CENTENNIAL LECTURES Chapter 3 Fairness after the Charter
Transcription
CENTENNIAL LECTURES Chapter 3 Fairness after the Charter
CENTENNIAL LECTURES Chapter 3 Fairness after the Charter These materials were prepared by A. Wayne MacKay, Faculty of Law, Dalhousie University, for Continuing Legal Education, October 1983. I INTRODUCTION On at least a short term basis the Charter of Rights and Freedomsl has made a significant dent in the Canadian legal landscape. 2 Not only has it produced a veritable cottage industry for both practicing lawyers and legal academics - it has raised some of the most fundamental questions about which institutions should shape public policy in Canada. The courts have a bold new mandate to measure the acts of both legislative and the executive branches of government, against the new standards of the Charter. When government agencies are found wanting, they are to be checked and their legal actions invalidated. The cruise missile case is the most vivid example of the new role courts are being asked to play.3 In some respects the supremacy of Parliament in relation to matters of human rights, is dead. 4 It is still too early to tell whether there will be a net improvement in the protection of rights as a result of the Charter. 5 There will undoubtedly be changes in the institutions of lawyering and judging and these are already becoming apparent. increased emphasis on public law. Another observable result is an This causes the traditional bastions of private law to demonstrate mixed reactions of envy and concern. The move towards public law as opposed to private law predates the Charter but has been accentuated by it. 6 Section 7 of the Charter raises the most intriguing and exciting questions of the provisions of the Charter which are presently in effect. This section states: 2 Everyone has· the right to life, liberty and security of the person and the right not to be deprived thereof except in accordance with tIle principles of fundamental justice. The section bristles with basic legal questions. [1] What is meant by "fundamental justice"? [2] Are there affirmative rights to life, liberty and security of the person? [3] What is the line between a reasonable limit on these rights and an unconstitutional deprivation of them? [4] Could an action contrary to "fundamental justice" ever be justified as reasonable in a "free and democratic society"? [5] How does the constitutional concept of "fundamental justice" fit with the existing common law doctrines of natural justice and fairness? The purpose of this paper is primarily to address the last question but in doing so the preceding questions must be examined as well, One of the unique features of the Canadian Charter is that it has to be superimposed on a pre-existing legal structure. It was adopted not as many such documents are at the birth of the nation, but rather at a stage of considerable national maturity. The problems implicit in this superimposition are amply displayed in an investigation of post Charter fairness. Considering section 7 in the context of the existing legal framework raises a host of important practical questions for lawyers. What is the impact of section 7 on the existing law about fair procedures in administrative law? Does it simply "constitut1onalize" natural justice and fairness and if so does this change anything? Does it add a third category of procedural rights, if indeed, there are two at the present time? What 3 impact does it have on the range oE interests which protections? attr~ct procedural lfuat are the standing and remedial implications of making a constitutional claim to "fundamental justice" as opposed to a common law claim for faIrness? At this early stage in Charter jurisprudence it would be both presumptuous and unwise to venture definitive answers to these many questions. However, there is value in addressing the questions so lawyers can assist the judges in venturing some answers. Before attempting to address any of these questions however, it is desirable to consider the pre-Charter evolution of fair procedures. The judicial invasion of the traditional legislative domain began not with the Charter, but with the evolution of fairness which mandates and defines the proper procedures for administrative as well as judicial bodies. 7 II PRE-CHARTER EVOLUTION OF FAIRNESS - The Traditional Legal Framework for Fair Procedures In legal terms fairness is a doctrine concerned primarily with proce- dures. Like much of our common law heritage it is British in origin. The important point is that it has been a procedural doctrine and not a substantive one. It is hoped that a decision made by following fair procedures will be a substantively better decision; howe.ver, this link has not been expanded into a doctrine of substantive due process as has developed in the United States. There are signs that the lines between procedural and substantive review have recently been blurred by a broad interpretation of fairness. 8 Procedures are the focus but there is a neW 4 policy role for the courts which allows them to consider at least indirectly, the merits of a decision--formerly a matter exclusively within the legislative domain. 9 Fairness as a procedural term is new; the classical common law terminology is natural justice. it might at first appear. This latter phrase is not as expansive as It does not incorporate the divine overtones of natural law but is a specific procedural doctrine. with two branches. It is a single rule Before a person's rights are affected he or she has the right to be heard before an unbiased decision-maker. Most cases examine the threshold and content of hearing rights but there are also cases on the meaning and application of the bias rule. IO Professor John Willis has described administrative law as a theological subject. 11 Historically, there are religious overtones to the concept of natural justice. At least one commentator suggests that God gave Adam and Eve the first hearing, before He expelled them from the Garden of Eden. 12 The right to a hearing is at the foundation of the British concept of justice and a fudamental value in the Anglo-Canadian legal system. waived The rule against bias appears less deep rooted as it can be or pre-empted by statute. Natural justice has been described as the common law equivalent of American due process. l3 The veracity of this assertion will be tested by exploring whether the protection of rights can best be achieved by COmmon law or constitutional devices. This will be a theme which runs throughout this paper. The explosion of administrative agencies is a recent phenomenon. Natural justice arose in an environment inhabited by courts and a few S tribunals which also tended to act in a judicial fashion. Thus it should not be surprising that natural jOlstice was linked with the exercise of judicial functions. Administrative or executive decisions were considered immune from the rules of natural justice. l4 Such an approach is a logical extension to the principle of supremacy of Parliament. How can judicial decision-making be distinguished from administrative? Administrative boards can act judicially; courts do not have a monopoly on such conduct. act in a judicial fashion. at different times. However, there are many tribunals which do not Tribunals can also act in different capacities A single municipal councilor housing authority may act legislatively, administratively or judicially at different times. Dickson J. speaking for the Supreme Court of Canada, in Minister of National Revenue v. Coopers and Lybrand,lS identifies the following factors as relevant to the labelling of functions. It is possible, I think, to formulate several criteria for determining whether a decision or order is one required by law to be made on a judicial or quasijudicial basis. The list is not intended to be exhaustive. (1) Is there anything in the language in which the function is conferred or in the general context in which it is exercised which suggests that a hearing is contemplated before a decision is reached? (2) Does the decision or order directly or indirectly affect the rights and obligations of persons? (3) Is the adversary process involved? (4) Is there an obligation to apply substantive rules to many individual cases rather than, for example, the obligation to implement social and economic policy in a broad sense? The application of legal rules or standards and the existence of a lis inter partes are the hallmarks of judicial action. The landmark decision 6 of Ridge v. Ba1dwin16 advocated a focus upon whether rights are affected, rather than upon the nature of the tribunal. This case expanded the cate- gory of judicial action but has not been followed consistently. Creating rights rather than determining their scope has been described as a classic legislative function. 17 Pursuit of a broad policy objective that affects many people is usually labelled as administrative action. 18 Expropriation is one common example of a government function considered to be administrative in nature. Procedural rights used to depend upon convincing a court to apply the desired 1abel. 19 proposition. It was an all or nothing Many decisions were considered administrative rather than judicial action because of their broad impact. This all or nothing phenomenon extended not only to the threshold application of natural justice, but also to its content. Since procedutal protections were applied only to judicial bodies, the procedures were adjudicative and court-like. Powers Procedure Act, 1971. 20 This view was codified in the Statutory Notice, rights to counsel, cross-examination and disclosure were usually part of this procedural content. Some rights such as notice are so basic as to apply to all decision makers 21 but others such as cross examination may not be appropriate for mass adjudication or broad policy implemenation. A bias towards court style procedures continued in spite of the line of cases led by Ridge v. Baldwin,22 which called for a more flexible application of natural justice, with the content of procedures tailored to the individual board. Had the courts taken this flexible and expansive approach to natural justice, there would have been no need for a new doctrine of procedural fairness. 7 Like its predecessor natural justice, the concept of fairness Was icrported to Canada from the United Kingdom. Judges had long accepted that all decision-makers were subject to a duty of fairness, in the sense that they must act honestly and exercise their powers in a bona fide fash-ion. 23 However, it was not at all clear that this duty of fairness had a procedural content. It was a duty of honesty and good faith and courts rarely found a decision-maker in breach of that duty. In 1967 with the case of Re H.K.,24 Lord Parker C.J. held that the concept of fairness did have a procedural content. meet this duty than to just to act honestly. More was required to On the facts of Re U.K., the immigration officer had to allow the immigrant to explain why he felt the statutory criteria were satisfied. Furthermore, the officer had to arti- culate his objections, so the immigrant could attempt to dispel them. This new approach to fairness was followed in several cases including two landmark cases decided by Lord Denning. 25 One important result of this neW development was that even those decisions which were not labeled as judicial were now subject to review. This fact was clearly enunciated in Bates v. Lord Hailsham 26 where Megarry J. stated: Let me accept that in the sphere of the so called quasi-judicial the rules of natural justice run and in the administrative or executive field there is a general duty of fairness. This neat dichotomy was not always accepted in later English cases but does appear to represent the Canadian view on fairness. Later English cases have adopted a more unified approach to procedural protections. They 8 suggest that natural justice and fairness are different points on a single continuum. Lord Morris in Furnell v. Whangeri High School made this representative statement: Natural justice is but fairness writ large and judicially. It has been described" as fair play in action." Nor is it a leaven to be associated with judicial or quasi-judicial occasions •••• 27 Professor Clive Lewis has suggested that the unified approach to procedural protections is the predominant one in the United Kingdom. 28 Thus fairness in the United Kingdom is not a distinct and separate concept from the older concept of natural justice. The single question that must be asked in each particular setting is what procedures are approrpiate? As Professor Lewis suggests, this invites courts to openly balance the competing considerations rather than to hide behind labels. Whether fairness is an outgrowth of natural justice or a new doctrine has important implications for the imposition of substantive standards. Although the Canadian tree of fairness grew from its British roots, its branches did not always bend in the same direction. Some of the differences can be explained by the different judicial traditions in the two countries. Canadian courts have lacked a clear direction in respect to administrative law. Professor Hogg has described the Canadian scene as a "wilderness of single instances.,,29 In the decade since Hogg's study there has been considerable progress, especially at the Supreme Court of Canada level. A predicatable approach to matters procedural however, is still lacking. One of the earliest cases breaking down the old classification process was the Nova Scotian case of Scott v. Rent Review Commission. 30 The issue ... 9 in dispute Was the disclosure of financial information to tenants. Without such information the tenants argued that they could play no meaningful role in the hearings. They won their claim under the banner of fairness. It would not have been difficult to argue that no such classification was necessary. Fairness applied regardless of the classification. The real breakthrough came with the Supreme Court of Canada decision in Re Nicholson and Haldimand-Norfolk. 3l Drawing upon the British author- ities this case concluded that there is a procedural content to the duty of fairness. Laskin C.J. explains that fairness extends to administrative actions which were previously immune from judicial review. The late Chief Justice also hints that fairness and natural justice are distinct concepts with differing procedural contents, but that point is not clear. This separation theme Was followed in Re Webb and the Ontario Housing Corporation. 32 In exploring what procedures were appropriate for the removal of a subsidized tenancy, the court discussed fairness as a concept distinct from natural justice. It also emphasized that the procedural content of fairness was much less than full natural justice. Although it is better than nothing, fairness may be second class natural justice. 33 The use of the term "benefits" rather than rights or privileges as a description of subsidized tenancy in Re Webb is an important issue for later examination, when the protected interests in section 7 are discussed. Another Supreme Court of Canada decision supports the separate treatment of fairness and natural justice. In Martineau v. Matsqui Institu- tion 34 a disciplined prison inmate who had been denied access to the 10 Federal Court of Appeal pursuant to section 28 of the Federal Court Act,35 sought review in the Federal Court Trial Division under section 18. The Court ruled that there Was a duty of fairness owed even in respect to prison discipline. However, Pigeon J. in his judgment, indicated that the procedural content would be minimal. 36 A separation of fairness and natural justice, depending upon classification of the decision-maker, is encouraged by the jurisdictional tangle of the Federal Court Act. Administrative decisions must be reviewed for fairness in the Trial Division, while review of jUdicial decisions for breach of natural justice, must proceed in the Federal Court of Appeal. Labelling is mandated by the statute. A New Zealand judge in an unusual remark expressed the fear that justice might degenerate into mere fairness. 37 If the content of fairness is too abbreviated, there may be some foundation for the judge's fears. Recognising a duty of fairness and then shrinking its procedural content may simply raise false expectations. Indeed, fairness may return to its origins as a simple duty to act in good faith. However, there are cases which take a broader approach to the concept of fairness, viewing it as part of the continuum of natural justice. 38 C.J. in Nicholson are open to this broader the late Chief Justice intended. The seminal comments of Laskin interpretati~n and may be what It is unlikely that the he intended fairness to be used as a means of challenging the substance of the administrative decision but intentions are not always controlling. Problems of procedure and substance surface in regard to the interpretation of the common law concept of fairness. Whether fairness will . 11 remain true to its procedural roots in natural justice, or expand into substantive review, is not at present clear. Further confusion is added by the evolution of the traditional grounds for substantive review of administrative decisions under the umbrella of abuse of discretion. Agreement is also lacking upon whether increased judicial review is desirable or, if desirable, whether it should proceed under the banner of fairness. There has been an increasing awareness that procedure and substance are really points on a single continuum and not completely distinct ideas. Professor Grey argues that this has been the core of recent developments in administrative law. It stands to reason that in the context of new flexible administrative law, it would not be the court's intention to embark on a technical definition of procedure and substance and that certain minimal and similar rules of justice would apply to both. Thus "substantive fairness" is not only not a heresy but is an essential component of the new orthodoxy.39 Professor Mullan agrees that there are signs of a substantive extension of fairness, but is more inclined to view this as heresy rather than orthodoxy.40 He examines in detail four recent cases which use a result oriented interpretation of fairness to challenge the reasonableness of a particular decision. 41 In Mullan's view the broad interpretation of fairness which allows it to invade substantive review, undesirable. ~s unjustified and In the latter part of his article he argues that the same results can be achieved by using the more traditional grounds for abuse of discretion or emerging branches of that review, such as no evidence and unreasonableness. 42 Review under the old labels according to Mullan, would 12 produce a better balance between judicial review and curial deference than subjective rulings about fairness. To date there have been few cases in Canada which have adopted the substantive view of fairness and thereby challenged the merits of an administrative decision. 43 This may reflect a more traditional view of the role of the judge in the administrative process. Such a view is well expressed in the following quotation. However, judges are not supposed to base their decisions on arguments of policy, that is, on what will promote desirable social goals, be they comfort for the sick, shelter for the homeless, education for children, mitigation of industrial unrest, or--and this is the major problem--the equitable assessment of priorities in the use of limited resources. Judges must reach their decisions by reasoning from the established rules, resolving difficult questions by reference to principles of law rather than social aims. There are many reasons for this. "liard cases make bad law," in that the same point of law may arise in a case where the desirable social goal will be promoted by the opposite decision; in presuming to assess what is the desirable social goal, the judge is usurping a task which should be performed by democratically elected and accountable bodies; and the result will be arbitrary and unpredictable, which is unforgiveable in a system which allows the judges to lay down the law through decisions on facts which have already happened. 44 Both the comments of Mullan and the excesses of the American due process explosion emphasize problems with a full-blown doctrine of substantive fairness. However, much of Mullan's argument depends upon the efficacy of the existing bases for reviewing administrative discretion. Indeed, the review for unreasonableness which Mullan advocates may provide no more predictability or curial deference than the fairness review he attacks. Fairness as a vehicle for improving decisions made by the state • 13 will also be affected by the development of constitutional rights under the Charter. However, even the most liberal interpretation of the Charter is unlikely to supplant the need for a flexible common law concept of fairness. In spite of the revolutionary potential in fairness, Canadian courts have proceeded cautiously and prudently on a case by case basis. They have recognized the value of an important new legal tool by which to do justice in the individual case. It is true, however, that having found a duty of fairness they have often defined its content narrowly. for future expansion. There is still room Courts have also carefully balanced the advantages of greater procedural protections against the financial and bureaucratic costs of due process. Fairness provides an example of the flexible evolution of the common law. Interpretation of the Charter is also likely to follow the familiar Canadian course of gradualism. There has been very little empirical study to determine whether fairness has actually produced meaningful input into the decision process for those whose interests are being affected. If unfair and uninformed decisions are now reached after the trappings of proper procedures, the net gain is minimal. Indeed, such a charade is counter-productive as it produces an illusion of justice where none exists. The ~eal impact of fairness, as with the newly guaranteed Charter rights will only be discovered by hard empirical study. Although the jury is still out, I would predict that the practical impact of both fairness and the Charter will be considerably less than legal commentators 45 and public pronouncements would suggest. The promises of judicial protection in 14 respect to both common law fairness and the Charter may have been too extravagant. Certainly the fan-fare surrounding the Charter Was designed to raise expectations but the actual process of Charter-making provides a more sobering view of what can reasonably be anticipated in the way of due process protections under our new Constitution. III THE PROCESS OF CHARTER-MAKING Much has been written about the making of the Charter and that information shall not be repeated here. 46 Suffice.to say that the Charter arose out of political compromise and interest group lobbying rather than a careful articulation of political and legal ideals. It is instructive· to briefly consider the origins of the perplexing section 7. It is an amalgam of two separate provisions of the Canadian Bill of Rights 47 sections l(a) and 2(e). 1. It is hereby recognized and declared that in Canada there have existed and shall continue to exist without discrimination by reason of race, national origin, colour, religion or sex, the following human rights and fundamental freedoms, namely, (a) the right of the individual to life, liberty, security of the person and enjoyment of property, and the right not to be deprived thereof except by due process of law; .. 2. Every law of Canada shall, unless it is expressly declared by an Act of the Parliament of Canada that it shall operate notwithstanding the Canadian Bill of Rights, be so construed and applied as not to abrogate or infringe or to authorize the abrogation, abridgement or infringement of any of the rights or freedoms herein recognized and declared, and in particular, no law of Canada shall be construed or applied so as to ••• (e) deprive a person of the right to a fair hearing in accordance with the principles of fundamental justice for the determination of his rights and obligations. 15 The narrow reading given to these provisions in the Bill of Rights is well known to both lawyers and legal academics. 48 Courts Were reticent to give real content to the concept of "due process" under the Bill of Rights but when they did it was a very limited content. In Duke v. The Queen49 Fauteux, C.J. attempted a definition of "fundamental justice" which has been much quoted in the early Charter cases on section 7. He stated: Without attempting to formulate any final definition of those words, I would take them to mean, generally, that the tribunal which adjudicates upon his rights must act fairly, in good faith, without bias and in a judicial temper, and must give him the opportunity adequately to state his case. 50 This quotation has been used to buttress the argument that the phrase "fundamental justice" has procedural and not substantive connotations. In another much cited Bill of Rights case Mr. Justice Laskin (as he then was) clearly rejected a substantive interpretation to "due process'· in the Bill of Rights. He reached this conclusion in Curr v. The Queen 51 on the basis that the Bill was not a constitutional document and that to give it substantive impact would be contrary to the principle of the supremacy of Parliament. Speaking for the Court the late Chief Justice made the following comments: The phrase "due process of law" has its context in the words of s. l(a) that proceed it. In the present case, the connection stressed was with '·the right of the individual to ••• security of the person". It is obvious that to read "due process of law" as meaning simply that there must be some legal authority to qualify or impair security of the person would be to see it as declaratory only. On this view, it should not matter whether the legal authority is found in enacted law or in unenacted or decisional law •••• I am unable to appreciate what more can be read into s. l(a) from a procedural standpoint than is already comprehended by s. 2(e) ("a fair hearing in accordance with the principles of fundamental justice·') and by l 16 s. 2(f) ("a fair and public hearing by an independent and impartial tribuna1,,).52 Later the Supreme Court of Canada ~as again called upon to a~judicate on the meaning of "due process" in Miller v. The Queen,53 which was· a case involving the dea1th penalty. Mr. Justice Ritchie speaking for the Court defined the phrase as follows: The declaration of the right of the individual not to be deprived of life which is contained in s. lea) is clearly qualified by the words "except by due process of law", which appear to me to contemplate a process whereby an individual may be deprived of life. At the time when the Bill of RIghts was enacted there did not exist and had never existed in Canada the right not to be deprived of life in the case of an individual who had been convicted of "murder punishable by death" by the duly recorded verdict of a properly instructed jury and, in my view, the "existing right'" guaranteed by s. l(a) can only relate to individuals who have not undergone the process of such a trial and conviction. 54 The net effect of these and related cases was to render '"due process of law'" as equivalent to '"in accordance with existing law'".55 This is a clear assertion of the supremacy of Bar1iament and of the deferential approach of Canadian courts. It is against this back-drop that the early commentators. on section 7 have argued that the different wording of the Charter was a deliberate attempt to escape the narrow approach to -due process'" under the Bill of Rights. 56 The desire for a broader approach to "due process" protections was not readily evident in the process of Charter-making. The phrase '"enjoyment of property'", found in section lea) of the !!£ of Rights, was deliberately omitted from section 7 of the Charter as a federal government concession to the provinces and the New Democratic Barty, after considerable debate in both Parliament and the House of l 17 Commons and Senate Joint Committee on the Constitution. 57 Since property is the classic interest which has attracted procedural protections at common law the deletion of property is a matter of some significance. It is also relevant to the argument for American style substantive due process. 58 The other change from the Bill of Rights is the deletion of the phrase "due process of law· and the substitution of the phrase from section 2(e) "fundamental justice". However, the fair hearing context apparent in the use of the latter phrase in section 2(e) of the Bill of Rights is not expressly repeated in section 7 of the Charter. This has been raised as an argument for substantive as opposed to procedural review. 59 There was little real debate on the meaning of this phrase before the Joint Committee on the Constitution-and indeed most of the committee's time on section 7 was spent in procedural rangles. 60 However, Barry Strayer, Assistant Deputy Minister, Public law of the Federal Department of Justice, when questioned on the meaning of "fundamental justice" before the Joint Committee on the Constitution, emphasized that it was to signify procedural protections and expressly drafted to avoid the pitfalls of American style substantive due process. 61 The intent of the drafters in the respect will not necessarily prevail. 62 One of the interesting issues of judicial methodology that will surface in the early Charter cases is the use of the intent of the drafters of the document in giving content to its provisions. is used, it is not clear whose intent is relevant. If evidence of intent Is it the members of 18 ParlIament, the members of the Joint Committee on the Constitution or the bureaucrats who drafted the particular provision in issue? To the extent that any of these intentions can be ascertained they will only provide guidance and will not be determinative. Whether section 7 was designed to escape the narrowness of the Bill of Rights, the breadth of American substantive due process or both, will continue to be an important debate. It is highly likely that more meaning and purpose is being read into the process of Charter-making than was actually present. However, the fact that intentions are fictional has not prevented courts from relying upon them in the past. 63 There are, however, persuasive arguments that a constitutional document must be open to changing interpretations and not tied to the intentions of its creators. 64 Nonetheless, the setting for the Charter does provide hints as to how it may be interpreted. IV APPLICATION, LIMITATIONS AND REMEDIES A. Application With the exception of two notable dissenting commentators 64a it is now generally accepted that the Charter only applies to government action on what the American's call "state action" .65 private activity. The Charter does not apply to This is the fairly clear intention of section 32 of the Charter and has been so found in the early cases. 66 However, what is meant by "state action·· has not been clearly articulated and the early indications are that it will be defined quite '.' broadly. It has been held to include within the reach of the Charter an 19 arrest by a private person pursuant to the Criminal Code. 67 Municipal traffic by-laws passed by a city council were found to be subject to the Charter. 68 This is particularly interesting in the context of this paper, because city councils are usually equated with administrative tribunals for legal purposes. There has even been some suggestion that courts themselves will be caught by the Charter as well. 69 In the controversial Operation Dismantle case even the exercise of the Royal Prerogative was held not to be immune from the provisions of the Charter. 70 At this early stage the predictions of Professor Swinton that Canada will follow the United States lead and define state action broadly, would appear to be sound. 7l This broad definition will likely extend to a wide range of administrative boards which are charged with the execution of public policy, such as the Canadian Transport Commission, the Canadian Radio, Television and Telecommunications Commission and housing agencies at both the federal and provincial levels of government. 72 As will be discussed later in this paper, the Charter has been applied to the National Parole Board and its provincial counterparts. Purely domestic or private tribunals will escape section 7 of the Charter in the same way that they have escaped the restraints of administrative law. However, the contours of state action will not necessarily be identical to the border between public and private action in administrative law. Unions for example will not necessarily be considered to be engaged in government action merely beCause they indirectly derive their existence from statute. 73 Nor, for that matter, has it been clear that unions are 20 caught by the procedural rules of administrative law. One anomalous result which may evolve from the Charter is that public sector unions and employers may be bound by the Charter while private employers and unions will not fall within its grasp. The protections of the Charter have been applied to corporations as well as individuals. 74 R. v. Halifax-Dartmouth Real Estate Board ex parte Seaside Realties 75 provides an example of a body engaged in a "public function" so as to attract the procedural roles of administrative law; but it would aot necessarily be regarded as an agent of the state engaged in governmental action. Indeed, such a board could be easily viewed as engaged in private action. Other examples of where an action could be public but not governmental can also be imagined. Thus the applicati9n of the constitutional concept of "fundamental justice" will in some cases be narrower than the reach of common law procedural protections. this is one important reason why the common law doctrines will continue to thrive in the post-Charter world. B. Standing Another respect in which common law concepts of fairness diverge from constitutional "fundamental justice" is in relation to standing. There is still some doubt whether the expansion of standing requirements for constitutional issues, as evidenced in Thorson, MacNeil and Borowski 76 is .< equally applicable to claims in administrative law.77 However, there has been a fairly clear expansion of standing in administrative law and the Nova Scotia case, Re Ratepayers of New Ross,78 is a rather extreae example 21 of this extension. An application for an order to remedy a breach of fairness was brought by the ratepayers of the school district on behalf of the local school principal. A litigant under the Charter has three remedial channels open to him or her and the standing requirements are different in each situation. One very specific remedial provision is the exclusion of evidence pursuant to section 24(2) of the Charter. This section appears to be aimed at the criminal process since it speaks about "bringing the administration of justice into disrepute" but it could have some tangential application to administrative boards which receive evidence. In any event the standing requirements for this section are stated in the section and will not be discussed here. The other two remedial channels are the general provisions which apply to all Charter violations and not ,just those in the criminal domain. A declaration that a particular law is invalid may be obtained by using section 52 of the Constitution Act, 1982. This provision which applies to any unconstitutional law will attract the normal standing requirements. 79 However, as the section stipulates, it must be a law that is being challenged and not just a board ruling or some administrative action. 52(1) The Constitution of Canada is the suprem~ law of Canada, and any law that is inconsistent with the provisions of the Constitution is, to the extent of the inconsistency, of no force or effect. In the administrative sphere it will often be a particular decision or .~ ruling that initiates a challenge. Recourse must then be had to section 24(1) of the Charter which is the general remedial provision. states: This section 22 24(1) Anyone whose rights or freedoms, as guaranteed by this Charter, have been infringed or denied may apply to a court of competent jurisdiction to obtain such remedy as the court considers appropriate in the circumstances. In order to acquire standing under this section the litigant must prove, on the balance of probabilities, that his or her rights have been violated. 80 This is a stricter standard than is required for standing at common law. Accordingly, when the Edmonton Journal challenged in camera hearings in the juvenile courts, the court concluded that its rights wre not infringed and any challenge would have to be under section 52 of the Constitution Act, 1982. 81 As a further limitation on the availability of remedies under section 24(1), the word "may" has been interpreted so as to give the court a discretion as to whether to allow an application, as well as granting a citizen an option to apply or not. 82 This suggests a parallel to the broad judicial discretion in respect to standing enunciated in the pre-Charter cases. Thus the same discretion is open to the court at the end of the day but the original hurdle for the would-be litigant is higher. C. Limitations Like any other provision in the Charter section 7 can be over-riden by a proper use of section 33 but such action will hopefully be rare. There are some limitations inherent in section 7 of the Charter which should be noted. . ~. It applies only to deprivations of "life, liberty and security of the person"; as shall be discussed later in the paper these interests may be read broadly or narrowly by the courts. Furthermore. the rights to "fundamental justice" arise only upon "deprivation" and not merely upon . .. 23 limitation of one of the protected interests. There will be much litigation about what constitutes a deprivation as opposed to a mere limitation of rights. 83 Section one of the Charter allows for reasonable limits on any of the rights guaranteed in the Charter. 1. This section states as follows: The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms guarantees the rights and freedoms set out in it subject only to such reasonable limits prescribed by law as can be demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society. This provision has already received considerable judicial attention and Some of the contentious issues have been resolved at the court of appeal level. It has been held that the burden of showing that a limitation is reasonable rests with the alleged government violator. 84 In the Ontario courts it has also been established that any limitations must be properly prescribed by "law" and policy guidelines do not qualify as "law".8S Many courts have considered the meaning of "reasonable limits" and have frequently relied on the Europeon case law to assist them in devising a methodology.86 Courts have been much less clear about what investigation is mandated by the reference to "free and democratic society" and whether this really adds anything to the section 1 limitation. Certainly what limitations would be reasonable in respe~t to fundamental justice, would vary greatly from one democratic society to another. Professor Paul Bender of the University of Pennsylvania has argued that once there is a finding that there is a breach of the rules of -,'. "fundamental justice" section 1 could not be invoked to save it. 87 He argues that section 1 should not be applied to any provision which contains r 24 its own limitation. 87a · Although section 1 may be difficult to apply once there has been a breach of fundamental jllstice, I do not think that it is precluded. Section 1 refers to all rights in the Charter and it is unikely that courts will read that to mean only those sections not otherwise qualified. Furthermore, there are rare cases, such as a national emergency, in which the violation of "fundamental justice" could be regarded as reasonable. In any event, such a conclusion would be within the Canadian tradition of deference to authority. Section I should be reluctantly applied, once there is a breach of section 7. but it is not precluded. There does appear to be a rather unusual shifting burden of proof in section 7 cases, which will make it difficult for the state to justify violations. First, the applicant must show a deprivation of an enumerated right in section 7. Second, the state, arguably, must show that this deprivation was in accordance with fundamental justice. Alternatively the applicant could be required to show that the deprivation was contrary to "fundamental justice". Finally, the state must justify the deprivation contrary to "fundamental justice", as a reasonable limitation under section I of the Charter. At COmmon law once a violation of natural justice or fairness has been proved it cannot be justified as reasonable. However. it can be held that the breach of natural justice or fairness produced no real miscarriage of justice so the court may deny a remedy.87b Furthermore, the result may simply be a second decision before the same tribunal. Of course, an appropriate remedy under section 24 for a violation of section 7 may be to order that the matter be re-heard in accordance with the principles of 25 "fundamental justice". action as well. However, there is the possibility of other remedial Thus there can be important strategic differences in pursuing section 7 as opposed to common law procedures. In most cases both avenues will be pursued in order to pick the best elements of constitutional and common law protections. C. Remedies One significant advantage of proceeding under section 7 of the Charter rather than common law, is that it opens up the expansive remedial provisions of the Charter. One of the traditional problems with procedural review at common law is that the issue gets sent back to the same decision maker to decide again, but in accordance with proper procedures. Thus a procedural victory is often short-lived. Although the same result could emerge from the Charter, the remedial possibilities are much greater. Section 24 grants a broad judicial discretion to fashion appropriate remedies. In the colourful case of R. v. Vermette,SS Quebec Premier Ren€ Levesque made comments in the National Assembly about testimony of a witness during a trial of an R.C.M.P. officer charged with wrong-doing. These comments were widely publicized. The result was that the trial was stayed because of the publicized comments. which in the circumstances amounted to a dismissal of the charge. On the facts of that case the court concluded that it would noW be impossible for the trial to be conducted in accordance with the principles of "fundamental .~ justice··. Another example of the potential breadth of section 24 is the possibility of getting injunctions against the Crown which is not immune 26 from the Charter. 89 The potential breadth of section 24 has been explored by many writers and their detailed analysis will not be repeated here. 90 There are two distinct parts to the section 24 remedial provision. They read as follows: 'Enforcement 24(1) Anyone whose rights or freedoms, as guaranteed by this Charter, have been infringed or denied may apply to a court of competent jurisdiction to obtain such remedy as the court considers appropriate and just in th~ circumstances. (2) Where, in proceedings under subsection (1), a court concludes that evidence was obtained in a manner that infringed or denied any rights or freedoms guaranteed by this Charter, the evidence shall be excluded if it is established that, having regard to all the circumstances, the admission of it in the proceedings would bring the administration of justice into disrepute. It is unlikelY that the exclusion of evidence pursuant to section 24(2) will be applied outside the criminal law context; so it may have no direct application to the general run of administrative boards. However, it has been successfullY argued that in some situations the exclusion of evidence could be an "appropriate remedy" within the meaning of section 24(1). This was the conclusion reached by the Saskatchewan Court of Appeal in R. v. Therens. 9l While this may be a rather devious way to escape the restrictions of section 24(2) in the criminal context, it makes more sense in respect to non-criminal administrative boards. There could be cases where the exclusion of evidence would be the only appropriate response to the Charter violations of a board. By doing this under section 24(1) it 27 eliminates the hurdle of showing that the administration of justice would be brought into disrepute. Section 52 of the Constitution Act, 1982 also offers new remedial options to deal with violations of procedural rights. Professor Garant suggests that procedural codes iri either statutes or regulations can noW be attacked directly if they do not measure up to the standards of "fundamental justice" enunciated in the Charter. 92 It is even possible that the narrow definition of law in Martineau v. Matsqui Institution (No. !l93 may now be used to further procedural rights because reasonable limits can only be imposed by laws. 94 Thus prison directives or policies may not qualify as a valid device for imposing reasonable limits on behalf of the state. The power of the courts to invalidate laws may not only cause courts to be more vigilant in assessing statutory codes of procedure, but also to be more active in implying procedures where the statute is silent. 95 Procedural guarantees will not have to be asserted by way of statutory interpretation as has been the case in the past. There are however some problems in applying the Charter remedies. Depending upon what remedies are sought it is not always clear which is the "court of competent jurisdiction" within the meaning of section 24(1). This problem arose in Re Seaway Trust and the Queen. 96 ·Although the Divisional Court was the proper forum under the Judicial Review Procedure Act 97 of Ontario, was it a court of competent jurisdiction for purposes of ., .:- remedies? The Ontario Court of Appeal concluded that it was not. It reached this conclusion in part because the trial process of an action was more appropriate to resolve factual matters such as the basis for . 28 reasonable limits, than the application process which Was used. The court also held that the damages remedy would be more appropriately pursued in the trial division. The Seaway Trust case is merely a manifestation of the larger dispute about what is meant by a "court of competent jurisdiction". One view is that the court only needs to be competent in respect to the subject matter and thus the effect of section 24(1) is to add a new remedial jurisdiction to all courts. 98 The contrary view is that a court is only competent within the meaning of section 24(1) if it would have jurisdiction over both the subject matter and the remedy, notwithstanding the Charter. 99 It is the latter more restrictive approach to remedial jurisdiction which has Won the day in the early Charter cases. 100 However, the issue is not settled and 80me commentators argue that even administrative boards should be able to grant Charter remedies. 10l Another possible limitation on Charter remedies is the application of the section 1 "reasonable limits" clause to the remedy sections as well as the express guarantees of rights. This is a case where the Professor Bender ~nalysis,102 disputed earlier in this paper, should be applied. Section 1 does not so clearly apply to section 24 as the more specific guarantees of rights elsewhere in the Charter. Furtherm~re, both branches of section 24 contain their own extensive limitations provisions and an application of the ··reasonable limits·· clause would be genuinely .. redundant. This is one of the many unsettled isues that will wind its way to the Supreme Court of Canada. 29 Even at this stage the Charter remedies would appear to be broader than those available at COmmon law for breach of fairness or natural justice. The prerogative writs themselves are discretionary and these, as well as appeal rights, should be considered separately from Charter remedies under sections 24 and 52.. Courts generally have failed to treat these three categories of remedies separately.l03 Even with the expansion of certiorari under Martineau {No. 2),104 there is still a large element of discretion in the granting of prerogative writs. The Charter holds out the potential for more creative remedies for the breach of fair procedures. This is an important practical reason to make a claim for breach of "fundamental justice" as well as the more traditional claims. V SUBSTANTIVE DUE PROCESS One of the most controversial early debates about the Charter is whether section 7 imports substantive or merely procedural due process. As indicated earlier the clear intent of the drafters was the latter. lOs Cases to date have gone both ways although the great majority have come down on the procedural side. among the legal academics. There has also been a split on this issue Morris Manning 106 and John Whyte 107 have argued in support of substantive due process while Patrice Carant 108 and A. Gold 109 have predicted a procedural application of "fundamental justice". Under a substantive due process approach the courts can examine the ., content of legislation to determine whether it meets the substantive standards of "fundamental justice" .110 basic legal process issue. This kind of analysis raises a Who should decide issues of substantive 30 fairness? A full blown substantive due process approach would require courts to limit not just the procedures by which government policies are implemented but the content of the policies themselves. Traditionally, the content and wisdom of government policy have been determined by the legislators and,it would be a striking departure to assign this bold substantive role to the courts. Of course courts have been involved in policy making in such areas as the distribution of powers but substantive due process would be a marked extension of the policy-making role. Adopting full blown substantive due process would be undesirable quite apart from the fact that it is unlikely. A. Arguments for a Substantive Approach John Whyte lll has made a strong argument in favour of a substantive due process approach to section 7 of the Charter. The case for a substantive due process analysis can be elucidated by a brief summary of Professor Whyte's arguments. First, a substantive interpretation of section 7 would enable the courts to assist the legislators in the allocation of burdens and resources in society. Second, the real purpose of the Charter is to protect minorities from majorities and this objective would be best served by a substantive due process analysis. Third, a substantive approach to "fundamental justice" would provide a more effective check on the growing host of administrative tribunals. ll2 Fourth, courts are already invited by the Charter to adopt a broad policy-making role which requires them to balance competing interests. Prime examples of this are the broad language r 31 ! [ I of sections 1 and 24 discussed in the previous section. Finally, a substantive interpretation would make section 7 a more effective residue of rights clause and would give real content to the other rights in the Charter. On a more technical level ,Whyte and Manning argue that section 7 is not as clearly procedural as SOme writers would suggest. I13 The "fair hearing" phrase in section 2(e) of the Bill of Rights does not appear in section 7. Thus Bill of Rights cases such as Duke v. Queen l14 and Curr v. The Queen l15 can be distinguished. Neither Whyte nor Manning see the deletion of property as fatal because of the potential expansive interpretation of "security of the person".ll6 They also see the deletion of the phrase "due process of law" as a positive rather than negative sign, as this phrase was narrowly construed under the Bill of Rights. Its deletion may signal a broader approach by the use of the more open-ended phrase "principles of fundamental justice". Both writers also reject the idea that the intention of the drafters to restrict section 7 to procedural matters will be controlling. B. This problem was discussed earlier. Arguments Against a Substantive Approach I am more skeptical both as to whether the courts will opt for a substantive due process approach, or indeed whether they should. This is not a fashionable view in legal or academic circles and such a view would be considered by some to be regressive and anti-court. I am not really opposed to courts; however, they, like most institutions, have limits of expertise. Canadians have traditionally preferred that the elected 32 legislators make policy decisions about substantive fairness within a procedural framework set by the courts. III The expertise of the courts is in designing the appropiate procedural structure and not in second guessing the legislators on government policy. lIS There are a number of problems in jumping on the band wagon of substantive due process. First, the imposition of legal decision-making On matters of substantive policy may produce a narrowing rather than broadening effect. It should be remembered that courts generally are a rather conservative institution and this was vividly illustrated by the American interpretation of substantive due process in the early 1900's as a way to champion freedom of contract at the expense of better wages and working conditions for employees. 119 Of course there are other occasions when the courts are more advanced in their thinking than the legislators; Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka 120 is a classic example. Canada's judges do not share the activist experiences or philosophies of their southern brethren121 and even if they did decide to lead public opinion, the legislators have the final word via section 33 of the Charter. 122 In Canada the language issue may provide the testing ground for the comparative policy-making roles of courts and legislators. Second, a substantive approach to "fundamental justice" would unduly politicize the· courts and thus reduce their credibility. While this politicizing of judges will happen to some extent under other sections of the Charter, such as sections land 24, there is a difference of degree. As far as the exercise of the broad remedial discretion of section 24, the courts have long had power to shape new remedies at least at the superior 33 court level. While the courts are involved in balancing competing policies under the section 1 "reasonable limits" clause, this is only done after a violation of a Charter right has been established. It is true, however, that certain cases prior to the Charter have also politicized the courts. 123 Nonetheless, mandating that courts assess the merits of legislation against the ill defined standards of ·'fundamental justice" would take courts outside their usual terrain and into direct conflict with legislators on a regular basis. Third, courts as an institution are not well equipped to make decisions about the substantive fairness of legislation. Such a new role would require different considerations in the selection of judges, the training of lawyers, the expansion of extrinsic evidence and the concept of judicial notice. Many of these changes will come about as a result of the Charter but once again it is a question of degree. If the court structure is radically altered to accomodate this kind of decision-making will a more traditional role be sacrificed? Fourth, it is important that lawyers balance a healthy optimism and realism in assessing the utility of the Charter. Are courts better able to deal with basic issues such as human dignity and the right to a job or are they more inclined to emphasize classic legal rights such as free speech, rights to counsel and freedom of assembly?124 Using freedom of expression as example the courts may shelter pornographers and hate propagandists in the name of free expression while the legislators are more concerned to promote human dignity by the passing of laws against pornography and hate propagan~a. While it would be naive to suggest that the legislative 34 process is particulatly accessible to the average person, it is than the courts. ~ore so Women's lobbies were obviously more successful in affecting the process of Charter1naking than they were in influencing the result in Lavell. 125 Courts are not particularly accessible and that is relevant to the kind of power that should be assigned to them under the . Charter. Fifth, making extravagant claims for section 7 could actually reduce the practical impact of the Charter. If the courts pursue too activist a stance either the federal government or individual provinces can over-ride the result by using section 33. Frequent application of "reasonable limits" under section 1 could be the refuge of courts which want to avoid getting involved in difficult value choices about the fairness of particular legislation. It is also conceivable that a substantive interpretation of section 7 will make judges reluctant to conclude that there has been a violation of the principles of "fundamental justice". This would be the converse of the development of fairness where the concept is broadly applied but the content. There are many other ways in which judges can avoid deciding a case if they so desire. Canadian courts are likely to resolve a dispute on the basis of the distribution of powers rather than the Charter where that is possible.1 26 In the United States the courts have devised a wide range of avoidance techniques. Limiting standing, doctrines of ripeness or mootness and the requirement that other remedies be exhausted are but a few examples. Thus it is important to know whether the judges themselves are 3S comfortable with evaluating laws on a substantive basis, for if they are not they will find clever means by which to avoid the task. Sixth, many of the benefits of judicial review sought by the supporters of a substantive approach can be achieved by less drastic means. As will be discussed in the next section of this paper, a procedural interpretation of section 7 can still produce a significant extension of fairness as it presently exists. Even some of the substantive due process cases which will be examined could have been resolved in other ways. Furthermore, there are other sections of the Charter which can be useful. Sections 11, 12 and 15 are obvious examples. Much the same results can be achieved within more traditional legal confines. Seventh, a substantive interpretation of section 7 would further accentuate the homogenizing impact of the Charter. It has been recognized by some commentators that one of the results of the Charter is a leveling of differences between provincial laws and an indirect strengthening of the federal position. 127 In the United States conCern has been expressed that one of the effects of the Fourteenth Amendment was to reduce the power of the states. 128 It is possible that substantive due process could be applied disproportionately to provincial laws, although the claims to a federal bias in Canadian courts have been exaggerated. 129 C. The Caselaw A substantive approach to due process was rejected under the Bill of Rights as discussed in an earlier section of this paper. 130. This has also r 36 been the stance adopt~d in most post-Charter cases. There have, however, been a few notable exceptions the most significant of which comes from the British Columbia Court oE Appeal and has been appealed to the Supreme Court of Canada. This leading case is Ref. Re Section 94(2) of the Motor Vehicle Act. 131 The challenged section provides that anyone who drives a motor vehicle while prohibited or while his or her licence is suspended is liable to a fine and no less than seven days imprisonment for a first offence. Subsection (2) makes it clear that this is an absolute liability offence and guilt could be established by proof of driving, "whether or not the defendant knew of the prohibition or suspension". The provision was invalidated as breaching the principles of "fundamental justice" in section 7 of the Charter. In reaching this conclusion the court emphasized that not all absolute liability offences are offensive and the genuine "public welfare" offences discussed by Dickson J. (as he then was) in!:. v. City of Sault Ste. Marie 132 would normally survive. Particular emphasis was placed on the minimum jail sentence in Ref. Re Motor Vehicle Act and perhaps it was this mandatory sentence in combination with absolute liability for a less serious offence, that offended the court. 133 The fate of strict as opposed to absolute liability offences has not yet been decided. However, the early judicial reasoning suggests that such offences are likely to survive a Charter attack whether under section 7 or another section. 134 There is also Privy Council authority for the proposition that "fundamental justice" when applied to strict liability offences has only a procedural impact. 135 r I· 37 However, the critical aspect of Ref. Re Hotor Vehicle Act is not the application of section 7 to those facts, which might be construed as a procedural impact, but rather its clear statement of the need for courts to take a substantive approach to section 7 of the Charter. Upon this view of the matter the effect of s. 7 is to enshrine in the Constitution the principles of natural justice. That is certainly one view of the matter. It does not, however, give any effect to s. 52 of the Constitution Act, 1982 which can be viewed as effecting a fundamental change in the role of the courts. The Bill of Rights allowed the courts to test the content of federal legislation, but because the Bill was merely a statute, its effectiveness was hampered by the equally persuasive "presumption of validity" of federal legislation. The Constitution Act, 1982 in our opinion, has added a new dimension to the role of the courts; the courts have been given constitutional jurisdiction to look at not only the vires of the legislation and whether the procedural safeguards required by natural justice are present but to go further and consider the content of the legislation. 136 Other Criminal Code provisions have been attacked on the basis of the above reasoning that they remove the need for the Crown to prove the full mens rea of the offence. One of the most noteworthy examples of such application is R. v. Red Hot Video Ltd. 13 7' This case involved the possession of obscene video tapes for distribution contrary to section 159 of the Code. Although the argument that the limits imposed by the section were too vague to constitute a "reasonable limit" under section I of the Charter failed, the court held that there was a violation that could not be saved by section 1. The crux of the violation was that the defendant could not raise as a defence the fact that he did not know the videos were obscene. Putting it another way, the Crown did not have to prove a vital part of the mens rea for the offence. issue. l38 Cases have gone both ways on this 38 A similar issue arose in the Cmtario Court of Appeal but the court evaded the hard question of whether section 7 imported substantive due process. The impugned provision of the Code was section 145 prohibiting intercourse with a female person under fourteen years. It was argued in R. v. Stevens 139 that removing the defence of mistake as to age violated the principles of "fundamental justice". In a rather oracular response the court relied heavily On the existence of similar provisions in other free and democratic societies and decided the case more on the basis of section 1 than on section 7. Assuming, without in any way deciding the question, that s. 7 of the Charter permits judicial review of the substantive content of legislation, we are all of the view that, in so far as this case is concerned, s. 7 does not have the effect of invalidating s. 146(1) of the Criminal Code and preventing Parliament from creating the crime of having sexual intercourse with a girl under 14 years of age excluding mistake as to the age of the girl as a defence therefrom. The appeal is, accordingly, dismissed. 140 Even in the criminal domain the arguments for substantive due process have met little success. this respect. Ref. Re Motor Vehicle Act is an aberration in Outside the criminal sphere the unusual case of The Queen v. Larry Jones 141 is a rare example of a successful application. This case concerned the invalidat.ion of the compulsory attendance provision under the provincial education statute. The reasoning of the court was not very clear and the ruling in respect to section 7 was further clouded by a claim that the section violates freedom of religion. Substantive due process has generally not fared well in the post Charter cases. r 39 D. Concluding Thoughts It would be unwise in the early stages of Charter development to embracefully any theory of section 7 be it substantive or procedural. There are many variants of either a substantive or procedural model and it is even possible that the standards of justification under section 1 will vary depending upon the context in which section 7 is applied. Furthermore, the degree of substantive review could vary widely depending upon the question that the court asks. A very different response might be elicited by asking whether there is a rational basis for the law, whether the law fairly allocates burdens or whether the law is desirable. The latter question would produce the most extensive form of review. It is false to assume that there is a clear line between substance and procedure as they are increasingly being seen as different points on a single continuum. 142 There have been arguments that the basic right to property should be seen largely as a process right rather than a substantive one. 143 Thus much can be achieved with a creative procedural application of section 7. It is best to apply the section on a case by case basis and keep alive the possibility of a substantive application in certain fundamntal areas such as criminal law. This is at least an area where the courts have considerable experience. This cautious case by case approach was advocated by the late Chief Justice Laskin in Morgentaler v. The Queen.144 I am not, however, prepared to say, in this early period of the elaboration of the impact of the Canadian Bill of Rights upon federal legislation, that the prescriptions of s. l(a) must be ridigly confined to procedural matters. There is often an interaction of means and ends, and it may be that there can be a 40 proper invocation of due process of law in respect of federal legislation as improperly abridging a person's right to life, liberty, security and enjoyment of property. Such a reservation is not, however called for in the present case. This advice is equally compelling for the early development of the Charter. Undoubtedly, substantive due process would make life more interesting for lawyers and judges and might help to produce a just result in a particular case. Nonetheless, until it can be demonstrated that it would produce better protection for the rights of Canadians and that the costs to the collective interest would not be too great, it is self-indulgent of lawyers to promote a substantive approach to section 7 as an across the board approach. In an age of general uncertainty about basic values there is much to be said for testing these values in the broader population rather than abdicating responsibility to the judges. VI THE PROCEDURAL IMPACT OF SECTION 7 To conclude that section 7 has a procedural rather than substantive impact is not to dismiss its significance. There are at least two distinct ways in which section 7 of the Charter can expand the concept of fairness as evolved by the common law. One way is to extend the range of interests that are protected by fair procedures and the other is to produce a third level of procedural content which is more expansive than either natural justice or fairness. The majority of the cases to date have arisen in the criminal context but the extradition cases and others that will be discussed later in this paper confirm a potentially broader reach to the section. 41 One of the early cases to assert/strenuously a procedural interpretation of section 7 was R. v. Potma. 145 This case conceraed the routine disposal of breathalyzer tests which made it impossible for the defendant to attack the results of the tests. The response of the court was clear. The submission that the inability to conduct an independent test of the ampoules amounts to a denial of the right to make full answer and defence and hence to the denial of a fair trial was fully canvassed in the Duke case, supra. The considerations applicable to this issue are no different now than they were before the Charter. The concepts of "fundamental justice" and "fair hearing" relevant here are the .same whether considered under ss. 7 and ll(d) of the Charter, under. s. 2(e) and (f) of the Bill of Rights, or under the COmmon law. In so far as this case is concerned, while the Charter accords recognition to the well-established rights asserted by the appellant, it effects no change in the law respecting those rights. Sections 7 and ll(d) cannot be construed to operate so as to reverse the decision reached in the like circumstances of Duke that non-production of evidence of this kind does-not infringe the right to a fair trial in accordance with fundamental justice. This is not to suggest that "the principles of fundamental justice" now recognized by the Charter of Rights and Freedoms are immutable. "Fundamental justice", like "natural justice" or "fair play", is a compendious expression intended to guarantee the basic right of citizens in a free and democratic society to a fair procedure. The principles or standards of fairness essential to the attainment of fundamental justice are in no sense static, and will continue as they have in the past to evolve and develop i" response to society's changing perception of what is arbitrary, unfair or unjust. 146 The emphasis on the flexibility of "fundamental justice" and its potential for expansion is significant. This potential for growth is well exemplified in the cases involving parole revocation. Prior to the Charter there was no right to a hearing upon parole revocation because it was L r 42 considered a privilege rather than a right. 147 There was no question in Re Caddedu and the Queen 148 that the rules of the game had been changed by the Charter. The Crown's submission was that ss. 7 and 9 do not have any effect where an individual is lawfully detained. By this, I understand, is meant lawfully detained according to the common law or positive legislation other than the Constitution of Canada. If the Constitution were included within the ambit of the Crown's submission, the proposition it stands for would be tautologous and unhelpful. I do not think I can accept the Crown's submission. The wording of these Charter rights must be given their plain and natural meaning which contains no such restriction. They prohibit certain government action that does not accord with the principles of fundamental justice or are arbitrary. The actions may be authorized by the common law or by federal or provincial legislation, but if the actions do not accord with the principles of fundamental justice or are arbitrary, the law authorizing them is, to that extent, void and of no effect (Constitution Act, 1982, s. 52). Alternatively, it may be that the Charter rights dictate standards to which the common law and federal or provincial legislation do not address themselves. In such a case, the Charter rights fill the lacuna. Considering that the rights protected by s. 7 are the most important of all those enumerated in the Charter, that deprivation of those rights has the most severe consequences upon an individual, and that the Charter establishes a constitutionally mandated enclave for protection of rights, into which government intrudes at its peril, I am of the view that the applicant could not be lawfully deprived of his liberty without being given the opportunity for an in-person hearing before his parole was revoked. It was conceded, by Mr. Cole, that there might be circumstances in which parole could be revoked without a hearing, but the Crown, for its part did not suggest this was such an instance. Although nothing in the common law or in federal or provincial legislation required the board to grant a hearing - or, for that matter, forbade the board to do so - I am of the opinion that the Charter dictates that such an opportunity be given. The board, having revoked the applicant's parole without affording him r 43 the opportunity for a hearing, therefore exceeded any jurisdiction it could possess. That being the case, I need not consider s. 9 of the Charter. 149 It is an interesting to note that there appears to be an increasing willingness on the part of lower court judges to find a violation of section 7 of the Charter. This observation is based upon a reading of the large number of section 7 cases reproduced in the Charter of Rights Digest ·in which the number of cases where the courts found a violation increased with each succeeding· volume. superior courts. This same trend is not repeated in the When all the cases are considered very little pattern emerges but when only superior court decisions are taken into account Some trends become more apparent. One important trend is the willingness of the courts to treat section 7 differently in varying contexts. In this respect it echoes the common law evolution of fairness discussed earlier. A. Expanding the Content of Fairness? Section 7 can be used to attack directly procedures as set out in statutes or ~egulations procedures. lSO or for that matter the failure to articulate such However, the precise content of the principles of "fundamental justice" are far from clear. One theory is that section 7 is the umbrella provision which includes not only the procedural rights implicit in the more specific provisions of sections 8-14 but also any residual rights necessary to promote "fundamental justice" in the broad sense. lSI 1. Parole One of the early groups to beneficit from the Charter has been parolees. In the seminal case of Re Caddedu and The Queen 152 the court r 44 required that the parolee be granted an in person hearing before his parole could be revoked. This application is surprising not just in the context of the previous parole law but also in the context of the general treatment of prisoners by Canadian courts. Generally Canadian courts have been willing to defer to both prison and parole authorities on matters related to the liberty of prisoners. It may be that the Charter will usher in a neW approach to the treatment of Canadian prisoners l53 but such a sweeping conclusion is premature. Charter cases have not changed the status of the inmate within the institution and that will be the real test of section 7. Nonetheless, Re Caddedu was a significant step forward. In a follow-up decision the holding of parole hearings in camera was also found to be a violation of section 7. 154 The courts have even limited the conditions under which a parolee can waive his rights to a hearing. When the Earole Board relies upon a waiver of a hearing it must establish that the parolee's consent Was fully informed. 155 In R. v. Swan 156 it was held that a post-revocation hearing attracted full scale natural justice and not just fairness because the liberty of the person is at stake. Even where no post-revocation hearing is mandated by the relevant parole statute, once it is granted it must be carried out in accordance with the principles' of "fundamental justice". Martens v. A.G. of British Columbia l57 found that a ten minute discussion between the board and the parole officer in the absence of the parolee Was a violation of section 7. The exclusion of the parolee throughout the board hearing has, not surprisingly, also been found to violate the fair hearing requirement. 15S 45 Finally where the deciding vote in a post-suspension hearing was cast by a board member not present at the hearing this was also found to violate the Charter. 159 Thus section 7 has been actively used not only to require hearings upon parole revocation but also to shape the content of these hearings. The courts have not been so bullish in applying the provision in other ·contexts. It is not clear why parolees have received special treatment or whether the benefits granted will be affirmed in the Supreme Court of Canada. 2. Extradition and Deportation Section 7 of the Charter has not fared so well in extradition hearings. These cases make it clear that the courts will apply section 7 outside the criminal context. The issue in controversy was the statutory denial of rights'to cross-examine under the Extradition Act. 160 The statutory framework gave the foreign country the option to tender affidavits which would not be subject to cross examination_ Attack on the relevant provisions were mounted on the basis of both "fundamental justice" in section 7 and also on the guarantee of a "fair hearing" in section ll(d) of the Charter. There Was a flurry of cases on this issue and some conflicting decisions in the lower courts as to whether there was a violation of the Charter. 161 However, there was no such ambivalence on the issue in the superior courts. Three separate rulings in the Ontario High Court held that either there was no violation of section 7 or alternatively, it was saved by section I as a reasonable limit. 162 The lead of the Ontario r , 46 courts has been followed in other provinces as well to uphold current practices under the Extradition Act. l63 The predominant reasoning on this issue was that expressed in Re U.S.A. and Yue l64 and similar reasoning was adopted in Re Schmidt and the Queen et al. 165 I conclude that the omission of the documentary evidence, not subject to cross-examination, is requird by treaty and permitted by statute. I conclude as well that reliance on such evidence, even as the only evidence, is not contrary to the principoles of fundamental justice and does not violate s. 7 of the Charter. Even if I am wrong and the reliance on evidence not subject to cross-examination is a violation of s. 7, it is my view that the procedures in the treaty and the Act are reasonable limits prescribed by law as can be demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society within the meaning of s. 1 of the Charter. That the limits are reasonable is apparent when the nature and purpose of extradition is considered, and regard is had to the guarantees contained in the treaty and the Act. The fact that the extradition hearing does not address the issue of guilt or innocence is also to be considered. A limit on one's rights may be reasonable where no finding of guilt may be made, but not reasonable if such finding can be made. The limits must also be ones that can be demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society. That test may be made by measuring the limit against the general standards of Canada. But the test need not be restricted to a consideration of Canadian standards. Assistance may be found in an examination of standards and judicial pronouncements in other free and democratic societies. This is particularly so when the matter in issue is one that has international implications or involves relationships between friendly nations. The rights of fugitives and the law relating to extradition of offenders are clearly matters which suggest an examination of the law of the state with which Canada has a treaty - the other lane of the two"Way street. 166 • 47 Arguments about the need to honour Canada's international obligations are interesting. It could be argued that Canada is in a position of conflicting international obligations. Under articles 6 and 9 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, to which Canada is a signatory, there are some guarantees of procedural justice. 6. Every human being has the inherent right to life. right shall be protected by law. No one shall be arbitrarily deprived of his life. This ... 9. Everyone has the right to liberty and security of person. No one shall be subjected to arbitrary arrest or detention. No One shall be deprived of his liberty except on such grounds and in accordance with such procedures as are established by law. Any conflict, of course, disappears if the extradition procedures executed in accordance with international treaties do not violate the principles of fundamental justice. If, on the other hand, a violation is found and only saved by section 1 of the Charter, then the position is not quite so clear. These arguments may not make much difference in a domestic court but if international treaties are raised to justify extradition practices, it is only fair to consider other long-term international obligations. Another aspect of the reasoning in the extradition cases is that these proceedings involve no determination of guilt or innocence. That really indicates little more than that they are not criminal proceedings. In the common law evolution of fairness the severity of the consequences is an important factor. Frequently the consequences of extradition will be great :and this emphasizes the need for fair procedures. Perhaps the lesson of r the extradition cases is that the principles of "fundamental justice" can be more easily met in a non-criminal proceeding. this in other non-criminal hearings as well. 167 There is some evidence of Disciplinary hearings which have an element of guilt determination may be subject to a closer section 7 scrutiny.l68 The varfable content of section 7 Was emphasized in Re U.S.A. and Smith: The principles of fundamental justice are not new concepts nor are they fixed and immutable. They form an integral part of our judicial process and do not arise from the Charter. Their application may vary to meet the particular circumstances of a specific situation. 169 3. Criminal Proceedings There has been a great flood of criminal cases in which section 7 of the Charter was raised. Indeed, there have been more cases on seetion 7 than any other legal right or for that matter than any other Charter right. To properly analyze all these cases properly would be a paper in itself and, is thus beyond the scope of this study. For purposes of this paper I have restricted my comments to superior court decisions and have been selective even with these rulings. Of course, many of the lower court rulings are on appeal to higher courts so any generalizations must be tentative. Most commentaries will be speculative until .the Supreme Court of Canada provides some guiding caselaw. Even after -such rulings there will be some flux in the state of the relevant law. shall consider the cases under two headings. - I L For convenience I .. P" 49 a. Rights Infringed The early cases do not support the thesis suggested in the previous section of this paper that violations of section 7 are more likely to be found in criminal proceedings. The number of cases where no violation Was found far exceed those where the courts found a violation. This statistic is undoubtedly affected by the tendency of defence counsel to raise section ·7 arguments even where there is very little chance of success. Nonetheless, there have been some victories for section 7 in the criminal sphere. One successful application was in the surprising substantive application of section 7 to strike down an absolute liability offence in Re Motor Vehicle Act. 170 As discussed in an earlier section, this approach has been followed in Bome cases but more frequently rejected. Another successful application ocurred in ~ v. Vermette I7l where proceedings were stayed because a trial in accordance with "fundamental justice" was found to be impossible. There has also been a successful application of section 7 to limit prosecutorial discretion and in particular the power of the Attorney-General to prefer indictments directly. R. v. Rosamund1 72 was a case involving three accused where the preferral of indictments and scheduling of preliminaries put one accused at an advantage over the other two. The court held that this amounted to a violation of the Charter in this case but emphasized that the accused need not receive identical treatment in every case. 173 50 b. Rights Not Infringed On the issue of prosecutorlal discretion the majority of cases have found no violation of section 7. Re Balderstone et al and The Queen 174 was one of the early cases to conclude that the power to prefer indictments was expressly granted by section 507 of the Criminal Code and there was no real evidence that such a power violated "fundamental justice". In R. v. Stolar 175 the court affirmed that there was no right to a preliminary inquiry, Even though one accused had the benefit of a preliminary inquiry while the other did not, the "advantage" analysis of Rosamund was not applied. NOr have arguments that section 507 produces unequal treatment between provinces met with any success. 176 Another caSe concerning the Attorney General's range of power is v. Musitano 177 which concerned section 498 of the Criminal Code. ~ This provision permits the Attorney General to mandate trial by judge and jury in spite of the accused's election of trial by judge alone. As in Balderstone the court emphasized that the powers were clearly granted under the ~ and there was no apparent breach of section 7. R. v. Piraino 178 raised another issue in the pre-trial process - that of jury selection. The accused challenged section 563 of the Criminal Code which grants the Crown an advantage in jury selection. This claim was rejected on the basis that the Charter only guaranteed a fair trial at the end of the day and not that each segment be completely even-handed. The principles of "fundamental justice" did not mandate the selection of the jury on a basis of equality with the Crown. r >1 The right of the accused to confront the witnesses against him was raised in R. v. Clarke and Norwood. 179 Although the accused had the chance to cross-examine the witness at the preliminary hearing, he was not informed until two weeks before the trial that the witness would not be available at the trial. The judge concluded that section 7 did not create a right to confront a witness personally so he did not exclude the evidence given at the preliminary hearing. However, he was willing to adjourn the trial so the witness in issue could be present. In R. v. Potma lSO the accused argued that he had been denied his right to make full answer and defence by the routine destruction of breath samples after the police conducted their test. making an independent assessment. This prevented him from As indicated at the beginning of this section the court responded by declaring that section 7 was procedural in nature and that there was no violation on these facts. Another example of tests for alcohol in the blood was R. v. Carter. lSI In this case a blood sample was given at the hospital and only later acquired and used by the police as evidence of drunk driving. The court held that this practice did not violate section 7 of the Charter and cited with approval the following statement about the interaction of the Charter and criminal law • ••• the Charter does not intend a transformation of our legal system or the paralysis of law enforcement. IS2 A third case involving testing for blood levels is ~ v. Strayer. IS3 The accused only agreed to a breathalyzer test on the condition that he be allowed to have a blood test done also. The police, however, put the accused in a cell to sober up as is their normal practice and by the time . 52 of his release a blood test would have,been of no value. In finding no violation of section 7 the court concluded that the police were acting in the public interest by detaining the accused in his cell. A similar crime control analysis has been used to uphold fingerprinting as consistent with "fundamental justice".184 4. Concluding Thoughts To date the Charter has not produced a significant expansion of the content of fair procedures. Except for the gains by parolees there has been little alteration of the status quo. This is particularly so in the realm of criminal law where the most impact might be expected. The wide array of more specific rights applicable to the criminal process may,' in part, explain the courts' reluctance to apply the more general language of section 7. But that is not the whole story. It does not appear that courts have accpeted the notion that "fundamental justice" is a third category of procedural rights which is superior in content to either natural justice or fairness. The predominant view is that section 7 merely constitutionalizes the procedural rights that existed prior to the Charter. Section 7, like natural justice or fairness, is seen as having a variable content depending upon the context in which it is applied. A cataloguing of the minimum content of "fundamental justice" has been avoided. 18S Finally the supremacy of Parliament is far from dead as the courts are still reluctant to strike down the clearly expressed intent of the legislators. This is evident in the clashes between particular provisions 53 of the Criminal Code and the broad language of section 7. This same deference is demonstrated in respect to the Extradition Act. There will be no over-night revolution in the thinking of judges just because the Charter has arrived on the Canadian scene. 186 Thus the expansion of procedural content under section 7 will be a slow process marked by as many retreats as advances. B. Newly Protected Interests? In one significant respect the range of interests protected by section 7 of the Charter would appear to be narrower than those which attract fair procedures at COmmon law; that is the deletion of property as one of the protected interests. In order to attract the principles of "fundamental justice" the interests in issue must be related to "life, liberty or security of the person". The omission of property is one of the reasons why the doctrines of natural justice and fairness are still relevant in the post-Charter world. There are, however, Some distinct advantages to the new language used in section 7 of the Charter. At present it is unencumbered by the baggage of caselaw and can escape the narrow and traditional definitions of property.187 Both "liberty" and "security of the person" are broad concepts which could be interpreted more broadly than the concept of property. Whyte has argued that to make the Charter meaningful these phrases must be read broadly enough to encompass economic rights such as the right to a livelihood which could be affected by the removal of a taxi licence, the cancellation of a franchise or deletion from the welfare • 54 rolls .188 Other writers have argued that "security of the person" could lead to claims to social assistance, socialized medicine or public housing. 189 However, these same authors conclude that the most the courts are likely to offer is a hearing at the allocation and removal stages in matters of government largesse. 190 The guar,!ntees of "life, liberty and security of the person" are stated in positive language and there is an argument that they require affirmative action on the part of the government and not just abstinence. For example real "security of the person" could require that the government provide a minimum wage to all Canadians. In the particular area of sexual assaults, it has been argued that section 7 mandates the provision of proper street lighting and proper rape crisis centers to promote the security of women in Canadian society.191 These arguments are buttressed by the need for affirmative action to promote true equality pursuant to section 15 of the Charter which comes into effect on April 1, 1985. There is little in the early caselaw to support the thesis that ther will be an expansion of the interests thst require fair procedures at either the allocation or removal stage. Arguments for affirmative rights have not been successful in the courts. R. v. Fisherman's Wharf Ltd. 192 is one of the early cases which takes an adventurous stance. This case reads property interests back into the phrase "security of the person". This appears to contradict the intention of tne drafters directly and has not attracted much fOllowing. Another interesting post-Charter case is Elliott v. Director of Social Services (Winnipeg)193 where Matas J.A. granted leave on the issue of 55 whether social assistance ben'efits haq been cut off in accordance with the principles of "fundamental justice". Although Hatas J.A. thought there was an arguable issue his colleague Hall J.A. summarily dismissed the argument based upon section 7, when the case was tried on the merits. l94 The latter judge had also construed broadly the power of the social assistance agents in an earlier case and was thus consistent ,in his views. 19S Thus the early activity in the sphere of social assistance offers little optimism for an adventurous extension of section 7. In another case there Was a request for funds to finance experts in a utility rate hearing. section 7. This might be classified as an affirmative use of This claim was denied in Manitoba Society of Seniors Inc. v. Greater Winnipeg Gas. l96 Attempts to extend the benefits of section 7 to the other end of the age scale have been equally ineffective. Section 7 was held to afford a child little in the way of new rights in a child apprehension setting. l97 A substantive due process analysis has led to the recognition of privacy rights in the family setting in the United States but such claims are unlikely to succeed in Canada. While the early cases offer little hope that the range of protected interests will be expanded, it is really too early to make any solid prediction. The potential is there in the language of section 7 and what Canadian courts will do with it only time will tell. It is safe to say that they will be slow to engage in the positive creation of rights that would mandate the expenditure of public funds. seen as a legislative role. This has traditionally been 56 VII OTHER PROVISIONS RELEVANT TO FAIRNESS AIl the legal rights have some relevance to section 7 because "fundamental justice" is seen as a concept that embraces the more specific legal rights.. Thus the guarantee of "reasonable search" in section 8 was used in tandem with section 7 to invalidate writs of assistance under the Narcotic Control Act. 198 This was the result in R. v. Carriere. 199 .Similarly an arbitrary detention contrary to section 9 of the Charter could also be viewed as a deprivation of liberty under section 7. Failure to give the reasons for arrest or the right to counsel under section 10 can also constitute a breach of "fundamental justice".200 It is easy to see how actions which are cruel and unusual within the meaning of section 12 could also be in breach of section 7. In a similar vein both sections 13 and 14 are not on their face restricted to criminal hearings but are stated as a component of a fair hearing in any setting. The reach of section 13 in respect to self-incrimination is quite important because, as will be discussed in a moment, it is not clear that section ll(c) applies to non-criminal proceedings. Section 11 rights are the ones that are most frequently used in conjunction with section 7. The rights in section 11 are only triggered when a person has been charged with an "offence" and they are thus arguably restricted to the criminal process. Breach of professional discipline within the context of a law society has been held not to constitute an offence. 201 However, law societies have been found to make law and are thus not generally immune from the Charter. 202 Section 11(c) on the non-compellability of the accused is of no assistance to lawyers who have 57 been charged with misconduct. 203 However, section 13 has been held to apply to professional discipline hearings. 204 The issue of how section ll(c) should be interpreted is on appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada. 205 The relevant portions of sections 11 and 13 read as follows: 11. Any person charged with an offence has the right '" (c) not to be compelled to be a witness in proceedings against that person in respect of the offence; (d) to be presumed innocent until proven guilty according to law in a fair and public hearing by an independent and impartial tribunal; 13. A witness who testifies in any proceedings has the right not to have any incriminating evidence so given used to incriminate that witness in any other proceedings, except in a prosecution for perjury or for the giving of contradictory evidence. Section ll(d) is the most frequent companion of section 7 and both sections were usually raised in the extradition cases discussed earlier. Even claims to substantive due process have been buttressed by a section ll(d) argument, albeit unsuccessfully to date. 206 There are really two relevant components to section ll(d) - the guarantee of a "fair and public hearing" before an "independent and impartial tribunal". Thus it resembles the classic statement of the two branches of natural justice. In some of the early cases there has arisen an alleged conflict between a "fair" and a "public" hearing. So far the freedom of the press appears to have prevailed in these arguments. 207 The issue of the independence and impartiality of judges has also arisen in R. v. Valente (No. 2).208 Ontario's Court of Appeal ruled that neither the appointment, tenure nor payment of provincial judges would lead the reasonable person to apprehend bias. Canada. This case has been appealed to the Supreme Court of An interesting question that will not be answered by this case is 58 whether different standards of impartiality and independence apply to boards as opposed to courts. Finally, the equality guarantees of section 15 will be an important ally of section 7 when they come into play in 1985. In the United States, equality and due process have been closely linked but that can be partly explained by the fact that they both arise out of the Fourteenth . Amendment. Significance may be attached to the existence of two discreet sections in the Canadian Charter. Certainly equality rights need not be derived from due process but equality may still be an important component of "fundamental jus!;ice". Equality has not been seen as a vital component of "fundamental justice" in the early Charter cases. Unequal applications of the Attorneys General's powers in different provinces have been upheld,209 Section 688 of the Criminal Code was challenged in R. v. Gustavson 210 as breaching equality and therefore "fundamental justice". This claim was rejected on the basis that the dangerous offender provisions were merely a special category of sentencing where each person must be handled on an individual basis. There was no direct substantive due process attack on the dangerous offender provision in Gustavson. However, such an attack on the provisions of the Indian Act 21l which make it an offence to be intoxicated on a reserve won at trial but lost on appeal. 2l2 VII CONCLUSION There have been very few references in this paper to American cases or other comparative jurisprudence. Such comparisons are often relevant and 59 useful but I think that too much has been made of them in the speculations about the Charter. e~rly The power of the CanadIan judiciary has historically been quite different from its counterpart in the United States. Canada's judges do not have an activist tradition and they bring a different philosophical orientation to their task. 213 Predictions about the Charter should be grounded in the Canadian . experience and tradition. This point is clearly stated by Madame Justice Veit. It seems to me in assessing the value of the American precedents ••• that the Constitution Act, 1982 is very much the fruit of Canadian political maturity that this is a tree which has grown in our own back yard, not a plastic tree, in my view that we bought in a store and put in our yard. It seems to me that we have to consider the roots from which this tree has grown up and that involves the Canadian and the Anglo-Canadian jurisprudence surrounding the words that eventually Were chosen to be used in the charter. 214 The above is not intended to diminish the importance of looking to other countries for guidance on how to interpret the Charter. Nor is it aimed at devaluing the wealth of American experience with the Bill of Rights. Indeed, it is significant that the remark was in the context of the exclusion of evidence which has not had a happy history in the United States. Following Madame Justice Veit's dictum too closely would produce a perpetuation of the status quo. However, before applying the experiences of other countries, Canadian judges should be well informed on their own roots. • •• the Charter was not enacted in a vacuum and the rights set out therein must be interpreted rationally having regard to the then existing laws ••• 215 60 In the realm of "fundamental justice" ~here evolution of fairness from natural justice. Charter~aking is much to learn in the Furthermore, the nature of the process, the limitations of the Charter and the restrictions of Canadian legal culture are all instructive. Although the pattern of early cases is far from clear, they do give some hints about the shape of fairness after the Charter. Trying to predict what judges will do with the concept of "fundamental justice" is a specific example of the broader problem of whether judges are restricted by words. Does it really matter whether the phrase is "fundamental justice", "natural justice" or "fairness"? it does not. In many respects The problem of deciding what content to give to the broad language of section 7 is really a question of values rather than words. How much money are Canadians willing to spend in designing and executing fair procedures? Traditionally, considerable money has been spent on criminal trials and this is increasingly the case with non-criminal tribunals. Spending money on fair procedures takes it away from some other projects and that is the heart of the value choice. One clear effect of section 7 of the Charter has been to give a constitutional dimension to the process value. Whether this will affect the choices made by legislators and judges remains to be seen. I would hope that the scales will ultimately be tipped more heavily in favour of due process but not to the exclusion of other values. That the rights in issue are largely procedural does not concern me because the line between substance and procedure is at . best fuzzy and at worst arbitrary. My hope is that competing values will 61 be clearly articulated and the nature/of the choices not obscured by labels and precedent. l 62 FOOTNOTES * The author acknowledges the research assistance of Jud Levinson, a Dalhousie law student who provided research on the section 7 Charter cases. 1. Part I of Constitution Act, 1982 [enacted by Canada Act, 1982 (U.K.) c. 11 as Schedule B). Hereafter referred to as the Charter. 2. The Charter cases have dwarfed other constitutional law litigation. In the 1983 D.L.R.'s (vols. 138-147) there were 144 constitutional cases - 7 were separation of powers issues, 45 involved distribution of powers, in the sections 91 and 92 sense, and 102 cases involved the Charter. J. MacPherson, "The First Two Years (Almost) of Charter Litigation", Paper presented at the Mid Western Meeting of the Sask. Branch C.B.A., Regina, Saskatchewan, February 4, 1984. 3. Operation Dismantle Inc. et al v. Canada, A.G. of Canada et al (1984), 49 N.R. 363 (F.C.A.). Now on appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada. 4. !:.. v. Cook (1983), 4 C.C.C. (3d) 419 (N.S.S.C. - App. Div.), at 435. 5. R.A. Samek, "Untrenching Fundamental Rights" (1982), 27 McGill L.J. 755, argues that the Charter was not intended to enhance the rights of Canadian citizens and is unlikely to do so. 6. B. Chayes, "The Role of the Judge in Public Law Litigation" (1976), 89 Harv. L.R. 1281, argues that even the Burger court in the United States could not thwart the growing public litigation role of the courts. 7. M. Loughlin, "Procedural Fairness: A Study of the Crisis in Administrative Law Theory" (1978), 28 U. of T.L.J. 215. 8. D.J. Mullan, "Natural Justice and Fairness: Substantive as well as Procedural Standards for the Review of Administrative Decision-Making" (1982), 27 McGill L. J. 250. 9. Supra, note 7. 10. Metropolitan Properties v. Lannon, [1969) 1 Q.B. 577 (Eng.C.A.). is the classic statement of the rule about the "reasonable apprehension of bias". This 11. J. Willis, "Canadian Administrative law in Retrospect" (1974), 24.!!.:. of T.L.J. 225. 63 12. R. Heuston, Essays in Constitutional Law (2nd ed.) London: Stevens, 1964, at 185. / 13. J. Willis, "Administrative Law and the British North America Act" (1939), 53 Harv. L.R. 251. 14. Copithorne v. Calgary Power Ltd., [1959] S.C.R. 24, providss a Canadian application of the rule. 15. [1979] 1 S.C.R. 495, at 500. 16. [1964] A.C. 40 (H.L.). 17. Dowhopoluk v. Martin (1971), 23 D.L.R. (3d) 42 (Ont.H.C.), at 48. 18. Local Government Board v. Arlidge, [1945] A.C. 120 (H.L.). 19. D.J. Mullan, "Fairness: L.J. 281. The New Natural Justice" (1975), 25 U. of T. 20. S.O. 1971, c. 47. 21. R. v. Kensington and Chelsea Rent Tribunal, [1974] 1 W.L.R. 1486 (Eng.Q.B.) stresses the importance of notice in rental deliberations. 22. Supra, note 16. 23. This position was well articulated by Loreburn L.C. in Board of Education v. Rice, [1911] A.C. 179, at 182. 24. [1967] 2 Q.B. 617. 25. R. v. Gaming Board, [1970] 2 Q.B. 417 (C.A.) and Re Pergamon Press, 11971] Ch. 388 (C.A.). 26. [1972] 1 W.L.R. 1373 (Eng.C.D.), at 1378. 27. [1973] 1 All E.R. 400 (N.Z.P.C.). at 412. 28. C.B. Lewis, "The Duty to Act Fairly", an unpublished paper prepared as part of his LL.M. program at Dalhousie Law School in 1981-2. He is fortified in his view by recent cases such as Bushell v. Secretary of State for the Environment, [1981] A.C. 75. The single question approach was also advocated by D.J. Mullan, supra, note 19. 29. P. Hogg, "The Supreme Court of Canada and Administrative Law 1949-1971" (1973), 11 Osgoode Hall L.J. 189, at 214. 30. (1977), 81 D.L.R. (3d) 530 (N.S.C.A.). D.J. Mullan, supra note 8, at 294 contends that this decision could also be explained as review for 64 inconsistency. Board. Landlords and tenants were treated differently by the " 31. [1979] S.C.R. 11l. 32. (1978), 93 D.L.R. (3d) 187 (Ont. C.A.). 33. There may be layers of bias just as there are layers of procedure. Thus it may be more difficult to challenge an administrative decision maker such as a tenancy officer, than to attack a magistrate, on the basis of bias. 34. (1979), 30 N.R. 119 (S.C.C.). 35. s.c. 1970-71-72, c. 1. 36. Oswald and Cardinal v. Kent Institution, [1982] 3 W.H.R. 593 (B.C.C.A.) emphasizes that the content of procedural fairness will be minimal in the prison context. This case is on appeal to S.C.C. 37. Avondale Printers v. Haggie, [1979] 2 N.Z.L.R. 124 (N.Z.S.C.), at 151-155. 38. A.G. Canada v. Inuit Tapirisat, [1980] 2 S.C.R. 735 (per Estey J.). 39. J.H. Grey, "'Can Fairness be Effective"' (1982), 27 McGill L.J. 360, at 370. 40. Supra, note 8. 41. ~ v. Barnsley Borough Council, Ex parte Hook, [1976] 1 W.L.R. 1052 (C.A.); H.T.V. Ltd. v. Price Commission, [1976] 1 C.R. 170 (C.A.); Daganayasi v. Minister of Immigration, [1980] 2 N.Z.L.R. 130 (C.A.) and Minister of Immigration and Ethnic Affairs v. Pochi (1980), 31 A.L.R. 666 (F.C. Aust.). 42. Supra, note 8, at 274-95. 43. Trans West Development Ltd. (B.C. S.C.) was the only one Mullan feels that Canada is decisions orr the grounds of v. Nanaimo (1979), 11 M.P.L.R. 254 located by D.J. Mullan, supra note 8. achieving the same result by reviewing inconsistency. 44. "'Editorial: Rights or Rationing·· (1978-79), Journal of Social ~ 193, at 193. \~elfare 45. Most early commentators on the Charter have championed a broad reading of the document and have advocated using it as a tool for social reform. These extravagant claims are often advocacy disguised as prediction. There are some dissenters who decry the over-valuation of 65 "entrenched" rights. Samek, supra, note 5 and R.A. MacDonald, "Postscript and Prelude - The Jurisprudence of the Charter: Eight Theses" (1982), 4 Sup. Ct. L.R., 321. 46. R. Romanow, "Making Canada's Constitution: Reflections of a Participant" in W. MacKay et al (ed.), The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms: Law Practice Revolutionized, Halifax, Dalhousie Continuing Legal Education, 1982, at 105. "Reshaping Confederation: The 1982 Reform of the Canadian Constitution" (1982), 45 Law and Contemp. Prob. (No.4), 1-302. The full volume is devoted to this issue. Samek, supra, note 5, provides a different view of Charter-making. 47. R.S.C. 1970, Appendix III. Hereafter the Bill of Rights. 48. W. Tarnopolsky, The Canadian Bill of Rights (2nd ed.), Toronto: McClelland and Stewart, 1975, at 222-235, analyses the courts' record on due process prior to the Charter. 49. [1972] S.C.R. 917. 50. Ibid. , at 923. 51. [1972] S.C.R. 889. 52. Ibid., at 897-98. Laskin J. reiterated this view in his dissenting opinion in Morgentaler v. The Queen (1975), 20 C.C.C. (2d) 449 (S.C.C.). 53. [1977] 2 S.C.R. 680. 54. Ibid., at 704. 55. D. Mullan, "Human Rights and Administrative Fairness", in R. Macdonald and J. Humphreys (eds.), The Practice of Freedom, Toronto: Butterworths, 1979, at Ill, 126; also Tarnopolsky, supra note 48, at 234-35. 56. M. Manning, Rights, Freedoms and the Courts, Toronto: Emond-Montgomery, 1983, at 255-56; P. Garant, "Fundamental Freedoms and Natural Justice", in W. Tamopolsky and G. Beaudoin, The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms: Commentary, Toronto: Carswell, 1982, at 276-77 and D. McDonald, Legal Rights in the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, Toronto: Carswell, 1982, at 19-24. 57. P. Hogg, Canada Act, 1982 Annotated, Toronto: Carswell, 1982, at 28 and R. Sheppard and M. Valpy, The National Deal, Toronto: Fleet Books, 1982, at 151. 66 58. Manning, supra, note 56, at 257 argues that the deletion of property does not preclude a substantive due process argument. Garant, supra, note 56, at 275-78; McDonald, supra, note 56, at 23-4 and A. Gold, "The Legal Rights Provisions - A New Vision or Deja Vu" (1982), 4 S.C. Law Rev. 107, at 110, all argue that the deletion of property is a significant blow to a Canadian substantive due process analysis. 59. Manning, supra, note 56, at 255-62. 60. J.D. Whyte, "Legal Rights: .The Scope and Application of Section 7 of the Charter", A paper presented at The Charter After 18 Months, a conference sponsored by the Canadian Institute for the Administration of Justice, Winnipeg, October, 1983 • . 61. Minutes of Proceedings and Evidence of Special Joint Committee of the Senate and House of Commons on the Constitution of Canada, First Session of the Thirty-second Parliament 1980-81, 46:32 (January 27, 1981); cited in Hogg, supra note 57, at 29. 62. Manning, supra, note 56, at 255-262. 63. The fiction of legislative intent in matters of statutory interpretation is well known and much criticized. J. Willis, "Statutory Interpretation in a Nutshell" (1938), 16 Can. Bar Rev. 1. 64. D. Gibson, "The Charter of Rights and the Private Sector" (1982), 12 Man. L.J. 213, at 213 and J. Richards and G.J. Smith, "Applying the Charter" (1983), 4 Advoc. Quarterly 129, at 149-50. 64a.Gibson, ibid., argues that the Charter applies to the private as well as the public sector and does not on its language preclude this broader application. He expanded on this view in "Distinguishing the Governors from the Governed: The Meaning of 'Government' under Section 32(1) of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms", a paper presented at The Charter After 18 Months, a conference sponsored by the Canadian Institute for the Administration of Justice, Winnipeg October, 1983. Manning, supra note 56, at lIS, agrees with Gibson and stresses that section 32 does not say that the Charter applies "only" to government. 65. K. Swinton, "Application of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms", in W. Tarnopolsky and G. Beaudoin, The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms: Commentary, Toronto: Carswell, 1982, at 44-49 and Hogg, supra, note 57, at 75-78, support the view that the Charter is limited to government action. 66. R. v. Easterbrook, unreported decision, July 18, 1983 (Ont. H.C.) and Re Schmidt and The Queen (1983), 4 C.C.C. (3d) 409 (Ont. H.C.). 67 67. ~ v. Easterbrook, ibid. The Charter has also been held to apply to orders made by directors under the federal combines statute and under a provincial social services statute, respectively. Southam Inc. v. Hunter (1983), 42 Alta. R. 93 (C.A.) and Elliot v. Dir. of Social Services (1982), 17 Man. R. (2d) 350 (C.A.). 68. McCutcheon v. Corp. of the City of Toronto (1983), 41 O.R. (2d) 652 (H.C.). 69. The Sunday Times v. The United Kingdom (1979), 2 E.H.R.R. 245 (Eur. Ct. of H.R.) and R. v. Begley et al (1982), 38 O.R. (2d) 549 (H.C.), establish that thecourts can "prescribe law" for purposes of section 1 of the Charter so it would not be too great a leap to say that the courts themselves are bound by the Charter. 70. Supra, note 3, per Le Dain J. at 374-75 and per Ryan J. at 370. The Crown in general has no Charter immunity. Van Mulligen v. Sask. Housing Corp. et al (1982), 23 Sask. R. 66 (Q.B.). 71. Supra, note 65. 72. W. MacKay and M. Holgate, "Fairness in the Allocation of Housing: Legal and Economic Perspectives" (1983), 7 Dal. L.J. (No.3), 383, at 403-05. 73. J. Fichaud, "Analysis of the Charter and its Application to Labour Law· in W. MacKay et al (eds.), The Canadian Charter of Rights: Law Practice Revolutionized, Halifax: Dalhousie Continuing Legal Education, 1982, at 217 ff., particularly at 227, argues that the internal management of union is unlikely to be caught by the Charter. 74. R. v. Red Hot Video Ltd. (1983), 6 C.C.C. (3d) 331 (B.C. Prov. Ct.); Re Balderstone and The Queen (1982), 2 C.C.C. (3d) 37 (Man. Q.B.). These were section 7 cases. 75. (1963), 42 D.L.R. (2d) 442 (N.S.S.C.); rev'd. 248 (N.S.S.C.). (1964), 44 D.L.R. (2d) 76. Thorson v. A.G. Canada (1974), 43 D.L.R. (3d) 1 (S.C.C.); N.S. Board of Censors v. McNeil (195), 55 D.L.R. (3d) 632 (S.C.C.) and Min. of Justice (Can.) v. Borowski, (1982) 11~.W.R. 97 (S.C.C.). 77. D. Mullan, "Standing After McNeil" (1976), 8 Ott. Law Rev. 32. 78. (1979), 102 D.L.R. (3d) 486 (N.S.S.C. - App. Div.). Another example of the expansion of standing is Finlay v. Minister of Finance of Canada (1983), 1 Admin. L.R. 76 (F.C.A.). 79. Re Edmonton Journal and A.G. Alta. (1983), 4 C.C.C. (3d) 61 (Alta. Q.B.). This case involved an attack on s. 12(1) of the Juvenile 68 Delinquents Act. . Contra this view see E. Ewaschuk, "The Charter: Overview and Remedies" (1982), 26 C.R. (3d) 54, at 67. An 80. Re Jamieson and The Queen (1982), 70 C.C.C. (2d) 430 (Que. S.C.). 81. Supra, note 79. 82. Seaway Trust Co. et al v. The Queen in Right of Ontario (1984), 5 C.R.R. 257 (Ont. H.C.). 83. Que. Assoc. of Protestant School Bds. v. A.G. Que. (No.2) (1982), 140 D.L.R. (3d) 33 (Que. S.C.) rejected drawing to sharp a line between denials of rights and limitations on rights. ·84. Ibid., aff'd by the Que. C.A. and now on appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada. Also see Re Federal Republic of Germany and Rauca (1983), 41 O.R. (2d) 225 (C.A.). 85. Onto Film and Video Appreciation Society v. Onto Bd. of Censors (1983), 147 D.L.R. (3d) 58 (Ont. Div. Ct.); aff'd. in an unreported judgement of February, 1984 (Ont. C.A.). 86. Sunday Times v. U.K., supra, note 69. 87. This position was articulated by Professor Bender at The Charter After 18 Months, a conference sponsored by the Canadian Institute for the Administration of Justice, Winnipeg October, 1983. It will appear in published form as part two of the following article, P. Bender, ·'The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms and the United States Bill of Rights: A Comparison" (1983), 28 McGill L.J. 811. 87a.The decision of Ewaschuk, J. in Re Moore, an unreported decision, January 10, 1984 (Ont. S.C.) did state that section 1 had no application to section 12 which contained its own modifier. However, the application of section 1 to the cruel and unusual punishment provision was left open by Linden, J. in Re Mitchell and The Queen (1983), 6 C.C.C. (3d) 193 (Ont. H.C.). 87b.Ridge, supra note 16; Harelkin v. The University of Regina, [19791 2 S.C.R. 561 and Glynn v. Keele University, [1971] 1 W.L.R. 487 (Eng. Ch. D.). 88. (1982), 1 C.C.C. (3d) 477 (Que. S.C.); aff'd C.C.C. (3d) 36 (Que. C.A.). ~ v. Vermette (1982), 3 89. Van Mulligen, supra, note 70. 90. D. Gibson, "Enforcement of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms", in W. Tarnopolsky and G. Beaudoin, The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms: Commentary, Toronto: Carswell, 1982, at 489; 69 S. Fairley, "Enfo·rcing the Charter: Some Thoughts on an Appropriate and Just Standard of Judicial Review" (1982), 4 S.C. Law Rev. 217 and A. MacLellan and B. Elman, "The Enforcement of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms: An Analysis of Section 24" (1983), 21 Alta. L.R. 205. 91. (1983), 5 C.C.C. (3d) 409 (Sask. C .A.). This decision is no" on appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada. For a contrary view on this point see Re Seigel and The Queen (1982), 142 D.L.R. (3d) 426 (Ont. H. C.) • 92. Garant, supra, note 56, at 286-90. 93. [1978] 1 S.C.R. 118. 94. Supra, note 85. Policy guidelines were not considered "law". 95. Cooper v. Wandsworth Board of Works (1863), 143 E.R. 414 (Eng. C.P.), is an example where procedures were implied as a matter of common law. 96. (1983), 41 O.R. (2d) 501 (Div. Ct.); rev'd. (1983), 41 O.R. (2d) 532 (C.A.). 97. R.S.O. 1980, c. 224. 98. iIogg, supra, note 57, at 65. 99. Ewaschuk, supra, note 79. 100. Supra, note 96; supra, note 91 and Re Legal Services Society and Brahan (1983), 148 D.L.R. (3d) 692 (B.C.S.C.). 101. Gibson, supra, note 90, at 501. He emphasizes the use of the word "tribunal" in the French text of the Charter. 102. Supra, note 87. 103. ~ v. ~ (1982), 142 D.L.R. (3d) 339 (B.C.S.C.) in an exception where the three classes of remedies were considered separately. This approach was not repudiated on appeal R. v. S.B. (1983), 6 C.R.R. 50 (B.C.C.A.). 104. Supra, note 34. 105. Supra, note 61. 106. Supra, note 56, at 255-274. 107. Supa, note 60. Rand, J. would certainly have supported Professor Whyte on the appropriateness of a substantive role for the courts. 70 I.C. Rand, ·'The Role of an Independent Judiciary in Preserving Freedom (1951), 9 U. of T. L.J. 1 and "EJ>Cept by Due Process of Law" (1961), 2 Osgoode Hall L.J. 171. 108. Supra, note 56, at 257-290. 109. Supra, note 58. 110. For a detailed analysis of the application of the American due process model to the Canadian scene see, Manning, supra, note 56, at 257-271. 111. Supra, note 60. 112. The need for a judicial check on administrative boards will be accentuated if the proposed amendment to section 96 of the Constitution Act, 1867 is passed. This will give such boards wider powers. 113. Supra, note 60 and Manning, supra, note 56, at 255-274. 114. Supra, note 49. 115. Supra, note 51. 116. Supra, note 60 and supra, note 56, at 257. 117. Supra, note 7. Although the evolution of fairness extended the traditional role of the courts the content of fairness has been narrowly confined. 118. The author reached the Same conclusion in a more in depth study of fairness in the allocation of housing. Supra, note 72. 119. Lochner v. New York (1905), 198 U.S. 45. For a fuller explanation of this era see L. Tribe, American Constitutional Law, New York: 1978, at 427-55. Whyte, supra, note 60 suggests that Canada should not be too traumatized by Lochner. 120. (1954), 347 U.S. 483. The actual enforcement of the Court's advanced opinions has proven a difficult task. 121. The record of Canadian courts in interpreting the Bill of Rights should give the advocates of substantive due process reason to pause. 122. It could be argued that the existence of section 33 is an argument for substantive due process, as the legislature can over-ride the courts if they go too far. However, this would not be efficient nor does it deal with the hard question of who should decide in the first instance. 71 123. Constitutional Amendment References 1981 (1981), 39 N.R. 1 (S.C.C.). Other examples of highly politici:;ing decisions are those concerning the ownership and control of natural resources. 124. MacDonald, supra, note 45, at 340-49, argues that the rights protected in the Charter are largely those considered significant by the middle class elite and particularly by lawyers. 125. A.G. Canada v. Lavell, [1974] S.C.R. 1349. The addition of section 28 to the Charter was largely the result of an effective women's lobby. Women were also important in the expansion of section 15. 126. Westendorp v. The Queen (1983), 46 N.R. 30 (S.C.C.), is One example. ·127. P. Russell, "The Political Purposes of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms" (1983), 61 Can. Bar Rev. 30. 128. Baldwin v. Missouri (1929), 281 U.S. 586, at 595, per Holmes J. 129. P. Hogg, "Is the Supreme Court Biased in Constitutional Cases" (1979), 57 Can. Bar Rev. 74. 130. See the discussion related to supra, notes 48-55. 131. (1983), 4 C.C.C. (3d) 243 (B.C.C.A.). 132. (1978), 40 C.C.C. (2d) 353 (S.C.C.). 133. The seven year minimum sentence for importation of narcotics was not found to violate section 7 in and of itself. R. v. Randall and Weir (1983), 58 N.S.R. (2d) 234 (N.S.S.C. - App. Di~). The same 7 day minimum sentence that was in issue in Ref. Re Motor Vehicle Act, was not held offensive in R. v. Konecky (1983), 6 C.C.C. (3d) 354 (B.C. Co. Ct.). 134. R. v. Carson (1983), 4 C.C.C. (3d) 476 (Ont. C.A.). 135. Ong Ah Chuan v. Public Prosecutor, [1981] A.C. 648 (P.C.). 136. Supra, note 131, at 246. 137. Supra, note 74. 138. R. v. Watch, a unreported decision, July 5, 1983 (B.C. Prov. Ct.) found a violation but such arguments have been more frequently dismissed. Indeed, Watch itself was reversed on appeal, (1983), 3 C.R.D. 775.30-01 (B.C.S.C.). A more typical response is that presented by the Nova Scotia Appeal Court in R. v. Bezanson (1983), 61 N.S.R. (2d) 181 (N.S.S.C. App. Div.). 72 139. (1983), 3 C.C.C. (3d) 198 (Ont. G.A.). to the Supreme Court. This decision is now on appeal 140. Ibid., at 200. 141. (1983), 43 Alta. R. 64 (Prov. Ct.). For a comment on this case see J. Anderson, "Compulsory At tendance and the Charter" (1984), 3 Canadian School Executive (No.9), 27. 142. G. Teubner, "Substantive and' Reflexive Elements in Modern law" (1983), 17 Law & Soc. Rev. (No.2), 239, is one recent expression of that view. There is considerable documentation on this point. P. Nonet, Administrative Justice, New York: Russell Sage Foundation, 1969, at 3-7. Goldberg v. Kelly 397 U.S. 254 (1970), is a case where a procedural attack was successfully used to affect the actual distribution of welfare payments in New York. However, there has been a retreat from this broad approach in Mathews v. Eldridge 96 S.C.R. 893 (1970), a case which involved disability payments. A useful exploration of the interconnection of procedure and substance is found in, R.L. Rabin, "Some Thoughts on the Relationship Between Fundamental Values and Procedural Safeguards In Constitutional Rights to Hearing Cases" (1979), 16 San Diego L.R. 301. 143. Michelman, "Process and Property in Constitutional Theory" (1981), 30 Cleve. St. Law Rev. 577, at 588. 144. Supra, note 52, at 461-62. 145. (1983), 2 C.C.C. (3d) 383 (Ont. C.A.). 146. Ibid., at 391-92. 147. Howarth v. National Parole Board (1975), 50 D.L.R. (3d) 349 (S.C.C.) and Mitchell v. The Queen (1976), 61 D.L.R. (3d) 77 (S.C.C.). This situation was altered somewhat even before the Charter as hearings and the right to counsel were granted in certain cases. Re Dubeau and National Parole Board, [1981] 6 W.W.R. 272 (F.C.A.). 148. (1982), 4 C.C.C. (3d) 97 (Ont. H.C.). An appeal was heard but no judgment rendered because Mr. Caddedu died shortly.after the hearing. (1983), 4 C.C.C. (3d) 112 (Ont. C.A.). 149. Ibid., at 108-09. 150. Garant, supra, note 92. 151. Manning, supra, note 56, at 267-69 and M.L. Friedland, "Legal Rights Under the Charter", a paper presented at The Charter After 18 Months, a conference sponsored by the Canadian Institute for the Administration of Justice, Winnipeg, October, 1983, at 11. 13 152. Supra, note 148 •. The reasoning of this case is discussed earlier in this section. 153. This is the position advocated but not necessarily predicted by M. Jackson, Prisoners of Isolation: Solitary Confinement in Canada, Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1983. In one early Charter case the court required a hearing before an inmate could be transferred from a medium to a maximum security institution. Collin v. Lussier (1983), 3 C.R.D. 300-02 (F.C.T.D.). The prisoner was awarded damages for breach of section 7. 154. ~ v. Nunery (1984), 5 C.R.R. 69 (Ont. H.C.). 155. Re ·Convoy (1982), 4 C.R.R. 278 (Ont. H.C.). 156. (1983), 35 C.R. (3d) 135 (B.C.S.C.). 157. (1983), 35 C.R. (3d) 149 (B.C.S.C.). 158. Re Lowe and The Queen (1983), 5 C.C.C. (3d) 535 (B.C. S.C.). 159. R. v. Mason (1983), 3 C.R.D. 900-150-04 (Ont. S.C.). 160. R.S.C. 1970, c. E-21. 161. In the Matter of Demarco (1983), 2 C.R.R. 314 (Ont. Co. Ct.) held that there was no violation. Re U.S.A. and Copses (1983), 2 C.R.D. 500-01 (Ont. Co. Ct.), found that both sections 7 and 11 applied to non-citizens and that the denial of cross-examination did violate s. 11(d). There was no ruling as to s. 7. There are many similarly conflicting cases in the lower courts. 162. Re United States of America and Yue (1983), 42 O.R. (2d) 651 (H.C.); Re United States of America and Green (1983), 42 O.R. (2d) 325 (H.C.) and Re United States of America and Smith (1983), 42 O.R. (2d) 668 ·(H.C.). 163. Re Voss (1983), 3 C.R.D. 500-01 (B.C.S.C.). 164. Supra, note 162. 165. Supra, note 66, at 413, adopting the reasoning of the County Court decision in U.S.A. v. Yue, infra. 166. U.S.A. v. ~ (1983), 3 C.R.R. 362, (Ont. Co. Ct.), at 373-74. 167. Re Terzian and Workmen's Compensation Board (1983), 42 O.R. (2d) 144 (C.A.). The removal of a COmmon law right to sue was held not to violate section 7. Re Shingoose and Minister of Social Services (1983), 149 D.L.R. (3d) 400 (Sask. Q.B.), few rights were accorded the child in apprehension proceedings. 74 168. Joplin v. Chief Constable of the City of Vancouver (1983), 4 C.R.R. 208 (B.C.S.C.). A right to couns~l, not present in the statute or regulations, was implied by the Charter for purposes of a police disciplinary hearing. 169. Supra, note 162, at 671. 170. Supra, note 131. 171. Supra, note 88. 172. (1983), 5 C.C.C. (3d) 523 (Sask. Q.B.). 173. v. Speicher et al (1983), 6 C.C.C. (3d) 262 (B.C. S.C.), emphasized that the different application of s. 507 of the Criminal Code in different provinces did not violate s. 7. ~ 174. (1982), 2 C.C.C. (3d) 37 (Man. Q.B.). 175. (1983), 4 C.C.C. (3d) 333 (Man. C.A.). 176. Supra, note 173. 177. (1983), 2 C.R.R. 324 (Ont. H.C.). 178. (1982) , 1 C.R.R. 206 (Ont. H.C.). 179. (1983) , 3 C.R.R. 271 (B.C.S.C.). 180. Supra, note 145. 181. (1982), 2 c.C.C. (3d) 412 (Ont. C.A.). 182. ~ v. Altseimer (1983), 1 C.C.C. (3d) 7 (Ont. C.A.), at 13. 183. (1983), 5 C.C.C. (3d) 573 (Sask. Q.B.). 184. Jamieson, supra, note 80. 185. This was what was advocated by Manning, supra, note 56, at 261-64 186. See Samek, supra, •• Judicial Process Reference and its Osgoode Hall L.J. note 5; MacDonald, supra, note 45 and W. MacKay, in the Supreme Court of Canada: The Pa triation Implications for the Charter of Rights" (1983), 21 55. 187. Supra, note 72, at 412. 188. Supra, note 60. 15 189. Supra, note 72, at 405. 190. Ibid., at 446. 191. C. Boyle, Sexual Assault, Toronto: Carswell, 1984, at Ch. 2. 192. (1982), 135 D.L.R (3d) 307 (N.B.Q.B.); aff'd. on other grounds (1982), 44 N.B.R. (2d) 201 (C.A.). 193. (1982), 17 Man. R. (2d) 350 (C.A.). 194. Elliott v. Director of Social Services, an unreported decision December I, 1982 (Man. C.A.). 195. Finlay v. Director of Welfare (Winnipeg) (1976), 71 D.L.R. (3d) 597 (Man. C.A.). 196. (1982), 18 Man. R. (2d) 440 (C.A.). 197. Shingoose, supra, note 167. 198. R.S.C. 1970, c. N-1, s. 10. 199. (1983), 32 C.R. (3d) 117 (Ont. Prov. Ct.). 200. Joplin, supra, note 168 is an example. Other cases have relied upon section 10 in isolation. R. v. Nelson (1982), 3 C.C.C. (3d) 147 (Man. Q.B.). 201. Re Rosenbaum and Law Society of Manitoba (1983), 150 D.L.R (3d) 352 (Man. Q.B.) and Law Society of Manitoba v. Savino (1983), 23 Man. R. 293 (C.A.). 202. Black et al v. Law Society of Alberta (1983), 144 D.L.R. (3d) 439 (Alta. Q.B.). 203. Rosenbaum, supra, note 201; Re James and Law Society of B.C. (1982), 143 D.L.R. (3d) 379 (B.C. S.C.) and Belhumeur v. Comit~ de Discipline du Barreau (1983), 34 C.R. (3d) 279 (Que. S.C.). 204. Donald v. Law Society of B.C., an unreported decision, November 29, 1983 (B.C.C.A.) and Amorell~ and The Queen (1983), 6 C.C.C. (3d) 93 (Que. S.C.). 205. Re Crooks and The Queen (1982), 2 C.C.C. (3d) 57 (Ont. C.A.); now on appe?l to the Supreme Court of Canada. 206. Supra, note 134 and Bezanson, supra, note 138. 207. Re Southam and The Queen (1983), 3 C.C.C. (3d) 515 (Ont. C.A.) and R. v. Sophonow (1983), 21 Man. R. (2d) 110 (C.A.), are two examples. • 76 208. (1983), 2 C.C.C.(3d) 417 (Ont. C.A.); now on appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada. 209. Supra, note 173. 210. (1983), 1 C.C.C. (3d) 47 (B.C.S.C.). In another case Re Moore, an unreported decision, January 10, 1984 (Ont. S.C.), Ewaschuk J. rejected the argument that dangerous offender decisions based upon the speculative predictions of psychiatrists, violated the principles of "fundamental justice". Arginnents based on "arbitrary detention" under section 9, and cruel and unusual punishment under section 12 of the Charter, have also failed. R. v. Lyons, an unreported decision, January 30, 1984 (N.S. Co. C~). This latter decision is on appeal. 211. R.S.C. 1970, c. 1-6. 212. R. v. Hayden (1983), 6 C.R.R. 23 (Man. Provo Ct.); rev'd. (1983), 3 C7R.D. 25-03 (Man. C.A.). 213. B. Hovius and R. Martin, "The Cansdian Charter of Rights and Freedoms in the Supreme Court of Canada" (1983), 61 Can. Bar Rev. 354, at 364 and A. Roman, "The Charter of Rights: Renewing the Social Contract?" (1982-83), 8 Queens L.J. 188, at 192-93, substantiate this view. 214. R. v. MacIntryre et al (1982), 139 D.L.R. (3d) 602 (Alta. Q.B.), at 606. 215. Re Federal Republic of Germany and Rauca, supra, note 84, at 244 •