SUPREME
COURT OF CANADA
Between:
Her
Majesty The Queen
Appellant
v.
Toronto
Star Newspapers Ltd., Canadian Broadcasting
Corporation
and Sun Media Corporation
Respondents
‑ and ‑
Canadian
Association of Journalists
Intervener
Coram:
McLachlin C.J. and Major, Bastarache, Binnie, LeBel, Deschamps, Fish, Abella
and Charron JJ.
Reasons for
Judgment:
(paras. 1 to 43)
|
Fish J. (McLachlin C.J. and
Major, Bastarache, Binnie, LeBel, Deschamps, Abella and Charron JJ.
concurring)
|
______________________________
Toronto Star Newspapers Ltd. v. Ontario, [2005] 2
S.C.R. 188, 2005 SCC 41
Her Majesty The Queen Appellant
v.
Toronto Star Newspapers Ltd., Canadian Broadcasting
Corporation and Sun Media Corporation Respondents
and
Canadian Association of Journalists Intervener
Indexed as: Toronto Star Newspapers Ltd. v.
Ontario
Neutral citation: 2005 SCC 41.
File No.: 30113.
2005: February 9; 2005: June 29.
Present: McLachlin C.J. and Major, Bastarache, Binnie,
LeBel, Deschamps, Fish, Abella and Charron JJ.
on appeal from the court of appeal for ontario
Constitutional law — Charter of Rights — Freedom of
expression — Freedom of the press — Dagenais/Mentuck test — Search warrants —
Crown requesting order sealing warrants and informations used to obtain
warrants — Whether Dagenais/Mentuck test applicable to all discretionary court
orders that limit freedom of expression and freedom of the press in relation to
legal proceedings.
Criminal law — Provincial offences — Search
warrants — Sealing orders — Open court principle — Protection of confidential
informant — Crown requesting order sealing warrants and informations used to
obtain warrants — Whether Dagenais/Mentuck test applicable to sealing orders
concerning search warrants and informations upon which issuance of warrants was
judicially authorized — Whether Dagenais/Mentuck test applicable at pre‑charge
or “investigative stage” of criminal proceedings.
Search warrants relating to alleged violations of
provincial legislation were issued. The Crown brought an ex parte application
for an order sealing the search warrants, the informations used to obtain the
warrants and related documents, claiming that public disclosure of the material
could identify a confidential informant and could interfere with the ongoing
criminal investigation. A court order directed that the warrants and
informations be sealed. Various media outlets brought a motion for certiorari
and mandamus in the Superior Court, which quashed the sealing order and
ordered that the documents be made public except to the extent that the
contents of the informations could disclose the identity of a confidential
informant. Applying the Dagenais/Mentuck test, the Court of Appeal
affirmed the decision to quash the sealing order but edited materials more
extensively to protect informant’s identity.
Held: The appeal
should be dismissed.
The Dagenais/Mentuck test applies to all
discretionary court orders that limit freedom of expression and freedom of the
press in relation to legal proceedings, including orders to seal search warrant
materials made upon application by the Crown. Court proceedings are
presumptively “open” in Canada and public access will be barred only when the
appropriate court, in the exercise of its discretion, concludes that disclosure
would subvert the ends of justice or unduly impair its proper administration.
Though applicable at every stage of the judicial process, the Dagenais/Mentuck
test must be applied in a flexible and contextual manner, and regard must be
had to the circumstances in which a sealing order is sought by the Crown, or by
others with a real and demonstrated interest in delaying public disclosure.
[4] [7-8] [30-31]
Here, the Crown has not demonstrated that the flexible
Dagenais/Mentuck test as applied to search warrant materials is
unworkable in practice, nor has it shown that the Court of Appeal failed to
adopt a “contextual” approach. The evidence brought by the Crown in support of
its application to delay access amounted to a generalized assertion of possible
disadvantage to an ongoing investigation. A party seeking to limit public
access to legal proceedings must rely on more than a generalized assertion that
publicity could compromise investigative efficacy. The party must, at the
very least, allege a serious and specific risk to the integrity of the criminal
investigation. The Crown has not discharged its burden in this case. [9-10]
[34-35] [39]
Cases Cited
Applied: Dagenais
v. Canadian Broadcasting Corp., [1994] 3 S.C.R.
835; R. v. Mentuck, [2001] 3 S.C.R. 442, 2001 SCC 76; referred to:
Attorney General of Nova Scotia v. MacIntyre, [1982] 1 S.C.R. 175; Vancouver
Sun (Re), [2004] 2 S.C.R. 332, 2004 SCC 43; National Post Co. v. Ontario
(2003), 176 C.C.C. (3d) 432; R. v. Eurocopter Canada Ltd., [2001] O.J.
No. 1591 (QL); Flahiff v. Bonin, [1998] R.J.Q. 327; Toronto Star
Newspapers Ltd. v. Ontario, [2000] O.J. No. 2398 (QL).
Statutes and Regulations Cited
Canadian Charter of Rights and
Freedoms, s. 2 (b).
Criminal Code, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-46, s. 487.3 .
Provincial Offences Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. P.33.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Ontario Court of Appeal
(Doherty, Rosenberg and Borins JJ.A.) (2003), 67 O.R. (3d) 577 (sub nom. R.
v. Toronto Star Newspapers Ltd.), 232 D.L.R. (4th) 217, 178 C.C.C. (3d)
349, 17 C.R. (6th) 392, 110 C.R.R. (2d) 288, 178 O.A.C. 60, [2003] O.J. No. 4006
(QL), allowing the Crown’s appeal, to a very limited extent, from an order of
McGarry J. quashing the sealing order of Livingstone J. Appeal dismissed.
Scott C. Hutchison
and Melissa Ragsdale, for the appellant.
Paul B. Schabas and
Ryder Gilliland, for the respondents.
Written submissions only by John Norris, for
the intervener.
The judgment of the Court was delivered by
Fish J. —
I
1
In any constitutional climate, the administration of justice thrives on
exposure to light — and withers under a cloud of secrecy.
2
That lesson of history is enshrined in the Canadian Charter of Rights
and Freedoms . Section 2 (b) of the Charter guarantees, in
more comprehensive terms, freedom of communication and freedom of expression.
These fundamental and closely related freedoms both depend for their vitality
on public access to information of public interest. What goes on in the courts
ought therefore to be, and manifestly is, of central concern to Canadians.
3
The freedoms I have mentioned, though fundamental, are by no means
absolute. Under certain conditions, public access to confidential or sensitive
information related to court proceedings will endanger and not protect the
integrity of our system of justice. A temporary shield will in some cases
suffice; in others, permanent protection is warranted.
4
Competing claims related to court proceedings necessarily involve an
exercise in judicial discretion. It is now well established that court
proceedings are presumptively “open” in Canada. Public access will be barred
only when the appropriate court, in the exercise of its discretion, concludes
that disclosure would subvert the ends of justice or unduly impair
its proper administration.
5
This criterion has come to be known as the Dagenais/Mentuck test,
after the decisions of this Court in which the governing principles were
established and refined. The issue in this case is whether that test,
developed in the context of publication bans at the time of trial, applies as
well at the pre-charge or “investigative stage” of criminal proceedings. More
particularly, whether it applies to “sealing orders” concerning search warrants
and the informations upon which their issuance was judicially authorized.
6
The Court of Appeal for Ontario held that it does and the Crown now
appeals against that decision.
7
I would dismiss the appeal. In my view, the Dagenais/Mentuck
test applies to all discretionary court orders that limit freedom of
expression and freedom of the press in relation to legal proceedings. Any other
conclusion appears to me inconsistent with an unbroken line of authority in
this Court over the past two decades. And it would tend to undermine the open
court principle inextricably incorporated into the core values of s. 2 (b)
of the Charter .
8
The Dagenais/Mentuck test, though applicable at every stage of
the judicial process, was from the outset meant to be applied in a flexible and
contextual manner. A serious risk to the administration of justice at the
investigative stage, for example, will often involve considerations that have
become irrelevant by the time of trial. On the other hand, the perceived risk
may be more difficult to demonstrate in a concrete manner at that early stage.
Where a sealing order is at that stage solicited for a brief period only, this
factor alone may well invite caution in opting for full and immediate
disclosure.
9
Even then, however, a party seeking to limit public access to legal
proceedings must rely on more than a generalized assertion that publicity could
compromise investigative efficacy. If such a generalized assertion were
sufficient to support a sealing order, the presumption would favour secrecy
rather than openness, a plainly unacceptable result.
10
In this case, the evidence brought by the Crown in support of its
application to delay access amounted to a generalized assertion of possible
disadvantage to an ongoing investigation. The Court of Appeal accordingly held
that the Crown had not discharged its burden. As mentioned earlier, I would
not interfere with that finding and I propose, accordingly, that we dismiss the
present appeal.
II
11
The relevant facts were fully and accurately set out in these terms by
Doherty J.A. in the Court of Appeal for Ontario ((2003), 67 O.R. (3d) 577):
On August 20, 2003, a justice of the peace issued
six search warrants for various locations linked to the business of Aylmer Meat
Packers Inc. (“Aylmer”). The informations sworn to obtain the warrants were
identical. The warrants were obtained under the provisions of the Provincial
Offences Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. P.33 and related to alleged violations of
provincial legislation regulating the slaughter of cattle. The informations
were sworn by Roger Weber, an agricultural investigator with the Ministry of
Natural Resources. The warrants were executed on August 21 and 22, 2003.
On about August 26, 2003, the investigation by the
Ministry of Natural Resources into the operation of Aylmer became the subject
of widespread media reports. The suitability for human consumption of meat
slaughtered and processed by Aylmer became a matter of public concern.
On about August 27, 2003, the Ontario Provincial
Police commenced a fraud investigation into the business affairs of Aylmer.
The officers involved in that investigation were advised that Inspector Weber
had applied for and obtained the search warrants described above.
On September 2, 2003, the Crown brought an ex
parte application in open court in the Ontario Court of Justice for an
order sealing the search warrants, the informations used to obtain the warrants
and related documents. The Crown claimed that public disclosure of the
material could identify a confidential informant and could interfere with the
ongoing criminal investigation.
Justice Livingstone made an order directing that
the warrants and informations were to be sealed along with the affidavit of
Detective Sergeant Andre Clelland, dated August 30, 2003 filed in support of
the application for a sealing order and a letter, dated September 2, 2003, from
Roger Weber indicating that the Ministry of Natural Resources took no objection
to the application. The sealing order was to expire December 2, 2003. The
Clelland affidavit and Inspector Weber’s letter were subsequently made part of
the public record on the consent of the Crown.
The Toronto Star Newspapers Limited and other media
outlets (respondents) brought a motion for certiorari and mandamus
in the Superior Court. That application proceeded before McGarry J. on
September 15 and 16, 2003. On September 24, 2003, McGarry J. released reasons
quashing the sealing order and directing that the documents should be made
public except to the extent that the contents of the informations could
disclose the identity of a confidential informant. McGarry J. edited one of
the informations to delete references to material that could identify the
confidential informant and told counsel that the edited version would be made
available to the respondents unless the Crown appealed within two days. . . .
[paras. 1-6]
12
The Crown did, indeed, appeal — but with marginal success.
13
The Court of Appeal for Ontario held that Livingstone J. had exceeded
her jurisdiction by refusing to grant a brief adjournment to allow counsel for
the media to attend and make submissions on the application for a sealing
order. Speaking for the court, Doherty J.A. found that the media can
legitimately be expected to play an important role on applications to prohibit
their access, and that of the public they serve, to court records and court
proceedings. “There was no good reason”, he stated, “to deny The London
Free Press an opportunity to make submissions” (para. 15). This amounted,
in his view, to a denial of natural justice and resulted in a loss of
jurisdiction. I find it unnecessary to express a decided view on this branch
of the matter, since it is not in issue before us, and find it sufficient for
present purposes to refer to the guidelines on notice to the media and media
standing set out in Dagenais v. Canadian Broadcasting Corp., [1994] 3
S.C.R. 835, particularly at pp. 868-69 and 890-91.
14
Doherty J.A. next addressed the merits of the request for a sealing
order. Applying this Court’s decision in R. v. Mentuck, [2001] 3 S.C.R.
442, 2001 SCC 76, he concluded that the Crown had not displaced the presumption
that judicial proceedings are open and public. Like McGarry J., Doherty J.A.
recognized that the materials had to be edited to exclude information that
could reveal the identity of the confidential informant and the editing he
found appropriate was “somewhat more extensive than that done by McGarry J.”
(para. 28).
15
The order of the Court of Appeal has now become final and the factual
basis for a sealing order has evaporated with the passage of time. In the
absence of a stay, the edited material was released on October 29, 2003, and
the proceedings have to that extent become moot.
16
The Crown nonetheless pursues its appeal to this Court with respect to
the underlying question of law: What is the governing test on an application to
delay public access to search warrant materials that would otherwise become
accessible upon execution of the search warrant?
17
Essentially, the Crown contends that the Court of Appeal erred in law in
applying the “stringent” Dagenais/Mentuck test without taking into
account the particular characteristics and circumstances of the pre-charge,
investigative phase of the proceedings.
III
18
Once a search warrant is executed, the warrant and the information upon
which it is issued must be made available to the public unless an applicant
seeking a sealing order can demonstrate that public access would subvert the
ends of justice: Attorney General of Nova Scotia v. MacIntyre, [1982] 1
S.C.R. 175. “[W]hat should be sought”, it was held in MacIntyre, “is
maximum accountability and accessibility but not to the extent of harming the
innocent or of impairing the efficiency of the search warrant as a weapon in
society’s never-ending fight against crime” (Dickson J., as he then was,
speaking for the majority, at p. 184).
19
MacIntyre was not decided under the Charter . The Court
was nonetheless alert in that case to the principles of openness and
accountability in judicial proceedings that are now subsumed under the Charter ’s
guarantee of freedom of expression and of the press.
20
Search warrants are obtained ex parte and in camera, and
generally executed before any charges have been laid. The Crown had contended
in MacIntyre that they ought therefore to be presumptively shrouded in
secrecy in order to preserve the integrity of the ongoing investigation. The
Court found instead that the presumption of openness was effectively rebutted until
the search warrant was executed — but not thereafter. In the words of Dickson
J.:
. . . the force of the ‘administration of justice’ argument abates once
the warrant has been executed, i.e. after entry and search. There is
thereafter a “diminished interest in confidentiality” as the purposes of the
policy of secrecy are largely, if not entirely, accomplished. The need for
continued concealment virtually disappears. . . . The curtailment of the
traditionally uninhibited accessibility of the public to the working of the
courts should be undertaken with the greatest reluctance. [pp. 188-89]
21
After a search warrant has been executed, openness was to be
presumptively favoured. The party seeking to deny public access thereafter was
bound to prove that disclosure would subvert the ends of justice.
22
These principles, as they apply in the criminal investigative context,
were subsequently adopted by Parliament and codified in s. 487.3 of the Criminal
Code, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-46 . That provision does not govern this case,
since our concern here is with warrants issued under the Provincial Offences
Act of Ontario, R.S.O. 1990, c. P.33. It nonetheless provides a useful
reference point since it encapsulates in statutory form the common law that
governs, in the absence of valid legislation to the contrary, throughout
Canada.
23
Section 487.3(2) is of particular relevance to this case. It
contemplates a sealing order on the ground that the ends of justice would be
subverted, in that disclosure of the information would compromise the nature
and extent of an ongoing investigation. That is what the Crown argued here.
It is doubtless a proper ground for a sealing order with respect to an
information used to obtain a provincial warrant and not only to informations
under the Criminal Code . In either case, however, the ground must not
just be asserted in the abstract; it must be supported by particularized
grounds related to the investigation that is said to be imperilled. And that,
as we shall see, is what Doherty J.A. found to be lacking here.
24
Since the advent of the Charter , the Court has had occasion to
consider discretionary actions which limit the openness of judicial proceedings
in other contexts. The governing principles were first set out in Dagenais.
25
In that case, four accused sought a ban on publication of a television
mini-series, The Boys of St. Vincent, which was fictional in appearance
— but strikingly similar in fact — to the subject matter of their trial.
Writing for a majority of the Court, Lamer C.J. held that a ban should only be
imposed where alternative measures cannot prevent the serious risk to the
interests at stake and, even then, only to the extent found by the Court to be
necessary to prevent a real and substantial risk to the fairness of the trial.
In addition, a ban should only be ordered where its salutary effects outweigh
its negative impact on the freedom of expression of those affected by the ban.
Here, too, the presumption was said to favour openness, and the party seeking a
restriction on disclosure was therefore required to justify the solicited
limitation on freedom of expression.
26
The Dagenais test was reaffirmed but somewhat reformulated in Mentuck,
where the Crown sought a ban on publication of the names and identities of
undercover officers and on the investigative techniques they had used. The
Court held in that case that discretionary action to limit freedom of
expression in relation to judicial proceedings encompasses a broad variety of
interests and that a publication ban should only be ordered when:
(a) such an order is necessary in order to prevent a serious risk to
the proper administration of justice because reasonably alternative measures
will not prevent the risk; and
(b) the salutary effects of the publication ban outweigh the
deleterious effects on the rights and interests of the parties and the public,
including the effects on the right to free expression, the right of the accused
to a fair and public trial, and the efficacy of the administration of justice.
[para. 32]
27
Iacobucci J., writing for the Court, noted that the “risk” in the first
prong of the analysis must be real, substantial, and well
grounded in the evidence: “it is a serious danger sought to be avoided that
is required, not a substantial benefit or advantage to the administration of
justice sought to be obtained” (para. 34).
28
The Dagenais/Mentuck test, as it has since come to be known, has
been applied to the exercise of discretion to limit freedom of expression and
of the press in a variety of legal settings. And this Court has recently held
that the test applies to all discretionary actions which have that
limiting effect:
While the test was developed in the context of
publication bans, it is equally applicable to all discretionary actions by a
trial judge to limit freedom of expression by the press during judicial
proceedings. Discretion must be exercised in accordance with the Charter ,
whether it arises under the common law, as is the case with a publication ban .
. .; is authorized by statute, for example under s. 486(1) of the Criminal
Code which allows the exclusion of the public from judicial proceedings in
certain circumstances (Canadian Broadcasting Corp. v. New Brunswick
(Attorney General), [[1996] 3 S.C.R. 480], at para. 69); or under rules of
court, for example, a confidentiality order (Sierra Club of Canada v. Canada
(Minister of Finance), [2002] 2 S.C.R. 522, 2002 SCC 41).
(Vancouver Sun (Re), [2004] 2 S.C.R. 332, 2004 SCC 43, at para.
31)
29
Finally, in Vancouver Sun, the Court expressly endorsed the
reasons of Dickson J. in MacIntyre and emphasized that the presumption
of openness extends to the pre-trial stage of judicial proceedings. “The
open court principle”, it was held, “is inextricably linked to the freedom of
expression protected by s. 2 (b) of the Charter and advances the
core values therein” (para. 26). It therefore applies at every stage of
proceedings (paras. 23-27).
30
The Crown now argues that the open court principle embodied in the Dagenais/Mentuck
test ought not to be applied when the Crown seeks to seal search warrant
application materials. This argument is doomed to failure by more than two
decades of unwavering decisions in this Court: the Dagenais/Mentuck test
has repeatedly and consistently been applied to all discretionary judicial
orders limiting the openness of judicial proceedings.
31
It hardly follows, however, that the Dagenais/Mentuck test should
be applied mechanistically. Regard must always be had to the circumstances in
which a sealing order is sought by the Crown, or by others with a real and
demonstrated interest in delaying public disclosure. The test, though
applicable at all stages, is a flexible and contextual one. Courts have
thus tailored it to fit a variety of discretionary actions, such as
confidentiality orders, judicial investigative hearings, and Crown-initiated
applications for publication bans.
32
In Vancouver Sun, the Court recognized that the evidentiary
burden on an application to hold an investigative hearing in camera cannot
be subject to the same stringent standard as applications for a publication ban
at trial:
Even though the evidence may reveal little more than reasonable
expectations, this is often all that can be expected at that stage of the
process and the presiding judge, applying the Dagenais/Mentuck test in a
contextual manner, would be entitled to proceed on the basis of evidence that
satisfies him or her that publicity would unduly impair the proper
administration of justice. [para. 43]
33
Similar considerations apply to other applications to limit openness at
the investigative stage of the judicial process.
IV
34
The Crown has not demonstrated, on this appeal, that the flexible Dagenais/Mentuck
test as applied to search warrant materials is unworkable in practice. The
respondents, on the other hand, have drawn our attention to several cases in
which the test was effectively and reasonably applied. Sealing orders or
partial sealing orders were in fact granted, for example, in National Post
Co. v. Ontario (2003), 176 C.C.C. (3d) 432 (Ont. S.C.J.); R. v.
Eurocopter Canada Ltd., [2001] O.J. No. 1591 (QL) (S.C.J.); Flahiff v.
Bonin, [1998] R.J.Q. 327 (C.A.); and Toronto Star Newspapers Ltd. v.
Ontario, [2000] O.J. No. 2398 (QL) (S.C.J.).
35
Nor has the Crown satisfied us that Doherty J.A. failed to adopt a
“contextual” approach to the order sought in this case.
36
In support of its application, the Crown relied exclusively on the
affidavit of a police officer who asserted his belief, “based on [his]
involvement in this investigation that the release of the Warrants,
Informations to Obtain and other documents would interfere with the integrity
of the ongoing police investigation” (Appellant’s Record, at p. 70). The
officer stated that, should the contents of the information become public,
witnesses could be fixed with information from sources other than their
personal knowledge and expressed his opinion “that the release of the details
contained in the Informations to Obtain [the search warrants] has the potential
to make it more difficult for the Ontario Provincial Police to gather the best
evidence in respect of its investigation” (Appellant’s Record, at p. 72).
37
Doherty J.A. rejected these broad assertions for two reasons.
38
First, he found that they amounted to a “general proposition that
pre-trial publication of the details of a police investigation risks the
tainting of statements taken from potential witnesses” (para. 26). In Doherty
J.A.’s view, if that general proposition were sufficient to obtain a sealing
order,
the presumptive rule would favour secrecy and not openness prior to
trial. A general assertion that public disclosure may distract from the
ability of the police to get at the truth by tainting a potential witness’s
statement is no more valid than the equally general and contrary assertion that
public disclosure enhances the ability of the police to get at the truth by
causing concerned citizens to come forward with valuable information. [para.
26]
39
Second, Doherty J.A. found that the affiant’s concern, for which he
offered no specific basis, amounted to a mere assertion that “the police might
have an advantage in questioning some individuals if those individuals [are]
unaware of the details of the police investigation” (para. 27). In oral
argument before this Court, counsel for the Crown referred to this as the
“advantage of surprise”. In this regard, Doherty J.A. noted Iacobucci J.’s
conclusion in Mentuck, at para. 34, that access to court documents
cannot be denied solely for the purpose of giving law enforcement officers an
investigative advantage; rather, the party seeking confidentiality must
at the very least allege a serious and specific risk to the integrity of the
criminal investigation.
40
Finally, the Crown submits that Doherty J.A. applied a “stringent”
standard — presumably, an excessively stringent standard — in assessing
the merits of the sealing application. This complaint is unfounded.
41
Quite properly, Doherty J.A. emphasized the importance of freedom of
expression and of the press, and noted that applications to intrude on that
freedom must be “subject to close scrutiny and meet rigorous standards” (para.
19). Ultimately, however, he rejected the Crown’s claim in this instance
because it rested entirely on a general assertion that publicity can compromise
investigative integrity.
42
At no point in his reasons did Doherty J.A. demand or require a high
degree of predictive certainty in the Crown’s evidence of necessity.
V
43
For all of these reasons, I propose that we dismiss the appeal, with
costs to the respondents, on a party-and-party basis.
Appeal dismissed with costs.
Solicitor for the appellant: Ministry of the Attorney
General, Toronto.
Solicitors for the respondents: Blake, Cassels &
Graydon, Toronto.
Solicitors for the intervener: Ruby & Edwardh,
Toronto.