Judgments

Decision Information

Decision Content

T-2265-86 T-2268-86 T-2269-86
Director of Investigation & Research, ex rel. Robert Weist (Applicant)
v.
Irving Equipment, a division of J. D. Irving, Lim ited, and Barrington Industrial Services Limited (Respondents)
INDEXED AS: CANADA (DIRECTOR OF INVESTIGATION AND RESEARCH) V. IRVING EQUIPMENT
Trial Division, Muldoon J.—Ottawa, November 24; December 1, 1986.
Combines — Motions to (1) authorize retention of seized documents and (2) that access thereto be limited — First motion granted as records seized kind authorized by warrant and report to judge meeting requirements of Act, s. 15(2)
Inapplicability of Charter ss. 7, 8 and 11(d) Applicability of common law presumption of innocence — Non-access orders appropriate in both private and public law litigation
Decision of Dickson J. in Maclntyre explained No interest served in giving public access to respondents' business secrets if no charge laid — Courts having supervisory power over own records — Second motion granted.
Constitutional law Charter of Rights — Life, liberty and
security — Seizure of documents under Competition Act —
Motion for order limiting access to business secrets No charge laid — Presumption of innocence — Security of person — Public perception of guilt as judge found reasonable grounds to issue warrants — Ignorance of public to be dealt
with by education, not Charter Whether search and seizure unreasonable under Charter s. 8 considering prejudice due to publicizing secret information — Corporations entitled to
human rights No relief under Charter.
Constitutional law — Charter of Rights Criminal pro
cess — Competition Act Documents seized No charge laid — Motion that retention be with limited access — Busi ness secrets — Presumption of innocence — Charter s. 11(d) inapplicable.
Criminal justice Common law presumption of innocence
Competition Act — Documents containing business secrets
seized — No charge laid Motion granted that retention be
on limited access basis Non-access orders appropriate in
both private and public law cases — No valid interest serve6 by giving public access to documents.
Practice — Affidavits — In support of motion — That of counsel appearing — Such affidavits normally rejected for several reasons — Received where counsel from afar, matter urgent and opposing counsel not objecting — Court never again making such exception unless compellingly persuasive reasons.
Two motions came on before the Court sitting in camera. The Director of Investigation and Research under the Compe tition Act moved under paragraph 15(1 )(b) and subsection 15(3) for an order authorizing the retention of certain docu ments including quotations to customers, lists of customers, equipment rental rate schedules, promotional brochures and market analysis which had been seized pursuant to section 13 warrants. The respondents sought an order that the documents be retained on a confidential basis and with limited access unless and until a charge was laid. The affidavit in support was that of counsel. While neither side actively opposed the other's motion, there was no consent.
The respondents' motion was based on Charter sections 7, 8 and I 1(d). It was argued that, at this stage of the proceedings, respondents were in the position of the "innocent persons" referred to by Dickson J. [as he then was] in the Maclntyre case. There was a presumption of innocence and the respon dents' security of the person, as guaranteed by Charter section 7, would be prejudiced if their business secrets became acces sible to competitors and the public. Since a judge had found that there were reasonable grounds for issuing the warrants, the public perception would be that respondents were probably guilty but, not having been charged, they could not repudiate the "accusations". Invoking Charter section 8, the respondents maintain that to publicize this sensitive commercial informa tion before a charge is laid would be so prejudicial as to render the search and seizure unreasonable. Finally, while conceding that the Charter paragraph 11(d) right to be presumed inno cent until proven guilty has not come into play as they have yet to be charged, the respondents submit that the presumption of innocence should extend to persons in their position.
Held, the motions should be granted without costs.
The report to a judge produced by the applicant was in conformity with the requirements of subsection 15(2) of the Act. The records seized were of the kind authorized by the warrant. Subsection 16(4) provides for the further detention of things seized if a judge is satisfied that this is warranted.
It was bad practice for the affidavit in support to be that of counsel appearing on the motion. There were three reasons for rejecting the affidavits of counsel for a party: (1) everyone had a right to know if a person spoke as witness or professional adviser; (2) a conflict could arise between the lawyer's role as witness and that of advocate: no witness can deal objectively with the credibility of his own testimony; (3) the lawyer could
expose himself to cross-examination on matters covered by solicitor-client privilege. On this one occasion, the Court would receive the affidavit in view of the urgency of the matter and the facts that respondents' counsel had come to Ottawa from New Brunswick and opposing counsel consented to its accept ance. Never again would the Court do so in the absence of the most compellingly persuasive reasons.
Although it seemed ludicrous that a corporation could invoke human rights and freedoms, the constitution was developing in that direction. The respondents' arguments were creative but it was not certain that relief under the Charter was available. 1f the public was so unsophisticated as to misunderstand the difference between prima facie reasonable grounds and proof beyond a reasonable doubt, the answer lay in public education rather than in invoking Charter sections 7 or 8. It was the common law presumption of innocence, rather than the Chart er, which could avail the respondents.
Protection for business secrets is frequently accorded in commercial litigation. Non-access orders were as appropriate in public law as in private law cases.
When, in Mac/ntyre, Dickson J. spoke of a right of public access to the information and the warrant after it was executed and something found, he meant something cogent. Under the Competition Act, the Director has 60 days to decide whether anything cogent has been seized. A comparison of values and interests had to be made. No valid interest would be served by giving public access to respondents' business secrets if the respondents are not to be charged. Should charges be laid, the matter would enter the public domain and public access to the investigator's sworn information could not be prohibited. Every court had supervisory and protecting power over its own records. The information should be kept confidential with access limited to the parties and court officials so that the respondents' sensitive business secrets would not be unneces sarily subverted.
STATUTES AND REGULATIONS JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, being Part of the Constitution Act, 1982, Schedule B, Canada Act 1982, 1982, c. 11 (U.K.), ss. 2(b), 7, 8, 11(d).
Competition Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. C-23 (as am. by S.C. 1986, c. 26, s. 19), ss. 13 (as am. idem, s. 24), 15 (as am. idem), 16(4) (as am. idem).
Constitution Act, 1982, Schedule B, Canada Act 1982, 1982, c. 11 (U.K.), s. 52.
Criminal Code, R.S.C. 1970, c. C-34, s. 443.2 (as added by S.C. 1985, c. 19, s. 70).
Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, s. 11(3).
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
APPLIED:
Attorney General of Nova Scotia et al. v. Maclntyre, [1982] 1 S.C.R. 175; 132 D.L.R. (3d) 385.
CONSIDERED:
Lex Tex Canada Ltd. v. Duratex Inc., [ 1979] 2 F.C. 722 (T.D.); Canadian Newspapers Co. Ltd. v. Attorney-Gen eral of Canada and two other actions (l986), 55 O.R. (2d) 737 (H.C.); Can. Newspapers Co. v. Can. (A.G.), [1987] 1 W.W.R. 262; (1986), 28 C.C.C. (3d) 379 (Man.
Q. B.).
REFERRED TO:
R. v. A. & A. Jewellers Limited, [1978] 1 F.C. 479 (T.D.); Martinoff v. Gossen, [1978] 2 F.C. 537 (T.D.); Hunter et al. v. Southam Inc., [1984] 2 S.C.R. 145; 11 D.L.R. (4th) 641; Southam Inc. v. Dir. of Investigation & Research, [1983] 3 W.W.R. 385 (Alta. C.A.); Thom- son Newspapers Ltd. et al. v. Director of Investigation and Research et al. (1986), 26 D.L.R. (4th) 507 (Ont.
H.C.).
COUNSEL:
Winston K. Fogarty for applicant. Gerald B. Lawson for respondents.
SOLICITORS:
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for applicant.
Lawson & Lawson, Saint John, New Bruns- wick, for respondents.
The following are the reasons for order ren dered in English by
MULDOON J.: Irving Equipment is the respon dent in proceedings T-2265-86 and Barrington Industrial Services Limited is the respondent in proceedings T-2268-86 and T-2269-86, but since these reasons apply in all proceedings and since the respondents are identically represented by one counsel and one firm of solicitors, a copy of these written reasons shall be lodged in the file for each of these proceedings.
Two motions came simultaneously before the Court sitting in camera in Ottawa, in the presence of counsel for the applicant and counsel for the respondents. Both counsel participated in each motion's hearing to greater or lesser extent as will be seen hereinafter.
MOTION FOR RETENTION OF THINGS SEIZED
The first motion was made on behalf of the applicant, pursuant to paragraph 15(1)(b) and subsection 15(3) of the Competition Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. C-23, as am. by S.C. 1986, c. 26, ss. 19 and 24, for an order authorizing the applicant to retain records or things seized pursuant to war rants earlier issued under section 13 [as am. idem] of the Act.
Part I of the Act bears the title INVESTIGATION AND RESEARCH. A review, by recitation, of section 15 is warranted here:
15. (1) Where a record or other thing is seized pursuant to paragraph 13(1)(d), subsection 13(7) or section 14, the Direc tor or his authorized representative shall, as soon as practicable,
(a) take the record or other thing before the judge who issued the warrant or a judge of the same court or, if no warrant was issued, before a judge of a superior or county court or of the Federal Court; or
(b) make a report in respect of the record or other thing to a judge determined in accordance with paragraph (a).
(2) A report to a judge under paragraph (1)(b) in respect of a record or other thing shall include
(a) a statement as to whether the record or other thing was seized pursuant to paragraph 13(1)(d), subsection 13(7) or section 14;
(b) a description of the premises searched;
(c) a description of the record or other thing seized; and
(d) the location in which it is detained.
(3) Where a record or other thing is seized pursuant to section 13 or 14, the judge before whom it is taken or to whom a report is made in respect of it pursuant to this section may, if he is satisfied that the record or other thing is required for an inquiry or any proceeding under this Act, authorize the Direc tor to retain it.
The applicant chose, as is his right, to invoke paragraph 15(1)(b) of the Act.
The report which the applicant produced con forms adequately in these particular instances with the requirements of subsection 15(2). It ought to be noted that, while counsel for the respondents did not actively oppose the applicant's motion in this regard, such counsel pointedly declined to consent to the making of the order which the applicant seeks. Accordingly, the applicant's coun-
sel was not relieved of the task of making the applicant's case, if possible, for retention of the records seized. The report is formulated by Robert Weist, the relator and authorized representative herein of the applicant, the Director of Investiga tion and Research. The records seized appear to be of the kind authorized by the warrant and include: price offers and quotations to customers, customer lists, equipment rental rate schedules, payroll reg isters, internal notes relating to price quotations, promotional brochures, market analysis and other documents which have probable probative bearing on the alleged offences. The descriptions of those records appear to be adequate in this instance, having regard to the sworn informations upon which issuance of the warrants was based. Such descriptions could be too cryptic in other instances, perhaps.
The retention and care of seized records or things are provided in law by section 16 of the Competition Act. Of particular interest at this stage of proceedings is subsection 16(4) [as am. idem] which in its pertinent passages runs as follows:
16. ...
(4) Any record or other thing ... the retention of which is authorized under subsection 15(3), shall be returned to ... the person from whom it was seized no later than sixty days after ... its retention was authorized, unless, before the expiration of that period,
(a) the person ... from whom it was seized agrees to its further detention for a specified period of time;
(b) the judge who authorized its production or retention or a judge of the same court is satisfied on application that, having regard to the circumstances, its further detention for a specified period of time is warranted and he so orders; or
(e) proceedings are instituted in which the record or thing may be required.
Counsel for the respondents would accord no agreement on their behalf pursuant to paragraph 16(4)(a). Therefore the Director may retain the seized records under section 16 of the Act only for so long as is permitted pursuant to paragraphs 16(4)(b) and (c). This application is granted as of November 24, 1986, without costs for or against any party hereto.
MOTION FOR ORDER OF CONFIDENTIAL RETENTION OF THE INFORMATION, WITH LIMITED ACCESS, UNLESS AND UNTIL A CHARGE BE LAID AGAINST THE RESPONDENTS HEREIN
PROCEDURAL MATTERS
The respondents' motions are for the orders sketched above. The motion in each matter is supported by the affidavit of counsel herein. To purport to be both counsel and witness in one and the same litigious matter is bad practice in this Court and, as well, objectively.
There is an excellent and apparently unpremeditated trilogy of decisions which together make a useful practice textbook for the formula tion and use of affidavits in this Court. They are: R. v. A. & A. Jewellers Limited, [1978] 1 F.C. 479 (T.D.), a decision of Associate Chief Justice Thurlow, as he then was; Martinoff v. Gossen, [1978] 2 F.C. 537 (T.D.) (at page 542), a decision of Mr. Justice Collier; and Lex Tex Canada Ltd. v. Duratex Inc., [1979] 2 F.C. 722 (T.D.) (to page 725), a decision of Mr. Justice Addy.
There are at least three good reasons for reject ing affidavits sworn by solicitors and counsel for a party. First, everyone including the speaker has the right and obligation to be perfectly clear about whether he or she speaks as a witness or as a professional adviser. Second is the possibility of conflict with professional responsibility. Affidavits like oral testimony are expressed solemnly upon oath or the legal (if not moral) equivalent thereof. No counsel or solicitor, who is, after all, an officer of the Court, ought ever to place himself or herself into the quandary or risking a conflict of interest between remunerative (but yet honourable) advocacy and possibly unpalatable truth sworn on oath. See subsection 11(3) of the Federal Court Act [R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10]. No witness can deal objectively with the weight or credibility of his own testimony. Lawyers for opposing parties ought not to be exigible to cross-examination by each other, for fear of sacrifice of one role for the other, or the lamentable appearance of such sacri fice. Third, unless the solicitor or counsel obtain the previous blanket absolution of the client, then
he or she will be obliged to assert the client's solicitor-and-client privilege mentally when for mulating the affidavit and, of course, orally only when being cross-examined on it. As was stated by Addy J. in the Lex Tex case (above) at pages 723 and 724:
Whatever might be the motive for doing so, it is completely improper and unacceptable for a solicitor to take an affidavit even in an interlocutory matter where he attests to matters of substance and might therefore expose himself to being cross- examined on matters covered by solicitor-and-client privilege.
Here counsel for the respondents has placed them in the jeopardy of having the affidavit in support of their serious, urgent and important motions utterly rejected because he is the depo- nent. Counsel for the applicant does not actively oppose the respondents' motions, but is instructed not to consent to them. His posture here does not incline against receiving the affidavit sworn by counsel in each proceeding. Counsel for the appli cant notes that his adversary has come from Saint John, New Brunswick, to present the respondents' urgent and important motions in Ottawa and gen erously moved that the affidavit be received and accepted in each matter before the Court. So be it, on this one occasion only, but never again, without the most compellingly persuasive reasons which can hardly be imagined.
SUBSTANTIVE MATTERS
Although counsel for the applicant Director of Investigation and Research (herein sometimes: the D.I.R.) does not actively oppose the respondents' motions, yet, because these matters are being argued in camera, the Court exacted of the D.I.R.'s counsel that he responds at least as if he were an amicus curiae, a not embarrassing or unnatural role for a non-contending, non-consent ing party's counsel. His contribution in that role
has been most helpful, as was also acknowledged by the respondents' counsel.
The respondents' motion in regard to each war rant's supporting sworn information asks for:
... an Order that all copies of the Information filed in support of the Application for the granting of a Search Warrant in this matter be maintained as confidential, with access to the same limited to officials of this Honourable Court, officials or repre sentatives of J.D. Irving, Limited, officials or representatives of Barrington industrial Services Limited and anyone who has the written consent of J.D. Irving, Limited or Barrington Industrial Services Limited, and the Applicant or anyone who has the written consent of the Applicant. This order is sought on the grounds that the release of such information would violate the rights of J.D. Irving, Limited and Barrington Industrial Ser vices Limited under the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, more specifically Sections 7, 8 and 1 1(d) thereof.
The affidavit in support of the motion recounts the following among other matters in this matter to which no objection was taken on behalf of the
D.I.R.:
5. That I have reviewed the said Information of Robert Weist and have reviewed allegations set out in such Information with officials of Irving and Barrington and have reviewed certain of the documents seized pursuant to the said Search Warrants, and based on this review, it is my opinion that Irving and Barrington have not, either together or alone, committed any offence as alleged in the said Information.
(Those above mentioned officials would have been the natural deponents to swear their oaths as to the facts, and to be exigible to cross-examination thereon.)
6. That I do verily believe that Irving and Barrington would suffer damage by public disclosure of the pricing and commer cial information set out in the said Information.
7. That I do verily believe that the public, in reading the said Information would presume, until Irving and Barrington had an opportunity to answer the matters raised in the Information, that Irving and Barrington had acted unlawfully, and that such presumption of guilt raised in the minds of the public would damage the reputation of Irving and Barrington among the public at large and customers and potential customers of Irving and Barrington in particular.
8. That the Respondents seek an Order by this Honourable Court that all copies of the Information filed in support of the Application for the granting of a Search Warrant in this matter be maintained as confidential unless and until a charge is laid against the Respondent in this matter, with access to the said
Information limited to officials of this Honourable Court officials or representatives of J.D. Irving, Limited, officials oi representatives of Barrington Industrial Services Limited, anc anyone who has the written consent of J.D. Irving, Limited oi Barrington Industrial Services Limited, and the Applicant oi anyone who has the written consent of the Applicant.
A body of jurisprudence, cited by both counsel, is before the Court. The following were cited by the respondents' counsel: Attorney General oi Nova Scotia et al. v. Maclntyre, [ 1982] 1 S.C.R, 175; 132 D.L.R. (3d) 385; Hunter et al. v. South- am Inc., [1984] 2 S.C.R. 145; 11 D.L.R. (4th) 641; and its immediate predecessor Southam Inc. v. Dir. of Investigation & Research, [1983] 3 W.W.R. 385 (Alta C. A.). Counsel for the D.I.R., more as amicus curiae than as the respondents' adversary, cited: Thomson Newspapers Ltd. et al. v. Director of Investigation and Research et al. (1986), 26 D.L.R. (4th) 507 (Ont. H.C.) and the appeal decision therein, of the same style of cause (the applicants being appellants and cross-respond ents), (unreported). There is also, counsel noted. the decision by Osler J. of the Ontario High Court of Justice, in Canadian Newspapers Co. Ltd. v. Attorney-General of Canada and two othe, actions (1986), 55 O.R. (2d) 737, in which he refers to the decision of Barkman J. of the Manito- ba Queen's Bench in Can. Newspapers Co. v. Can. (A.G.), [1987] 1 W.W.R. 262; (1986), 28 C.C.0 (3d) 379. Both of the latter two decisions come tc the same conclusion, namely, that section 443.2 of the Criminal Code [R.S.C. 1970, c. C-34 (a: added by S.C. 1985, c. 19, s. 70] contravene; paragraph 2(b) of the Canadian Charter of Right! and Freedoms [being Part I of the Constitution Act, 1982, Schedule B, Canada Act 1982, 1982, c 11 (U.K.)] and that section 443.2 is therefore voic pursuant to section 52 of the Constitution Act 1982 [Schedule B, Canada Act 1982, 1982, c. 11 (U.K.)].
Section 443.2 of the Criminal Code provided an indication of Parliament's notion of appropriate public policy in this regard, thus:
443.2 (1) Where a search warrant is issued under section 443 or 443.1 or a search is made under such a warrant, every
one who publishes in any newspaper or broadcasts any informa tion with respect to
(a) the location of the place searched or to be searched, or
(b) the identity of any person who is or appears to occupy [sic] or be in possession or control of that place or who is suspected of being involved in any offence in relation to which the warrant was issued,
without the consent of every person referred to in paragraph (b) is, unless a charge has been laid in respect of any offence in relation to which the warrant was issued, guilty of an offence punishable on summary conviction.
(2) In this section, "newspaper" has the same meaning as in section 261.
The Attorney General of Canada launched appeals from the latter two rulings but, in a news release dated October 22, 1986, The Hon. Ramon Hnaty- shyn confirmed that he would not pursue such appeals. Such a development may see the demise of section 443.2 of the Criminal Code, but the policy upon which it was based has not been repudiated.
The policy has in general existed in Canadian law even before the Charter was promulgated on April 17, 1982. The Maclntyre case, above cited, is a potent example. There, in January, 1982, the Supreme Court of Canada divided 5 to 4 on the issue of whether there is a general public right to inspect search warrants and their related informa- tions. The minority opinion expressed by Mr. Jus tice Martland asserted the risk to the informant in being identified in certain kinds of criminal inves tigations (not relevant in the case at bar here), the confidentiality of police work, and the undesirabi lity of making available to those engaged in crimi nal activities the pattern of police activities in connection with searches. That minority opinion was also based on the tought that the "highly prejudicial" publication of the fact that a person's "premises are the subject of a search warrant generates suspicion that he was in some way involved in the offence".
The majority opinion in the Maclntyre case, written by Mr. Justice (now Chief Justice) Dick-
son concluded (at pages 189-190 S.C.R.; 405 D.L.R.) that:
... the administration of justice argument does justify an in camera proceeding at the time of issuance of the warrant but, once the warrant has been executed, exlusion thereafter of members of the public cannot normally be countenanced. The general rule of public access must prevail, save in respect of those whom I have referred to as innocent persons.
In the result it was declared that after a search warrant has been executed, and objects found as a result of the search are brought back before the issuer, the general public could then inspect the warrant and the information upon which it was issued.
The respondents' motion is based on provisions of the Charter—sections 7, 8 and 11(d). It does seem objectively ludicrous that corporations— those artificial, metaphysical and imaginary enti ties, which are exploited generally as notional vehi cles to share the risks and liabilities of industrial and commercial enterprises—should be permitted to invoke what are fundamentally human rights and freedoms. However, the development of the Constitution is already embarked on that swampy course and this is neither the time nor the place to reverse it.
Counsel for the respondents argues that they are—at this stage of events, at least—the "inno- cent persons" referred to by Dickson J. [as he then was] in the majority decision in Maclntyre, back in January, 1982. A few passages from those reasons (at pages 185 to 187 S.C.R.; 401-403 D.L.R.) give a panoramic view of the opinion.
Let me deal first with the `privacy' argument. This is not the first occasion on which such an argument has been tested in the courts. Many times it has been urged that the `privacy' of litigants requires that the public be excluded from court pro ceedings. It is now well established, however, that covertness is the exception and openness the rule. Public confidence in the integrity of the court system and understanding of the adminis tration of justice are thereby fostered. As a general rule the sensibilities of the individuals involved are no basis for exclu sion of the public from judicial proceedings.
At every stage the rule should be one of public accessibility and concomitant judicial accountability; all with a view to ensuring there is no abuse in the issue of search warrants, that once issued they are executed according to law, and finally that any
evidence seized is dealt with according to law. A decision by the Crown not to prosecute, notwithstanding the finding of evi dence appearing to establish the commission of a crime may, in some circumstances, raise issues of public importance.
In my view, curtailment of public accessibility can only be justified where there is present the need to protect social values of superordinate importance. One of these is the protection of the innocent.
Many search warrants are issued and executed, and nothing is found. In these circumstances, does the interest served by giving access to the public outweigh that served in protecting those persons whose premises have been searched and nothing has been found? Must they endure the stigmatization to name and reputation which would follow publication of the search? Protection of the innocent from unnecessary harm is a valid and important policy consideration. In my view that consider ation overrides the public access interest in those cases where a search is made and nothing is found. The public right to know must yield to the protection of the innocent. If the warrant is executed and something is seized, other considerations come to bear.
Finally, for purposes of the case at bar, the following passages (at pages 189 S.C.R.; 405 D.L.R.) cast a certain light:
Undoubtedly every court has a supervisory and protecting power over its own records. Access can be denied when the ends of justice would be subverted by disclosure or the judicial documents might be used for an improper purpose. The pre sumption, however, is in favour of public access and the burden of contrary proof lies upon the person who would deny the exercice [sic] of the right.
I am not unaware that the foregoing may seem a departure from English practice, as I understand it, but it is in my view more consonant with the openness of judicial proceedings which English case law would seem to espouse.
The respondents urge not only their own inno cence and the presumption of it in the circum stances, but also the prejudice which they would suffer if their business secrets recounted, albeit by necessary hearsay, in the information were to be now made accessible to their competitors, custom ers and the general public. So, their counsel argues on the high plane of unsullied commercial reputa tion in assertion of the presumption of innocence. Damage to that reputation and to the enshrined presumption would inflict a deprivation of the security of their corporate metaphysical persons in violation of section 7 of the Charter, that which must not be permitted, except in accordance with the principles of fundamental justice. The present proceedings accord the respondents their funda-
mental justice in its procedural sense, but their counsel argues premature publicity of the sworn information would deprive them of the protection of the principles of fundamental justice in its substantive sense. They argue that because the judge who issued the warrants was satisfied that there were reasonable grounds to believe that an offence had been or was about to be committed—a state of proof far removed from proof beyond a reasonable doubt—the general public would be induced to believe that they are probably guilty and, not yet having been even charged with any offence, they have no appropriate forum in which to repudiate the "accusations", to their prejudice.
The respondents' counsel asserts therefore that there would be not only a substantive violation of their right to security of the person pursuant to section 7, but also that the very same factors lead inexorably to a violation of their right to security from unreasonable search or seizure under section 8 of the Charter. This argument runs as follows. The process of search and seizure whether con junctive or, more inclusively, disjunctive as expressed in section 8, comprehends the proce dures, acts and facts of setting out the informant's evidence and beliefs in the sworn information and in thereby persuading the judge that they are satisfactory to him or her in order to induce the judge to issue a warrant. Because the information must reveal a prima facie case and, in this particu lar case, does reveal sensitive commercial informa tion, the premature publicizing of the information before any charge is laid, if any, if ever, would be so highly prejudicial as to render the search and seizure unreasonable. The respondents might never be charged, and, they argue, if not charged, then their rights under section 8 would be violated by such an unreasonable search and seizure.
Further, respondents' counsel argues, since the respondents have not yet been charged with an offence and, pursuant to paragraph 11(d) of the
Charter, their right to be presumed innocent until proven guilty according to law in a fair and public hearing by an independent and impartial tribunal does not yet formally arise according to the Chart er. They assert that if in law they bear a presump tion of innocence upon being charged with an offence, then a fortiori the respondents ought equally to have it before anyone has charged them and might never charge them.
The respondents' arguments are thoughtful, creative and thought-provoking. It is not certain however that the respondents' plight accords them resort to the provisions of the Charter. It is doubt ful that revelation of the contents of the sworn information would violate the respondents' section 7 rights, although one might well believe that the revelation of commercial secrets could jeopardize the security of a commercial corporation's "per- son" more than the security of a commercial cor poration's "person" more than the security of a human individual's person. If the public be gener ally not so sophisticated as to understand that merely showing the prima facie reasonable grounds to believe that an offence has been or (even more remote) is about to be committed, is far, far from proving the commission of such offence beyond a reasonable doubt, then the answer lies in public education but not in invoking section 7 or 8 of the Charter. Formally and offi cially the presumption of innocence arises under paragraph 11 (d) literally only upon being charged with an offence. In a common law ambience, however, that presumption benefits at large every one who is not convicted of perpetrating a particu lar offence. It is the inherent proclivity of the common law, with its pervasive ambience in feder al public law, which can avail the respondents more than the provisions of the Charter, in these circumstances.
As to the respondents' sensitive commercial and business management secrets, such secrets are often, if not routinely, accorded protection in vari ous intellectual property matters and other litiga tion involving commercial and industrial corpora-
tions. It is true that for the most part the context is private law but not always. The Competition Tribunal's proposed rule 29 runs thus:
29. (I) The proceedings of the Tribunal shall be open to the public and every person is entitled on request to access to all documents filed with the Registrar or received in evidence by the Tribunal.
(2) On a motion of the Director or of any other party to proceedings of the Tribunal and after hearing arguments from the Director and any parties wishing to present arguments, the Tribunal may, if it is of the opinion that there are valid reasons for its proceedings not to be open to the public or for persons not to be given access to any documents described in subsection (I), make an order accordingly.
There is good reason for such a rule, for it would be wicked and absurd if the Tribunal's very pro ceedings inflicted more damage upon a party than a favourable decision and as much damage as, or no less than, an unfavourable decision. The pro ceedings and adjudications of that Tribunal are certainly very much in the domain of public law. Similar procedures are utilized in various adminis trative tribunals. One can conclude non-access orders in relation to sensitive documents are not only appropriate in the field of private law, but also public law where the present proceedings are firmly located.
When, in the Maclntyre case Dickson J., as he then was, wrote of a general right of public access to the information and the warrant after the war rant has been executed and something has been found, he naturally meant something cogent in the circumstances. A wanton seizure of a random piece of paper or even a hectolitre of random papers does not constitute the seizure of "some- thing" in this context. But, because of the nature of the alleged offences, here, under the Competi tion Act, even some 11,000 pages of records of the categories of documentation authorized to be seized by the search warrant will not be known for certain to constitute that something cogent until they are sifted and assessed.
For this process of sifting and assessing, subsec tion 16(4) of the Act, as already noted above, accords the D.I.R. a period of sixty days. Such a lengthy period is no doubt predicated on the nature of the alleged offences, which are not overt or physical, and not requiring weapons, tools, chemical substances or even loot for proof, since many of the offences are not even mala in se, as the constitutional history of combines offences amply demonstrates. Because the evidence which the investigators are seeking is nothing like fire arms, syringes, drugs, crowbars or swag, even per fectly lawful seizures may not produce certain evidence of an offence. It takes more than a pass ing glance in these circumstances to discern that something cogent has been seized upon execution of the warrant.
In the majority opinion of the Supreme Court in the Maclntyre case the return of something seized upon execution of the warrant marked the point at which the Court accorded public access to the information. In this instance Parliament accords to the D.I.R. a period of sixty days certain, or that lesser period of time until a charge is laid, to ascertain whether something cogent has been seized upon execution of the warrant.
Now this situation requires a comparison of values and interests. In those pre-Charter days Dickson J., as he then was, asserted the value of the openness of judicial proceedings. Nowadays one sees in the two Canadian Newspapers Co. Ltd. cases, from Manitoba and Ontario respectively, a celebration of freedom of the press and other media of communication, pursuant to paragraph 2(b) of the Charter.
Here it is the suspects—not yet accused—who seek to preserve their privacy only until charges are laid, if ever. Had they not been importuned by investigators armed with warrants, of course the respondents' presumably innocent business would
be and remain private. On such an application, which is not actively opposed by the D.I.R. the Court must scrutinize the proprieties. Clearly, the respondents are not alleging harassment by the applicant, and in that regard their counsel sagely submits that they and all those in their position ought always to be free to open the matter at large to the media, if they complain of harassment. The D.I.R., to express it in the vernacular, must after all, fish or cut bait. But a complaint to the news media would open the matter to response from the D.I.R. and that would surely satisfy the constitu tional interests of freedom of the press.
There seems to be no valid public interest to be served by giving public access to each respondent's business secrets if it is not going to be charged with committing an offence. In that situation it would appear that the D.I.R. would not have sufficient evidence to prosecute. The respondents' counsel concedes that if and when charges be laid, the matter would enter the public domain and public access to the investigator's sworn informa tion could not then be legitimately forbidden.
It is clear upon the authority of the Supreme Court of Canada in the Maclntyre case, at least, that this Court, in common with every other court, "has a supervisory and protecting power over its own records". In the circumstances of this case, the respondents have displaced the presumption of public access upon the D.I.R.'s return of records after execution of the, warrants. The public has no interest, apart from curiosity, in gleaning the details of the investigator's suspicions, the com plainant's hearsay allegations or the respondents' business secrets unless and until the matter is precipitated into the public domain by the laying of charges.
On the other hand, the public is entitled to know, even if no charges be laid, that the D.I.R. has initiated some activities under the Act in regard to the respondents. Because reasons were released for the issuance of the search warrants, they are in the public domain. Indeed, the public is
entitled to know that those search warrants were issued and the reasons why so long as the reasons be formulated only so discreetly as not to abort the respondents' privacy interests which they are now seeking to protect. In dialogue with the Court, counsel for the respondents went so far as to concede that, even if this application be successful, the public is entitled to be informed that the respondents have instituted this motion. The release of these reasons will accomplish that.
Therefore, unless and until charges be laid, access is denied because it would work an injustice upon the respondents by subverting their sensitive business secrets unnecessarily. The allegations and hearsay revelations in the information might be used for a commercially improper purpose and revelation without the formal, lawful structures of accusation and plea in a court of competent juris diction, and the need for proof beyond a reason able doubt, could be defamatory. If the respon dents be charged and convicted, so be it and so say they. The order sought by the respondents is grant ed; the information is to be kept confidential with access limited to the parties and court officials, and so to remain unless the respondents be charged with offences under the Competition Act. However, if the respondents choose to open the said information to public scrutiny and debate, they alone may do so. These reasons are open to public access.
Since neither side actively opposed the other's motion there are no costs awarded for or against either party. Costs, in any event, should rarely, if ever, be awarded in this type of proceedings.
 You are being directed to the most recent version of the statute which may not be the version considered at the time of the judgment.