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dui lawyer Tag

Edmonton Criminal Lawyer Ziv > Posts tagged "dui lawyer"

Colour of Right

Theft and Colour of Right

Theft

322 (1) Every one commits theft who fraudulently and without colour of right takes, or fraudulently and without colour of right converts to his use or to the use of another person, anything, whether animate or inanimate, with intent

(a) to deprive, temporarily or absolutely, the owner of it, or a person who has a special property or interest in it, of the thing or of his property or interest in it;

(b) to pledge it or deposit it as security;

(c) to part with it under a condition with respect to its return that the person who parts with it may be unable to perform; or

(d) to deal with it in such a manner that it cannot be restored in the condition in which it was at the time it was taken or converted.

Motor vehicle theft

333.1 (1) Everyone who commits theft is, if the property stolen is a motor vehicle, guilty of an offence and liable

(a) on proceedings by way of indictment, to imprisonment for a term of not more than 10 years, and to a minimum punishment of imprisonment for a term of six months in the case of a third or subsequent offence under this subsection; or

(b) on summary conviction, to imprisonment for a term of not more than 18 months.

 

WHAT DOES THE CROWN NEED TO PROVE?

This case will hinge on whether the alleged theft took place fraudulently and without colour of right. Case law suggests that both defences are related and will hinge on similar facts.

Fraudulent Intent

R v Laroche, [1964] SCR 667

Honest but mistaken belief works

Colour of Right

R v Lilly (1983), 34 CR (3d) 1, R v. Shymkowich, 19 CR 401

Honest but mistaken belief works

“With respect, this is clearly, in my view, misdirection in law. The fate of the accused’s defence of colour of right was not dependent upon the jury determining when the commissions were payable. That question was indeed important as relevant to whether the monies were his or those of his clients. The fact that they still be the property of the client was a prerequisite to his having to raise a defence to the taking or conversion. Rather, the accused’s defence was dependent upon whether they, the jury, were satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that he, the accused, had not, at the time of the transfers, an honest belief that he had the right to that money, and not, as they were told, dependent upon what they, the jurors, thought his rights were.”

 

Noting up Colour of Right Cases

Lilly is the foundational case in this area. It is important to note that in Lilly, a case decided in ’83, the alleged theft involved almost 27 thousand dollars, a lot of money now. But the SCC was very clear in stating that honest but mistaken belief is always a defence to theft.

R. v. Abramenko  [2008] A.J. No. 61, 2008 ABPC 23

Alberta Provincial Court case that does a good job of canvassing the law.

Further, I am satisfied that the accused had a colour of right when he withdrew the monies from Brent’s account. In R. v. Dorosh (G.) (2004) 241 Sask. R. 180 (Sask. C.A.), Bayda C.J.S., speaking for the panel, at paragraphs 16 – 18 inclusive, gave the following explanation of the concept of “colour of right”:

“[16] The jurisprudential history surrounding the phrase ‘colour of right’ indicates that the meaning of the phrase has a certain quality of elusiveness (see The Law of Theft and Related Offences by Winifred H. Holland (Toronto: Carswell, 1998) at pp. 150-170). The definition of the phrase by Martin J.A., speaking for the Court (including Gale C.J.O., and Estey J.A.), in R. v. DeMarco (1973), 13 C.C.C. (2d) 369 (Ont. C.A.) at 372 may be taken to have settled many, if not all, of the contentious issues raised by earlier Canadian cases where the phrase was considered. He said:

‘The term “colour of right” generally, although not exclusively, refers to a situation where there is an assertion of a proprietary or possessory right to the thing which is the subject-matter of the alleged theft. One who is honestly asserting what he believes to be an honest claim cannot be said to act “without colour of right”, even though it may be unfounded in law or in fact: see R. v. Howson, [1966] 3 C.C.C. 348; 55 D.L.R. (2d) 582, [1966] 2 O.R. 63. The term “colour of right” is also used to denote an honest belief in a state of facts which, if it actually existed would at law justify or excuse the act done: R. v. Howson. The term when used in the latter sense is merely a particular application of the doctrine of mistake of fact.’

[17] Since DeMarco was decided, the Supreme Court of Canada has dealt with the ‘colour of right’ issue in two cases: R. v. Lilly, [1983] 1 S.C.R. 794; 48 N.R. 140; 24 Sask.R 50 and R. v. Jones and Pamajewon, [1991] 3 S.C.R. 110, 137 N.R. 321. Nothing said in the judgments in either of those cases in any way detracts from Martin, J.A.’s, definition. If anything, the court’s decision in Lilly may be said to impliedly support the definition. In two other cases, R. v. Lafrance, [1975] 2 S.C.R. 201 and R. v. Milne, [1992] 1 S.C.R. 697; 135 N.R. 202; 125 A.R. 135; 14 W.A.C. 135; [1992] 3 W.W.R. 97; 85 Alta. L.R. (2d) 257; 12 C.R. (4th) 175; 70 C.C.C. (3d) 481, the ‘colour of right’ issue arose only incidentally and not as a principal issue. These judgments as well contain nothing that detracts from the DeMarco definition.

[18] A colour of right can have its basis in either a mistake of civil law (a colour of right provides an exception to s. 19 of the Code; see: The Law of Theft and Related Offences p. 153) or in a mistake in a state of facts. The mistake in each case must give rise to either an honest belief in a proprietary or possessory right to the thing which is the subject matter of the alleged theft or an honest belief in the state of facts which if it actually existed would at law justify or excuse the act done.”

40     In the case at Bar, the accused honestly believed that he had the right to borrow money from his son’s AISH account (and, on the facts as I have found them, he did have that right). While the AISH monies were to be used for the benefit of Brent, I take from Ms. Mittelstadt’s testimony that the right to borrow did not depend upon the borrowing being for the benefit of the trust beneficiary. The fact that the accused had an honest belief that his borrowing and use of the funds was to the benefit of Brent goes not to the issue of “colour of right”, but rather it goes to the question of whether the acts of the accused were fraudulent (an issue with which I have already dealt).

41     I am completely satisfied that the accused had a colour of right to do that which he did.

R. v. DeMarco  [1973] O.J. No. 533

(This is an older case than Lilly, but on point)

Involved a vehicle, accused had kept a rental vehicle beyond due date, and had not paid, she thought there was nothing wrong with her behaviour and she could just pay them later

“The term “colour of right” generally, although not exclusively refers to a situation where there is an assertion of a proprietary or possessory right to the thing which is the subject matter of the alleged theft. One who is honestly asserting what he believes to be an honest claim cannot be said to act “without colour of right”, even though it may be unfounded in law or in fact. Reg. v. Howson, [1966] 2 O.R. 63. The term “colour of right” is also used to denote an honest belief in a state of facts which, if it actually existed would at law justify or excuse the act done: Reg. v. Howson, supra. The term when used in the latter sense is merely a particular application of the doctrine of mistake of fact.”

R. v. Pena – [1997] B.C.J. No. 1405

Very interesting case, stands for the proposition that mistake of law is also included in colour of right defence. (On reflection, this is backed up in other cases too, plus this seems self-evident because colour of right is an element of the office and mistake about it (which can include mistake of law) should be a defence)

“However, as noted by Stuart in Canadian Criminal Law, supra at 308, “it now seems clear that colour of right can also result from a pure mistake of law.”

11     In R. v. Howson, [1966] 3 C.C.C. 348 (Ont. C.A.), a case where a car towing company had been charged with the theft of a car, Porter C.J.O. reviewed the law regarding colour of right and mistake of law, and held, at p. 356:

In my view the word “right” should be construed broadly. The use of the word cannot be said to exclude a legal right. The word is in its ordinary sense charged with legal implications. I do not think that s. 19 affects s. 269 [now s. 429]. Section 19 only applies where there is an offence. There is no offence if there is colour of right. If upon all the evidence it may fairly be inferred that the accused acted under a genuine misconception of fact or law, there would be no offence of theft committed. The trial tribunal must satisfy itself that the accused has acted upon an honest, but mistaken belief that the right is based upon either fact or law, or mixed fact and law.

12     Accordingly, in R. v. DeMarco (1974), 13 C.C.C. (2d) 369 at 372 (Ont. C.A.), where the accused had rented a car and not returned it on time because she did not think that she was obliged to, Martin J. held:

The term “colour of right” generally, although not exclusively, refers to a situation where there is an assertion of a proprietary or possessory right to the thing which is the subject-matter of the alleged theft. One who is honestly asserting what he believes to be an honest claim cannot be said to act “without colour of right”, even though it may be unfounded in law or in fact…The term “colour of right” is also used to denote an honest belief in a state of facts which, if it actually existed would at law justify or excuse the act done…The term when used in the latter sense is merely a particular application of the doctrine of mistake of fact.
13     An honest belief concerning property rights, whether based on a mistake in fact or in law, may constitute a colour of right: Lilly v. The Queen (1983), 5 C.C.C. (3d) 1 (S.C.C.). (I don’t think Lilly makes this clear at all, it talks about mistake of fact

14     Recently, in R. v. Jorgensen (1995), 102 C.C.C. (3d) 97 (S.C.C.), Lamer C.J.C. noted at pp. 102-103 of his dissenting opinion that:

Despite the importance of [the rule against ignorance of the law] some exceptions to it are already established in our law…a certain number of our Criminal Code offenses provide an excuse for an accused who acted with colour of right. The existence of these exceptions demonstrates that the ignorantia juris rule is not to be applied when it would render a conviction manifestly unjust.

15     By implication, Lamer C.J.C. apppears to acknowledge that the colour of right defence includes mistake of law.

16     Finally, Penashue, supra, R. v. Drainville (1991), 5 C.R. (4th) 38 (Ont. Prov. Ct.) and R. v. Potts, [Q.L. [1990] O.J. No. 2567] (Ont. Prov. Ct.) a11 involve fact situations similar to present case. The accused were charged with mischief for occupying what they claimed were aboriginal lands. In all three cases, it was accepted that mistake of law was included in the colour of right defence, and the Court instead focused on the issues of a moral as opposed to legal right, and the accused’s “honest belief.””

Mistake of Fact

 

Mistake of Fact and consent

Thoughts re: Mistake of Fact w.r.t. consent

Mistake of fact:

265 (1) A person commits an assault when

(a) without the consent of another person, he applies force intentionally to that other person, directly or indirectly;

Mistake of fact w.r.t. consent is therefore a valid defence.

It is important to note that mistake of fact (with the exception of sexual assault cases) does not have to be based on reasonable grounds.

R. v. Bulmer [1987] 1 S.C.R. 782

“The defence has been variously described and may be conveniently stated in these terms. If an accused entertains an honest belief in the existence of a set of circumstances which, if they existed at the time of the commission of an otherwise criminal act, would have justified his act and rendered it non-criminal, he is entitled to an acquittal. The law on this question as far as Canada is concerned has been stated authoritatively in Pappajohn v. The Queen, [1980] 2 S.C.R. 120. Dickson J. (as he then was), writing on this point with the concurrence of the majority of the Court, held that the defence was available in Canada, that it goes to the question of whether the accused had the necessary mens rea for the commission of the crime involved, and that the mistaken belief upon which the defence rests need not be reasonable, if honestly held. The subject has been further explored by my colleague, Wilson J., in her reasons for judgment in R. v. Robertson, [1987] 1 S.C.R. 918 (judgment delivered concurrently), with whose observations I agree.”

But I would argue that there were reasonable grounds for our client to believe that the complainant was one of the attackers. He is Latin American, and therefore brown skinned like the group of Arabs that attacked our client. Furthermore, email communication with the crown indicates that the complainant was friends with at least two of the Arab men in question, and he was by all accounts, near or at the scene of the crime. It is therefore not a stretch to believe that the complainant was one of his attackers. Impaired, and justifiably angry, our client had reasonable grounds to believe that the complainant was one of his attackers, and fleeing from him after subjecting him to significant bodily harm.

Note: R. v. Jobidon [1991] 2 S.C.R. 714: The limitation demanded by s. 265 vitiates consent between adults intentionally to apply force causing serious hurt or non-trivial bodily harm to each other in the course of a fist fight or brawl.

Firstly, Jobidon specifically mentions that intention is needed to vitiate consent. This is also the requisite mental element for the assault offence (R v Danydink 253 C.C.C. (3d) 493 (B.C C.A) Did our client intentionally cause serious bodily harm? It is possible that he was reckless or careless, but quite unlikely that our client, impaired and justifiably angry, had the requisite intention to cause serious bodily harm to the complainant. Our client was simply reacting to the onslaught by a group of men. He was actively defending himself, rather than intentionally attacking the complainant with the intent of causing serious bodily harm. Mistake of fact w.r.t. consent is very much a live issue.

 

Even if we are to accept that our client had the requisite intention there are ways around the Jobidon problem. It is important to note that in Jobidon “the fight” resulted in death. In R. v. Nash  [1996] O.J. No. 4239, Quinn J. reviews Jobidon exhaustively and has some interesting insights into the decision.

at p. 491:

“Although there is certainly no crystal-clear position in the modern Canadian common law, still, when one takes into account the combined English and Canadian jurisprudence, when one keeps sight of the common law’s centuries-old persistence to limit the legal effectiveness of consent to a fist fight, and when one understands that s. 265 has always incorporated that persistence, the scale tips rather heavily against the validity of a person’s consent to the infliction of bodily injury in a fight …
Notwithstanding this conclusion, given the residual indetermination which admittedly lingers in the recent Canadian cases, it is useful to canvass policy considerations which exert a strong influence in this appeal, for they rather decisively support the respondent, bringing down the scales even more surely in support of the decision in the court below.
Foremost among the policy considerations supporting the Crown is the social uselessness of fist fights … it is not in the public interest that adults should willingly cause harm to one another without a good reason. There is precious little utility in fist fights or street brawls. These events are motivated by unchecked passion.”
and at p. 492:

“Given the spontaneous … nature of many fist fights, I would not wish to push the deterrence rationale too far. None the less, it seems reasonable to think that, in some cases, common law limitations on consent might serve some degree of deterrence to these sorts of activities.”
and at p. 493:

“… If aggressive individuals are legally permitted to get into consensual fist fights and they take advantage of that license from time to time, it may come to pass that they eventually lose all understanding that that activity is the subject of a powerful social taboo. They may too readily find their fists raised against a person whose consent they forgot to ascertain with full certitude. It is preferable that these sorts of omissions be strongly discouraged.
Wholly apart from deterrence, it is most unseemly from a moral point of view that the law would countenance, much less provide a backhanded sanction to the sort of interaction displayed by the facts of this appeal. The sanctity of the human body should militate against the validity of consent to bodily harm inflicted in a fight.”
and at p. 494:

“… it must not be thought that by giving the green light to the common law, and a red light to consent fights, this court is thereby negating the role of consent in all situations or activities in which people willingly expose themselves to intentionally applied force. No such sweeping conclusion is entailed. The determination being made is much narrower in scope.
How, and to what extent, is consent limited?
The law’s willingness to vitiate consent on policy grounds is significantly limited. Common law cases restrict the extent to which consent may be nullified; as do the relevant policy considerations. The unique situation under examination in this case, a weaponless fist fight between two adults, provides another important boundary.
The limitation demanded by s. 265 as it applies to the circumstances of this appeal is one which vitiates consent between adults intentionally to apply force causing serious hurt or non-trivial bodily harm to each other in the course of a fist fight or brawl. (This test entails that a minor’s apparent consent to an adult’s intentional application of force in a fight would also be negated.) This is the extent of the limit which the common law requires in the factual circumstances of this appeal. It may be that further limitations will be found to apply in other circumstances. But such limits, if any, are better developed on a case-by-case basis, so that the unique features of the situation may exert a rational influence on the extent of the limit and on the justification for it.”
and at p. 495:

“Finally, the preceding formulation avoids nullification of consent to intentional applications of force which cause only minor hurt or trivial bodily harm. The bodily harm contemplated by the test is essentially equivalent to that contemplated by the definition found in s. 267(2) of the Code, dealing with the offence of assault causing bodily harm. The section defines bodily harm as ‘any hurt or injury to the complainant that interferes with the health or comfort of the complainant and that is more than merely transient or trifling in nature’.”
15     Although the review, by Gonthier J., of the jurisprudence was sweeping, the end result was less so. I regard the ratio decidendi to be no more than this: in the case of a consensual, weaponless fist fight (brawl), between two adults, consent is ineffective as a defence where serious hurt or non-trivial bodily harm is occasioned. Such a ratio, with nothing more, would logically support an inference that, in the case of a consensual, weaponless fist fight (brawl), between two adults, consent is effective where less-than-serious hurt or trivial bodily harm is occasioned. However, the matter ceases to be inferential and is rendered explicit, by the words of Gonthier J. just mentioned above (at p. 495):

“… the preceding formulation avoids nullification of consent to intentional applications of force which cause only minor hurt or trivial bodily harm.”
Thus, Jobidon does not eliminate consent as a defence in cases of assault simpliciter.

2.
According to Jobidon, What Level of Bodily Harm Must Be Suffered Before Consent Is Rendered Ineffective As A Defence?

16     Earlier I set out this statement by Gonthier J. (at p. 494) which I now repeat:

“The limitation demanded by s. 265 as it applies to the circumstances of this appeal is one which vitiates consent between adults intentionally to apply force causing serious hurt or non-trivial bodily harm to each other in the course of a fist fight or brawl.”
(Emphasis added.)
17     However, Gonthier also stated, as already indicated (at p. 495):

“Finally, the preceding formulation avoids nullification of consent to intentional applications of force which cause only minor hurt or trivial bodily harm. The bodily harm contemplated by the test is essentially equivalent to that contemplated by the definition found in s. 267(2) of the Code, dealing with the offence of assault causing bodily harm. The section defines bodily harm as ‘any hurt or injury to the complainant that interferes with the health or comfort of the complainant and that is more than merely transient or trifling in nature’.” (Emphasis added.)
18     So, what is the level of bodily harm that must be reached before consent ceases to be a valid defence? Should “serious hurt or non-trivial bodily harm” and “minor hurt or trivial harm” be read so as to be compatible with the definition of bodily harm found in s. 267(2) of the Criminal Code? Or, as Crown counsel submits, in using the words “essentially equivalent”, is Gonthier J. proposing another (and lower) threshold of bodily harm? I disagree with such a submission. To begin with, no good purpose would be served by setting up a new category of bodily harm. The law of assault would be complicated unnecessarily. It would result in a sliding scale for bodily harm. Furthermore, Crown counsel is putting too fine a point on the meaning of “essentially”. In The Shorter Oxford English Dictionary (Third Edition), “essential” is defined as “of or pertaining to the essence of anything”. Consequently, it is my view that Gonthier J. was not at all purporting to set up a new category of bodily harm. Instead, the bodily harm that vitiates consent is that which is found in s. 267(2) of the Criminal Code and nothing less. Support for this view is found in R. v. Welch (1995), 43 C.R. (4th) 225 (Ont.C.A.), where Griffiths J.A., writing for the Court, states at p. 249:

“In my view, however, the message delivered by the majority in Jobidon is that the victim cannot consent to the infliction of bodily harm upon himself or herself, as defined in s. 267(2) of the Code, unless the accused is acting in the course of a generally approved social purpose when inflicting the harm.” (Emphasis added.)
19     Accordingly, the ratio in Jobidon could be stated as follows:

20     In the case of a consensual, weaponless fist fight (brawl), between two adults, consent is ineffective as a defence where bodily harm, as defined in s. 267(2) of the Criminal Code, is occasioned. Thus, the logical inference, of which I spoke earlier, would now be that consent is effective as a defence where the level or degree of bodily harm falls short of, or does not meet, the definition found in s. 267(2).

 

My thoughts on how we can use this: Jobidon is the leading case on consent being vitiated, and the policy considerations underlying the decision provide important insights into why the court came to this decision. The court talks of fist fights and brawls, and how public policy dictates that these activities be discouraged. It is clear that public policy had a huge role in Jobidon, and public policy does dictate that people not consent to their own deaths in voluntary fist fights. However, for our client, the situation was neither an active fistfight (He was attacked by another group of people, and he responded to defend himself), and it is not clear if public policy would dictate that consent or the mistake of fact with respect to consent be unavailable in this case. It would be entirely unjust if a person responding to a brutal attack is the one who is charged with assault, and cannot argue mistake of fact w.r.t. consent, while the instigators of the violence are used as witnesses against him. This is clearly not what Jobidon envisaged when it talked about consent being vitiated. Mistake of fact w.r.t. consent should be very much a live issue in our case.

In the above case (R. v. Nash  [1996] O.J. No. 4239), the judge finds that Jobidon did not eliminate consent as a defence in cases of assault simpliciter 2. According to Jobidon, the level of bodily harm that must be suffered, before consent will be ineffective as a defence, is “bodily harm” as defined by s. 267(2) of the Criminal Code. 3. The altercation, in the case at bar, is not of such a nature that public policy should proscribe the defence of consent.

Ultimately, Jobidon is a case about public policy. The court needs to consider whether public policy mandates that a victim of an assault by a group of men be the target of the criminal sanction. Other cases have cited Jobidon and discussed public policy reasons for finding the accused guilty or not guilty.

QUESTION: WHAT IF YOU consent to a fight and cause bodily harm but did not intend to do so? The law is less clear. Supreme Court cases after Jobidon suggest that bodily harm must be intended and caused. English law suggests that bodily harm must be intended or caused.

R. v. Amos [1998] O.J. No. 3047

1     THE COURT (endorsement):– The policy considerations and legal principles which inform the reasoning of the Supreme Court of Canada in R. v. Jobidon (1991), 66 C.C.C. (3d) 454 and this court’s decision in R. v. Welch (1995), 101 C.C.C. (3d) 216 have no application to the case at hand.

2     In Welch, Griffiths J.A. stated at p. 238 that, “the message delivered by the majority in Jobidon is that the victim cannot consent to the infliction of bodily harm upon himself or herself, as defined by s. 267(2) of the Code, unless the accused is acting in the course of a generally approved social purpose when inflicting the harm.” Griffiths J.A. went on to observe at p. 239 that — “[A]lthough the law must recognize individual freedom and autonomy, when the activity in question involves pursuing sexual gratification by deliberately inflicting pain upon another that gives rise to bodily harm, the personal interest of the individuals involved must yield to the more compelling societal interests which are challenged by such behaviour.”

3     In Welch, the court was concerned with sado-masochistic sexual activity involving the deliberate infliction of pain and injury, conduct which the court described as being “inherently degrading and dehumanizing.” The same cannot be said about the sexual conduct engaged in by the appellant. There is no suggestion in the evidence that the appellant deliberately inflicted injury or pain to the complainant. Moreover, it cannot be said that anal intercourse is inherently degrading and dehumanizing or that it constitutes socially unacceptable conduct, particularly in view of s. 159(2) of the Criminal Code which excepts from criminal liability anal intercourse between consenting adults in private.

4     It follows, in our view, that the trial judge erred in concluding that the resulting bodily harm to the complainant rendered irrelevant the presence or absence of consent on her part. Given the trial judge’s finding that the Crown had failed to prove lack of consent beyond a reasonable doubt, in the particular circumstances of this case, the conviction cannot stand.

R. v. Bruce [1995] B.C.J. No. 212

The Jobidon case on its facts applied to the vitiation in law of apparent consent in fact where the force was intentionally applied in the course of a fist fight or brawl and the force was such as was intended to cause and did cause serious hurt or non-trivial bodily harm. Counsel for the appellant in this appeal argued the very same standard of public policy vitiation of consent as is derived from the facts of the Jobidon case should be applied in cases of family altercations. However, I do not think that the same standard that applies to brawls and fist fights between grown men should apply to domestic altercations between a man and a woman. In the public interest I think that the public policy discussed in Jobidon and which underlies the decision in that case must take a stricter view of the level of applied force which should vitiate apparent consent as a matter of law in domestic altercations than it does in brawls and fist fights. In my opinion, the intentional application of sufficient force as to be capable of causing an injury that is more than trivial should operate to vitiate apparent consent in a domestic altercation between a man and a woman.

Uttering Threats

Uttering Threats

264.1 (1) Every one commits an offence who, in any manner, knowingly utters, conveys or causes any person to receive a threat

(a) to cause death or bodily harm to any person;

Elements of the Offence

Actus Reus: The actus reus is met by utterances that a reasonable person would consider a threat. In the reasonable person background factors play an important role, including the words used, the surrounding circumstances, the relationship between the parties and any other relevant factors.

 R. v. Clemente [1994] S.C.J. No. 50, Actus reus is uttering threats to cause serious bodily harm,

R. v. McCraw: [1991] 3 S.C.R. 72 Reasonable person, Viewed objectively in the context of the words spoken, with regard to the person to whom they were addressed, would the words convey a threat of serious bodily harm to a reasonable person.

Armstrong: 95 C.R. (6th) 46, Reasonable Person Test would objective person consider words threat? Taking into account the words uttered by the speaker, the circumstances of the speaker, and the person to whom the words are communicated or who is the subject of the threat

Bone : [1993] M.J. No. 222, In deciding whether to infer the specific intent to instill fear in someone, the trier of fact must consider evidence of D’s intoxication, together with all the other circumstances in which the threat is uttered

Batista: For Actus reus assessment of all relevant circumstances is required, the relationship between the V and D provides context

Mens Rea: For Mens rea to be met, there needs to be a subjective intention to intimidate or words to be taken seriously. Recklessness is not appropriate, knowledge is required. But this determination is arrived at using objective factors.

Leblanc Innocently made threat is not a threat, whether D intended to carry out the threat is not material

Noble: Knowingly: Subjective intent component (words/threats must be taken seriously or intimidate), recklessness not enough

Clemente [1994] S.C.J. No. 50. The mental element is that the words were meant to intimidate or be taken seriously, this depends upon the words used, the context in which they were spoken, and the person to whom they were directed.

It is useful to look at some cases where the offence wasn’t proven.

R. v. Fischer:  [1999] A.J. No. 1156

R. v. Eakin :  [2002] M.J. No. 349

As I see it, even if the accused did utter some words capable of being interpreted as a threat, which he denies, and no other witness was produced to confirm that he did utter them, they were uttered at a time when the accused may have been understandably upset about the lopsided loss of his son’s team and frustrated with the complainants’ behaviour in support of the other team. It is not inconsistent with all the evidence to view that any words beyond those admitted by Eakin were nothing but outbursts of disappointment and frustrations and were not intended to be taken seriously.

Twaddle: There were many reasons why threatening words alone would not suffice. The most obvious arose from the fact that people do not always say what they mean or mean what they say. There was thus the danger of misconstruing words, especially those which were spoken, and the further danger of assuming that a person actually intended to do what he or she had threatened. It is a well-recognized trait of human kind, found even in the sober and the sane, to make rash and extravagant statements of what they intend to do in the future without intending to do any such thing or, if they had such an intent, to regret the though and abandon it before harm is done.

R. v. Lee (1988) 3 W.C.B. (2d) 203:0803 (Ont. Dist. Ct.), , the accused, during the course of a heated argument, “told the victim that he would smash his face in”. The Court held that “while the words uttered here might in some circumstances constitute a threat, they were of such gross proportions that it represented simply a series of epithets used in circumstances of anger.” (I would say that this is very similar to what happened to our client)

R. v. Payne-Binder (1991) 7 C.R. (4th) 308 (Yukon C.A.).: “The questions (sic) to ask is, did the respondent intend the words to be taken seriously? To put it another way, did the respondent intend the parties to be frightened? Bearing in mind the context in which the words were spoken, another frustrating courtroom appearance and the background dealings between the parties….The respondent was trying to convey to the court her total desperation in the inability to resolve the problems of custody and access to two children following a separation. The words were used to convey that desperation that she wanted the matter to be resolved, but not with the intention to be taken seriously or to frighten the parties that she would kill or cause them serious bodily harm.”

R. v. Kontuk [2012] N.S.J. No. 306 2012 NSSC 204

50     Having considered the words spoken, in the context of the facts found by the trial judge, I cannot say that “could break the window and haul you out if I wanted to” would constitute a threat to a reasonable person. Mr. Avery was in the vehicle and though Mr. Kontuk had initially tried the door that was the only time he did so. (Common law relation, hadn’t been invited to son’s wedding)

Seems like a threat but because of the relationship, court quite happy to rule that there was no threat. Facts matter, background matters. In the leading cases of Clemente and McCraw the facts were quite troubling.

The Clemente case is distinguishable on the facts from the case at Bar, in that there the threats towards a caseworker were uttered within the context of five days of frustration in dealing with the caseworker on getting his case before the appeal board, and in the broader context of a long-standing obsession by the accused there over a failed real estate transaction that left him penniless and onto public assistance.

R. v. McCraw, [1991] 3 S.C.R. 72 (26 September 1991) 21684. In that case the appellant had written anonymous letters to three football cheerleaders detailing various sexual acts he wished to perform on them and concluded with the threat that he would have sexual intercourse with them “even I have to rape you”

Defence

On the Actus Reus front, it is more of a losing battle. But there is still an argument to be made. Did the complainant really feel threatened by the accused? She is a relatively fragile woman who keeps saying she will beat up people, in a strange house, where she is outnumbered at least 3-1. Did the complainants really conceive of this behaviour as an actual threat against them or did they believe it, as a reasonable person would in the circumstances, that the utterances were simply epithets in circumstances of anger. I’d suggest that this is far the more likely explanation. Both sides exchanged obscenities in anger. Mrs. Atcheson was clearly upset because she thought that her son had been endangered by reckless driving, and she lashed out. Her words, if we believe the allegations of the complainant, would not be construed as threats by the reasonable person.

Temporal proximity is also a factor in our favour. The alleged threats were made right after the dangerous driving, and point to being outbursts of frustration rather than being genuine threats.

Mens Rea: Far stronger case here. There are doubts as to whether Mrs. Atcheson had the requisite intention. Important to note that recklessness is not enough, and she must have subjectively, (and not in a momentary outburst of anger), intended to intimidate or for her words to be taken seriously. There is a level of premeditation required here that is just not an appropriate fix for the facts of this case. Mrs. Atcheson was angered by dangerous driving in proximity of her toddler, and she rushed to the house of the perpetrator, saying things in anger that any mother might.

I have analyzed the actus reus and mens rea on the assumption that the allegations of the complainant are true. Credibility is another issue.

 

 

Recollection and Demeanour Evidence

I took these articles from Alan Gold’s February 8, 2016 weekley newsletter. assessing evidence. demenour. recollection.

 

Evidence based on recollection

15.An obvious difficulty which affects allegations and 
     oral evidence based on recollection of events which 
     occurred several years ago is the unreliability of human 
     memory. 
 
     16.While everyone knows that memory is fallible, I do not 
     believe that the legal system has sufficiently absorbed 
     the lessons of a century of psychological research into 
     the nature of memory and the unreliability of eyewitness 
     testimony. One of the most important lessons of such 
     research is that in everyday life we are not aware of the 
     extent to which our own and other people’s memories are 
     unreliable and believe our memories to be more faithful 
     than they are. Two common (and related) errors are to 
     suppose: (1) that the stronger and more vivid is our 
     feeling or experience of recollection, the more likely 
     the recollection is to be accurate; and (2) that the more 
     confident another person is in their recollection, the 
     more likely their recollection is to be accurate. 
 
     17.Underlying both these errors is a faulty model of 
     memory as a mental record which is fixed at the time of 
     experience of an event and then fades (more or less 
     slowly) over time. In fact, psychological research has 
     demonstrated that memories are fluid and malleable, being 
     constantly rewritten whenever they are retrieved. This is 
     true even of so-called ‘flashbulb’ memories, that is 
     memories of experiencing or learning of a particularly 
     shocking or traumatic event. (The very description 
     ‘flashbulb’ memory is in fact misleading, reflecting as 
     it does the misconception that memory operates like a 
     camera or other device that makes a fixed record of an 
     experience.) External information can intrude into a 
     witness’s memory, as can his or her own thoughts and 
     beliefs, and both can cause dramatic changes in 
     recollection. Events can come to be recalled as memories 
     which did not happen at all or which happened to someone 
     else (referred to in the literature as a failure of 
     source memory). 
 
     18.Memory is especially unreliable when it comes to 
     recalling past beliefs. Our memories of past beliefs are 
     revised to make them more consistent with our present 
     beliefs. Studies have also shown that memory is 
     particularly vulnerable to interference and alteration 
     when a person is presented with new information or 
     suggestions about an event in circumstances where his or 
     her memory of it is already weak due to the passage of 
     time. 
 
     19.The process of civil litigation itself subjects the 
     memories of witnesses to powerful biases. The nature of 
     litigation is such that witnesses often have a stake in a 
     particular version of events. This is obvious where the 
     witness is a party or has a tie of loyalty (such as an 
     employment relationship) to a party to the proceedings. 
     Other, more subtle influences include allegiances created 
     by the process of preparing a witness statement and of 
     coming to court to give evidence for one side in the 
     dispute. A desire to assist, or at least not to 
     prejudice, the party who has called the witness or that 
     party’s lawyers, as well as a natural desire to give a 
     good impression in a public forum, can be significant 
     motivating forces. 
 
     20.Considerable interference with memory is also 
     introduced in civil litigation by the procedure of 
     preparing for trial. A witness is asked to make a 
     statement, often (as in the present case) when a long 
     time has already elapsed since the relevant events. The 
     statement is usually drafted for the witness by a lawyer 
     who is inevitably conscious of the significance for the 
     issues in the case of what the witness does nor does not 
     say. The statement is made after the witness’s memory has 
     been “refreshed” by reading documents. The documents 
     considered often include statements of case and other 
     argumentative material as well as documents which the 
     witness did not see at the time or which came into 
     existence after the events which he or she is being asked 
     to recall. The statement may go through several 
     iterations before it is finalised. Then, usually months 
     later, the witness will be asked to re-read his or her 
     statement and review documents again before giving 
     evidence in court. The effect of this process is to 
     establish in the mind of the witness the matters recorded 
     in his or her own statement and other written material, 
     whether they be true or false, and to cause the witness’s 
     memory of events to be based increasingly on this 
     material and later interpretations of it rather than on 
     the original experience of the events. 
 
     21.It is not uncommon (and the present case was no 
     exception) for witnesses to be asked in cross-examination 
     if they understand the difference between recollection 
     and reconstruction or whether their evidence is a genuine 
     recollection or a reconstruction of events. Such 
     questions are misguided in at least two ways. First, they 
     erroneously presuppose that there is a clear distinction 
     between recollection and reconstruction, when all 
     remembering of distant events involves reconstructive 
     processes. Second, such questions disregard the fact that 
     such processes are largely unconscious and that the 
     strength, vividness and apparent authenticity of memories 
     is not a reliable measure of their truth. 
 
     22.In the light of these considerations, the best 
     approach for a judge to adopt in the trial of a 
     commercial case is, in my view, to place little if any 
     reliance at all on witnesses’ recollections of what was 
     said in meetings and conversations, and to base factual 
     findings on inferences drawn from the documentary 
     evidence and known or probable facts. This does not mean 
     that oral testimony serves no useful purpose – though its 
     utility is often disproportionate to its length. But its 
     value lies largely, as I see it, in the opportunity which 
     cross-examination affords to subject the documentary 
     record to critical scrutiny and to gauge the personality, 
     motivations and working practices of a witness, rather 
     than in testimony of what the witness recalls of 
     particular conversations and events. Above all, it is 
     important to avoid the fallacy of supposing that, because 
     a witness has confidence in his or her recollection and 
     is honest, evidence based on that recollection provides 
     any reliable guide to the truth. 
 
     23.It is in this way that I have approached the evidence 
     in the present case. 
 
— Gestmin SGPS SA v Credit Suisse (UK) Ltd & Anor, [2013]
EWHC 3560 (Comm); URL:
http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2013/3560.html 

Demeanour evidence                           

    “44 This court has repeatedly cautioned against giving 
     undue weight to demeanour evidence because of its 
     fallibility as a predictor of the accuracy of a witness’s 
     testimony: Law Society of Upper Canada v. Neinstein, 
2010 ONCA 193, 99 O.R. (3d) 1, at para. 66; R. v. Rhayel, 
2015 ONCA 377, 324 C.C.C. (3d) 362. As I indicated in Rhayel, 
     at para. 85, “[i]t is now acknowledged that demeanour is 
     of limited value because it can be affected by many 
     factors including the culture of the witness, 
     stereotypical attitudes, and the artificiality of and 
     pressures associated with a courtroom.” 
 
          45 Although the law is well settled that a trial 
          judge is entitled to consider demeanour in assessing 
          the credibility of witnesses, reliance on demeanour 
          must be approached cautiously: see R. v. S. (N.), 
          2012 SCC 72, [2012] 3 S.C.R. 726, at paras. 18 and 
          26. Of significance in this case is the further 
          principle that a witness’s demeanour cannot become 
          the exclusive determinant of his or her credibility 
          or of the reliability of his or her evidence: R. v. 
          A. (A.), 2015 ONCA 558, 327 C.C.C. (3d) 377, at 
          para. 131; R. v. Norman (1993), 16 O.R. (3d) 295 
          (C.A.), at pp. 313-14. 
 
          46 It is of note that the trial judge started his 
          assessment of the appellant’s credibility by 
          expressing his concern about how the appellant 
          testified: 
 
               It was my impression that the [appellant] 
               testified in a careful fashion which lacked any 
               spontaneity. He appeared to me to be a witness 
               who was prepared and aware of what his evidence 
               should be to raise a reasonable doubt as 
               opposed to a retired teacher wrongfully accused 
               of fondling a young male 20 years ago. 
 
          47 This paragraph troubles me for two reasons. 
 
          48 First, the trial judge found the appellant’s 
          credibility was diminished because he testified in a 
          manner that was too careful. The problem I have with 
          this is that the trial judge had no reference point. 
          He did not know how the appellant normally expressed 
          himself. Moreover, the appellant’s “careful fashion” 
          of testifying may relate to such factors as the 
          unfamiliar atmosphere of the courtroom, the 
          artificiality of the circumstances under which the 
          appellant was being asked to provide information and 
          the pressure he was under given what was at stake. 
 
          49 Second, I am concerned by the trial judge’s 
          finding that the appellant testified more like 
          someone trying to raise a reasonable doubt than 
          someone wrongfully accused of sexually assaulting a 
          student. The trial judge provided no insight as to 
          how he arrived at that conclusion, particularly how 
          the differences between the two types of testimony 
          might manifest themselves. General assertions such 
          as this are, with respect, not only unhelpful but 
          also defy appellate review.” 
 
— R. v. Hemsworth [2016] O.J. No. 505 (C.A.) 

Criminal Harassment

Criminal Harassment Memo

 

Thoughts on Sillipp and related harassment Cases

I was able to look up a number of cases that cited Sillipp, and based on that have some thoughts on arguments that the offence of criminal harassment isn’t made out on the facts.
R. v. Sillipp 1997 ABCA 346

Sillipp read 264(1) to mean that criminal harassment is established when the crown can prove beyond a reasonable doubt that a) the defendant engaged in conduct described in 264 (2) (a-d) b) Victim was harassed c) intention can be established by knowledge, recklessness, or wilful blindness, d)the conduct caused V to fear for her safety e) V’s fear was reasonable
Mens Rea- Delusion?
Sillipp seems to be the foundational case for Criminal Harassment. In my earlier input into this case, I had suggested using the lack of mens rea as an argument, but case law seems scant on this point. In fact there is an actual case (R. v. Crook [2015] O.J. No. 5849 2015 ONCJ 627) where the judge rejected a psychologist’s testimony that the defendant was delusional and believed himself to be in love (Although in that case the crown prosecutor and the amicus curae-the accused was self represented-urged the judge to not take into account the psychologist’s testimony )
This may be useful for us, however. In Crook, the judge, after accepting the crown and the A.C’s suggestion to disregard the psychologist’s testimony, went on to consider whether mens rea was established regardless. In this case, it wasn’t because 1)the delusion was limited to another facet of the case and 2)the delusion did not properly explain Mr. Crook’s actions
20 First, the delusions identified by Dr. Van Impe are limited to the belief that Lisa and Brent were not the parents of the children living with them and that Lisa might ultimately enter into a relationship with Mr. Crook. These delusions do not extend to a belief that the Aube children had been abducted, although the suggestion of abduction is either explicit or implicit in the Abduction Communications. Absent that feature as part of Mr. Crook’s identified delusions, his references to abduction is an act naturally resulting in significant perturbation on the part of the Aubes and cannot be excused as part of any fixed and false set of beliefs.
21 Second, Ms. Ross and Mr. Jim point out that Mr. Crook, if the sender, went to some lengths to disguise his identity, posing, for example, as a concerned parent of another child, as a police officer, and as a Toronto Star reporter. As Ms. Ross put it in Exhibit 31, “had he truly wanted to ensure the safety of abducted children, he could and should have marched into a police station or CAS office”. Assuming Mr. Crook sent the Abduction Communications, his surreptitiousness in doing so would undercut the concern which I initially entertained that Mr. Crook was, from his delusional perspective, merely engaging in an exposure of the Aubes as wrongdoers. I accept from counsel’s submissions that Mr. Crook, as sender, perceived that the sending of the Abduction Communications was wrong. Moreover, even if Mr. Crook were incapable of an appreciation of the culpability of each consequence of the sending of the Abduction Communications, so long as the Crown proves mental culpability in respect of the sending itself, mens rea is established: R. v. DeSousa, [1992] S.C.J. No. 77 (S.C.C.); R. v.Krushel, [2000] O.J. No. 302 (O.C.A.).
Harassment
There is a case to be made that the complainant wasn’t harassed in this case. It is important to note that 1-criminal harassment is a high threshold.

R. v Alvarez-Gongora, 2014 ONCJ 712,
42 For the complainant to have been harassed or to have felt harassed, it is not enough for the complainant to have been “vexed, disquieted or annoyed”. To have been harassed means to have been “tormented, troubled, worried continually or chronically, plagued, bedeviled and badgered”. I note that these terms are not cumulative. It can be enough for harassment if any one of these terms is established.
It is useful to look at some cases where criminal harassment has been found. We can argue that Mr. Khedr’s behavior isn’t similar.

R. v. Yannonie [2009] A.J. No. 121 2009 ABQB 4 467 A.R. 336

29 The evidence in Sillipp disclosed the following actions on the part of the Accused:
• – the Accused frequently drove past and parked near the home and office of the first complainant (his ex-spouse) and the apartment of the second complainant;
• – the Accused frequently followed the first complainant’s vehicle for short distances and swerved at her vehicle on one occasion;
• – the Accused followed the second complainant’s vehicle for short distances as well;
• – the Accused followed the complainants through several specific locales in St. Albert and Edmonton;
• – the Accused followed the second complainant to the Edmonton International Airport where she was to pick up the first complainant from an incoming flight.

R. v. R.G. [2001] Y.J. No. 12 2001 YKSC 2

51 The point is that conduct which causes a complainant to be “vexed, disquieted or annoyed” is not sufficient. The complainant must be “tormented, troubled, worried continually or chronically, plagued, bedeviled and badgered.”
52 It is clear from the evidence of M.O., Olga Anderson and Bruce Webber that M.O. was harassed. She was fearful and in a state of agitation that caused her to run for several blocks to find a safe haven. Constable Letendre, who attended at the 4050 Fourth Avenue apartment, described M.O. as very scared, anxious and talking quickly. In short, she was not annoyed, but rather, she was tormented, troubled and badgered.
R. v. P.R.B. [1999] A.J. No. 1589 1999 ABPC 158 263 A.R. 90

16 Ms. L.B. described the effect of the defendant’s actions on her and her family in the following words:
I live with my parents. We are fearful for our safety; we’ve had a security system installed in our house. We don’t even feel comfortable going into our back yard without looking over our shoulders. I’m constantly looking in my rear view mirror when I’m driving. It’s a very uncomfortable situation to say the least and I’m fearful for my safety. Like I said, he’s very unpredictable and I just don’t know what to expect next.
Looking at the totality of the defendant’s conduct, including the content of his voice-mail messages, and accepting the foregoing evidence, I am satisfied to the requisite standard that the complainant was indeed harassed.

2-This is related to the requirement that the victim must fear for her safety or someone else close to her. Either proving lack of fear or lack of harassment is good enough, both seem to rely on similar criteria.

R. v. Raymond [2014] Q.J. No. 2193 2014 QCCQ 1833

36 But here, the evidence only shows the complainant was on stress or on edge. She was uncomfortable. She did not have peace of mind.
38 The Crown did not establish beyond a reasonable doubt, that the conduct of the accused caused the complainant to fear for her safety or the safety of anyone known to her.
A case where fear wasn’t found.

R. v. Hnatiuk [2000] A.J. No. 545 2000 ABQB 314

41 However, as was pointed out in Sillip, in order to convict an accused of criminal harassment, it is not enough to be satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that the conduct troubled or badgered the complainant, the court must also be satisfied that the conduct caused the complainant to fear for her safety or the safety of anyone known to her and the fear must, in all of the circumstances, be reasonable.

42 The evidence in this case fails to establish beyond a reasonable doubt that Ms. Haavaldsen reasonably feared for her safety. In fact, the evidence does not establish that Ms. Haavaldsen feared for her safety. Indeed, when the worst of the conduct occurred, which was the threat which occurred during the mediation, the Haavaldsens decided to continue with the mediation. When the mediation was unsuccessful, the Haavaldsens continued with their life, as before. The evidence establishes that they were annoyed by the Hnatiuks, but they were not in fear of them. Ms. Haavaldsen testified, for example, that she continued to go outside, continued to tend her garden, continued to meet her children, continued to walk her dog, etc. Ms. Hnatiuk has argued that the Haavaldsens “gave as good as they got”; the evidence may not go that far, but certainly the evidence establishes that the Haavaldsens were not in fear of the Hnatiuks.
2-Multiple cases stress that to establish criminal harassment, it is necessary to examine the background and context and the details of the relationship.

R. v Alvarez-Gongora, 2014 ONCJ 712,

44 When the Court is considering whether the elements of the offence have been made out, the approach is a contextual one. It is a question of fact for the Court to determine in each case. The Court must consider the conduct that is the subject of the criminal harassment charge against the background of the relationship and the history between the complainant and accused.

R. v. P.M.B. [2011] B.C.J. No. 2499 2011 BCPC 370

10 In order to examine whether the elements of the offence are made out, the court must look beyond the letters and their content and examine the context in which they were written.
Misc

R. v. Wease [2008] O.J. No. 1938 78 W.C.B. (2d) 381

29 The trial judge acknowledged that Mr. Wease did not actually know Mrs. Wease considered herself harassed. (might have some utility for us) Having acknowledged this, however, the trial judge found that the appellant was, at the very least, reckless or willfully blind, “in my opinion, and I think clearly willfully blind in this matter.” He points out that in the appellant’s testimony he made it clear that he, “just didn’t care what effect his actions would have upon the complainant”, and in the trial judges opinion that, “clearly amounts to an admission of willful blindness and by his very acts, I think, he can also be taken to be reckless as to whether or not Mrs. Wease was harassed. Therefore, the third essential element has also been established beyond a reasonable doubt in this matter.”
30 The evidence, however, must be taken in context and it is my view that it does not support such a finding.

R. v. Davis [1999] M.J. No. 477 143 Man.R. (2d) 105

Talks about subjective and objective fear

R. v. Pringle [1999] O.J. No. 3704 43 W.C.B. (2d) 487 No. 982384

14 In the case at bar, the “proscribed conduct” is that specified in para. 264(2)(b) of the Code, to wit, “repeatedly communicating with, either directly or indirectly, the other person or anyone known to them”. Within the charge period, there are 2 written communications, eligible for consideration (Exhibits #1 and #3). I have considered all of the evident pre-charge period conduct of Accused toward Complainant, and find it to amount to no more than non-criminal “workplace harassment” (might have some utility, seem to be different kind of harassments), as between co-employees, notably weird and eccentric behaviour, but not manifestly “criminal” nor “threatening”.

The Intoxilyzer

Operating the Breath Instrument (Intoxilyzer) Correctly

 

An excellent decision was provided by Judge Higgerty in Edson, Alberta. The defence counsel in the case was Alan Pearse.

Burping into the Intoxilyzer

The evidence was that the Accused was taken out of the phone room after speaking with a lawyer and asked to provide a breath sample. Given that 15 minutes had not elapsed between being taken out of the phone room and positive evidence that the accused had not burped the judge had reasonable doubt that the machine was not being operated properly. Here is an excerpt:

Depending on whether one is a defence lawyer or a prosecutor, one tends to refer to an Intoxilyzer as a machine or an instrument; being an ex-prosecutor, I will refer to it as an instrument. Certainly a very precise instrument authorized by Parliament to be the centrepiece, if you will, a tool of great use in weeding out impaired drivers on the road, but the fact remains that in many cases an accused is being convicted by an instrument. And I only say that, and it is perhaps a bit of an exaggeration, a bit of a stretch, but I say that in all seriousness because that underscores that the instrument must be operated correctly in order to bring it within the parameters of the Criminal Code of Canad which essentially allows hearsay evidence, a certificate, to be essentially the entire case against an accused.

The requirement is 15 minutes, as set out by the manufacturer, although it seems to be acknowledged by the case law that in most cases 5 minutes would be sufficient, but the manufacturer says 15 minutes. And there is a very good reason for this, the presence of mouth alcohol can result in an unreliable reading.

I did have a question earlier on, and I can perhaps answer my own question, does the accused have to adduce positive evidence that he burped or belched or chewed on a cough drop, that type of thing, during that 15-minute run-up to the first sample and, indeed, I suppose, prior to the second sample as well? And in the real world, given that Officer Jackson had difficulty on the subject of slurred speech, how could we expect an ordinary accused to remember if he or she burped within the 15 minutes prior to providing a sample? So I find that this 15-minute requirement is just as important for the operator to ensure as flipping the right switch at the right time. The 15-minute requirement is an integral part of the operation of the Intoxilyzer and the manufacturer’s requirement was not complied with. I will not speculate as to, and I am lapsing into the vernacular, aw, shucks, golly, it does not mean that much anyway. I will not go there. The facts, to me, are the instrument was operated incorrectly, the manufacturer required that 15 minutes, that 15 minutes was not observed and, therefore, in my view, the instrument was not operated correctly and the presumption cannot be relied upon. Therefore, on the over 08 charge, I also find the accused not guilty.

For a copy of the decision please contact my office at 780-429-4004.Intoxilyzer

 

Expert Witness

Expert Witnesses

 

A recent case I found to be very troubling. Thankfully, the judge made the right decision and refused to allow the evidence of an expert witness to be admitted to the jury.

In R. v. Calnen [2015] NSSC 330 the Crown sought to tender the opinion of an expert witness, a medical doctor, Dr. Marnie Woods, about the cause of death of the deceased. Let me say at this juncture I am troubled that the Crown would attempt to lead this type of evidence.

The case concerns a fall from a flight of stairs. The defence theory was that the fall caused the death of the deceased. The crown sought to tender expert evidence which went to “the cause and manner of death”.

Doctor’s Opinion

The doctor stated:

“instantaneous death after such a fall would be distinctly unusual given my experience and the reports described in the reviewed literature” but qualified her opinion “many variables and individual factors must be considered … it is not reasonable to describe one expected outcome … the ability to comment more specifically on this case is limited by the absence of a body [she did not examine the body]”.

If you dissect what the doctor is saying here, she is really saying nothing at all. Her evidence can be rewritten as follows:

falling from a flight of stairs usually doesn’t cause death but I can’t be certain that it didn’t in this case because I haven’t seen or examined the body.

The judge in this case found that the doctor’s evidence was too speculative to have merit. Rather, the judge was persuaded by another doctor’s opinion that the evidence sought to be tendered was “anecdotal” and that the cases Dr. Woods referenced were “unpublished”.

I am reminded of how important the scientific method is, and how in this case it was violated in many respects. The scientific method calls for a theory which can be tested. Results are then published so that they can be re-tested and scrutinized via peer review.

In this case the Crown doctor had a theory. She did not examine the body or review the medical history of the deceased to test her theory nor did she use published cases in support of her theory. The doctor’s opinion runs afoul of the scientific method.

Finally, in this case the judge also did not allow the expert evidence because it went to the ultimate issue of the case – murder v accident.

Alcohol

Taking Samples — Impaired Driving

Case Comment
R. v. Cole 2015 SKPC 109
A recent Saskatchewan Provincial Court decision applies some very important law concerning taking samples “as soon as practicable”.
When the Crown attempts to prove that someone\s blood alcohol limit is “over 80” they usually can do it one of two ways. Remember, the taking of a sample to determine the concentration of blood in a person’s body only tells you what their alcohol level at the time you the test is taken – not at the time of driving.

(1) The criminal code has evidentiary short-cut that allows a court to conclude that the blood alcohol of a person at the time of driving is or was the same at the as the time the test is taken. This is called the presumption of identity. In order for the presumption to apply several things need to be proven including: that each sample was taken “as soon as practicable after the time when the offense was alleged to have been committed”;
(2) Alternatively, the Crown could call an expert to extrapolate times back from when sample taken to when offense was alleged to have occurred.
In R. v. Cole, a classic defense was raised. Mr. Cole argued that samples where not taken as soon as practicable because the police officer’s waited for a tow truck before transporting the accused back to give a sample.

The judge concluded that it was not necessary for both officers to wait for the tow truck because the car was parked in a safe manner only a few blocks from the police station. Also, they could have called another police officer to assist, they could have waited to have his car towed and there were no passengers that had to be dealt with.
Although the delay in this case was short (12 minutes) the judge determined that the police did not act reasonably in the circumstances.

The touchstone for determining whether the tests were taken as soon as practicable is whether the police acted reasonably (para 12 R. v. Vanderbruggen [2006] 206 CCC (3d) 489 Ont C.A.

Therefore, the Crown were not allowed to use the presumption of identity. The Crown then asked the judge to take judicial notice of the fact that the accused’s blood alcohol would not have been that different from the time of driving to the time the test was taken. He was not prepared to do that. The Crown needed to call an expert and they failed to do so.