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T-656-77
Robert Anthony McKend (Plaintiff)
v.
The Queen (Defendant)
Trial Division, Mahoney J.—Toronto, May 17; Ottawa, May 26, 1977.
Parole — Granted by National Parole Board — Sentence of two years less a day definite and one year indefinite — Crime committed near end of parole period — Parole forfeited — Term to be served — Whether federal or Ontario legislation applicable — Parole Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. P-2, ss. 13, 17(1), 21(1), R.S.C. 1970 (1st Supp.), c. 31, s. 21 — The Ministry of Correctional Services Act, R.S.O. 1970, c. 110, ss. 26, 30(1).
The plaintiff, sentenced July 4, 1973 to two years less a day definite and one year indefinite, started serving his sentence in an Ontario correctional institution; the sentence was to expire July 2, 1976. The National Parole Board granted parole on September 17, 1974. The plaintiff was charged with a criminal offence on June 25, 1976, and subsequently was convicted and sentenced. The National Parole Board then forfeited the plain tiff's parole. The federal and Ontario methods of calculating the time to be served because of the forfeiture of parole resulted in a significant difference in the plaintiffs term of imprisonment.
Held, the action is dismissed. The National Parole Board, under the authority of the Parole Act, had exclusive jurisdic tion to grant the plaintiff parole at the time. There is no provision in the federal legislation to translate a parole granted by the National Parole Board into one granted by the Ontario Board of Parole nor in the provincial legislation for the latter to receive such translation. The plaintiff was not granted parole by the Ontario Board. A parole granted by the National Parole Board under authority of the Parole Act continues to be governed by the provisions of that Act as to forfeiture of parole and the consequences thereof notwithstanding that, at the date of forfeiture, the definite portion of the paroled inmate's sen tence had expired and that, at that time, had the question been a grant rather than a forfeiture of parole, it would have been dealt with by the Ontario Board of Parole.
ACTION. COUNSEL:
David P. Cole for plaintiff. Thomas L. James for defendant.
SOLICITORS:
David P. Cole, Toronto, for plaintiff.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for
defendant.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
MAHONEY J.: It would be to the plaintiff's considerable advantage if the consequences of his conviction of indictable offences, committed while on parole, were dictated by provincial rather than federal law. With the usual remissions, he should be freed fairly soon rather than looking forward to considerably more time in the penitentiary. The material facts are agreed.
On July 4, 1973, the plaintiff was sentenced to two years less one day definite and one year indefinite for robbery. He commenced serving his sentence in correctional institutions maintained by the Province of Ontario. He applied for parole. The Ontario Board of Parole indicated to the National Parole Board that it had no objection to parole being granted and the Ontario Ministry of Correctional Services indicated its willingness to provide supervision upon release. Parole was grant ed by the National Parole Board and the plaintiff was released on parole September 17, 1974. Had all gone well for him, his sentence would have expired July 2, 1976.
All did not go well. On June 25, 1976, he was charged with possession of and uttering counterfeit money, indictable offences punishable by impris onment for at least two years. On June 26, he was arrested and taken into custody where he remained until he was convicted and given a nine month sentence on October 14. He was then transferred to Kingston Penitentiary where he remains. On June 29, the National Parole Board issued a sus pension warrant which was executed July 2 and cancelled July 15. A warrant forfeiting his parole was executed November 22.
The calculation of the resulting term of impris onment under the applicable provisions of the fed eral legislation' is not challenged.
Balance of original term (September 17, 1974 to
July 2, 1976) 654 days
Nine month sentence imposed October 14, 1976 273 days
Less time served under parole suspension (July 2
to 15, 1976) (14 days)
Total term commencing October 14, 1976 913 days
The calculation under the applicable provision of the provincial legislation 2 would have been:
' The Parole Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. P-2.
17. (1) Where a person who is, or at any time was, a paroled inmate is convicted of an indictable offence, punish able by imprisonment for a term of two years or more, committed after the grant of parole to him and before his discharge therefrom or the expiry of his sentence, his parole is thereby forfeited and such forfeiture shall be deemed to have taken place on the day on which the offence was committed.
21. (1) When any parole is forfeited by conviction for an indictable offence, the paroled inmate shall undergo a term of imprisonment, commencing when the sentence for the indictable offence is imposed, equal to the aggregate of
(a) the portion of the term to which he was sentenced that remained unexpired at the time his parole was granted, including any period of remission, including earned remis sion, then standing to his credit,
(b) the term, if any, to which he is sentenced upon convic tion for the indictable offence, and
(c) any time he spent at large after the sentence for the indictable offence is imposed except pursuant to parole granted to him after such sentence is imposed,
minus the aggregate of
(d) any time before conviction for the indictable offence when the parole so forfeited was suspended or revoked and he was in custody by virtue of such suspension or revoca tion, and
(e) any time he spent in custody after conviction for the indictable offence and before the sentence for the indict able offence is imposed.
2 The Ministry of Correctional Services Act, R.S.O. 1970, c. 110.
30. (1) Whenever a person while on parole is convicted of an indictable offence, he shall undergo a term of imprison ment equal to the portion of the term to which he was originally sentenced that remained unexpired at the time of the offence, in addition to any term of imprisonment to which he may be sentenced.
Unexpired portion of original sentence (June 26
to July 2, 1976) 7 days
Nine month sentence imposed October 14, 1976 273 days
Total term commencing October 14, 1976 280 days
It goes without saying that if there is any genuine doubt at all as to which legislation ought to have been applied, then the plaintiff is entitled to the benefit of that doubt and to have the provincial legislation applied.
Starting from square one, the plaintiff's parole and its forfeiture derive from legislation duly enacted by the Parliament of Canada in the exer cise of its legislative jurisdiction over the criminal law 3 . It follows that any provincial jurisdiction in this area must have been delegated by Parliament.
The fundamental enactment by Parliament is section 6 of the Parole Act.
6. Subject to this Act and the Prisons and Reformatories Act, the Board has exclusive jurisdiction and absolute discre tion to grant, refuse to grant or revoke parole.
Nothing in that Act detracts from the National Parole Board's exclusive jurisdiction. However, the Prisons and Reformatories Act 4 provides:
41. The Lieutenant Governor of the Province of Ontario may appoint a Board of Parole for the Province whose duty it shall be to inquire from time to time into the cases of prisoners sentenced to the Ontario Reformatory, the Andrew Mercer Reformatory or any industrial farm, and where as a result of such inquiry the Board thinks proper, it may permit prisoners serving indeterminate sentences to be paroled under conditions approved of by the Solicitor General of Canada, and when the terms on which such prisoners have been paroled have been complied with, the Board may recommend for the consideration of the Solicitor General the final discharge of such prisoners.
Acting upon that authority, the Ontario legislature has provided, in The Ministry of Correctional Services Act, as follows:
26. Subject to the regulations, the Board may order the release on parole of any person detained in a correctional institution,
3 The British North America Act, 1867, s. 91(27).
4 R.S.C. 1970, c. P-21.
(b) referred to in section 43 5 of the Prisons and Reformato ries Act (Canada) and sentenced to an indeterminate sentence,
to be at large during the indeterminate portion of his sentence.
The proposition that the consequences of forfeit ure of the plaintiff's parole are to be governed by the provincial rather than federal legislation is based on the fact that his parole was forfeited after his definite term of imprisonment had expired during the indeterminate period of his sentence. It is argued that since, as at the date of forfeiture, the provincial rather than federal legislation would have governed the grant of parole, it also, at that date, governed the forfeiture or, at the very least, it is not clear that the federal legislation governed and the plaintiff is entitled to the benefit of the doubt. As was said by Dickson J., for the majority of the Supreme Court of Canada in the Marcotte case 6 :
If one is to be incarcerated, one should at least know that some Act of Parliament requires it in express terms, and not, at most, by implication.
The sentence of "two years less a day definite and one year indeterminate" is not two sentences; it is a single sentence. If that were not so on a fair interpretation of the ordinary language of the phrase, section 14 of the Parole Act makes it so for purposes of that Act'. (There were, as well, two concurrent six month sentences for possession that had expired prior to the grant of parole and are
5 Section 43 of the Prisons and Reformatories Act became section 41 with the coming into force of the Revised Statutes of Canada, 1970.
6 Marcotte v. Deputy Attorney General for Canada [1976] 1 S.C.R. 108 at 115.
' 14. Where, either before, on or after the 26th day of August 1969,
(a) a person is sentenced to two or more terms of impris onment, or
(b) an inmate who is in confinement is sentenced to an additional term or terms of imprisonment,
he shall, for all purposes of this Act, the Penitentiary Act and the Prisons and Reformatories Act, be deemed to have been sentenced, on the day on which he is so sentenced in the circumstances described in paragraph (a), or on the day on which he was sentenced to the term of imprisonment he is then serving in the circumstances described in paragraph (b), to a single term of imprisonment commencing on that day and ending on the last day that he would be subject to confinement under the longest of such sentences or under all of such sentences that are to be served one after the other, whichever is the later day.
immaterial to this action.)
The plaintiff's parole was applied for and grant ed while he was serving the definite portion of his sentence. The National Parole Board, under the authority of the Parole Act, had exclusive jurisdic tion to grant him parole at the time. There is no provision in the federal legislation to translate a parole granted by the National Parole Board into one granted by the Ontario Board of Parole nor in the provincial legislation for the latter to receive such translation. At no time was the plaintiff granted parole by the Ontario Board nor, in the scheme of the provincial legislation, could he have been. Its discretion is limited to releasing on parole "any person detained in a correctional institution". A person released on a parole granted by the National Parole Board is plainly not a person so detained.
The Parole Act makes clear that, except in the case of a day parole, a paroled inmate is not serving his sentence s. That being clear, the author ity delegated by section 41 of the Prisons and Reformatories Act in respect of "prisoners serving indeterminate sentences" plainly does not extend to a paroled inmate not on day parole.
There is no genuine doubt that a parole granted by the National Parole Board under authority of the Parole Act continues to be governed by the provisions of that Act as to forfeiture of parole and the consequences thereof notwithstanding that, at the date of forfeiture, the definite portion of the
8 13. (1) The term of imprisonment of a paroled inmate shall, while the parole remains unrevoked and unforfeited, be deemed to continue in force until the expiration thereof accord ing to law, and, in the case of day parole, the paroled inmate shall be deemed to be continuing to serve his term of imprison ment in the place of confinement from which he was released on such parole.
paroled inmate's sentence had expired and that, at the time, had the question been a grant rather than forfeiture of parole, it would have been dealt with by the Ontario Board of Parole in the manner prescribed by provincial legislation.
The action will be dismissed. The defendant asks for costs and is entitled to them. However, it appears to me that, in the circumstances, costs on the basis of a Class I rather than a Class II action, as called for by paragraph 1(3)(b) of Tariff A, would be more appropriate.
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