T-514-84 
Leslie Blake Danielson (Applicant) 
v. 
Ludvik Gordan Sterba, J. F. Denis Cousineau 
(Respondents) 
Trial Division, Rouleau J.—Vancouver, Septem-
ber 21; Ottawa, November 22, 1984. 
Judges and courts — Federal Court Judge — Granting 
Minister's application for writ of assistance under Narcotic 
Control Act — Registry Officer signing face of writ — Wheth
er Judge delegating power to issue writs — Whether acting in 
judicial capacity or in administrative capacity as persona 
designata — Statute not requiring signature on face of writ — 
Officer's signature verification — "Omnia praesumuntur" 
doctrine invoked — Certiorari available against neither Offi
cer nor Judge Narcotic Control Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. N-1, s. 
10(1)(a),(3) (as am. by R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, s. 64(2)) 
— Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, s. 2. 
Constitutional law — Charter of Rights — Criminal process 
— Search or seizure — Writ issued before promulgation of 
Charter, activity complained of occurring after — Writs of 
assistance issued under Narcotic Control Act desirable in free 
and democratic society — Act s. 10(1)(a) not unconstitutional 
but can be declared inoperative in certain circumstances: (R. v. 
Rao and R. v. Hamill) — Reasonableness of search and 
seizure to be determined in each case, irrespective of lawful
ness — To be justified, entry under Act s. 10(1)(a) requires 
reasonable belief narcotics present, offence committed, and 
search conducted in reasonable manner — Southam case 
distinguished — Public interest in control of narcotics justify
ing restriction on individuals' rights — Judicial control possi
ble after event 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, 8, 24(2) — Narcotic 
Control Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. N-1, s. 10(1)(a),(3) (as am. by 
R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, s. 64(2)). 
Narcotics — Writ of assistance issued by judge under Act, s. 
10(3) — Issued before Charter promulgated — Acts com
plained of occurring after — Writs desirable in free and 
democratic society — Reasonableness of search and seizure to 
be determined in each case — Certiorari application dismissed 
— Narcotic Control Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. N-1, s. 10(1)(a),(3) 
(as am. by R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, s. 64(2)) 
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, 8, 24(2). 
Practice — Process — Writs of assistance — Registrar not 
exceeding jurisdiction in signing writ and certiorari not appli
cable — Registrar's function authenticating writ issued pursu
ant to authorization of judge deriving authority from statute. 
Judicial review — Prerogative writs — Narcotics — Certio-
rari — Issuing writ of assistance by Federal Court judge 
judicial, not administrative function and judge not acting as 
persona designata — Certiorari not applicable to Federal 
Court judge — Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 
10, s. 2. 
A police officer entered and searched a dwelling-house under 
the authority of a writ of assistance. The writ issued out of this 
Court pursuant to an application by the Minister of National 
Health and Welfare under subsection 10(3) of the Narcotic 
Control Act. The Judge granted the application by writing on 
it: "Let the Writs issue as applied for." and by signing it. The 
writ used in this case was issued pursuant to that instruction 
and signed by a Registry Officer. 
This is an application for certiorari to quash that writ of 
assistance. 
The jurisdiction of this Court to deal with the application is 
not in issue. The applicant argues, however, that the writ, 
signed by the Registrar, is invalid because a judge cannot 
delegate his power to issue writs unless there is enabling 
legislation. Also in issue is whether certiorari is an appropriate 
remedy in this case. This depends on whether the Judge was 
acting in a judicial capacity or as persona designata, and 
therefore in an administrative capacity. 
The applicant also raises the question of whether, especially 
in view of the Supreme Court's decision in Southam, the 
issuance of writs of assistance and the warrantless searches 
effected thereunder violate the right to be secure against unrea
sonable search or seizure, guaranteed by section 8 of the 
Charter. 
Held, the application should be dismissed. 
The Registrar did not exceed his jurisdiction in subscribing 
his signature to the formal document and certiorari would not 
apply against him: his function is one of authentication; the 
writ itself is issued pursuant to the authorization of a judge 
empowered to do so by statute. Nowhere does the statute 
require a signature to appear on the face of the writ. 
When issuing such a writ, a Federal Court judge is perform
ing a judicial function and certiorari is not applicable. Even if 
there is little discretion to exercise, it does not follow that the 
judge is acting in an administrative capacity. Nor is he acting 
as a persona designata since there is nothing in the statute to 
that effect. 
While conceding that the Southam decision has created a 
problem in that it proclaimed the public's right to be secure 
against unlawful search and seizure in accordance with section 
8 of the Charter, counsel for the Crown argued that Southam 
did not preclude the suspension of prior authorization when it 
could not feasibly be obtained. In Southam, it had not been 
necessary for the Supreme Court of Canada to weigh Charter 
section 8 against the section I requirements of a free and 
democratic society. It was open to the Courts to conclude that, 
in certain circumstances, the rights of society take precedence 
over individual rights. To do away with writs of assistance 
would severely impair the work of law enforcement personnel in 
combatting the illegal drug trade. R. v. Rao is not authority for 
the proposition that writs of assistance contravene the Charter. 
Martin J. would not have held that the admission of the 
evidence would bring the administration of justice into disre
pute just because it had been obtained in a warrantless search. 
Rather, it was excluded for a "gross abuse of power and a 
flagrant denial" of constitutional rights. 
Warrantless searches were unusual but had to be utilized in 
narcotic drug cases in view of the following considerations: the 
large amounts of money involved; the mobility of the offenders; 
the social problems and the public concern. 
In R. v. Hamill, Esson J. held that while entry under a writ 
of assistance was lawful, it had to be reasonable to comply with 
Charter section 8. But even if the search was unlawful or 
unreasonable, that did not mean that the evidence must be 
excluded. An appropriate remedy under Charter section 24(1) 
would most often not be exclusion of the evidence. Exclusion 
was appropriate only if admission would bring the administra
tion of justice into disrepute. 
An entry under paragraph 10(1)(a) of the Narcotic Control 
Act must be made with a reasonable belief that there is a 
narcotic in the premises and that an offence against the Act has 
been committed. Furthermore, the search must be conducted in 
a reasonable manner. 
Southam was to be distinguished for in that case the statu
tory authorization of searches involved a conflict of interest and 
insufficient protection for the public. Under the Combines 
Investigation Act, the person authorizing the warrant was 
found, by Dickson C.J., not to be acting judicially. That Act 
did not even embody a requirement for reasonableness. 
In the case of writs of assistance in aid of narcotic drug 
investigations, the courts afford the public adequate protection 
after the event. The trial judge is an objective third party acting 
judicially who will scrutinize what has taken place. The intru
sion on Charter section 8 rights is justified under section I. 
As suggested by Justice La Forest in an article in the 
Canadian Bar Review, American decisions and international 
conventions ought not to be blindly followed. The Courts are 
forced by the Charter to make value judgments with respect to 
statutes even though their wording be clear but in doing so they 
must be guided by the needs and traditions of our own society. 
Canadian society is prepared to accept the limitations on 
Charter rights which flow from this order. 
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED 
APPLIED: 
Wilson v. The Queen, [1983] 2 S.C.R. 594; 37 C.R. (3d) 
97; R. v. Rao (1984), 46 O.R. (2d) 80 (C.A.), confirmed 
at [1984] 2 S.C.R. ix; Re Soenen and Thomas et al. 
(1983), 3 D.L.R. (4th) 658 (Alta. Q.B.); Basile v. Attor-
ney-General of Nova Scotia (1983), 148 D.L.R. (3d) 382 
(N.S.S.C.). 
DISTINGUISHED: 
Hunter et al. v. Southam Inc., [1984] 2 S.C.R. 145. 
CONSIDERED: 
United Assn. of Journeymen and Apprentices of Plumb
ing and Pipe Fitting Industry of U.S. and Can., Local 
488 v. Bd. of Industrial Relations, [1975] 2 W.W.R. 470 
(Alta. C.A.); Re Writs of Assistance (1975), 34 C.C.C. 
(2d) 62 (F.C.T.D.); Herman et al. v. Deputy Attorney 
General (Can.), [1979] I S.C.R. 729; 91 D.L.R. (3d) 3; 
Minister of Indian Affairs and Northern Development v. 
Ranville et al., [1982] 2 S.C.R. 518; 139 D.L.R. (3d) I; 
R. v. Hamill, [1984] 6 W.W.R. 530; 41 C.R. (3d) 123 
(B.C.C.A.). 
REFERRED TO: 
R. v. Carriere (1983), 32 C.R. (3d) 117 (Ont. Prov. Ct.); 
R. v. Cuff (1983), 34 C.R. (3d) 344 (B.C. Co. Ct.). 
COUNSEL: 
M. L. Moore for applicant. 
Ingrid C. Hutton, Q.C. for respondents. 
SOLICITORS: 
Woolliams, Korman, Moore & Wittman, Cal-
gary, for applicant. 
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for 
respondents. 
The following are the reasons for order ren
dered in English by 
ROULEAU J.: This is an application to quash a 
writ of assistance issued out of this Court on May 
22, 1975, pursuant to an application made by the 
Minister of National Health and Welfare under 
subsection 10(3) of the Narcotic Control Act, 
R.S.C. 1970, c. N-1, as amended. 
It is useful at this time to refer to paragraph 
10(1)(a) and subsection 10(3) [as am. by R.S.C. 
1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, s. 64(2)] of the Narcotic 
Control Act: 
10. (1) A peace officer may, at any time, 
(a) without a warrant enter and search any place other than a 
dwelling-house, and under the authority of a writ of assistance 
or a warrant issued under this section, enter and search any 
dwelling-house in which he reasonably believes there is a 
narcotic by means of or in respect of which an offence under 
this Act has been committed; 
(3) A judge of the Federal Court of Canada shall, upon 
application by the Minister, issue a writ of assistance authoriz
ing and empowering the person named therein, aided and 
assisted by such person as the person named therein may 
require, at any time, to enter any dwelling-house and search for 
narcotics. 
There is no doubt as to the propriety of the 
application by the Minister dated May 13, 1975. A 
judge of the Federal Court wrote on the applica
tion: "Let the Writs issue as applied for." and 
signed it. Pursuant to this instruction, a writ of 
assistance in proper form was issued to Ludvik 
Gordan Sterba, a member of the R.C.M.P. drug 
section. The seal of the Court appears on the 
document and it is properly embossed. On the face 
of it appears the signature of a J. F. Denis Cousi-
neau, Registry Officer. On June 15, 1983, while 
engaged in the investigation of a suspected drug 
offence, the police officer entered and searched a 
dwelling-house under the authority of the writ of 
assistance. Found in the dwelling-house was a 
substance believed to be cocaine. This was seized 
along with other paraphernalia usually associated 
with drug users or traffickers. 
After committal, and prior to trial, the solicitor 
for the accused requested an adjournment in the 
Provincial Court to permit him to bring an 
application for certiorari before this Court seeking 
to quash the writ of assistance. The adjournment 
was granted, hence this application. 
At the opening, the petitioner abandoned his 
request for relief of quo warranto and also con
sented that Her Majesty the Queen be struck as a 
party defendant. 
There were two major submissions: one of pro
cess and the other of constitutionality. Counsel for 
the applicant suggested that because all possible 
evidence was before me, there was no need for a 
full trial; that I should be capable of deciding the 
constitutional issue. 
Process 
Applicant's Submission: 
Counsel submits that this Court can and should 
deal with the application to quash since the writ 
was issued out of this Court; that the Court of 
Queen's Bench in Alberta cannot question another 
court's authority. This principle was canvassed in 
the case of Wilson v. The Queen, [1983] 2 S.C.R. 
594; 37 C.R. (3d) 97, and more particularly at 
page 608 S.C.R.; 127 C.R. where the Supreme 
Court of Canada states: 
The exigencies of court administration, as well as death or 
illness of the authorizing judge, do not always make it practical 
or possible to apply for a review to the same judge who made 
the order. There is support for the proposition that another 
judge of the same court can review an ex parte order. See, for 
example, Bidder v. Bridges (1884), 26 Ch.D. 1 (CA.), and 
Boyle v. Sacker (1888), 39 Ch.D. 249 (C.A.) In the case of 
Gulf Islands Navigation Ltd. v. Seafarers' International Union 
(1959), 18 D.L.R. (2d) 625 (B.C.C.A.), Smith J.A. said, at pp. 
626-27: 
After considering the cases, which are neither as conclusive 
nor as consistent as they might be, I am of opinion that the 
weight of authority supports the following propositions as to 
one Judge's dealings with another Judge's ex parte order: (I) 
He has power to discharge the order or dissolve the injunc
tion; (2) he ought not to exercise this power, but ought to 
refer the motion to the first Judge, except in special circum
stances, e.g., where he acts by consent or by leave of the first 
Judge, or where the first Judge is not available to hear the 
motion; (3) if the second Judge hears the motion, he should 
hear it de novo as to both the law and facts involved. 
I would accept these words in the case of review of a wiretap 
authorization with one reservation. The reviewing judge must 
not substitute his discretion for that of the authorizing judge. 
Only if the facts upon which the authorization was granted are 
found to be different from the facts proved on the ex parte 
review should the authorization be disturbed. It is my opinion 
that, in view of the silence on this subject in the Criminal Code 
and the confusion thereby created, the practice above-described 
should be adopted. 
Neither counsel for the respondents nor I take 
issue with this position. 
II 
The applicant argues that the writ, signed by the 
Registrar, is invalid. The statute (Narcotic Con
trol Act) grants the Minister the authority to 
make an application for a writ of assistance which 
is then submitted to the Court. In this case it was 
presented to a Federal Court judge who endorsed 
on the application: "Let the Writs issue as applied 
for." Although this procedure has been followed 
by the Court for years, it is inappropriate. A judge 
has been given the authority to issue the writs and 
he cannot delegate this power unless there is en
abling legislation. To properly define "issuance", 
he refers me to the case of United Assn. of Jour
neymen and Apprentices of Plumbing and Pipe 
Fitting Industry of U.S. and Can., Local 488 v. 
Bd. of Industrial Relations, [1975] 2 W.W.R. 470 
(Alta. C.A.) and more particularly to page 473: 
The words "issuance", "issuing" and "issue" have been the 
subject of a number of decisions covering various shades of 
meaning, and in the present context I would refer to the only 
definition of "issue" set out in The Dictionary of English Law, 
by Earl Jowitt: 
"A writ, subpoena or similar document is said to be issued 
when it is delivered by the proper officer of the court to the 
party at whose instance it is sued out, after having been 
sealed or otherwise marked to denote its official character." 
[My underlining.] 
He concludes that the signing of the writ by the 
Registrar is not by the "proper officer" and is 
therefore invalid. 
III 
The applicant is of the opinion that certiorari is 
an appropriate remedy to set aside the functions 
performed by both the Judge and the Registrar, 
contending that the performance of their duties 
was administrative. 
He suggests to the Court that Collier J.'s view in 
Re Writs of Assistance, reported in (1975), 34 
C.C.C. (2d) 62 (F.C.T.D.), when referring to the 
remarks of the Chief Justice in 1965 (Jackett 
C.J.), was that a judge, when acting pursuant to 
the dictates of a statute, is acting administratively 
because there appears to be no discretion in the 
exercise of the function. It is not judicial, not even 
quasi-judicial. And counsel for the applicant 
quotes Collier J. at page 64: 
I think it desirable to repeat his conclusions because they 
indicate this Court is reluctantly bowing to the dictates of the 
statute and has no say or discretion in the matter of issuing 
these writs which are then placed in the hands of persons who, 
in individual cases, may seriously abuse the unrestrained inva-
sionary powers given. 
At page 65 he wrote: 
It may be commented by some that, in view of the carefully 
reasoned decision of the Chief Justice in 1965, I, a novitiate in 
1975, should merely have signed (on behalf of the Court) the 
particular writ sought here. I infer from the reasons of the 
Chief Justice he was, however, protesting the wide powers given 
by these writs and the inability of the Court to exercise any 
discretion in respect of the number of writs issued, the qualifi
cations of those to be clothed with the powers, and the duration 
of the writs. Ten years after that protest these untrammelled 
writs are still being sought. For that reason, and partly 
influenced by the recent history of executive branch excesses in 
the United States, I determined to reproduce once more, in 
writing, the views expressed by Jackett, P. [My underlining.] 
Counsel implies that these remarks by Collier J. 
infer that these decisions are administrative, quali
fy for judicial review and are therefore subject to 
certiorari, the appropriate remedy to quash deci
sions of other bodies or persons having legal au
thority to determine questions affecting the rights 
of others. 
Respondents' Submission: 
Counsel for the respondents, as I have already 
stated, did not take issue with the contention that 
the application properly belonged in the Federal 
Court. 
II 
The respondents submit that the issuance of the 
writ of assistance was proper and that the signing 
of the document by the Registrar did not vitiate 
the process; that there was a proper application 
submitted on behalf of the Minister; that the 
person designated by the writ of assistance was a 
proper person; that the execution by a judge of the 
Federal Court of the application, "a proper offic
er" authorized its issuance; that the document 
itself was in correct form and bore the seal of the 
Court; that the signature of the Registrar appear
ing was for the purpose of verifying its authenticity 
and did not in any way imply that the executing 
official was the issuing officer. 
III 
The respondents admit that certiorari would 
apply to acts performed by the Registrar were they 
beyond his scope of authority; but, since he in fact 
was not required to make a decision, there could 
be no remedy. 
Counsel submitted that certiorari cannot be 
invoked against a judge of the Federal Court. 
Once a judge, always a judge. Though Parliament 
can, in certain circumstances, appoint a judge to 
act in a special capacity of persona designata, it 
may only do so by express and unqualified words. 
One must look to the intent of Parliament and the 
statute. I am referred to the case of Herman et al. 
v. Deputy Attorney General (Can.), [ 1979] 1 
S.C.R. 729; 91 D.L.R. (3d) 3, at page 749 S.C.R.; 
18 D.L.R.: 
Prima facie, Parliament should be taken to intend a judge to 
act qua judge whenever by statute it grants powers to a judge. 
He who alleges that a judge is acting in the special capacity of 
persona designata must find in the specific legislation provi
sions which clearly evidence a contrary intention on the part of 
Parliament. The test to be applied in considering whether such 
a contrary intention appears in the relevant statute can be cast 
in the form of a question: is the judge exercising a peculiar, and 
distinct, and exceptional jurisdiction, separate from and 
unrelated to the tasks which he performs from day-to-day as a 
judge, and having nothing in common with the court of which 
he is a member? 
In discussing the interpretation of Collier J.'s 
remarks in Re Writs of Assistance (supra), as 
attributed to him by the applicant, the respondents 
disagree that the judge was acting in an adminis
trative capacity; it cannot be inferred from his 
remarks that he performed something other than a 
judicial function. It is submitted that he initially 
had to consider whether or not the application was 
a proper one and submitted by the Minister; 
secondly, that a proper person (i.e. an R.C.M.P. 
officer) was the person designated in the writ of 
assistance; and, thirdly that the scope of the au
thority granted by the writ did not exceed the 
powers granted under the statute. Though there 
was no discretion to be exercised, there was the 
exercise of a judicial function. 
A judge of the Federal Court has power to 
invoke the remedy of prerogative writs with 
respect to decisions made by inferior bodies or 
tribunals as defined in section 2 of the Federal 
Court Act; [R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10]; 
under the interpretation section, a "judge" means 
a judge of the Court and one cannot infer that a 
judge of the Federal Court can ever be performing 
the functions of a commissioner, a federal board or 
tribunal. 
To attempt to vary or change the decision of a 
Federal Court judge, the proper procedure is not 
before the Trial Division but rather before the 
Appeal Division of the Federal Court of Canada. 
It is further submitted that a judge, when per
forming a function under a statute, can only be 
acting as a judge and the authority for this can be 
found in the case of Minister of Indian Affairs 
and Northern Development v. Ranville et al., 
[1982] 2 S.C.R. 518; 139 D.L.R. (3d) 1, at page 
528 S.C.R.; 9 D.L.R.: 
In this instance adherence to the stare decisis principle would 
generate more uncertainty than certainty. The Herman case 
decided that persona designata status would be recognized only 
in exceptional circumstances. This, however, leaves open to 
debate just how exceptional the circumstances are in a particu
lar case. Thus, continued recognition of the distinction 
approved by this court in Commonwealth of Puerto Rico v. 
Hernandez, supra, can only have the effect of creating doubt as 
to which review or appeal route a party should follow. The 
judge-made concept of persona designata, so far as I can 
determine, serves no useful purpose in the present context, and 
can readily be jettisoned without prejudice to legal principle. 
Having regard to the clear and unambiguous language of s. 
2(g) of the Federal Court Act, "other than [...] any [...] 
person [...] appointed [...] under section 96 of The British 
North America Act, 1867",I am of the opinion that the proper 
course is fidelity to the statutory language as evidence of 
legislative intention. 
As a final submission, counsel for the respon
dents argues that the doctrine of omnia 
praesumuntur applies. That the writ of assistance 
must be presumed legal until the contrary is 
proved. In this instance we have an official act, it 
is presumed that all necessary conditions and for
malities have been complied with, and though it is 
a rebuttable presumption, this burden has not been 
discharged by the applicant. 
Conclusion of Process 
There is no dispute that the remedy sought by 
this application is in the proper forum. I am also 
satisfied that the writ, on the face of it, was 
properly issued. The Registrar in subscribing his 
signature to the formal document did not exceed 
his jurisdiction and certiorari would not apply 
against him. His function is that of authenticating 
the writ of assistance or any other document issued 
pursuant to the authorization of a judge of the 
Federal Court who derives his authority from the 
statute. Nowhere in the enabling legislation do we 
find any requirement of a judge's signature, or for 
that matter any other official, to appear on the 
face of the writ of assistance. 
I further reject the suggestion that certiorari is 
applicable to a judge in this Court or that he was 
acting as a persona designata in these circum
stances. Though Collier J. may have found little 
exercise of discretion in issuing writs of assistance, 
it does not follow that he inferred that he was 
acting administratively. When a judge of the Fed
eral Court authorizes the issuance of a writ of 
assistance pursuant to the Narcotic Control Act, 
he is performing a judicial function. He cannot be 
acting in any other capacity unless the statute 
indicated a contrary intention and directed that he 
was acting in a manner "unrelated to the tasks 
which he performs from day-to-day as a judge and 
having nothing in common with the court of which 
he is a member" (Herman, supra, at page-749 
S.C.R.; 18 D.L.R.). 
Constitutionality 
Applicant's Submission: 
Counsel for the applicant submits that the ratio 
of Chief Justice Dickson in Hunter et al. v. South-
am Inc., [1984] 2 S.C.R. 145 is now the binding 
authority in the case of statutory powers of search 
and seizure; that any writ of assistance is an 
instrument which challenges the constitutional 
rights as enunciated and guaranteed by section 8 
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.)]. The almost limitless powers granted a 
police officer, without interruption, are inconsist
ent and cannot be sustained. 
I was urged to consider and follow the decisions 
in R. v. Carriere (1983), 32 C.R. (3d) 117 (Ont. 
Prov. Ct.), and R. v. Cuff (1983), 34 C.R. (3d) 
344 (B.C. Co. Ct.). That I should adopt, without 
question, counsel's interpretation of the conclusion 
reached in the case of R. v. Rao (1984), 46 O.R. 
(2d) 80 (confirmed by the Supreme Court of 
Canada [ 1984] 2 S.C.R. ix), a decision of the 
Ontario Court of Appeal, wherein Martin J. wrote 
at page 109: 
I have, for the reasons which I have set forth, concluded that 
the search of an office without a warrant where the obtaining 
of a warrant is not impracticable, is unreasonable and, to that 
extent, s. 10(1 )(a) is of no force or effect. 
Relying on Southam (supra), counsel argues 
that search and seizure must conform to the mini
mum standards imposed under the Criminal Code 
otherwise the legislation should be of no force and 
effect. It is indispensable that an independant or 
objective person assess the circumstances before a 
warrant can issue. This now becomes an absolute 
step in the procedure before searches and seizures 
can be effectively carried out. 
Dickson C.J. wrote (Southam, supra, at pages 
161 and 162): 
The purpose of a requirement of prior authorization is to 
provide an opportunity, before the event, for the conflicting 
interests of the state and the individual to be assessed, so that 
the individual's right to privacy will be breached only where the 
appropriate standard has been met, and the interests of the 
state are thus demonstrably superior. For such an authorization 
procedure to be meaningful it is necessary for the person 
authorizing the search to be able to assess the evidence as to 
whether that standard has been met, in an entirely neutral and 
impartial manner. At common law the power to issue a search 
warrant was reserved for a justice. 
In this case, the writ of assistance was issued 
before the Charter; the activity complained of 
occurred after it came into effect. The Federal 
Court granted the writ of assistance before the 
promulgation of the Charter, at a time when re
strictions were non-existent and left the Court no 
discretion but to issue. To support this position, 
counsel refers me again to Southam, supra, (at 
page 156): 
The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms is a purposive 
document. Its purpose is to guarantee and to protect, within the 
limits of reason, the enjoyment of the rights and freedoms it 
enshrines. It is intended to constrain governmental action 
inconsistent with those rights and freedoms; it is not in itself an 
authorization for governmental action. 
Respondents' Submission: 
Paragraph 10(1)(a) and subsection 10(3) of the 
Narcotic Control Act must be read and considered 
together. They clearly imply preconditions before 
the use of a writ of assistance can be relied upon 
when entering a "dwelling house". They presume a 
reasonable belief that there is a narcotic on the 
premises and secondly that an offence has been 
committed. There is a presumption under para
graph 10(1) (a) that the Court must first be satis
fied of the urgency of the situation before the 
evidence which is the result of the search and 
seizure can be introduced. In other words, it is 
incumbent upon the trial judge to satisfy himself 
as to the absolute necessity and urgency of the 
circumstances before the evidence could be 
adduced. A second step would then require the 
Court to satisfy itself that the person exercising 
the powers in the writ of assistance has reasonable 
belief that narcotics are on the premises and that 
an offence has been committed. This reasoning 
was adopted by Martin J. in the case of R. v. Rao 
(supra) and followed in the case of R. v. Hamill, 
[1984] 6 W.W.R. 530; 41 C.R. (3d) 123 a decision 
of the Court of Appeal of British Columbia dated 
September 4, 1984. 
I was urged to accept as a basic premise that it 
is unreasonable, in all circumstances, to consider 
prior authorization for the obtaining of a warrant. 
To impose this condition would undoubtedly add 
security to the rights of individuals as required 
under section 8 of the Charter. In turn, it may 
offset the greater right of society to be protected 
against criminal activity in the narcotic field. That 
the debate in Southam (supra) did not call upon 
the Supreme Court of Canada to weigh section 8 
of the Charter in light of section 1, the require
ments of a free and democratic society. 
Counsel for the Crown admits that the decision 
in Southam creates a problem because the public 
has a right to be protected and secure against 
unlawful search and seizure by section 8 of the 
Charter; this action is to protect against the issu
ance and the use of these procedures before they 
are required or prior to the occurrence of an event. 
Southam, on the other hand, does not preclude the 
argument that prior authorization may be sus
pended when it is not feasible to obtain it. It was 
urged that Southam imposes an onus on the party 
making the search but it remains rebuttable. There 
can be circumstances when prior authorization 
may and should be excepted. In a free and demo
cratic society we should be permitted warrantless 
searches under certain restricted circumstances 
but they must be confined and subjected to reason
able limits. 
The courts have a duty to question that which is 
to be remedied and they can then decide that 
which is needed by way of effective laws to impose 
narcotic control. It is open to them to conclude 
that rights of society take precedence over the 
rights of individuals in certain circumstances. To 
remove writs of assistance would create a major 
hardship on law enforcement primarily because of 
urgency when dealing in the illegal drug trade. R. 
v. Rao (supra) which has now been confirmed by 
the Supreme Court of Canada, does not suggest 
that writs of assistance contravene the Charter. It 
supports the view that there must be some power 
given to police officers when it is not practical to 
obtain a warrant. This limitless exercise of search 
and seizure may not be authorized even with a writ 
of assistance when a warrant may be obtained in 
non-urgent circumstances. In concluding, it was 
suggested that when it is feasible to obtain a 
proper warrant, a writ of assistance could not be 
supported. 
It is worth noting that, in R. v. Rao (supra), the 
evidence was not excluded as a result of the con
clusion that paragraph 10(1)(a) was invalid. 
Martin J. said that he would not have held that the 
admission of the evidence would bring the 
administration of justice into disrepute solely 
because the evidence was seized during a warrant-
less search. A warrant was required to meet the 
constitutional standard of reasonableness under 
section 8 of the Charter. The evidence was exclud
ed because as he wrote at page 110: 
... there was a gross abuse of power and a flagrant denial to 
the respondent of his constitutional rights which cannot be 
condoned in a free and democratic society. 
Warrantless searches are unusual but they must 
be maintained in narcotics cases if we are to 
maintain any semblance of order in society. Spe
cial provisions are necessary in dealing with nar
cotics because of the large sums of money at stake, 
the mobility of the perpetrators, the social prob
lems created and the general outcry from the 
public. 
Conclusion of the Constitutionality Issue: 
I am satisfied that writs of assistance issued 
under the Narcotic Control Act are desirable in a 
free and democratic society and should prevail 
subject to certain restrictions and confinements; I 
disagree with the applicant's contention that 
Martin J. concluded otherwise in R. v. Rao 
(supra). He did not find that paragraph 10(1)(a) 
of the Narcotic Control Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. N-1, 
was unconstitutional. He decided it was inopera
tive in the case he had to decide because of its 
particular facts bringing about an inconsistency 
with the Charter and he wrote at pages 109-110: 
In my view, the warrantless search powers conferred by s. 
10(1)(a) of the Narcotic Control Act are not on their face 
necessarily unreasonable and do not necessarily collide with the 
Charter, although warrantless searches authorized by s. 
10(1)(a) may in some circumstances, come into collision with 
the Charter's protection against unreasonable searches and 
seizures. It is not like the reverse onus contained in s. 8 of the 
Narcotic Control Act, which on its face collided with the 
presumption of innocence secured by s. 8 of the Charter ... 
Accordingly, I do not consider that s. 10(1)(a) is unconstitu
tional, but hold that it is inoperative to the extent that it is 
inconsistent with s. 8 of the Charter. In my opinion, s. 10(1)(a) 
is inoperative to the extent that it authorizes the search of a 
person's office without a warrant, in the absence of circum
stances which make the obtaining of a warrant impracticable; 
beyond that it is unnecessary to go in the present case. In that 
respect, my views differ somewhat from those of the trial judge. 
He further concluded that a warrantless search 
can be unreasonable in the case of a person's office 
by extending to it the quality of a dwelling-house; 
at page 106 he wrote: 
The common law has always afforded special protection to 
dwelling-houses which s. 10 recognizes by requiring a warrant 
to search a dwelling-house. In my view, however, the individu
al's legitimate expectation of privacy in contemporary society 
extends equally to his office. In Re Alder et al. and The Queen 
(1977), 37 C.C.C. (2d) 234 at p. 251, [1977] 5 W.W.R. 132, 5 
A.R. 473 sub nom. Alder v. A.-G. Alta. et al. (Alta. S.C.T.D.) 
Moshansky J. stated, "The authority to search a citizen's home, 
or his private office involves an extraordinary infringement of 
his liberty and his privacy." (Emphasis added.) The Law 
Reform Commission of Canada has suggested that the exist
ence of separate rules for the search of dwellings and other 
private premises carrying a high expectation of privacy, such as 
offices, should be reconsidered: at pp. 24-5. 
There is a seeming inconsistency, and perhaps even incon
gruity, between s. 10(1 )(a) of the Narcotic Control Act confer
ring power on a police constable to ransack a person's office 
without a warrant because he has reasonable grounds for 
believing that there are a few ounces of marijuana on the 
premises, even when it would not be impracticable to obtain a 
warrant, and s. 11 of the Official Secrets Act which requires a 
search warrant to search private premises save in the exception
al circumstance when there is an emergency situation in which 
the interest of the State requires immediate action. Even in the 
latter situation the R.C.M.P. constable is required to obtain 
written authorization from a senior officer, not below the rank 
of superintendent, before undertaking a search, unlike under 
the Narcotic Control Act where the police officer acting in his 
discretion may search private premises without a warrant or 
written authority even though there is no emergency making it 
impracticable to obtain a warrant. 
In my view, the warrantless search of a person's office 
requires justification in order to meet the constitutional stand
ard of reasonableness secured by s. 8 of the Charter, and 
statutory provisions authorizing such warrantless searches are 
subject to challenge under the Charter. The justification for a 
warrantless search may be found in the existence of circum
stances which make it impracticable to obtain a warrant: see, 
for example, s. 101(2) of the Code; s. 11(2) of the Official 
Secrets Act. The individual's reasonable expectation of privacy 
must, of course, be balanced against the public interest in 
effective law enforcement. However, where no circumstances 
exist which make the obtaining of a warrant impracticable and 
when the obtaining of a warrant would not impede effective law 
enforcement, a warrantless search of an office of fixed location 
(except as an incident of a lawful arrest) cannot be justified 
and does not meet the constitutional standard of reasonableness 
prescribed by s. 8 of the Charter. [Emphasis added.] 
According to Martin J. in R. v. Rao (supra) the 
reasonableness of a search in light of section 8 of 
the Charter should be examined; at page 90 he 
wrote: 
A challenge to the reasonableness of a particular search may 
be made under the Charter on two bases. Firstly, the reason
ableness of the legislation authorizing the search is subject to 
challenge; secondly, a search under a constitutionally valid 
statutory authority may be carried out in an unreasonable 
manner, for example, by the use of excessive force. 
Therefore, the test of reasonableness of section 8 
of the Charter goes beyond the lawful entry of an 
officer. It may be lawful but unreasonable. Martin 
J. wrote in R. v. Rao (supra) at page 105: 
Mr. Dambrot, in support of his able submission that the 
warrantless powers conferred by s. 10(1)(a) of the Narcotic 
Control Act were reasonable, stressed the fact that s. 10(1)(a) 
authorizes a warrantless search only where a peace officer has 
reasonable grounds to believe that there is in the place to be 
searched a narcotic drug possessed in contravention of the Act, 
and it does not authorize a warrantless entry into premises to 
search for evidence. Mr. Dambrot is, of course, correct in 
stating that entry under s. 10(1)(a) is justified only where the 
officer has reasonable grounds to believe that there is in the 
place to be searched a narcotic by means of or in respect of 
which an offence under the Act has been committed. However, 
upon a lawful entry very wide powers are conferred. The peace 
officer may search any person found on the premises, break 
open doors and containers and seize and take away not only 
narcotics, but anything which he reasonably believes may be 
evidence of the commission of an offence under the Act. 
The legitimate expectation of privacy in one's home or office 
is one of the most valued rights of the individual afforded 
protection by a democratic society. 
According to Martin J. in R. v. Rao (supra), it 
is a question of circumstances. Warrantless 
searches may be reasonably justified. And he 
wrote at page 109: 
Section 10(1)(a) does not, on its face, necessarily clash with 
s. 8 of the Charter although in some circumstances a warrant-
less search authorized by that subsection may, in fact, infringe 
the constitutional requirement of reasonableness secured by s. 8 
of the Charter, depending upon the circumstances surrounding 
the particular search. The statute is inoperative to the extent 
that it authorizes an unreasonable search. Section 52(l) of the 
Constitution Act, 1982 reads: 
52 (1) The Constitution of Canada is the supreme law of 
Canada, and any law that is inconsistent with the provisions 
of the Constitution is, to the extent of the inconsistency, of 
no force or effect. (Emphasis added.) 
Esson J. in R. v. Hamill (supra) agreed that 
paragraph 10(1) (a) of the Narcotic Control Act is 
not, per se, unconstitutional and he said at pages 
534, 535 W.W.R.; 129 C.R.: 
The question is whether s. 10(1)(a), in empowering a search 
of the dwelling under the authority of a writ of assistance, is 
inconsistent with s. 8 of the Charter, and thus of no force and 
effect. That section authorizes a peace officer, under the au
thority of a writ of assistance or a warrant, to enter and search 
any dwelling-house in which he reasonably believes there is a 
narcotic by means of or in respect of which an offence against 
the Act has been committed. 
In my view, the section validly confers the power to enter and 
search under the authority of a writ of assistance. If it required 
only possession of a writ of assistance, it would be inconsistent 
with s. 8. There would then be no requirement of reasonable 
grounds. But the section authorizes only an entry and search 
based on a reasonable belief in the presence of a narcotic by 
means of or in respect of which an offence has been committed. 
A search based upon a reasonable belief in the presence of a 
narcotic involved in an offence is a reasonable search, so there 
is no inconsistency with s. 8. 
The powers given under paragraph 10(1)(a) are 
very wide but then the subject is very specific and 
the legislature believed in its necessity in consider
ing the particular circumstances encountered in 
drug investigations. 
According to Esson J., entry under authority of 
a writ of assistance is lawful. But to be in accord
ance with section 8 of the Charter, the search 
should be reasonable. When is it? 
Here is what he says at page 547 W.W.R.; 141 
C.R.: 
The conclusion that the writ of assistance is constitutionally 
valid does not end the inquiry whether the search carried out 
under its authority was reasonable. Entry under authority of a 
writ of assistance is lawful, and not in breach of s. 8 of the 
Charter, only if the officer had a reasonable belief in the 
presence of a narcotic. Even if the initial entry is reasonable, 
the search may become unreasonable if carried out in an 
unreasonable manner. On the other hand, even if a search was 
carried out without lawful authority, or was otherwise unrea
sonable, that is not in itself a ground for excluding the evidence. 
If it amounts to a breach of the Charter, it will provide grounds 
for granting under s. 24(1) a just and appropriate remedy. The 
remedy of exclusion of evidence will not, in most cases, be 
either just or appropriate. It can be so only if the admission of 
the evidence would, in the words of s. 24(2), bring the adminis
tration of justice into disrepute. 
Over the years, many commissions were 
appointed to analyse writs of assistance together 
with their use and value. In the 1972 report of the 
Commission of Inquiry into the non-medical use of 
Drugs (Le Dain Commission), Professor Le Dain 
(as he then was) wrote on behalf of the Commis
sion [at page 240]: 
A writ of assistance is a general warrant that is not limited as 
to time or place and remains valid during the entire career of 
the law enforcement officer to whom it is issued. It is obtained 
upon application by the Minister of National Health and 
Welfare to a judge of the Federal Court. The judge has no 
discretion in the matter. It is mandatory that he issue the writ 
upon such an application. The writ empowers the officer named 
in it, with the assistance of such other persons as he may 
require, to enter any dwelling-house at any time and search for 
prohibited drugs. In practice writs of assistance are issued 
under the drug laws only to officers of the R.C.M. Police. 
At page 297, the Commission stated as part of 
its conclusions and recommendations: 
The use of extraordinary methods of enforcement. Refer
ence has been made in Chapter 5 to the extraordinary methods 
of law enforcement which must be resorted to because of the 
difficulty in detecting offences by reason of the fact that there 
is seldom, if ever, a complainant. The use of special methods of 
search, undercover agents and informers, and police encourage
ment of offences makes the impact of the criminal law process 
in this field particularly unpleasant and generates considerable 
resentment. It also tends to bring the law and police into some 
disrepute. Commission researchers who engaged in participant 
observation of law enforcement in the drug field have conclud
ed that such enforcement would be seriously handicapped if the 
police were deprived of these special powers and methods. It 
would appear, therefore, that they must be regarded as special 
costs inherent in the criminal law prohibition of the distribution 
and use of drugs. [My underlining.] 
I have come to the conclusion that a search can 
be lawful but unreasonable; it may also be without 
lawful authority but reasonable and pass the test 
of section 8 of the Charter. 
To be operative, an entry made under paragraph 
10(1)(a) of the Narcotic Control Act must be 
made at all times with reasonable belief that there 
is a narcotic in the premises to be searched; that 
an offence under the Act has been committed and 
that the manner in which the search is conducted 
be reasonable. 
The wording of paragraph 10(1)(a), when deal
ing with entry into a dwelling-house, is therefore, 
not per se, unconstitutional but can become of no 
force and effect depending on the particular cir
cumstances of the case. It could be considered 
inoperative in its application in light of section 8 of 
the Charter. 
In Southam (supra), the statute in question was 
the Combines Investigation Act [R.S.C. 1970, c. 
C-23]. Subsection 10(3) provides for prior authori
zation of searches by a member of the Restricted 
Trade Practices Commission. No doubt there is a 
conflict of interest and as it was stated, a commis
sioner cannot be said to be acting judicially. 
The Combines Investigation Act does not pro
vide sufficient protection to the public. The courts 
concluded that the Act brings about unreasonable 
search and seizure and was found not to measure 
up to the standards imposed by the Charter. 
The issue in Southam (supra) was more 
restricted and the parameter of the debate is found 
at page 154: 
At the outset it is important to note that the issue in this 
appeal concerns the constitutional validity of a statute authoriz
ing a search and seizure. It does not concern the reasonableness 
or otherwise of the manner in which the appellants carried out 
their statutory authority. It is not the conduct of the appellants, 
but rather the legislation under which they acted, to which 
attention must be directed. 
Dickson C.J. concluded that the person author
izing the warrant was not a person acting judicial- 
ly nor could the person overcome the objectivity 
test. At page 162 he wrote: 
The person performing this function need not be a judge, but he 
must at a minimum be capable of acting judicially. 
This function and its required impartiality is 
defined at page 164 when he wrote: 
In my view, investing the Commission or its members with 
significant investigatory functions has the result of vitiating the 
ability of a member of the Commission to act in a judicial 
capacity when authorizing a search or seizure under s. 10(3). 
This is not, of course, a matter of impugning the honesty or 
good faith of the Commission or its members. It is rather a 
conclusion that the administrative nature of the Commission's 
investigatory duties (with its quite proper reference points in 
considerations of public policy and effective enforcement of the 
Act) ill-accords with the neutrality and detachment necessary 
to assess whether the evidence reveals that the point has been 
reached where the interests of the individual must constitution
ally give way to those of the state. A member of the R.T.P.C. 
passing on the appropriateness of a proposed search under the 
Combines Investigation Act is caught by the maxim nemo 
judex in sua causa. He simply cannot be the impartial arbiter 
necessary to grant an effective authorization. 
Dickson C.J. further concluded at page 168 that 
there was no requirement of reasonableness in the 
legislation itself: 
In cases like the present, reasonable and probable grounds, 
established upon oath, to believe that an offence has been 
committed and that there is evidence to be found at the place of 
the search, constitutes the minimum standard, consistent with 
s. 8 of the Charter, for authorizing search and seizure. In so far 
as subss. 10(1) and 10(3) of the Combines Investigation Act do 
not embody such a requirement, I would hold them to be 
further inconsistent with s. 8. 
However, he is of the opinion that there might 
be some exceptions (pages 160 and 161): 
As such it accords with the apparent intention of the Charter to 
prefer, where feasible, the right of the individual to be free 
from state interference to the interests of the state in advancing 
its purposes through such interference. 
I recognize that it may not be reasonable in every instance to 
insist on prior authorization in order to validate governmental 
intrusions upon individuals' expectations of privacy. Neverthe
less, where it is feasible to obtain prior authorization, I would 
hold that such authorization is a precondition for a valid search 
and seizure. 
The Narcotic Control Act is a very special 
statute and to sustain writs of assistance in the 
case of entering a "dwelling-house" one has a duty 
to find the balance between individuals' rights and 
the public interest. Because of the nature of drugs 
and their far-reaching social consequences, I am 
persuaded to accept certain limited restrictions to 
individuals' rights which should be considered 
reasonable and in the public interest, in a free and 
democratic society. 
When there is a challenge to the constitutional 
validity of a statute and the Canadian Charter of 
Righs and Freedoms has been invoked, I must 
determine if the infringement is within reasonable 
limits. In Re Soenen and Thomas et al. (1983), 3 
D.L.R. (4th) 658 (Alta. Q.B.), it was found that if 
the limiting section of the Charter is applied, we 
must then balance the individual's rights against 
those of the collectivity. The Court must determine 
that which can be a reasonable limit demonstrably 
justified in a free and democratic society. In Basile 
v. Attorney-General of Nova Scotia (1983), 148 
D.L.R. (3d) 382, the Supreme Court of Nova 
Scotia reasoned that if it becomes necessary to 
protect the general public, certain constraints and 
limitations may be imposed on our freedoms. 
In this case, the Crown has demonstrated that, 
within reasonable limits, we should impose certain 
restrictions to section 8 of the Charter, which are 
justifiable in a free and democratic society when 
considering the social, economic and political wel
fare of Canadians. Section 1 of the Charter was 
drafted in such a manner as to anticipate the 
imposition of certain restrictions on our rights and 
freedoms. The language itself imposes no limita
tion on the latitude of the censorship by which the 
courts may justifiably restrict our freedoms. 
Searches and seizures are intrusions into the 
private domain of the individual. They cannot be 
tolerated unless circumstances justify them in 
exceptional cases. 
Though there may be no immediate prior 
authorization, the courts afford the public ade
quate protection after the event. Tests are adminis
tered by an objective third person acting judicially, 
the trial judge. Writs of assistance under the Nar
cotic Control Act are always subject to scrutiny 
under section 8 of the Charter but they can be 
reasonable and operative provided they adhere to 
certain rigorous tests. They must demonstrate 
urgency and the impracticability of obtaining a 
search warrant in the particular circumstances; 
reasonableness, as to the manner in which the 
search was conducted; that the person availing 
himself of the writ of assistance reasonably 
believes that there is a narcotic on the premises in 
respect of which an offence under the Act has been 
committed; that the reasonable belief be thorough
ly canvassed as to the investigating officer's knowl
edge prior to conducting the search; that the evi
dence sought and obtained during the search be 
confined to the offence he reasonably believed was 
committed. 
These criteria, though not restrictive, nor all 
inclusive, do not leave the individual without pro
tection against warrantless searches and seizures. 
Though individuals' rights under section 8 of the 
Charter would be subject to these intrusions, I am 
convinced that they are required under section 1 of 
the same Charter; they are not inconsistent with 
the requirements of law enforcement in the narcot
ic field in a free and democratic society. There is 
also the additional protection of subsection 24(2) 
of the Charter. 
One must be apprehensive of undermining 
police powers by interpreting legal rights in such a 
manner as to protect the criminal element and at 
the same time diminish the security of the citizen. 
Justice Gérard V. La Forest of the Court of 
Appeal of New Brunswick (as he then was), writ
ing in the Canadian Bar Review on the Canadian 
Charter of Rights and Freedoms in an article 
entitled "The Canadian Charter of Rights and 
Freedoms: An overview", published at (1983), 61 
Can. Bar Rev. 19, at page 20: 
The courts through a series of presumptions designed "as 
protection against interference by the state with the liberty or 
property of the subject" interpret statutes so as to ensure that 
individual freedom or private rights of property are not arbi
trarily restricted or abridged. In doing this the courts exercise 
what is in essence a constitutional function. They are working 
along with the legislative branch to ensure the preservation of 
our fundamental political values. The legislature can, of course, 
by clear language overturn the court's ruling, but by insisting 
on such clarity the courts help to promote second thought and 
public debate, a debate that all recognize as an essential 
safeguard in a parliamentary democracy. 
And at page 25, dealing with section 1 of the 
Charter, he continued: 
In any society, rights have to be balanced against one 
another. Absolute rights are virtually non-existent. The courts 
would in any event have to engage in balancing the rights set 
forth in the Charter against other rights, and in doing so they 
would naturally have recourse to what is reasonably justified in 
a democratic society. For that is the kind of society we live in 
and judges like other citizens feel the pulse of their own society. 
At page 24 he wrote: 
I might add, interstitially, that the Charter forces us to look 
at questions differently than before. However clear a statute or 
its purposes may be, courts will be asked to make a value 
judgment about it, a duty that is very different from the 
traditional role of the court. This should profoundly affect the 
sources on which courts must rely for guidance. In particular, 
reference to judicial decisions in other jurisdictions, notably the 
United States, and under the United Nations Covenant on Civil 
and Political Rights and the European Convention for the 
Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms. Not 
that I think we should blindly follow these. Our courts must be 
guided by the felt needs and traditions of our own society. But 
they will be invaluable in raising the issues that must be 
considered. So often we fail to see that a course of action may 
unnecessarily infringe on the rights of the individual because 
we have simply become accustomed to that way of doing things. 
As Justice La Forest distinguished, there is no 
need for us to blindly follow other jurisdictions but 
we should be guided by the needs and traditions of 
our own society. This judgment may generate 
second thoughts. As I see the pulse of our society, 
1 have concluded that it is prepared to accept the 
limitations that I would impose on its rights and 
freedoms. 
I cannot comment on the particular facts of this 
case. The Trial Judge shall determine whether or 
not the evidence obtained in the search and seizure 
is admissible. 
Application dismissed with costs. 
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