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T-3801-80
William Faulder Robertson (Plaintiff) v.
Donald Yeomans, in his capacity as Commissioner of Corrections, and John Dowsett, in his capacity as Institutional Head of Kent Institution and the Canadian Corrections Service and its members (Defendants)
Trial Division, Gibson J.—New Westminster, March 3; Vancouver, March 6, 1981.
Penitentiaries — Plaintiff an inmate at maximum security penitentiary — Orders by Institutional Head to skin frisk all inmates on completion of open visits — Whether orders incon sistent with s. 41(2) of Penitentiary Service Regulations and therefore unlawful — Whether doing skin frisks on a regular and routine basis is unlawful in the absence of reasonable grounds for suspecting contraband on the part of specific inmates such as plaintiff — Whether s. 41(2) is ultra vires — Penitentiary Service Regulations, C.R.C. 1978, Vol. XIII, c. 1251, s. 41(2) as amended by SOR/80-462.
The plaintiff, an inmate at Kent Institution, a maximum security penitentiary, seeks injunctive and declaratory relief against the defendants with respect to orders issued by the Institutional Head of Kent to skin frisk all inmates on comple tion of open visits. Plaintiff submits that those orders are inconsistent with section 41(2) of the Penitentiary Service Regulations (as it read prior to June 20, 1980 when amended section 41(2) came into force, and as it now reads) and therefore are unlawful; that doing skin frisks on a regular and routine basis is unlawful in the absence of reasonable grounds on the part of the member of the Penitentiary Service to suspect contraband in relation to specific inmates such as plaintiff; and finally that if section 41(2) is authority to issue such orders, it is then ultra vires.
Held, the action is dismissed. Since June 20, 1980, skin frisks of inmates at Kent Institution after open visits are within the Institutional Head's authority as a member of the Penitentiary Service and in accordance with section 41(2) of the Penitentia ry Service Regulations. The Institutional Head ordered those skin frisks on a routine and universal basis because in his opinion, on a continuing basis, there are reasonable and prob able grounds for believing, and it is his belief, that contraband will enter Kent Institution after open visits if no preventative measure is taken. His opinion is that of an experienced and competent administrator with respect to security matters gener ally and in particular in maximum security federal penitentia ries. It follows therefore that section 41(2) is not ultra vires. Finally, any declaration with respect to what took place prior to June 20, 1980 would be of no material importance.
Gunn v. Yeomans [1981] 2 F.C. 99, considered.
ACTION. COUNSEL:
John W. Conroy for plaintiff. W. B. Scarth for defendants.
SOLICITORS:
John W. Conroy, Mission, for plaintiff. Deputy Attorney General of Canada for defendants.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
GIBSON J.: William Faulder Robertson is an inmate at Kent Institution, a federal maximum security penitentiary located in British Columbia. He is serving a 23-year sentence for conspiracy to traffic in cocaine.
Robertson sues Donald Yeomans, the Commis sioner of Corrections (appointed under section 4 of the Penitentiary Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. P-6, as amended) and John Dowsett, the Warden and Institutional Head of Kent Institution. Robertson claims certain injunctive and declaratory relief, namely:
a) an interlocutory injunction or relief in the nature thereof restraining the Defendants from requiring the Plaintiff on being searched, to remove all of his clothing and to bend over to enable the Defendants or any one of them to visually inspect the area between the Plaintiff's buttocks on a routine basis except in accordance with the provisions of Penitentiary Service Regulation 41(2)(c) when the Defendants or any one of them has reason to believe that the Plaintiff is in the possession of contraband in that area of his anatomy or the Defendants or any one of them have reason to believe that it is necessary to search that area of the Plaintiff's anatomy to maintain the good order of the institution, pending the ruling of this Honourable Court on the merits of this action;
(This claim for interlocutory relief was dismissed by Collier J. on 20 August 1980.)
b) a declaration of this Honourable Court that any Commis sioner's Directives or other subordinate orders inconsistent with the provisions of Regulation 41(2) of the Penitentiary Service Regulations are unlawful to the extent of such inconsistency;
c) a declaration of this Honourable Court that any searches of the Plaintiff's person and any orders requiring searches of the Plaintiff's person on or before June 19th, 1980 were unlawful to the extent that they were not in compliance with
the provisions of Penitentiary Service Regulation 41(2) in force up to that time;
d) a declaration of this Honourable Court that Penitentiary Service Regulation 41(2)(c) that came into force on June 19th, 1980 continues to require the member, before search ing, to have reason to believe that the Plaintiff is in posses sion of contraband in order for such action to be reasonable to detect the presence of contraband or reason to believe that it is necessary to conduct such a search in the circumstances of each case in relation to the Plaintiff for the good order of the institution;
e) a declaration of this Honourable Court that any searches of the Plaintiff's person or orders requiring searches of the Plaintiff's person since June 19th, 1980 are or were unlawful to the extent that such searches were conducted or ordered to be conducted on a regular, routine and arbitrary basis in the absence of specific reasons therefore [sic] in relation to the Plaintiff as an individual;
f) a permanent injunction restraining the Defendants, their servants, agents or employees from conducting by order or otherwise any further searches of the Plaintiff's person except in accordance with Regulation 41(2)(c) of the Peni tentiary Service Regulations as interpreted by this Honour able Court;
A maximum security penitentiary, which Kent Institution has been designated, is defined in Canadian Penitentiary Service Divisional Instruc tion No. 1024 of August 8, 1978 at paragraph 5a(1) as follows:
5....
a. Security Definitions
The security requirements for inmates are defined as follows:
(1) Maximum Security:
for the inmate who is likely to make active efforts to escape and, if he is at large, is likely to be dangerous to the public, and for the hostile and violent type of offender who requires close supervision at all times.
Penitentiary Service Regulation 41(2) [C.R.C. 1978, Vol. XIII, c. 1251] enacted pursuant to the enabling powers of the Governor in Council under section 29 of the Penitentiary Act (supra) until the 19th June 1980 read as follows:
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, but no such person, who is female, shall be searched except by a female person.
By amendment P.C. 1980-1638 [SOR/80-462], 19 June 1980, in force 20 June 1980 and to date, section 41(2) now reads:
41....
(2) Subject to subsection (3), any member may search
(a) any visitor, where there is reason to believe that the visitor has contraband in his possession, and if the visitor refuses to be searched he shall be refused admission to or escorted from the institution;
(b) any other member or members, where the institutional head has reason to believe that a member or members has or have contraband in his or their possession;
(c) any inmate or inmates, where a member considers such action reasonable to detect the presence of contraband or to maintain the good order of an institution; and
(d) any vehicle on institution property where there is reason to believe that such a search is necessary in order to detect the presence of contraband or to maintain good order of the institution.
Standing Order 7:21 of Kent Institution Stand ing Orders in force at all material times reads as follows:
7:21 SEARCHING OF INMATES
1. The searching of inmates shall be the responsibility of the Assistant Director (Security), who shall ensure that searches are properly carried out and shall issue instructions to his staff regarding procedures to ensure that due regard to decency and self respect is observed.
2. Inmates may be searched at any time by an Employee who has reason to suspect that contraband is being carried within or into the Institution.
3. It is the duty of the Employee in charge of shops or work gangs to search all inmates on completion of work periods, when inmates are leaving work areas or shops, before leaving or entering the prison compound and when leaving or returning to Living Units.
4. Frisking of inmates shall be in one of the forms outlined depending on thoroughness required:
(a) Line Frisk
The clothed inmate shall be searched by hand from cap to shoes, down the body front and rear and under the arms; checking the waistbands, pockets, cuffs and inseams and outseams of trousers, pockets in jackets and shirts, and socks and the tops of boots.
(b) Security or Skin Frisk
Shall consist of undressing the inmate in privacy where a thorough examination of body and body cavities and a detailed examination of all clothing and accessories can be made. Such examinations of the body cavities shall be con ducted by the Institutional Physician or a Health Care Officer.
5. Thorough examination of body and body cavities shall only be completed on those inmates being admitted to dissociation/ segregation or when there is sufficient suspicion to warrant same; or as directed by the Director, Assistant Director (Secu- rity) or the Employee I/C of the Institution.
In addition, by memorandum dated 14 August 1980 it was prescribed:
Searching of Inmates:
1. In addition to Standing Order 7:21, paragraph 3, all inmates are to be body searched on completion of visits.
In evidence Robertson and his wife, among other things, said skin frisks are not necessary and are useless and degrading. And of the submissions of counsel for Robertson, the submission is that orders to skin frisk are inconsistent with section 41(2) of the Penitentiary Service Regulations and therefore unlawful; alternatively, the submission is that if they are consistent, doing skin frisks on a routine and universal basis is unlawful because of the lack of reasonable and probable grounds on the part of the member of the Penitentiary Service authorizing such skin frisks for believing that con traband would enter the penitentiary through spe cific inmates such as Robertson; and further, alter natively the submission is that if section 41(2) purports to be authority to enable orders to be issued such as here, namely that skin frisks be done on a routine and universal basis without such reasonable and probable grounds, section 41(2) is ultra vires.
John Dowsett, Warden and Institutional Head of Kent Institution, (formerly Deputy Regional Director of Security in the Penitentiary Service from July 1973 to April 1974 and Director of maximum security penitentiary Millhaven Institu tion from May 1974 to 1977) in evidence said that there are 160 inmates in Kent at the moment, 10 to 12 of whom have been convicted of capital murder, 1 / 2 of whom are serving sentences for life, '/s of whom were convicted for various drug offences and 30 to 32 of whom have been involved in escapes or escape attempts.
Dowsett said further that prior to the opening of Kent Institution he caused Kent Standing Orders to be issued and specifically directed that there be skin frisks of inmates after open visits. He said he decided to so order because he was of opinion that this was one way to control some of the introduc tion of contraband into the Institution, that is contraband in the form of hardware, knives, ammunition, drugs, explosives, money, etc. Dow- sett said he formed his opinion as to the efficacy of
skin frisks based on his training, knowledge and experience. His opinion is that skin frisks on a universal and routine basis after open visits have been effective, by and large, in curtailing, and in many cases preventing, the entry of contraband into penitentiaries generally, and particularly in penitentiaries where he has been Warden and Institutional Head and further based on the practi cal experience at Kent Institution since it opened, skin frisks have produced similar successful results in that Institution. Dowsett also said that in his opinion, based on an amalgam of knowledge derived for example from instructions he has received, information he has obtained from others, and what he has read and experienced, after open visits there is always reasonable and probable grounds for believing that contraband will enter an institution such as Kent Institution, by transfer from the visitor to inmate unless some preventative measures are taken and that skin frisks is one of such measures; and that in deciding what inmates to skin frisk, it is, from a practicable point of view, impossible to differentiate among inmates as to who might be a probable transferee at any time so as to be selective as to which inmate or inmates should be skin frisked.
The open visits at Kent Institution take place in a room (see Exhibit 3) which can hold up to 10 inmates, plus 2 visiting adults for each inmate, plus children in respect of which no limit in number is placed by the authorities. The visits last for 1' hours. Personal contact between inmate and visitor is permitted. There is an officer, or officers, monitoring the visits behind a glassed area but they have other duties at the time besides monitoring.
The evidence is that skin frisks were ordered to be done and are done on a routine and universal basis at Kent Institution after all open visits; that the author of such requirement is the Warden, John Dowsett, through Standing Orders and Spe cific Orders and that an inmate may have an open visit with a visitor only if he consents to a skin frisk after such open visit.
An inmate has the option, however, if he does not wish to be subject to a skin frisk, to have a visit with a visitor in another way. The inmate can have a visual one with a glass partition separating him
from the visitor and with communication between them accomplished by telephone.
According to the evidence of Dowsett and the two other Kent Institution officers, Robertson has been a satisfactory inmate during his incarceration and has not given any trouble to the authorities.
In an action in this Court, Gunn v. Yeomans [1981] 2 F.C. 99, Mr. Justice Cattanach, in his judgment dated 11 June 1980, decided an issue and a matter that is much similar on its facts as in this case. Mr. Justice Cattanach's decision was made when section 41(2) of the Penitentiary Ser vice Regulations read as it did, prior to the 20th June 1980 (see supra). Mr. Justice Cattanach in that case held that the Standing Orders of the Warden of Matsqui Institution and other orders of the Warden and all other orders of all members of the Penitentiary Service, all of which were subor dinate to the provisions of section 41(2) of the Penitentiary Service Regulations as it then read, were not lawful to the extent of their inconsistency with section 41(2); and further that all searches of the plaintiff's person in that case could only be made in accordance with section 41(2) of the Penitentiary Service Regulations as it then read.
Section 41(2) of the Penitentiary Service Regu lations as it now reads (Exhibit 6) apparently was issued and enacted having in mind this decision of Mr. Justice Cattanach.
Relevant to this case also are the words of Mr. Justice Cattanach in that case regarding the efficacy of skin frisking in the light of its declared purpose [at pages 107-108]:
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 respon sible. 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 accept ing that premise, as I have, it follows that it was not invoked for any ulterior purpose.
With this view I agree.
In the result, therefore, based on the whole of the evidence and especially the evidence of John Dowsett, Warden and Institutional Head of Kent Institution, an experienced and competent administrator with respect to security matters gen erally and in particular in maximum security fed eral penitentiaries, I am of opinion that since 20 June- 1980 skin frisks of inmates at Kent Institu tion after open visits are lawful.
Warden Dowsett ordered these skin frisks on a routine and universal basis because in his opinion on a continuing basis there are reasonable and probable grounds for believing, and it is his belief, that contraband will enter Kent Institution after open visits if no preventative measure or measures are taken. As a means of preventing or minimizing such entering of contraband he ordered that skin frisks be done. His opinion is that of an expert. His opinion is based on an amalgam of knowledge arising, among other ways, out of information as to security matters and methods he has obtained by his reading, his formal training, his conversa tions with security people in Canada and in other countries and his experience as head of two max imum security penitentiaries in Canada since 1974. His orders for skin frisks are within his authority as a member of the Penitentiary Service and in accordance with section 41(2) of the Peni tentiary Service Regulations.
Further, it follows that there is no basis for the submission that section 41(2) is ultra vires based on the point of lack of reasonable and probable grounds for believing on the part of a member of the Penitentiary Service at the time skin frisks are ordered that such skin searches are necessary to detect the presence of contraband or to maintain the good order of Kent Institution.
In regard to part of the relief claimed, any declaration with respect to what took place prior to 20 June 1980 (the date when amended section 41(2) of the Penitentiary Service Regulations came into force) would be of no material importance.
Accordingly this action is dismissed with costs.
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