R. v. Law, [2002] 1 S.C.R. 227, 2002 SCC 10
Ka Lam Law, Kam Sun Chan and
2821109 Canada Inc. Appellants
v.
Her Majesty The Queen Respondent
and
The Attorney General for Ontario Intervener
Indexed as: R. v. Law
Neutral citation: 2002 SCC 10.
File No.: 27870.
2001: October 4; 2002: February 7.
Present: McLachlin C.J. and L’Heureux‑Dubé,
Gonthier, Iacobucci, Major, Bastarache, Binnie, Arbour and LeBel JJ.
on appeal from the new brunswick court of appeal
Constitutional law – Charter of Rights –
Unreasonable search and seizure – Exclusion of evidence – Safe containing
business documents revealing alleged GST violations by accused stolen from
accused’s place of business – Safe recovered by police – Police officer not
involved in theft investigation but suspecting accused of tax evasion
photocopying documents and forwarding them to tax authorities – Whether
photocopying of documents constituted unreasonable search or seizure – Whether
photocopied documents admissible as evidence of Excise Tax Act violations –
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, ss. 8 , 24(2) .
A locked safe belonging to the accused was reported
stolen and then recovered, open, in a field. The police conducted an
investigation of the theft. Before the safe was returned to the accused, an
officer, not involved in the investigation of the theft but who suspected the
accused of tax violations, photocopied some financial documents found in the
safe without obtaining a warrant and eventually forwarded the photocopies to
Revenue Canada. The Crown brought summary conviction proceedings against the
accused under the Excise Tax Act for contraventions of the reporting
requirements and of the obligation to remit taxes. The Crown requested that
the photocopied documents be admitted into evidence. The trial judge ruled
that the photocopying of the documents was an unreasonable search under
s. 8 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms , and excluded
the photocopies under s. 24(2) of the Charter . Since the Crown did
not adduce any further evidence, the trial judge acquitted the accused of all
charges. The Court of Queen’s Bench upheld the trial judge’s decision to
exclude the evidence. The majority of the Court of Appeal allowed the Crown’s
appeal. At issue is whether the photocopied evidence, which revealed alleged
GST violations on the part of the accused, ought to be excluded.
Held: The appeal
should be allowed.
Police conduct interfering with a reasonable expectation
of privacy constitutes an unreasonable search within the meaning of s. 8
of the Charter . Where an individual abandons his property, he
effectively abandons his privacy interest in it. However, the mere fact that
police recover lost or stolen property is insufficient to support an inference
that the owner voluntarily relinquished his expectation of privacy in the
item. In this case, the accused retained a residual, but limited, reasonable
expectation of privacy in the contents of their stolen safe. The existence of
a residual privacy interest does not undermine the police’s obligation to
investigate the theft of a stolen item, or to carry out whatever law
enforcement responsibility is reasonably associated with its taking. The
police’s taking of the accused’s safe was restricted to the investigation of
the theft and did not extend to the pursuit of totally unrelated hunches.
Further, to the extent the officer was driven by another law enforcement
objective, namely, investigation of GST violations, he lacked reasonable and
probable grounds to seize the property of the accused, i.e. the papers
contained in the safe. The search was unreasonable as none of the recognized
exceptions to the warrant requirement was satisfied. Furthermore, the search was
not conducted by an “authorized person” under the Excise Tax Act ,
rendering the statutory defence under that Act unavailable.
The evidence should be excluded. Although admitting
the evidence would not affect the fairness of the trial (it being real,
discoverable, non-conscripted evidence), and excluding the evidence would
compromise the Crown’s case, the resolution of the inquiry under s. 24(2)
turns on whether the violation of s. 8 is so serious that it outweighs the
State’s interest in admitting the evidence. The officer’s approach, behaviour
and disrespect for regular police procedures combined with his failure to leave
responsibility for the investigation to taxation authorities when that option
was available rendered his conduct sufficiently serious to exclude the
photocopied documents. This factor must, however, be weighed against the
quasi-criminal nature of the offence and the fact that it was proceeding
summarily. The administration of justice would suffer greater disrepute from the
admission of the evidence than from its exclusion.
Cases Cited
Applied: R. v.
Collins, [1987] 1 S.C.R. 265; R. v. Stillman,
[1997] 1 S.C.R. 607; Hunter v. Southam Inc., [1984] 2 S.C.R. 145;
referred to: R. v. Edwards, [1996] 1 S.C.R. 128; R. v. Dyment,
[1988] 2 S.C.R. 417; 143471 Canada Inc. v. Quebec (Attorney General),
[1994] 2 S.C.R. 339; R. v. LeBlanc (1981), 64 C.C.C. (2d) 31; United
States v. Procopio, 88 F.3d 21 (1996); R. v. Arp, [1998] 3 S.C.R.
339; R. v. Colarusso, [1994] 1 S.C.R. 20; R. v. Annett (1984), 17
C.C.C. (3d) 332; R. v. Spinelli (1995), 101 C.C.C. (3d) 385; United
States v. Sumlin, 909 F.2d 1218 (1990); Coolidge v. New Hampshire,
403 U.S. 443 (1971); United States v. O’Bryant, 775 F.2d 1528 (1985); R.
v. Belnavis, [1997] 3 S.C.R. 341; R. v. Therens, [1985] 1 S.C.R.
613; R. v. Kokesch, [1990] 3 S.C.R. 3.
Statutes and Regulations Cited
Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms, ss. 8 , 24(2) .
Excise Tax Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. E-15, ss. 288 [ad. 1990, c. 45,
s. 12], 327.
Authors Cited
Canada. Report of a Task Force
Established Jointly by the Department of Communications/Department of Justice.
Privacy and Computers. Ottawa: Information Canada, 1972.
LaFave, Wayne R. Search
and Seizure: A Treatise on the Fourth Amendment, 3rd ed. St. Paul,
Minn.: West Publishing Co., 1996.
APPEAL from a judgment of the New Brunswick Court of
Appeal (2000), 225 N.B.R. (2d) 85, 578 A.P.R. 85, [2000] G.S.T.C. 37, 2001
D.T.C. 5656, [2000] N.B.J. No. 76 (QL), reversing a judgment of the Court of
Queen’s Bench (1998), 204 N.B.R. (2d) 191, 520 A.P.R. 191, [1998] G.S.T.C. 111,
2001 D.T.C. 5661, [1998] N.B.J. No. 347 (QL), affirming a decision of the
Provincial Court. Appeal allowed.
Éric J. Doiron and
Michel C. Léger, for the appellants.
Bernard Laprade and François
Lacasse, for the respondent.
W. Graeme Cameron,
for the intervener.
The judgment of the Court was delivered by
1
Bastarache J. — A locked
safe belonging to the appellants was reported stolen and then recovered,
opened, in a field in Moncton, New Brunswick. The police conducted an
investigation of the theft and, in the course of its investigation, placed the
safe in an exhibit room. Before the safe was returned to the appellants, an officer
who suspected the appellants of tax violations retrieved the safe, photocopied
some financial documents inside and eventually forwarded the photocopies to
Revenue Canada. At issue is whether the photocopied evidence, which revealed
alleged GST violations on the part of the appellants, ought to be excluded
under s. 24(2) of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms in summary
proceedings under the Excise Tax Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. E-15 . I conclude
the evidence ought to be excluded.
I. Factual
Background
2
The appellants Law and Chan are the directors of
the appellant corporation 2821109 Canada Inc. (“the company”). In 1992, the
company began operating a Moncton restaurant, Fu Lam City. A break and enter
occurred at the restaurant on October 31, 1993, following which the police were
notified of a missing safe. The safe was recovered by the local RCMP after two
individuals reported seeing it open and abandoned in a field. It contained a
number of documents related to the restaurant, such as chequebooks and a ledger
that tracked disbursements.
3
The safe and its contents were entrusted to Constable Michael White, a
member of the Forensic Investigation Section of the Moncton Police Force.
White completed fingerprinting tests on November 1 and found no identifiable
prints. The documents were released to the appellants two weeks later, after
repeated inquiries as to whether and when they would be returned.
4
In the meantime, an officer not involved in the investigation, Paul Desroches,
expressed an interest in Constable White’s investigation. Corporal Desroches
worked for the Criminal Intelligence Unit of the Moncton Police Force; he had
been suspicious of the appellants from shortly after the restaurant’s opening.
He testified that his suspicions of wrongdoing were not substantiated, but that
he had “a gut feeling” that they were not submitting all their taxes and that
he “didn’t know what [he] was gonna find”. Prior to the break and enter,
Corporal Desroches had copied down the licence plate numbers of several
patrons’ vehicles. He was keeping information in relation to a file named
“Asian Crimes” and inquired with Revenue Canada as to whether the restaurant’s
taxes had been paid. He was told by Revenue Canada that there was nothing
irregular about the restaurant’s operations.
5
The day White completed his fingerprinting tests, Desroches learned of
the break and enter and heard the police had possession of the appellants’
safe. He told White he was interested in looking at the documents inside and,
out of “curiosity”, accompanied another constable to the restaurant site. He
also conducted a cursory examination of the documents, many of which contained
“Chinese characters” and were unintelligible to him. Desroches proceeded to
ask Crown counsel if he could photocopy the recovered documents; it is unclear
whether he disclosed his reasons for wanting to do so. Based on the Crown’s
advice, Desroches took the documents from forensics and photocopied them over
the course of two days. He kept several copies for himself and placed the
ledger, along with the other original documents, in a box in an exhibit room.
No steps were taken to obtain a search warrant, nor to ask the appellants for
their permission to copy the documents.
6
After making the photocopies, Desroches twice contacted an investigator
with Revenue Canada, Don Duguay, to offer him copies of the documents. On
November 8, Duguay came to the station to meet with Desroches, who took the box
of documents out of the exhibit room without signing for it; he testified that
this irregularity in procedure was not improper because the documents consisted
of “found property” that was not truly an exhibit per se. Constable
White remained ignorant of the movement of the items; contrary to normal police
procedures, no entries were ever made in the “movement of exhibits” record.
7
Based on information contained in the documents, Revenue Canada
investigators searched the appellants’ restaurant in May 1994. Subsequently,
pursuant to s. 327 of the Excise Tax Act , summary conviction proceedings
were brought against the appellants for eight separate contraventions of the
reporting requirements in s. 238 and of the obligation to remit taxes in Part
IX (Goods and Services Tax). The respondent requested that the photocopied
documents be admitted into evidence in support of conviction. After conducting
a voir dire, the Provincial Court judge ruled that the photocopying of
the documents was an unreasonable search under s. 8 of the Charter and
excluded the photocopies under s. 24(2) of the Charter . The respondent
advised that it would not present any further evidence, and the judge acquitted
the appellants of all charges.
8
The trial judge’s decision on the voir dire was upheld by
Godin J. at the Court of Queen’s Bench. The Crown appealed again to the New
Brunswick Court of Appeal, and a majority of the court (Larlee and Ryan JJ.A.)
allowed the appeal. In their view, s. 8 of the Charter was not
infringed and there was no need to consider the exclusion of evidence under s.
24(2) . Rice J.A. dissented, paying considerable deference to the lower court
findings. The appellants seek to restore the decision of the trial judge.
II. Relevant
Statutory Provisions
9
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms
8. Everyone has the right to be secure
against unreasonable search or seizure.
24. . . .
(2) Where, in proceedings under subsection (1), a
court concludes that evidence was obtained in a manner that infringed or denied
any rights or freedoms guaranteed by this Charter , the evidence shall be
excluded if it is established that, having regard to all the circumstances, the
admission of it in the proceedings would bring the administration of justice
into disrepute.
Excise Tax
Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. E-15
288. (1) An authorized person may, at all
reasonable times, for any purpose related to the administration or enforcement
of this Part, inspect, audit or examine the documents, property or processes of
a person that may be relevant in determining the obligations of that or any
other person under this Part or the amount of any rebate or refund to which
that or any other person is entitled and, for those purposes, the authorized
person may
(a) subject to subsection (2), enter any premises or place where
any business or commercial activity is carried on, any property is kept,
anything is done in connection with any business or commercial activity or any
documents are or should be kept; and
(b) require the owner or manager of the property, business or
commercial activity and any other person on the premises or in the place to
give to the authorized person all reasonable assistance and to answer all
proper questions relating to the administration or enforcement of this Part
and, for that purpose, require the owner or manager to attend at the premises
or place with the authorized person.
(2) Where any premises or place referred to in
paragraph (1)(a) is a dwelling-house, an authorized person may not enter
that dwelling-house without the consent of the occupant, except under the
authority of a warrant issued under subsection (3).
III. Judicial
History
10
At the voir dire, McKee Prov. Ct. J. had no difficulty concluding
the photocopies made by Corporal Desroches constituted a “search” within the
meaning of s. 8 of the Charter . After noting the search was conducted
without a warrant, he went on to consider whether the search was otherwise
authorized by law. In his view, the only other source of authorization was s.
288 of the Excise Tax Act , which only authorized specific persons to
conduct searches. As Corporal Desroches was neither an inspector nor the
Minister under that Act, and as the search was not related to the investigation
of the theft of the safe, no authorization existed. McKee Prov. Ct. J. also
declined to apply the “plain view” doctrine, noting that while the police were
lawfully situated when the search took place, the photocopies were neither
discovered inadvertently nor immediately evident to Corporal Desroches. He
also noted that neither the appellants' consent nor exigent circumstances could
rebut the presumption of unreasonableness. At the Court of Queen’s Bench,
Godin J. upheld these findings: (1998), 204 N.B.R. (2d) 191.
11
Both McKee Prov. Ct. J. and Godin J. would have excluded the photocopied
evidence pursuant to s. 24(2) of the Charter . Although the latter
concluded the evidence was not conscriptive under the first branch of R. v.
Collins, [1987] 1 S.C.R. 265, he remarked that “the police took advantage
of a criminal act perpetrated against the respondents -- i.e., the break and
enter in the restaurant and the theft of the safe -- to gather evidence that
would not otherwise have come to their attention” (para. 16). In that sense,
the fairness of the trial would be affected, he held. McKee Prov. Ct. J. did
not make such a finding; nevertheless, he held that the Charter violation
was, in light of all the circumstances, [translation]
“sufficiently serious” to justify excluding the evidence under s. 24(2) .
Citing Corporal Desroches’s approach, behaviour and disregard for normal police
procedures, McKee Prov. Ct. J. concluded that to admit the evidence would bring
the administration of justice into disrepute.
12
In the Court of Appeal ((2000), 225 N.B.R. (2d) 85), the majority
focused on whether the appellants had a reasonable expectation of privacy in
the safe such that s. 8 would be triggered. In their view, any such
expectation disappeared once the safe was stolen and fell into the hands of the
police (at para. 10):
[translation] In my
opinion, once the documents have fallen into the hands of the thieves and other
individuals, the respondents' reasonable expectation of privacy no longer
existed.
Having found
no expectation of privacy, the majority felt it unnecessary to consider whether
the alleged “search” was conducted in a reasonable manner. That said, they
were of the view that the police’s conduct was reasonable. The fact that the
investigation of the theft had been initiated by the accused, combined with the
fact that the police were legally in possession of the safe when it was opened,
persuaded them that Corporal Desroches had the right to photocopy its
contents. The majority also concluded that Corporal Desroches acted in good
faith throughout the investigation. Because of this, he was authorized to take
his investigation of the safe beyond that which was required by its theft. In
light of its conclusion that there was no breach of s. 8 of the Charter ,
the majority of the Court of Appeal did not consider s. 24(2) .
13
Rice J.A. dissented, holding that the police’s legal possession of the
safe did not authorize them to examine and photocopy its contents. In his
view, the appellants retained a privacy interest in those contents and, more
particularly, did not relinquish any interest in their confidentiality. Rice
J.A. therefore would have found a s. 8 violation. With respect to s. 24(2) ,
Rice J.A. noted that an appellate court should not lightly interfere with a
trial judge’s discretion to exclude unlawfully obtained evidence. He cited the
majority judgment in R. v. Stillman, [1997] 1 S.C.R. 607, where Cory J.
held, at para. 68:
. . . appellate courts should only intervene with
respect to a lower court’s s. 24(2) analysis when that court has made “some
apparent error as to the applicable principles or rules of law” or has made an
unreasonable finding . . . .
Not being able
to find an apparent error or unreasonable finding in the decision of McKee
Prov. Ct. J., Rice J.A. would have dismissed the Crown’s appeal.
IV. Issues
14
Whether the photocopied evidence ought to be excluded from evidence
depends on (1) whether the officer’s conduct constituted an unreasonable search
or seizure within the meaning of s. 8 of the Charter ; and (2) if so,
having regard to all the circumstances, whether the admission of the evidence
would bring the administration of justice into disrepute, such that it should
be excluded under s. 24(2) .
V. Analysis
1. Section
8
(a) Was There a Search or Seizure?
15
It has long been held that the principal purpose of s. 8 of the Charter
is to protect an accused’s privacy interests against unreasonable intrusion by
the State. Accordingly, police conduct interfering with a reasonable
expectation of privacy is said to constitute a “search” within the meaning of
the provision: Hunter v. Southam Inc., [1984] 2 S.C.R. 145, R.
v. Edwards, [1996] 1 S.C.R. 128. Such conduct may also be characterized as
a “seizure”, the essence of which is the “taking of a thing from a person by a
public authority without that person’s consent”: R. v. Dyment, [1988] 2
S.C.R. 417, per La Forest J., at p. 431. In this case, there is no
doubt the taking of the safe was authorized, inasmuch as the appellants
reported its theft to the police. The question that arises is whether the
appellants retained a reasonable expectation of privacy in the contents of the
safe, having reported the safe’s theft to the police.
16
This Court has adopted a liberal approach to the protection of privacy.
This protection extends not only to our homes and intimately personal items,
but to information which we choose, in this case by locking it in a safe, to
keep confidential: Dyment, supra, per La Forest J., at p.
429. As a 1972 task force on privacy and computers noted,
informational privacy “derives from the assumption that all information about a
person is in a fundamental way his own, for him to communicate or retain
. . . as he sees fit”: A Report of a Task Force Established Jointly
by the Department of Communications/Department of Justice, Privacy and Computers
(1972), at p. 13. While this may be less true of commercial documents than
personal ones, this distinction has historically been applied to the regulatory
sphere and carries its own limitations: 143471 Canada Inc. v. Quebec
(Attorney General), [1994] 2 S.C.R. 339. In other contexts, a proprietor’s
control over confidential business documents implicates his individual autonomy
and, in turn, “has profound significance for the public order”: Dyment, supra,
per La Forest J., at p. 427.
17
Courts have, to be sure, recognized situations where it is unreasonable
to expect personal property or information to remain private. It has been held
that an individual can effectively abandon his own property by relinquishing
any privacy interest in it: see Stillman, supra. It has also
been implied that where the police recover property that has been cast off or
stolen, they may infer it has been “abandoned” for the purposes of their
investigation: R. v. LeBlanc (1981), 64 C.C.C. (2d) 31 (N.B.C.A.), cited
in Dyment, supra, at p. 435; see also, United States v.
Procopio, 88 F.3d 21 (1st Cir. 1996). Without more, however, the mere fact
that the police recover lost or stolen property is insufficient to support an
inference that the owner voluntarily relinquished his expectation of privacy in
the item. The question remains: on the facts of the case, did the owner have a
reasonable expectation of privacy in the item, or had he relinquished it?
18
In this case, the appellants did not voluntarily discard their private
documents. On the contrary, the documents were locked in a safe that was
stolen out of their place of business and left abandoned by the thieves in an
open field. Moreover, the theft of the safe was reported to the police the
morning it occurred, well before it was recovered. One can therefore infer the
existence of a subjective expectation of privacy: Edwards, supra.
In this entire context, I cannot but conclude that the appellants retained a
residual, but limited, reasonable expectation of privacy in the contents of
their stolen safe. In short, one would have expected the stolen property to
remain private following its recovery, as it was before its theft.
19
The existence of a residual privacy interest does not undermine the
police’s obligation to investigate the theft of a stolen item, or to carry out
whatever law enforcement responsibility is reasonably associated with its
taking. Any expectation of privacy must be reasonable. Thus, an unattended
suitcase may have to be inspected for explosives, a stray wallet for
identification, or a deserted vehicle for evidence of theft. More extensive
investigation may be required to determine the motive of the theft, or to
identify the perpetrator. However, where the police cannot reasonably conclude
the property has been abandoned by its owner, they are limited in their
investigation by the privacy interest of the owner as protected by s. 8 of the Charter .
20
As I see it, to conclude otherwise would authorize the police to conduct
a full search of any item reported stolen, aided only by an unreasonable
suspicion or a hunch. Even if an individual reported something as innocuous as
a stolen sweater, the respondent’s logic would permit the police to conduct DNA
testing of the sweater to assist an ongoing murder investigation. This is
particularly problematic given the range of items people are bound to report
stolen: a purse, a computer, a car, perhaps even a mobile home. The
unauthorized search of such items is precisely the type of investigative action
which the “residual” expectation of privacy, and indeed the search warrant
process, is meant to prevent.
21
The respondent cites R. v. Arp, [1998] 3 S.C.R. 339, for the
proposition that evidence lawfully obtained by the police for one purpose may,
without additional authorization, be used for another. In that case, the
accused voluntarily gave scalp and pubic hair samples to the police, who went
on to use those samples in an unrelated investigation. In my view, the
respondent is hard-pressed to compare bodily samples provided through
unconditional and reasonably informed consent (as in Arp) with a safe
stolen out of an accused’s place of business (as in this case). While the
State cannot be held responsible for such a theft, the accused equally cannot
be said to have relinquished all privacy interests in the stolen item. Even
had the accused in Arp retained such an expectation of privacy, it was
concluded on the facts of that case that the accused’s consent extended as far
as the new investigation. Arp does not assist the respondent.
22
The better analogy is to Dyment, supra, in which a doctor
collected a vial of free-flowing blood from an unconscious victim for medical
purposes. After collecting the blood from the victim, the doctor provided the
blood to a police officer, who then tested it to determine whether the victim
was intoxicated. A majority of the Court concurred with La Forest J. that any
consent to the seizure of blood was “restricted to the use of the sample for
medical purposes” (p. 431). A similar finding was made in R. v. Colarusso,
[1994] 1 S.C.R. 20, in which a majority of the Court agreed (at p. 55) that
where a state actor obtains personal information under lawful circumstances,
“the limited purpose for which it was obtained cannot be ignored”. By analogy
to this case, the police’s taking of the appellants’ safe was restricted to the
purpose of the taking — namely, the investigation of the theft — and did not
extend to the pursuit of totally unrelated hunches.
23
The principal reason for this restriction, in my view, is to discourage
police procedures whereby “property is seized by one state agent for a purpose
for which the prerequisites for search may not be as demanding, and another
state agent . . . is permitted to claim the fruits of the search
(the resulting information) for use for law enforcement purposes without regard
to the rightly stringent prerequisites of searches for those purposes”: Colarusso,
supra, per La Forest J., at p. 64. In my view, such a
circumvention of the warrant requirement is precisely what occurred in this
case. It is true that the property was shared among police officers in this
case, rather than passed from a coroner to a police officer, as in Colarusso,
supra. Yet this distinction does not assist the respondent. Whatever
the relationship between Officers White and Desroches, the former’s authorized
taking of the safe could not have liberated the latter from the stringent
prerequisites for searching and analysing the safe’s contents.
24
The intervener, the Attorney General for Ontario, cites R. v. Annett
(1984), 17 C.C.C. (3d) 332 (Ont. C.A.), in which the police searched the
accused’s car for drugs under the “pretext” of conducting an investigation
under the Liquor License Act. On appeal, the Ontario Court of Appeal
held that the lawful search under the Act was not converted into an unlawful or
unreasonable search because the officers had an expectation of finding
narcotics. The distinguishing feature of Annett, however, is that the
full scope of the officers’ search was authorized by statute; thus, the only
issue was whether their hidden intentions rendered the search unreasonable. In
this case, by contrast, Corporal Desroches lacked explicit authority to examine
and photocopy the contents of the appellants’ safe.
25
The best analogy provided by the intervener, in my view, is the scenario
in which the police search a car in the course of investigating its theft, as
opposed to carrying out an explicit statutory duty. It is clear the police are
“lawfully positioned” in such cases, inasmuch as their common law and statutory
duties include the protection of property. However, the police’s obligation to
search a stolen car is not without its limits. As the intervener acknowledges,
“a police officer might be justified in fully inspecting the driver and
passenger compartment of a stolen car during the course of an investigation of
the theft, but might be precluded, absent a warrant, from searching through
computer files contained in a laptop computer locked in the car’s trunk”; see
also, R. v. Spinelli (1995), 101 C.C.C. (3d) 385 (B.C.C.A.), per
Southin J.A., at para. 36.
26
In my view, the intervener’s own logic supports a s. 8 breach in this
case. Corporal Desroches began his investigation of the appellants' safe after
the police had completed their investigation of its theft. At all
material times the safe was in police custody and, as far as the theft was
concerned, ready to be returned to its rightful owner. Corporal Desroches
nevertheless examined the documents inside the safe, photocopied them and, for
purposes unrelated to the theft, provided copies to another branch of law
enforcement. In assessing these actions, I make no judgment as to whether
examining, photocopying or even translating documents might, in other contexts,
be reasonably necessary to investigate their theft or carry out a legitimate
law enforcement objective. Such actions may be necessary where evidence of
illegal activity appears on the face of the document, as contemplated by the
“plain view” doctrine. Suffice it to say, Corporal Desroches proceeded as though
the safe had been abandoned by its owner and, for that reason, infringed the
appellants' reasonable expectation of privacy.
27
The respondent attempts to rely on the plain view doctrine, arguing that
evidence that comes within the view of a “lawfully positioned” officer may be
admissible if it is discovered inadvertently. Many of the authorities cited by
the respondent may be characterized as plain view searches: see United
States v. Sumlin, 909 F.2d 1218 (8th Cir. 1990); Coolidge v. New Hampshire,
403 U.S. 443 (1971); United States v. O’Bryant, 775 F.2d 1528 (11th Cir.
1985). In this case, I agree with McKee Prov. Ct. J. that the incriminating
evidence was neither immediately obvious to Corporal Desroches nor discovered
inadvertently. On the contrary, it came to light only after he examined,
translated and photocopied several documents. Corporal Desroches admitted
there was nothing facially wrong with the documents. He testified they
contained a series of numbers and Chinese characters, and that he lacked both
accounting expertise and proficiency in Chinese. Not having detected anything
incriminating through the unaided use of his senses, Corporal Desroches cannot
rely on the plain view doctrine either to establish reasonable and probable
grounds to search, or to avoid the requirement of reasonable and probable
grounds entirely; see W. R. LaFave, Search and Seizure: A Treatise on the
Fourth Amendment (3rd ed. 1996), at pp. 395-98.
28
I conclude the police’s conduct in this case amounted to a search within
the meaning of s. 8 of the Charter . While a reasonable accused would
have expected a certain degree of state intrusion into his stolen safe -- a
fingerprint analysis, a security check, an investigation of content for the
purpose of identifying the perpetrator of the theft -- he would otherwise have
expected the contents of the safe to remain private. Moreover, to the extent
the officer was driven by another law enforcement objective (namely,
investigation of GST violations), he lacked reasonable and probable grounds to
suspect the appellants. Such conduct is precisely what the search warrant
process is meant to prevent.
(b) Was the Search Unreasonable?
29
As the Charter only protects against “unreasonable” search and
seizure, it was open to the respondent to establish on a balance of
probabilities that Corporal Desroches’s conduct was reasonable under the
circumstances. In the absence of prior judicial authorization, a search
or seizure will be reasonable if it is otherwise authorized by law, and both
the law itself and the manner in which the search was carried out are
reasonable: Hunter v. Southam Inc., supra; Collins, supra.
In my view, none of the recognized exceptions to the warrant requirement is
satisfied in the current appeal. I conclude the search was unreasonable.
30
The intervener made the interesting suggestion that by reporting the
theft of their safe to the police, the appellants consented to the seizure of its
contents, thus waiving their right to privacy. As he put it, the appellants'
conduct “represented, at a minimum, unlimited consent by the Appellants for the
police to take possession of the safe and its contents”. I disagree. Had the
appellants expected the police to open the safe and examine its contents, it is
difficult to imagine they would have directed the police’s attention to it,
given that it contained incriminating documents. Far from representing the
appellants' consent to search the safe, such conduct reveals a certain faith
that the police will not search the content of documents in the
safe. Moreover, I have considerable difficulty with the implication that
someone who reports a theft to the police must place conditions on the
subsequent investigation, as though one’s privacy interest must be asserted to
be respected. This suggestion runs contrary to s. 8 of the Charter ,
which guarantees the individual’s right to be secure against
unreasonable search and seizure. It is equally true that no request for the
return of the safe was required to “re-establish” the appellants' expectation
of privacy.
31
Finally, the respondent relies on s. 288(1) of the Excise Tax Act as
a source of independent statutory authority to search documents that are
relevant to determining tax liability. That section permits an “authorized
person”, meaning a person authorized by the Minister, to “inspect, audit or
examine” such documents. As noted by the trial judge, however, the police
officer in this case was not authorized by the Minister to conduct an audit of
the appellants' business; thus, the statutory defence is not available. I
conclude the officer’s conduct in this case constituted an unreasonable search
within the meaning of s. 8 of the Charter .
2. Section
24(2)
32
Evidence obtained in violation of s. 8 of the Charter will not be
excluded unless, having regard to all the circumstances, its admission would
bring the administration of justice into disrepute. While the decision to
exclude must be a reasonable one, a reviewing court will not interfere with a
trial judge’s conclusions on s. 24(2) absent an “apparent error as to the
applicable principles or rules of law” or an “unreasonable finding”:
Stillman, supra, at para. 68; see also R. v. Belnavis, [1997]
3 S.C.R. 341, at para. 35. In this case, I uphold the trial judge’s finding
under s. 24(2) but, for reasons developed below, feel it is necessary to
conduct a separate s. 24(2) inquiry.
33
In Collins, supra, this Court grouped the circumstances to
be considered under s. 24(2) into three categories: (1) the effect of admitting
the evidence on the fairness of the subsequent trial, (2) the seriousness of
the police’s conduct, and (3) the effects of excluding the evidence on the
administration of justice. Trial judges are under an obligation to consider
these three factors. In general, it will be much easier to exclude evidence if
its admission would affect the fairness of the trial as opposed to condoning a
serious constitutional violation: Collins, supra, at p. 284.
(a) Trial Fairness
34
The concept of trial fairness is ultimately concerned with the continued
effects of unfair self-incrimination on the accused; thus, the principal
(though not exclusive) considerations at this stage will be the nature of the
evidence obtained and the nature of the right violated: Collins, supra,
at p. 284. The leading case on this issue is Stillman, supra,
which held that the admission of “conscriptive” evidence, whether
self-emanating or derivative, would generally affect the fairness of the
trial. Evidence will be classified as conscriptive where “an accused, in
violation of his Charter rights, is compelled to incriminate himself at
the behest of the state by means of a statement, the use of the body or the
production of bodily samples”: Stillman, supra, per Cory
J., at para. 80.
35
In this case, the photocopied evidence obtained by Corporal Desroches
was not conscriptive evidence. It neither emanated directly from the
appellants, nor derived from the appellants' compelled co-operation with the
state. While it probably would not have been discovered without the
constitutional violation, the originals existed independently of that violation
and were not reproduced with the appellants' participation. The trial fairness
branch of Collins, supra, will not operate to exclude the
evidence.
36
In making this finding, I must respectfully disagree with the superior
court judge that trial fairness would be implicated by the officer’s having
taken advantage of a criminal act perpetrated against the appellants (i.e., a
break and enter of their premises) to gather evidence that otherwise would not
have come to their attention. In Collins, supra, at p. 284, this
Court held that factors relevant to trial fairness include “the nature of the
evidence obtained as a result of the violation and the nature of the right
violated and not so much the manner in which the right was violated.” In my
view, the behaviour described by Godin J. goes more to the manner in which the
appellants’ Charter rights were violated than to the nature of the
evidence obtained or the nature of the right violated. I conclude this factor
more appropriately informs the seriousness of the Charter breach
and does not operate to render the trial unfair.
(b) Seriousness of the Breach
37
At this stage of Collins, supra, the conduct of Corporal
Desroches in conducting an unauthorized search, as opposed to the fairness of
the subsequent trial, informs the analysis. The seriousness of this conduct
depends, first, on “whether it was committed in good faith, or was inadvertent
or of a merely technical nature, or whether it was deliberate, wilful or
flagrant”: R. v. Therens, [1985] 1 S.C.R. 613, at p. 652. Also
relevant is whether the police officer could have obtained the evidence by
other means, thus rendering his disregard for the Charter gratuitous and
blatant: Collins, supra, at p. 285.
38
In my view, the trial judge is entitled to deference on this point.
After reviewing the evidence, McKee Prov. Ct. J. concluded that Corporal
Desroches’s approach, behaviour and disrespect for regular police procedures
rendered his conduct [translation]
“sufficiently serious” to exclude the photocopied documents. It appears from
the record that Corporal Desroches essentially assumed the role of an Excise
Tax official, taking regulatory matters into his own hands when he easily could
have left that responsibility to the appropriate body. It is highly unlikely
that Corporal Desroches misunderstood the scope of his authority. His
disregard for established procedures, combined with his failure to proceed
properly when that option was available, are factors supporting the trial
judge’s s. 24(2) ruling: see Collins, supra, at p. 285; R. v.
Kokesch, [1990] 3 S.C.R. 3, at pp. 32-35. I conclude the breach of the
appellants’ s. 8 rights was serious in this case.
(c) Effect on the Administration of Justice
39
At the third stage of Collins, supra, the inquiry focuses
on whether excluding the evidence would have a detrimental effect on the
administration of justice. In general, this turns on whether the
unconstitutionally obtained evidence forms a crucial part of the Crown’s case
and, where trial fairness is not affected, the seriousness of the underlying
charge. In this case, it is conceded the evidence is essential to substantiate
the Crown’s case and, for that reason, can only be excluded at the risk of
undermining the administration of justice. However, this factor must be
weighed against the quasi-criminal nature of the offence and the fact that it
was proceeding summarily. Like the trial judge, I conclude it is the admission
of this key piece of Crown evidence, not its exclusion, that would risk
bringing the administration of justice into disrepute.
(d) Conclusion on Section 24(2)
40
In my view, this case is not unlike Collins, supra, in
that admitting the evidence would not affect the fairness of the trial (it
being real, discoverable, non-conscripted evidence), yet excluding the evidence
would compromise the Crown’s case. The resolution of s. 24(2) thus turns on
the second Collins factor, namely, whether the violation of s. 8 is so
serious that it outweighs the State’s interest in admitting the evidence.
41
I have already noted the trial judge’s entitlement to deference on this
point. In any event, I am of the view the administration of justice “would
suffer far greater disrepute from the admission of this evidence than from its
exclusion”: Kokesch, supra, per Sopinka J., at p. 35.
VI. Disposition
42
I would allow the appeal.
Appeal allowed.
Solicitors for the appellants: Doiron & Bastarache,
Moncton; Michel C. Léger & Associés, Shediac, New Brunswick.
Solicitor for the respondent: The Attorney General of
Canada, Ottawa.
Solicitor for the intervener: The Ministry of the
Attorney General, Toronto.