Judgments

Decision Information

Decision Content

A-999-87
John Samuel Fedoriuk (Applicant) v.
Commissioner of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (Respondent)
INDEXED AS: FEDORIUK V. CANADA (COMMISSIONER OF THE ROYAL CANADIAN MOUNTED POLICE)
Court of Appeal, Heald, Mahoney and Marceau JJ.—Calgary, October 6; Ottawa, October 21, 1988.
Judicial review — Applications to review — RCMP officer
convicted of shoplifting Recommended for discharge as
unsuitable Standing Order describing ground of unsuitabil-
ity as when member involved in commission of offence of so serious nature and in such circumstances as to significantly affect proper performance of duties Discharge and Demo tion Board finding lack of intent to commit offence mitigating circumstance — Commissioner stating theft could not help but significantly affect proper performance of duties — Standing Order binding on Commissioner and requiring examination of
particular circumstances Decision confirming recommenda tion for discharge set aside.
Estoppel — Issue estoppel — RCMP officer convicted of
shoplifting Subsequent internal proceedings resulting in recommendation for discharge — Standing order describing ground of unsuitability as member's involvement in commis sion of offence of so serious nature and in such circumstances as would seriously affect proper performance of duties Whether conviction binding on civil tribunal — Issue estoppel doctrine inapplicable — Abuse of process.
RCMP — Officer convicted of shoplifting — Recommended for discharge as unsuitable — Standing order describing unsuitability based on commission of criminal offence binding
on Commissioner Requiring consideration of particular circumstances Erred in law in holding theft affecting proper performance of duties in all cases.
This was an application to set aside the Commissioner's decision confirming the recommendation that the applicant, an RCMP officer convicted of shoplifting, be discharged. The applicant's discharge was recommended on the ground of unsuitability. Standing Order AM-53 stated the basis for dis charge on such ground as the involvement of the member in the commission of an offence of so serious a nature and in such circumstances as to significantly affect the proper performance of his duties. The Commissioner addressed this issue by stating that theft by a member sworn to uphold the law could not help but significantly affect the proper performance of his duty. He
also took the position that the Discharge and Demotion Board had lacked jurisdiction to hear evidence concerning an issue that had already been determined and should not have found a lack of intent to be a mitigating circumstance, as theft had already been established, including intent as a requisite element of the offence. The issues were whether the Commissioner erred in law in not considering the circumstances and whether issue estoppel applied to prevent the consideration by civil tribunals of the applicant's involvement in the commission of the offence.
Held, the application should be allowed.
Per Heald J.: Bulletin AM-53, promulgated as a Standing Order, was designed to comply with the rules of natural justice and procedural fairness and was binding on the Commissioner. The plain language of the Bulletin required the Commissioner to examine the particular circumstances of the commission of the offence in each case, and to satisfy himself that the offence was so serious as to significantly affect the performance of the member's duties. That he did not, in this case, do so was evidenced by his statement which revealed a belief that in all cases, regardless of the circumstances, a breach of the law by a member would automatically satisfy the requirements of the Bulletin. This was further corroborated by his failure to refer to the mitigating circumstances put forward by the applicant before the Board of Review.
It was unnecessary to decide whether issue estoppel applied because that doctrine related to the question of whether an offence had been committed, which was not in issue in these proceedings.
Per Mahoney J.: Although there was no question of issue estoppel, there was a real question of abuse of process. A conviction or acquittal on a criminal charge must be binding on consequent disciplinary tribunals because such decisions are based upon a higher standard of proof, that of proof beyond all reasonable doubt.
Per Marceau J. (concurring in the result): The prior finding of the Provincial Court as to the applicant's intent was not irrevocably binding on the Board. It could only have been so under the doctrine of "issue estoppel" or "abuse of process", neither of which applied. Issue estoppel could not apply because there was neither identity of parties, nor identity of issues. This was not a case of criminal proceedings subsequent to an acquittal, where the doctrine of issue estoppel would be more readily accepted as a guarantee against double jeopardy. Where civil proceedings follow a criminal conviction, the danger of abuse of process arises. However, there was no abuse of process here as "intent" is not a material fact which can be the object of direct misapprehension, but a state of mind which can only be inferred from outward circumstances, involving subjectivity.
Even if the Provincial Court's finding were binding, the Discharge and Demotion Board was under a duty to look into the circumstances of the case and assess their significance in regard to the person's guilt and character. It was not required to verify the validity of the conviction, but to use its own judgment and make the recommendation which it thought appropriate. Although an acquittal would preclude the Com missioner from looking into the facts of the case, a conviction would not have the corresponding preclusive effect because the principles involved and the public interest at stake are not identical. The constitutional safeguards available to a person accused of a criminal offence must not be circumvented by bringing an action in another forum. However, when a person is convicted of an offence, the interest of the individual requires that at least a degree of discretion be left to the tribunal. The Commissioner erred in law in rejecting the findings of fact of the Discharge and Demotion Board.
STATUTES AND REGULATIONS JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, s. 28.
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
APPLIED:
Hunter v Chief Constable of West Midlands, [1981] 3 All ER 727 (H.L.).
CONSIDERED:
Lutes v. Commissioner of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, [1985] 2 F.C. 326; (1985), 61 N.R. 1 (C.A.); Van Rooy v. M.N.R., [1989] 1 F.C. 489 (C.A.).
REFERRED TO:
R. v. Riddle, [1980] I S.C.R. 380; Re Del Core and Ontario College of Pharmacists (1985), 19 D.L.R. (4th) 68 (Ont. C.A.); Demeter v. British Pacific Life Insurance Co. and two other actions (1983), 150 D.L.R. (3d) 249 (Ont. H.C.).
AUTHORS CITED
de Smith's Judicial Review of Administrative Action, 4th ed., by J. M. Evans, London: Stevens & Sons Limited, 1980.
Howard, "Res Judicata in the Criminal Law" (1961) 3 Melbourne U.L. Rev. 101.
COUNSEL:
Keith F. Groves for applicant. D. Bruce Logan for respondent.
SOLICITORS:
Black & Company, Calgary, for applicant.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for respondent.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
HEALD J.: This is a section 28 [Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10] application to review and set aside a decision of the respondent dated September 22, 1987, wherein he upheld a decision of a Board of Review made on June 22, 1987, which decision allowed an appeal from the decision of a Discharge and Demotion Board ren dered on March 31, 1987. That decision of the Discharge and Demotion Board directed that the applicant be retained in the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) at his present rank.
The facts giving rise to these proceedings may be shortly stated. On June 6, 1986, the applicant, a Special Constable with the RCMP was convicted of theft, by shoplifting, of a bottle of cologne valued at $10.28 from a store in the city of Edmonton and was granted an absolute discharge by His Honour Judge Friedman of the Provincial Court of Alberta. On July 24, 1986, the applicant was served with a Notice of Intent to Recommend Discharge from the RCMP, whereupon he requested a review of his case by a Discharge and Demotion Board (D & D Board). The D & D Board held a two-day hearing in November of 1986 and delivered its decision on March 31, 1987. The Board concluded, after a consideration of all of the evidence before it, that the applicant did not have the intent to steal and that this circumstance operated to alter "the normally serious nature of the offence." (Case, page 609.) The Board then went on to conclude that "having regard to this circumstance, the conviction will not significantly affect the performance of S/Cst. Fedoriuk's duties." (Case, page 609.) This conclusion formed the basis for the decision of the D & D Board
(supra) which directed that the applicant be retained at his present rank.
That decision was appealed to a Board of Review. That Board allowed the appeal from the decision of the D & D Board and recommended that the applicant be discharged from the Force. That decision was in turn appealed by the appli cant to the respondent who, in a decision dated September 22, 1987, agreed with the decision of the Board of Review and, thus, denied the appli cant's appeal, and confirmed the recommendation of the Board of Review that the applicant be discharged.
The procedures followed by the RCMP in the instant case were said to be prescribed by Bulletin AM-53, which had been promulgated by the Com missioner as a standing order. Standing Order AM-53 sets out a comprehensive Code of Dis charge and Demotion Procedures for the Force. In my view, this Code was clearly designed to comply with the rules of natural justice and procedural fairness and is binding on the respondent Commis sioner. I think also that the Commissioner intend ed, when he promulgated Standing Order AM-53, to utilize the fact-finding capabilities of the D & D Board as well as the review facilities of the Board of Review in discharging his responsibilities with respect to the dismissal of Force personnel.'
The basis relied on by the respondent for his recommendation that the applicant be discharged is said to be Ground of Unsuitability no. 2 of AM-53. Ground no. 2 reads:
The member is involved in the commission of an offence under an enactment of the Parliament of Canada or the Legislature of a province of so serious a nature and in such circumstances as would significantly affect the proper perform ance of his duties under the Act.
1 I expressed a similar view in Lutes v. Commissioner of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, [1985] 2 F.C. 326, at pp. 340-341; (1985), 61 N.R. 1 (C.A.), at p. 15.
After concluding that the first two elements of Ground of Unsuitability no. 2 had been established in this case, 2 the respondent then turned his atten tion to the third and final element of Ground no. 2, namely, "whether the offence in this case is of so serious a nature and committed in such circum stances as would significantly affect the proper performance of S/Cst. Fedoriuk's duties." (Case, Volume 4, page 687.)
In addressing himself to this issue, the respond ent said (Case, Volume 4, pages 687-688):
9. The Discharge and Demotion Board, lacking jurisdiction to hear evidence concerning an issue previously determined, was not free to infer a lack of intent as a mitigating circumstance; the commission of a theft had already been established, includ ing intent as a requisite element of the offence.
10. The Board of Review was unanimous in considering theft to be a serious offence, particularly when the person involved is a peace officer. After serious reflection, and not without regret that a capable, experienced officer like S/Cst. Fedoriuk should find himself in this position, I am compelled to say that theft by a member sworn to uphold the law cannot help but significantly affect the proper performance of duty by that member. With this in mind, I wish to adopt the following statement by the Board of Review as my own:
It is an accepted fact that society demands a much higher standard of conduct from public office holders, especially those charged with enforcement of the laws of the land, than from the public at large. Uncompromising honesty, trustwor thiness and integrity are paramount, and an obvious breach such as this clearly diminishes the trust which an individual can expect, either from the public whom he serves, his department or his peers. Unfortunately, the public's confi dence in the Force as a whole is also affected by a demon strated lack of integrity by one of its members.
From the Force's perspective, trust is imperative ... A loss of credibility in the public's view, within the Force, and before the courts will seriously impair this member's effectiveness and render him unsuitable for service in the Force.
11. In the present case I can find no mitigating circumstance sufficient to justify the fact a theft has been committed, with intent, by a serving member of this Force. I accordingly deny S/Cst. Fedoriuk's appeal and confirm the recommendation for his discharge.
2 Those two elements are: (a) that an offence had been committed under an Act of the Parliament of Canada; and (b) that the applicant was involved in the commission of that offence.
The respondent's reasons quoted (supra) are dated September 22, 1987. Prior to this, on Sep- tember 8, 1987, Inspector E. P. Craig wrote a memorandum to the respondent, presumably in response to a request therefor from the respondent. That memorandum reads (Case, Volume 4, pages 681-684):
TO THE COMMISSIONER
FROM Insp. Craig
DATE
87-09-08
SUBJECT S/CSt..I.S. FEDORIUK
Recommendation for Discharge
SUMMARY
On 86-02-15 S/Cst. FEDORIUK was charged with theft (shop- lifting) after an incident in a supermarket in Edmonton, Alber- ta. He was convicted in Provincial Court, 86-06-06, but given an absolute discharge. Following conviction, the Commanding Officer "K" Division recommended discharge.
A Discharge and Demotion Board sat in November, 1986 and rendered a decision 87-03-31, directing that S/Cst. FEDORIUK be retained in the Force.
The C.O. "K" Division appealed and the Board of Review allowed the appeal, rejected the findings of the D & D Board and recommended that S/Cst. FEDORIUK be discharged. The date was 87-06-22.
S/Cst. FEDORIUK has now appealed that recommendation to you.
TRIAL
On 86-06-06 S/Cst. FEDORIUK appeared in the Provincial Court of Alberta for trial on a charge of shoplifting. Actus reus, the actual taking of the article (cologne) was conceded. Mens rea, the intent, was inferred by the Court on the basis of testimony by the store loss prevention officer that FEDORIUK had placed the article into a parka pocket and had externally touched it during the check-out process. The accused, for his part, admitted putting the cologne into his pocket, but only to separate it from the rest of the purchases. He said he intended to give it to the cashier on the way out as he had decided not to buy it.
Despite the appearance of two character witnesses, the decision was taken on the basis of the word of one witness against the other. The judge did not accept the explanation of the accused and found him guilty as charged. However, in view of his age and total absence of previous record, an absolute discharge was granted.
DISCHARGE AND DEMOTION BOARD
The Board, stating it is "not bound by the procedural and evidentiary restraints of the courts, and is not bound to accept
the finding in the prior hearing", allowed S/Cst. FEDORIUK'S representative to call the loss prevention officer to rebut the prima facie proof of guilt resulting from conviction in a crimi nal court. At the same time, the Board was prepared to follow an English case which said that "nothing less than conclusive evidence of innocence could suffice to counteract the weight of the previous conviction".
In the end, the Board found both FEDORIUK and his wife to be credible witnesses, while questioning the "changing recollec tion" of the loss prevention officer. As a result, the Board found a lack of intent to steal on the part of S/Cst. FEDORIUK. However, mindful of the "conclusive" dictum referred to above, the Board was unwilling to say that the Provincial Court Judge's decision was wrong. Accordingly, the Board accepted that a criminal offence was committed and that our member was in fact involved in its commission.
A collateral issue concerning evidence of a polygrapher engaged by our member was resolved when the Board refused to give any weight to his evidence.
Turning to the third ground whether or not the conviction would significantly affect the proper performance of duty, the Board concluded that lack of intent to steal in this case altered the normally serious nature of the offence. "The mitigating circumstance here is the lack of intent, and without this quality of turpitude, S/Cst. FEDORIUK'S integrity is not in question".
BOARD OF REVIEW
The Board of Review, after seeking a legal opinion from Justice Legal Services, concluded that the Discharge and Demotion Board officer had exceeded his jurisdiction when he heard evidence concerning an issue already decided by a court of competent criminal jurisdiction.
Having concluded that the first two grounds had been estab lished, the Board of Review was unanimous in its view that theft is an offence serious enough to substantially affect the performance of duty. It allowed the Commanding Officer's appeal and recommended discharge.
S/Cst. FEDORIUK has now appealed that recommendation to you.
THE LAW
I believe there is sufficient authority in the case law to support the following statements in your decision:
1) the Discharge and Demotion Board erred at law in hearing evidence concerning an issue already decided by a court of competent criminal jurisdiction.
2) lacking jurisdiction, the Discharge and Demotion Board could not infer lack of intent as a mitigating circumstance.
3) theft is an obvious example of lack of integrity.
RECOMMENDATIONS/COMMENTARY
1. If you accept grounds one and two as established, based on the result in criminal court, your decision will of necessity be based solely on whether ground three is also established— whether the offence is of so serious a nature and committed in such circumstances as would significantly affect the proper performance of duty.
2. No specific evidence was introduced by the C.O. "K" to support ground number three. In effect, then he is relying on the prima facie case created by the finding of guilt. On the other hand, with the possible exception of the character evi dence mentioned below, the defence did not introduce specific evidence concerning the effect of the finding on proper performance of duty. The determination concerning ground three is thus left to you as a matter of general principle.
3. You may wish to specifically comment on whether or not in future you would desire evidence concerning the effect of a finding of guilt on performance. If each case is to be judged on its own merits, there may be good reason to tender such evidence.
4. Mitigating circumstances in S/CSt. FEDORIUK'S favour include almost 20 years of service, no previous criminal record, no foreseen necessity to appear in court given the nature of employment, and no criminal record in any event following the absolute discharge. Four character witnesses testified that S/Cst. FEDORIUK is experienced, very good at his job, and that there was no indication of lack of integrity prior to this incident.
May I suggest that in putting your mind to this case you carefully read the written submissions at Tabs 9, and 10, the appeal to you by S/Cst. FEDORIUK and the reply to that appeal by the Commanding Officer, "K" Division. In making its recommendation to you the Board of Review did not specifical ly refer to the arguments made on behalf of our member. In the interest of fairness, I believe you should be completely aware of what those arguments were.
When the respondent's reasons relating to the third and final element of Ground no. 2 (supra) are evaluated, keeping in mind the advice he received from Inspector Craig quoted supra, I have little difficulty in concluding that the respondent committed reviewable error in confirm ing the recommendation for the applicant's dis charge. I have reached this conclusion for two reasons. Firstly, the respondent stated categorical ly and without equivocation in paragraph 10 of his
reasons (Case, page 687 supra) that "theft by a member sworn to uphold the law cannot help but significantly affect the proper performance of duty by that member." From this statement as well as other statements of like purport in paragraph 10 it is clear that the respondent Commissioner believed that, in all cases, and regardless of the circum stances in any particular case, a breach of the law by a member would, automatically, and without anything further, satisfy the requirements of the third element of Ground of Unsuitability no. 2. With respect, I think that such an interpretation is not in accordance with the plain and unequivocal language used in Ground no. 2 of AM-53. In my view, based on the language used in establishing the third element of Ground no. 2, the Commis sioner is required to examine the particular cir cumstances of the offence committed in each individual case, and to satisfy himself, after such examination, that the offence committed was of so serious a nature as to significantly affect the proper performance of his duties by the member in question. I find it interesting that the Craig memo randum supra, focuses on this aspect of the matter and makes suggestions to the Commissioner which he did not follow in his subsequent decision. In referring to the third element, Inspector Craig, after noting that neither the Force nor the member introduced any evidence relative to the third ele ment, concluded that:
The determination concerning ground three is thus left to you as a matter of general principle. (Case, p. 684.)
Thereafter Inspector Craig stated that:
You may wish to specifically comment on whether or not in future you would desire evidence concerning the effect of a finding of guilt on performance. If each case is to be judged on its own merits, there may be good reason to tender such evidence. (Case, p. 684.)
It is unfortunate that the Commissioner did not accept this advice. As noted in de Smith: "A Tribunal entrusted with a discretion must not, by the adoption of a fixed rule of policy, disable itself
from exercising its discretion in individual cases." 3 Because the Commissioner did not address himself to the factual situation here present, in deciding whether the third element of Ground 2 was estab lished in this case, I think he has committed reviewable error which vitiates the decision a quo.
My second reason for concluding that review- able error is present in this case relates to the Commissioner's statement that (Case, page 688):
In the present case I can find no mitigating circumstance sufficient to justify the fact a theft has been committed, with intent, by a serving member of this Force.
Once more it is instructive to refer back to the Craig memorandum and to repeat some of the advice given by Inspector Craig to the Commis sioner. At page 4 of his memorandum to the Commissioner, the Inspector wrote (Case, page 684):
4. Mitigating circumstances in S/Cst. FEDORIUK's favour include almost 20 years of service, no previous criminal record, no foreseen necessity to appear in court given the nature of employment, and no criminal record in any event following the absolute discharge. Four character witnesses testified that S/Cst. FEDORIUK is experienced, very good at his job, and that there was no indication of lack of integrity prior to this incident.
He then went on to suggest to the Commissioner:
... that in putting your mind to this case you carefully read the written submissions ...
of both the applicant and the Commanding Offi cer, "K" Division. Inspector Craig added (Case, page 684):
In making its recommendations to you the Board of Review did not specifically refer to the arguments made on behalf of our member. In the interest of fairness, I believe you should be completely aware of what those arguments were.
The record does not disclose whether in making his decision, the Commissioner took the advice of Inspector Craig and did consider the arguments of the applicant before the Board of Review. Those submissions were detailed and somewhat lengthy (Case, pages 643-652 inclusive). The reasons given by the commissioner make no mention of those
3 de Smith's Judicial Review of Administrative Action, 4th ed., by J. M. Evans, London: Stevens & Sons Limited, 1980, p. 311.
submissions and arguments whatsoever. The mere fact that he did not address those submissions in his reasons is not a deciding factor, of itself, from which it can be concluded that he did not address all of the circumstances of this case. However, in my view, the fact that the Commissioner chose not to refer to the very serious and detailed submis sions of the applicant, may present some corrobo ration that he did not consider the specific circum stances here present, because he had already decided, as discussed supra, that the circumstances in each particular case were irrelevant to the deci sion which he was required to make.
Accordingly, and for the above reasons, my conclusion is that the respondent Commissioner's decision herein cannot be allowed to stand. In these reasons, I have not addressed the rather extensive submissions made to us by the appli cant's counsel relating to the application or non- application of the doctrine of issue estoppel. In the view I take of this matter, it is not necessary to decide its applicability or non-applicability in this case since the reviewable error committed by the Commissioner related to the third element of Ground no. 2. The whole question of issue estoppel relates to the question as to whether or not an offence was committed by the applicant. Since I assume, for the purpose of disposing of this application that the Commissioner was correct in deciding that an offence had been committed by the member in question, the question of issue estoppel need not be answered in this case. For the reasons given herein, my problem is not with the first and second elements of Ground of Unsuitabil- ity no. 2 but with the third element thereof.
I would therefore allow the section 28 applica tion, set aside the Commissioner's decision herein, and refer the matter back to him for redetermina- tion on a basis not inconsistent with these reasons for judgment.
* * *
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
MAHONEY J.: I agree with the disposition of this application proposed by Mr. Justice Heald and with his reasons therefor. I should not have been disposed to add my own reasons except to explain why I do not agree with Mr. Justice Mar- ceau in his approach.
There is, in my opinion, no question of issue estoppel in this case. There is, however, a real question of abuse of process. The applicant was duly convicted of shoplifting by the Provincial Court. Intent was an essential element of the offence. Mr. Justice Marceau sees no reason why the finding of intent should be binding on the tribunals engaged in the consequent disciplinary proceedings. With respect, I disagree. I can express myself no better than to adopt the words of Lord Diplock in Hunter y Chief Constable of West Midlands, [1981] 3 All ER 727 (H.L.), at page 734:
... a decision on a particular question against a defendant in a criminal case ... is reached on the higher criminal standard of proof beyond all reasonable doubt and is wholly inconsistent with any possibility that the decision would not have been against him if the same question had fallen to be decided in civil proceedings instead of criminal.
Accepting, as we ought, that Lutes v. Commis sioner of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, [1985] 2 F.C. 326; (1985), 61 N.R. 1 (C.A.), correctly decided that a verdict of acquittal, i.e. a finding that all elements of the criminal offence had not been proved beyond a reasonable doubt, was binding in subsequent disciplinary proceedings where the standard of proof was merely the bal ance of probabilities, it seems to me that, a fortiori, a finding of guilt must be likewise binding.
*
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
MARCEAU J. (concurring in the result): I am in complete agreement with Mr. Justice Heald that the respondent's decision under attack in this sec tion 28 application cannot be allowed to stand, and, had I been satisfied with the approach my colleague adopts in his reasons for judgment, I would have had nothing to add. But my approach has been different and my objection to the validity of the decision is, in a sense, more fundamental than his, so I feel the need to express some person al views.
The resolution of the respondent to accept the recommendation of the Review Board and reject that of the Discharge and Demotion Board (the D
& D Board) was essentially based, as explained in my brother's reasons, on the conclusion that the D
& D Board was not legally entitled to hear evi dence on the involvement of the applicant in the commission of the offence for which he had been convicted in the Alberta Provincial Court. It is clear that, even when that conclusion was accept ed, there remained another aspect to the case which, as found by Mr. Justice Heald, the respondent seems to have neglected. But the need to look into this other aspect was dependent on a prior rejection of the findings of facts made in first instance, particularly the finding that intent was not really present, a rejection which would be warranted, at this stage, only on the ground that the evidence having led to those findings was totally inadmissible. Was that belief that the D &
D Board was precluded from looking again into the facts of the case well founded in law? In my opinion, it was not. I shall attempt to explain my opinion briefly, in spite of the difficulty of some of the points involved.
1. My first assertion will be that I see no reason why the prior finding of the Provincial Court in respect of the applicant's intent could have been irrevocably binding on the Board called upon to make the recommendation contemplated by Bulle tin AM-53. Indeed, only by virtue of the doctrines
of "issue estoppel" or "abuse of process" could it have been so and neither one, in my view, had application.
As for the doctrine of issue estoppel, I will simply refer to the recent judgment of this Court in Van Rooy v. M.N.R., [1989] 1 F.C. 489 where Mr. Justice Urie, writing for the Court, after a thorough review of the case law, reiterated that an objection based on res judicata or issue estoppel will constitute a bar to proceedings only if the same matter has been decided between the same parties in a prior final judicial decision. It is evident that the parties before the disciplinary tribunal were not the same as those in the Provin cial Court: the D & D Board sits at the behest and on behalf of the Commissioner who acts, not on behalf of the Queen but in accordance with the duties and powers conferred on him personally by Parliament. Nor was the issue before the D & D Board the same as that facing the Provincial Court: even if the element of "intent to steal" were treated in isolation, it had to be addressed by the D & D Board having regard to its mission which was to ascertain whether the appellant was "involved in the commission of an offence ... of so serious a nature and in such circumstances as would significantly affect the proper performance of his duties under the Act".
Above all, it should not be forgotten that this is not a case of subsequent criminal proceedings after a verdict of acquittal, where the doctrine of issue estoppel, in its development beyond the strict con fines of res judicata, is more readily accepted, related as it is to the old plea of autrefois acquit and the guarantee against double jeopardy, (see Howard, "Res Judicata in the Criminal Law" (1961), 3 M.U.L.R. 101, at page 108 et seq.; see also the reasons of Dickson J. (as he then was) in R. v. Riddle, [1980] 1 S.C.R. 380). This is a case where, after conviction in a criminal forum, new
proceedings, clearly classifiable as civil (questions of professional status and employment being involved), are engaged: in such a case, as was said again recently by the Ontario Court of Appeal in Re Del Core and Ontario College of Pharmacists (1985), 19 D.L.R. (4th) 68, it is the danger of abuse of process which should become the para mount concern.
As for the doctrine of "abuse of process", it should be sufficient to point out that there was no question here of reopening an issue for the sole purpose of relitigating it, as was the case in Deme- ter v. British Pacific Life Insurance Co. and two other actions (1983), 150 D.L.R. (3d) 249 (Ont. H.C.). Nor was anyone indirectly disputing the validity, even less the existence, of the first convic tion, which had to be and was in fact accepted for what it was. The applicant was not seeking to avoid the consequences of that conviction, and, in any event, he had been granted an absolute dis charge. In the proceedings before the D & D Board, however, the applicant had his career and livelihood at stake. His interest in trying to chal lenge, excuse or mitigate some of the findings of the Provincial Court judge could not be more legitimate. I do not see how one can speak of an abuse of process. Particularly if one takes due care to bear in mind that "intent" is not a material fact which can be the object of direct apprehension but a pure state of mind which can only be inferred from outward circumstances, an inference in which a large dose of subjectivity inevitably comes into play.
2. My second assertion is that, even if the findings of the Provincial Court judge as to the applicant's involvement were binding on it, the D & D Board was nevertherless under a duty to look
into the circumstances of the case and assess for itself their significance in regard to the man's guilt and character. It is not, of course, that the D & D Board was called upon to verify the validity of the conviction, it is that, under the standing order, it was required to use its own judgment and make the recommendation which it, itself, thought appropriate.
I am not oblivious of the judgment of this Court in Lutes v. Commissioner of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, [1985] 2 F.C. 326; (1985), 61 N.R. 1 (C.A.), where it was decided that a verdict of acquittal by a criminal court in favour of an RCMP officer charged with a criminal offence prevented the Commissioner from looking again into the facts of the case so as to verify for himself whether the officer had been involved in the offence for the purpose of Standing Order AM -53. It seems to me, however, that a corresponding preclusive effect would not be warranted in the case of a conviction, because the principles involved and the public interest at stake are not identical. In the Lutes case, the conclusion of the majority, as I read the reasons, was based, not directly on the doctrine of issue estoppel, but essentially on the proposition that a finding of involvement in the commission of an offence under an Act of Parliament could only be founded on proof adduced to the satisfaction of a court of competent criminal jurisdiction. It would, of course, be unacceptable that the panoply of consti tutional safeguards available to a person accused of a criminal offence in a criminal court be cir cumvented by bringing proceedings against him in another forum. But when the circumstances are reversed, the same reasoning does not hold. The interest of the individual, which is what is to be secured, dictates a different solution and requires that at least a degree of discretion be left to the tribunal.
It is therefore my view that the Commissioner misdirected himself in law when, in confirming the
Review Board, he rejected at the outset the find ings of fact of the Discharge and Demotion Board. My objection to the validity of the decision is therefore, as I said, more fundamental still than that expressed by my brother Heald and, on send ing the matter back to the Commissioner for reconsideration, I would ask that it be taken into account.
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