SUPREME
COURT OF CANADA
Between:
Marcel
Godin
Appellant
and
Her
Majesty The Queen
Respondent
Coram: McLachlin
C.J. and Binnie, Deschamps, Abella, Charron, Rothstein and Cromwell JJ.
Reasons
for Judgment:
(paras. 1 to 42)
|
Cromwell J.
(McLachlin C.J. and Binnie, Deschamps, Abella, Charron and Rothstein JJ.
concurring)
|
______________________________
R. v. Godin, 2009 SCC 26, [2009] 2 S.C.R. 3
Marcel Godin Appellant
v.
Her Majesty The Queen Respondent
Indexed as: R. v. Godin
Neutral citation: 2009 SCC 26.
File No.: 32740.
2009: February 12; 2009: June 4.
Present: McLachlin C.J. and Binnie, Deschamps,
Abella, Charron, Rothstein and Cromwell JJ.
on appeal from the court of appeal
for ontario
Constitutional law — Charter of Rights — Right to be
tried within reasonable time — Thirty‑month delay between date accused
charged and date set for trial — Straightforward criminal case — Whether
accused’s right to be tried within reasonable time violated — Canadian Charter
of Rights and Freedoms, s. 11 (b).
In May 2005, the accused was charged with sexual
assault, unlawful confinement, and threatening to kill his ex‑girlfriend.
The Crown elected to proceed summarily. In mid‑September, the trial
dates were fixed for mid‑February 2006. Four days before the trial,
the Crown received the forensic report indicating that the DNA profile of the
spermatozoa swab obtained from the complainant did not match the accused. In
response to this new evidence, the Crown and defence agreed that the Crown
would re‑elect to proceed by indictment in order to give the defence the
opportunity to explore the complainant’s evidence and the forensic report at a
preliminary inquiry. The earliest day available was September 2006.
Defence counsel wrote to the court and the Crown proposing several earlier
alternative dates on which he would be available. The Crown did not respond.
The September preliminary inquiry was adjourned for want of sufficient court time.
It was re‑scheduled to February 5, 2007 because defence counsel
was unavailable at a December date proposed by the Crown. The trial was set
for November 2007, 30 months after the charges were laid. In
June 2007, the accused successfully brought an application for a stay of
proceedings on the ground that his right to be tried within a reasonable time
guaranteed by s. 11 (b) of the Canadian Charter of Rights and
Freedoms was violated. The majority of the Court of Appeal set aside the
stay and remitted the matter to trial, holding that the trial judge had erred
in his analysis of the conduct of the defence and of prejudice to the accused.
Held: The appeal should
be allowed. The accused’s s. 11 (b) right was violated.
Although this was a straightforward case with few
complexities and requiring very modest amounts of court time, the delays far
exceeded the Morin guidelines. Virtually all of the delay, in
particular the nine‑month delay in obtaining and disclosing the forensic
analysis and the delay resulting from the adjournment of the preliminary
inquiry, was attributable to the Crown. These delays were unexplained, let
alone justified. Furthermore, defence counsel tried unsuccessfully to move the
case ahead faster; the Crown, however, failed to explain why his request for an
earlier date for the preliminary inquiry was ignored and why more priority was
not given to this case which, by then, was in obvious s. 11 (b)
difficulty. [2] [4‑6] [13‑14]
Defence counsel did not significantly contribute to the
delays. Although the defence agreed to the Crown re‑election, had the
Crown obtained the forensic evidence within a reasonable amount of time, the re‑election
to proceed by indictment and the subsequent preliminary inquiry could have
happened much sooner. The accused was entitled to timely disclosure, and he
did not receive it. There is also no suggestion that defence counsel was
unreasonable in rejecting the earliest date offered to reschedule the
preliminary inquiry. While scheduling requires reasonable availability and
reasonable cooperation, it does not require defence counsel to hold themselves
in a state of perpetual availability for s. 11 (b) purposes. [20]
[23]
In the absence of specific evidence of prejudice to the
accused’s liberty and security interests or his interest in a fair trial,
prejudice may be inferred from the length of the delay. The longer the delay
the more likely that such an inference will be drawn. Here, the charges had
been hanging over the accused’s head for a long time and it was reasonable to
infer, as the trial judge did, that the prolonged exposure to criminal
proceedings resulting from the delay gave rise to some prejudice. The accused
had also been on judicial interim release for more than two years and, although
bail conditions were relaxed as the delay lengthened, this consideration was
properly taken into account as one relevant aspect of the trial judge’s
assessment of whether the long delay was unreasonable. Lastly, there was
evidence of a risk of prejudice to the accused’s defence because of the delay
and weight should be accorded to this risk. [31‑32] [34‑35]
Cases Cited
Applied: R.
v. Morin, [1992] 1 S.C.R. 771; R. v. Askov, [1990] 2 S.C.R. 1199.
Statutes and Regulations Cited
Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms, s. 11 (b).
APPEAL from a judgment of the Ontario Court of Appeal
(MacPherson and Cronk JJ.A. and Glithero R.S.J. (ad hoc)), 2008 ONCA
466, 237 O.A.C. 324, 173 C.R.R. (2d) 209, [2008] O.J. No. 2316 (QL), 2008
CarswellOnt 3457, setting aside the stay of proceedings ordered by Gordon J.,
2007 CarswellOnt 5364. Appeal allowed.
Mark C. Halfyard,
for the appellant.
Alexander Alvaro,
for the respondent.
The judgment of the Court was delivered by
Cromwell J. —
I. Introduction
[1]
This appeal concerns the right to be tried within a reasonable time as
guaranteed by s. 11 (b) of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms .
The trial judge stayed the prosecution for unreasonable delay, but the majority
of the Court of Appeal set aside that decision. The appeal comes to the Court
as of right by virtue of the dissent in the Court of Appeal.
[2]
For the reasons that follow, I would allow the appeal and restore the
stay of proceedings entered by the trial judge. This is a straightforward case
and needed only modest amounts of court time, yet the delays far exceeded the
guidelines set out by the Court in R. v. Morin, [1992] 1 S.C.R. 771.
Virtually all of this delay was attributable to the Crown, and no explanation
was offered for it. There was some evidence of prejudice to the appellant and,
when defence counsel tried to get earlier dates, his correspondence was
ignored. In the result, what had started out as a summary conviction
prosecution had not yet gone to trial more than two years later. In all of the
circumstances, the trial judge in my respectful view was correct to conclude
that this delay was unreasonable.
II. Overview
of the Facts
[3]
In May of 2005, the appellant was charged with sexual assault, unlawful
confinement, and threatening to kill his ex‑girlfriend. The Crown
elected to proceed with these charges summarily. In mid-September, the trial
dates were fixed for three days in mid-February of 2006, some nine months after
the appellant was charged. That delay would not have been unreasonable had the
case proceeded as scheduled. Unfortunately, it did not.
[4]
Three critical elements contributed to the delays which beset this case:
a long delay in obtaining, and therefore in disclosing, potentially important
forensic evidence; failure to acknowledge or respond to defence counsel’s
effort to obtain earlier dates; and the need to adjourn the long-delayed
preliminary inquiry because there was not sufficient court time for it to
proceed on the date set. The result was that a one-day preliminary inquiry was
not completed until 21 months after the charges had been laid.
[5]
Before reviewing the facts in more detail, it will be helpful to place
them in the context of the guidelines set out in Morin. Those
guidelines refer to periods of 8 to 10 months for institutional delay in the
provincial courts and of 6 to 8 months from committal to trial, for a total
guideline period of between 14 and 18 months. It is clear that these
guidelines were substantially exceeded in this case. That, on its own, does
not make the delay unreasonable. The difficulty in this case, in my view,
arises from the considerable delay coupled with three additional facts: (1) the
case is a straightforward one with few complexities and requiring very modest
amounts of court time; (2) virtually all of the delay is attributable to the
Crown and is unexplained, let alone justified; and (3) defence counsel
attempted, unsuccessfully, to move the case ahead faster.
(I) The
Late Disclosure
[6]
A vaginal swab was taken from the complainant the day after the alleged
offences were committed, in May of 2005. However, it was not until nearly
nine months later and only four days before the trial was scheduled to begin in
mid-February of 2006 that the Crown received a report from the Centre for
Forensic Sciences (“CFS”) setting out the results of its DNA analysis. No
explanation has been advanced at any point in these proceedings for the
nine-month delay in obtaining and disclosing this analysis.
[7]
The Crown, very properly, promptly disclosed this information to the
defence. But given its potential importance and the proximity of the trial
dates, it was agreed that the trial could not proceed as scheduled. It will be
helpful to explain why the evidence was potentially important in the context of
the case against the appellant.
[8]
The complainant’s allegations are as follows. When she left her
workplace late on the evening of May 8, 2005, she was surprised to find the
appellant, her ex-boyfriend, awaiting her in his car in the parking lot. He
convinced her to get into the car but became threatening and violent after she
did. The inside door handle of the car was not working, preventing her from
leaving the vehicle. The appellant started to drive, hitting the complainant
on the head and choking her as he did so. He stopped the car. When she
refused to perform oral sex, he forcibly removed her clothing and sexually
assaulted her, including forced vaginal penetration. After threatening her and
her loved ones with death should she tell the police, the appellant drove her
back to her workplace.
[9]
The record discloses that the next day, the complainant went to the hospital
and was examined and interviewed. The examination did not produce any physical
evidence corroborating the complainant’s allegations that she had been hit on
the head and choked. Before taking a semen swab, the nurse asked the
complainant a series of questions and filled out a questionnaire. In response
to a question about the “date and time of last previous intercourse”, the
complainant’s response was “three days prior to [the] assault”.
[10] The
CFS forensic analysis concluded that the DNA profile of the semen obtained from
the medical examination of the complainant did not match the appellant. She
testified at the preliminary inquiry that if the semen did not match the
appellant’s DNA, then the source of the semen must have been her boyfriend. She
could not recall when they last had intercourse before the assault but knew
that they had not had intercourse between the time of the assault and the
taking of the swabs. According to the CFS reports, the semen had been present
for at most 24 hours before the sample was taken. Thus, this forensic evidence
could be important to the defence because it was potentially inconsistent with
the complainant’s statement at the hospital that she had not had intercourse
for three days before the alleged assault.
[11] Given
the possible inconsistencies between the complainant’s statement and the
forensic evidence, the Crown quite properly did not question the potential
importance of the evidence or attempt to force the trial on notwithstanding its
last-minute disclosure. There is no suggestion that Crown counsel delayed
disclosure or was otherwise at fault for this delay. Nevertheless, the
resulting delay is attributable to the Crown. It is responsible for bringing
an accused person to trial and for the provision of facilities and staff to see
that accused persons are tried in a reasonable time: R. v. Askov,
[1990] 2 S.C.R. 1199, at p. 1225. The Crown bears the burden of explaining
unusual delays caused by the forensic investigators. It offers no explanation
in this case.
(ii) Preliminary
Inquiry
[12] In
response to this new evidence, Crown and defence agreed that the Crown would
re-elect to proceed by indictment in order to give the defence the opportunity
to explore the complainant’s evidence and the CFS report at a preliminary
inquiry. The result, however, was that the proceedings were substantially
delayed. Even though only one day was required for the preliminary inquiry (as
opposed to the three days which had been originally set for trial), the court
in February of 2006 could not offer a date earlier than the following
September, a period of about 7 months.
[13] The
defence was concerned about the delay. The charges had been laid in May of
2005. With the preliminary inquiry fixed for September of 2006, the appellant
was facing a delay of 16 months for a one-day preliminary inquiry. In late
February, a few days after the September 2006 hearing had been set, defence
counsel wrote to the court and the Crown requesting an earlier date. Defence
counsel proposed 31 alternative dates on which he would be available. He
received no response to this request. The Crown has given no explanation for
why this request to expedite the matter was ignored.
(iii) The
Preliminary Inquiry Does Not Proceed
[14] On the
scheduled date for the preliminary inquiry (September 15, 2006), the case was
nearly 16 months old and therefore substantially outside the Morin
guidelines. Unfortunately, the preliminary inquiry could not proceed as
scheduled. The case was not reached until well into the afternoon as a result
of other matters on the court’s docket. Insufficient court time remained to
proceed with the preliminary inquiry and it had to be postponed. Eventually,
the preliminary inquiry was held on February 5, 2007, roughly 21 months after
the charges had been laid. This period is more than double the Morin
guideline for institutional delay in the provincial courts. No explanation has
been offered about why more priority was not given to dealing with this matter
which by then was in obvious s. 11 (b) difficulty.
[15] Following
committal in February of 2007, trial was set in Superior Court for November
2007, roughly 30 months from the laying of the charges. The trial judge stayed
the proceedings for unreasonable delay in June of 2007.
[16] To sum
up: this was a straightforward case requiring only modest amounts of court
time; the delays substantially exceeded the Morin guidelines; virtually
all of the delays are attributable to the Crown and virtually none of them to
the appellant; and the Crown offered no explanation of the three critical
elements that accounted for most of the delay which is attributable to it.
III. Analysis
[17] The
majority of the Court of Appeal set aside the trial judge’s stay of proceedings
on two main bases. It held that the trial judge had erred in his analysis of
the conduct of the defence and of prejudice to the accused: 2008 ONCA 466, 173
C.R.R. (2d) 209. Respectfully, my view is that the majority of the Court of Appeal
erred in these respects and there is, therefore, no basis to set aside the
trial judge’s finding that the delay was unreasonable.
[18] The
legal framework for the appeal was set out by the Court in Morin, at pp.
786-89. Whether delay has been unreasonable is assessed by looking at the
length of the delay, less any periods that have been waived by the defence, and
then by taking into account the reasons for the delay, the prejudice to the
accused, and the interests that s. 11 (b) seeks to protect. This often
and inevitably leads to minute examination of particular time periods and a
host of factual questions concerning why certain delays occurred. It is
important, however, not to lose sight of the forest for the trees while
engaging in this detailed analysis. As Sopinka J. noted in Morin, at p.
787, “[t]he general approach . . . is not by the application of a mathematical
or administrative formula but rather by a judicial determination balancing the
interests which [s. 11 (b)] is designed to protect against factors which
either inevitably lead to delay or are otherwise the cause of delay.”
(I) Conduct
of the Defence
[19] Three
aspects of the conduct of the defence are relevant here. The first concerns
the agreement to have the Crown re-elect to proceed by indictment in order to
permit a preliminary inquiry to be held. The second relates to the impact of
defence counsel’s unavailability on the attribution of responsibility for
delay. The third arises from the fact that defence counsel on occasion
appeared by agent and had to seek a brief adjournment of the ultimate trial
date because of a scheduling conflict.
a. Crown Re-election
[20] The
majority of the Court of Appeal found defence counsel’s consent to the Crown
re-election and the fact that the resulting preliminary inquiry “enured
significantly to the [appellant’s] benefit” pointed against counting the
resulting delay as unreasonable (MacPherson J.A., at para. 38). I respectfully
disagree. Had the Crown obtained the forensic evidence within a reasonable
amount of time, the re-election and preliminary inquiry could have happened
much sooner. It may well have been beneficial to the appellant to have a
preliminary inquiry. But, respectfully, that is not the point. The appellant
was entitled to timely disclosure, he did not receive it, and no explanation
for the failure to provide it has been advanced. I do not see anything in this
which undercuts the appellant’s position that this delay was unreasonable.
b. Available Dates
[21] The
majority in the Court of Appeal found defence counsel responsible for about a
month and one-half of delay because he was not available for the first offered
date for the rescheduled preliminary inquiry. With respect, I agree with Glithero
R.S.J. (ad hoc), dissenting in the Court of Appeal, that this placed too
great a responsibility on defence counsel in the circumstances of this case.
[22] The
earliest date offered to the defence to reschedule the
preliminary inquiry was December 22, 2006, over three months from the original
September date. Defence counsel was unavailable on that date. The record does
not reveal the earliest date offered by the defence to the Crown and court.
The preliminary inquiry was ultimately set for February 5, 2007, one and a half
months after the earliest proffered date and nearly a year after the originally
scheduled trial date. The trial judge found that the first three months of
this period of delay were attributable to the Crown. He also noted that even
if the additional one and a half months of delay were attributed to the
defence, because that period of delay could have been avoided by the defence
had it accepted the earliest offered date, there had still been a delay of 10
months in conducting the preliminary inquiry.
[23] The
majority of the Court of Appeal took this as a finding by the trial judge, with
which it agreed, that the defence had waived this one and a half month period.
Respectfully, I do not agree that the trial judge ruled in this way and I do
not agree that it would have been correct to do so. Like Glithero R.S.J., I do
not read the trial judge’s reasons as accepting the proposition that this
period should be attributed to the defence. Rather, the trial judge simply
recognized the argument and said that even if it were accepted, the delay was
still excessive. Moreover, I respectfully disagree that this period of delay
should be treated as waived by the defence in the circumstance of this case.
Scheduling requires reasonable availability and reasonable cooperation; it does
not, for s. 11 (b) purposes, require defence counsel to hold themselves
in a state of perpetual availability. Here, there is no suggestion that
defence counsel was unreasonable in rejecting the earlier date. Indeed, his
prior conduct in seeking earlier dates for the preliminary inquiry — efforts
which were ignored — suggests that he wished to proceed expeditiously. I
respectfully agree with Glithero R.S.J., dissenting in the Court of Appeal, at
para. 53, that: “To hold that the delay clock stops as soon as a single
available date is offered to the defence and not accepted, in circumstances
where the Crown is responsible for the case having to be rescheduled, is not
reasonable.”
c. Other Matters
[24] It is
worth noting briefly that the Court of Appeal mentions two additional periods
of delay which, by virtue of defence counsel’s conduct, in its view weighed
strongly against the appellant’s claim of unreasonable delay.
[25] The
periods in question book-ended the proceedings. The first period involved two
hearings in June of 2005 which were held in order to schedule the judicial
pre-trial. In both cases, defence counsel was represented by an agent, and the
appellant did not appear. The Provincial Court was nevertheless able, at the
second hearing, to schedule the pre-trial. The other “book-end” highlighted by
the Court of Appeal occurred during defence counsel’s submission at the hearing
of the s. 11 (b) Charter application on June 20, 2007. At
the outset of the hearing, defence counsel notified the court that he had
inadvertently scheduled the November trial in this case for dates on which he
was already committed to be at a trial on Manitoulin Island. He asked the
court to adjourn the trial for one additional month. The Court of Appeal found
this troubling — defence counsel was arguing that the proceedings had already
gone on for too long, but was at the same time asking for a further
adjournment.
[26] I
respectfully disagree that these two “book end” events should weigh against the
appellant’s claim of unreasonable delay. The first had no appreciable impact
on the progress of the matter and the second, while perhaps ironic, is
irrelevant. By the time that scheduling conflict arose, the case had already,
as the trial judge found, been unreasonably delayed.
[27] It
should be remembered that the only person who appears to have made any effort
to move this matter ahead more quickly was defence counsel. He complained
about the long delay to the first date set for the preliminary inquiry and
provided 31 earlier dates on which he was available. As counsel for the
appellant put it during oral argument, this effort was met by “radio silence”.
[28] In
summary, I respectfully disagree with the majority of the Court of Appeal that
there is anything in the conduct of the defence which undercuts the appellant’s
claim of unreasonable delay.
(ii) Prejudice
[29] The
Court of Appeal disagreed with the trial judge’s analysis of prejudice and
found that any prejudice to the accused’s interest in a fair trial was too
speculative to be considered. Partly on this basis, the Court of Appeal found
that the delay was not unreasonable. I respectfully disagree. In light of the
length of the delay, of the Crown’s failure to explain the multiple delays
adequately, and of the prejudice to the accused’s liberty and security
interests — if not also to his interest in a fair trial — the delay in this
case was unreasonable.
[30] Prejudice
in this context is concerned with the three interests of the accused that s.
11 (b) protects: liberty, as regards to pre-trial custody or bail
conditions; security of the person, in the sense of being free from the stress
and cloud of suspicion that accompanies a criminal charge; and the right to
make full answer and defence, insofar as delay can prejudice the ability of the
defendant to lead evidence, cross-examine witnesses, or otherwise to raise a
defence. See Morin, at pp. 801-3.
[31] The
question of prejudice cannot be considered separately from the length of the
delay. As Sopinka J. wrote in Morin, at p. 801, even in the absence of
specific evidence of prejudice, “prejudice may be inferred from the length of
the delay. The longer the delay the more likely that such an inference will be
drawn.” Here, the delay exceeded the ordinary guidelines by a year or more,
even though the case was straightforward. Furthermore, there was some
evidence of actual prejudice and a reasonable inference of a risk of prejudice.
[32] This
approach was reflected in the trial judge’s reasons, where he wrote that the
delay in this case was “well beyond any reasonable interpretation of the [Morin]
guidelines” (2007 CarswellOnt 5364, at para. 20) and that the appellant had
suffered prejudice as a result. The judge referred specifically to the fact
that the charges had been hanging over the appellant’s head for a long time and
that he was subject to “fairly strict” bail conditions (para. 22).
[33] The
Court of Appeal disagreed with the sequence in which the trial judge addressed
the issue of prejudice, noting that the trial judge only turned to his
consideration of prejudice after he had already concluded that s. 11 (b)
had been infringed. Respectfully, I cannot accept that the trial judge erred
in this regard. It is in my respectful view clear from reading the judge’s
reasons as a whole that he considered the relevant factors.
[34] The
majority of the Court Appeal acknowledged that these charges had been hanging
over the appellant’s head for a long time. It was reasonable, in my view, to
infer as the trial judge did that the prolonged exposure to criminal
proceedings resulting from the delay gave rise to some prejudice. The majority
of the Court of Appeal appears to have given no weight to this consideration.
The majority of the Court of Appeal also disagreed with the trial judge’s
findings relating to prejudice flowing from restrictive bail conditions. The
appellant had been on judicial interim release for more than two years. It is
true that his bail conditions were relaxed as the delay lengthened, but the
trial judge did not err in the circumstances of this case by taking this
consideration into account as one aspect relevant to his overall assessment of
whether the long delay was unreasonable.
[35] The
majority of the Court of Appeal rejected as speculative the appellant’s
contention that his ability to make full answer and defence had been
prejudiced. There was evidence, however, that there was a risk of prejudice to
his defence because of the delay. In my respectful view, the majority of the
Court of Appeal erred by failing to accord any weight to this risk of
prejudice.
[36] The
nature of the risk to the appellant’s ability to make full answer and defence
was well set out by Glithero R.S.J., dissenting in the Court of Appeal, at
paras. 69-74. He noted that the case was likely to turn on credibility and, in
particular, on cross-examination of the complainant and her boyfriend in light
of the DNA test results and prior statements. The dissenting judge concluded
that the extra passage of time made it more likely that the ability of the
appellant to cross-examine effectively had been diminished.
[37] It is
difficult to assess the risk of prejudice to the appellant’s ability to make
full answer and defence, but it is also important to bear in mind that the risk
arises from delay to which the appellant made virtually no contribution.
Missing from the analysis of the majority of the Court of Appeal, in my
respectful view, is an adequate appreciation of the length of the delay in
getting this relatively straightforward case to trial. As noted already,
prejudice may be inferred from the length of the delay.
[38] Moreover,
it does not follow from a conclusion that there is an unquantifiable risk of
prejudice to the appellant’s ability to make full answer and defence that the
overall delay in this case was constitutionally reasonable. Proof of actual
prejudice to the right to make full answer and defence is not invariably
required to establish a s. 11 (b) violation. This is only one of three
varieties of prejudice, all of which must be considered together with the
length of the delay and the explanations for why it occurred.
IV. Conclusion
[39] This
was not a complex case. A delay of 30 months in bringing it to trial is
striking, given that the delay was virtually entirely attributable to the Crown
or institutional delay and was largely unexplained. Critical evidence was
disclosed some nine months after the tests which produced it, the appellant’s
request for earlier dates was ignored, and when the case was clearly in s. 11 (b)
trouble, the matter was not proceeded with on the date set for the long-awaited
preliminary hearing. The length of the delay and the evidence supported the
trial judge’s inference that some prejudice to the appellant resulted from the
delay.
[40] As
McLachlin J. (as she then was) put it in her concurring reasons in Morin,
at p. 810, “[w]hen trials are delayed, justice may be denied. Witnesses
forget, witnesses disappear. The quality of evidence may deteriorate. Accused
persons may find their liberty and security limited much longer than necessary
or justifiable. Such delays are of consequence not only to the accused, but
may affect the public interest in the prompt and fair administration of
justice.”
[41] Of
course, there is a strong societal interest in having serious charges tried on
their merits. However, the progress of this case was delayed to such a degree
that the appellant’s constitutional right to be tried within a reasonable time
was violated. In my respectful opinion, the Court of Appeal erred in reversing
the trial judge’s conclusion to that effect.
[42] I
would allow the appeal and restore the order of the trial judge.
Appeal allowed.
Solicitors for the appellant: Pinkofskys, Toronto.
Solicitor for the respondent: Attorney General of Ontario,
Toronto.