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T-5968-80 T-5875-80
In re the Royal Canadian Mounted Police Act and Regulations thereunder
and
In re proceedings against special constable Rita Husted and Corporal E. A. Ridley for a major service offence under the Royal Canadian Mount ed Police Act
and
In re an application by special constable Rita Husted and Corporal E. A. Ridley for a writ of prohibition prohibiting the proceedings from con tinuing without allowing them the right to legal counsel
Trial Division, Addy J.—Vancouver, February 2 and 5, 1981.
Prerogative writs — Applications for writs of prohibition — Applicants, members of the R.C.M.P., charged with having committed a major service offence contrary to s. 25 of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police Act — Request to be repre sented by independent counsel at their trials before a service tribunal of the R.C.M.P. was denied — Applicants seeking to prohibit the trying officer from proceeding with trials until they are so allowed to be, represented — Crown arguing that the service tribunal is an administrative tribunal, that s. 33 of the R.C.M.P. Regulations prohibiting representation by independent counsel is valid and that such a prohibition may be implied from s. 34(3) of the Act — Whether s. 33 of the Regulations is valid — Royal Canadian Mounted Police Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. R-9, ss. 21, 25, 29, 30, 32, 34, 36 — Royal Canadian Mounted Police Regulations, C.R.C. 1978, Vol. XV, c. 1391, s. 33.
The applicants, both members of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, have each been charged with having commit ted a major service offence contrary to section 25 of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police Act. Their request to be represented by independent counsel at their trials before a service tribunal of the R.C.M.P. having been denied, they now seek writs to prohibit the trying officer from proceeding with their trials unless and until they are so allowed to be represented. The Crown argues that the service tribunal is a purely administra tive one, that in such a case a regulation, such as section 33 of the R.C.M.P. Regulations, could be validly enacted to prevent the engagement of independent counsel pursuant to section 21(1) of the Act and that, in any event, prohibition is to be implied from•section 34(3) of the Act. The issue arises over the validity of section 33 of the Regulations.
Held, the applications are allowed. Section 33 of the Regula tions is ultra vires and of no effect at least in so far as a trial for a major service offence under section 25 of the Act is concerned. First, section 34(3) is not in any way prohibitory against the accused hiring his own counsel: it merely obliges the force to provide representation if requested. Second, a tribunal cannot be held to be essentially administrative in nature when, to arrive at its findings, it is obliged to abide by the rules of evidence in criminal trials, to have the evidence transcribed and to conduct a trial in such a formal manner as provided for in section 34 of the Act. Third, in the case of a person convicted under the Act, the only appeal as of right is on the record. Therefore, if the accused, by reason of his lack of legal training, has failed to get evidence on the record which he should have, an appeal would not remedy the situation. Finally, in consider ing these matters, together with the severity of the penalties provided for in section 36, it cannot be conceived that Parlia ment intended to absolutely deny to all accused the benefit of counsel of their choice when it authorized the Governor in Council to issue regulations for the "discipline, efficiency, administration and good government of the force".
APPLICATIONS. COUNSEL:
J. J. Threlfall for applicants Rita Husted and E. A. Ridley.
G. Carruthers for respondents the Queen and the Attorney General of Canada.
SOLICITORS:
Harris, Campbell, Threlfall, Burnaby, for applicants Rita Husted and E. A. Ridley. Deputy Attorney General of Canada for respondents the Queen and the Attorney Gen eral of Canada.
The following are the reasons for order ren dered in English by
ADDY J.: The present applications for writs of prohibition were at the request of all parties, heard together, as they are based on the same facts and both applicants were represented throughout by the same counsel. They are both members of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police and were refused a request to be represented by independent counsel at their trials before a service tribunal of the Force and are requesting that the trying officer be pro hibited from proceeding with their trials unless and until they are so allowed to be represented.
The applicant, Husted, a special constable, is charged under paragraph (a) of section 25 of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. R-9, of the major service offence of refusing to obey a lawful command to hand over a firearm. The applicant, Ridley, who holds the rank of corporal, stands charged at the same time of another major service offence under section 25(o) of disgraceful conduct in pointing a revolver at or toward a constable.
Both offences were allegedly committed on the same day, namely 5 January 1980, that is some eleven months before formal charges were laid on 7 November 1980.
Counsel during argument referred at some length to and argued on the applicability or other wise of a line of cases which are attached hereto as Appendix "A". I have considered them but will refrain from commenting on same in these reasons as, in my view, the issue turns on one or two well-recognized common law principles and on the specific wording of certain sections of the Act and of the Regulations.
The offences under which the applicants are respectively charged are described in the Act as follows:
25. Every member who
(a) disobeys or refuses to obey the lawful command of, or strikes or threatens to strike, any other member who is his superior in rank or is in authority over him;
(o) conducts himself in a scandalous, infamous, disgraceful, profane or immoral manner; ...
is guilty of an offence, to be known as a major service offence, and is liable to trial and punishment as prescribed in this Part.
The facts are uncontradicted. When the accused appeared for their trials before Superintendent J. M. Roy they had both retained and instructed the same counsel who was not a member of the Force but who was present outside of the room where the trial was scheduled to be held. They both request ed that they be tried together and that he be allowed to represent them. Neither of the appli-
cants had any formal legal training. Their request was denied by the service court and an adjourn ment was granted the accused on the grounds that they were not prepared to proceed at that time. Before the date of resumption of the proceedings the present applications were launched.
The controversy arises over the application or, more precisely, over the validity of section 33 of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police Regulations, C.R.C. 1978, Vol. XV, c. 1391 issued pursuant to section 21 of the Act. Section 33 of the Regula tions reads as follows:
33. No member whose conduct is being investigated under section 31 of the Act or who is charged with any offence described in section 25 or 26 of the Act is entitled to have professional counsel appear on his behalf at that investigation or trial.
Section 21(1) of the Act reads as follows:
21. (1) The Governor in Council may make regulations for the organization, training, discipline, efficiency, administration and good government of the force and generally for carrying the purposes and provisions of this Act into effect.
Section 21(2) of the Act authorizes the Commis sioner to issue standing orders for essentially the same purposes as section 21(1). The standing orders, however, are not in issue before me.
The Act distinguishes between major and minor service offences. The major service offences are all specifically provided for and are enumerated in section 25. Section 26 provides that failure to obey any regulation or standing order of the Commis sioner will constitute a minor service offence. The punishment for all service offences is contained in section 36 of the Act. Section 36(1), with which we are concerned, reads as follows:
36. (1) Any one or more of the following punishments may be imposed in respect of a major service offence:
(a) imprisonment for a term not exceeding one year;
(b) a fine not exceeding five hundred dollars;
(c) loss of pay for a period not exceeding thirty days;
(d) reduction in rank;
(e) loss of seniority; or (/) reprimand.
Section 36(2) lays down the punishment for minor service offences. In such cases there is no
penalty of imprisonment but any one or more of the following punishments may be imposed, i.e. confinement to barracks for a period not exceeding 30 days, a fine not exceeding $50 unless dismissal is recommended when the fine may be $300, loss of seniority and reprimand are provided for.
There is no absolute common law right to coun sel in all cases where an individual is subject to some penalty. The courts have consistently refused to intervene on the grounds that representation by counsel was denied in certain service disciplinary matters where the hearing is, by nature of the subject-matter or the alleged offence, of an inter nal administrative nature and concerns a discipli nary matter within a special body such as a branch of the armed services or a police organization. The powers of the trying officer in such cases are generally quite limited and subject to administra tive review by higher authority. In those cases the alleged disciplinary offence is usually investigated in a very informal manner without a court stenog rapher recording the proceedings and without regard to the strict rules of evidence and, as one judge has put it "on a man to man basis" between the superior officer and the alleged offender. In most of these cases it has generally been long established by custom that such disciplinary mat ters would be settled within the force or organiza tion, informally and without outside intervention. In other cases,. legislation specifically prohibits the employment of outside agents or counsel. The exigencies of the service require this degree of informality without which the day-to-day adminis tration of the Force and the maintenance of disci pline within it would become so cumbersome and time-consuming as to be ineffective. On the other hand, the common law recognizes that wherever a person's liberty, or livelihood is at stake in a legal trial, he should not unreasonably be deprived of the services of the duly qualified legal counsel of his choice unless the employment of any particular counsel would unduly delay or impede the administration of justice. It is a natural corollary of the principle that an accused is entitled to a full and fair defence.
Both counsel before me were of the view that the provisions of the Canadian Bill of Rights are of no assistance in the case at bar and counsel for
the applicants readily conceded at the outset of argument that if the prohibition against the use of outside counsel were contained in the Act itself, the present applications should not be granted.
Counsel for the Crown's argument was based on two main contentions: first, that the service tri bunal was a purely administrative one dealing with internal disciplinary matters, that in such a case a regulation could be validly enacted to prevent the engagement of independent outside counsel and that the authority for issuing such a regulation resided in the power to regulate for the "discipline, efficiency, administration and good government of the force" contained in section 21(1) of the Act. Secondly, he argued that, in any event, the prohi bition was to be implied from the wording of section 34(3) of the Act which reads as follows:
34....
(3) An accused may be represented and assisted at his trial by another member and if the accused requests that he be so represented and assisted, his request shall be granted.
Dealing with the last argument first, I cannot put such a construction on subsection (3). It merely obliges the Force to make available any representative of the Force which the accused might request to represent him. It is mandatory on the Force to provide representation if requested and is not in any way prohibitory against the accused hiring his own counsel.
As to the first argument advanced by counsel for the Crown, it is important to note that section 34 of the Act, dealing with the conduct of the trial, in addition to subsection (3) with which I have dealt, contains the following provisions:
34. (1) At the time and place appointed in the written charge, the accused shall be brought before the officer who is to try the offence.
(2) The accused may plead guilty or not guilty, and where he refuses to plead, he shall be deemed to have pleaded not guilty.
(3) [supra].
(4) An accused is not compelled to testify at his trial, but he may give evidence under oath; an accused who has not given evidence under oath shall, at the conclusion of the case for the prosecution, be given an opportunity of making a statement to the presiding officer.
(5) An accused may call witnesses on his own behalf and may cross-examine any witnesses called for the prosecution.
(6) The rules of evidence at a trial under this Part shall be the same as those followed in proceedings under the Criminal Code in the courts in the province in which the trial is held, or, if the trial is held outside Canada, in the courts of Ontario.
(7) The officer presiding at the trial shall cause the evidence of the witnesses to be taken down and transcribed.
I have never heard of, nor were counsel able to refer me to any case where a tribunal was held to be essentially administrative in nature when, to arrive at its findings, it was obliged to abide by the rules of evidence in criminal trials, to have the evidence transcribed and to conduct a trial in such a formal manner as provided for in section 34.
It would be nothing short of ludicrous to expect an ordinary layman, without the benefit of legal counsel, to either understand, abide by or, more importantly, benefit by the rules of evidence in criminal matters such as the rules regarding state ments and admissions made to persons in author ity. Unlike many other instances where there is an appeal provided by means of a trial de novo, in the case of a person convicted under the Royal Canadian Mounted Police Act the only appeal as of right is on the record. Therefore, if the accused, by reason of his lack of legal training, has failed to get evidence on the record which he should have, an appeal would not remedy the situation.
Finally, section 33 of the Regulations purports to be absolute and mandatory. It forbids the use of outside counsel in all cases, without allowing any discretion to the tribunal trying the accused regardless of the legal complexities involved and regardless of the fact, as in the cases before me, that time does not appear to be important.
In considering these matters, together with the severity of the penalties provided for in section 36, I cannot conceive that Parliament, in the face of these specific provisions which it enacted, intended to absolutely deny to all accused the benefit of counsel of their choice when it authorized the Governor in Council to issue regulations for the
"discipline, efficiency, administration and good government of the force".
For the above reasons I find that section 33 of the Regulations is not authorized under the Act and is therefore ultra vires and of no effect at least in so far as a trial for a major service offence under section 25 of the Act is concerned.
As to the particular circumstances of this case which really do not affect the question of the validity of Regulation 33, it is interesting to note that a duly qualified legal officer had been appointed as prosecutor according to the custom of the Force and that the Force, in conformity with section 34 of the Act, considered the proceedings as being quite formal and strictly adversary in nature.
Since, admittedly, no reason exists in the cases before me for excluding counsel, other than the provisions of section 33 of the Regulations, an order will issue prohibiting the service tribunal from proceeding with the trial of either of these applicants unless they are allowed to be represent ed by counsel of their choice.
On examining the general disciplinary scheme of the Act, one finds that the laying of charges for minor service offences can be authorized by an officer junior in rank to one who must authorize charges for major service offences. Notwithstand ing this, section 34 requires that the actual trial of a minor offence be conducted with the same for mality, be subject to the same strict evidentiary rules and that its proceedings be taken down and transcribed in the same manner as a trial on a major service offence. Minor service offences are of the type which must necessarily occur frequent ly and on an almost daily basis even in a well-disci plined force. They are, more often than not, the result of inattention or temporary neglect rather than deliberate disobedience. They are, by their very definition, relatively unimportant when com pared to the major offences enumerated in section 25 and might consist of such petty offences as failure to shine one's shoes, to keep one's uniform neat and tidy or being late on duty or absent for a few hours. Yet, in order to punish a member of the
Force by confinement to barracks for a couple of days, a formal trial must take place with all the burdensome administrative difficulties, time-con suming procedures, expense and drain of personnel that such a trial entails. It is difficult to conceive how a police force can operate with any degree of efficiency, maintain a military type of discipline and at the same time conform strictly to those particular provisions of an Act. Though the law draws a clear distinction between the two types of offences initially at the level of the laying of charges (reference section 32), as to the constitu tion of the courts for their trial (reference sections 29 and 30) and finally at the level of punishment following conviction (reference section 36), it nevertheless provides for a single trial procedure which, though fully justified in the case of major offences, imposes an unnecessarily strict and cum bersome trial procedure for all minor offences no matter how petty or lacking in blameworthy intent they may be. The law in respect of these proce dures invites, and indeed cries out, for its breach or circumvention not by indifferent or poorly moti vated members of the Force but by those who perhaps are the most anxious to ensure its efficien cy. This would not appear to be a desirable situa tion especially in the case of a police force.
The order to be issued being in the nature of a prerogative writ of prohibition against a tribunal sitting on a quasi-criminal matter, no costs will be allowed.
APPENDIX "A" TO REASONS FOR ORDER OF ADDY J.
Belanger v. The King (1917) 54 S.C.R. 265.
Ulin v. The Queen [1973] F.C. 319.
Attorney General of Canada v. Paulsen [1973] F.C. 376.
Regina v. Drybones [1970] 3 C.C.C. 355.
The Attorney General of Canada v. Lavell [1974] S.C.R. 1349.
Re Walsh and Jordan (1962) 31 D.L.R. (2d) 88.
Re Bachinsky and Sawyer (1974) 43 D.L.R. (3d) 96.
Kedward v. The Queen [1973] F.C. 1142.
Bokor v. The Queen [1970] Ex.C.R. 842.
McCleery v. The Queen [1974] 2 F.C. 339.
Doucette v. Nova Scotia Police Commission (1980) 40 N.S.R.
(2d) 572.
Post Office Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. P-14, s. 6.
Nissan Automobile Co. (Canada) Ltd. v. Pelletier (1980) 97
D.L.R. (3d) 277.
Nissan Automobile Co. (Canada) Ltd. v. Pelletier (1977) 77
D.L.R. (3d) 646.
Maynard v. Osmond [1977] 1 All E.R. 64.
MacKay v. Rippon [1978] 1 F.C. 233.
Martineau v. The Matsqui Institution Inmate Disciplinary
Board [1978] 1 S.C.R. 118.
626 082 762 Private R. C. MacKay v. The Queen [1980] 2
S.C.R. 370.
Nicholson v. Haldimand-Norfolk Regional Board of Commis
sioners of Police [ 1979] 1 S.C.R. 311.
Chisholm v. Jamieson (1974) 47 D.L.R. (3d) 754.
Martineau v. The Matsqui Institution Inmate Disciplinary
Board [1976] 2 F.C. 198.
Ex parte FRY [1954] 2 All E.R. 118.
The Queen v. White [ 1956] S.C.R. 154.
Selvarajan v. Race Relations Board [1976] 1 All E.R. 12.
R. v. Hull Prison Board of Visitors, ex parte St. Germain
[1979] 1 All E.R. 701.
Martineau v. Matsqui Institution Disciplinary Board [1980] 1
S.C.R. 602.
Dubeau v. National Parole Board [1981] 2 F.C. 37.
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