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T-5674-78
Conrad Gunn (Plaintiff) v.
Donald Yeomans, in his capacity as Commissioner of Corrections, and Nicholas Caros, in his capaci ty as Institutional Head of Matsqui Institution and in his capacity as Chairman of the Matsqui Institution Inmate Disciplinary Board (Defend- ants)
Trial Division, Cattanach J.—Vancouver, May 13; Ottawa, June 11, 1980.
Penitentiaries — Standing Order by Institutional Head requiring all inmates to be thoroughly searched for contraband in leaving and returning to institution — Thorough search meaning "skin frisk" — Procedure strictly and indiscrimi nately applied because of knifing incident and because of uncertainty as to which inmates would carry contraband — Refusal by plaintiff to submit to order to be skin searched on ground that it is unlawful — Whether it is lawful for Institu tional Head to order the indiscriminate search of all inmates for contraband on leaving and returning to the institution — Penitentiary Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. P-6, s. 29 - Penitentiary Service Regulations, C.R.C. 1978, Vol. XIII, c. 1251, s. 41(2) — Interpretation Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. I-23, s. 26(7).
On November 10, 1978, the plaintiff, an inmate at the Matsqui Institution, was ordered to submit to a "skin frisk" before leaving the Institution for a medical examination, but refused to do so because, in his opinion, the order was unlawful. The facts show that a Standing Order issued by the defendant in his capacity as Institutional Head of Matsqui, which pro vided that all inmates were to be thoroughly searched before leaving and when returning to the Institution, had not been universally and strictly enforced and, as a consequence, a knifing incident occurred. Following this incident, which took place before the date in question, the Institutional Head at first verbally directed the rigid and indiscriminate enforcement of the Standing Order and made clear that a thorough search meant a skin frisk. He then issued another Standing Order in which the words "skin frisked" replaced the word "searched". The question is whether it is lawful for an institutional head to order the indiscriminate search of all inmates for contraband on leaving and returning to the institution.
Held, the action is allowed. The order requiring employees in charge of escorts to ensure that all inmates be thoroughly skin frisked before leaving and when returning to the institution is unlawful in that it is in conflict with subsection 41(2) of the Penitentiary Service Regulations. That Regulation is so worded that the institutional head must suspect on reasonable grounds that an inmate is in possession of contraband before he may order that that person be searched. That suspicion must be
specific and not a suspicion generally held. Subsection 41(2) is expressed in the singular throughout; no resort can be had to subsection 26(7) of the Interpretation Act—declaring the sin gular to include the plural and vice versa—in order to replace the singular used in the Regulation by the plural. The manifest interpretation of subsection 41(2) of the Regulations requires that it shall be read in the singular only to give effect to the legislative intent. Furthermore, the words of an enactment must be interpreted in their ordinary grammatical sense unless there is something in the context, the object of the enactment or the circumstances with reference to which they are used to show that the contrary is the case.
Corporation of the City of Victoria v. Bishop of Vancou- ver Island [ 1921] 2 A.C. (P.C.) 384, referred to. R. v. Noble [ 1978] 1 S.C.R. 632, applied.
ACTION. COUNSEL:
John W. Conroy for plaintiff. John Haig for defendants.
SOLICITORS:
Abbotsford Community Legal Services, Abbotsford, for plaintiff.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for defendants.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
CATTANACH J.: The plaintiff is an inmate at Matsqui Institution, a federal penitentiary in the Municipality of Matsqui, in the Province of British Columbia.
The capacities of the defendants are as described in the style of cause.
Mr. Caros, in the capacity described and which he occupied at the times relevant to this action, was responsible for the direction of the staff of the Institution, the organization, safety and security of the Institution and the correctional training of all inmates.
In his capacity as Institutional Head and in the furtherance of the responsibilities of that office, Mr. Caros may, under the authority of the Com missioner, the first named defendant herein, issue Standing Orders which are orders of a permanent nature peculiar to a particular institution and Rou tine Orders, as they are required to give informa-
tion and direction to all officers under his jurisdiction.
These matters are specifically provided in the Penitentiary Service Regulations, C.R.C. 1978, Vol. XIII, c. 1251, made by the Governor in Council under the authority granted in section 29 of the Penitentiary Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. P-6.
Mr. Caros did issue Standing Orders.
An extract from the Standing Orders issued by him directed to the security division was intro duced as Exhibit D.I.
This extract is entitled "Searching of Inmates" and consists of nine subsections under section 7.12.
It is provided that:
(1) the searching of inmates is the responsibility of the Assist ant Director Security who shall see that such search is properly carried out (which I take to mean efficiently and effectively) but with due regard to decency and self respect;
(2) inmates may be searched at any time by an Employee (that is a member of Penitentiary Service) who has reason to suspect that contraband (which means anything that an inmate is not permitted to have in his possession) is being carried;
(3) frisking of inmates shall be in the form of a "Line Frisk" or "Security Frisk" or both depending on the thoroughness required;
(4) "Line Frisk" is the hand search from cap to shoes of a clothed inmate;
(5) "Security Frisk" consists of undressing an inmate in priva cy, a thorough examination of body and body cavity and a detailed examination of all clothing and accessories;
(6) the "thorough examination of body and body cavities" is undertaken on very strong suspicion, or on the direction of senior officer and shall be conducted by the institutional physi cian or hospital officers;
(7) frequent but irregular searches of all inmates and areas of the institution are to be made to detect contraband, and
(8) all inmates are to be skin frisked on admission to the institution, termination of a patio visit and on returning from temporary absence.
Skin frisking is not defined in the Orders but was described as the inmate completely undress ing, a detailed examination of all clothing and a visual examination of the exposed body. The searcher is not to touch the inmate. However the inmate is required to "bend over" and spread his buttocks in order that an employee "may complete
a proper skin frisk". Clearly this bending over process is part and parcel of a "skin frisk".
Also produced as Exhibit D.2 was an extract from the Standing Orders respecting the duties of outside escorts dated March, 1977.
The employee in charge of escorts shall ensure that inmates are thoroughly searched in the Admission and Discharge area before leaving and when returning to the institution. That is a respon sibility of the escorting employee as well. Restraint equipment is used.
These same instructions to employees on escort duty are repeated in Exhibit D.3, a Standing Order dated June 1, 1978.
The words used in the foregoing extracts from the Standing Orders are "thoroughly searched" and as indicated, a thorough search has been interpreted as a skin frisk and that was the type of thorough search to be conducted. It was also estab lished that a "skin frisk" is a recognized form of search adopted by institutions and has been for some time an accepted procedure.
However in Exhibit D.4 which is an extract from the Standing Order dated December, 1978 the language has been amended to read that all inmates "are thoroughly skin frisked ... before leaving and when returning to the institution."
The words "skin frisked" have been inserted.
This Standing Order is subsequent to the event which set off the chain of circumstances which give rise to this action. That event took place on November 10, 1978.
Shortly before November 10, 1978 an inmate named Lakey was being escorted to a hospital for treatment. He had secreted on his person a knife. He attacked and seriously wounded his two escort ing guards. He escaped to Vancouver Island and there committed a murder before his recapture.
This incident was the cause of great concern in the community. The mayor of the municipality in which the institution was situate demanded greater security and safety for the citizens. Hospital
authorities were reluctant to treat inmates without assurance of the control of inmates. Naturally Mr. Caros was concerned. He was concerned for the safety of the staff under his jurisdiction, the out side hospital authorities and their staff and the outside population.
His investigation of security measures disclosed that the search procedures outlined in the Stand ing Orders dated March, 1977 and June 1, 1978 (Exhibits D.2 and D.3) had not been universally and strictly enforced. Every inmate leaving the institution had not been thoroughly searched upon leaving and when returning.
The first remedial step taken by Mr. Caros was to verbally direct that this Standing Order respect ing inmates leaving the institution under escort should be rigidly and indiscriminately enforced and by thorough search he meant a skin frisk. Each and every inmate on leaving and upon returning was to be skin frisked without exception. Those verbal instructions were given Mr. Mick- aloski, the Assistant Director of Security.
Mr. Caros so reinforced the Standing Order. It was to be strictly and consistently complied with in every instance. The issuance of the Standing Order dated December 1978 (Exhibit D.4) in which the words "skin frisked" replaced the word "searched" formerly used was a further step in the reinforce ment and to leave no doubt what was contemplat ed by a thorough search.
Mr. Caros was motivated to act as he did because, in his opinion, any flow of contraband in or out of the institution and its presence within the institution jeopardized the safe custody of inmates, the security and safety of the staff and the general public, all of which were his responsibility to ensure.
That opinion is self-evident and cannot be disputed.
Furthermore every inmate temporarily leaving the institution was suspect to him. That was so because he could not determine with any degree of accuracy which inmates would and which inmates
would not carry contraband. It was also his view that if exceptions were made those excepted might well carry contraband voluntarily or become the target of pressure to do so by other inmates.
This he pleads in the defence to the statement of claim as a whole and he testified to the above effect.
The plaintiff had a history of a kidney ailment prior to his imprisonment. That ailment recurred in prison and was surgically relieved by the remov al of a cyst at the Vancouver General Hospital but he was then advised of the almost certain likeli hood of more cysts developing. An X-ray examina tion was suggested in two years' time.
In the fall of 1978 the plaintiff suffered a recur rence of associated pain and was referred by the institutional physician to a doctor in Abbotsford who undertook to do an X-ray examination on November 10, 1978.
On that day the plaintiff was to be escorted outside for that purpose and upon reaching the Receiving and Discharge area at about 9:45 a.m. he was ordered by Penitentiary Officer Scott to remove his clothing. This the plaintiff did.
He was then ordered to bend over to enable the officer to see between the buttocks to determine if anything was there concealed. This the plaintiff refused to do. He refused because to do so was humiliating and degrading but more so because, in his opinion which he expressed to the penitentiary officers present, the order was unlawful.
The order was repeated with the admonition that if the plaintiff persisted in his refusal to bend over he would be charged with disobeying a lawful order and would be sent to segregation pending the disposition of the charge.
The plaintiff continued in his refusal. He was thereupon taken to segregation and subsequently charged "... that (he) did refuse a direct order, lawfully given, to be skin-frisked ...."
On November 16, 1978 he appeared before an Inmate Disciplinary Board, the composition of
which and the conduct thereof is provided for in Commissioner's Directive No. 213. The Commis sioner is authorized to make directives by subsec tion 29(3) of the Penitentiary Act.
The Board was comprised of Mr. Caros, as Chairman, and two staff members, Mr. Mickalos- ki, the Assistant Director of Security and Mr. Arens, an officer in charge of a living unit. The decisions are exclusively those of Mr. Caros, as Chairman of the Board, the functions of the other two members being advisory only.
By virtue of section 12 of the Commissioner's Directive particularly paragraph c(4) thereof the accused shall be given the opportunity to make his full answer and defence, including amongst other things the cross-examination of witnesses through the presiding officer and the right to call witnesses on his own behalf, unless, in the belief of the presiding officer it is frivolous and vexatious to do so and shall so advise the accused in writing.
At the hearing the plaintiff pleaded not guilty to the charge. In so doing he admitted his refusal to obey the order to bend over on the contention that the order was not lawful.
He was afforded the opportunity of cross-exam ining the sole witness called as to the facts, Peni tentiary Officer Scott, through the presiding offi cer as is the authorized practice.
He also requested that Mr. Mickaloski remove himself from the Board in order that the plaintiff might call him as a witness. These requests were denied by Mr. Caros as presiding officer. The plaintiff's purpose in calling Mr. Mickaloski as a witness was to establish that the plaintiff had indicated to him that his refusal to bend over in compliance with the order to do so was based upon his conviction that the order was unlawful and for that reason need not be obeyed and that the conduct of the plaintiff was exemplary for the nine years he had served in his life sentence with but one exception, a fight with another inmate.
As I appreciate the refusal of these requests it was because it was accepted by the Board that the plaintiff's conduct had been irreproachable and that his refusal to obey the order was because he considered the order to be unlawful. That being so there was no need to call Mr. Mickaloski to estab-
lish those facts which were accepted. Thus the refusal, on those grounds, was well taken.
It was also contended that both Mr. Caros and Mr. Mickaloski were disqualified from sitting as members of the Disciplinary Board convened to try this alleged offence because Mr. Caros was being called upon to decide the lawfulness of an order which he had made and which Mr. Mickaloski had ordered to be enforced.
This contention is based on the probability that the minds of these two members have been made up on the issue of the lawfulness of the order, that they were respectively the author and enforcer of the order and to sit on the Board where the lawfulness of that order was in issue is tantamount to sitting on appeal from a prior decision and that each had a direct interest in issue. As a result of those circumstances the submission was that the plaintiff entertained a reasonable apprehension of bias.
It would appear that Mr. Caros, while recogniz ing the plaintiffs contention that the order made by him was unlawful, did not accept that conten tion. It was his view that he had authority to make the order and the only logical assumption I can make is that he rejected the plaintiff's contention in this respect.
There is merit to the contentions respecting bias in its legal sense advanced on behalf of the plaintiff.
However it is possible that, either by express words or by necessary implication, authority to decide disputes may be committed to a person interested in the result in which case the common law disqualifications recited above may be treated as removed. That is the application of the rule of necessity.
Under subsection 29(3) of the Penitentiary Act the Commissioner may make directives for the discipline of inmates. This he has done by Direc tive No. 213. Inmate offences are categorized and disobedience of an order is in the category of a serious or flagrant offence warranting serious pun ishment including dissociation for a period not exceeding thirty days alone or in combination with other prescribed punishment.
As previously pointed out Directive No. 213 provides for the composition of the Disciplinary Board.
It is inherent in the Directive that the more serious the offence the more senior the presiding officer shall be.
Mr. Caros obviously considered this matter to be so important as to require his personal attention and decision and so presided at the Board himself.
In my view it would appear that the circum stances dictate that the Commissioner's Directive contemplates a built-in exemption from disqualifi cation of the institutional head to so sit even though he may have the interest of enforcing his own order.
The plaintiff was convicted of the offence with which he was charged and sentenced to thirty days' dissociation but the sentence was suspended for ninety days.
That meant that should the plaintiff repeat his refusal to comply with an order to submit to skin frisking within the ninety-day period the punish ment of thirty days' dissociation might well be imposed as well as that imposed on conviction for any subsequent charges.
There was considerable evidence adduced and argument advanced as to the efficacy of skin frisk ing and that other suggested means of search might be more efficient, practical and less demeaning.
The plaintiff in his testimony expressed the belief that skin frisking was deliberately imposed to degrade and humiliate inmates and not for any other purpose. If that were so the Standing Order directed to be rigidly enforced by Mr. Caros would be unlawful as effecting an ulterior purpose.
It is not my function to substitute my opinion for that of the institutional head as to the most effective methods to ensure the safety and security of the institution for which he was responsible. Skin frisking is an accepted procedure throughout the Penitentiary Service and I must, therefore, accept the premise that it is the most effective method of search for contraband not required to
be conducted by medical personnel and accepting that premise, as I have, it follows that it was not invoked for any ulterior purpose.
However such conclusion does not mean that the order might not be unlawful for other reasons.
There is no question that the Commissioner is responsible "for the organization, training, disci pline, efficiency, administration and good govern ment of the Service, and for the custody, treat ment, training, employment and discipline of inmates and the good government of penitentiar ies". Subsection 29(3) so provides and to that end the Commissioner may issue directives but subject to subsection (1).
Subsection 29(1) authorizes the Governor in Council to make regulations to the same end. This has been done by the enactment of the Penitentia ry Service Regulations.
Therefore the Commissioner cannot make any directive which conflicts with a provision of the Penitentiary Service Regulations.
As set out at the outset the institutional head is responsible for the direction of his staff, the organ ization, safety and security of his institution and the correctional training of all inmates confined therein.
To that end he may issue Standing Orders pecu liar to his institution and Routine Orders to give information and direction to all officers under his command.
Both Standing Orders and Routine Orders are issued under the authority of the Commissioner. It follows that since the Commissioner cannot issue directives in conflict with the Penitentiary Service Regulations he cannot authorize Standing Orders that will do so.
I accept the premise put forward in paragraph 17 of the defence with respect to the fact, of which Mr. Caros testified, that the flow of contraband in and out of Matsqui and its presence within Mat- squi jeopardizes the safe custody of the inmates, the security and safety of staff and the general public which are his responsibility to ensure.
As stated before, that premise is so self-evident as not to permit of dispute and it inexorably follows that the flow and possession of contraband must be suppressed.
The logical place to suppress the flow in or out of the institution is when and where the inmates leave and return to the institution on authorized absences.
The logical way to ensure this is by a thorough search of the inmate at that time and place. For the reason I have mentioned above, if the institu tional head directs that the most efficient method of search is a skin frisk, that is within his compe tence to impose.
However Mr. Caros testified that he could not be certain which inmates would carry contraband. Therefore he suspected all inmates. Therefore he ordered all inmates to be searched and for the additional reason that no exceptions being made would be a deterrent to attempts to carry contraband.
It seems to me that the rigid enforcement of thorough searching of all inmates leaving and returning to the institution inaugurated by Mr. Caros without exception would be the logical way to suppress the carrying of contraband upon the person of an inmate.
The narrow issue upon which this action falls to be determined is whether it is lawful for the insti tutional head to order the indiscriminate search of all inmates for contraband on leaving and return ing to the institution.
Within the broad responsibility upon the institu tional head to ensure the safety, security and good administration of the institution I am of the opin ion that such measures would be to achieve that purpose and so within his competence but because it may well be within his competence to do so it is not within his authority to do so if the order made by him conflicts with an order on the same subject-matter in the Penitentiary Service Regula tions.
Subsection 41(2) of the Penitentiary Service Regulations (formerly 2.31(2) and so designated in the pleadings herein) reads:
41....
(2) Where the institutional head suspects, on reasonable grounds, that an officer, employee, inmate or visitor to the institution is in possession of contraband he may order that person to be searched ....
This Regulation prescribes the circumstances under which the institutional head may order the search of an inmate for contraband.
He must suspect, on reasonable grounds, that the inmate to be searched is in possession of contraband as a condition precedent to ordering the search.
While the institutional head might be justified in holding the suspicion that each and every inmate who leaves the institution and returns thereto on temporary, but authorized, absences is likely to be carrying contraband I do not think that such suspicion is held on reasonable grounds with respect to a particular inmate. The suspicion must be specific and not a suspicion generally held.
Subsection 41(2) is expressed in the singular throughout.
My brother Walsh in his reasons for granting an interlocutory injunction dated January 24, 1979, * restraining the defendants herein from ordering any further searches upon the plaintiff's person except those in accordance with Regulation 2.31(2) of the Penitentiary Service Regulations (now subsection 41(2) of those Regulations) had this to say:
The regulation 2.31(2) (supra) is however so worded that the institutional head must suspect "on reasonable grounds" that the "inmate" "is in possession" of contraband before he may order "that person" to be searched. [The emphases were insert ed by Walsh J.]
It is trite to say that there may be some suspicion, even perhaps "reasonable" suspicion, that inmates generally may be in possession of contraband at any given time—experience in prisons so indicates. The regulation, as drawn, would appear to require specific suspicion of a given individual "on reasonable grounds" before he may be searched. The word "inmate" is used in the singular, the regulation uses the word "is" in possession not "may be" in possession, and the order is that "that" person be searched. It would in my view require stronger wording to justify a general body search of the type indicated of all inmates on leaving or entering the institution, however desirable, useful, or even necessary such a search may be. If greater powers of search are necessary, as they may well be, then the regulation should be amended to provide for this.
* [Unreported, Court No. T-5674-78.]
Subsection 26(7) of the Interpretation Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. I-23, reads:
26....
(7) Words in the singular include the plural, and words in the plural include the singular.
Lord Selborne L.C. has said in Conelly v. Steer ((1881) 7 Q.B.D. 520, at page 522):
But, in construing a statute, plural is to read as singular whenever the nature of the subject-matter requires it;
The converse is equally so, the singular is to be read as plural "whenever the nature of the subject- matter requires it".
When Lord Selborne spoke as he did in 1881 the same words as those in subsection 26(7) (with the addition of the word "shall" before the word "include") were contained in "An Act for shorten ing the Language used in Acts of Parliament", 13 Vict., c. 21, and were reproduced in the exact words, when that Act was repealed but consolidat ed, in section 1(1) (b.) of the Interpretation Act, 1889, 52 & 53 Vict., c. 63.
I make mention of this to indicate that the words of an enactment must be interpreted in their ordinary grammatical sense unless there is some thing in the context, the object of the enactment or the circumstances with reference to which they are used to show that the contrary is the case (see Lord Atkinson in Corporation of the City of Vic- toria v. Bishop of Vancouver Island [1921] 2 A.C. (P.C.) 384, at page 387).
In The Queen v. Noble ([1978] 1 S.C.R. 632) the question arose as to whether the use of the word "samples" in section 237(1)(f) of the Crimi nal Code could be construed in the singular and that but one breath "sample" would be sufficient.
Ritchie J. speaking for the Court adopted with approval the language of Hughes C.J.N.B. when he said that the word "samples" cannot be extend ed by the provisions of the Interpretation Act declaring the singular to include the plural and vice versa to a case where only one sample of an accused's breath had been taken. Such a provision should only be resorted to where it is necessary to
give effect to the apparent legislative intent of the Act being considered.
This is the converse of the Regulation here under review. In The Queen v. Noble the singular was sought to be substituted for the plural used in the statute by the application of subsection 26(7) of the Interpretation Act. In subsection 41(2) of the Penitentiary Service Regulations the plural is sought to be substituted for the singular used in the Regulation.
Here, in my opinion, the manifest interpretation of subsection 41(2) of the Regulations requires that it shall be read in the singular only to give effect to the legislative intent.
I therefore conclude that the order in Exhibit D.2 and Exhibit D.4 being Standing Orders 7.05 dated March 1977 and December 1978 requiring employees in charge of escorts to ensure that all inmates be thoroughly skin frisked before leaving and when returning to the institution is unlawful in that it is in conflict with subsection 41(2) of the Penitentiary Service Regulations.
Accordingly, as sought in the plaintiff's claim for relief:
(1) it is declared that any Commissioner's direc tives or other subordinate orders inconsistent with the provisions of subsection 41(2) of the Penitentiary Service Regulations are unlawful to the extent of that inconsistency;
(2) it is declared that the order made by Peni tentiary Officer Scott and directed to the plain tiff at or about 9:45 a.m. on March 10, 1978 on orders from the defendant, Nicholas Caros, in his capacity as Institutional Head of Matsqui Institution was not a lawful order;
(3) it is declared that the conviction of the plaintiff on the charge that he failed to obey a lawful order by the Disciplinary Board on November 16, 1978 was wrong in law and it is directed that such conviction be set aside and any record thereof be expunged from the plain tiff's penitentiary record and file; and
(4) the defendants, their servants, agents and employees are enjoined from conducting by order or otherwise any searches of the plaintiffs person except in accordance with subsection 41(2) of the Penitentiary Service Regulations.
I was informed that the plaintiffs costs of con ducting this action came from public funds. Since any order for the plaintiffs costs would also come from public funds there shall be no order for costs to the plaintiff.
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