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T-2182-85
"H" (Applicant)
v.
The Queen (Respondent)
and
National Parole Board (Respondent)
INDEXED AS: H V. R.
Trial Division, Reed J.—Toronto, October 28 and November 7, 1985.
Privacy — Parole — Privacy Act not applicable as exemp tions therein relate only to requests for information made pursuant thereto — Act cannot limit access to information where right thereto resulting from other legal rules or princi ples — Argument application premature due to failure to pursue all available remedies under Act rejected as disclosure rules under Act different in content and purpose from those flowing from rules of natural justice — Privacy Act, S.C. 1980-81-82-83, c. 111, Schedule II, ss. 19, 22(1)(b), 23, 28 Parole Regulations, SOR/78-428, s. 17(3).
Parole — Application for day parole — Board having information re offences of which applicant a suspect — Duty to disclose information — Application re disclosure of infor mation not premature though parole decision not yet made — Application to be heard by different panel without knowledge of undisclosed allegations against applicant — Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, being Part I of the Constitu tion Act, 1982, Schedule B, Canada Act 1982, 1982, c. 11 (U.K.), s. 7.
The applicant appeared before the National Parole Board for a hearing to determine whether or not day parole should be granted to him. He found out at the hearing that the Board was taking into account the fact that the RCMP considered him a suspect in the deaths of two young girls and in the disappear ance of a third. He also learned that the Board had before it considerable detail concerning these offences. The details were not disclosed to the applicant. The decision on day parole has not yet been taken.
The applicant seeks either an order of prohibition to prevent the Board from taking into account information which it fails to disclose to the applicant or, alternatively, an order of man- damus requiring the Board to disclose sufficient details to give
the applicant a fair opportunity to respond. He further requests that the order provide that any subsequent hearings be conduct ed by a newly constituted panel of the Board.
Held, an order for prohibition will issue and the parole application shall be heard by a differently constituted panel.
Both the common law and section 7 of the Charter require the Board to follow the rules of natural justice according to which, in the instant case, the applicant is entitled to know sufficient details of the case being made against him to enable him to respond thereto.
Section 23 of the Privacy Act cannot be invoked to oppose further disclosure because the exemptions in the Act relate to requests for information made pursuant to that Act. It does not operate so as to limit access to information to which an individual might be entitled as a result of other legal rules or principles.
The argument was made that the applicant's motion is premature because he has not pursued all the remedies avail able under the Privacy Act. While the applicant did make an application under the Act before the hearing and did not pursue the available appeal procedures, his seeking further details from the Board directly on the occasion of the hearing is another matter entirely. The disclosure rules under the Privacy Act are different in content and purpose from those flowing from the rules of natural justice. Failure to follow the appeal procedures under the Act cannot, therefore, be characterized as a failure to exhaust all available remedies thereby precluding the present application.
Nor is the application premature because the Board has not yet made any decision on parole. The decision challenged is the Board's refusal to disclose further information, it is not a challenge to a decision respecting parole.
In any event, the Board argues that the details of the crimes under investigation are simply irrelevant and that all it consid ers is the fact that there is an on-going investigation. Given this position and the fact that the Board accepts the applicant's request for an order of prohibition, such an order will issue.
Whether the matter should be referred to a newly constituted panel is a matter of discretion and circumstance, not binding precedent. For the sake of the appearance of fairness, in this case, the matter is referred to a differently constituted panel of the Board.
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
APPLIED:
Couperthwaite v. National Parole Board, [1983] 1 F.C. 274 (T.D.); Latham v. Solicitor General of Canada, [1984] 2 F.C. 734; 39 C.R. (3d) 78 (T.D.); Cadieux v. Director of Mountain Institution, [1985] 1 F.C. 378; 41
C.R. (3d) 30 (T.D.); Richards v. Nat. Parole Bd. (1985), 45 C.R. (3d) 382 (F.C.T.D.).
REFERRED TO:
Rogers v. Secretary of State for the Home Department, [1972] 2 All ER 1057 (H.L.).
COUNSEL:
A. Manson for applicant.
J. E. Thompson for respondents.
SOLICITORS:
David P. Cole, Toronto, for applicant.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for respondents.
The following are the reasons for order ren dered in English by
REED J.: On consent of the parties the appli cant's name has been deleted from the style of cause, the National Parole Board has been added as a respondent, and it has been ordered that neither the identity of the applicant nor any infor mation that could disclose his identity shall be published in any newspaper, journal, radio, televi sion or other media communication.
The applicant seeks either an order of prohibi tion, prohibiting the National Parole Board from taking into account information which it fails to disclose to the applicant, or alternatively, an order of mandamus requiring the Board to disclose suffi cient details of the information presently held by it to permit him a fair opportunity to respond thereto.
The applicant is serving a sentence of 12 years for rape. On June 5, 1985 the applicant appeared before the National Parole Board for a hearing as to whether or not day parole should be granted to him. The hearing was adjourned for two reasons:
(1) to obtain a fresh psychiatric assessment, (which was subse quently prepared by a Dr. David Byers); and
(2) to investigate the "B.C. situation".
The "B.C. situation" referred to the fact that the RCMP in that province consider him to be a suspect in the deaths of two young girls and in the disappearance of a third.
It is common ground that the National Parole Board has before it considerable detail concerning the offences which the applicant is suspected of having committed, which it has not disclosed to the applicant.
In response to enquiries by the applicant's coun sel, Mr. Cole, for information concerning these allegations, the National Parole Board wrote on May 27, 1985:
The National Parole Board is advised that [H] continues to remain a suspect in the deaths of 2 young girls and the disappearance of a 3rd young girl, in the Matsqui, B.C. area.
In attempting to obtain further details in July 1985, the applicant's counsel sought information directly from the RCMP in Vancouver. This enquiry brought forward the information that the deaths had occurred in 1978; that Mr. H had been under suspicion by the police since that time; that the police did not have enough evidence to lay charges; and that it was unlikely that charges would be laid.
Immediately before the hearing of this motion an affidavit was filed by a member of the National Parole Board which had appended thereto a docu ment not previously disclosed to the applicant. This document dated July 18, 1985, was edited to remove all details concerning the offences being investigated. Part of the unedited portion states:
In short, the investigating police force concludes that they have considerable circumstantial evidence connecting the subject with these three crimes. The suggestion has also been made that there is some physical evidence implicating the subject, although details could not be provided at this time for fear of comprising a somewhat sensitive, long-standing investigation. They are most interested in seeing the subject undergo a polygraph test, but they indicate that no final decision has been made, at present, regarding the laying of specific charges.
Counsel argues that no factual details of the crimes of which the applicant is suspected have been communicated to him, and that he does not
even know during what months the alleged offences occurred. It is argued that the applicant is entitled to more information than what has been provided to him so far, to enable him to respond in a meaningful way to the allegations being made against him.
Counsel for the applicant's whole argument is based on the ground that applicant knows little more about the allegations against him than what is set out above: in the letter to Cole, and in the information Cole learned from the RCMP. A statement of fact and law filed by counsel summa rizes the applicant's affidavit stating that it was while the applicant was undergoing a psychologi cal testing program in December 1982 — July 1983 that
he first learned that he "was suspected of having committed other sex-related offences in British Columbia" for which he had not been charged;
and, that in January, 1984
the Applicant made a series of enquiries and enlisted the help of various individuals in an attempt to learn the nature and import of suspicions offered by the R.C.M.P. in British Columbia.
These allegations of fact were not challenged; they were admitted by the respondent, in the form in which they were referred to in the memoran dum. Yet, a report, dated July 1985, appended to an affidavit filed in support of the respondent's position, just before the hearing of this motion, contains the following:
"on 08 December 1981 the subject was interviewed by two members of the R.C.M.P. Serious Crime Section at Kent Institution. He was questioned regarding a total of six unsolved cases, for a period of three and a half hours. Police eventually focused on the three cases in question, concluding that he is a prime suspect in all three crimes."
I have considered whether this statement of fact entitles me to draw the inference that the appli cant knows more about the details of the allega tions against him than appears in the record before me. After considerable hesitation I have decided that it does not. I base this conclusion on the fact that the respondent concurred in the applicant's statement of fact concerning his state of knowl edge; that the applicant's affidavit in that respect was not challenged; that no affidavit was filed by the respondent alleging that the applicant had more extensive knowledge of the events than the
record discloses (either as a result of the process of December 1981, or as a result of any oral com munications between himself and the Board or correctional staff).
It is clear that the National Parole Board is governed by the rules of natural justice (fairness) by virtue of the common law, and by virtue of 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.)]: Couperthwaite v. National Parole Board, [1983] 1 F.C. 274 (T.D.); Latham v. Solicitor General of Canada, [1984] 2 F.C. 734; 39 C.R. (3d) 78 (T.D.); Cadieux v. Director of Mountain Institution, [1985] 1 F.C. 378; 41 C.R. (3d) 30 (T.D.); Richards v. Nat. Parole Bd. (1985), 45 C.R. (3d) 382 (F.C.T.D.). The rules of natural justice provide that an individual is entitled to know the case being made against him in order to enable him to respond thereto.
Counsel for the applicant argues that the degree of detail that is required to be disclosed must be assessed by reference to the purpose for which it is required: to enable the individual to make a full and fair response to the adverse allegations against him. This is clearly right. This is the sense in which Mr. Justice Strayer in Latham v. Solicitor General of Canada, [1984] 2 F.C. 734; 39 C.R. (3d) 78, at page 746 F.C.; 89 C.R. indicates that "it would be important for the applicant herein to know the main focus of the Board's preoccupa tions" [emphasis added], and at page 748 F.C.; 91 C.R. "fairness requires at least an outline being given to the person affected of the allegations being considered by a tribunal". [emphasis added]. It is the sense in which I spoke in Cadieux v. Director of Mountain Institution, [1985] 1 F.C. 378; 41 C.R. (3d) 30, at page 397 F.C.; 49 C.R. of it being necessary to disclose "at least the gist of the reasons against him" [emphasis added] (mir- roring the words of Lord Reid in Rogers v. Secre tary of State for the Home Department, [ 1972] 2 All ER 1057 (H.L.), at page 1061). It is the sense which the Associate Chief Justice used in Rich- ards v. Nat. Parole Bd. (1985), 45 C.R. (3d) 382, at page 387, when saying that "the explanation
must at least be sufficient to permit the accused person to defend himself'.
In the Latham case (supra) Mr. Justice Strayer found [at page 746 F.C.; 89 C.R.] that "A Child Welfare matter involving Latham and his step daughter" was not sufficient. In the Cadieux deci sion (supra) I found [at page 399 F.C.; 50 C.R.] that "The Board is in receipt of confidential infor mation which satisfies us that you are a risk to re-offend on any form of release at this time" was not sufficient. In the Richards case (supra) Associate Chief Justice Jerome found [at page 384] that "it related to the uttering of threats by the applicant to members within the community" was not sufficient. Similarly, in this case, being told you are suspected of having committed crimes involving the deaths of two young girls and the disappearance of a third in British Columbia in 1978 is not enough. Something more must be given. Clearly, at the very least, the applicant would be entitled to information concerning the dates of the alleged offences, the place, presum ably some indication of time and the identity of the victims. It is difficult in the abstract to set out what should be provided to him without more detailed argument being given thereon, and I do not propose to do so.
Counsel for the Board argues that the Board has disclosed all it can to the applicant since disclosure of more is prescribed by section 23 of the Privacy Act [S.C. 1980-81-82-83, c. 111, Schedule II]. It is argued that the application is premature since the applicant has not exhausted all his remedies under the Privacy Act, and that in any event the Parole Board has not yet made any decision on the parole request.
Dealing first with the argument that the Privacy Act precludes the disclosure of any further infor mation to the applicant. Sections 19 to 28 of the Act set out certain circumstances in which a person seeking information pursuant to that Act may be refused information. Section 22 (particu- larly paragraph 22(1)(b))' provides for refusal in cases where the information was obtained in the course of investigating the commission of a crime. These provisions are not controlling of the issue in the present case. The Privacy Act established a right, that had not existed before its enactment, allowing individuals to obtain access to informa tion about themselves contained in government files. The exemptions in the Act relate to requests for information made pursuant to that Act. They do not operate so as to limit access to information to which an individual might be entitled as a result of other legal rules or principles, as for example, the right to subpoena evidence in trial proceedings before a Court, or, as in this case, to have the case one has to meet disclosed pursuant to the rules of natural justice. (It is common ground that subsec tion 17(3) of the Parole Regulations, SOR/78-428 does not apply in this case to the application for day parole, and in any event I would refer to Cadieux (supra) at page 55.)
With respect to the argument that the appli cant's motion is premature because he has not pursued all the remedies available to him under the Privacy Act, it must be noted that the appli-
22. (1) ...
(b) the disclosure of which could reasonably be expected to be injurious to the enforcement of any law of Canada or a province or the conduct of lawful investigations, including, without restricting the generality of the foregoing, any such information
(i) relating to the existence or nature of a particular investigation,
(ii) that would reveal the identity of a confidential source of information, and
(iii) that was obtained or prepared in the course of an investigation; or
cant did make application, in April 1985, under the Privacy Act, and received much of the material on his files. All the details of the crimes of which he is suspected were blanked out. The reasons given for deletion were various exempting sections of the Act, particularly section 22 mentioned above. The applicant did not pursue the appeal procedures under that Act. But, on the occasion of the Board hearing on June 5 (and its continuation on August 6) he sought from the Board directly further details of the allegations being made against him. The rules allowing for the disclosure of information under the Privacy Act are different from and designed to serve a different purpose from those flowing from the rules of natural jus tice. In such circumstances, failure to follow the appeal procedure of the Privacy Act cannot be characterized as a failure to exhaust all available remedies and thereby preclude an application in this case against the National Parole Board seek ing to enforce the rules of natural justice (fairness).
Nor is the application premature because the Board has not yet made any decision on parole. In the course of the Board's hearing on August 6, 1985 (which was a continuation of that of June 5 referred to on page one supra) applicant's counsel asked the Board for further details concerning the information before it. When such information was not forthcoming, applicant's counsel sought and obtained from the Board an adjournment to allow this Court to review that refusal. Accordingly, as counsel for the applicant argues, the decision chal lenged is that of the Board not to disclose further information to the applicant; it is not a challenge to a decision respecting parole.
The main thrust of the Board's position, how ever, is that the details of the crimes under investi gation are simply irrelevant to the Board's decision
making. It is argued that all the Board considers is the fact that there is an on-going investigation involving the applicant. Indeed, counsel for the Board agreed that it would be acceptable to issue an order prohibiting the Board from taking into account any of the details received from the police authorities. I took counsel's position to be essen tially, acceptance of the applicant's request that an order be granted:
in the nature of prohibition, prohibiting the National Parole Board from taking into account any information received from police authorities or other sources [relating to the investigations of the three crimes] which it chooses not to disclose to the Applicant.
Since it is clear from the reasons given so far that either an order of prohibition or mandamus is appropriate in this case, and counsel for the respondent has expressed a preference for the former, an order of prohibition will issue.
Counsel for the Board did not agree with coun sel for the applicant's additional submission, how ever, that the order provide for any subsequent hearings to be conducted by a freshly constituted panel of the National Parole Board. That is, that subsequent hearing be heard by a panel composed of members who do not have information (either written or oral) which the present panel has and which has been denied to the applicant. A newly constituted panel was said not to be acceptable because: (1) it would set an unwelcome precedent and imply that the Board had to establish a two- stage procedure whereby one panel reviewed the evidence and submitted only that which was perti nent to a second panel; (2) many tribunals and courts routinely hear a great deal of evidence which they then discount as irrelevant in coming to their decisions; and (3) the National Parole Board's assertion that it would not take into account the details of the crimes or investigations should be relied upon.
I do not agree that an order of the nature sought might set a precedent. Decisions of tribunals are frequently referred back to administrative tri bunals on the ground of failing to observe a rule of fairness. Sometimes referral is to a newly con stituted panel; sometimes it is not. This is a matter of discretion and circumstance, not binding prece dent. While many courts and tribunals hear evi dence which they eventually declare to be irrele vant and which they consequently ignore, this is often in the context of public disclosure of that evidence and of the court or tribunal decision. While I have no doubt that the presently constitut ed panel of the National Parole Board would act properly and conduct itself as it says it will, the applicant is entitled to the appearance of fairness as well as fairness itself. This is the purpose of the rules of natural justice (fairness). Accordingly, an order will go requiring consideration by a newly constituted panel.
ORDER
THIS COURT DOTH ORDER AND ADJUDGE THAT:
(1) the National Parole Board, in considering the applicant's application for day parole to which the hearings of June 5, 1985 and August 6, 1985 relate, is prohibited from taking into account any information received from police authorities or other sources relating to the investigation of the three offences referred to in the reasons for this order, which it chooses not to disclose to the applicant;
(2) the parole application shall be heard by a differently constituted panel of the Nation al Parole Board who do not have knowledge of the details of the allegations against the applicant which have not been disclosed to the applicant;
(3) the applicant is entitled to his costs of this motion.
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