Judgments

Decision Information

Decision Content

A-1041-83
Glen Howard (Applicant) (Appellant) v.
Presiding Officer of the Inmate Disciplinary Court of Stony Mountain Institution (Respond- ent)
Court of Appeal, Thurlow C.J., Pratte and Mac- Guigan JJ.—Winnipeg, January 10; Ottawa, March 1, 1985.
Penitentiaries — Disciplinary offences — Presiding Officer at Inmate Disciplinary Court denying request by inmate for representation by legal counsel — Procedural changes re disciplinary hearings not transforming disciplinary board into court — Procedure lacking fully adversarial character — Directives not having status of law — Amendments leading only to fairer version of model considered by Supreme Court of Canada in Martineau cases — Request for representation not matter of discretion but of right where circumstances indicate need — Presiding Officer's functions strictly limited — No authority as master of own procedure — Denial of request subject to supervisory jurisdiction of superior court — Appeal allowed — Penitentiary Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. P-6, ss. 24 (rep. and sub. S.C. 1976-77, c. 53, s. 41), 24.1 (as added idem), 29 (as am. idem, s. 44) — Penitentiary Service Regula tions, C.R.C., c. 1251, ss. 2, 38 (as am. by SOR/80-209), 38.1(1),1(2)(asladded�idem), 391-1Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, ss. 18, 28.
Constitutional law — Charter of Rights — Fundamental justice — Whether s. 7 Charter affording inmate right to representation by legal counsel in prison disciplinary hearings — Right to counsel arising from necessity to afford inmate opportunity to adequately present case — S. 7 requiring fundamentally just procedure — Unnecessary to fulfil s. 7 requirement that right be recognized in all circumstances — Request for representation not matter of discretion but of right when circumstances indicate need — Seriousness of charges, points of law, capacity of inmate to present case, procedural difficulties, need for reasonable speed in adjudication and for fairness determining right to counsel — In instant case, risk of losing earned remission, lack of particulars re disciplinary offences, vagueness and complexity of charges suggesting need for counsel — Appeal allowed — Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, being Part I of the Constitution Act, 1982, Schedule B, Canada Act 1982, 1982, c. 11 (U.K.), ss. 1, 7 — Canadian Bill of Rights, R.S.C. 1970, Appendix III, ss. 1(a), 2(e) — U.S. Const., Amends. XIV, XV.
The appellant, an inmate of Stony Mountain Institution, was charged with disciplinary offences under section 39 of the Penitentiary Service Regulations. The charges were all classi fied as "serious or flagrant" offences pursuant to Commission er's Directive No. 213. The appellant obtained Legal Aid counsel and applied to have counsel represent him at the disciplinary hearing. That request was denied by the Presiding Officer of the Inmate Disciplinary Court who held that section 7 of the Charter had not created a "new wave of rights" and that the circumstances of the case did not preclude a fair hearing in the absence of counsel. The Trial Division dismissed the appellant's application for prohibition on the grounds that at common law there existed no right to counsel and that section 7 had not conferred on the appellant a new right to such representation. The issue is whether section 7 of the Charter guarantees inmates the right to be represented by counsel at disciplinary hearings. The case also raises the issue whether procedural amendments (such as the appointment of presiding officers from outside the Correctional Service and the formality of the new procedure) changed the nature of the disciplinary proceedings as hitherto stated by the Supreme Court of Canada and transformed the disciplinary board into a court within the traditional sense.
Held, the appeal should be allowed.
Per Thurlow C.J. (Pratte J. concurring): The enactment of section 7 of the Charter has not created any absolute right to counsel. The standard to satisfy the procedural requirement of section 7 is that of a procedure that is fundamentally just. In that context, any right a person has to the assistance of counsel arises from the requirement to afford the person an opportunity to adequately present his case. It is not necessary in order to afford an inmate such an opportunity and thus to fulfil the requirement of section 7 to recognize in all circumstances his right to be represented by counsel in a disciplinary court. Whether or not a person has such a right depends on the circumstances of the particular case, its nature, its gravity, its complexity, the capacity of the inmate himself to understand the case and present his defence. The list is not exhaustive. From this it follows that an inmate's request for representation is not a matter of discretion, but a matter of right guaranteed by section 7 where the circumstances are such that the opportu nity to present his case adequately calls for representation by counsel. Where the circumstances do not point to that conclu sion a residual authority to permit counsel may nevertheless be exercisable by the appropriate official but that area is not within the purview of section 7.
Where the circumstances indicate the necessity for represen tation, not only is there no discretion to refuse the request for representation, but the authority to decide whether it is a case in which counsel must be allowed is not vested in the presiding officer of the disciplinary court. The latter's functions are strictly limited by subsections 24.1(2) of the Penitentiary Act and 38.1(2) of the Regulations. Commissioner's Directive No.
213, which is an administrative directive, instructs the presiding officer as to how his duties, including that of conducting the hearing, are to be carried out, and Annex "A" to the Directive contains a provision that forbids him to permit counsel. It cannot be said therefore that the presiding officer has authority as master of his own procedure to permit counsel or to adjudi cate on the right of an inmate to counsel. His denial of a request for representation cannot prevent a superior court in the exercise of its supervisory jurisdiction from determining the question on its own.
In the instant case, the appellant's request could not have been lawfully refused. The fact that his 267 days of earned remission were in jeopardy, that there existed a lack of particu lars with respect to the disciplinary offences, and that one of the charges, i.e. conduct calculated to prejudice discipline and good order, is a notoriously vague and difficult charge to defend, suggest the need for counsel. Moreover, in a social system which recognizes the right of anyone to counsel in any of the ordinary courts of law for the defence of any charge, it would be incongruous to deny such a right to a person who, though not suffering from any physical or mental incapacity to defend himself, is faced with charges having such grave consequences.
Per MacGuigan J.: It would be excessive to view the proce dural changes affecting disciplinary hearings as having created a court. There is no prosecution in the strict sense and no prosecuting officer. The whole procedure lacks a fully adver sarial character. Moreover, the new procedural structure is still incomplete in its legality: the use of presiding officers remains optional and the Commissioner's Directives, which are the only provisions dealing with the conduct of hearings, do not have the status of law. Legally speaking, the amendments have led only to a fairer version of the same basic model considered by the Supreme Court of Canada in the two Martineau cases.
The standard enunciated in section 7 is the right not to be deprived of the right to liberty "except in accordance with the principles of fundamental justice". Fundamental justice requires that an accused be given "the opportunity adequately to state his case" as stated by Fauteùx C.J.C. in the case of Duke v. The Queen. While the Charter has not created a new right (representation by legal counsel) it has nevertheless enhanced the requirement of an adequate opportunity of answering a charge. Whether this necessitates representation by counsel in any set of circumstances can be determined only by a full analysis of the circumstances. Webster J. in the English case of Tarrant enumerated six considerations to be taken into account in relation to the right to counsel: (1) the seriousness of the charge; (2) whether any points of law are likely to arise; (3) the capacity of a particular prisoner to present his own case; (4) procedural difficulties; (5) the need for reasonable speed in adjudication; (6) the need for fairness as between prisoners and as between prisoners and prison officers. (The third consideration, however, meets with disap proval: no presiding officer could be in a position, at the outset
of the disciplinary proceedings, to make a summary judgment of the capacity of an inmate to present his case before having heard the inmate.) The need for counsel in a case of a possible forfeiture of earned remission is so strong that it amounts effectively to a presumption in favour of counsel, a departure from which a presiding officer would have to justify.
What section 7 requires is that an inmate be allowed counsel when to deny his request would infringe his right to fundamen tal justice. The existence of the right admittedly depends on the facts. The presiding officer's authority cannot prevent a review ing court from substituting its own view if it is clearly satisfied that the exercise of the presiding officer's discretion was wrong. In this case, the presiding officer in expressing the opinion that section 7 "[did] not create a new wave of rights nor [did] it elevate any greater degree of responsibility by an administra tive tribunal such as the Inmate Disciplinary Board" has misunderstood the effect of the Charter. The Charter does modify the previous understanding of the law and in so doing it does affect even purely administrative proceedings. The appel lant was thus clearly deprived of the protection of a fundamen tal principle of justice in violation of section 7.
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
APPLIED:
R. v. Mingo et al. (1982), 2 C.C.C. (3d) 23 (B.C.S.C.).
CONSIDERED:
Duke v. The Queen, [1972] S.C.R. 917; Martineau et al. v. Matsqui Institution Inmate Disciplinary Board (No. 1), [1978] 1 S.C.R. 118; Martineau v. Matsqui Institu tion Disciplinary Board (No. 2), [1980] 1 S.C.R. 602; Fraser v. Mudge, [1975] 1 W.L.R. 1132 (Eng. C.A.); Reg. v. Secretary of State for the Home Department, Ex parte Tarrant, [1984] 2 W.L.R. 613 (Eng. Q.B.D.); Wolff v. McDonnell, 418 U.S. 539 (1974); Re Davidson and Disciplinary Board of Prison for Women et al. (1981), 61 C.C.C. (2d) 520 (F.C.T.D.); Blanchard v. Disciplinary Board of Millhaven Institution et al., [1983] I F.C. 309; 69 C.C.C. (2d) 171 (T.D.); Joplin v. Chief Constable of Vancouver Police Dept., [1983] 2 W.W.R. 52 (B.C.S.C.); R. v. Cadeddu (1982), 3 C.R.R. 312 (Ont. H.C.); Law Society of Upper Canada v. Ska- pinker, [1984] 1 S.C.R. 357; 8 C.R.R. 193; Morrissey v. Brewer, 408 U.S. 471 (1972); Gagnon v. Scarpelli, 411 U.S. 778 (1973); Pett v. Greyhound Racing Association, Ltd., [1968] 2 All E.R. 545 (C.A.); Selvarajan v. Race Relations Board, [1976] 1 All E.R. 12 (C.A.); In re Prisons Act and in re Pollard et al., judgment dated February 20, 1980, Supreme Court of Newfoundland, file no. 1355, not reported.
REFERRED TO:
Minou v. Presiding Officer of the Inmate Disciplinary Court of Stony Mountain Penitentiary et al., [1982] 1 F.C. 322 (T.D.); The Queen, et al. v. Operation Disman tle, Inc., et al., [1983] 1 F.C. 745 (C.A.); In re Husted and in re the Royal Canadian Mounted Police Act, [1981] 2 F.C. 791; 58 C.C.C. (2d) 156 (T.D.); Re Swan and The Queen (1983), 7 C.C.C. (3d) 130 (B.C.S.C.); R. v. Nunery (1983), 5 C.R.R. 69 (Ont. H.C.); Collin v. Lus- sier, [1983] 1 F.C. 218; 6 C.R.R. 89 (T.D.); R. v. Sibley (1982), 4 C.R.R. 166 (N.S. Co. Ct.); Re Jamieson and The Queen (1982), 70 C.C.C. (2d) 430 (Que. S.C.); R. v. Holman (1982), 28 C.R. (3d) 378 (B.C. Prov. Ct.); Re Balderston et al. and The Queen (1982), 2 C.C.C. (3d) 37 (Man. Q.B.); Baxter v. Palmigiano, 425 U.S. 308 (1976); General Medical Council v. Spackman, [1943] A.C. 627 (H.L.); Nicholson v. Haldimand-Norfolk Regional Board of Commissioners of Police, [1979] 1 S.C.R. 311; Evans v. Bartlam, [1937] A.C. 473 (H.L.); Charles Osenton & Co. v. Johnston, [ 1942] A.C. 130 (H.L.); Quebec Association of Protestant School Boards et al. v. Attorney General of Quebec et al. (No. 2) (1982), 140 D.L.R. (3d) 33 (Que. S.C.), affirmed (1983) 1 D.L.R. (4th) 573 (Que. C.A.).
COUNSEL:
Judy Elliott and Arne Peitz for applicant (appellant).
Brian H. Hay for respondent.
SOLICITORS:
Legal Aid Manitoba, Ellen Street Commu nity Legal Services, Winnipeg, for applicant (appellant).
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for respondent.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
THURLOW C.J.: This is an appeal from a judg ment of the Trial Division [(1983), 8 C.C.C. (3d) 557] which dismissed the appellant's application for an order prohibiting the respondent from con tinuing or concluding the hearing of certain charges against the appellant under section 39 of the Penitentiary Service Regulations [C.R.C., c. 1251] in the absence of legal counsel as requested by the appellant. The issue in the appeal is wheth er the request of the appellant was unlawfully refused.
As presented it is a narrow issue.
The appellant does not claim a right to have counsel provided for him. Indeed, having had counsel available, he did not even seek a postpone ment to obtain counsel. On the other hand, it was not disputed by counsel for the respondent that the Disciplinary Court has authority and indeed a duty to permit counsel to conduct the defence of an accused inmate where to deny it would breach the obligation to deal fairly with him. This was referred to as a "discretion" vested in the Presid ing Officer. In so far as the appellant's entitlement to representation by counsel is subject to denial by the exercise of a discretion there was no attack by the appellant either before the Trial Division or on the appeal on the exercise by the Disciplinary Court of such discretion by denying the appellant's request. What is in issue is thus solely whether the appellant had an undeniable right to counsel and more particularly whether section 7' of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms [being Part I of the Constitution Act, 1982, Schedule B, Canada Act 1982, 1982, c. 11 (U.K.)] guaranteed him that right.
At the material time the appellant was an inmate of Stony Mountain Institution serving a sentence of two years and four months. On December 31, 1982, he was involved in incidents with officers of the institution as a result of which five charges were laid against him under section 39 of the Penitentiary Service Regulations. These were, possessing contraband, using indecent or dis respectful language to another person, an act cal culated to prejudice discipline or good order of the institution, disobeying a lawful order of a peniten tiary officer, and threatening to assault another person. The record does not disclose particulars of the charges other than that the first three occurred at 08.40 hours, the fourth at 09.00 hours, and the fifth at 09.20 hours, all on December 31, 1982. On January 6, 1983, the appellant appeared before a presiding officer and entered pleas of guilty to the charges of possessing contraband and disobeying a
' 7. Everyone has the right to life, liberty and security of the person and the right not to be deprived thereof except in accordance with the principles of fundamental justice.
lawful order and pleas of not guilty on the remain ing three charges.
Editor's Note: The affidavit of Glen Howard, the appellant herein, dated May 10, 1983 and filed in the Trial Division of the Federal Court on May 12, 1983, contains the following paragraphs:
3. THAT on December 31st, 1982 I was involved in certain incidents with officers employed at the Stony Mountain Institu tion. As a result, the following charges were laid against me under Section 39 of the Penitentiary Service Regulations:
(i) threatens to assault another person;
(ii) is indecent or disrespectful in his language or writing towards another person;
(iii) does any act that is calculated to prejudice the disci pline or good order of the institution;
(iv) has contraband in his possession;
(v) disobeys the lawful order of a penitentiary officer.
5. THAT on January 6th, 1983, I appeared before the Presid ing Officer of the Inmate Disciplinary Court. I entered pleas of not guilty to the first three charges referred to in paragraph 3 herein and guilty pleas to the latter two charges referred to in paragraph 3 herein.
The reasons for judgment of the Trial Judge, Nitikman D.J., reported at (1983), 8 C.C.C. (3d) 557, read in part as follows (at pages 559-560):
Applicant is an inmate of Stony Mountain Institution whose mandatory release date is June 9, 1983, according to his affidavit. On December 31, 1982, he was involved in certain incidents with officers employed at the institution. As a result, the following charges were laid against him under s. 39 of the Penitentiary Service Regulations:
39(i) has contraband in his possession, allegedly having occurred at 0840 hours on December 31, 1982;
39(g) is indecent, disrespectful or threatening in his actions, language or writing toward any other person, allegedly having occurred at 0840 hours on December 31, 1982;
39(k) does any act that is calculated to prejudice the discipline or good order of the Institution, allegedly having occurred at 0840 hours on December 31, 1982;
39(a) disobeys or fails to obey a lawful order of a penitentia ry officer, allegedly having occurred at 0900 hours on December 31, 1982;
39(b) assaults or threatens to assault another person, allegedly having occurred at 0920 hours on December 31, 1982;
The above offences were allegedly committed on December 31, 1982, the first three at the same time, and the last two, some short while later. He was subsequently charged under said s. 39 of the Penitentiary Service Regulations with one count of having contraband in his possession on January 4, 1983, and was also subsequently charged under said section with one count of failure to obey a lawful order of a penitentia ry officer on January 18, 1983.
On January 6, 1983, applicant appeared before the presid ing officer of the inmate disciplinary court and entered not guilty pleas on the first three charges above referred to and guilty pleas to the latter two charges. Disposition of the charges applicant pleaded guilty to was held in abeyance pending the determination of the balance of the charges. He later appeared before the presiding officer of the inmate disciplinary court and entered pleas of not guilty to the last two charges.
Disposition of the charges to which he pleaded guilty was held in abeyance pending determination of the remaining three charges. Subsequently, charges of having contraband on January 4, 1983, and failing to obey a lawful order on January 20, 1983, were laid. To these the appellant pleaded not guilty. All the charges were categorized under the Commissioner's Directive No. 213 as "serious" or "flagrant" offences. On February 3, 1983, by which time he had secured counsel, the appellant appeared before the Presiding Officer of the Inmate Disciplinary Court who thereupon adjourned the hearing in order to obtain written submissions from counsel for the appellant and for the Department of Justice on the request of the appellant to have counsel represent him at the hearing. The request was denied on April 11, 1983. The Presiding Officer held that section 7 of the Charter does not create "a new wave of rights" and, as he was not persuaded that there were circumstances in the particular case which pre cluded the possibility of a fair hearing in the absence of counsel, he exercised his discretion and denied the request.
The appellant's application for prohibition was then brought. It was refused on June 7, 1983, the learned Trial Judge holding that at common law the appellant did not have a right to be represented by counsel in such proceedings and that section 7 of the Charter had not conferred on the appellant
any new right to such representation. He found no basis for disagreeing with the Presiding Officer's decision. The appellant thereupon brought this appeal.
On May 10, 1983, when the affidavit in support of the application for prohibition was sworn, the appellant had 267 days of earned remission stand ing to his credit and was due for release on manda tory supervision on June 9, 1983. The earned remission was subject to forfeiture in whole or in part as a result of the Disciplinary Court proceed ings. Among other permissible punishments for serious or flagrant offences was solitary confine ment, also referred to as punitive dissociation.
We were informed by counsel for the appellant that the hearing in the Inmate Disciplinary Court proceeded on June 9, 1983, when the appellant was found guilty on six of the seven counts and was sentenced to forfeiture of 70 days of his earned remission. As a prohibition can no longer be effective and as the sentence which the appel lant was serving has long since expired, the matter has become academic and would ordinarily not be entertained. But, as counsel for the respondent, as well as for the appellant, urged upon the Court the importance, to both inmates and the penitentiary administration, of having a decision of this Court as to the right of inmates to counsel in such disciplinary proceedings and in particular as to the effect of section 7 of the Charter, the Court exer cised its discretion to hear the matter on its merits.
At the material time the relevant provisions of the Penitentiary Act [R.S.C. 1970, c. P-6 (as am. by S.C. 1976-77, c. 53)] included:
EARNED REMISSION
24. (1) Subject to section 24.2, every inmate may be credited with fifteen days of remission of his sentence in respect of each month and with a number of days calculated on a pro rata basis in respect of each incomplete month during which he has applied himself industriously, as determined in accordance with any rules made by the Commissioner in that behalf, to the program of the penitentiary in which he is imprisoned.
(2) The first credit of remission pursuant to subsection (1) shall be made not later than the end of the month next following the month the inmate is received into a penitentiary, or, if he had been so received before the coming into force of this subsection, not later than the end of the month next following the month in which this subsection comes into force and thereafter a credit of remission shall be made at intervals of not more than three months.
24.1 (1) Every inmate who, having been credited with earned remission, is convicted in disciplinary court of any disciplinary offence is liable to forfeit, in whole or in part, the earned remission that stands to his credit and that accrued after the coming into force of this section, but no such forfeiture of more than thirty days shall be valid without the concurrence of the Commissioner or an officer of the Service designated by him, or more than ninety days without the concurrence of the Minister.
(2) The Governor in Council may make regulations provid ing for the appointment by him or by the Minister of a person to preside over a disciplinary court, prescribing the duties to be performed by such a person and fixing his remuneration.
REGULATIONS AND RULES
29. (1) The Governor in Council may make regulations
(a) for the organization, training, discipline, efficiency, administration and good government of the Service;
(b) for the custody, treatment, training, employment and discipline of inmates;
(2) The Governor in Council may, in any regulations made under subsection (1) other than paragraph (b) thereof, provide for a fine not exceeding five hundred dollars or imprisonment for a term not exceeding six months, or both, to be imposed upon summary conviction for the violation of any such regulation.
(3) Subject to this Act and any regulations made under subsection (1), the Commissioner may make rules, to be known as Commissioner's directives, for the organization, training, discipline, efficiency, administration and good government of the Service, and for the custody, treatment, training, employ ment and discipline of inmates and the good government of penitentiaries.
Under the heading CUSTODY AND TRAINING OF INMATES the Penitentiary Service Regulations [as am. by SOR/80-209] included:
38. (1) The institutional head of each institution is respon sible for the disciplinary control of inmates confined therein.
(2) No inmate shall be punished except pursuant to
(a) an order of the institutional head or an officer designated by the institutional head; or
(b) an order of a disciplinary court.
(3) Where an inmate is convicted of a disciplinary offence the punishment shall, except where the offence is flagrant or serious, consist of loss of privileges.
(4) The punishment that may be ordered for a flagrant or serious disciplinary offence shall consist of one or more of the following:
(a) forfeiture of statutory remission or earned remission or both;
(b) dissociation for a period not exceeding thirty days;
(c) loss of privileges.
38.1 (1) The Minister may appoint a person to preside over a disciplinary court.
(2) A person appointed pursuant to subsection (1) shall
(a) conduct the hearing;
(b) consult, in the presence of the accused inmate, with two officers designated by the institutional head;
(c) determine the guilt or innocence of an accused inmate appearing before him; and
(d) on finding an accused inmate guilty, order such punish ment authorized by these Regulations as he deems suitable.
39. Every inmate commits a disciplinary offence who
(a) disobeys or fails to obey a lawful order of a penitentiary officer,
(b) assaults or threatens to assault another person,
(g) is indecent, disrespectful or threatening in his actions, language or writing toward any other person,
(i) has contraband in his possession,
(k) does any act that is calculated to prejudice the discipline or good order of the institution,
Commissioner's Directive No. 213 included:
5. OFFICERS DESIGNATED TO HEAR CHARGES AND AWARD PUNISHMENT
c. Where an independent chairperson has been appointed, that chairperson shall be assigned by the institutional director to hear charges and award punishment in all cases of serious or flagrant offences.
d. Where an independent chairperson has not been appointed, the persons designated to award punishment for serious or flagrant offences shall not be below the level of assistant director.
12. HEARING OF CHARGES FOR SERIOUS OR FLAGRANT OFFENCES
a. A person designated by the institutional director shall hear all charges for serious or flagrant offences and, if the inmate is found guilty, shall decide the appropriate punishment. Two staff members shall be appointed to attend a hearing, but their role shall be as advisers only.
b. The hearing of a charge shall commence, as far as is practicable, within seven working days from the date the charge was laid, unless a justifiable reason warrants delay, but may, when circumstances require, be adjourned from time to time.
c. No finding shall be made against an inmate charged under section 2.29 of the PSR for a serious or flagrant offence unless the inmate:
(1) has received written notice of the charge in suffi cient detail so that he may direct his mind to the occasion and events upon which the charge is made, and a summary of the evidence alleged against him;
(2) has received the written notice and summary referred to in paragraph (1) at least 24 hours prior to the beginning of the hearing, so that he has reasonable time to prepare his defence;
(3) has appeared personally at the hearing so that the evidence against him was given in his presence;
(4) has been given an opportunity to make his full answer and defence to the charge, including the introduction of relevant documents, and the ques tioning and cross-examination of the witnesses which shall be done through the presiding person. The inmate is entitled to call witnesses on his own behalf, except that, where the request for the attendance of any such witness is believed to be frivolous or vexatious, the presiding person may refuse to have such witness called and shall advise the inmate of the reason for the refusal in writing.
d. The decision as to the guilt or innocence shall be based solely on the evidence produced at the hearing and, if a conviction is to be registered, it can only be on the basis that, after a fair and impartial weighing of the evidence, there is no reasonable doubt as to the guilt of the accused.
13. AWARDING PUNISHMENT
(5) When the award of punishment is one of forfeiture of statutory or earned remission, under no circum stances shall this punishment be suspended.
And Annex "A" to Directive No. 213 included:
12. MISCELLANEOUS
a. Occasions have arisen where an accused has made formal or informal demands that he be represented by counsel. Such demands shall be met with the response that he is not entitled to counsel, and that the hearing will proceed without the accused person being represented.
These statutory provisions, regulations and directives have not changed materially from what they were when the Martineau cases 2 arose. The enactment of subsection 24.1(2) of the Penitentia ry Act by chapter 53 of the Statutes of Canada 1976-77 provided for a new or additional class of persons who might preside at inmate disciplinary court proceedings but the nature of such proceed ings as being essentially administrative rather than judicial or quasi-judicial, as held by the majority of the Supreme Court in the first Martineau case, remains unchanged. On the other hand, as no question as to the division of jurisdiction in super visory proceedings effected by sections 18 and 28 of the Federal Court Act [R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10] between the Trial Division of this Court and the Court of Appeal or as to an applica tion for prohibition as an appropriate means of raising the issue of the appellant's right to counsel arose it appears to me to make no difference whether the appellant as an inmate was entitled to be dealt with in the Disciplinary Court in accord ance with what are referred to as principles of natural justice or with some lesser standard referred to by the term "fairly". In neither case, apart from section 7 of the Charter, would the appellant on the basis of existing jurisprudence have been in a position to demand as of right to be represented by counsel at the disciplinary hearing. The utmost he might have achieved was to have a discretion to permit him to be represented by counsel exercised in his favour. Even then it would have been permitted in the face of Directive No. 213 which, however, has been held by the Trial Division to be ultra vires and inoperative to deprive the Disciplinary Court of a discretion to permit counsel. See Minott v. Presiding Officer of the Inmate Disciplinary Court of Stony Mountain Penitentiary et al. 3 and Re Davidson and Discipli nary Board of Prison for Women et al.'s So far as I am aware no appeal was taken from either of those decisions.
2 Martineau et al. v. Matsqui Institution Inmate Discipli nary Board, [1978] 1 S.C.R. 118; Martineau v. Matsqui Institution Disciplinary Board, [1980] 1 S.C.R. 602.
3 [1982] 1 F.C. 322 (T.D.).
(1981), 61 C.C.C. (2d) 520 (F.C.T.D.).
Both in England, where no constitutional provi
sion comparable to section 7 of the Charter is involved, and in the United States, where there is a constitutional right to due process, the existence and extend of the right of a prison inmate to counsel in disciplinary proceedings does not appear
to be finally settled.
In England Fraser v. Mudge 5 is taken as au thority that the inmate has no absolute right to counsel. In the course of his reasons, Lord Denning
M.R. said [at pages 1133-1134]:
If legal representation were allowed, it would mean consider able delay. So also with breaches of prison discipline. They must be heard and decided speedily. Those who hear the cases must, of course, act fairly. They must let the man know the charge and give him a proper opportunity of presenting his case. But that can be done and is done without the matter being held up for legal representation. I do not think we ought to alter the existing practice. We ought not to create a precedent such as to suggest that an individual is entitled to legal representation.
Roskill L.J. wrote [at page 1134]:
One looks to see what are the broad principles underlying these rules. They are to main [sic] discipline in prison by proper, swift and speedy decisions, whether by the governor or the visitors; and it seems to me that the requirements of natural justice do not make it necessary that a person against whom disciplinary proceedings are pending should as of right be entitled to be represented by solicitors or counsel or both.
Ormrod L.J. said [at page 1134]:
I agree. In my view it is for Parliament to make rules as they think fit. I agree that this application should be refused.
The effect of this case, which was begun, heard at trial and appeal levels and decided, all on the same day, has been moderated by the decision of the Queen's Bench Division of the High Court of
5 [1975] 1 W.L.R. 1132 (Eng. C.A.).
Justice in Reg. v. Secretary of State for the Home Department, Ex parte Tarrant, 6 in which the Court held that while Fraser v. Mudge stands for the proposition that the inmate has no absolute right to counsel, the disciplinary court has author ity to exercise a discretion to allow counsel. The reasoning is founded on the power of a tribunal, in the absence of statutory provision to the contrary, to establish its own procedure. At pages 646-647 Kerr L.J. wrote:
A right to the exercise of a discretion
I therefore turn to the second question, whether there is an absolute bar to the grant of legal representation or whether there is a discretion in boards of visitors to grant such requests. As it seems to me, under our law, including the principles of natural justice, there cannot be any answer to this question other than that boards of visitors have a discretion to grant requests for legal representation in appropriate cases. This must be so for at least two reasons. First, since there is no statutory provision to the contrary, boards of visitors are masters of their own procedures and entitled to decide for themselves whether or not to grant such requests. In the same way as any other tribunal or body inquiring into any charges against anyone, they have an unfettered right to decide whom they will hear on behalf of the persons charged.
Secondly, the grant of legal representation, when this is requested, must in some cases necessarily follow from section 47(2) of the Prison Act 1952 and rule 49(2) of the Prison Rules 1964. Both of these provide, in effect, that a prisoner charged with any offence under the Rules must be given a proper and full opportunity of presenting his case. Suppose then that in a particular instance a board of visitors is of the view that this requirement can only be complied with if the prisoner is legally represented, or even that the board is doubtful whether this objective can be attained without legal representation. How, then, could the board refuse such a request? Such situations are by no means necessarily fanciful. The evidence before us shows that such views may well be held by the members of boards in a number of cases who are at present constrained by the "rule" that legal representation is simply out of the question. More over, while the principles of natural justice are of course primarily designed for the protection of persons against whom charges of some kind are made, they must also operate for the benefit of tribunals or bodies who have the task of investigating the charges and deciding upon the consequences for the persons charged. They must be entitled to conduct their proceedings on the basis of what they consider to be appropriate, according to justice as they see it.
6 [1984] 2 W.L.R. 613 (Eng. Q.B.D.)
Given that there is a discretion to grant requests of legal representation when boards of visitors consider it appropriate to do so, what then are the rights of prisoners who make such requests? The answer, in my view, is that they have the right to a proper consideration of such requests on their merits by each board to whom such a request is made.
It does not follow, however, that such requests will necessari ly be granted, except that they must always be granted if, in the view of the board, the circumstances are such that legal representation is or may be required in order to comply with the prisoner's rights under rule 49(2). In order to reach a conclusion as to whether or not to grant any such request, I agree that boards should take account of the considerations which have been listed by Webster J. in his judgment, together with any other circumstances which they may regard as ma terial in any individual case. [Emphasis added.]
In the course of his reasons, Webster J., at pages 636-637, gave a list of six matters of consideration in exercising such a discretion. They included:
(1) The seriousness of the charge and the potential penalty.
(2) Whether any points of law are likely to arise.
(3) The capacity of [the] particular [person] to present his own case.
(4) Procedural difficulties.
(5) The need for reasonable speed in making the adjudica tion....
(6) The need for fairness as between prisoners and as between prisoners and prison officers.
It appears to me that the effect of this decision is that in the English system a prisoner has the right to require of the disciplinary court that it exercise on sound judicial grounds a discretion to allow representation by counsel and to require that the request be granted if in the view of the board of visitors the circumstances are such that legal representation is or may be required in order to comply with the prisoner's rights under the Prison Rules to be given a proper and full opportunity of presenting his case. This appears to me to amount in substance to a right to have counsel when the facts indicate the need for it and to a discretion to allow it in other cases as well. It is of interest to note as well the view of Webster J. as to when counsel might be required. When dealing with the cases of individual prisoners, he said at pages 637-638:
It seems to me that in most, if not all, charges of mutiny, and certainly in these two cases, questions are bound to arise as to whether collective action was intended to be collective, i.e. whether it was concerted or not, and as to the distinction between mere disobedience of a particular order on the one hand and disregard or defiance of authority on the other.
In my judgment, where such questions arise or are likely to arise, no board of visitors, properly directing itself, could reasonably decide not to allow the prisoner legal representation. If this decision is to have the result that charges of mutiny will more frequently be referred to the criminal courts in some other form, I, personally, would not regard that result as a matter of regret.
The charges against Tangney and Anderson each included one charge of an assault on a prison officer under rule 51. Each of them was, therefore, exposed to the risk of "an award" of forfeiture of remission for a period not exceeding 180 days— more, if, as Mr. Simon Brown contends but which is challenged on behalf of the applicants, a board has power to make consecutive awards, a point upon which I need express no view. For my part, I do not think that it can possibly be said that any reasonable board properly directing itself would be bound to grant legal representation or, in the case of Tangney and Anderson who applied for it, would be bound to have allowed the presence of an adviser. I would, therefore, leave the matter to be decided by any board before which it may come, if it does so.
In the United States, the Supreme Court dealt with a similar problem in Wolff v. McDonnell.' The Court held that an inmate's right to good-time credits under a Nebraska statute was protected by the Constitution and that to deprive him of them the minimum requirements of procedural due pro cess must be observed. At pages 560-561 the Court points to what may be a significant difference between the effect of loss of good time under the Nebraska statute and that under the statutory provisions applicable to the present case. The court said:
For the prison inmate, the deprivation of good time is not the same immediate disaster that the revocation of parole is for the parolee. The deprivation, very likely, does not then and there work any change in the conditions of his liberty. It can post pone the date of eligibility for parole and extend the maximum term to be served, but it is not certain to do so, for good time may be restored. Even if not restored, it cannot be said with certainty that the actual date of parole will be affected; and if parole occurs, the extension of the maximum term resulting from loss of good time may affect only the termination of
7 418 U.S. 539 (1974).
parole, and it may not even do that. The deprivation of good time is unquestionably a matter of considerable importance. The State reserves it as a sanction for serious misconduct, and we should not unrealistically discount its significance .... [Emphasis added.]
The fact that under the Canadian provisions earned remission, once forfeited, cannot be re stored makes the forfeiture of it by the disciplinary court a final and irrevocable deprivation of the right to liberty, conditional or qualified as it might be, to which the inmate would otherwise become entitled.
On the right of the inmate to counsel, the Court held [at page 570]:
The insertion of counsel into the disciplinary process would inevitably give the proceedings a more adversary cast and tend to reduce their utility as a means to further correctional goals. There would also be delay and very practical problems in providing counsel in sufficient numbers at the time and place where hearings are to be held. At this stage of the development of these procedures we are not prepared to hold that inmates have a right to either retained or appointed counsel in discipli nary proceedings.
Where an illiterate inmate is involved, however, or where the complexity of the issue makes it unlikely that the inmate will be able to collect and present the evidence necessary for an adequate comprehension of the case, he should be free to seek the aid of a fellow inmate, or if that is forbidden, to have adequate substitute aid in the form of help from the staff or from a sufficiently competent inmate designated by the staff. We need not pursue the matter further here, however, for there is no claim that respondent, McDonnell, is within the class of inmates entitled to advice or help from others in the course of a prison disciplinary hearing. [Emphasis added.]
This seems to me to leave it open to establish a different rule in the future.
I come then to section 7 of the Charter and whether it has the effect of affording an inmate in a disciplinary proceeding a right to counsel that is not subject to denial by the presiding officer on discretionary grounds.
What was said to be at stake in the disciplinary proceedings is the liberty and security of the inmate and his right not to be deprived of them except in accordance with the principles of funda mental justice. The inmate's liberty was said to be at stake because his earned remission was in jeop ardy as was also the security of his person since solitary confinement—also referred to as dissocia- tion—was one of the punishments to which he might be subjected. I accept this analysis so far as the appellant's liberty is involved and that, as I view it, is sufficient for present purposes. At the same time it is to be noted that earned remission, which is a creation of the Penitentiary Act, has at all times been conditional in the sense that it has been subject to forfeiture in disciplinary proceed ings of an administrative nature and thus has never had the quality of an absolute right to be set free on the completion of the unremitted portion of a sentence. To hold that an inmate's procedural rights have been increased by the enactment of section 7 is accordingly to hold that its enactment has also enhanced the quality of the less than absolute right conferred by the Penitentiary Act.
In the course of their reasons both the Presiding Officer and the learned Trial Judge referred to expressions of judicial opinion in a number of reported cases supporting the view that at common law a prison inmate had no absolute right to have counsel represent him in proceedings before a dis ciplinary tribunal, that the legal procedures estab lished by law before the enactment of the Charter are procedures in accordance with the principles of fundamental justice and that section 7 of the Charter did not add to the rights of a person in the appellant's position. That may be a legitimate approach to the question. But it appears to me that in interpreting section 7, and its meaning in the Charter, it is desirable to consider the wording of the provisions in an effort to determine its ordinary meaning in its context.
The section is cast in broad terms. Its context is that of a constitutional charter. The Charter itself is part of the Constitution of Canada. These fea tures suggest a broad interpretation. The extent of the Charter's guarantee of the rights set out in
section 7 may be limited by section 1 but that does not, as it seems to me, bear on how section 7 itself should be interpreted or on the breadth of what it embraces. In the present case no argument was presented on the effect of section 1 on any right to counsel that may arise under section 7.
Next, the subject-matter of section 7 is the right to life, liberty and security of the person. These are matters of prime importance to everyone More over, the fact that liberty and the security of the person are lumped together with life itself shows that the importance of the right to them is in the same class with that of the right to life itself. The enjoyment of property is not included in the class as it is in paragraphs 1(a) and 2(e) of the Canadi- an Bill of Rights [R.S.C. 1970, Appendix III].
Further, while the argument in the present case focussed on the meaning and effect of the wording "in accordance with the principles of fundamental justice" as a guarantee of procedural standards, I would not rule out the possibility that the wording may also refer to or embrace substantive standards as well.
A further observation is that the standard' of what is required to satisfy the section in its proce dural sense, as it seems to me, is not necessarily the most sophisticated or elaborate or perfect procedure imaginable but only that of a procedure that is fundamentally just. What that may require will no doubt vary with the particular situation and the nature of the particular case. An unbiased tribunal, knowledge by the person whose life, liber ty or security is in jeopardy of the case to be answered, a fair opportunity to answer and a decision reached on the basis of the material in support of the case and the answer made to it are features of such a procedure.
In Duke v. The Queens, Fauteux C.J., speaking of the similar wording in paragraph 2(e) of the Canadian Bill of Rights, said:
8 [1972] S.C.R. 917, at p. 923.
Under s. 2(e) of the Bill of Rights no law of Canada shall be construed or applied so as to deprive him of "a fair hearing in accordance with the principles of fundamental justice." With out 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 to him the opportunity adequately to state his case.
In this context, any right a person may have to the assistance of counsel arises from the require ment to afford the person an opportunity to ade quately present his case. This particular point was observed by Goodridge J. in In re Prisons Act and in re Pollard et al. 9 when he noted in parenthesis: "Jeopardy, of course, is not the full test, in a broader sense one is really talking about a person having the right to be heard by a tribunal."
Has it then become necessary, in order to afford an inmate an opportunity to be adequately heard and thus to fulfil the requirement of section 7 to recognize his right to be represented by counsel in a disciplinary court? I hesitate to refer to pre- Charter cases on the right to counsel because to do so seems to me to beg the question whether a new right has been created. On the other hand, to hold that whenever life, liberty or security of the person are in jeopardy in administering prison discipline an absolute right to counsel arises from the requirement of section 7 is to hold that the system before its enactment in which it was said to be within the discretion of the court to allow or deny representation by counsel was not necessarily up to that standard.
I am of the opinion that the enactment of sec tion 7 has not created any absolute right to counsel in all such proceedings. It is undoubtedly of the greatest importance to a person whose life, liberty or security of the person are at stake to have the opportunity to present his case as fully and ade quately as possible. The advantages of having the assistance of counsel for that purpose are not in
9 Supreme Court of Newfoundland, February 20, 1980, unreported.
doubt. But what is required is an opportunity to present the case adequately and I do not think it can be affirmed that in no case can such an opportunity be afforded without also as part of it affording the right to representation by counsel at the hearing.
Once that position is reached it appears to me that whether or not the person has a right to representation by counsel will depend on the cir cumstances of the particular case, its nature, its gravity, its complexity, the capacity of the inmate himself to understand the case and present his defence. The list is not exhaustive. And from this, it seems to me, it follows that whether or not an inmate's request for representation by counsel can lawfully be refused is not properly referred to as a matter of discretion but is a matter of right where the circumstances are such that the opportunity to present the case adequately calls for representation by counsel. It may be that where the circum stances do not point to that conclusion a residual authority to permit counsel nevertheless is exercis- able by the appropriate official but that area is not I think within the purview of section 7.
It appears to me that the right of an inmate to counsel in a case in which under the English and United States' systems it could not be denied is guaranteed in Canada by section 7. It is guaran teed because ex hypothesi it is a case in which an opportunity to adequately present his case cannot be accorded without the inmate being allowed to have counsel.
In Canada the system thus differs in that in such a case not only is there no discretion, properly described, to refuse the request but the authority to decide whether it is a case in which counsel must be allowed is not vested in the presiding officer of the disciplinary court. That officer is, in my view, strictly limited in his functions. Under subsection 24.1(2) of the Penitentiary Act the duties of a presiding officer appointed under that subsection, as the Presiding Officer in the present instance, are to be those prescribed by regulation. Under subsection 38.1(2) of the Regulations he has authority to conduct the hearing, to consult
with two officers, to determine guilt and to order punishment. The procedure to be followed is, how ever, not left to him. The Commissioner's Direc tive No. 213, made under the authority of subsec tion 29(3) of the Act, has been held 10 not to have the force of law, but it appears to me nevertheless to be an administrative directive to the presiding officer as to how his duties, including that of conducting the hearing, are to be carried out and included in the Annex to it is a provision that forbids him to permit counsel. In this situation I do not think any authority as master of his own procedure exists from which authority to permit counsel or to adjudicate on the right of an inmate to counsel might be regarded as vested in the presiding officer.
He will no doubt have to consider and take a position on whether the case is one in which the request for counsel can be denied. And he must be prepared to act on his view. But, in my opinion, his denial of such a request cannot be regarded as an adjudication of the right and cannot prevent a superior court in the exercise of supervisory juris diction from determining the question on its own. I may note as well that for a presiding officer to decide that he can accord the inmate a fair hearing in accordance with the principles of fundamental justice without permitting counsel would seem to me to indicate that he already has preconceived ideas about the case and the defence and that the need to decide would put him in the embarrassing position of determining his own capacity to accord the inmate his rights without knowing what they are. That, in my view, makes him an unsuitable person to decide such a question.
1 0 Martineau et al. v. Matsqui Institution Inmate Discipli nary Board, [1978] 1 S.C.R. 118 per Pigeon J., at p. 129; see also Martineau v. Matsqui Institution Disciplinary Board, [1980] 1 S.C.R. 602.
This brings me to the question whether the present was a case in which the appellant's request could lawfully be refused. Its principal feature was that the whole of the appellant's 267 days of earned remission were in jeopardy. In my view that alone suggests his need of counsel. Next there is the lack of particulars of offences of which three are alleged to have occurred at the same instant. Conviction on the two of the charges to which he pleaded not guilty might result in consecutive losses of 30 days' remission without reference to the Commissioner for what not inconceivably may have been the same act. Moreover, one of the three charges is that of an act calculated to prejudice discipline and good order, a notoriously vague and difficult charge for anyone to defend. These fea tures, as well, suggest the need for counsel to protect the inmate.
There is not in the record anything that would indicate that the appellant suffered from physical or mental incapacity which would disable him from conducting his own defence as well as might be expected of any ordinary person without legal training. But he obviously felt the need for counsel because he obtained Legal Aid assistance prompt ly. He must also have been able to persuade those who administer the legal aid system of his need. Moreover, in a social system which recognizes the right of anyone to counsel in any of the ordinary courts of law for the defence of any charge, no matter how trivial the possible consequences may be, it seems to me to be incongruous to deny such a right to a person who, though not suffering from any physical or mental incapacity to defend him self, is faced with charges that may result in loss of his liberty, qualified and fragile though it, may have been, for some 267 days.
On the whole, I am of the opinion that the refusal of the appellant's request for counsel was a refusal of the opportunity to which he was entitled to adequately present his defence and that prohibi tion should have issued.
I would allow the appeal with costs, and set aside the dismissal of the application for prohibi tion. As prohibition can no longer be effective, I would grant a declaration that the appellant was entitled to counsel for the defence of the charges against him with costs of the application.
PRArrE J.: I agree.
* * *
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
MACGUIGAN J.: This case raises the question of the right to representation by legal counsel in prison disciplinary hearings in the light of section 7 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
The appellant was an inmate of the Stony Mountain Institution in Manitoba when he was involved in December 1982 and January 1983 in incidents which led to the laying of seven charges against him under section 39 of the Penitentiary Service Regulations as follows:
39(a) disobeys or fails to obey a lawful order of a penitentiary officer, allegedly having occurred twice, on December 31, 1982, and on January 20, 1983;
39(b) assaults or threatens to assault another person, allegedly having occurred on December 31, 1982;
39(g) is indecent, disrespectful or threatening in his actions, language or writing toward any other person, allegedly having occurred on December 31, 1982;
39(i) has contraband in his possession, allegedly having occurred twice, on December 31, 1982, and on January 4, 1983;
39(k) does any act that is calculated to prejudice the discipline or good order of the institution, allegedly having occurred on December 31, 1982;
He pleaded guilty to the earlier charges under both paragraphs 39(a) and 39(i), and not guilty to all of the others.
All of the charges against him were laid as "flagrant or serious", for which the punishment is defined by section 38 of the Regulations as follows:
38....
(4) The punishment that may be ordered for a flagrant or serious disciplinary offence shall consist of one or more of the following:
(a) forfeiture of statutory remission or earned remission or both;
(b) dissociation for a period not exceeding thirty days;
(c) loss of privileges.
The appellant was not eligible for statutory remis sion but he was subject to loss of all of the earned remission that stood to his credit, viz. 267 days.
The appellant obtained Legal Aid counsel and applied to have counsel represent him at the hear ing of the charges. The Presiding Officer of the Inmate Disciplinary Court of the institution (the respondent herein), who was a practising barrister and solicitor, denied the appellant's request for counsel on April 11, 1983. The appellant then sought an order from the Trial Division prohibit ing the respondent from continuing or concluding the hearing of the charges in the absence of legal counsel. That order was refused by the Trial Divi sion on June 7, 1983.
A peculiarity of this case is that because the appellant was due to be released from prison on mandatory supervision two days later and in the absence of any statutory authorization to try him for disciplinary offences committed in prison after his release, the Presiding Officer presumed to pro ceed immediately to hearing, conviction and sen tence, despite having notice of appeal to this Court. We were informed by counsel for the appel lant that his client was found guilty on six of the seven counts (including the two on which he plead ed guilty) and was sentenced to forfeiture of 70 days of his earned remission.
Given that this action by the Disciplinary Court rendered ineffective the order of prohibition sought and that the appellant's sentence has since expired (although he is in prison again on a convic tion for a subsequent offence), the Court exercised its discretion to hear the matter on its merits only because both parties urged upon us the importance
of a decision on the matter by this Court, especial ly in the light of the new exigencies of the Charter.
The case law applicable for the most part ante dates the Charter. After holding in Martineau (No. 1) (Martineau et al. v. Matsqui Institution Inmate Disciplinary Board, [1978] 1 S.C.R. 118) that prison disciplinary proceedings could not be reviewed under section 28 of the Federal Court Act since they are administrative in character and so not required by law to be determined on a judicial or quasi-judicial basis, the Supreme Court of Canada established in Martineau (No. 2) (Martineau v. Matsqui Institution Disciplinary Board, [ 1980] 1 S.C.R. 602), an action under section 18 of the same Act, that an inmate discipli nary board is nevertheless subject to a duty of fairness. It did not have reason, on the facts of Martineau (No. 2), to decide on the implications of this duty for legal representation.
The earlier attitude of the English courts to this issue was put forth by Lord Denning M.R. in Fraser v. Mudge, [1975] 1 W.L.R. 1132 (Eng. C.A.), at pages 1133-1134:
We all know that, when a man is brought up before his commanding officer for a breach of discipline, whether in the armed forces or in ships at sea, it never has been the practice to allow legal representation. It is of the first importance that the cases should be decided quickly. If legal representation were allowed, it would mean considerable delay. So also with breaches of prison discipline. They must be heard and decided speedily. Those who hear the cases must, of course, act fairly. They must let the man know the charge and give him a proper opportunity of presenting his case. But that can be done and is done without the matter being held up for legal representation. I do not think we ought to alter the existing practice, We ought not to create a precedent such as to suggest that an individual is entitled to legal representation.
A similar attitude was expressed in this country by Cattanach J. in Re Davidson and Disciplinary Board of Prison for Women et al. (1981), 61 C.C.C. (2d) 520 (F.C.T.D.), at page 534:
The very nature of a prison is such prison officers must make immediate decisions, the disobedience of which by inmates will necessarily result in charges being laid and restrictions and penalties imposed. This is essential and must be made as part of the routine process. Disobedience to legitimate orders in this regard must be followed by swift and certain punishment. If the powers and authority of the prison officers are curbed and the deterrent of speedy and sure punishment removed the conse quences will be chaotic.
For my part I find it difficult to envision circumstances where, upon a trial for breach of military or prison discipline, the presence of counsel is essential to ensure that the duty of fairness is observed.
However, Cattanach J. held that the presiding officer of a disciplinary tribunal has the discretion to allow an inmate representation by legal counsel, and that his failure actually to exercise that discre tion, under the influence of Correctional Service guidelines refusing legal representation at all such hearings, amounted to a denial of natural justice.
In the result, this coincided with the approach taken by Nitikman D.J. in Minott v. Presiding Officer of the Inmate Disciplinary Court of Stony Mountain Penitentiary et al., [1982] 1 F.C. 322 (T.D.). Subsequently, Addy J. reiterated in Blanchard v. Disciplinary Board of Millhaven Institution et al., [1983] 1 F.C. 309, at pages 311-312; 69 C.C.C. (2d) 171 (T.D.), at page 174, that counsel may be present only at the discretion of the presiding officer:
There is no right to counsel; whether counsel representing the prisoner is to be allowed to be present is a matter for the discretion of the chairman conducting the enquiry. Occasions might possibly arise where matters are so complicated from a legal standpoint that the duty to act fairly might require the presence of counsel, but I cannot at the moment envisage such a situation, especially where the person conducting the enquiry is a legally qualified barrister and solicitor, as in the present case. Furthermore, the questions arising in these disciplinary proceedings are, generally, of a factual nature.
These Canadian cases take the position that at common law a presiding officer's duty to act fairly may on particular facts require representation by legal counsel but does not necessarily do so, and they describe the decision as to such representation as being within the discretion of the presiding officer. That this is where the law in England has
now arrived is indicated by Reg. v. Secretary of State for the Home Department, Ex parte Tar- rant, [1984] 2 W.L.R. 613 (Eng. Q.B.D.). It was on the basis of the same understanding of the law that the Trial Judge here found no basis for disa greeing with the Presiding Officer's decision to deny applicant's request to be represented by coun sel at the hearing.
However, the appellant contends that two new elements must be deemed to change the law as hitherto applied: changes in the Penitentiary Act and Regulations and the effect of section 7 of the Charter.
On the first point the appellant argues that when the Supreme Court of Canada rendered its decisions in the two Martineau cases the discipli nary system was a different one from that which now exists. The then system had a disciplinary board presided over by the institutional director or his nominee, and it was only such a system, it is contended, that Dickson J. (as he then was) had in mind when he said in Martineau (No. 2), at page 629, that "An inmate disciplinary board is not a court." The present provision for a presiding offi cer drawn from outside the Correctional Service and the formality of the procedure required are sufficient to constitute a court. The procedural guidelines in Commissioner's Directive No. 213 and Annex "A" to the Directive propose: a formal charge similar in form to a criminal information; 24 hours written notice of the charge; a formal plea; an opportunity for the inmate to make full answer and defence to the charge, including the introduction of relevant documents, the question ing and cross-examination of witnesses through the presiding officer, and the calling of witnesses; a right on the inmate's part not to incriminate him self; a decision based solely on the evidence addressed at the hearing; the criminal-law stand ard of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt; the record ing of proceedings; and, upon a finding or admis sion of guilt, the imposition of a sentence. The appellant argues that the restrictions contained in the Commissioner's Directives on cross-examina tion and the calling of defence witnesses, which
might appear to point in the other direction, may be legally impeachable.
It is true that the Report to Parliament by the Sub-Committee on the Penitentiary System in Canada, Minister of Supply and Services Canada, 1977, sparked a major re-examination from mid 1977 of justice within prison walls. Recommenda tion 30 (ibid., at page 91) is particularly apposite:
Independent chairpersons are required immediately in all insti tutions to preside over disciplinary hearings. Cases should be proceeded with within 48 hours unless there is reasonable cause for delay.
By early 1978 independent chairpersons were pre siding over all disciplinary hearings in maximum security institutions, and by the end of 1980 the new system had also been extended to medium security institutions.
In R. v. Mingo et al. (1982), 2 C.C.C. (3d) 23 (B.C.S.C.) where several accused who had been convicted of offences in disciplinary proceedings were subsequently charged with closely-related offences under the Criminal Code [R.S.C. 1970, c. C-34], a British Columbia Court held that since the disciplinary proceedings were administrative acts, there was no Charter violation by the subse quent criminal proceedings. Toy J. rejected (at page 34) the same argument made by the appel lant here, viz. that changes in the Regulations since Martineau (No. 2) created a court in the traditional sense:
Other than the change in name the function performed by the disciplinary court is precisely what the institutional head his torically could do and still is entitled to do, namely, adjudicate and order punishment for disciplinary offences. It is still a private or domestic court exclusively maintained to adjudicate upon inmates' disciplinary offences and to order the restricted punishments of loss of earned remission and punitive segregation.
To the contrary on the status of a disciplinary court is In re Prisons Act and in re Pollard et al., February 20, 1980, unreported, file no. 1355, 1979 (S.C. Nfld.), where the conviction of two warders for breach of prison regulations was quashed because, inter alia, they were denied representa tion at their trial. Goodridge J. held that the forum in question was a statutory tribunal exercising a judicial function (at pages 19-20):
Unlike a domestic tribunal to whose jurisdiction the parties appearing before it have submitted by being members of the association creating it, a statutory tribunal exercising a judicial function is established by law and without the consent of the parties whom it may concern.
Before such tribunals the right to representation is essential.
Goodridge J. indicated in obiter dicta (at page 30) that the same result would also apply to the disci plining of prisoners.
Although in my opinion an interpretation of the procedural changes as merely nominal is a less than adequate one, it would on the other hand be excessive to view them as having already created a court. There is no prosecution in the strict sense and no prosecuting officer. The presiding officer, who is assisted by two correctional officers whose unusual function was rationalized by Cattanach J. in Re Davidson et al., supra, at page 535, as being like that of "assessors in an Admiralty action before the Federal Court of Canada", has some thing of an inquisitorial role. Certainly, the whole procedure lacks a fully adversarial character.
Even more, the new procedural structure is still incomplete in its legality. Regulation 38.1, sup ported by subsection 24.1(2) of the Penitentiary Act, authorizes the appointment of presiding offi cers for disciplinary courts, but their use remains optional. The procedures at hearings and even the requirement that serious or flagrant offences should be tried by independent chairpersons are found only in Commissioner's Directives, which were held in Martineau (No. 1) not to have the status of law. In the result, while a new legal
system in prison disciplinary hearings may be in the process of evolution, it has not yet emerged. Legally speaking, the only advance has been to a fairer version of the same basic model considered by the Supreme Court in the two Martineau cases.
The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms does, however, introduce a distinctly new perspec tive: where it does not create new rights, it may nevertheless enhance existing ones.
The appellant abandoned before this Court his argument based on paragraph 11(d) of the Chart er and relied solely on section 7, which reads as follows:
7. Everyone has the right to life, liberty and security of the person and the right not to be deprived thereof except in accordance with the principles of fundamental justice.
As this Court established in The Queen, et al. v. Operation Dismantle Inc., et al., [1983] 1 F.C. 745 (C.A.) only a deprivation of life, liberty or security of the person that results from a breach of the principles of fundamental justice is contrary to this section. The only right which is in question here is that to liberty; "security of the person" does not appear to add anything to "liberty" in the present context.
What are the principles of fundamental justice which protect the right to liberty? In Joplin v. Chief Constable of Vancouver Police Dept., [1983] 2 W.W.R. 52 (B.C.S.C.), at page 58 McEachern C.J.S.C. said "fundamental justice is justice and fairness, nothing more and nothing less." On this basis he held that a police officer who was denied counsel at a disciplinary hearing under the B.C. Police (Discipline) Regulations was denied fundamental justice, but he felt that the result would be the same under the general law as under the Charter—and as to the general law he cited the decision by Addy J. in a similar case involving the R.C.M.P. before the coming into effect of the Charter (In re Husted and in re the Royal Canadian Mounted Police Act, [1981] 2 F.C. 791; 58 C.C.C. (2d) 156 (T.D.)).
Section 7 was recently applied in two cases involving parole proceedings. In R. v. Cadeddu (1982), 3 C.R.R. 312 (Ont. H.C.) Potts J. held that section 7 required an in-person hearing for a revocation of parole and in Re Swan and The Queen (1983), 7 C.C.C. (3d) 130 (B.C.S.C.), McEachern C.J.S.C. followed Cadeddu. Com menting on section 7 (as well as section 9) of the Charter some months after his earlier reflection in Joplin, McEachern C.J.S.C. stated (at page 141):
These provisions impatiently await analysis by appellate authority, but they seem to me to tilt the scales strongly towards the requirements of natural justice rather than just procedural fairness in the post-revocation process.
Cadeddu was also followed by Smith J. in R. v. Nunery (1983), 5 C.R.R. 69 (Ont. H.C.) on almost identical facts. In addition, Decary J. in Collin v. Lussier, [1983] 1 F.C. 218; 6 C.R.R. 89 (T.D.) applied section 7 to an inmate transfer within the penitentiary system.
Other judicial statements besides those of McEachern C.J.S.C. in Re Swan also support natural justice as the standard under section 7: McLellan N.S. Co. Ct. J. in R. v. Sibley (1982), 4 C.R.R. 166, at page 168 ("I see little difference between the principles of `fundamental justice' and the principles of `natural justice' "); Durand J. in Re Jamieson and The Queen (1982), 70 C.C.C. (2d) 430 (Que. S.C.), at page 438 ("It is also established that the words `fundamental justice— justice fondamentale' are synonymous with 'natu- ral justice—justice naturelle' "); McCarthy, Prov. J. in R. v. Holman (1982), 28 C.R. (3d) 378 (B.C. Prov. Ct.), at page 388. ("If `fundamental justice' means `natural justice' (as I believe it to mean) ...").
The standard applied by the majority of the Supreme Court of Canada in both Martineau cases to prison disciplinary proceedings before the Charter was the lesser standard of procedural fairness. However, Dickson J. for the three concur ring Judges in Martineau (No. 2) at pages 630- 631, urged a broader approach:
7. It is wrong, in my view, to regard natural justice and fairness as distinct and separate standards and to seek to define the procedural content of each. In Nicholson, the Chief Justice spoke of a "... notion of fairness involving something less than the procedural protection of the traditional natural justice". Fairness involves compliance with only some of the principles of natural justice. Professor de Smith (3rd ed. 1973, p. 208) expressed lucidly the concept of a duty to- act fairly:
In general it means a duty to observe the rudiments of natural justice for a limited purpose in the exercise of functions that are not analytically judicial but administra tive.
The content of the principles of natural justice and fairness in application to the individual cases will vary according to the circumstances of each case, as recognized by Tucker L. J. in Russell v. Duke of Norfolk, [1949] 1 All E.R. 109, at p. 118.
8. In the final analysis, the simple question to be answered is this: Did the tribunal on the facts of the particular case act fairly toward the person claiming to be aggrieved? It seems to me that this is the underlying question which the courts have sought to answer in all the cases dealing with natural justice and with fairness.
The surest footing on which to stand in the instant case would appear to be this common ground between natural justice as applied to quasi- judicial proceedings and fairness as applied to administrative action that Dickson J. draws atten tion to in the passage just quoted. The underlying question in both cases thus becomes whether the tribunal acted fairly. On this approach, the content of the principles of fundamental justice may vary somewhat according to circumstances.
Section 7 in fact makes no distinction between administrative and quasi-judicial proceedings. The only standard it enunciates is the right not to be deprived of the right to liberty "except in accord ance with the principles of fundamental justice". While one can agree with Scollin J. in Re Balder- stone et al. and The Queen (1982), 2 C.C.C. (3d) 37 (Man. Q.B.), at page 46 that "The Charter did not repeal yesterday and did not abolish reality", one may not conclude from this that the Charter
merely affirms the legal status quo in any particu lar area. There is no a priori presumption as to which legal doctrines are to be preserved, which to be modified, and which to be abrogated. The only guide to judicial interpretation is the Charter itself. Estey J. put it this way for the Supreme Court in Law Society of Upper Canada v. Ska- pinker, [1984] 1 S.C.R. 357, at pages 366-367; 8 C.R.R. 193, at pages 200-201:
There are some simple but important considerations which guide a Court in construing the Charter, and which are more sharply focussed and discernible than in the case of the federal Bill of Rights. The Charter comes from neither level of the legislative branches of government but from the Constitution itself. It is part of the fabric of Canadian law. Indeed, it "is the supreme law of Canada": Constitution Act, 1982, s. 52. It cannot be readily amended. The fine and constant adjustment process of these constitutional provisions is left by a tradition of necessity to the judicial branch. Flexibility must be balanced with certainty. The future must, to the extent foreseeably possible, be accommodated in the present. The Charter is designed and adopted to guide and serve the Canadian commu nity for a long time. Narrow and technical interpretation, if not modulated by a sense of the unknowns of the future, can stunt the growth of the law and hence the community it serves. All this has long been with us in the process of developing the institutions of government under the B.N.A. Act, 1867 (now the Constitution Act, 1867). With the Constitution Act, 1982 comes a new dimension, a new yardstick of reconciliation between the individual and the community and their respective rights, a dimension which, like the balance of the Constitution, remains to be interpreted and applied by the Court. [Emphasis added.]
The respondent maintains that distinctions should be drawn among cases involving the loss of one's absolute liberty, those involving the loss of conditional liberty as in parole revocation, and those like the one at bar involving the potential loss of anticipated conditional liberty, where the expected remission is subject to good conduct.
The respondent did not argue that there was no liberty interest at stake in the instant case, but only that there was none such as to attract the application of section 7 of the Charter in reference to the right to counsel: even after an inmate's release from penitentiary on mandatory supervi sion the original sentence still survives and his conditional liberty is always liable to be lost; in
this respect earned remission differs from the now abolished status of statutory remission, and does not, if lost, involve a loss of absolute liberty.
The appellant nevertheless replies that, since an inmate's earned remission is computed on a monthly basis, it cannot, once computed, be revoked except for cause. It is a firm right subject to a condition subsequent, as it were, and could be lost only on the happening of the condition. In all other circumstances it is a matured right.
Admittedly, the liberty interest of an inmate in relation to revocation of earned remission is not unconditional. However, the question this Court has to decide is whether it is sufficiently analogous to full liberty that it ought to be protected by section 7.
In R. v. Cadeddu, supra, at page 323, where a parolee had not been allowed an in-person hearing before revocation, Potts J. found that section 7 had been violated:
I turn now to consider whether the applicant's rights under s. 7 of the Charter have been violated. It appears to me that there are two questions that must be addressed: was the applicant at liberty while on parole, and if so, was he deprived of liberty except in accordance with the principles of fundamental justice?
My answer to the first question is: yes, the applicant was at liberty during his parole. Although it is clear law that parole is a privilege which an inmate cannot claim as of right; that while on parole he is serving his sentence of imprisonment; and that a decision to grant or revoke parole is a decision as to where an inmate shall serve his sentence none of these considerations, in my view, are helpful in assessing what was the applicant's condition during his parole. His condition, obviously, was that he had a conditional or qualified liberty to be at large during the term of his imprisonment. Although it was a qualified liberty which might be revoked, that, in my view, is sufficient to attract the constitutionally mandated protections of s. 7 of the Charter. Accordingly, the Board, if it was not to violate the applicant's rights, could revoke the applicant's parole only in accordance with the principles of fundamental justice.
In Duke v. The Queen, [1972] S.C.R. 917, 28 D.L.R. (3d) 129, 7 C.C.C. (2d) 474, Fauteux C.J.C. considered the words "principles of fundamental justice" in the context of s. 2(e) of the Canadian Bill of Rights. At p. 479 C.C.C. he said:
Without attempting to formulate any final definition of those words, I would take them to mean, generally, that the tribunal which adjudicates upon his right must act fairly in good faith, without bias and in a judicial temper, and must give to him the opportunity to adequately state his case.
This, to me, looks very much like a definition of natural justice.
Considering that the rights protected by s. 7 are the most important of all those enumerated in the Charter, that depriva tion 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 govern ment 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.
The words quoted from Fauteux C.J.C. in the Duke case are of particular importance because they indicate that the underlying principle is the necessity of giving an accused "the opportunity to adequately state his case".
The interpretation by the U.S. Supreme Court of the requirement of procedural due process under the Fifth Amendment to the U.S. Constitu tion, made applicable to the States by the Four teenth Amendment, is, I believe, of some assist ance. In Wolff v. McDonnell, 418 U.S. 539 (1974), at pages 556-557 (subsequently reaffirmed in Baxter v. Palmigiano, 425 U.S. 308 (1976)) the Court (per White J.) found for a constitutional protection for personal liberty, even when as, in the case of remission of punishment, the liberty itself is a statutory creation:
We also reject the assertion of the State that whatever may be true of the Due Process Clause in general or of other rights protected by that Clause against state infringement, the inter est of prisoners in disciplinary procedures is not included in that "liberty" protected by the Fourteenth Amendment. It is true that the Constitution itself does not guarantee good-time credit for satisfactory behavior while in prison. But here the State itself has not only provided a statutory right to good time but also specifies that it is to be forfeited only for serious misbehav ior. Nebraska may have the authority to create, or not, a right to a shortened prison sentence through the accumulation of credits for good behavior, and it is true that the Due Process Clause does not require a hearing "in every conceivable case of government impairment of private interest." Cafeteria Workers v. McElroy, 367 U.S. 886, 894 (1961). But the State having created the right to good time and itself recognizing that its deprivation is a sanction authorized for major misconduct, the prisoner's interest has real substance and is sufficiently embraced within Fourteenth Amendment "liberty" to entitle
him to those minimum procedures appropriate under the cir cumstances and required by the Due Process Clause to ensure that the state-created right is not arbitrarily abrogated.
It is true that the Court came to the conclusion that "At this stage of the development of these procedures we are not prepared to hold that inmates have a right to either retained or appoint ed counsel in disciplinary proceedings" (page 570), but it did so on the basis of material facts which have no parallel in Canada (pages 560-561):
For the prison inmate, the deprivation of good time is not the same immediate disaster that the revocation of parole is for the parolee. The deprivation, very likely, does not then and there work any change in the conditions of his liberty. It can post pone the date of eligibility for parole and extend the maximum term to be served, but it is not certain to do so, for good time may be restored. Even if not restored, it cannot be said with certainty that the actual date of parole will be affected; and if parole occurs, the extension of the maximum term resulting from loss of good time may affect only the termination of parole, and it may not even do that.
Unlike good time credits which can be restored, earned remission under the Canadian system, if forfeited, cannot be re-earned. Equally important, under our system of mandatory supervision there are precise release dates, nowhere more strikingly apparent than in the instant case, where the immi nence of the release date led the Presiding Officer to precipitous action.
The passage just quoted would suggest that a more exact parallel to the Canadian situation might be found in American case law on parole revocation, but unfortunately the leading case, Morrissey v. Brewer, 408 U.S. 471 (1972), is ambiguous on the right to counsel. Burger C.J. for the majority leaves the question open (page 489):
We do not reach or decide the question whether the parolee is entitled to the assistance of retained counsel or to appointed counsel if he is indigent.
But Brennan J., for the concurring minority, quali fied that reservation (page 491):
The Court, however, states that it does not now decide whether the parolee is also entitled at each hearing to the assistance of retained counsel or of appointed counsel if he is indigent. Goldberg v. Kelly, 397 U.S. 254 (1970), nonetheless plainly dictates that he at least "must be allowed to retain an attorney if he so desires." Id., at 270. As the Court said there, "Counsel can help delineate the issues, present the factual contentions in an orderly manner, conduct cross-examination, and generally safeguard the interests of" his client. Id., at 270-271. The only question open under our precedents is whether counsel must be furnished the parolee if he is indigent.
The subsequent case of Gagnon v. Scarpelli, 411 U.S. 778 (1973), focussed on the obligation to provide counsel. The Court held that although the State is not constitutionally obliged to provide counsel in all cases, it should do so where the indigent probationer or parolee may have difficul ty in presenting his version of disputed facts with out the examination or cross-examination of wit nesses or the presentation of complicated documentary evidence. However, the Court went as far as to prescribe when counsel should be provided (per Powell J. at page 790):
Presumptively, it may be said that counsel should be provided in cases where, after being informed of his right to request counsel, the probationer or parolee makes such a request, based on a timely and colorable claim (i) that he has not committed the alleged violation of the conditions upon which he is at liberty; or (ii) that, even if the violation is a matter of public record or is uncontested, there are substantial reasons which justified or mitigated the violation and make revocation inap propriate, and that the reasons are complex or otherwise dif ficult to develop or present.
On balance, I believe the American precedents are helpful, particularly in that they clearly affirm that the liberty of prison inmates is protected by the constitutional guarantee of due process, and in that they appear to suggest that an absolute depri vation of remission of punishment could take place
only in a proceeding characterized by the right to retain counsel.
What both the Canadian and the American cases indicate is that there are degrees of liberty, all protected in some way by a rule of due process or natural justice or fundamental justice, but not in the same way. What there must always be is an opportunity to state a case which is adequate for fundamental justice in the circumstances. In other words, there is a sliding standard of adequacy which can be defined only in reference to the particular degree of liberty at stake and the par ticular procedural safeguard in question. The reso lution may involve the balancing of competing interests. Here the penitentiary setting is of capital importance in sorting out the interests in competition.
Penitentiaries are not nice places for nice people. They are rather institutions of incarceration for the confinement of for the most part crime-hard ened and anti-social men and women, serving sen tences of more than two years. Reformation fortu nately remains an aspiration of the prison system, but the prevalent environment is sadly reminiscent of Hobbes' primitive state of nature before the advent of the Leviathan, where human life was said to be solitary, poor, nasty, brutish and short. In such an atmosphere of discord and hatred, minor sparks can set off major conflagrations of the most incendiary sort. Order is both more necessary and more fragile than in even military and police contexts, and its restoration, when dis turbed, becomes a matter of frightening immediacy.
It would be an ill-informed court that was not aware of the necessity for immediate response by prison authorities to breaches of prison order and it would be a rash one that would deny them the means to react effectively.
But not every feature of present disciplinary practice is objectively necessary for immediate disciplinary purposes. The mere convenience of the authorities will serve as no justification; as Lord Atkin put it in General Medical Council v. Spack-
man, [1943] A.C. 627 (H.L.), at page 638, "Con- venience and justice are often not on speaking terms." Even what may be necessary but neverthe less delayable cannot be given priority. All that is not immediately necessary must certainly yield to the fullest exigencies of liberty.
On the basis of these criteria of necessity and immediacy, on-the-spot administrative dissociation may arguably be required to segregate inmates involved, e.g., in hostage-taking, but punitive dis sociation as a consequence of a disciplinary court has much less immediate necessity, and revocation of earned remission seems not to be immediately necessary at all.
It is apparent that the demands of liberty inversely coincide with those of the institution. It is not necessary for the disposition of the present case to decide on the application of section 7 to punitive dissociation. It is sufficient for the present that revocation of earned remission was a possible punishment—although in fact here it was also the actual punishment and not merely a possible one. In such circumstances penitentiary inmates are entitled not to be deprived of their right to liberty except in accordance with the principles of funda mental justice.
What is there in the right to counsel which should make it required by fundamental justice? Lord Denning described its rationale in Pett v. Greyhound Racing Association, Ltd., [1968] 2 All E.R. 545 (C.A.), at page 549, in a licence revoca tion hearing:
It is not every man who has the ability to defend himself on his own. He cannot bring out the points in his own favour or the weaknesses in the other side. He may be tongue-tied or nervous, confused or wanting intelligence. He cannot examine or cross- examine witnesses .... I should have thought, therefore, that when a man's reputation or livelihood is at stake, he not only has a right to speak by his own mouth. He has also a right to speak by counsel or solicitor.
McEachern C.J.S.C. goes even further in Joplin v. Chief Constable of Vancouver Police Dept., supra,
at pages 67-68, in describing the right to counsel as "the most important safeguard in the legal process" and adds that "justice and fairness cannot tolerate a procedure where a layman is expected to deal with legal concepts which are strange to him, and at the same time advise him self objectively".
In Nicholson v. Haldimand-Norfolk Regional Board of Commissioners of Police, [1979] 1 S.C.R. 311, at pages 327-328, in holding that a police constable on probation was entitled to fair treatment on dismissal, Laskin C.J.C., for the majority, accepted a statement of Lord Denning with respect to the fairness required of an adminis trative agency with no judicial functions in Sel- varajan v. Race Relations Board, [1976] 1 All E.R. 12 (C.A.), at page 19:
The fundamental rule is that, if a person may be subjected to pains or penalties, or be exposed to prosecution or proceedings, or deprived of remedies or redress, or in some such way adversely affected by the investigation and report, then he should be told the case made against him and be afforded a fair opportunity of answering it.
It is this guarantee of being given the case against him and being afforded a fair opportunity to answer it that, borrowing the language of Fauteux C.J.C., I have already referred to as an adequate opportunity to state a case. Before the Charter, this was not considered to embrace representation by counsel. The question that must now be asked is whether the implications of an "adequate oppor tunity" to answer a charge have been enhanced by the Charter.
The American courts have been specific as to the requirements of due process. In Morrissey v. Brewer, supra, at page 489, Burger C.J. enumer ated the minimum requirements of due process on parole hearings as follows: (a) written notice of the claimed violations; (b) disclosure of evidence against him; (c) opportunity to be heard in person and to present witnesses and documentary evi dence; (d) confrontation and cross-examination of adverse witnesses, unless the hearing officer finds good cause to the contrary; (e) a neutral and detached hearing body; and (f) a written statement
by the factfinders as to the evidence relied on and the reasons for their decision. As I have noted above, the majority in Morrissey declared that it made no decision about counsel, and it also speci fied that the process should be flexible enough to consider evidence that would not be admissible in an adversary criminal trial.
The right to counsel would, a fortiori, include the right to confront and cross-examine adverse witnesses, and so presents the greatest challenge to institutional interests, particularly that of quick punishment for infractions. It also bespeaks the fulness of the adversary process, subject to a broader rule of admissibility of evidence than in the criminal courts. It is also the only right in question, not only because it is the subject of the challenge here but also because it is the only significant adversarial element that is not already available to inmates.
It may be that a recognition of the right to counsel would lead inevitably to the introduction of a prosecuting officer, the complete disappear ance of any inquisitorial aspect to the process and the full acceptance of an adversarial system. I accept this as an accurate estimate of the likely consequences, but not as an argument in terrorem. If it is what fundamental justice requires, it is a step forward rather than a limitation.
As I see it, section 7 enhances the previous requirement of an adequate opportunity of answer ing a charge, but whether it necessitates represen tation by counsel in any set of circumstances can be determined only by a full analysis of the circumstances.
Webster J. in the Tarrant case, supra, at pages 635-637, enumerated six considerations to be taken into account in relation to the right to counsel: (1) the seriousness of the charge and of the potential penalty; (2) whether any points of law are likely to arise; (3) the capacity of a particular prisoner to present his own case; (4) procedural difficulties; (5) the need for reasonable speed in adjudication; (6) the need for fairness as between prisoners and as between prisoners and prison officers.
In the Tarrant case, although the Court was prepared to hold that no board of visitors, properly directing itself, could have reasonably decided not to allow the prisoners in question legal representa tion in some of the circumstances reviewed there, it nevertheless asserted that there is a discretion in boards of visitors as to whether to grant requests for counsel. If this means, as applied to a Canadi- an context, that a presiding officer has the author ity to make up his mind as to whether to allow counsel, I can accept it as far as it goes. But if it is understood to mean that his decision on the matter, presumably as one made on the facts, is an adjudication free from subsequent judicial review, then it does not in my opinion meet the require ments of section 7. Nor incidentally does it square with the action of the Court in Tarrant itself, where in the result five of the board of visitors' awards were quashed.
What section 7 requires is that an inmate be allowed counsel when to deny his request would infringe his right to fundamental justice. The existence of the right admittedly depends on the facts. But the right, when it exists, is not discre tionary, in the sense that the presiding officer has a discretion to disallow it. The presiding officer's authority cannot, in my view, prevent a reviewing court from looking at the facts and substituting its own view if it is persuaded by them that the case is one in which counsel should be allowed in order to afford the inmate the rights guaranteed by section 7. The threshold of appellate intervention is that the appellate court must be clearly satisfied that the exercise of the discretion was wrong, as Lord Wright insisted in both Evans v. Bartlam, [1937]
A.C. 473 (H.L.), at page 486, and Charles Osen- ton & Co. v. Johnston, [1942] A.C. 130 (H.L.), at page 148.
In the present case, the reasons for decision of the Presiding Officer on the issue of counsel were expressed as follows [(1983), 8 C.C.C. (3d) 557, at pages 560-562]:
The submission of Diane Dzydz, counsel for Howard, basi cally presents three (3) arguments on his behalf, namely:
1. That Section 7 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, hereinafter referred to as the Charter, guarantees the right to be represented by counsel;
2. That in the alternative, S. 11(d) of the Charter provides for such a right because Howard has been "charged with an offence", and;
3. That in the event that the first two (2) arguments fail, this is an appropriate case to exercise discretion in favour of entitle ment to counsel representation.
Counsel for the Department of Justice, Brian H. Hay, argues:
1. That Section 7 does not add to the rights specifically provided for in Section 11 of the Charter;
2. That even if Section 7 does add rights and if "principles of fundamental justice" are equated with "natural justice" the latter "do not guarantee the right to legal counsel", and;
3. That S. 11(d) does not alter Canadian law with respect to an inmate's right to counsel at Inmate Disciplinary Board hearings.
The Department of Justice does not express opinion as to whether any facts exist in the instant case which should sway my exercise of discretion to grant Howard's application for counsel representation.
In dealing with the Section 7 argument submitted by Diane Dzydz, I express the opinion that Section 7 does not create a new wave of rights nor does it elevate any greater degree of responsibility by an administrative tribunal such as the Inmate Disciplinary Board is.
In Re Jamieson and The Queen, an unreported decision dated September 24, 1982 of the Quebec Supreme [sic] Court, it was held that "fundamental justice" is to be equated with natural justice. The unreported decision of R vs Holman ema nating from the British Columbia Provincial Judges Court held that the phrase in question deals only with due process and incorporates therein the principles of natural justice.
Ms. Dzydz suggests that because habeas corpus in Re Cardi nal and Oswald and The Queen (1982), 67 C.C.C. (2d) 252 (BCCA), is available to release an inmate from solitary con-
finement to the general inmate population, combined with statements of Fauteux, C. J. in Duke v. R. (1972), 28 D.L.R. (3d) 129 (S.C.C.), that these developments have elevated the rights of an inmate to include the right to counsel.
With respect I disagree, In the absence of decisions to the contrary; I am bound by Jamieson and Holman, supra, and have to accept that "fundamental principles of justice" is to be equated with natural justice, and in the present context, natural justice rules have not provided a right to counsel. In this connection see also the case of Davidson and Disciplinary Board of Prison for Women et al (1981), 61 C.C.C. (2d) 520 (F.C.T.D.), a decision of Justice Cattanach which in my opin ion sets forth the principles by which Inmate Disciplinary Board hearings are to be conducted.
Several American cases were cited by Ms. Dzydz in support of equating "principles of fundamental justice" with the Ameri- can concept of "due process". However, these cases do not establish the right to be represented by counsel. Indeed, the United States Supreme Court in Baxter v. Palmigiaro, 425 U.S. 308 (1976), stated that inmates do not have the right to counsel at disciplinary hearings.
The last matter therefore to be dealt with is whether or not representation by counsel ought to be allowed in order to ensure a fair hearing.
With respect I have not been persuaded that there exist any circumstances in this particular case which preclude the possi bility of a fair hearing in the absence of counsel. Therefore I exercise my discretion in denying the application of Howard to be represented by counsel at the hearing. [Emphasis added.]
I must respectfully conclude that the Presiding Officer, in the words I emphasize, has misunder stood the effect of the Charter. The Charter does modify the previous understanding of the law by an enhancement of the fundamental principle of justice relating to an adequate opportunity to answer, and in doing so it does affect even purely administrative proceedings.
One of the charges against the appellant here, that of conduct "calculated to prejudice the disci pline or good order of the institution" is a catch-all charge of such vagueness that the need for counsel to clarify the facts and to challenge the arguments is strikingly apparent, but counsel is hardly less necessary to deal with charges such as being "inde- cent, disrespectful or threatening" in "actions, lan guage or writing", or possessing "contraband", which is defined as anything that an inmate is not
permitted to have in his possession [Penitentiary Service Regulations, s. 2]. Even the charges of disobeying a lawful order or threatening to assault another person can easily give rise to legal issues of some complexity. On the two guilty pleas counsel may have been necessary to plead exonerating factors.
I disapprove particularly of the suggestion in the Tarrant case that one of the relevant consider ations should be the capacity of a particular pris oner to present his own case. With respect, no presiding officer could be in a position, at the outset of disciplinary proceedings, to make a sum mary judgment of such a kind before a prisoner had been heard by him.
In sum, other than, perhaps, in fact situations of unique simplicity, I cannot imagine cases where a possible forfeiture of earned remission would not bring into play the necessity for counsel. Indeed, in my view the probability that counsel will be required for an adequate hearing on charges with such consequences is so strong as to amount effec tively to a presumption in favour of counsel, a departure from which a presiding officer would have to justify. The right-enhancing effect of the Charter thus greatly increases the ambit of protec tion afforded.
Here the decision in question reveals both a faulty understanding of the law and an insufficient explanation of how in this situation there could be an adequate hearing without counsel. I therefore have no difficulty in concluding that the appellant was deprived of the protection of a fundamental principle of justice, in violation of section 7 of the Charter.
Since the inmate's counsel was ready and wait ing to be recognized, there was no need here to insist on the necessity of reasonable and timely
arrangements, as McEachern C.J.S.C. found necessary in Joplin.
It is also unnecessary for the present case to determine what limits on section 7 rights, if any, may be justified under the provisions of section 1 of the Charter. The appellant having established at least a prima facie violation of his right to liberty under section 7, the onus then lies on the Crown under section 1 to demonstrate the existence of reasonable limits prescribed by law that can be demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society: Quebec Association of Protestant School Boards et al. v. Attorney General of Quebec et al. (No. 2) (1982), 140 D.L.R. (3d) 33 (Que. S.C.), affirmed (1983), 1 D.L.R. (4th) 573 (Que. C.A.). The respondent here did not attempt to meet this onus.
I would therefore dispose of the case as proposed by the Chief Justice.
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