Judgments

Decision Information

Decision Content

A-1028-84
John Ross Taylor and Western Guard Party (Appellants) (Respondents)
v.
Canadian Human Rights Commission and Attor ney General of Canada (Respondents)(Appli- cants)
INDEXED AS: CANADA (CANADIAN HUMAN RIGHTS COMMIS SION) v. TAYLOR
Court of Appeal, Mahoney, Stone and Lacombe JJ.-Vancouver, March 31 and April 1; Ottawa, April 22, 1987.
Constitutional law - Charter of Rights - Fundamental freedoms - Freedom of expression - Prohibition of hate messages in Act s. 13(1) not unreasonable limit on freedom of expression - Reasonable limit demonstrably justified in free and democratic society - Canadian Human Rights Act, S.C. 1976-77, c. 33, ss. 2, 3, 4, 13, 32, 33, 35, 36, 39, 40, 41, 42, 42.1, 43 - 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, 2(b).
Human rights - Prohibition of hate messages in Act s. 13(1) reasonable limit on freedom of expression demonstrably justified in free and democratic society - Human Rights Tribunal order, made Federal Court order, prohibiting com munication of hate messages against Jews - Conduct con tinuing - Finding of contempt upheld on appeal - Canadian Human Rights Act, S.C. 1976-77, c. 33, ss. 2, 3, 4, 13, 32, 33, 35, 36, 39, 40, 41, 42, 42.1, 43.
Practice Contempt of court - Disobedience of Court
order constituting contempt of court even if order later rescinded - Court orders must be obeyed as long as remain in force - Intention to tell truth irrelevant - Unnecessary to prove intent to disobey court order, only intentional doing of act prohibited - Federal Court Rules, C.R.C., c. 663, R. 355(2).
Judicial review - Appeal against contempt of court com mittal order - Reasonable apprehension of bias - Human Rights Tribunal finding appellants communicated hate mes sages against Jews - Order to cease and desist made order of Court pursuant to Human Rights Act s. 43 - Appellants found guilty of contempt for disobeying order - Fact order made by Tribunal appointed in manner found, in MacBain case, to raise reasonable apprehension of bias irrelevant Order of Court, not Tribunal, disobeyed - Court orders must
be obeyed as long as remaining in effect — Canadian Human Rights Act, S.C. 1976-77, c. 33, ss. 2, 3, 4, 13, 32, 33, 35, 36, 39, 40, 41, 42, 42.1, 43 — Federal Court Rules, C.R.C., c. 663, R. 355(2) — Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, ss. 18, 28.
Judges and courts — Duty to file reasons for judgment — Judges not required to give reasons — However, when reasons given, duty to file — No apparent remedy for party when judge fails to file — Court of Appeal hearing appeals from Trial Division decisions, not dealing with complaints of non- feasance — Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, s. 51.
In July 1979, a Human Rights Tribunal found that the appellants had, using the telephone, repeatedly communicated hate messages respecting Jews, thus engaging in a discriminato ry practice proscribed by section 3 and subsection 13(1) of the Canadian Human Rights Act. The Tribunal ordered the appel lants to cease and desist. That order was made an order of the Court as provided by section 43 of the Act. The appellants did not cease and desist and, in January 1984, on the basis of messages transmitted between June 1982 and April 1983, they were found guilty of contempt of court. The reasons, given orally at the conclusion of argument, were never filed. An order committing the appellant Taylor to prison for one year was made in August 1984 and, in December, the appellants' motion questioning the constitutionality of subsection 13(1), in view of the constitutionally entrenched right to freedom of expression, was dismissed.
This is an appeal from the judgment whereby the appellants were found in contempt of court and the appellant Taylor committed to prison.
Held, the appeal should be dismissed.
It is irrelevant that the Tribunal which made the order may have been appointed under a legislative regime found, in Mac- Bain, to raise a reasonable apprehension of bias. Since it is not argued that the order is a nullity, that order must be obeyed as long as it remains in force, regardless of how flawed it may be.
The appellants' argument, that the messages found to have been in contravention of the Tribunal's order simply told the truth, could not be accepted. Even if particular portions of the messages were true, it is clear that the purpose of the messages as a whole was to communicate that which had been enjoined by the cease and desist order: messages likely to expose Jews to hatred and contempt. In any event, as was stated in Re Sheppard and Sheppard, the offence of contempt consists of doing that which is in fact prohibited by an order; the intent to tell the truth may be a mitigating, but not an exculpatory circumstance.
Even though the Trial Judge did not need to do so, he did decide that subsection 13(1) of the Canadian Human Rights Act was not an unreasonable limit on the freedom of expression guaranteed by paragraph 2(b) of the Charter, and there is an appeal from that pronouncement. This issue must be resolved by recourse to section 1 of the Charter: there is nothing trivial, insubstantial, indirect or unintentional in the impact of subsec tion 13(1) on the freedom of expression. The criteria in The Queen v. Oakes as to the applicability of section 1 are applied. No evidence is required to establish the concern of Canada, a country populated by immigrants of many races and religions, to avoid racial and religious hatred. 1) As to the importance of the objective, the avoidance of the propagation of religious and racial hatred is properly a pressing and substantial concern of a free and democratic society. 2) As to proportionality, the limitation on freedom of expression in subsection 13(1) is tailored precisely to the specific practices of those who abuse their freedom by repeatedly communicating hate messages by telephone. 3) As to severity, the legislative scheme exemplifies restraint rather than severity.
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
APPLIED:
Canada Metal Co. Ltd. et al. v. Canadian Broadcasting Corp. et al. (No. 2) (1974), 4 O.R. (2d) 585 (H.C.), approved by (1975), 11 O.R. (2d) 167 (C.A.); Re Shep- pard and Sheppard (1976), 67 D.L.R. (3d) 592 (Ont. C.A.); The Queen v. Oakes, [1986] 1 S.C.R. 103.
DISTINGUISHED:
R. v. Edwards Books and Art Ltd., [1986] 2 S.C.R. 713.
CONSIDERED:
R. v. Jones, [1986] 2 S.C.R. 284.
REFERRED TO:
MacBain v. Lederman, [1985] 1 F.C. 856 (C.A.); In re Human Rights Tribunal and Atomic Energy of Canada Limited, [1986] 1 F.C. 103 (C.A.).
COUNSEL:
Douglas H. Christie for appellants (respond- ents).
Russell G. Juriansz for Canadian Human Rights Commission.
D. Martin Low for Attorney General of Canada.
SOLICITORS:
Douglas H. Christie, Victoria, for appellants (respondents).
Blake, Cassels & Graydon, Toronto, for Canadian Human Rights Commission.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for Attorney General of Canada.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
MAHONEY J.: This appeal is taken from a judg ment of the Trial Division which found the appel lants in contempt of court, and committed the appellant Taylor to prison for a term of one year. It imposed no penalty on the appellant Western Guard Party. The order was consequent upon the decision of a Tribunal appointed under the Canadian Human Rights Act, S.C. 1976-77, c. 33, as amended, that the appellants had engaged in a discriminatory practice on prohibited grounds of discrimination as defined and proscribed by sec tion 3 and subsection 13(1) of the Act. Stated briefly, the appellants were found to have tele- phonically and repeatedly communicated hate messages respecting Jews. The Tribunal's order was that permitted by paragraph 41(2)(a) and subsection 42(1) and had been made an order of the Court as provided by section 43. A brief review of the history of the proceedings will be helpful.
SUMMARY OF THE PROCEEDINGS
The Tribunal found that the appellants had, by means that at least included the distribution of cards, invited calls to a Toronto telephone number answered by a recorded message. The message was changed from time to time. Those upon which the Tribunal's decision was based were transmitted between August 17, 1977 and May 8, 1979. The Tribunal's decision and order, a single document, was dated July 20, 1979, and was made an order of the Court on August 23. It required the appel lants to cease and desist. No proceedings were taken to set aside the Tribunal's decision and order.
The appellants did not cease and desist. On application by the Canadian Human Rights Com mission, by judgment entered February 21, 1980, Mr. Justice Dubé found the appellants in contempt and imposed the maximum sanctions permitted by Rule 355(2) [Federal Court Rules, C.R.C., c. 663]: a $5,000 fine on the respondent Party and a one year sentence of imprisonment on Taylor. He suspended the sentence conditional on Taylor and the Party, of which Taylor is leader, thereafter obeying the Tribunal's order. An application for extension of time to appeal Mr. Justice Dubé's judgment was dismissed by this Court on February 27, 1981, and leave to appeal that dismissal was refused by the Supreme Court of Canada June 22, 1981. Meanwhile, the appellants had continued to disobey the Tribunal's order and, on June 11, 1980, Mr. Justice Walsh vacated the suspension of Taylor's sentence. Mr. Justice Dubé made an order of committal on June 24. That order was stayed pending disposition of the applications to this Court and the Supreme Court. Taylor served his sentence, with remission, between October 17, 1981 and March 19, 1982.
The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms [being Part I of the Constitution Act, 1982, Schedule B, Canada Act 1982, 1982, c. il (U.K.)] came into force April 17, 1982.
On May 12, 1983, the Commission filed the application leading to the order subject of this appeal. It was based on the allegation that mes sages transmitted between June 22, 1982 and April 20, 1983, breached the Tribunal's cease and desist order. The application sought both an order of committal of Taylor and a $5,000 fine of the Party. The appellants filed a notice of motion calling into question the validity of subsection 13(1) of the Canadian Human Rights Act, in view of their constitutionally entrenched freedom of expression. On January 24, 1984, the Associate Chief Justice rendered the following decision:
For reasons given orally at the conclusion of argument I am satisfied that both respondents have acted in disobedience of an
order of this Court and must be found in contempt. The matter is adjourned for delivery of written reasons to February 6, 1984 at 10 a.m. or so soon thereafter as the matter can be heard.
He did not mention the appellants' motion. On February 6, he adjourned the matter further to March 20 and also adjourned the appellants' motion to that date. On March 21, both matters were adjourned sine die. On August 15, 1984, he made the committal order subject of this appeal and on December 20 dismissed the appellants' application as to the constitutionality of subsection 13(1). In his reasons for the latter decision, the learned Trial Judge said:
I was satisfied on affidavit evidence that the respondents must be found in contempt.
That was the extent of the fulfilment of the inten tion to deliver written reasons expressed in the decision of January 24. The oral reasons given January 24, 1984, have not been recorded. The notice of appeal, filed August 27, 1984, refers to both decisions.
THE ISSUES
Section 3 of the Act provides, inter alia, that race and religion are prohibited grounds of dis crimination. Subsection 13 (1) provides:
13. (I) It is a discriminatory practice for a person or a group of persons acting in concert to communicate telephonically or to cause to be so communicated, repeatedly, in whole or in part by means of the facilities of a telecommunication undertaking within the legislative authority of Parliament, any matter that is likely to expose a person or persons to hatred or contempt by reason of the fact that that person or those persons are identifi able on the basis of a prohibited ground of discrimination.
The Tribunal's conclusion and its order follow:
We hold that Mr. Taylor and The Western Guard Party have communicated telephonically or have caused to be so communicated, repeatedly, messages in whole or in part by means of facilities of a telecommunication undertaking within the legislative authority of Parliament. Although some of the messages by themselves are somewhat innocuous, the matter for the most part that they have communicated, we believe, is likely to expose a person or persons to hatred or contempt by reason of the fact that the person is identifiable by race or religion. In particular, the messages identify specific individuals by name, Mayor Mel Lastman, Judge Sidney Harris, Mr. Clayton Ruby, and we believe that the remarks about those individuals have a likelihood of exposing them to hatred or contempt, merely on the basis that they are said to be Jewish.
Moreover, we hold that the messages in question not only expose identified individuals but persons generally to hatred or contempt by reason of the fact that those persons are identifi able as Jews. We therefore find that the complaints are substantiated.
[The recitation of subsection 42(1) and paragraph 41(2)(a) of
the Act here is omitted.]
5. ORDER
We therefore order the respondents to cease their discrimina tory practice of using the telephone to communicate repeatedly the subject matter which has formed the contents of the taperecorded messages referred to in the complaints.
The grounds of appeal, in the order in which I propose to deal with them, are:
1. The Tribunal was appointed by the Commission in circumstances giving rise to a reasonable appre hension of bias.
2. The Tribunal's order is too vague and obscure to enable the appellants to be held in contempt for disobeying it.
3. The learned Trial Judge failed to find that the appellants had in fact breached the Tribunal's order and failed to give any reason for so finding.
4. The learned Trial Judge erred in failing to consider a desire to communicate truth as a valid intention and not as an intention to breach the Tribunal's order.
5. Subsection 13(1) is ultra vires, inoperative and of no force and effect because it is an unreasonable limit on freedom of expression.
APPREHENSION OF BIAS
The Tribunal here was appointed under the legislative regime that was considered by this Court in MacBain v. Lederman, [1985] 1 F.C. 856 (C.A.), and In re Human Rights Tribunal and Atomic Energy of Canada Limited, [1986] 1 F.C. 103 (C.A.). MacBain supports the proposition that, had the issue of a reasonable apprehension of bias been raised in a timely way, the provisions of the Act then in force providing for the Tribunal's appointment would have been declared inoperative in respect of the complaint in issue and the Tri bunal declared to be without jurisdiction. The latter decision held that failure to raise the issue in a timely fashion constituted a waiver of the right
to challenge the jurisdiction of the Tribunal on that ground.
The appellants argue that, because they were not professionally represented at the time the issue ought to have been raised, they cannot be held to have waived the right to raise it now. No authority for that proposition was cited and I am not per suaded it is valid, however I find no need to express a concluded opinion. The Tribunal's deci sion is not the one we are now asked to deal with. This is an appeal from a decision of the Trial Division finding the appellants in contempt of an order of the Court. The appellants say, in effect, that with every application to find them in con tempt of that order, their right to attack its validi ty is renewed. That, too, is irrelevant.
The fact is that it was a subsisting order of the Court during the entire period the appellants did what the learned Trial Judge found to have diso beyed it. If he was right in concluding that disobedience to constitute contempt of court, it remains so even though the order may later be rescinded for whatever reason.
The appellants' argument could only be relevant in respect of an order that was a nullity. Here it is directed at an order which they say should be set aside but cannot say is a nullity. It is deemed in law to be an order of a superior court made within its jurisdictional competence as expressly provided by Parliament.
I adopt the rationale of O'Leary J. in Canada Metal Co. Ltd. et al. v. Canadian Broadcasting Corp. et al. (No. 2) (1974), 4 O.R. (2d) 585 (H.C.), at page 613, approved (1975), 11 O.R. (2d) 167 (C.A.):
To allow Court orders to be disobeyed would be to tread the road toward anarchy. If orders of the Court can be treated with disrespect, the whole administration of justice is brought into
scorn. Daily, thousands of Canadians resort to our Courts for relief against the wrongful acts of others. If the remedies that the Courts grant to correct those wrongs can be ignored, then there will be nothing left but for each person to take the law into his own hands. Loss of respect for the Courts will quickly result in the destruction of our society.
He was there speaking in the context of disobedi ence of an interlocutory injunction obtained on an ex parte application which was, by its very nature, liable to be dissolved upon hearing the parties bound by it.
The duty of a person bound by an order of a court is to obey that order while it remains in force regardless of how flawed he may consider it or how flawed it may, in fact, be. Public order demands that it be negated by due process of the law, not by disobedience.
ORDER TOO VAGUE
This is another spurious argument. The appel lants would have us accept that the order consists only of this single sentence:
We therefore order the respondents to cease their discriminato ry practice of using the telephone to communicate repeatedly the subject matter which has formed the contents of the tape recorded messages referred to in the complaints.
The test of vagueness is whether the intention is ascertainable or understandable to a person of average intelligence reading it in good faith. In my opinion, the conclusion proceeding that sentence, recited above, alone amply satisfies that test with out recourse to the balance of the decision. The appellants can have had no bona fide doubt that the subject matter enjoined was subject matter likely to expose Jews to hatred or contempt.
NO FINDINGS OF FACT AND REASONS
The proposition that the learned Trial Judge failed to find that the appellants had breached the order is baseless. Clearly that finding is implicit in the decision itself. The question is: was that find ing supported by the evidence?
The messages of the 1977-79 period were well described by Mr. Justice Dubé in his reasons for judgment of February 21, 1980, as
conveying the same basic theme: some corrupt Jewish interna tional conspiracy is depriving the callers of their birthright and the White Race should stand up and fight back.
Following are excerpts from the transcript of the message of February 25, 1983, which was among those in evidence on the present application.
Without freedom of speech we'd perish. Few know what com munism really is .... to truly expose communism is the great no no. But moral decay, economic problems and war are all coming from the same source that produces communism is generally not understood .... The Fed's Kuhn-Loeb High Bank financed the Russian Revolution. December Thunderbolt, which is banned in Canada, states Andropov's real name is Leiberman .... Toronto Star, November 14, states of Andropov: "His mother's family is almost certainly Jewish." The founder of communism Karl Marx, whose real name was Moses Mordecai Levy, was the grandson of Rabbi Mordecai. The founder of the Soviet Army was Trotsky whose real name is Bronstein. Help the Western Guard expose these bankers and their agents. Send funds and mail to ....
Clearly, there was evidence upon which the learned Trial Judge was entitled to conclude that the appellants were in breach of the cease and desist order. The unequivocal message is: Jewry is the source of Communism; moral decay, economic problems and war all come from that same source. That might well expose Jews, individually and collectively, to the contempt or hatred of anyone who accepted it as true.
The failure of a Trial Judge to give reasons is not, of itself, an error upon which an appellate court can act. In their absence, we must proceed on the assumption that due consideration was given the evidence. Having found the Party guilty of contempt, the learned Trial Judge imposed no penalty on the Party. While that omission is, in my opinion, inexplicable, it is not a subject of this appeal.
I think it proper to observe that while no judge is required to give reasons, when a judge of the Federal Court of Canada does, as the record dis-
closes was done on January 24, 1984, he is obliged by law to put them on the record. The Federal Court Act [R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10] provides:
51. Where a judge gives reasons for a judgment pronounced by him or pronounced by a court of which he was a member, he shall file a copy of the reasons in the Registry of the Court.
I am at a loss to know what seemly action, within the appellate process of this Court, a party can take when a judge fails in that statutory duty. Our jurisdiction is to hear appeals from decisions of the Trial Division, not to deal with complaints in respect of non-feasance.
THE TRUTH
There are two branches to the appelants' argu ment on the issues of truth. The first is founded on the following statement by the Tribunal in its decision:
It would appear from Mr. Taylor's cross-examination of witnesses and his argument that he was attempting to establish the truth of what he said about Jews in his tape recorded statements. Strange as it may sound, the establishment of truth is not in issue in this case. Unlike the statutory defences set out in s. 281.2(3) of the Criminal Code which make truth a defence to a criminal prosecution for public incitement of hatred against any group distinguished by colour, race, religion, or ethnic origin, no equivalent defence is available in the Canadi- an Human Rights Act. Parliament has deemed that the use of the telephone for this kind of discriminatory message is so fundamentally wrong, that no justification for the communica tion can avail the respondents. The sole issue then is whether the telephonic communications of the respondents are likely to expose a person or persons to hatred or contempt.
The appellants say that was so egregious an error of law as to be fatal to any finding that they were in contempt for disobeying an order founded on that error.
The argument cannot prevail. The validity of the Tribunal's order is not in issue here. Whether the Tribunal erred in law or not, its order now stands as an order of the Court and, as previously stated, the appellants' duty is to obey it while it does stand. Conceding, for the sake of argument, that the advent of the Charter will, when the issue is adjudicated, be found to have rendered the
Tribunal's view of the law utterly untenable, the collateral attack on the order itself is not germane to the contention that the appellants are not in contempt for disobeying that order.
The appellants also contend that the messages found to have disobeyed the Tribunal's order simply tell the truth and, for that reason, they cannot be held to have disobeyed it. They say that their purpose was to tell the truth, not to disobey the order. The foregoing excerpts from the Febru- ary 25, 1983 message serve to illustrate their argument. They say, and for this purpose I accept, that the publications cited did make the statements attributed to them and that Andropov, Marx and Trotsky were Communists and all of some meas ure of Jewish blood. These are the truths they say the message told.
The appellants' technique of selecting only par ticular statements is an unacceptable and invalid approach to a determination of the purpose of the message containing them. They were but part of the message. It was the entire message that was transmitted and it is the entire message that is to be construed in determining whether or not its transmission disobeyed the order.
The appellants' argument here is, to some extent, a repetition of that based on the paucity of the. reasons below. Again, we must assume that the learned Trial Judge did consider the arguments put to him. No reasonable person, considering the messages as a whole, could conclude that their only purpose was to communicate truth; their pur pose was plainly to communicate that which had been enjoined by the cease and desist order: a message likely to expose Jews to hatred or con tempt. The appellants' argument, in my opinion, is not well founded in fact.
In any event, even if the appellants were to have established that their purpose was only to tell the truth, they would be no less guilty of contempt. The law was correctly stated by the Ontario Court
of Appeal in Re Sheppard and Sheppard (1976), 67 D.L.R. (3d) 592, at pages 595-596:
We are all of the view, therefore, that in order to constitute a contempt it is not necessary to prove that the defendant intend ed to disobey or flout the order of the Court. The offence consists of the intentional doing of an act which is in fact prohibited by the order. The absence of the contumacious intent is a mitigating but not an exculpatory circumstance.
There was no error in rejecting the appellants' plea that they intended only to communicate the truth, not to disobey the order.
THE CHARTER OF RIGHTS
Since the appellants' duty was to obey the cease and desist order while it remained in force as an order of the Court, a subsequent favourable dispo sition of their application to have subsection 13(1) declared constitutionally invalid could have no bearing on the finding that they were in contempt. The learned Trial Judge saw that; otherwise he could not have found them in contempt eleven months before disposing of the constitutional ques tion. He could and, in my opinion, should have disposed of the application on that basis. It is to be hoped that, with experience, courts will refuse unnecessarily to pronounce on interesting Charter issues even where the parties are all disposed to have them dealt with. Transparent obiter dicta tends to trivialize the judicial process, if not the Charter. That said, the learned Trial Judge did pronounce on the substantive issue and we have an appeal from that pronouncement.
The appellants say that subsection 13(1) of the Canadian Human Rights Act is an unreasonable limit on the freedom of expression guaranteed them by paragraph 2(b) of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. The appellants and the Commission are agreed that this issue is to be resolved by recourse to section 1 of the Charter. The Attorney General argues that subsection 13 (1) is not properly to be regarded as a limitation on freedom of expression at all and that it is therefore unnecessary to refer to section 1. It is convenient again to recite subsection 13(1) as well as the pertinent provisions of the Charter.
13. (1) It is a discriminatory practice for a person or a group of persons acting in concert to communicate telephonically or to cause to be so communicated, repeatedly, in whole or in part by means of the facilities of a telecommunication undertaking within the legislative authority of Parliament, any matter that is likely to expose a person or persons to hatred or contempt by reason of the fact that that person or those persons are identifi able on the basis of a prohibited ground of discrimination.
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.
2. Everyone has the following fundamental freedoms:
(a) freedom of conscience and religion;
(b) freedom of thought, belief, opinion and expression, including freedom of the press and other media of communication;
(c) freedom of peaceful assembly; and
(d) freedom of association.
The Attorney General finds support for his posi tion in judgments by Wilson J., in R. v. Jones, [1986] 2 S.C.R. 284 and Dickson C.J., in R. v. Edwards Books and Art Ltd., [1986] 2 S.C.R. 713. In the former case, the Court was considering the alleged infringement of freedom of religion by compulsory school attendance legislation. A majority, including Wilson J., found no infringe ment and she, dissenting in part, added, at pages 313 and 314:
However, even assuming that this legislation does affect the appellant's beliefs, which for the reasons given I doubt, not every effect of legislation on religious beliefs or practices is offensive to the constitutional guarantee of freedom of religion. Section 2(a) does not require the legislature to refrain from imposing any burdens on the practice of religion. Legislative or administrative action whose effect on religion is trivial or insubstantial is not, in my view, a breach of freedom of religion.
In the latter case, a majority of the Court found the freedom of religion of certain merchants to have been abridged by legislation restricting hours of business and that abridgement to have been justified as required by section 1. In a passage at page 759, evidently concurred in by a majority, the Chief Justice said:
All coercive burdens on the exercise of religious beliefs are potentially within the ambit of s.2(a).
This does not mean, however, that every burden on religious practices is offensive to the constitutional guarantee of freedom of religion. It means only that indirect or unintentional burdens will not be held to be outside the scope of Charter protection on that account alone. Section 2(a) does not require the legisla tures to eliminate every miniscule state-imposed cost associated with the practice of religion. Otherwise the Charter would offer protection from innocuous secular legislation such as a taxation act that imposed a modest sales tax extending to all products, including those used in the course of religious worship. In my opinion, it is unnecessary to turn to s.1 in order to justify legislation of that sort.
There is nothing trivial, insubstantial, indirect or unintentional in the impact of subsection 13(1) on freedom of expression. Subsection 13(1) is a meas ure that must be justified under section 1 of the Charter.
In his book of authorities, the Attorney General included the following, all of which were referred to in their Memoranda of Fact and Law by both the Attorney General and the Commission:
a. United Nations Declaration on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination proclaimed by the General Assembly November 20, 1963, resolution 1904 (XVIII);
b. Report to the Minister of Justice of the Special Committee on Hate Propaganda in Canada, dated November 10, 1965, including Appendix V entitled "Hate Legislation in Other Countries";
c. "Equality Now!", the first report to the House of Com mons of the Special Committee on Participation of Visible Minorities in Canadian Society, dated March 8, 1984;
d. Study on the Implementation of Article 4 of the Interna tional Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination, published May 18, 1983, by the Secretary General of the United Nations;
e. Fourth Report by Canada presented to the Secretary Gen eral of the United Nations under the terms of the Interna tional Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination, dated August, 1978;
f. Annex XXIV to the Report of the Human Rights Commit tee to the 38th Session of the U.N. General Assembly, being a decision of the Committee, dated April 6, 1983, rejecting a complaint by the present Appellants concern ing, inter alia, the aforementioned refusal of leave to appeal by the Supreme Court of Canada and the proceed ings that led up to that refusal.
None of the above documents were included in the Appeal Book. It was not suggested that they were in evidence in the Trial Division. The record does
disclose that some were in evidence before the Tribunal. At the hearing, this Court questioned the propriety of its considering them in the absence of an application for leave to adduce further evidence and their proper proof.
Since the decision in The Queen v. Oakes, [1986] 1 S.C.R. 103, postdates that under appeal, it is not surprising that the respondents now see the desirability of introducing evidence relevant to a section 1 justification. The Rules provide means for this Court to receive evidence. The means do not include bootlegging evidence in the guise of authorities. I do not think that we can properly consider any of the foregoing. I have not done so.
There is no question that the limit imposed on the appellants' freedom of expression by subsection 13(1) of the Canadian Human Rights Act is imposed by law. The issue is whether it is a "reasonable limit ... demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society". The criteria for determining that were established by the Supreme Court of Canada in Oakes. Some of these are sufficiently summarized in the headnote [at page 105]:
Section 1 of the Charter has two functions: First, it guaran tees the rights and freedoms set out in the provisions which follow it; and second, it states explicitly the exclusive justifica- tory criteria (outside of s.33 of the Constitutional Act, 1982) against which limitations on those rights and freedoms may be measured.
The onus of proving that a limitation on any Charter right is reasonable and demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society rests upon the party seeking to uphold the limitation. Limits on constitutionally guaranteed rights are clearly excep tions to the general guarantee. The presumption is that Charter rights are guaranteed unless the party invoking s.1 can bring itself within the exceptional criteria justifying their being limited.
The standard of proof under s.1 is a preponderance of probabilities .... The preponderance of probability test must be applied rigorously.
In his judgment, unanimously concurred in as to this issue, the Chief Justice, at pages 138 ff. continued:
To establish that a limit is reasonable and demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society, two central criteria must be satisfied. First, the objective, which the measures responsible for a limit on a Charter right or freedom are designed to serve, must be "of sufficient importance to warrant overriding a constitutionally protected right or freedom": R. v. Big M Drug Mart Ltd. ([1985] 1 S.C.R. 295), at p. 352. The standard must be high in order to ensure that objectives which are trivial or discordant with the principles integral to a free and democratic society do not gain s.I protection. It is neces sary, at a minimum, that an objective relate to concerns which are pressing and substantial in a free and democratic society before it can be characterized as sufficiently important.
Second, once a sufficiently significant objective is recognized, then the party invoking s.1 must show that the means chosen are reasonable and demonstrably justified. This involves "a form of proportionality test": R. v. Big M Drug Mart Ltd., supra, at p. 352. Although the nature of the proportionality test will vary depending on the circumstances, in each case courts will be required to balance the interests of society with those of individuals and groups. There are, in my view, three important components of a proportionality test. First, the measures adopt ed must be carefully designed to achieve the objective in question. They must not be arbitrary, unfair or based on irrational considerations. In short, they must be rationally connected to the objective. Second, the means, even if rational ly connected to the objective in this first sense, should impair "as little as possible" the right or freedom in question: R. v. Big M Drug Mart Ltd., supra, at p. 352. Third, there must be a proportionality between the effects of the measures which are responsible for limiting the Charter right or freedom, and the objective which has been identified as of "sufficient importance".
With respect to the third component, it is clear that the general effect of any measure impugned under s.1 will be the infringement of a right or freedom guaranteed by the Charter; this is the reason why resort to s.1 is necessary. The inquiry into effects must, however, go further. A wide range of the rights and freedoms are guaranteed by the Charter, and an almost infinite number of factual situations may arise in respect of these. Some limits on rights and freedoms protected by the Charter will be more serious than others in terms of the nature of the right or freedom violated, the extent of the violation, and the degree to which the measures which impose the limit trench upon the integral principles of a free and democratic society. Even if an objective is of sufficient importance, and the first two elements of the proportionality test are satisfied, it is still possible that, because of the severity of the deleterious effects of a measure on individuals or groups, the measure will not be justified by the purposes it is intended to serve. The more severe the deleterious effects of a measure, the more important the objective must be if the measure is to be reasonable and demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society.
In summary, we must be satisfied that there is a high degree of probability that the limit of subsec tion 13(1) on freedom of expression is a reasonable one in a free and democratic society. That deter mination is to be made in the context of the freedom of expression of persons in Canada gener ally, not with reference to circumstances peculiar to the appellants. We are not, however, called upon to consider all prohibited grounds of dis crimination but only those in issue: race and religion.
We have no evidence. The Oakes decision, in observing that evidence will generally be required, anticipated that it would not always be so. In R. v. Jones, a majority of the Court did not find it necessary to enter upon a section 1 inquiry. For the minority who did, La Forest J., (Dickson C.J., and Lamer J., concurring) referring to that obser vation in Oakes, said at page 299:
... the Chief Justice made it clear that this is so only "[w]here evidence is required in order to prove the constituent elements of a s.1 inquiry" (p.138). I do not think such evidence is required here. A court must be taken to have a general knowledge of our history and values and to know at least the broad design and workings of our society. We are not con cerned with particular facts.
We must proceed on that basis.
It seems to me that the concern of any free and democratic society to avoid the vilification of individuals or groups by reason of their race and/or religion is self-evident. Canada, specifical ly, is populated by immigrants and the descendants of immigrants of numerous races and religions and an indiginous population of races different from the vast majority of the immigrant population. Canada recognizes its multiculturalism not only as a fact but a positive characteristic of its national persona.
It is not, in my opinion, necessary that vilifica tion by reason of race and/or religion be rife or have become subject of active and general public interest to render pressing and substantial the concern to avoid it. A similar view, in a totally
different context, appears to have been shared by the minority in Jones who considered the section 1 justification. There was no intimation that non- attendance at school on religious grounds was either widespread or of much popular concern in Alberta.
We witness today the events in Ulster, the Punjab, Sri Lanka and Lebanon. The list is not exhaustive. All are struggling, in the teeth of violence fueled by racial and/or religious hatred, to remain free and democratic societies or, within our ready memory, appear to have lost that struggle. I have no difficulty with the concept that the avoid ance of the propagation of hatred on those grounds is, in itself, properly a pressing and substantial concern of a free and democratic society. I am not tempted to disagree with Parliament's evident decision that it is.
As to proportionality, subsection 13(1) is nar rowly drawn. Its rational connection to its object could hardly be plainer. Its limitation on freedom of expression is tailored precisely to the specific practices of those who abuse their freedom by repeatedly communicating hate messages by telephone.
As to the third branch of the test, the legislative scheme exemplifies restraint rather than severity. I see no need to set out the pertinent provisions of the Canadian Human Rights Act. They are all or parts of sections 2, 3, 4, 13, 32, 33, 35, 36, 39, 40, 41, 42, 42.1 and 43. In addition sections 18 and 28 of the Federal Court Act and Rule 355 of the Rules of Court are pertinent.
The determination that a person or group has contravened subsection 13 (1) is made by a Tri bunal after a hearing which must be conducted according to the requirements of natural justice. A complaint cannot be referred to a Tribunal unless the alleged transgressor has been informed of and afforded an opportunity to respond to the com plaint and the evidence upon which the Commis sion intends to decide if a Tribunal is needed. Unless the Tribunal itself consists of three mem bers, an appeal lies to a three member Review Tribunal. Both are subject to judicial supervision
in the conduct of their hearings and the final decision is subject to judicial review. The only order that can be made is a cease and desist order. It is only after that order has been filed in the Registry of this Court and after being afforded the opportunity to appear at a show cause hearing and being found in a judicial proceeding to have con tinued to disobey the cease and desist order that an offender can be penalized. The maximum penalty presently prescribed is a $5000 fine or one year imprisonment, not both.
I see no merit in this branch of the appeal. On balance, the interest of a free and democratic society to avoid the repeated telephonic communi cation of messages of hate based on race or reli gion clearly outweighs its interest to tolerate the exercise in that fashion of their freedom of expres sion by persons so inclined.
CONCLUSION
The Attorney General, while named a respon dent in the notice of appeal, was an intervenor, on his own application, in the Trial Division. In the result, I would dismiss the appeal with costs to the Commission. Revocation of the stay of execution of the order of committal is a matter for the Trial Division.
STONE J.: I agree. LACOMBE J.: I agree.
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