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T-2411-82
Connie Davidson, an inmate of the Prison for Women (Applicant)
v.
Prison for Women Disciplinary Court and Helen P. King, the independent chairperson thereof (Respondents)
Trial Division, Dubé J.—Ottawa, April 15 and 16, 1982.
Judicial review — Prerogative writs — Certiorari — Appli cant convicted by disciplinary court of three separate assault charges — Sentenced by chairperson to thirty days in segrega tion on each count, to run consecutively — S. 38(4)(b) of Regulations provides for dissociation for maximum period of thirty days — Jurisdiction of chairperson to order consecutive sentences — Submission by applicant that consecutive terms not to be imposed unless specifically provided by statute — Reference to s. 649(1) of Criminal Code where sentence com mences when imposed except as otherwise provided in enact ment — Disciplinary, not criminal, offence — No provisions in Penitentiary Act or Regulations that punishment for discipli nary offence commences when imposed — S. 38(4)(b) clear: three separate offences, three consecutive terms — Discretion of judge — Motion denied — Criminal Code, R.S.C. 1970, c. C-34, ss. 645(4), 649(1) — Penitentiary Service Regulations, C.R.C. 1978, Vol. XIII, c. 1251, ss. 38(4)(b), 39(b).
R. v. Blake [1962] 2 Q.B. 377, applied. R. v. Oakes (1977) 37 C.C.C. (2d) 84, distinguished.
MOTION. COUNSEL:
Fergus O'Connor for applicant. E. R. Sojonky for respondents.
SOLICITORS:
Correctional Law Project, Faculty of Law, Queen's University, Kingston, for applicant.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for respondents.
The following are the reasons for order ren dered in English by
DUBÉ J.: This motion seeks a writ of certiorari to quash the two sentences of 30 days each, imposed upon the applicant by the chairperson of a
disciplinary court, to be served in punitive dissocia tion and to run consecutively to another sentence of 30 days, on the ground that the chairperson has no jurisdiction to impose such sentences to run consecutively.
The applicant is an inmate of the Prison for Women at Kingston, Ontario. On February 15, 1982 she was convicted in disciplinary court at the penitentiary of three separate assault charges con trary to subsection 39(b) of the Penitentiary Ser vice Regulations, C.R.C. 1978, Vol. XIII, c. 1251. The assaults were committed on the same day on three different female guards. On February 15 the chairperson found her guilty of the three offences and sentenced her to 30 days in segregation on each count—to run consecutively—or a total of 90 days in segregation.
Counsel for the applicant argues that the au thority of the chairperson founded on paragraph 38(4)(b) of the Penitentiary Service Regulations does not include the power to make a sentence consecutive. The paragraph reads as follows:
38....
(4) The punishment that may be ordered for a flagrant or serious disciplinary offence shall consist of one or more of the following:
(b) dissociation for a period not exceeding thirty days;
Counsel alleges that "in the criminal law con text" the authority to impose consecutive sentences is derived solely from a statutory provision, namely subsection 649(1) of the Criminal Code of Canada, R.S.C. 1970, c. C-34, which reads as follows:
649. (1) A sentence commences when it is imposed, except where a relevant enactment otherwise provides.
Since there are no provisions in the Penitentiary Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. P-6, or the Penitentiary Ser vice Regulations providing for consecutive sen tencing, counsel invites the Court to apply to the Act and the Regulations, which deal with the liberty of a subject, an interpretation favourable to the subject. He argues that if a specific enactment is necessary under the Criminal Code to impose consecutive sentences, a fortiori the imposing of such serious punishment as consecutive solitary
confinement terms ought not to be imposed unless it is specifically provided by statute. He relies on an Ontario Court of Appeal decision, Regina v. Oakes (1977) 37 C.C.C. (2d) 84, wherein Martin J.A. held as follows [at page 88]:
I am disposed to think, however, that the power of a Court in Canada to impose a consecutive sentence in respect of a criminal offence must be found in existing federal legislation.
Unfortunately for the applicant, the analogy to the Criminal Code does not really assist her case. Subsection 649(1) aforementioned is preceded by subsection 645(4) which empowers the Court to direct that the terms of imprisonment of the accused in certain circumstances "shall be served one after the other". That is the exception referred to in subsection 649(1). As outlined in Regina v. Oakes, the ordinary rule is that a sentence of imprisonment for a criminal offence commences when it is imposed and the power of a court to impose a consecutive sentence must be found in existing federal legislation. In that case the Ontario Court of Appeal found that none of the circumstances set out in subsection 645(4) applied.
We are not dealing here with a criminal offence, but with a disciplinary offence, and there are no provisions either in the Penitentiary Act or the Penitentiary Service Regulations analogous to subsection 649(1) of the Criminal Code to the effect that a punishment for a disciplinary offence shall commence when it is imposed. Paragraph 38(4)(b) of the Penitentiary Service Regulations is clear and plain: "The punishment .. . for a ... serious disciplinary offence shall consist of ... dissociation for a period not exceeding thirty days." The applicant, having been convicted of three separate disciplinary offences, may be ordered to serve three consecutive terms not exceeding 30 days each.
In Regina v. Blake [1962] 2 Q.B. 377, the applicant pleaded guilty to separate offences under the Official Secrets Act, 1911, 1 & 2 Geo. 5, c. 28, and was sentenced to three consecutive sentences of 14 years' imprisonment each. The applicant applied for leave to appeal on the ground that,
since the maximum sentence of 14 years was pro vided, to pass consecutive sentences of 14 years each was to evade the limit of the Act. The Court denied the application, holding that where each count in an indictment charged a separate and distinct offence, and the maximum sentence for each offence was 14 years, it was for the judge in the exercise of his discretion to determine whether the sentences should be consecutive or concurrent. The Court said (at page 380):
The answer to this is that there is no settled principle that a judge may not pass consecutive sentences in respect of a number of offences for any one of which the maximum sen tence is 14 years where each offence charged in each count is separate and distinct.
In my view, therefore, a writ of certiorari ought not to issue to quash the consecutive sentences. This motion is denied with costs.
ORDER
The motion is denied with costs.
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