Docket: T-2165-16
Citation:
2017 FC 912
Ottawa, Ontario, October 24, 2017
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Brown
BETWEEN:
|
MOHAMED
AKHLAGHI
|
Applicant
|
and
|
ATTORNEY
GENERAL OF CANADA
|
Respondent
|
JUDGMENT AND REASONS
I.
Nature of the Matter
[1]
This is an application for judicial review under
section 18.1 of the Federal Courts Act, RSC 1985, c F-7 [the Act]
of a decision [Decision] of the Independent Chairperson of the Disciplinary
Court of the Collins Bay Institution [Collins Bay], made on November 17, 2016.
In the Decision, the Independent Chairperson convicted the Applicant of the
disciplinary offence of disobeying a justifiable order of a staff member,
contrary to paragraph 40(a) of the Corrections and Conditional Release Act,
SC 1992, c 20 [the CCRA] and sentenced the Applicant to pay a $20.00
fine, and was suspended for 60 days. The application was heard in Kingston.
[2]
For the reasons that follow the application is
granted; the Decision below is not reasonable.
II.
Facts
[3]
On September 2, 2016, the Applicant and all
inmates of the Applicant’s range, the “J-Range”
of the Maximum Security Unit at Collins Bay, refused a general order to return
to their cells and “lock up” for evening “count” at 10:30 at night.
[4]
Officer Hurran, an officer on duty the night of
the incident at issue, testified at the Institutional Disciplinary Court
Hearing [the Hearing]. According to Officer Hurran, the nightly “count” was called at 10:30 p.m. over the PA system.
Inmates were required at that time to enter their cells. Typically, once all
inmates are in their cells, Officer Hurran would hit “lock
all”, there would be a pause, and then all the cell doors in the range
would close using an air system. The lights on the lock system screen would
turn green when the doors are locked, or, if a given door is not secured
closed, the light for that door is red.
[5]
On the evening of September 2, 2016, when the
officers, including Officer Hurran arrived at the J-range, they went to lock
the doors, but neither the Applicant nor any of the other prisoners in that
range were in their cells. In addition, numerous cell doors were blocked open
with various items such as shoes or footlockers.
[6]
Officer Hurran testified that the inmates were
in their range, but despite numerous instructions to lock up, neither the
Applicant nor any other inmate on the range made any movement to enter their
cells.
[7]
In particular, four penitentiary officers
approached and walked onto the range telling the inmates to move into their
cells. However, because the cells were blocked open and the inmates were not in
their cells, the four officers could not do a normal security patrol. Officer
Hurran testified that the officers could not go down to the range because, in
the past, blocking cells open has been a trap set by prisoners for penitentiary
officers who entered the area.
[8]
Therefore, the four penitentiary officers
vacated the range to speak to the range representative (another inmate).
[9]
The Applicant’s cell was at the far end of the J-Range.
[10]
At the Hearing, Officer Hurran testified to
observing the Applicant the night of the incident. Officer Hurran stated:
[the Applicant] was observed on the range
with the other inmates, and he was directed to enter the cell for lockup, and
as I can recall, his cell was – I was unable to secure all the occupied cells
in the range, due to the doors being blocked open.
[11]
After discussions with the range representative
and penitentiary officials, including the Warden, over the course of some two
hours, all the inmates who had refused to enter their cells eventually did so,
including the Applicant, and were locked up much later that evening, between
12:20 a.m. and 12:40 a.m. the next morning, on September 3, 2016.
[12]
There was no evidence, nor any allegation that
the Applicant was involved in organizing or leading these actions by the
inmates on his range. He had been in the penitentiary system since 2007 and his
statutory release was set for 2017.
[13]
The Applicant and all other inmates on the
Applicant’s range were charged with the same offence in relation to this
incident, namely, disobeying a justifiable order. It was alleged that each
inmate refused to lock up after multiple instructions, and that each inmate
used an object to block his own cell door from closing.
[14]
The Applicant gave evidence. He admitted that he
did not obey the lock up order. Nor was there any dispute that the order was “justifiable” – it was given every night at the end of
the prison day. While the Applicant denied blocking his cell, the Independent
Chairperson said he was not concerned with cell blocking. Thus, it is not
disputed that the Applicant disobeyed a justifiable order by not entering his
cell, thereby breaching subsection 40(a) of the CCRA.
[15]
The Applicant states that the refusal to lock up
occurred following an inmate-on-inmate ‘stabbing’ that had been discovered
earlier in the day. However, Officer Hurran stated that an inmate had been ‘injured’
that night. The parties agree the injured inmate was in a different range when
injured, and that his cell was not on the Applicant’s range.
[16]
It is also agreed that the perpetrator’s cell was
in the J-Range with the Applicant, and that the perpetrator was actually in the
J-Range when the inmates refused the lock up order. The Applicant argues that
it was the presence - and anticipated imminent apprehension by prison
authorities - of the aggressor inmate that precipitated the inmates’ refusal to
lock up that evening.
[17]
At the Hearing, the Applicant stated that during
his orientation sessions at the federal penitentiary system in 2007, he was told
by staff to, “never go against the grain” and, “if everyone on the range is putting up their blockers, you
have to put up the blocks. If they are refusing to lock up, don’t ever be the
person that – to go against the grain […]”. He testified that he was
told that if he went against the grain, he would be held accountable by the
range and considered a “rat”. The Applicant’s evidence
in this respect was not contradicted.
[18]
The Applicant also testified that in the
circumstances, if he was the only person who entered his cell, “he would have problems. I couldn’t stay on that range. I
couldn’t stay in Collins Bay Maximum Security. I would have been stabbed just
like the other person”, referring to the individual involved in the
altercation that precipitated this incident.
[19]
By way of background, it appears the Applicant
had been in Collins Bay Medium, where there had been issues that resulted in
him being moved to Collins Bay Maximum. He stated, “[s]o
I was already on, you know, sticky grounds to begin with, so I wasn’t going to
be the only one to lock up to have more a […] problem” and he repeated, “I would have got stabbed like that other guy.”
[20]
In cross-examination, the Applicant acknowledged
that he also knew that if he felt he was in danger, he was to “tell an officer”. In this case, however, the
Applicant did not tell an officer: there were no officers to tell. In this
connection it is also worth recalling that his cell was at the far end of the
range away from the prison officers.
[21]
At the Hearing, the Applicant raised two
defences.
(i)
First, the defence of duress or compulsion by
threats. Applicant’s counsel argued that the Applicant felt, “that there was the implicit threat of future bodily harm or
potentially death that he reasonably believed would be carried out.”
Counsel said the Applicant felt there was no safe avenue for escape, pointing
to the fact that he was in a unit where another inmate had been assaulted, and
he felt threatened with harm if he did not participate. The defence of duress
is raised on judicial review.
(ii)
The second defence was that of officially
induced error of law based on the Applicant’s evidence that he was advised,
during his initial orientation not to put himself in a position of peril by “going against the grain”; language he recalls from
nine years earlier when he entered federal custody. The Applicant argued that
an officially induced error of law is a defence where the accused reasonably
relied upon erroneous legal opinion. The Independent Chairperson made no
finding on this defence which was not pursued on this judicial review.
[22]
The Applicant was convicted of the offence
charged, namely disobeying a justifiable order, contrary to paragraph 40(a) of CCRA.
Central to his decision was the Independent Chairperson’s ruling that duress
was not a defence in law.
III.
Issues
[23]
The only issue is whether the Independent
Chairperson’s assessment of the Applicant’s duress defence was reasonable.
IV.
Decision
[24]
In arriving at the Decision, the Independent
Chairperson restated the evidence of Officer Hurran: the Applicant failed to
lock up despite numerous orders to do so. The Independent Chairperson noted
that there is no dispute that the Applicant failed to obey the lock up order.
[25]
Because the reasons are short I will reproduce
them in material respects:
I think Mr. Akhlaghi agrees that he did not
lock up. However, he is saying that it would go, basically to use his phrase,
against the grain. In other words, he would be disobeying other inmates who may
have more power or more control of the unit and other inmates if he locked up,
and that may place him in some sort of jeopardy if he complied. So what he did
was he went along with what the inmates indicated to him, and that was not to
lock up, for whatever reason.
Submissions presented by the defence
basically presented one of duress, that it would be
dangerous for Mr. Akhlaghi to have locked up. There is a prison code. There
is no doubt in my mind that prison code exists, and that you must kind of
follow what you are being told by perhaps inmates who might be, for a
better term, in charge of that unit, whether legally or otherwise; probably
illegally. However, that is not a defence to the charge. What it does is
it helps to explain his behaviour that he didn’t do this entirely on his own
free will; that he did so because the other inmates didn’t lock up. […] The
submissions that Mr. Gray [the penitentiary’s representative at the Hearing,
Court comment] made today where the best I have heard from him ever where he
said there would be anarchy if this was allowed to be used as a defence, and I
agree with him. There would be chaos, because an inmate would be able to
say I was told to do this and if I didn’t this what happened. It’s almost like
a mob mentality and the Act – the Correctional and Conditional Release Act
is not to punish an individual, but it is to correct their behaviour, and when
they all go along with this sort of mob mentality, where one or, at the time he
may feel that he has to go along in order to get along with the people that he
lives with every day, and that helps to explain his actions, and it is
understandable, but it cannot be relied on as a defence. It would go
more towards a sanction imposed, because the Court is not without understanding
of what it’s like to live in the confines of the penitentiary, where you have
individuals who have a – some who have a criminal mindset and want to continue
controlling other people and continuing doing things that they ought not to do;
but as I indicated, the Act is there to correct one’s behaviour, and that’s what
the purpose of this tribunal is for. So to acquit sends the wrong message to
him that he was told and not to do this. It doesn’t correct his behaviour, so I
find that while it’s understandable it’s not a defence in law.
Accordingly, I will find Mr. Akhlaghi guilty
of the charge and convict him, and I think the issue of penalty would be more
appropriate for leniency, given the circumstances that this entire situation
revolved upon.
[Emphasis added.]
[26]
The Independent Chairperson did not address the
Applicant’s argument concerning officially induced error of law argument; this
argument was not pursued on judicial review.
V.
Standard of Review
[27]
In Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9
at paras 57, 62 [Dunsmuir], the Supreme Court of Canada held that a
standard of review analysis is unnecessary where “the
jurisprudence has already determined in a satisfactory manner the degree of
deference to be accorded with regard to a particular category of question.”
The Federal Court of Appeal has determined that the appropriate standard of
review in cases such as the one presently before the bar is reasonableness: Canada (Procureur général) c L’Espérance, 2016 CAF 306. At para 7, Trudel JA stated: “[À]
notre avis, la Juge n’aurait pu intervenir si elle avait analysé la décision du
tribunal indépendant selon la norme raisonnable, tel qu’elle devait le faire.”
[28]
While the Applicant in his
written submissions argued it was correctness, at the hearing he conceded the
standard of review is reasonableness. I agree. The judicial review proceeded on
the basis that the standard of review is reasonableness.
[29]
In Dunsmuir at para 47, the Supreme Court
of Canada explained what is required of a court reviewing on the reasonableness
standard of review:
A court conducting a review for reasonableness
inquires into the qualities that make a decision reasonable, referring both to
the process of articulating the reasons and to outcomes. In judicial review,
reasonableness is concerned mostly with the existence of justification,
transparency and intelligibility within the decision-making process. But it is
also concerned with whether the decision falls within a range of possible,
acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the facts and law.
[30]
In Chshukina v Canada
(Attorney General), 2016 FC 662, [Chshukina] at paras 20-21, Roy J, determined that decisions such as this by independent
chairpersons are to be accorded deference. Justice Roy made the following
additional determinations which I also accept:
[20] This type of review is at the
heart of the specialized jurisdiction of independent chairpersons, whose role
is to determine whether a disciplinary offence was committed. In these matters,
the person conducting the hearing will not find the inmate guilty unless “satisfied
beyond a reasonable doubt” (subsection 43(3) of the [CCRA]).
[21] Consequently, this Court will have
to accord deference to the impugned decision. Rather than replace the judgment
of the independence chairperson, it seeks to determine whether the decision
falls within a range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in
respect of the facts and the law.
[31]
The Supreme Court of Canada further instructs
that judicial review is not a line-by-line treasure hunt for errors; the
decision should be approached as an organic whole: Communications, Energy
and Paperworkers Union of Canada, Local 30 v Irving Pulp & Paper, Ltd,
2013 SCC 34. Further, a reviewing court must determine whether the decision,
viewed as a whole in the context of the record, is reasonable: Construction
Labour Relations v Driver Iron Inc., 2012 SCC 65; see also Newfoundland
and Labrador Nurses’ Union v Newfoundland and Labrador (Treasury Board),
2011 SCC 62 [Newfoundland Nurses’].
VI.
Analysis
[32]
In this case, a major issue in assessing
reasonableness is the Independent Chairperson’s finding that the defence of
duress is not a defence in law. Dunsmuir requires that a decision falls
within a range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect
of the facts and the law. While judicial review often focuses on the record, it
is also the case, per Dunsmuir, that judicial review requires such decisions
to be defensible in respect of “the law”. In my
respectful view, the finding that duress is “not a
defence in law” is not defensible in respect of the law as Dunsmuir
demands. My reasons follow.
[33]
As noted, the Independent Chairperson ruled that
“duress is not a defence in law.” I note that
this ruling was not simply a misstatement or oversight by the Independent
Chairperson; it was his only answer to the only defence raised by the Applicant
that the Independent Chairperson considered.
[34]
Moreover, the proposition that duress is not a
defence was stated not once but three times in the Independent Chairperson’s
reasons; I underlined them and repeat them now:
Submissions presented by the defence
basically presented one of duress, that it would be
dangerous for Mr. Akhlaghi to have locked up. There is a prison code. There is
no doubt in my mind that a prison code exists, and that you must kind of follow
what you are being told by perhaps inmates who might be, for a better term, in
charge of that unit, whether legally or otherwise; probably illegally. However,
that is not a defence to the charge.
…
The submissions that Mr. Gray [the
penitentiary’s representative at the Hearing, Court note] made today
where the best I have heard from him ever when he said there would be
anarchy if this was allowed to be used as a defence, and I agree with him.
There would be chaos, because an inmate would be able to say I was told to
do this and if I didn’t this would happen.
…
So to acquit him sends the wrong message to
him that he was told and not to do this. It doesn’t correct his behaviour, so I
find that while it’s understandable it’s not a defence in law.
[35]
Before going further, I wish to place this
ruling in context. The Independent Chairperson found that there is a prison
code, and that prisoners “must” obey the prison
code in this case. Those findings are supported by the record. The Respondent
did not dispute these findings, and in my view they are reasonable.
[36]
The Independent Chairperson’s finding that the
Applicant did not return to his cell when ordered is also defensible on the
record and reasonable: it was admitted.
[37]
The Court should also defer to the finding that
to allow the defence of duress in the prison context would create anarchy and
chaos. I note there was no expert or other evidence to this effect. Rather,
that was the submission of the institution’s representative [Mr. Gray] at the
hearing. That said, as noted above, deference is owed to the decision-maker, and
this particular finding by the Independent Chairperson is a reasonable inference.
[38]
It is also the case, as the Applicant submitted,
and the Respondent did not dispute, that an inmate charged with the offence of
failure to obey a justifiable order under subsection 40(a) of the CCRA
is entitled to the same legal defences available in an ordinary criminal trial.
This was the conclusion Beaudry J, in Lemoy v Canada (Attorney
General), 2009 FC 448, [2009] FCJ No 589 at para 32, which relied on
the finding of Létourneau JA, in Ayotte v Canada, 2003 FCA 429 [Ayotte]:
[32] In Ayotte, above, the Federal Court of Appeal extended to
persons charged with disciplinary offences under the CCRA the same procedural safeguards, in terms of
their defence, that apply in ordinary trials. The Court acknowledged the
particular nature of the prison system, where authorities must have a degree of
flexibility to ensure that order is maintained. Nevertheless, those who are
charged with a disciplinary offence are entitled to procedural fairness.
[39]
See also the finding of Blais J, (as he was
then) in Zanth v Canada (Attorney General), 2004 FC 1113 at para
26:
[26] In Ayotte […] Létourneau
J.A., on behalf of the Federal Court of Appeal, clearly gave persons charged
with disciplinary offences under the Act the same procedural safeguards as
those in ordinary trials, in terms of defences. Létourneau J.A. acknowledged
the particularities of the prison system, where the authorities must have a
degree of flexibility to ensure that order is maintained. At the same time, in
the words of the Court of Appeal, those who are charged with a disciplinary
offence are entitled to procedural equity:
[11] Simply put, the prison
disciplinary process calls for flexibility and efficiency, but flexibility and
efficiency that must be sought and achieved through procedural fairness and
compliance with the mandatory provisions of the law.
[40]
Similarly, see in the following passages from
the reasons of Létourneau JA, in Ayotte:
[15] In fact, subsection 43(3) of the Act
provides that the person conducting the hearing of a prison disciplinary
complaint “shall not find the inmate guilty unless satisfied beyond a
reasonable doubt, based on the evidence presented at the hearing, that the inmate
committed the disciplinary offence in question”:
43. (3) The
person conducting the hearing shall not find the inmate guilty unless
satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt, based on the evidence presented at the
hearing, that the inmate committed the disciplinary offence in question.
|
43. (3) La
personne chargée de l’audition ne peut prononcer la culpabilité que si elle
est convaincue hors de tout doute raisonnable, sur la foi de la preuve
présente, que le détenu a bien commis l’infraction reprochée.
|
[16] The
decision-maker’s obligation to be satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt of the
guilt of the accused as well as the onus imposed on the complainant or on the
prosecutor to provide such evidence are inextricably linked to the presumption
of innocence: R v Lifchus, [1997] 3 S.C.R. 320, at paragraph 13. “It is
one of the principal safeguards which seeks to ensure that no innocent person
is convicted.”: ibidem. The failure to understand and to properly apply
this standard of proof irreparably prejudices the fairness of the trial or the
hearing: ibidem.
[19] The
chairperson of the court could not disregard the only true defence raised by
the appellant without compromising procedural fairness and failing in his duty
to hold a full hearing. To repeat the remarks of Denault J. in Hendrickson v Kent Institution Disciplinary Court (Independent
Chairperson) (1990), 32 F.T.R. 296 (F.C.T.D.), or
of Addy J. in Re Blanchard and
Disciplinary Board of Millhaven Institution and Hardtman, [1983] 1 F.C. 309 (F.C.T.D.), he
should have examined “both sides of the question”. He could dismiss the defence
advanced by the appellant, but he could not disregard it in light of the
evidence submitted.
[20] Similarly,
he could weigh and assess the evidence submitted by the appellant in support of
his defence but he could not ignore it: Canada (Attorney General) v
Primard, [2003] F.C.J. No. 1400; Maki v The Canada Employment Insurance
Commission et al., [1998] F.C.J. No. 1129; Boucher v Canada (Attorney
General), [1996] F.C.J. No. 1378; Lépine v Canada (Employment and
Immigration Commission, [1990] F.C.J. No. 131; Rancourt v Canada
(Employment and Immigration Commission), [1996] F.C.J. No. 1429.
[21] The motions judge should have
expressed disapproval of these two failures by the court to consider
important and relevant elements of the proceedings, the effect of which was to
deprive the appellant of a full and fair hearing, thereby resulting in a serious
injustice” within the meaning of Martineau v Matsqui Institution Disciplinary Board, [1980] 1 S.C.R. 602, and justifying
the relief sought.
[Emphasis added.]
[41]
And as Roy J, held in Chshukina at para 24:
[24] It cannot be
disputed that the common law defences, justifications and excuses are
available. The General part of the Criminal Code, R.S.C., 1985, c. C-46, makes specific provisions for this,
and these apply in respect of proceedings for an offence under any Act of
Parliament (subsection 8(3) of the Criminal
Code). The alleged offence is set out in
paragraph 40(r) of the Act. Common law defences can be invoked.
[42]
In addition, the Applicant submitted, and it was
not disputed, that duress is a well-established defence in Canadian law,
recognized both in the Criminal Code, RSC, 1985, c C-46 [the Criminal
Code] and at common law. Duress is a complete defence. At section
17, the Criminal Code provides:
Compulsion by
threats
|
Contrainte par
menaces
|
17 A person who commits an offence under compulsion by threats of
immediate death or bodily harm from a person who is present when the offence
is committed is excused for committing the offence if the person believes
that the threats will be carried out and if the
person is not a party to a conspiracy or association whereby the person is
subject to compulsion, but this section does not apply where the offence that
is committed is high treason or treason, murder, piracy, attempted murder,
sexual assault, sexual assault with a weapon, threats to a third party or
causing bodily harm, aggravated sexual assault, forcible abduction, hostage
taking, robbery, assault with a weapon or causing bodily harm, aggravated
assault, unlawfully causing bodily harm, arson or an offence under sections
280 to 283 (abduction and detention of young persons).
|
17 Une personne qui commet une infraction,
sous l’effet de la contrainte exercée par des menaces de mort immédiate ou de
lésions corporelles de la part d’une personne présente lorsque l’infraction
est commise, est excusée d’avoir commis l’infraction si elle croit que les
menaces seront mises à exécution et si elle ne participe à aucun complot ou aucune association par
laquelle elle est soumise à la contrainte. Toutefois, le présent article ne s’applique
pas si l’infraction commise est la haute trahison ou la trahison, le meurtre,
la piraterie, la tentative de meurtre, l’agression sexuelle, l’agression
sexuelle armée, menaces à une tierce personne ou infliction de lésions
corporelles, l’agression sexuelle grave, le rapt, la prise d’otage, le vol
qualifié, l’agression armée ou infliction de lésions corporelles, les voies
de fait graves, l’infliction illégale de lésions corporelles, le crime d’incendie
ou l’une des infractions visées aux articles 280 à 283 (enlèvement et
séquestration d’une jeune personne).
|
[Emphasis added.]
|
[Soulignements
ajoutés.]
|
[43]
The Supreme Court of Canada has also recently discussed
the defence of duress. In R v Ryan, 2013 SCC 3 [Ryan]
at paras 2 and 23:
[2] As we see it, the defence of
duress is available when a person commits an offence while under compulsion of
a threat made for the purpose of compelling him or her to commit it.
[23] The rationale underlying duress is
that of moral involuntariness, which was entrenched as a principle of
fundamental justice in R. v. Ruzic, 2001 SCC 24, [2001] 1 S.C.R. 687, at para. 47: “It is a
principle of fundamental justice that only voluntary conduct — behaviour that
is the product of a free will and controlled body, unhindered by external
constraints — should attract the penalty and stigma of criminal liability.” It
is upon this foundation that we build the defences of duress and necessity. As
Lamer C.J. put it in Hibbert, the underlying concept of both defences is “normative
involuntariness”, in other words, that there is “no legal way out”
(para. 55). While the test to be met is not dictated by this generally
stated rationale underlying the defence, its requirements are heavily
influenced by it. As was discussed in Perka, defences built on the principle of moral involuntariness are
classified as excuses. The law excuses those who, although morally blameworthy,
acted in a morally involuntary manner. The act remains wrong, but the author of
the offence will not be punished because it was committed in circumstances in
which there was realistically no choice (Ruzic, at para. 34; Perka, at p. 248). The principle of moral involuntariness is “[a]
concessio[n] to human frailty” in the face of “agonising choice” (Ruzic, at para. 40; Stuart, at p. 490).
The commission of the crime is “remorselessly compelled by normal human
instincts” (Perka, at p.
249). As LeBel J. put it in Ruzic: “Morally involuntary conduct is not always inherently blameless”
(para. 41).
[44]
Also see R v Ruzic, 2001 SCC 24, at paras
71 and 100 where the Supreme Court stated:
[71] The House of Lords recently
confirmed that the test for duress is an objective one: did the accused
reasonably believe that the threat would be carried out if he did not commit
the crime, and would a person of “reasonable firmness sharing the [accused’s]
characteristics” have succumbed to the threat? (Howe, supra, per Lord Mackay, at p. 800, where he
endorses the English Court of Appeal’s decision in R.
v. Graham, [1982] 1 All E.R. 801, at p. 806).
This test is arguably more stringent than s. 17 of the Criminal
Code ,
which is entirely subjective and does not require that the accused’s belief be reasonable.
It is also arguably more stringent than the common law formulation of the
defence in Canada, which results in an objective-subjective standard, as
in the case of the defence of necessity. As in Canada, the accused bears
an evidential burden of laying a factual foundation for the defence of duress
(if no such foundation may be inferred from the Crown’s case). Once the
factual foundation is established, the Crown has the onus of disproving duress
(Smith & Hogan: Criminal Law, supra, at
p. 242).
[100] There was no misdirection either on
the burden of proof. The accused must certainly raise the defence and
introduce some evidence about it. Once this is done, the burden of proof
shifts to the Crown under the general rule of criminal evidence. It must
be shown, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the accused did not act under
duress. Similarly, in the case of the defence of necessity, the Court
refused to shift the burden of proof to the accused (see Perka, supra, at pp. 257-59), although the defence must have an air of
reality, in order to be sent to the jury, as the Court held in Latimer, supra.
[45]
In this connection, and since the Supreme Court
of Canada’s 2013 ruling in Ryan at para 55, it is settled law that
duress includes the following elements:
[55] we can conclude that the common
law of duress comprises the following elements:
• an explicit or implicit threat
of death or bodily harm proffered against the accused or a third person. The
threat may be of future harm. Although, traditionally, the degree of bodily
harm was characterized as “grievous”, the issue of severity is better dealt
with at the proportionality stage, which acts as the threshold for the
appropriate degree of bodily harm;
• the accused reasonably believed that
the threat would be carried out;
• the non-existence of a safe avenue
of escape, evaluated on a modified objective standard;
• a close temporal connection between
the threat and the harm threatened;
• proportionality between the harm
threatened and the harm inflicted by the accused. This is also evaluated on a
modified objective standard;
• the accused is not a party to a
conspiracy or association whereby the accused is subject to compulsion and
actually knew that threats and coercion to commit an offence were a possible
result of this criminal activity, conspiracy or association.
[46]
Based on the foregoing, I have come to the
conclusion that the Independent Chairperson acted unreasonably when he held
that duress was not a defence in law. I also note the linkage made by the
Independent Chairperson between his finding that to allow the defence of duress
would result in chaos and anarchy, and his ruling that duress was not a defence
in law. In my view that conclusion was drawn as a matter of policy. While I
afford the Independent Chairperson flexibility, to my mind that flexibility
does not extend to his abrogating a defence afforded by both statute and common
law as occurred in this case. That in my view is a matter for the legislature.
[47]
The Respondent further supported the conclusions
of the Independent Chairperson respecting the legal availability of the defence
of duress by arguing that the Independent Chairperson was essentially assessing
whether the facts established an air of reality to the defence of duress. She
stated in her memorandum: “[i]n determining that the
Applicant had not established a defence in law, the Chairperson essentially
determined that there was no air of reality to the Applicant’s defence.”
[48]
It is certainly the case that an accused must do
more than simply allege that the defence of duress entitles him or her to an
acquittal: R v Fontaine, 2004 SCC 27 [Fontaine]. It is not
disputed that before an accused may rely on duress he or she must first
establish that there is an air of reality to that allegation. This requires
that there be evidence on the record upon which a properly instructed jury,
acting judicially, could entertain a reasonable doubt as to the defence that
has been raised: see Fontaine at paras 55-56:
[55] With respect to all other “affirmative”
defences, including alibi, duress, provocation and others mentioned in R v Cinous, [2002] 2 S.C.R. 3, at para.
57, the persuasive and the evidential burdens are divided.
[56] As regards these “ordinary”,
as opposed to “reverse onus” defences, the accused has no persuasive burden at
all. Once the issue has been “put in play” (R. v. Schwartz, [1988]
2 S.C.R. 443), the defence will succeed unless it is disproved by the
Crown elementary beyond a reasonable doubt. Like all other disputed
issues, however, defences of this sort will only be left to the jury where a
sufficient evidential basis is found to exist. That foundation cannot be
said to exist where its only constituent elements are of a tenuous, trifling,
insignificant or manifestly unsubstantive nature: there must be evidence in the
record upon which a properly instructed jury, acting judicially, could
entertain a reasonable doubt as to the defence that has been raised.
[49]
However, I cannot accept the Respondent’s characterization
of the Independent Chairperson’s reasons to the effect that he “essentially” determined that there was no air of
reality to the Applicant’s defence. That is simply not the case. Nowhere in the
reasons of the Independent Chairperson is there any mention of air of reality.
There is no mention of air of reality as being the test considered. There is no
mention of air of reality in the analysis. There is no mention of air of
reality in the conclusion. With respect, that interpretation is entirely the
Respondent’s construct and cannot reasonably be borne by the reasons themselves.
[50]
The Respondent argued that the Court should
support the decision by reference to the record as per the Supreme Court of
Canada’s decision in Newfoundland Nurses’ at paras 14 to 16. To
this end, it was submitted that the Court should look to the record for the
purpose of assessing the reasonableness of the outcome, and should seek to
supplement the reasons before finding the decision unreasonable. Further, it
was argued that if the reasons allow this Court to understand why the
Independent Chairperson made his decision and permit it to determine whether
the conclusion is within the range of acceptable outcomes, the Dunsmuir criteria
will be met.
[51]
I am unable to do so for a number of reasons. As
the Supreme Court of Canada stated in Alberta (Information and Privacy
Commissioner) v Alberta Teachers’ Association, 2011 SCC 61 at para 54:
[54] I should not be
taken here as suggesting that courts should not give due regard to the reasons
provided by a tribunal when such reasons are available. The direction that
courts are to give respectful attention to the reasons “which could be offered
in support of a decision” is not a “carte blanche to reformulate a tribunal’s
decision in a way that casts aside an unreasonable chain of analysis in favour
of the court’s own rationale for the result” (Petro-Canada
v. Workers’ Compensation Board (B.C.), 2009 BCCA
396, 276 B.C.A.C. 135, at paras. 53 and 56). Moreover, this direction should
not “be taken as diluting the importance of giving proper reasons for an
administrative decision” (Canada (Citizenship and
Immigration) v. Khosa, 2009 SCC 12, [2009] 1 S.C.R.
339, at para. 63, per
Binnie J.). On the contrary, deference under the reasonableness standard is
best given effect when administrative decision makers provide intelligible and
transparent justification for their decisions, and when courts ground their
review of the decision in the reasons provided. Nonetheless, this is subject to
a duty to provide reasons in the first place. When there is no duty to
give reasons (e.g., Canada (Attorney General) v.
Mavi, 2011 SCC 30, [2011] 2 S.C.R. 504) or when
only limited reasons are required, it is entirely appropriate for courts to
consider the reasons that could be offered for the decision when conducting a
reasonableness review. The point is that parties cannot gut the deference
owed to a tribunal by failing to raise the issue before the tribunal and
thereby mislead the tribunal on the necessity of providing reasons.
[Emphasis added.]
[52]
To the same effect see the Federal Court of
Appeal’s decision in JMSL v Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), [2014]
FCJ No. 439, [2014] ACF No 439 [JMSL] at paras 29-30, where Stratas JA
found:
[29] Alberta (Information and
Privacy Commissioner) v. Alberta Teachers’ Association, 2011 SCC 61
suggests that this does not allow a reviewing court free rein to dive into the
record before the administrative decision-maker to save the decision.
[30] In Alberta Teachers’
Association, at paragraph 54, Justice Rothstein, writing for the majority
of the Supreme Court, found that giving respectful attention to the reasons
which could be offered in support of a decision is not a “carte blanch” to
reformulate a tribunal’s decision in a way that casts aside an unreasonable
chain of analysis in favour of the court’s own rational for the result.”
[53]
JMSL also
establishes that a reviewing court may only take on wholesale revision or
rewriting of a decision - which I am asked to do in this case - where to send
the matter back would serve no useful purpose, but not where it might well
reach a different result, see para 38:
[38]This is a situation where the Officer,
informed by these reasons of her error and of the proper standard to be
applied, might well reach a different result. There is evidence in the record
that could support a decision either way. I cannot say that the record leans so
heavily against relief that sending the matter back to the Officer would serve
no useful purpose, as per MiningWatch Canada v. Canada (Fisheries and Oceans),
2010 SCC 2 [2010] 1 S.C.R. 6. Nor can I say that the record is
unequivocally in favour of relief allowing us to award mandamus and
grant the subsection 25(1) application.
[54]
I am asked to decide the case by reference to
the record. This I cannot do. The Independent Chairperson should have
considered the elements of duress but did not. He left no dots on the page for
me to connect as required by the Federal Court of Appeal’s decision of Lloyd
v Canada (Revenue Agency), [2016] FCJ No 374 per Rennie JA, at para 24:
In light of the adjudicator’s findings, even
on a generous application of the principles in Newfoundland and Labrador
Nurses’ Union v. Newfoundland and Labrador (Treasury Board), 2011 SCC 62,
[2011] 3 S.C.R. 708, the basis upon which the 40-day suspension was justified
cannot be discerned without engaging in speculation and rationalization. As I
noted in Komolafe v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2013 FC 431,
at para, 11:
Newfoundland Nurses is not an open invitation to the Court to provide reasons that were
not given, nor is it licence to guess what findings might have been made or to
speculate as to what the tribunal might have been thinking. This is
particularly so where the reasons are silent on a critical issue. It is ironic
that Newfoundland Nurses, a case which at its core is about deference
and standard of review, is urged as authority for the supervisory court to do
the task that the decision maker did not do, to supply the reasons that might
have been given and make findings of fact that were not made. This is to turn
the jurisprudence on its head. Newfoundland Nurses allows reviewing
courts to connect the dots on the page where the lines, and the direction they
are headed, may be readily drawn. Here, there were no dots on the page.
[55]
To do as suggested asks this Court to determine first
of all, whether there is an air of reality to the alleged defence, and secondly
and if so, to decide whether the defence of duress was or was not established
on the evidence. Based on the foregoing jurisprudence, and while it is possible
for this Court to perform the duties of the Independent Chairperson in the
appropriate case, in my view this is not such a case. The determination of
whether there is an air of reality to the alleged defence, with its many elements
set out at paragraph 46 above, and if so, whether the defence is made out on
the facts of this case are quintessentially matters of fact in the first place.
They are, therefore, matters for an independent chairperson to assess and determine.
[56]
In addition, considerations of the elements of
duress are questions for those charged by Parliament to make within the context
of the penitentiary system. The deference owed to such independent chairpersons
militates strongly in favour of returning the matter to the independent tribunal
whose duty it was to make the decision in the first place.
[57]
At the end of this analysis I must review the
decision as an organic whole, keeping in mind that judicial review is not a
treasure hunt for errors. While I have noted aspects of the Decision that are
defensible in respect of the facts, and found that the decision is entitled to
deference, I am not persuaded the rejection of the defence of duress is
defensible “in respect of the law” which, in my
respectful view, establishes the opposite, as noted above.
[58]
On balance, I conclude that the Decision is not
reasonable in that it does not fall within the range of acceptable outcomes
that are defensible in respect of the facts and law.
[59]
Therefore, judicial review must be granted and
the decision set aside for redetermination.
VII.
Costs
[60]
There is no reason why costs should not follow
the event. Thus, the Applicant is entitled to his costs. The parties agreed
that regardless of who was successful, costs would be set at $1,500.00 all
inclusive of fees, taxes and disbursements which amount is reasonable and is
therefore ordered.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT’S JUDGMENT is that judicial
review is granted, the decision of the Independent Chairperson is set aside,
the charge against the Applicant is remanded for redetermination before a
differently decision maker, the whole with costs in the amount of $1,500.00
payable by the Respondent to the Applicant.
“Henry S. Brown”
Relevant Legislation
Corrections
and Conditional Release Act, SC 1999, c 20, section
38-44
Purpose of
disciplinary System
|
Objet
|
38 The purpose of
the disciplinary system established by sections 40 to 44 and the regulations
is to encourage inmates to conduct themselves in a manner that promotes the
good order of the penitentiary, through a process that contributes to the
inmates’ rehabilitation and successful reintegration into the community.
|
Le régime
disciplinaire établi par les articles 40 à 44 et les règlements vise à
encourager chez les détenus un comportement favorisant l’ordre et la bonne
marche du pénitencier, tout en contribuant à leur réadaptation et à leur
réinsertion sociale.
|
System
Exclusive
|
Dispositions
habilitantes
|
39 Inmates shall
not be disciplined otherwise than in accordance with sections 40 to 44 and
the regulations.
|
39 Seuls les
articles 40 à 44 et les règlements sont à prendre en compte en matière de
discipline.
|
Disciplinary
offences
|
Infractions
disciplinaires
|
40 An inmate
commits a disciplinary offence who
|
40 Est coupable d’une
infraction disciplinaire le détenu qui :
|
(a) disobeys a
justifiable order of a staff member;
|
a) désobéit à l’ordre
légitime d’un agent;
|
(b) is, without
authorization, in an area prohibited to inmates;
|
b) se trouve,
sans autorisation, dans un secteur dont l’accès lui est interdit;
|
c) wilfully or
recklessly damages or destroys property that is not the inmate’s;
|
c) détruit ou
endommage de manière délibérée ou irresponsable le bien d’autrui;
|
(d) commits
theft;
|
d) commet un vol;
|
(e) is in
possession of stolen property;
|
e) a en sa
possession un bien volé;
|
(f) is
disrespectful toward a person in a manner that is likely to provoke them to
be violent or toward a staff member in a manner that could undermine their
authority or the authority of staff members in general;
|
f) agit de
manière irrespectueuse envers une personne au point de provoquer
vraisemblablement chez elle une réaction violente ou envers un agent au point
de compromettre son autorité ou celle des agents en général;
|
(g) is abusive
toward a person or intimidates them by threats that violence or other injury
will be done to, or punishment inflicted on, them;
|
g) agit de
manière outrageante envers une personne ou intimide celle-ci par des menaces
de violence ou d’un autre mal, ou de quelque peine, à sa personne;
|
(h) fights with,
assaults or threatens to assault another person;
|
h) se livre ou
menace de se livrer à des voies de fait ou prend part à un combat;
|
(i) is in
possession of, or deals in, contraband;
|
i) est en
possession d’un objet interdit ou en fait le trafic;
|
(j) without prior
authorization, is in possession of, or deals in, an item that is not
authorized by a Commissioner’s Directive or by a written order of the
institutional head;
|
j) sans
autorisation préalable, a en sa possession un objet en violation des
directives du commissaire ou de l’ordre écrit du directeur du pénitencier ou
en fait le trafic;
|
(k) takes an
intoxicant into the inmate’s body;
|
k) introduit dans
son corps une substance intoxicante;
|
(l) fails or
refuses to provide a urine sample when demanded pursuant to section 54 or 55;
|
l) refuse ou omet
de fournir l’échantillon d’urine qui peut être exigé au titre des articles 54
ou 55;
|
(m) creates or
participates in
|
m) crée des
troubles ou toute autre situation susceptible de mettre en danger la sécurité
du pénitencier, ou y participe;
|
(i) a
disturbance, or
|
(EN BLANC/BLANK)
|
(ii) any other
activity
|
(EN BLANC/BLANK)
|
that is likely to
jeopardize the security of the penitentiary;
|
(EN BLANC/BLANK)
|
(n) does anything
for the purpose of escaping or assisting another inmate to escape;
|
n) commet un acte
dans l’intention de s’évader ou de faciliter une évasion;
|
(o) offers, gives
or accepts a bribe or reward;
|
o) offre, donne
ou accepte un pot-de-vin ou une récompense;
|
(p) without
reasonable excuse, refuses to work or leaves work;
|
p) sans excuse
valable, refuse de travailler ou s’absente de son travail;
|
(q) engages in
gambling;
|
q) se livre au
jeu ou aux paris;
|
(r) wilfully
disobeys a written rule governing the conduct of inmates;
|
r) contrevient
délibérément à une règle écrite régissant la conduite des détenus;
|
(r.1) knowingly
makes a false claim for compensation from the Crown;
|
r.1) présente une
réclamation pour dédommagement sachant qu’elle est fausse;
|
(r.2) throws a
bodily substance towards another person; or
|
r.2) lance une substance
corporelle vers une personne;
|
(s) attempts to
do, or assists another person to do, anything referred to in paragraphs (a)
to (r).
|
s) tente de
commettre l’une des infractions mentionnées aux alinéas a) à r) ou participe
à sa perpétration.
|
Informal
resolution
|
Tentative
de règlement informel
|
41 (1) Where a
staff member believes on reasonable grounds that an inmate has committed or
is committing a disciplinary offence, the staff member shall take all
reasonable steps to resolve the matter informally, where possible.
|
41 (1) L’agent
qui croit, pour des motifs raisonnables, qu’un détenu commet ou a commis une
infraction disciplinaire doit, si les circonstances le permettent, prendre
toutes les mesures utiles afin de régler la question de façon informelle.
|
Charge may
be issued
|
Accusation
|
(2) Where an
informal resolution is not achieved, the institutional head may, depending on
the seriousness of the alleged conduct and any aggravating or mitigating
factors, issue a charge of a minor disciplinary offence or a serious
disciplinary offence.
|
(2) À défaut de
règlement informel, le directeur peut porter une accusation d’infraction
disciplinaire mineure ou grave, selon la gravité de la faute et l’existence
de circonstances atténuantes ou aggravantes.
|
Notice of
Charge
|
Avis d’accusation
|
42 An inmate
charged with a disciplinary offence shall be given a written notice of the
charge in accordance with the regulations, and the notice must state whether
the charge is minor or serious.
|
42 Le détenu
accusé se voit remettre, conformément aux règlements, un avis d’accusation
qui mentionne s’il s’agit d’une infraction disciplinaire mineure ou grave.
|
Hearing
|
Audition
|
43 (1) A charge
of a disciplinary offence shall be dealt with in accordance with the
prescribed procedure, including a hearing conducted in the prescribed manner.
|
43 (1) L’accusation
d’infraction disciplinaire est instruite conformément à la procédure
réglementaire et doit notamment faire l’objet d’une audition conforme aux
règlements.
|
Presence of
inmate
|
Présence du
détenu
|
(2) A hearing
mentioned in subsection (1) shall be conducted with the inmate present unless
|
(2) L’audition a
lieu en présence du détenu sauf dans les cas suivants :
|
(a) the inmate is
voluntarily absent;
|
a) celui-ci
décide de ne pas y assister;
|
(b) the person
conducting the hearing believes on reasonable grounds that the inmate’s
presence would jeopardize the safety of any person present at the hearing; or
|
b) la personne
chargée de l’audition croit, pour des motifs raisonnables, que sa présence
mettrait en danger la sécurité de quiconque y assiste;
|
(c) the inmate
seriously disrupts the hearing.
|
c) celui-ci en
perturbe gravement le déroulement.
|
Decision
|
Déclaration
de culpabilité
|
(3) The person
conducting the hearing shall not find the inmate guilty unless satisfied
beyond a reasonable doubt, based on the evidence presented at the hearing,
that the inmate committed the disciplinary offence in question.
|
(3) La personne
chargée de l’audition ne peut prononcer la culpabilité que si elle est convaincue
hors de tout doute raisonnable, sur la foi de la preuve présentée, que le
détenu a bien commis l’infraction reprochée.
|
Disciplinary
sanctions
|
Sanctions
disciplinaires
|
44 (1) An inmate
who is found guilty of a disciplinary offence is liable, in accordance with
the regulations made under paragraphs 96(i) and (j), to one or more of the
following:
|
44 (1) Le détenu
déclaré coupable d’une infraction disciplinaire est, conformément aux
règlements pris en vertu des alinéas 96i) et j), passible d’une ou de
plusieurs des peines suivantes :
|
(a) a warning or
reprimand;
|
a) avertissement
ou réprimande;
|
(b) a loss of
privileges;
|
b) perte de
privilèges;
|
(c) an order to
make restitution, including in respect of any property that is damaged or
destroyed as a result of the offence;
|
c) ordre de
restitution, notamment à l’égard de tout bien endommagé ou détruit du fait de
la perpétration de l’infraction;
|
(d) a fine;
|
d) amende;
|
(e) performance
of extra duties; and
|
e) travaux
supplémentaires;
|
(f) in the case
of a serious disciplinary offence, segregation from other inmates — with or
without restrictions on visits with family, friends and other persons from
outside the penitentiary — for a maximum of 30 days.
|
f) isolement —
avec ou sans restriction à l’égard des visites de la famille, des amis ou d’autres
personnes de l’extérieur du pénitencier — pour un maximum de trente jours,
dans le cas d’une infraction disciplinaire grave.
|
Collection
of fine or restitution
|
Amende ou
restitution
|
(2) A fine or
restitution imposed pursuant to subsection (1) may be collected in the
prescribed manner.
|
(2) Le
recouvrement de l’amende et la restitution s’effectuent selon les modalités
réglementaires.
|