T-2354-85 
Jean-Louis Lévesque (Plaintiff) 
v. 
Attorney General of Canada, Solicitor General of 
Canada and Warden of Leclerc Institution 
(Defendants) 
and 
Chief Electoral Officer of Quebec 
and 
Commission des droits de la personne of Quebec 
and 
Société québecoise de droit international 
and 
International Federation of Human Rights (Mis-
en- cause) 
INDEXED AS: LÉVESQUE v. CANADA (A TTORNEY GENERAL) 
Trial Division, Rouleau J.—Montreal, November 
26; Ottawa, November 26, 1985. 
Constitutional law — Charter of Rights — Democratic 
rights — Right to vote — Right of inmate in federal peniten
tiary to vote in provincial general election — Limitation on 
inmate's constitutionally guaranteed right to vote not reason
able limit demonstrably justified in free and democratic socie
ty — Administrative and security reasons for limitation not 
valid — Mandamus available against Crown or servant of 
Crown pursuant to Charter ss. 24, 32 and 52 — 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.), ss. 1, 3, 24, 32, 52 — Election Act, S.Q. 1979, c. 56 — 
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, CTS 
1976/47. 
Elections — Right of inmate in federal penitentiary located 
in Quebec to vote in Quebec general election — Failure of 
previous attempts, through administrative agreement, court 
action and submission to United Nations Human Rights Com
mittee, to permit inmates in federal penitentiaries to exercise 
right to vote — Withholding of inmate's right to vote not 
reasonable limit demonstrably justified in free and democratic 
society — 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, 3, 24, 32, 52 — Election Act, 
S.Q. 1979, c. 56 — International Covenant on Civil and 
Political Rights, CTS 1976147. 
Judicial review — Prerogative writs — Mandamus — 
Requiring authorities to take necessary steps to permit voting 
at provincial election by penitentiary inmate — Common law 
rule no mandamus against Crown or public servants — Over
turned by 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. 32 and 52. 
Penitentiaries — Inmate of federal penitentiary in Quebec 
— Seeking declaration of right to vote at provincial elections 
and mandamus requiring authorities to facilitate exercise of 
right — Denial of right to vote not justified on administrative 
or security grounds — Solicitors General having failed to act 
on initiatives of Chief Electoral Officer of Quebec — Man-
damus must issue. 
Practice — Parties — Intervention — Constitutional matter 
— Applicable criteria — Intervention refused in view of 
urgency of rendering judgment and fact arguments of mis -en-
cause amply advanced by plaintiff. 
The plaintiff, an inmate in a federal penitentiary located in 
the province of Quebec, wanted to vote at the 1985 Quebec 
general election. To that end, he sought a declaration that he 
was entitled to vote at that and at any other subsequent 
provincial election. Also sought was a writ of mandamus 
requiring the defendants to take the necessary and proper 
action to give effect to that right. 
Held, a declaration should be granted recognizing the plain
tiff's right to vote and a mandamus should issue against the 
defendants to give it effect. 
A preliminary motion to allow the intervention of one of the 
mis -en-cause is dismissed. Although this is a constitutional 
matter where intervention is normally more readily permitted, 
it was urgent that judgment be rendered as soon as possible and 
the arguments of the mis -en-cause are amply advanced by the 
plaintiff. 
It is clear that the plaintiffs right to vote, guaranteed by 
section 3 of the Charter, was infringed. It was established in 
Gould v. Attorney General of Canada that administrative or 
security reasons do not justify denying inmates the right to 
vote. Nor does imprisonment necessarily entail the loss of that 
right. In short, imprisonment in a federal penitentiary does not 
constitute a reasonable limit, on the right to vote, which could 
be demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society. 
With respect to mandamus, section 3 of the Charter implicit
ly recognizes, as regards the exercise of the right to vote, a 
specific public duty on the part of the federal government, and 
section 24 enables the Court to issue a writ of mandamus. And 
while it is a common law rule that mandamus will not issue 
against the Crown or against public servants acting exclusively 
in that capacity, adoption of Charter sections 32 and 52 had 
overturned the law on that point. 
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED 
APPLIED: 
Gould v. Attorney General of Canada, [1984] 1 F.C. 
1119 (T.D.); Minister of Finance of British Columbia v. 
The King, [1935] S.C.R. 278; Federal Republic of Ger-
many v. Rauca (1982), 38 O.R. (2d) 705 (H.C.). 
CONSIDERED: 
Attorney General of Canada v. Gould, [1984] 1 F.C. 
1133 (C.A.). 
COUNSEL: 
Renée Millette, Daniel Turp, Irwin Cotler for 
plaintiff. 
Annie Côté, Stephen Barry for defendants. 
Lucie Nadeau for Commission des droits de la 
personne of Quebec. 
SOLICITORS: 
Renée Millette, Montreal, for plaintiff. 
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for 
defendants. 
The following is the English version of the 
reasons for judgment rendered by 
ROULEAU J.: Before considering the substance 
of the matter, I would like to dispose of a prelim
inary motion by the plaintiff to allow the interven
tion of one of the mis -en-cause, namely the Com
mission des droits de la personne of Quebec. 
A number of criteria established in earlier cases 
must be taken into account in considering such a 
motion. The four applicable are: 
(1) Is the mis -en-cause directly affected by the 
outcome of the trial? 
(2) Is the position of the mis -en-cause ade
quately defended by one or other of the 
parties to the case? 
(3) Are the interests of justice better served by 
the intervention of the mis -en-cause? 
(4) Can the Court hear and decide the cause on 
its merits without the intervention of the 
mis -en-cause? 
Of course, there is no watertight division be
tween these various criteria: the appropriateness of 
such an intervention will be determined by the 
answers to these questions as a whole. Overall, the 
answers to these questions do'not appear to favour 
intervention by the mis -en-cause in the case at bar, 
and this is why I have dismissed the motion to 
intervene. I do realize that an intervention in a 
constitutional matter cannot be compared with, for 
example, an intervention in a tax matter or on a 
patent. In the case of the former, the conditions 
imposed by earlier authority might more readily be 
circumvented, except that the urgency of rendering 
judgment as soon as possible in the case at bar and 
the fact that the arguments of the mis -en-cause 
are amply reiterated by the plaintiff in his state
ment of claim oblige me to dismiss the motion. 
The plaintiff is seeking the following: 
[TRANSLATION] (A) a declaration that he is entitled to vote in 
the provincial general election to be held on December 2, 1985, 
and in any other subsequent provincial election; 
(B) a declaration that the defendants have a duty and an 
obligation, in their respective capacities, to comply with the 
Quebec Election Act, and cause it to be complied with, and in 
particular, the provisions contained in sections 203 and 217 
inclusive, regarding the RIGHT OF INMATES TO VOTE and THE 
EXERCISE OF THAT RIGHT, and therefore to take the necessary 
and proper action to give effect to the right of inmates to vote 
and the exercise of that right; 
(C) so as to give effect to conclusions A and B, ISSUE A WRIT 
OF MANDAMUS with the following orders: 
(1) Order the Warden of the Leclerc Institution: 
(a) to draw up a list of the inmates in that establishment 
who are electors, as provided in section 204 of the Quebec 
Election Act; 
(b) to ask every inmate if he wishes to be registered on the 
list of electors and verify with him the accuracy of the 
particulars concerning him, as provided by section 204 of 
the Quebec Election Act; 
(c) to send the list of electors to the Chief Electoral 
Officer of Quebec not later than the sixteenth day preced
ing polling day, as provided by section 204 of the Quebec 
Election Act; 
(d) to make an agreement with the Chief Electoral Officer 
of Quebec at the earliest possible opportunity on a valid 
procedure to establish a specific and secure mechanism for 
a vote by the inmates, along the lines of the memorandum 
prepared by the Chief Electoral Officer of Quebec, which 
the latter has been trying to submit to the defendants for 
six years, filed as Exhibit G of the affidavit of JEAN-LOUIS 
LEVESQUE, as provided by section 217 of the Quebec 
Election Act; 
(2) Ordering the Solicitor General of Canada at the earliest 
possible opportunity to give the proper directions to the 
wardens of the institutions concerned and all other persons 
employed and working for the Correctional Service of 
Canada to allow the mis -en-cause, the Chief Electoral Offi
cer of Quebec, and/or his authorized representatives, to do 
what is required by the Quebec Election Act to enable 
inmates in federal penitentiaries to vote, along the lines of 
those indicated in the memorandum of agreement prepared 
by the Chief Electoral Officer of Quebec, filed in support 
hereof as Exhibit G of the affidavit of JEAN-LOUIS 
LEVESQUE, as provided by section 217 of the Quebec Elec
tion Act; 
(3) any other order that shall be necessary to give effect to 
any eventual favourable judgment on conclusions A and B; 
(D) any other remedy which this honourable Court shall con
sider appropriate. 
FACTS: 
The plaintiff is at present an inmate in a federal 
penitentiary located in the province of Quebec and 
would like to vote in the forthcoming Quebec 
general election, to be held on December 2, 1985. I 
must digress here to indicate the background to 
the action at bar for a declaratory judgment. 
First, it should be said that in spring 1980 the 
Chief Electoral Officer of Quebec contacted the 
then Solicitor General several times, as well as his 
various successors (cf. the affidavit of Paul -René 
Lavoie filed with this action) with a view to arriv
ing at an administrative agreement allowing 
inmates in federal institutions to vote in the 1981 
provincial general election. The three Solicitors 
General who succeeded each other in this position 
during that period refused to act on the initiatives 
of the Chief Electoral Officer of Quebec, or simply 
ignored them. Moreover, I note that five years 
have elapsed since the request by the Chief Elec
toral Officer of Quebec, and that nothing has been 
done to date. 
In March 1981, some time before the vote was 
held, the plaintiff at bar and two other inmates 
tried to obtain an interlocutory injunction direct
ing the Solicitor General not to impede them in 
exercising their right to vote, and to give the 
penitentiary authorities orders to this effect. This 
application was dismissed by Marceau J. of the 
Federal Court of Canada because, inter alia, the 
plaintiffs had not used the correct procedure. On 
December 10, 1981 the then plaintiffs made a 
submission to the United Nations Human Rights 
Committee and filed a complaint pursuant to the 
International Covenant on Civil and Political 
Rights, CTS 1976/47. The United Nations 
Human Rights Committee reversed its initial deci
sion on the admissibility of the submission and 
found that the submission was inadmissible as the 
plaintiffs had not exhausted their available domes
tic remedies, and could apply to the Federal Court 
in an effort to obtain a declaratory judgment. This 
decision of the Committee was communicated to 
them in April 1985. On November 13, 1985 the 
plaintiff at bar filed this action for a declaratory 
judgment. That is a summary of the course of 
events. 
I note that the amended statement of claim at 
bar repeats the same allegations as the one submit
ted to Marceau J. in 1981, except for the relief 
sought and the inclusion of an allegation referring 
to section 3 of the Canadian Charter of Rights 
and Freedoms,' which guarantees every citizen of 
Canada the right to vote in any federal or provin
cial legislative election. I will therefore discuss 
whether section 3 of the said Charter has been 
infringed by the defendants, and if necessary, the 
legal effect of Canada's international obligations 
on domestic law, and the Charter in particular. 
THE LAW: 
Section 3 of the Charter provides: 
3. Every citizen of Canada has the right to vote in an election 
of members of the House of Commons or of a legislative 
assembly and to be qualified for membership therein. 
It is up to the plaintiff to show that this right 
has been infringed. He submitted that his impris
onment in a federal institution does in fact impede 
the exercise of the right conferred on him by the 
Charter and the Quebec Election Act (S.Q. 1979, 
c. 56). He adds that he has all the necessary 
qualifications to vote under Quebec law. In short, 
he considers that the refusal of the defendant 
contradicts the spirit and the letter of the Canadi-
an Charter of Rights and Freedoms. At first sight, 
it is clear that his application is valid and must be 
' being Part I of the Constitution Act, 1982, Schedule B, 
Canada Act, 1982, 1982, c. 11 (U.K.). 
allowed. It remains to be seen whether a limitation 
can be imposed on the exercise of this right. 
Such a limitation would result from section 1 of 
the Charter, which provides: 
1. The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms guaran
tees the rights and freedoms set out in it subject only to such 
reasonable limits prescribed by law as can be demonstrably 
justified in a free and democratic society. 
Unlike the U.S. Constitution, the rights and 
freedoms guaranteed by the Charter are not abso
lute. This means that they may be limited in 
certain well-defined circumstances. That is the 
effect of section 1 of the Charter. There is no 
doubt that it is for anyone seeking to establish a 
rule of law 2 limiting the rights and freedoms guar
anteed by the Charter to prove not only that they 
are reasonable but also justified in a free and 
democratic society. 
In this regard, the Crown must show that by his 
"rule of law" the legislator is pursuing a legitimate 
purpose or action in the common interest by with
holding the right to vote from inmates. 
The argument that inmates cannot be given the 
right to vote for administrative or security reasons 
cannot in my opinion prevent the exercise of a 
constitutionally recognized right in the case at bar. 
I concur in this regard in the opinion of Reed J., 
who in Gould v. Attorney General of Canada, 3 
[1984] 1 F.C. 1119 (T.D.), at page 1125, stated: 
It is hard to accept that security reasons could constitute 
justification for denying inmates the right to vote. The fact that 
other jurisdictions, for example, Quebec, are able to provide 
2 For the meaning of the term "rule of law", I refer the 
parties to the judgment in Federal Republic of Germany v. 
Rauca (1982), 38 O.R. (2d) 705 (H.C.), where Evans C.J. said 
at page 716: 
The phrase "prescribed by law" requires the limitation to 
be laid down by some rule of law in a positive fashion and not 
by mere implication. The rule of law containing the limita
tion will normally be statutory although it is possible that it 
may be found in delegated legislation or in the form of a 
common law rule. 
3 Reversed by the Federal Court of Appeal, but on other 
grounds: see [1984] 1 F.C. 1133. 
such mechanisms demonstrates that it is not unworkable, either 
from an administrative or security point of view. 
If the security argument cannot be supported, is 
it possible to argue that imprisonment necessarily 
entails as a consequence the loss of certain rights, 
including that of voting? Once again, I can do no 
better than to concur in the opinion of Reed J., 
who again in Gould (supra) disposed of this argu
ment as follows (at page 1126): 
... I do not think that because some of the prisoner's rights 
must necessarily be curtailed (e.g: the freedom of association, 
of expression, the right to be a candidate for election) this 
justifies curtailing the whole spectrum. (My emphasis.) 
I would add that the right to vote is the corner
stone of any self-respecting democracy. Clearly 
then it is a right which, in my view, it is difficult to 
limit unless within the well-defined circumstances 
indicated in section 1 of the Charter. 
The defendants did not succeed in showing that 
the imprisonment of the plaintiff in a federal 
prison constituted a reasonable limit on the right 
to vote, conferred by section 3 of the Charter, 
which could be demonstrably justified in a free 
and democratic society. The defendants confined 
their argument to maintaining that the interna
tional treaties and conventions are not applicable 
in Canadian domestic law and the Quebec election 
legislation is not applicable within the federal gov
ernment. Unfortunately for the defendants, the 
source of the right to vote here is not international 
treaties or the Quebec election legislation but the 
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. 
In view of this finding, I need go no further to 
dispose of the case, and do not need to deal with 
the other points raised in argument. This is a pity 
for counsel for the plaintiff, who eloquently argued 
the case for Canada's international obligations in 
relation to Canadian domestic law. All I can say to 
counsel is that the matter is only postponed for the 
time being. 
I would accordingly grant the plaintiff at bar a 
declaratory judgment in the following terms: 
The plaintiff shall be entitled to a declaration 
that he has a right to vote in the provincial 
general election to be held on December 2, 1985 
and in any other subsequent provincial election 
so long as he shall be an inmate. 
I realize that this declaratory judgment may 
remain inoperative if it is not accompanied with 
certain provisions to give it practical effect. 
This raises the question of whether a writ of 
mandamus can be issued against the defendants as 
requested, directing them to adopt administrative 
machinery enabling the plaintiff to vote in the 
provincial election. If I am not able to issue a 
mandamus, can I then grant "such remedy as 
[this] court considers appropriate and just in the 
circumstances", as provided by section 24 of the 
Charter: 
24. (1) Anyone whose rights or freedoms, as guaranteed by 
this Charter, have been infringed or denied may apply to a 
court of competent jurisdiction to obtain such remedy as the 
court considers appropriate and just in the circumstances. 
It is well known that a writ of mandamus can 
only issue to ensure the performance of a public 
duty in which the plaintiff has a sufficient legal 
interest. Can it be argued, as the defendants did, 
that section 3 of the Charter does not, in the 
present context of a provincial election, impose any 
obligation to act or any specific public duty on the 
federal government? I consider that such a duty is 
implicitly recognized in an enactment such as sec
tion 3 of the Charter, which is declaratory of a 
right. It would be illusory to guarantee the exist
ence of a right if its exercise could not also be 
guaranteed. It is all very well to have the right to 
vote, but it must be possible to exercise that right 
or the Charter will remain a dead letter. It now 
remains to specify how this right to vote shall be 
exercised. 
As Thurlow C.J., dissenting, observed in Attor
ney General of Canada v. Gould, [1984] 1 F.C. 
1133 (C.A.), at page 1138: 
When it is necessary, the Court, as it seems to me, must be 
prepared to be innovative in devising procedures and means, not 
heretofore employed, to enforce rights guaranteed by the 
Charter. 
Although these observations open the door to a 
whole range of remedies "not heretofore 
employed", I consider that in any case section 24 
is so worded as to enable me to issue a writ of 
mandamus. However, can I issue such a writ 
against the Crown, or against a Minister of the 
Crown acting in his capacity as a representative of 
the Crown? 
The traditional common law position is stated 
by de Smith as follows: 4 
... mandamus will not issue against the Crown, or against 
Crown servants acting exclusively in that capacity. 
Furthermore, the Supreme Court of Canada has 
clearly established that this rule is part of our legal 
tradition. I refer the parties to Minister of Finance 
of British Columbia v. The King, [1935] S.C.R. 
278, and in particular the observations of Davis J. 
at page 285: 
... it is beyond question that a mandamus cannot be directed 
to the Crown or any servant of the Crown simply acting in his 
capacity of servant. 
Does the Canadian Charter of Rights and Free
doms alter this traditional position? I would 
answer that it does: the Charter: has not only 
altered existing law, but also overturned it. 
Accordingly, since adoption of the Charter, and in 
particular sections 32 and 52 of the Charter, there 
is no longer any doubt that the Crown is subject to 
the provisions of the Charter in the same way as 
any other individual. Sections 32 and 52 read as 
follows: 
32. (1) This Charter applies 
(a) to the Parliament and government of Canada in respect 
of all matters within the authority of Parliament .... 
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. 
If the Canadian Charter of Rights and Free
doms, which is part of the Constitution of Canada, 
is the supreme law of the country, it applies to 
everyone, including the Crown or a Minister acting 
in his capacity as a representative of the Crown. 
Accordingly, a fortiori the Crown or one of its 
representatives cannot take refuge in any kind of 
declinatory exception or rule of immunity derived 
from the common law so as to avoid giving effect 
to the Charter. A writ of mandamus must there
4 Judicial Review of Administrative Action, 4th ed., Stevens, 
London, 1980, at page 541. 
fore issue directing the defendants in the case at 
bar to allow provincial authorities, namely the 
Chief Electoral Officer of Quebec, to prepare 
within the penitentiary a list of inmates having the 
necessary qualifications to vote under Quebec law 
and to establish a polling booth on the spot with a 
scrutineer appointed by the Chief Electoral Offi
cer, and a representative of each of the political 
parties sitting in the Quebec National Assembly, 
so as to give inmates an opportunity to exercise 
their right to vote in the provincial election of 
December 2, 1985. 
I would award costs and disbursements to the 
plaintiff if he requests them. 
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