2 S.C.R. 460; R. v. Evans, [1991] 1
S.C.R. 869; R. v. Tremblay, [1987] 2 S.C.R. 435; R. v. Black,
[1989] 2 S.C.R. 138; R. v. Smith, [1989] 2 S.C.R. 368; R. v.
Ross, [1989] 1 S.C.R. 3; R. v. G.D.B., 2000 SCC 22, [2000] 1
S.C.R. 520.
By Binnie J.
Applied: R.
v. Sinclair, 2010 SCC 35, [2010] 2 S.C.R. 310.
By LeBel and Fish JJ.
Applied: R.
v. Sinclair, 2010 SCC 35, [2010] 2 S.C.R. 310; R. v. McCrimmon, 2010
SCC 36, [2010] 2 S.C.R. 402.
Statutes and
Regulations Cited
Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms, ss. 10 (b),
24(2) .
APPEAL from a judgment of the Alberta Court
of Appeal (Ritter and Slatter JJ.A. and Bielby J. (ad hoc)),
2008 ABCA 126, 89 Alta. L.R. (4th) 22, 429 A.R.
135, 421 W.A.C. 135, 230 C.C.C. (3d) 1,
[2008] 7 W.W.R. 251, 168 C.R.R. (2d) 323, [2008] A.J. No. 327 (QL), 2008
CarswellAlta 404, reversing a decision of Gill J., 2006 CarswellAlta
2120. Appeal dismissed.
Lauren L. Garcia and Mary MacDonald, for the appellant.
Goran Tomljanovic,
Q.C., and Brian Graff, for the respondent.
David Schermbrucker and Christopher Mainella, for the intervener the
Director of Public Prosecutions of Canada.
John S. McInnes
and Deborah Krick, for the intervener the Attorney General of Ontario.
M. Joyce
DeWitt‑Van Oosten, for the intervener the Attorney General of
British Columbia.
P. Andras Schreck and Candice Suter, for the intervener the
Criminal Lawyers’ Association of Ontario.
Warren B. Milman and Michael A. Feder, for the intervener
the British Columbia Civil Liberties Association.
Jonathan C. Lisus, Alexi N. Wood and Adam Ship, for
the intervener the Canadian Civil Liberties Association.
The judgment of McLachlin C.J. and
Deschamps, Charron, Rothstein and Cromwell JJ. was delivered by
The Chief
Justice and Charron J. —
I. Overview
[1]
This appeal, in conjunction with its companion cases, R. v. Sinclair,
2010 SCC 35, [2010] 2 S.C.R. 310, and R. v. McCrimmon, 2010 SCC 36,
[2010] 2 S.C.R. 402, elaborates upon the nature and limits of the right to
counsel provided under s. 10 (b) of the Canadian Charter of Rights and
Freedoms . Specifically, this case touches upon a distinct facet of the s.
10 (b) guarantee, namely the right to counsel of choice.
[2]
The appellant, Stanley Willier, alleges that the police violated the Charter
by depriving him of his right to counsel. His allegation arises out of the
following circumstances: following Mr. Willier’s arrest for murder, the police
informed him of his right to counsel and facilitated a brief telephone
conversation with Legal Aid. Offered another opportunity to speak to counsel
the next day, he made an unsuccessful attempt to call a specific lawyer and
left a message on his answering machine. When asked if he wished to speak with
another lawyer, Mr. Willier stated his preference to wait to hear back from his
chosen counsel. However, when informed that his preferred lawyer was unlikely
to call back before his office reopened the next day and reminded of the
immediate availability of free Legal Aid, Mr. Willier opted to speak with duty
counsel a second time. Shortly thereafter, the police commenced an
investigative interview, prefacing the questioning with an open-ended
invitation to contact counsel at any point during the exchange. Mr. Willier
expressed satisfaction with the advice he had received from Legal Aid, and did
not attempt to contact counsel again before providing a statement to the
police.
[3]
A pre-trial voir dire affirmed Mr. Willier’s allegations of a s.
10 (b) breach. In the trial judge’s view, after Mr. Willier’s unsuccessful
attempt to contact his preferred lawyer and before he spoke to duty counsel, s.
10 (b) required the police to inform him of his right to a reasonable
opportunity to contact counsel of choice and of their duty to refrain from
questioning him until he had been afforded that opportunity. Without such a
warning, he could not waive his right to counsel of choice. Further, the
police had improperly discouraged Mr. Willier from waiting to hear from his
preferred lawyer, instead directing him to Legal Aid. Although Mr. Willier
spoke with duty counsel twice, the trial judge deemed these consultations
inadequate given their brevity, holding that they did not amount to a
“meaningful exercise of his right to counsel” (2006 CarswellAlta 2120, at para.
119). The trial judge excluded Mr. Willier’s statements, resulting in his
acquittal.
[4]
The majority of the Alberta Court of Appeal overturned this decision,
finding no Charter breach (2008 ABCA 126, 89 Alta. L.R. (4th) 22). In
their opinion, s. 10 (b) does not, as held on voir dire, impose an
additional informational obligation on the police when a detainee is
unsuccessful in contacting a specific lawyer and opts to speak with another.
The trial judge also erred in basing a s. 10 (b) breach upon the inferred
inadequacy of Mr. Willier’s legal advice. Given the privileged nature of the
solicitor‑client relationship, the police are not responsible for
ensuring that legal advice satisfy a particular qualitative standard.
Mr. Willier had been afforded his s. 10 (b) right. Given his
consultations with Legal Aid, his expressions of satisfaction with that advice,
and his decision to forego an offer to speak to counsel when again provided
with that opportunity prior to being interviewed, the police were entitled to proceed
with their questioning. In the absence of a Charter breach, there was
no basis for excluding Mr. Willier’s statement to the police.
[5]
Conversely, Bielby J. (ad hoc) concurring in the result, affirmed
the s. 10 (b) violation found on the voir dire. The brief
interlude between Mr. Willier’s attempt to contact his preferred counsel and
the start of the interview did not afford him a reasonable opportunity to
consult with counsel of choice, particularly given the seriousness of the
charge and the lack of urgency in commencing the investigation.
Mr. Willier’s brief calls to Legal Aid did not afford him “meaningful
contact” with counsel, and as such failed to discharge his right to counsel
(para. 77).
[6]
For the reasons that follow, we agree with the majority of the Court of
Appeal, find no s. 10 (b) violation, and dismiss the appeal.
II. Facts
[7]
On about February 25, 2005, Brenda Moreside was found stabbed to death
in her house in High Prairie, Alberta. The RCMP identified Stanley Willier as
a suspect, given his prior relationship with the deceased, and arrested him for
murder at his brother’s Edmonton apartment at midday on February 26, 2005.
[8]
Upon arrest, Mr. Willier admitted to having recently taken a number of
pills purchased off the street. After a few brief questions regarding his drug
use and his physical well-being, the arresting officers became concerned for
his health and decided to take him to the hospital. The officers informed Mr.
Willier of their intention to speak with him after his hospital visit, to which
he responded: “Okay, you guys are done (unintelligible) I want a lawyer, I
don’t want to be questioned” (A.R., vol. 2, at p. 168).
[9]
At 5:40 p.m., while in the emergency ward, the police informed Mr.
Willier of the reason for his arrest and of his right to retain and instruct a
lawyer without delay. They told him that he could call any lawyer he wanted,
informed him of the availability of free duty counsel, and provided him with a
telephone book and the toll-free number for Legal Aid. When asked if he
understood those rights, Mr. Willier responded in the affirmative. The police
then asked Mr. Willier if he wanted to call a lawyer, clarifying Mr. Willier’s
misconception that free legal advice was only available after an application to
Legal Aid and informing him of its immediate availability. Informed that he
wanted to wait until the next day to contact counsel, the police assured Mr.
Willier that a telephone would be available whenever he decided he wanted to
call a lawyer.
[10] When
Mr. Willier was released from hospital at approximately midnight that night,
the police took him to the RCMP detachment in Sherwood Park. Informed again of
his right to counsel, he asked to speak to a free lawyer. Provided with a
private room, a telephone, and various phone numbers, Mr. Willier had a
three-minute conversation with duty counsel. He was then returned to his cell
for the night.
[11] The
next morning, a Sunday, Cst. Lahaie confirmed with Mr. Willier that he had
spoken with a lawyer the night before and offered him another opportunity to
contact counsel. Mr. Willier indicated that he wanted to speak with a specific
lawyer, Mr. Peter Royal; Cst. Lahaie dialed Mr. Royal’s phone number, passed
the phone to Mr. Willier, and left him in private to leave a message on
the answering machine. After Mr. Willier hung up the phone, Cst. Lahaie asked
him if he wanted to contact another lawyer. He declined the offer, indicating
his preference to wait. After Cst. Lahaie informed him that Mr. Royal would
not likely be available until the next day, given the office closure, and of
the immediate availability of Legal Aid, Mr. Willier opted to speak with duty
counsel a second time. The exchange leading to Mr. Willier’s subsequent call
to Legal Aid went as follows:
Lahaie: Did
you, you left a message there, did you?
Willier: Yes.
Lahaie: Did
you wanna talk to any other lawyer this morning . . .
Willier: No.
Lahaie: . . . to, to talk directly to a lawyer? We can phone this
number here again, the after hours number, if you’d like.
Willier: No, I think I’ll just wait for (inaudible). I just told the
lawyer that.
Lahaie: Well,
their offices are closed, they said . . .
Willier: Yeah.
Lahaie: . . . on the answering machine. So they’re not gonna be
available until tomorrow.
Willier: Oh
(inaudible).
Lahaie: Unless they, unless they check their messages all weekend. So
if you wanna talk to a lawyer today, a direct lawyer, you can call, that’s why
we have these after hours, why the Legal Aid sign has these.
Willier: Sure, let’s phone them. [A.R., vol. 2, at p. 241]
After a brief one-minute conversation with a Legal Aid
lawyer, the police returned Mr. Willier to his cell.
[12] Approximately
50 minutes later, Sgt. Gillespie initiated an investigative interview with Mr.
Willier. After confirming Mr. Willier’s prior consultations with Legal Aid,
Sgt. Gillespie reinformed him of his right to retain and instruct counsel and
offered him another opportunity to contact a lawyer before continuing with the
interview. Mr. Willier indicated that he was satisfied with the advice he
had received from Legal Aid. Sgt. Gillespie re-cautioned Mr. Willier as to his
right to remain silent, informing him that anything he said may be used as
evidence against him. He asked Mr. Willier to repeat the nature of the caution
back to him to ensure that he understood its meaning, and Mr. Willier did
so. Sgt. Gillespie indicated that he would proceed with the interview, but
that Mr. Willier would be free at any time during the interview to stop and
call a lawyer:
Gillespie: And ah, ah, as long as you’re satisfied with the advice
you got I think ah, we’ll proceed from here but I want you to know that ah, at
any time if you want to stop and call a lawyer you’re more than welcome to do
so okay. I don’t want to, to deprive you of that in any way, shape or form so.
Willier: Yea.
Gillespie: Ahm, if, if you want to talk to a lawyer you just say,
hey Charlie I want to talk to a lawyer.
Willier: Hmm hmm.
Gillespie: Does
that sound good?
Willier: Yes.
Gillespie: Okay.
Do you have any other questions of me at all ah?
Willier:
No. [A.R., vol. 2, at p. 259]
During the ensuing exchange, Mr. Willier provided a lengthy
statement as to his involvement in the death of Ms. Moreside.
III. Judicial History
[13] The
court proceedings commenced with a voir dire to determine the common law
admissibility of Mr. Willier’s statements and whether there was a Charter basis
for their exclusion.
[14] The
trial judge ruled the statements voluntary and thus admissible under the
confessions rule, noting that Mr. Willier was “alert, focused, and rational”
throughout the interview, that the police had not offered any improper
inducements, and that their persuasive techniques were reasonable. However, he
excluded the statements after finding that the police had breached Mr.
Willier’s right to counsel under s. 10 (b) of the Charter .
[15] A
first violation derived from the failure of the police to inform Mr. Willier of
his right to counsel and give him an opportunity to exercise that right at the
time of his arrest, obligations fulfilled only later at the hospital. Although
a contravention of s. 10 (b), the trial judge noted, at para. 105,
that the delay was “perhaps not significant” as no evidence was gathered in
close proximity to the Charter violation. On this appeal, there is no
allegation that the delay in informing Mr. Willier of his right to counsel
constituted a s. 10 (b) breach and we agree with the trial judge as to
its insignificance, given the absence of a nexus between the delay and the
production of the statement.
[16] The
trial judge identified a second s. 10 (b) violation in the police denial
of Mr. Willier’s right to a reasonable opportunity to contact his counsel of
choice, as evidenced by Cst. Lahaie’s actions in “actively discouraging” Mr.
Willier from waiting for a call back from Mr. Royal and directing him to Legal
Aid, and Sgt. Gillespie’s initiation of the interrogation shortly thereafter
(paras. 111-13). In light of the totality of the circumstances, including a
lack of investigative urgency and the absence of any indication that Mr. Royal
would not be available within a reasonable time, the failure of the police to
hold off in the interrogation amounted to a s. 10 (b) breach. Mr.
Willier had not waived his right to a reasonable opportunity to contact counsel
of choice by opting to speak with duty counsel, as the police had not informed
him of his entitlement to that right. Despite Mr. Willier’s two conversations
with Legal Aid, these conversations were insufficient to satisfy his right to a
meaningful opportunity to instruct and retain counsel, in light of their
brevity. Given the s. 10 (b) violation, the trial judge excluded
Mr. Willier’s statement under s. 24(2) of the Charter . The Crown’s
subsequent inability to offer any evidence resulted in Mr. Willier’s acquittal.
[17] At the
Alberta Court of Appeal, the majority allowed the appeal, reversed the
acquittal, and ordered a new trial.
[18] As a
preliminary matter, Slatter J.A., writing for the majority, held that
s. 10 (b) does not require the police to monitor the quality of
advice received, writing that “[t]he police are required to notify the detained
person that he has a right to counsel, not to audit that advice once given”
(para. 28). Such communication being subject to privilege, the police are not
entitled to know its contents. Even if the police were voluntarily informed of
the advice provided to a detainee, it would be inappropriate for them to
second-guess its adequacy. As such, the trial judge erred in basing a Charter
breach on the inferred inadequacy of Mr. Willier’s legal advice.
[19] Slatter
J.A. found that the police had complied with their informational and
implementational obligations under s. 10 (b), and that there was no basis
for a Charter breach. There was nothing amiss when Cst. Lahaie informed
Mr. Willier of the availability of Legal Aid after his unsuccessful attempt to
contact Mr. Royal, as such conduct is consistent with the police duty to ensure
a detainee is aware of the availability of immediate and free legal
consultation (para. 47). The police had afforded Mr. Willier a reasonable
opportunity to contact counsel, given his two consultations with Legal Aid, his
expressions of satisfaction with that advice, and his decision to forego an
offer to speak to counsel when again provided with that opportunity prior to
the interview. Slatter J.A. wrote: “Having discharged their obligations to
advise the respondent of his right to counsel of choice, and after the respondent
actually spoke to counsel, they were entitled to attempt to obtain a statement
from him absent any further request to speak to counsel of choice” (para. 56).
[20] Slatter
J.A. also held that Mr. Willier had waived any continuing right to speak with
counsel, given his indications of satisfaction with the advice received from
Legal Aid. This waiver suspended the police obligation to hold off, entitling
them to commence with their questioning as they did.
[21] In the
absence of a Charter violation, there was no need to exclude the
statement under s. 24(2) . Nevertheless, Slatter J.A. identified errors in
the trial judge’s s. 24(2) analysis as an additional basis for a retrial.
[22] Bielby
J., concurring in the result, found that the police had violated
Mr. Willier’s s. 10 (b) right because of their failure to wait
a reasonable period of time to allow Mr. Willier’s counsel of choice to return
his call before initiating their interview. In finding that the 50-minute
interval between Mr. Willier’s attempt to call Mr. Royal and the start of the
interview did not amount to a reasonable period of time, she focused on the
seriousness of the charge and the lack of urgency in commencing the
investigation. She also noted that Mr. Willier’s two brief calls to Legal Aid
did not provide him with “meaningful contact with and the receipt of
satisfactory advice from a lawyer” (para. 77). She also held that the Crown
had failed to prove a waiver of Mr. Willier’s right to wait for further legal
advice from his counsel of choice, given the failure of the police to inform
him of that right and of their obligation to hold off. However, despite the Charter
breach, Bielby J. held that the trial judge conducted an inadequate s. 24(2)
analysis and ultimately agreed with the majority as to the necessity of a
retrial.
[23] Mr.
Willier appeals to this Court.
IV. Analysis
[24] As
indicated at the outset, the focal point in this appeal is the right to counsel
of choice under s. 10 (b) of the Charter and the corresponding
obligations on the police to facilitate that choice. While the right to choose
counsel is certainly one facet of the guarantee under s. 10 (b), the Charter
does not guarantee detainees an absolute right to retain and instruct a
particular counsel at the initial investigative stage regardless of the
circumstances. What the right to counsel of choice entails must be understood
having regard to the purpose of the guarantee.
A. The Text and Purpose of Section 10 (b)
[25] Section
10 (b) provides:
10. Everyone has the right on arrest or detention
.
. .
(b) to retain and instruct counsel without
delay and to be informed of that right;
[26] While
s. 10(b)’s text remains the starting point in its interpretation, an
understanding of its animating purposes is essential to a full understanding of
its content. This is especially true in this case, as the text of s. 10(b)
makes no explicit mention of the right to counsel of choice.
[27] As we
describe in Sinclair, the right to silence in s. 7 and the right to
counsel in s. 10(b) work together “to ensure that a suspect is able to
make a choice to speak to the police investigators that is both free and
informed” (para. 25). Section 10(b) aims to realize this purpose by
ensuring that detainees have an opportunity to be informed of their rights and
obligations under the law and to obtain advice on how to exercise those rights
and perform those obligations. As Lamer C.J. wrote in R. v. Bartle,
[1994] 3 S.C.R. 173, at p. 191:
This
opportunity is made available because, when an individual is detained by state
authorities, he or she is put in a position of disadvantage relative to the
state. Not only has this person suffered a deprivation of liberty, but also
this person may be at risk of incriminating him- or herself. Accordingly, a
person who is “detained” within the meaning of s. 10 of the Charter is
in immediate need of legal advice in order to protect his or her right against
self‑incrimination and to assist him or her in regaining his or her
liberty: Brydges, at p. 206; R. v. Hebert, [1990] 2 S.C.R. 151,
at pp. 176‑77; and Prosper. Under s. 10(b), a detainee is
entitled as of right to seek such legal advice “without delay” and upon
request. As this Court suggested in Clarkson v. The Queen, [1986] 1
S.C.R. 383, at p. 394, the right to counsel protected by s. 10 (b) is
designed to ensure that persons who are arrested or detained are treated fairly
in the criminal process. [Emphasis deleted.]
[28] Accordingly,
s. 10(b) provides detainees with an opportunity to contact counsel in
circumstances where they are deprived of liberty and in the control of the
state, and thus vulnerable to the exercise of its power and in a position of
legal jeopardy. The purpose of s. 10(b) is to provide detainees an
opportunity to mitigate this legal disadvantage.
B. The Rights and Obligations Engaged by
Section 10(b)
[29] The
purposes of s. 10(b) serve to underpin and define the rights and
obligations triggered by the guarantee. In Bartle, Lamer C.J.
summarized these rights and obligations in terms of the duties imposed upon
state authorities who make an arrest or effect a detention (p. 192). Section
10(b) requires the police
(1) to inform
the detainee of his or her right to retain and instruct counsel without delay
and of the existence and availability of legal aid and duty counsel;
(2) if a
detainee has indicated a desire to exercise this right, to provide the detainee
with a reasonable opportunity to exercise the right (except in urgent and
dangerous circumstances); and
(3) to
refrain from eliciting evidence from the detainee until he or she has had that
reasonable opportunity (again, except in cases of urgency or danger).
[30] The
first duty is an informational duty, while the second and third duties are
implementational in nature and are not triggered until detainees indicate a
desire to exercise their right to counsel. As explained in R. v. Suberu,
2009 SCC 33, [2009] 2 S.C.R. 460, these duties are triggered immediately upon
an individual’s arrest or detention, as “the concerns about self‑incrimination
and the interference with liberty that s. 10(b) seeks to address are
present as soon as a detention is effected” (para. 41).
[31] The
informational duty imposed on the police is relatively straightforward.
However, should a detainee positively indicate that he or she does not
understand his or her right to counsel, the police cannot rely on a mechanical
recitation of that right and must facilitate that understanding: R. v.
Evans, [1991] 1 S.C.R. 869. Additionally, there are specific, narrowly
defined circumstances in which s. 10(b) prescribes an additional
informational obligation upon the police. In R. v. Prosper, [1994] 3
S.C.R. 236, Lamer C.J. described this additional informational duty, and
the circumstances that trigger it, as follows, at p. 274:
In circumstances where a detainee has asserted his or her right to
counsel and has been reasonably diligent in exercising it, yet has been unable
to reach a lawyer because duty counsel is unavailable at the time of detention,
courts must ensure that the Charter ‑protected right to counsel is
not too easily waived. Indeed, I find that an additional informational
obligation on police will be triggered once a detainee, who has previously
asserted the right to counsel, indicates that he or she has changed his or her
mind and no longer wants legal advice. At this point, police will be required
to tell the detainee of his or her right to a reasonable opportunity to contact
a lawyer and of the obligation on the part of the police during this time not
to take any statements or require the detainee to participate in any
potentially incriminating process until he or she has had that reasonable
opportunity. This additional informational requirement on police ensures that a
detainee who persists in wanting to waive the right to counsel will know what
it is that he or she is actually giving up.
[32] Thus,
when a detainee, diligent but unsuccessful in contacting counsel, changes his
or her mind and decides not to pursue contact with a lawyer, s. 10(b)
mandates that the police explicitly inform the detainee of his or her right to
a reasonable opportunity to contact counsel and of the police obligation to
hold off in their questioning until then. This additional informational
obligation, referred to in this appeal as the duty to give a “Prosper
warning”, is warranted in such circumstances so as to ensure that a detainee is
informed that their unsuccessful attempts to reach counsel did not exhaust the
s. 10(b) right, to ensure that any choice to speak with the police does
not derive from such a misconception, and to ensure that a decision to waive
the right to counsel is fully informed.
[33] Detainees
who choose to exercise their s. 10(b) right by contacting a lawyer
trigger the implementational duties of the police. These duties require the
police to facilitate a reasonable opportunity for the detainee to contact
counsel, and to refrain from questioning the detainee until that reasonable
opportunity is provided. However, these obligations are contingent upon a
detainee’s reasonable diligence in attempting to contact counsel: R. v.
Tremblay, [1987] 2 S.C.R. 435; R. v. Black, [1989] 2 S.C.R. 138; R. v. Smith,
[1989] 2 S.C.R. 368. What constitutes reasonable diligence in the
exercise of the right to contact counsel will depend on the context of the
particular circumstances as a whole. As Wilson J. stated in Black, at
pp. 154-55:
A rider is attached to these police obligations, namely that the accused
must be reasonably diligent in attempting to obtain counsel if he wishes to do
so. If the accused person is not diligent in this regard, then the correlative
duties imposed upon the police to refrain from questioning the accused are
suspended: see R. v. Tremblay, [1987] 2 S.C.R. 435.
[34] Such a
limit on the rights of a detainee are necessary, as Lamer J., as he then was,
noted in Smith, “because without it, it would be possible to delay
needlessly and with impunity an investigation and even, in certain cases, to
allow for an essential piece of evidence to be lost, destroyed or rendered
impossible to obtain. The rights set out in the Charter , and in
particular the right to retain and instruct counsel, are not absolute and
unlimited rights. They must be exercised in a way that is reconcilable with
the needs of society” (p. 385).
[35] Should
detainees opt to exercise the right to counsel by speaking with a specific
lawyer, s. 10(b) entitles them to a reasonable opportunity to contact their
chosen counsel prior to police questioning. If the chosen lawyer is not
immediately available, detainees have the right to refuse to speak with other
counsel and wait a reasonable amount of time for their lawyer of choice to
respond. What amounts to a reasonable period of time depends on the
circumstances as a whole, and may include factors such as the seriousness of
the charge and the urgency of the investigation: Black. If the chosen
lawyer cannot be available within a reasonable period of time, detainees are
expected to exercise their right to counsel by calling another lawyer or the
police duty to hold off will be suspended: R. v. Ross, [1989] 1 S.C.R.
3; and Black. As Lamer J. emphasized in Ross, diligence must
also accompany a detainee’s exercise of the right to counsel of choice, at pp.
10-11:
Although
an accused or detained person has the right to choose counsel, it must be noted
that, as this Court said in R. v. Tremblay, [1987] 2 S.C.R. 435, a
detainee must be reasonably diligent in the exercise of these rights and if he
is not, the correlative duties imposed on the police and set out in Manninen
are suspended. Reasonable diligence in the exercise of the right to choose
one’s counsel depends upon the context facing the accused or detained person.
On being arrested, for example, the detained person is faced with an immediate
need for legal advice and must exercise reasonable diligence accordingly. By
contrast, when seeking the best lawyer to conduct a trial, the accused person
faces no such immediacy. Nevertheless, accused or detained persons have a
right to choose their counsel and it is only if the lawyer chosen cannot be
available within a reasonable time that the detainee or the accused should be
expected to exercise the right to counsel by calling another lawyer.
[36] Bearing
these principles in mind, we turn to the resolution of the issue raised on this
appeal.
C. Did Mr. Willier Suffer a Breach of His
Section 10(b) Right to Counsel?
[37] Mr.
Willier claims that the police violated the Charter by failing to
provide him with a reasonable opportunity to consult his counsel of choice.
Echoing the findings on voir dire, he argues that s. 10 (b)
mandates the extension of a Prosper-type warning to circumstances where
detainees are unsuccessful in contacting their counsel of choice and opt to
contact another. Uninformed of his right to a reasonable opportunity to
consult counsel of choice, and of the police obligation to refrain from
questioning him until he was afforded that opportunity, he was unable to
validly waive that right before speaking with duty counsel and ultimately
providing a statement to the police during questioning (A.F., at para. 51).
Mr. Willier also asserts that his consultations with duty counsel, given their
brevity, were insufficient to provide him a meaningful exercise of his right to
counsel and thus satisfy his s. 10 (b) entitlement.
[38] The
circumstances prompting this Court to articulate the additional informational
duty in Prosper are fundamentally different from those in the case at
hand. As noted above, a Prosper warning is warranted in circumstances
where a detainee is diligent but unsuccessful in contacting a lawyer and
subsequently declines any opportunity to consult with counsel. Section
10(b)’s provision of a reasonable opportunity to consult with counsel is
a fundamental guarantee aimed at mitigating a detainee’s legal vulnerability
while under state control. It affords detainees the chance to access
information relevant to their self-incrimination and liberty interests: Bartle.
The Prosper warning ensures that detainees are aware that their right to
counsel is not exhausted by their unsuccessful attempts to contact a lawyer.
This additional informational safeguard is warranted when a detainee indicates
an intent to forego s. 10(b)’s protections in their entirety, ensuring
that any choice to do so is fully informed. In Prosper, the detainee
ceded any opportunity to mitigate his legal disadvantage and benefit from the
protections afforded by s. 10(b), triggering the additional
informational warning.
[39] The
circumstances of this case are not analogous. The concerns animating the
provision of a Prosper warning do not arise when a detainee is
unsuccessful in contacting a specific lawyer and simply opts to speak with
another. In no way did Mr. Willier attempt to relinquish his right to
counsel and thus any opportunity to mitigate his legal disadvantage. He made
no attempt to waive his s. 10(b) right. Instead, unsuccessful in
contacting Mr. Royal, he exercised his right to counsel by opting to speak with
Legal Aid. As such, the police were under no obligation to provide him with a Prosper
warning, and its absence fails to establish a Charter breach.
[40] We are
also unable to agree with Mr. Willier’s claim that his consultations with duty
counsel were insufficient to satisfy his right to a reasonable opportunity to
contact counsel under s. 10(b), as they did not amount to a meaningful
exercise of that right. Echoing the trial judge’s finding on voir dire,
he asserts that the inadequacy of his two consultations with Legal Aid is to be
inferred from their brevity, and thus that they were insufficient to suspend
the police duty to hold off in their questioning. Effectively, his argument
implies that the police must ensure that a detainee’s legal advice meets a
particular qualitative standard before they are entitled to commence with an
investigative interview.
[41] While
s. 10(b) requires the police to afford a detainee a reasonable
opportunity to contact counsel and to facilitate that contact, it does not
require them to monitor the quality of the advice once contact is made. The
solicitor-client relationship is one of confidence, premised upon privileged
communication. Respect for the integrity of this relationship makes it
untenable for the police to be responsible, as arbiters, for monitoring the
quality of legal advice received by a detainee. To impose such a duty on the
police would be incompatible with the privileged nature of the relationship.
The police cannot be required to mandate a particular qualitative standard of
advice, nor are they entitled to inquire into the content of the advice
provided. Further, even if such a duty were warranted, the applicable standard
of adequacy is unclear. As this Court recognized in R. v. G.D.B., 2000
SCC 22, [2000] 1 S.C.R. 520, at para. 27, there is a “wide range of reasonable
professional assistance”, and as such what is considered reasonable, sufficient,
or adequate advice is ill defined and highly variable.
[42] As
noted, s. 10 (b) aims to ensure detainees the opportunity to be informed
of their rights and obligations, and how to exercise them. However, unless a
detainee indicates, diligently and reasonably, that the advice he or she
received is inadequate, the police may assume that the detainee is satisfied
with the exercised right to counsel and are entitled to commence an
investigative interview. In this case, despite the brevity of Mr. Willier’s conversations
with Legal Aid, Mr. Willier gave no indication that these consultations were
inadequate. Quite the contrary, he expressed his satisfaction with the legal
advice to the interviewing officer, prior to questioning. Mr. Willier is not
entitled to express such satisfaction, remain silent in the face of offers from
the police for further contact with counsel, remain silent in the voir dire
as to the alleged inadequacies of the actual legal advice received, and then
seek a finding that the advice was inadequate because of its brevity. A s. 10 (b)
Charter breach cannot be founded upon an assertion of the inadequacy of
Mr. Willier’s legal advice.
[43] Considering
the circumstances of this case as a whole, the majority of the Court of Appeal
correctly found that Mr. Willier did not suffer a violation of his s. 10 (b)
right to counsel. In no way did the police interfere with Mr. Willier’s right
to a reasonable opportunity to consult with counsel of choice by simply
reminding him of the immediate availability of free Legal Aid after his
unsuccessful attempt to call Mr. Royal. When Mr. Willier stated his preference
to wait, Cst. Lahaie reasonably informed him that it was unlikely that Mr.
Royal would be quick to return his call given that it was a Sunday, and
reminded him of the immediate availability of duty counsel. Mr. Willier was
not told that he could not wait to hear back from Mr. Royal, or that Legal Aid
was his only recourse. There is no indication that his choice to call duty
counsel was the product of coercion. The police had an informational duty to
ensure that Mr. Willier was aware of the availability of Legal Aid, and
compliance with that duty did not interfere with his right to a reasonable
opportunity to contact counsel of choice. Mr. Willier was properly presented
with another route by which to obtain legal advice, an option he voluntarily
chose to exercise.
[44] Further,
the brief interval between Mr. Willier’s attempt to contact Mr. Royal and the
start of the investigative interview did not deprive him of a reasonable
opportunity to contact counsel of choice. The brevity of the interval must be
viewed in light of all the circumstances prior to the commencement of the
interview. After speaking with Legal Aid, Mr. Willier expressed satisfaction
with that advice prior to being questioned. He did not pursue any further
opportunity to contact Mr. Royal, though he was offered an open‑ended
invitation to contact counsel prior to and throughout the interview. If Mr.
Willier maintained any continuing desire to speak with Mr. Royal, or wait
for him to call back, he was not diligent in exercising that right. There is
little more that the police could have done in these circumstances to afford
Mr. Willier a reasonable opportunity to exercise his rights under s. 10 (b).
There was therefore no violation of Mr. Willier’s right to counsel.
V. Disposition
[45]
For these reasons, the appeal is dismissed.
The following are the reasons delivered by
[46] Binnie J. — Subject to the disagreement
I expressed in R. v. Sinclair, 2010 SCC 35, [2010] 2 S.C.R. 310, with
regard to the majority’s interpretation of s. 10 (b) of the Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms , I agree with the Chief Justice and Charron
J. that with respect to the lawyer of choice aspect of the right to counsel
“[i]f the chosen lawyer cannot be available within a reasonable period of time,
detainees are expected to exercise their right to counsel by calling another
lawyer or the police duty to hold off will be suspended” (para. 35). The
situation here is not comparable to Sinclair. As my colleagues note
“[a]fter speaking with Legal Aid, Mr. Willier expressed satisfaction with that
advice prior to being questioned. He did not pursue any further opportunity to
contact [his lawyer of choice], though he was offered an open-ended invitation
to contact counsel prior to and throughout the interview” (para. 44).
[47] I
would therefore join in dismissing the appeal.
The reasons of LeBel, Fish and Abella JJ. were delivered by
[48] LeBel and Fish JJ. — In this case,
subject to our reasons in R. v. Sinclair, 2010 SCC 35, [2010] 2 S.C.R.
310, and R. v. McCrimmon, 2010 SCC 36, [2010] 2 S.C.R. 402, we agree
that the appeal should be dismissed. On the facts, it appears that the
appellant was given ample opportunity to exercise the rights in s. 10 (b)
of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms that he was claiming, but
he failed to exercise them with diligence.
Appeal dismissed.
Solicitors for the appellant: Dawson Stevens
& Shaigec, Edmonton.
Solicitor for the respondent: Attorney General
of Alberta, Calgary.
Solicitor for the intervener the Director of Public
Prosecutions of Canada: Public Prosecution Service of Canada,
Winnipeg.
Solicitor for the intervener the Attorney General of
Ontario: Attorney General of Ontario, Toronto.
Solicitor for the intervener the Attorney General of
British Columbia: Attorney General of British Columbia, Victoria.
Solicitors for the intervener the Criminal Lawyers’
Association of Ontario: Schreck & Greene, Toronto.
Solicitors for the intervener the British Columbia Civil
Liberties Association: McCarthy Tétrault, Vancouver.
Solicitors for the intervener the Canadian Civil Liberties
Association: McCarthy Tétrault, Toronto.