SUPREME
COURT OF CANADA
Between:
Her Majesty The Queen
Appellant
and
Jason Rodgerson
Respondent
Coram: Abella, Rothstein, Cromwell, Moldaver and Karakatsanis JJ.
Reasons
for Judgment:
(paras. 1 to 56)
|
Moldaver J. (Abella, Rothstein, Cromwell
and Karakatsanis JJ. concurring)
|
R. v. Rodgerson, 2015 SCC 38, [2015] 2 S.C.R. 760
Her Majesty The Queen Appellant
v.
Jason Rodgerson Respondent
Indexed as: R. v. Rodgerson
2015 SCC 38
File No.: 35947.
2015: January 14; 2015: July 17.
Present: Abella, Rothstein, Cromwell, Moldaver and
Karakatsanis JJ.
on appeal from the court of appeal for ontario
Criminal law — Murder — Charge to jury —
Evidence — Post‑offence conduct — After killing victim, accused concealed
body and cleaned up scene of death — Accused fled from and lied to police —
Trial judge instructed jury on use of accused’s post‑offence conduct in
assessing issue of intent for murder — Whether trial judge erred in
instructions to jury on concealment and clean‑up, and if so, whether that
error was fatal in conjunction with erroneous instructions on accused’s flight
from and lies to police — Detrimental impact of long and complex jury charges
on criminal justice system.
R
was charged with first degree murder in connection with the death of Y. At
trial, there was no dispute that R caused Y’s death. R’s primary defence was
self‑defence, but he also relied on lack of intent, provocation, and an
absence of evidence establishing first degree murder. He testified that after
he and Y engaged in consensual sexual activity, a heated exchange occurred and
she attacked him with a knife. A physical struggle ensued, culminating in Y’s
death. R maintained that he did not intend to kill or seriously injure Y.
Rather, he testified that he used only moderate force, and that her death was
accidental. To rebut R’s position on the amount of force used and the
issue of intent, Crown counsel relied on forensic analysis of Y’s injuries and
of bloodstains found at R’s home, as well as on evidence of R’s post‑offence
efforts to conceal Y’s body and to clean up the scene of her death. The Crown
also led evidence that R fled from the police, and initially lied to them about
who was responsible for Y’s death.
R
was convicted by a jury of second degree murder. On appeal from his conviction,
R maintained that the trial judge failed to properly instruct the jury on the
various ways in which R’s post‑offence conduct could and could not be
used. A majority of the Court of Appeal agreed and ordered a new trial on a
charge of second degree murder.
Held:
The appeal should be dismissed.
The
Crown concedes that the trial judge erred by instructing the jury that it could
consider R’s flight from and lies to the police on the issue of intent. This
appeal centres on the instructions related to the remaining post‑offence
conduct: R’s concealment of Y’s body, and his clean‑up of the scene of
her death.
In
order to establish that R was guilty of murder, rather than manslaughter, the
Crown had to prove that he either intended to kill Y or to cause her bodily
harm which he knew was likely to cause death. The cornerstone of its case was
the nature and extent of Y’s injuries and the degree of force required to
inflict them. The Crown asserted that the forensic evidence revealed a more
prolonged and violent physical altercation than the version of events described
by R.
It
is relatively straightforward to understand how R’s efforts at concealment and
clean‑up were capable of supporting the inference that he acted
unlawfully. However, these efforts were also capable of supporting the further
inference that R sought to conceal Y’s body and clean up the scene of her death
in order to conceal the nature and extent of her injuries and the degree of
force required to inflict them. This in turn could have been relevant on the
issue of intent for murder: the more severe the injuries, and the more force
required to inflict them, the stronger the inference that he intended to kill,
or to cause bodily harm which he knew was likely to cause death.
This chain of
inferential reasoning was narrow, and the relevance of the evidence was
attenuated. The trial judge should have assisted the jury with a specific
instruction on how to use this evidence on the issue of intent. However, the
sections of the jury charge relating to intent failed to link the concealment
and clean‑up evidence to the nature and extent of Y’s injuries and the
force required to inflict them. Rather, the charge merely reiterated the
existence of this evidence, and instructed the jury to consider it along with
all the other evidence. This was a legal error that created a risk that the
jury might convict R for murder based only on the broader inference that the
concealment and clean‑up pointed to a consciousness of guilt and a desire
to prevent discovery of an unlawful killing.
After
the jury rejected self‑defence, the issue of R’s intent was the central
issue at trial. Moreover, the Crown’s case was not overwhelming. As a
result, the curative proviso does not apply and R is entitled to a new trial
for second degree murder.
Both
the Crown and the dissenting judge in the Court of Appeal expressed concern
that requiring a more specific instruction on the concealment and clean‑up
evidence would further fuel the trend towards lengthier and more complex jury
charges. While these concerns are valid, a few modest alterations would have
saved this jury charge from legal error. At the same time, a great many of the
instructions that were included could and should have been removed. The length,
repetitiveness, and complexity of the charge were unwarranted.
A
trial judge must strike a crucial balance by crafting a jury charge that is
both comprehensive and comprehensible. Over‑charging is just as
incompatible with this duty as is under‑charging. Trial judges have taken
to quoting large extracts from model charge manuals to safeguard their verdicts
from appeal. But model charge manuals do not necessarily translate into
model charges. They are there to guide, not govern. The failure to isolate the
critical issues in a case and tailor the charge to them inevitably makes the
instructions less helpful to the jury. The fundamental purpose of the jury
charge must be to educate, not complicate.
Cases Cited
Referred
to: R. v. Morin, [1988] 2 S.C.R. 345; R. v. White, [1998] 2
S.C.R. 72; R. v. White, 2011 SCC 13, [2011] 1 S.C.R. 433; R. v. Daley,
2007 SCC 53, [2007] 3 S.C.R. 523; R. v. Jack (1993), 88 Man. R. (2d) 93,
aff’d [1994] 2 S.C.R. 310; R. v. Jacquard, [1997] 1 S.C.R. 314; R. v.
Hebert, [1996] 2 S.C.R. 272; R. v. Mathisen, 2008 ONCA 747, 239
C.C.C. (3d) 63; R. v. Pintar (1996), 30 O.R. (3d) 483; R. v. Mack,
2014 SCC 58, [2014] 3 S.C.R. 3; R. v. McNeil (2006), 84 O.R. (3d) 125; R.
v. Zebedee (2006), 81 O.R. (3d) 583.
Statutes and Regulations Cited
Criminal
Code, R.S.C. 1985, c. C‑46, ss. 34(1) [am. 2012, c. 9,
s. 2], (2) [idem], 35 [idem], 686(1)(b)(iii).
Authors Cited
Granger, Christopher. The Criminal Jury Trial in Canada, 2nd
ed. Scarborough, Ont.: Carswell, 1996.
Watt, David. Helping Jurors Understand. Toronto: Thomson
Carswell, 2007.
Watt, David. Ontario Specimen Jury Instructions (Criminal).
Toronto: Thomson Carswell, 2003.
APPEAL
from a judgment of the Ontario Court of Appeal (Doherty, Feldman and MacPherson
JJ.A.), 2014 ONCA 366, 319 O.A.C. 254, 309 C.C.C. (3d) 535, [2014] O.J.
No. 2232 (QL), 2014 CarswellOnt 5936 (WL Can.), setting aside the accused’s
conviction for second degree murder and ordering a new trial. Appeal
dismissed.
Megan Stephens, for
the appellant.
Christopher Hicks
and Kristin Bailey, for the respondent.
The
judgment of the Court was delivered by
Moldaver J. —
I.
Overview
[1]
Jason Rodgerson was charged with first degree
murder in connection with the death of Amber Young. He was tried by a court
composed of judge and jury, and convicted of second degree murder.
[2]
At trial, there was no dispute that Mr.
Rodgerson caused Ms. Young’s death. Rather, his primary defence was that he was
acting in lawful self-defence when he killed her. Secondarily, he relied on the
defences of lack of intent and provocation to reduce the charge of murder to
manslaughter. Finally, he maintained that the crime of first degree murder was
not made out on the evidence.
[3]
In the context of his self-defence claim, Mr.
Rodgerson conceded that he was applying force to Ms. Young at the time of her
death. He maintained, however, that the force in question was moderate and designed
solely to protect himself from death or grievous bodily harm. In using the
force he did, it was not his intention to kill or seriously injure Ms. Young.
The fact that she died from the force used was purely accidental.
[4]
The Crown sought to rebut Mr. Rodgerson’s
position that the force he used was moderate and not designed to kill or
seriously injure Ms. Young. To that end, Crown counsel relied in part on
certain aspects of Mr. Rodgerson’s post-offence conduct — namely, his efforts
to conceal her body in the backyard of his home and to clean up the scene of
her death.
[5]
The Crown also led other post-offence conduct at
trial. Specifically, the Crown adduced evidence that Mr. Rodgerson fled from
the police when they came to search his home, and that he initially lied to the
police about who was responsible for Ms. Young’s death. The parties acknowledge
that this body of evidence had no bearing on the issue of Mr. Rodgerson’s
intent.
[6]
At trial, Mr. Rodgerson argued that the evidence
of concealment and clean-up also had no bearing on the issue of his intent. The
trial judge disagreed. However, in his charge to the jury, the trial judge did
not explain the limited and somewhat nuanced basis upon which the evidence of
concealment and clean-up could be used to establish the requisite intent for
murder. Nor did he direct the jury that the other post-offence conduct — Mr.
Rodgerson’s flight from the police and his attempt to mislead them — could not
be used to establish intent. Rather than limiting the use of this evidence, as
he should have, to negating the defence of self-defence and establishing that
Ms. Young died as a result of an unlawful act, the trial judge also left it to
the jury to consider in deciding the issue of intent. By its verdict, the jury
obviously concluded that Mr. Rodgerson had the requisite intent for murder.
[7]
On appeal to the Ontario Court of Appeal from
his conviction, Mr. Rodgerson raised several grounds of appeal relating to the
jury charge. Among them, he challenged the trial judge’s failure to properly
instruct the jury on the various ways in which Mr. Rodgerson’s post-offence
conduct could be used, and the ways in which it could not be used.
[8]
A majority of the Court of Appeal, per Doherty
J.A., concluded that (1) evidence of Mr. Rodgerson’s flight from and lies to
the police was irrelevant to determining whether he had the requisite intent
for murder; (2) the trial judge erred by instructing the jury that it could
consider evidence of his flight from and lies to the police in assessing the issue
of intent; (3) evidence of Mr. Rodgerson’s concealment and clean-up was
relevant to assessing the issue of intent, but the trial judge failed to
instruct the jury on the limited way in which this evidence could be used for
that purpose; and (4) the curative proviso, Criminal Code, R.S.C. 1985,
c. C-46, s. 686(1) (b)(iii), did not apply (2014 ONCA 366, 319 O.A.C.
254). As a result, the majority ordered a new trial.
[9]
Writing in dissent, MacPherson J.A. agreed with
the majority that the trial judge erred in his instructions on the use of Mr.
Rodgerson’s flight from and lies to the police. Standing alone, he considered
this error to be minor. As regards the concealment and clean-up evidence, he
disagreed with the majority that a more specific instruction was necessary. In
his view, the trial judge’s general cautionary instruction about the dangers
associated with evidence of post-offence conduct was sufficient. Finding only
one minor error in the jury charge, he would have applied the curative proviso
and dismissed the appeal.
[10]
The sole issue before this Court is whether the
majority was correct in holding that the trial judge erred in his instructions
on the concealment and clean-up, and if so, whether that error — in conjunction
with the erroneous instructions on Mr. Rodgerson’s flight from and lies to the
police — was fatal. I conclude that the majority was correct on both counts,
and I would affirm the order for a new trial. Before addressing these issues,
however, it is necessary to review the circumstances of Ms. Young’s death and
to summarize the pertinent evidence presented at Mr. Rodgerson’s trial.
II.
Factual Background
A.
Ms. Young’s Death
[11]
On October 26, 2008, Mr. Rodgerson and Ms. Young
met for the first time in a bar in Oshawa, Ontario. Both had been drinking
earlier in the day, and Ms. Young had also taken various prescription
medications. They talked and drank together at the bar, and Ms. Young gave Mr.
Rodgerson an ecstasy tablet. She told him it was worth five dollars. After
leaving the bar, Ms. Young accompanied Mr. Rodgerson to his home. While in the
living room, Ms. Young repeatedly asked Mr. Rodgerson about the five dollars
she was owed.
[12]
Mr. Rodgerson was the sole witness to Ms.
Young’s death. At trial, he testified that he and Ms. Young engaged in consensual
sexual activity, first in the living room and then in his bedroom. According to
Mr. Rodgerson, shortly after moving to the bedroom, he lost interest in Ms.
Young and he suggested that they return to the bar. Ms. Young asked Mr.
Rodgerson again about the money she was owed, to which he replied, “What are
you? Some sort of whore?” Mr. Rodgerson testified that, in response, Ms. Young
attacked him with a knife, and they engaged in a physical struggle. This
struggle culminated in him pressing down on her face with his forearm until she
appeared to pass out. Shortly thereafter, Mr. Rodgerson also passed out. He
claimed that he did not know that Ms. Young was dead until he awoke the next
day.
B.
Mr. Rodgerson’s Post-Offence Conduct
[13]
Mr. Rodgerson made extensive efforts to conceal
Ms. Young’s body and clean up the scene of her death. He purchased bleach,
rubber gloves, and garbage bags, and dug a shallow grave in the backyard of the
house. He then dragged Ms. Young’s body from the bedroom to the backyard. He removed
her clothing and jewellery, placed her body in the grave, poured bleach into
the hole and filled it up with dirt. He then returned to the house and removed
his bloodstained mattress from the bedroom. He cut up the bloodstained carpet
and placed it in garbage bags, along with Ms. Young’s shoes and remnants of
their sexual activity. He also broke Ms. Young’s cellphone and removed the
battery. Finally, he used bleach to clean up the blood, and other remnants of
their sexual activity and physical altercation, located on the living room
carpet, the kitchen floor, and the bedroom walls.
[14]
Several days after Ms. Young’s death, on October
29, police officers executed a search warrant at Mr. Rodgerson’s home. When the
police arrived, Mr. Rodgerson attempted to flee, but he was quickly caught and
arrested near the front steps of his home. During his initial police interview,
he made various false statements in which he attempted to deflect blame from
himself by suggesting that someone else had killed Ms. Young.
C.
Forensic Evidence
[15]
At trial, the Crown relied on the testimony of
two key expert witnesses: Dr. Michael Pollanen, the forensic pathologist who
conducted Ms. Young’s autopsy, and David Sibley, a forensic analyst who
conducted a bloodstain pattern analysis at Mr. Rodgerson’s home. The Crown also
put forward the testimony of Dr. Marie Elliot, a forensic toxicologist who
analysed the drug and alcohol content of Ms. Young’s blood.
[16]
Dr. Pollanen described the injuries he found on
Ms. Young’s head and face, including bruising, abrasions, and cuts on the
inside of her lips. While he could not ascertain a conclusive cause of death,
he testified that the types of injuries he observed were consistent with death
by smothering. Mr. Sibley described the results of his bloodstain pattern
analysis, which shed light on the nature of the physical altercation between
Mr. Rodgerson and Ms. Young, as well as on Mr. Rodgerson’s efforts to clean up
the scene after her death.
III.
Analysis
A.
The Relevance of the
Post-Offence Concealment and Clean-Up in Determining Mr. Rodgerson’s Intent
[17]
The Crown concedes that the trial judge erred by
instructing the jury that it could consider Mr. Rodgerson’s flight from and
lies to the police on the issue of intent (A.F., at para. 5). It is the
remaining post-offence conduct — Mr. Rodgerson’s concealment of Ms. Young’s
body, and his clean-up of the scene of her death — which is at the heart of
this appeal.
[18]
The Court of Appeal unanimously rejected Mr.
Rodgerson’s assertion that the concealment and clean-up evidence was irrelevant
to establishing the requisite intent for murder. The Court of Appeal was split,
however, on whether the trial judge provided sufficient direction to the jury
on how it could use that evidence in assessing the issue of intent.
Before determining whether the majority was correct to find that the lack of
instruction constituted a legal error, it is first necessary to clarify, as a
preliminary matter, precisely how the post-offence concealment and clean-up
evidence is probative on the issue of Mr. Rodgerson’s intent.
[19]
In order to establish that Mr. Rodgerson was
guilty of murder, rather than manslaughter, the Crown had to prove that he
either intended to kill Ms. Young, or he intended to cause her bodily harm
which he knew was likely to cause death. In this regard, the cornerstone of the
Crown’s case was the nature and extent of the injuries suffered by Ms. Young,
and the degree of force required to inflict them. The more severe the injuries
caused by Mr. Rodgerson, and the more force required to inflict them, the
stronger the inference that he intended to kill Ms. Young or cause her serious
injury. To show that the nature and extent of the injuries and the degree of
force used pointed to murder, the Crown introduced Dr. Pollanen’s autopsy evidence
and Mr. Sibley’s bloodstain pattern analysis.
[20]
It is relatively straightforward to understand
how Mr. Rodgerson’s efforts at concealment and clean-up were capable of
supporting the inference that he acted unlawfully. The jury could reasonably
have concluded that he was attempting to conceal evidence of a crime that he
had committed — that is, unlawfully causing Ms. Young’s death. However, these
efforts were also capable of supporting the further inference that he was
acting not merely to hide the fact that a crime had occurred, but to
hide the extent of the crime. In other words, the jury might reasonably
have concluded that he sought to conceal Ms. Young’s body and clean up the
scene of her death in order to conceal the nature and extent of Ms. Young’s
injuries and the degree of force required to inflict them. As indicated, the
more severe the injuries, and the more force required to inflict them, the
stronger the inference that he intended to kill Ms. Young or cause her bodily
harm which he knew was likely to cause death. This is not the only inference
that could be drawn from the concealment and clean-up, but it is one the jury
was entitled to draw.
[21]
In this regard, the post-offence concealment and
clean-up is simply some evidence that the jury could look to — in
addition to the evidence of Dr. Pollanen and Mr. Sibley — in deciding the
nature and extent of the injuries and the degree of force required to inflict
them. While the meaning of the forensic evidence was vigorously contested at
trial, the Crown’s interpretation was that it revealed a more prolonged and
violent physical altercation than the version of events described by Mr.
Rodgerson. It was open to the jury to look to the post-offence concealment and
clean-up as evidence that tended to confirm this interpretation.
[22]
On this point, I reach the same conclusion as
the Court of Appeal. Doherty J.A. summarized the necessary inferential
reasoning in the following manner:
Before the
post-offence conduct relating to the hiding of the body and the clean-up of the
homicide scene could assist the Crown in proving the appellant’s state of mind,
the jury first had to be satisfied that there was a somewhat prolonged
and bloody struggle during which the appellant struck Ms. Young in the head or
face several times, or at least more than twice. The jury could come to
that conclusion only after a careful consideration of the competing
interpretations of the forensic evidence placed before it. Second,
the jury had to be satisfied that the appellant had engaged in the post-offence
conduct to destroy evidence that would reveal an extensive struggle and assault
well beyond that admitted by him in his evidence. [Emphasis added; para. 76.]
[23]
I do not disagree with this description of the
different inferences required to make use of the concealment and clean-up
evidence on the issue of intent. I am concerned, however, that this paragraph
could be misinterpreted to suggest that, on this issue, it would have been
impermissible for the jury to consider the concealment and clean-up evidence at
all until it had first satisfied itself, based on other evidence,
that the altercation between Mr. Rodgerson and Ms. Young had taken a particular
form. I do not ascribe such an interpretation to Doherty J.A., but I wish to
avoid any possible confusion on the matter. In my view, such an approach would
needlessly complicate the jury’s already complicated analytical task. Moreover,
it would represent an unwarranted requirement that the evidence be placed in
artificial silos before being considered by the jury. The jurisprudence
disfavours this type of evidentiary segregation: see R. v. Morin, [1988]
2 S.C.R. 345. The jury was entitled to consider both the forensic evidence and
the evidence of post-offence concealment and clean-up simultaneously, as a
whole, in determining the nature and extent of Ms. Young’s injuries and the
degree of force required to inflict them.
B.
The Trial Judge Failed to Adequately Instruct
the Jury on the Use of the Post-Offence Concealment and Clean-Up Evidence in
Assessing Mr. Rodgerson’s Intent
[24]
I agree with the Court of Appeal majority that
the trial judge erred in his instructions to the jury by failing to provide
sufficient guidance on how to use the evidence of concealment and clean-up on
the issue of intent.
(1)
The Trial Judge’s Instructions on Post-Offence
Conduct
[25]
The trial judge referred to Mr. Rodgerson’s
concealment and clean-up on numerous occasions in his lengthy jury charge. He
provided an initial, “general instruction” on post-offence conduct, in which he
gave an overview of its various permissible uses and cautioned the jury about
the dangers commonly associated with this type of evidence. In particular, as
MacPherson J.A. observed in his reasons, the trial judge instructed the jury in
accordance with the cautionary requirements set forth in this Court’s decisions
in R. v. White, [1998] 2 S.C.R. 72 (“White 1998”), and R.
v. White, 2011 SCC 13, [2011] 1 S.C.R. 433 (“White 2011”). The trial
judge stated:
3. . . . I wish to caution
you about a potential danger concerning post offence conduct. Post offence
conduct may appear more probative than it really is, and may be, by its very
nature, less reliable than it seems, or may be consistent with other less
obvious explanations than the one advanced by Crown counsel. You must consider
evidence of post offence conduct with care and the caution I have provided to
you. I would also direct you to reserve your final judgment about . . . Jason
Rodgerson’s post offence conduct until all the evidence has been
considered during your deliberations.
4. What a person said or did after
an offence was committed may indicate that he acted or spoke in a way
which, according to human experience and logic, is consistent with the conduct
of a person who committed the offence and inconsistent with the conduct of
someone who did not do so. On the other hand, there may be other explanations
for what Jason Rodgerson said or did afterwards, such that the conduct does not
assist in deciding whether he acted unlawfully or whether or not he intended to
kill Amber Young. [Emphasis in original; A.R., vol. IX, at p. 63.]
[26]
Throughout the charge, the trial judge
repeatedly referred back to the evidence of concealment and clean-up in his
instructions on the elements of the relevant offences and of Mr. Rodgerson’s
defences. On each occasion, he provided the same type of generic instruction.
He did not draw any distinction between using the concealment and clean-up
evidence to evaluate whether Ms. Young died as a result of an unlawful act, and
using it to evaluate Mr. Rodgerson’s intent. Each time, he simply instructed
the jury that “[o]nce again you also have to consider the post offence conduct
which I have previously outlined to you”, or words to that effect (A.R., vol.
IX, at p. 119). On some occasions, the trial judge provided a brief factual
summary of the relevant evidence, while on others he did not. At no point,
however, did he assist the jury in understanding how it could use the
concealment and clean-up evidence in determining whether Mr. Rodgerson had the
requisite intent for murder. Nor did he explain how the inferential reasoning
was different on this issue than on the question of whether Mr. Rodgerson had
acted unlawfully.
(2)
A More Specific Instruction Was Required
[27]
The jury was entitled to consider the concealment
and clean-up evidence in respect of Mr. Rodgerson’s self-defence claim and
whether he unlawfully killed Ms. Young. It was also entitled to consider
this evidence in evaluating whether he had the requisite intent for murder.
Regarding self-defence and unlawful killing, the relevance of the concealment
and clean-up and the nature of the available inference was a matter of common
sense: concealing the body and cleaning up the scene of Ms. Young’s death could
be viewed as evidence that Mr. Rodgerson knew he had killed Ms. Young
unlawfully and was acting to cover it up. Once the jury moved on to the issue
of intent for murder, however, this simple inferential reasoning was no longer
of any use. Rather, the limited relevance of this post-offence conduct on the
issue of intent rested on the following, narrower inference: the jury might
reasonably conclude that Mr. Rodgerson concealed Ms. Young’s body and cleaned
up the scene of her death in order to conceal the nature and extent of her
injuries and the degree of force required to inflict them.
[28]
In the sections of the jury charge relating to
the issue of intent, the trial judge failed to link the evidence of concealment
and clean-up to the nature and extent of Ms. Young’s injuries and the force
required to inflict them. Rather, his charge merely reiterated the existence of
the evidence, and instructed the jury to consider it along with all the other
evidence adduced at trial. This was a legal error. Having first used the
concealment and clean-up evidence in a common sense manner based on clear and
readily accessible inferences, there was a risk that the jury might continue to
rely on the evidence in this same manner on the issue of intent. The failure to
instruct the jury on the narrower basis for using the evidence created a risk
that the jury might convict Mr. Rodgerson for murder based only on the broader
inference that had previously been sufficient: that the concealment and
clean-up pointed to a consciousness of guilt and a desire to prevent discovery
of an unlawful killing.
[29]
A more specific instruction was required. It
need not have been long or complex. After first explaining to the jury the
factual link between Mr. Rodgerson’s concealment and clean-up efforts and the
resulting concealment of the injuries to Ms. Young’s body and the blood at the
scene, the trial judge need only have added a few sentences, along these lines:
The nature and extent of the injuries and the force used to inflict
them are factors you may consider in assessing Mr. Rodgerson’s intent at the
time he caused Ms. Young’s death. In this regard, you may take into account the
evidence of Mr. Rodgerson’s concealment and clean-up in determining whether he
intended to kill Ms. Young, or to cause her serious bodily harm which he knew
was likely to cause death. On this issue, you will need to consider this
evidence in a different way than I have instructed you previously. You may
conclude that Mr. Rodgerson sought to conceal Ms. Young’s body and clean up the
scene of her death in order to conceal the nature and extent of Ms. Young’s
injuries and the degree of force required to inflict them. You may or may not
reach this conclusion — it is up to you — but if you do reach this conclusion,
you may consider this along with all of the other pertinent evidence in
determining whether Mr. Rodgerson had the requisite intent for murder.
[30]
In crafting the jury charge, a trial judge has a
general duty to inform the jury of the relevant evidence, and to assist the
jury in linking that evidence to the issues that it must consider in reaching a
verdict. The level of detail that is required varies depending on the context.
As the majority of this Court stated in R. v. Daley, 2007 SCC 53, [2007]
3 S.C.R. 523, per Bastarache J.:
The
extent to which the evidence must be reviewed “will depend on each particular
case. The test is one of fairness. The accused is entitled to a
fair trial and to make full answer and defence. So long as the evidence
is put to the jury in a manner that will allow it to fully appreciate the
issues and the defence presented, the charge will be adequate” . . . . [para.
57]
(Quoting
C. Granger, The Criminal Jury Trial in Canada (2nd ed. 1996), at p.
249.)
[31]
I do not suggest that the evidence of
concealment and clean-up in this case was technical or unusually involved.
However, its relevance to the issue of intent was more than a matter of common
sense, and a more specific instruction was required in order to present the
evidence and the available inferences to the jury in a comprehensible form. As
described in Daley, “the task of the trial judge is to explain the
critical evidence and the law and relate them to the essential issues in plain,
understandable language” (para. 57 (emphasis added), quoting R. v. Jack
(1993), 88 Man. R. (2d) 93 (C.A.), at para. 39, aff’d [1994] 2 S.C.R. 310). The
failure to do so here amounts to a legal error.
(3)
Requiring a More Specific Instruction Is
Consistent With This Court’s Jurisprudence on Post-Offence Conduct
[32]
MacPherson J.A., writing in dissent, found no
error in the trial judge’s instructions related to the post-offence concealment
and clean-up. He concluded that the jury charge conformed to the requirements
for instructions on post-offence conduct established in White 1998 and White
2011.
[33]
Those two cases relate to a trial judge’s
obligation to caution the jury about the dangers associated with post-offence
conduct in general. I agree with MacPherson J.A. that the jury charge in this
case provided an adequate caution against those dangers. With respect, however,
I do not share his view that this conclusion disposes of the appeal.
[34]
The legal error in the jury charge was the
failure to assist the jury in understanding the limited and somewhat nuanced
relevance of the concealment and clean-up evidence on the issue of intent for
murder. This error is unrelated to the required caution on the dangers
associated with post-offence conduct in general. White 1998 and White
2011 do not serve to insulate jury instructions on post-offence conduct
from challenge on other grounds. They do nothing to circumscribe the need to
provide specific instructions where the relevance of the evidence on a
particular issue is not readily apparent and where the natural inclinations of
the jury might lead it down a wrong path. Correctly cautioning the jury in
accordance with White 1998 and White 2011 is therefore necessary,
but not always sufficient.
(4)
The “Gaps” in the Jury Charge Were Not Filled by
the Crown’s Closing Argument
[35]
The Crown asserts that its closing submissions
at trial “arguably filled precisely the ‘gaps’ in the charge that concerned the
majority at the Court of Appeal” (A.F., at para. 62). As the majority of this
Court stated in Daley, the “charge to the jury takes place not in
isolation, but in the context of the trial as a whole”, and therefore
“[a]ppellate review of the trial judge’s charge will encompass the addresses of
counsel as they may fill gaps left in the charge” (para. 58). On the facts of
this case, however, I am unpersuaded that the Crown’s closing address was
sufficient to remedy the deficiency in the jury charge.
[36]
The Crown made several statements during its
closing submissions that were of some value in explaining to the jury how the
evidence of concealment and clean-up related to the issue of intent. However,
they were scattered throughout a lengthy closing argument, and many of them
were vague and oblique. Most important, just like the trial judge, the Crown
never hit the nail on the head. The Crown’s closing argument did not contain a
clear and simple description of the way in which the concealment and clean-up
evidence could be used in evaluating the issue of Mr. Rodgerson’s intent. The
submissions lacked a direct explanation of the permissible inference, as
described by Doherty J.A., that Mr. Rodgerson attempted to conceal Ms. Young’s
body and clean up the scene of her death “because the injuries to the body and
the blood at the scene would reveal an assault consistent only with an
intention to cause bodily harm that would likely cause death” (para. 68). As
such, the closing submissions do not suffice to fill the gap and correct the
legal error in the jury charge.
[37]
I should also note, in regard to the
instructions on Mr. Rodgerson’s flight from and lies to the police, that the
legal error amounted to misdirection, not non-direction. The trial judge
instructed the jury that it could use the evidence to infer that Mr. Rodgerson
had the requisite intent for murder, when no such inference was available. The
error was unrelated to a gap in the charge, and as such, the gap-filling
principle contemplated by Daley could have no application.
C.
The Curative Proviso Does Not Apply
[38]
The charge contained two legal errors. First, it
is not disputed that the trial judge erred by instructing the jury to consider
Mr. Rodgerson’s flight from and lies to the police on the issue of intent.
Second, the trial judge erred in his instructions on Mr. Rodgerson’s
concealment and clean-up efforts.
[39]
The Crown argues that, notwithstanding any such
errors, the curative proviso should apply. I agree with Doherty J.A.’s analysis
on this point. As he noted, after the jury rejected self-defence, the issue of
Mr. Rodgerson’s intent was “the central issue at trial”, and these two errors
“went directly to the jury’s consideration of that issue” (para. 79).
Furthermore, the Crown’s case was not overwhelming. The curative proviso does
not apply, and Mr. Rodgerson is entitled to a new trial for second degree
murder.
D.
The Jury Charge as a Whole
[40]
In his dissenting opinion, MacPherson J.A.
expressed concern about requiring a more specific instruction on the
concealment and clean-up evidence, in part because he did not wish to further
fuel the trend towards lengthier and more complex jury charges. In his view,
appellate courts should be very wary of
expanding jury instructions . . . . A common theme of contemporary judicial and
counsel discourse is that jury charges today are not as helpful to juries as in
times past. That is because the modern jury charge is, especially in most
murder cases, exceptionally long and complex, rendering doubtful a jury’s
comprehension and comfort. [para. 103]
In her factum, Ms.
Stephens for the Crown echoes this concern, noting that “[t]his charge was
already incredibly long and complex” (para. 71). Quoting from both Daley,
at para. 56, and R. v. Jacquard, [1997] 1 S.C.R. 314, at para. 13, the
Crown emphasizes that “[b]revity in the jury charge is desired” and “[t]he
judge’s role is to ‘decant and simplify’” (para. 41).
[41]
While I differ on the disposition of this
appeal, I share these concerns about the proliferation of long and
unnecessarily complex jury charges. The jury charge in this case spans over 200
pages and took a full day to present in court. I have concluded that the trial
judge erred by failing to sufficiently aid the jury in understanding how to use
the evidence of post-offence concealment and clean-up on the issue of intent. I
emphatically reject any suggestion, however, that an even longer jury charge
was required in this case.
[42]
I start with the observation that a jury charge
may be “so unnecessarily confusing that it
constitute[s] an error of law” (R. v. Hebert, [1996] 2 S.C.R.
272, at p. 277). It is apparent that taming the unchecked expansion of jury
charges is not merely advisable — it is a legal necessity. Mr. Rodgerson does
not argue that the jury charge in this case was so complex and confusing that
it meets the Hebert standard. However, having reviewed the charge in its
entirety, I feel obliged to comment on the detrimental impact that increasingly
long and complex jury charges are having on our criminal justice system. In
doing so, I intend no disrespect to the trial judge, who obviously put a great
deal of time and effort into preparing the charge.
[43]
The basic facts of Ms. Young’s death were not
disputed at trial. Mr. Rodgerson’s testimony asserting self-defence and the
Crown’s contradictory theory were both clear and readily comprehensible. In my
respectful view, the length, repetitiveness, and complexity of the jury charge
were unwarranted. The unwieldy final product resulted from a combination of
decisions taken by the Crown, defence counsel, and the trial judge. Each of
these actors, both in this case and in the justice system at large, bears a
responsibility for ensuring that jury charges are as clear and comprehensible
as possible. Rote, repetitive and generic charges are of little value, and are
often harmful to the jury’s comprehension. Indeed, they can and do lead to
instruction that is all but meaningless. Charges should be thoughtfully
tailored to focus on the key evidence and the key issues that are relevant in
the particular context of the case.
(1)
The Role of the Crown
[44]
A significant contributing factor to the lengthy
and convoluted jury charge in this case was the decision by Crown counsel at
trial (not Ms. Stephens) to pursue a conviction for first degree murder. Ms.
Stephens concedes that the first degree murder count was “entirely based on circumstantial evidence” (transcript, at p. 8). I would go further and suggest that the evidence supporting first
degree murder was paper thin, and more a matter of speculation than of
inferences that could reasonably be drawn from the circumstantial evidence. Put
simply, I have difficulty seeing how it could pass the reasonable prospect of
conviction threshold. The decision to proceed with first degree murder required
the trial judge to include instructions on each of the four separate theories
of constructive first degree murder advanced by the Crown: that Mr. Rodgerson
intentionally killed Ms. Young in the course of (1) a sexual assault; or (2) an
unlawful confinement; or (3) an attempted sexual assault; or (4) an attempted
unlawful confinement. This increased the length of the jury charge by almost 40
pages.
[45]
The jury in this case did not convict Mr.
Rodgerson of first degree murder, but rather of the lesser included offence of
second degree murder. As such, in a new trial, only the second degree murder
charge will be before the jury. This will reduce the complexity of the jury
charge. This same concern will arise in future cases, however. Certainly, it is
within the Crown’s discretion to prosecute charges where the evidence would
permit a reasonable jury to convict. However, some semblance of a cost-benefit
analysis would serve the justice system well. Where the additional or
heightened charges are marginal, and pursuing them would necessitate a
substantially more complex trial process and jury charge, the Crown should
carefully consider whether the public interest would be better served by either
declining to prosecute the marginal charges from the outset or deciding not to
pursue them once the evidence at trial is complete.
[46]
While trial judges must proceed with caution, I
see no difficulty in questioning Crown counsel about the efficacy of proceeding
with a more serious charge or charges in circumstances where the evidence
surpasses the directed verdict threshold, but only barely. Apart from
increasing the length and complexity of the jury charge and the burden on the
jury in its deliberation process, charging a more serious offence risks
deflecting the jury’s attention away from the crucial issue or issues upon
which the case truly hinges.
(2)
The Role of Defence Counsel
[47]
The defence theory of the case was relatively
straightforward. Mr. Rodgerson, testifying in his own defence, asserted that
Ms. Young attacked him unexpectedly with a knife causing him to fear for his
life, that he used physical force only to protect himself, and that she died
during the course of their struggle — a death which he did not intend to cause.
This simple narrative generated jury instructions on the defence of
“involuntary act” accident, and three different bases of self-defence under ss.
34(1) , 34(2) , and 35 of the Criminal Code , as they then existed (amended
S.C. 2012, c. 9, s. 2 ). Nearly a quarter of the jury charge was dedicated to
instructions on these four topics, three of which were unnecessary and only
served to complicate the charge.
[48]
To begin, there was no basis for providing
instruction on the defence of “involuntary act” accident. While Mr. Rodgerson
did testify that Ms. Young’s death was an accident, this was a case of accident
going to mens rea — i.e., Mr. Rodgerson’s claim that he did not intend
to kill Ms. Young. In oral submissions on behalf of Mr. Rodgerson, Mr. Hicks,
who was not counsel at trial, acknowledged that there was no basis for an
instruction on “involuntary act” accident, and indicated that none would be
sought should the order for a new trial be upheld (transcript, at p. 53). Mr. Hicks also
acknowledged that s. 34(2) alone would have encompassed the basis of
self-defence asserted by Mr. Rodgerson’s testimony (pp. 53-54). Section 34(2)
was available if Mr. Rodgerson accidentally killed Ms. Young, or if he did so
intentionally: see R. v. Pintar (1996), 30 O.R. (3d)
483 (C.A.), at p. 497. Mr. Rodgerson received no benefit from having two
additional forms of self-defence put to the jury. Such instruction could only
serve to complicate the charge and confuse the jury (Pintar, p. 497).
[49]
Defence counsel, while of course seeking to
advance the client’s defence by all lawful and ethical means, also has an
obligation to assist the trial judge in crafting a jury charge that provides clear
and comprehensible instructions on the defences that are actually implicated by
the defence theory of the case. Had that been done here by defence counsel at
trial, the charge could have been shortened by nearly 50 pages.
(3)
The Role of the Trial Judge
[50]
While the Crown and defence counsel both have
roles to play, the role of the trial judge is the most vital, and the most
difficult, in formulating jury instructions. A trial judge must strike a
crucial balance by crafting a jury charge that is both comprehensive and
comprehensible. Recognizing the difficulty inherent in this task, this Court
has “repeatedly endorsed” the functional approach to reviewing jury charges (R.
v. Mack, 2014 SCC 58, [2014] 3 S.C.R. 3, at para. 49). This functional
approach is designed to “ensure that the yardstick by which we measure the
fitness of a [jury charge] does not become overly onerous”, in order to reduce
“the proliferation of very lengthy charges in which judges often quote large
extracts from appellate decisions simply to safeguard verdicts from appeal” (Jacquard,
at para. 1). Under the functional approach, the trial judge’s duty is to
“decant and simplify” (ibid., at para. 13). Over-charging is just as
incompatible with this duty as is under-charging.
[51]
More than 15 years later, the concern expressed
in Jacquard remains. However, rather than quoting large extracts from
appellate decisions, trial judges have taken to quoting large extracts from
model charge manuals to safeguard their verdicts from appeal. This has resulted
in an overreliance on the rote reproduction of excerpts from model jury
instructions. But model charge manuals do not necessarily translate into model
charges. They are a tool, not the final product. They are there to guide, not
govern. In my view, the failure to isolate the critical issues in a case and
tailor the charge to them inevitably makes the instructions less helpful to the
jury and adds unnecessarily to their length and complexity.
[52]
Courts have repeatedly
emphasized that the jury charge must “be tailored to the facts of the
specific case” (R. v. McNeil (2006), 84 O.R. (3d) 125
(C.A.), at para. 21). While “[t]he model instructions are intended to
provide a starting point for trial judges”, modification will frequently be
required to provide the jury “with the applicable legal principles in a format
that facilitates the application of those principles to the specific
circumstances of the case” (ibid.). Trial judges must “separate the
wheat from the chaff” when determining which defences may be applicable, and
must engage in a “careful and considered culling . . . to avoid unnecessary,
inappropriate and irrelevant legal instruction of a kind that might well divert
the jury’s attention” from the primary disputed issues in the case (Pintar,
at p. 494).
[53]
This principle was
endorsed in Helping Jurors Understand (2007), at p. 82, by no less
authority than Justice Watt of the Ontario Court of Appeal (then of the
Superior Court of Justice), also the author of the Ontario Specimen Jury
Instructions (Criminal) (2003):
A specimen is a sample. A specimen instruction is a sample
instruction about its subject-matter. Specimen instructions do not
and cannot be expected to provide legally accurate directions for every set of
circumstances that fall within their reach. There are no
one-size-fits-all jury instructions. At best, specimen instructions
provide the basic building blocks for finals and other instructions. The
twists and turns of individual cases will dictate the nature and extent of
modification required to ensure legal accuracy. [Emphasis in original.]
[54]
In the present case, a few modest alterations
would have saved this jury charge from legal error. At the same time, a great
many of the instructions that were included could and should have been removed.
In the event that Mr. Rodgerson’s new trial adduces substantially similar
evidence, and the positions of the parties on that evidence remain the same, it
is my view that a substantially more streamlined jury charge would suffice. Mr.
Rodgerson would benefit from a jury keenly focused on the evidence and
arguments forming the basis of his defence, and not distracted by hours of
confusing and repetitive generic instruction. The Crown would also benefit from
a simplified charge, with fewer unnecessary contours in which grounds for an
appeal of conviction may lay hidden. I do not wish to appear naïve, and I
recognize that such an everybody-wins approach is easier said than done.
Nevertheless, I remain firmly of the view that “common sense and the law need
not be strangers”, and that the fundamental purpose of the jury charge must be
“to educate, not complicate” (R. v. Zebedee (2006), 81 O.R. (3d) 583
(C.A.), at para. 82).
IV.
Conclusion
[55]
It was open to the jury to conclude that Mr.
Rodgerson sought to conceal Ms. Young’s body and clean up the scene of her
death in order to conceal the nature and extent of her injuries and the degree
of force required to inflict them. This in turn could have been relevant on the
issue of whether Mr. Rodgerson had the requisite intent for murder: the more
severe the injuries, and the more force required to inflict them, the stronger
the inference that Mr. Rodgerson intended to kill, or to cause bodily harm
which he knew was likely to cause death.
[56]
This chain of inferential reasoning was narrow,
and the relevance of the evidence was attenuated. The trial judge should have
assisted the jury with a specific instruction on how to link the concealment
and clean-up evidence with the issue of intent. His failure to do so was a
legal error, and one that is sufficiently serious, in conjunction with the
erroneous instructions on Mr. Rodgerson’s flight from and lies to the police,
that the curative proviso cannot apply. I would dismiss the Crown’s appeal and
affirm the Court of Appeal’s judgment ordering a new trial on a charge of
second degree murder.
Appeal
dismissed.
Solicitor
for the appellant: Attorney General of Ontario, Toronto.
Solicitors for the
respondent: Hicks Adams, Toronto.