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Commonwealth of Virginia (Applicant)
v.
Leslie Cohen (Respondent)
Trial Division, Heald J.—Ottawa, May 31 and June 1, 1973.
Extradition—Mandamus—Right of fugitive to bail pending hearing.
C was held in custody in Ontario pending an application for his extradition to Virginia on a charge of larceny. The extradition judge rejected an application for bail under section 457(1) of the Criminal Code.
Held, dismissing an application for mandamus, the tran script of the record of the proceedings before the extradition judge was incomplete and did not indicate his reasons for his decision.
APPLICATION. COUNSEL:
J. L. D. King for Commonwealth of Virginia.
A. D. Gold for Leslie Cohen. SOLICITORS:
MacDonald and Affleck, Ottawa, for Com monwealth of Virginia.
Pomerant, Pomerant and Greenspan, Toronto, for Leslie Cohen.
HEALD J.—This is an application under sec tion 18 of the Federal Court Act for a writ of mandamus directed to His Honour Judge T. J. Jacob, Judge of the County Court for the County of Middlesex, Ontario, to proceed in accordance with section 457 of the Criminal Code of Canada, R.S.C. 1970, c. C-34, and related sections in respect of the detention of the applicant pending the determination of the application for extradition.
Counsel for the applicant submitted that, on the basis of the evidence before me, I should conclude that the learned County Court Judge erred in not proceeding in accordance with the bail procedure provisions of section 457 of the Criminal Code and in particular section 457(1) and section 457(7) which read as follows:
457. (1) Where an accused who is charged with an offence other than an offence mentioned in section 457.7 and who is not required to be detained in custody in respect of any other matter is taken before a justice, the justice shall, unless a plea of guilty by the accused is accepted, order that the accused be released upon his giving an undertaking without conditions, unless the prosecutor, having been given a reasonable opportunity to do so, shows cause why the detention of the accused in custody is justi fied or why an order under any other provision of this section should be made.
(7) For the purposes of this section, the detention of an accused in custody is justified only on either of the follow ing grounds, namely:
(a) on the primary ground that his detention is necessary to ensure his attendance in court in order to be dealt with according to law; and
(b) on the secondary ground (the applicability of which shall be determined only in the event that and after it is determined that his detention is not justified on the pri mary ground referred to in paragraph (a)) that his deten tion is necessary in the public interest or for the protec tion or safety of the public, having regard to all the circumstances including any substantial likelihood that the accused will, if he is released from custody, commit a criminal offence involving serious harm or an interference with the administration of justice.
I have considerable doubt that the bail provi sions of the Criminal Code have application to extradition proceedings. (See for example: Re Stern 7 C.C.C. 191; United States v. Weiss 8 C.C.C. 62.)
The authority for the proceedings before the learned County Court Judge is contained in the Extradition Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. E-21.
Learned counsel submits that by virtue of section 13 of the Extradition Act, the learned Judge was obliged to follow the provisions of section 457 of the Criminal Code. Section 13 reads as follows:
13. The fugitive shall be brought before a judge, who shall, subject to this Part, hear the case, in the same manner, as nearly as may be, as if the fugitive was brought before a justice of the peace, charged with an indictable offence committed in Canada.
His submission is that since section 13 pro vides that the hearing before the extradition judge shall be conducted in the same manner, as nearly as may be, as a preliminary hearing of an indictable offence under the Criminal Code, that since the bail provisions of the Criminal Code
apply to a preliminary hearing, they should also apply to the extradition hearing.
In my view, this position is open to serious question. The provisions of the Criminal Code of Canada (including section 457) apply to a person charged with a specific offence under said Code. In the case at bar, the applicant is not such a person. He is charged with the offence of larceny in the Commonwealth of Virginia, one of the United States of America.
Section 13 of the Extradition Act merely pro vides for the procedure at the hearing, that is, once the hearing has commenced. It seems to me that a bail application is a collateral matter and that if Parliament had intended the provi sions of the Criminal Code to apply in other related matters, it would have said so by apt language.
However, assuming for the sake of argument that section 457 of the Criminal Code is applic able to these proceedings, I have the view that the material before me is not sufficient to estab lish that the provisions of said section were not complied with. There is before me a document which purports to be a transcript of the pro ceedings before His Honour Judge Jacob at London, Ontario on May 15, 1973.
Said transcript records submissions made to Judge Jacob by counsel for the applicant in respect of the bail application. He then called on counsel for the Commonwealth of Virginia to make representations. Apparently said counsel, Mr. King, did make fairly extensive representa tions. However, the transcript before me does not record those submissions. At page 4 thereof, the following note appears:
Reporter's Note: At this point submissions were made by Mr. King.
Counsel were not able to explain why the reporter did not record said submissions.
Mandamus lies to secure the performance of a public duty. The applicant must show that he has demanded performance of the duty and that
performance has been refused by the authority obliged to discharge it. I am asked to order mandamus on the basis of an incomplete and to some extent inaccurate record' of what took place at the proceedings in question.
Section 457(1) of the Criminal Code makes provision for reasonable opportunity being given to the prosecutor to show cause why the accused should be detained in custody. In the hearing before me, there was some suggestion that reasonable opportunity may not have been given. However, without a full transcript of what took place, I am not in a position to determine what considerations entered into the learned Judge's decision not to grant bail nor whether there was compliance with the provi sions of section 457(1) and section 457.7 of the Code. I am not prepared to say on the evidence before me that the learned County Court Judge refused to discharge the duty imposed on him under section 457 of the Code.
The application is therefore dismissed with costs.
' At the bottom of page 4 of the transcript, Judge Jacob is reported as saying "I am prepared to get into the issue as to whether or not any bail sections of the Code are to hold in a matter such as this." Counsel for the applicant says that the transcript is in error, that the learned Judge actually said "I am not prepared ..."
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