Judgments

Decision Information

Decision Content

T-370-88
Joseph Emmerson Porter (Plaintiff)
v.
The Queen (Defendant)
INDEXED AS: PORTER v. CANADA (T.D.)
Trial Division, Joyal J.—Halifax, December 13, 1988; Ottawa, March 14, 1989.
Customs and excise — Excise Act — Forfeiture — Truck seized under s. 163(3), when owner apprehended transporting illegally manufactured spirits — Historical and current theory of law of forfeiture — Distinction between regulatory and punitive forfeitures — Forfeiture not rendered inoperative by Charter — Caution against upsetting balance between individual and private rights guaranteed by Charter and Par liament's obligation to protect public interest — Proper to balance state interests with individual concerns within rights- defining clauses themselves.
Constitutional law — Charter of Rights — Criminal process — Plaintiff's truck forfeited under Excise Act, s. 163(3) when apprehended transporting illegally manufactured spirits — Convicted and fined under s. 163(1)(a) — No relief under Charter s. 11 as applies only to person charged — Forfeiture proceeding against truck — No double jeopardy as accused not finally punished until all possible penal consequences for offence exhausted — Law permitting imposition of variety of sanctions in conjunction with other forms of punishment — Cruel and unusual punishment excessive and grossly dispro portionate — Forfeiture not unusual as lengthy history in Canada, and not "so excessive as to outrage standards of decency" — Charter, s. 8 (protection against unreasonable seizure) designed to protect privacy interests of individuals — No allegation privacy interest violated — No violation of presumption of innocence — Forfeiture of vehicle statutorily based on use in illicit carriage of spirits, not on ultimate conviction.
Constitutional law — Charter of Rights — Limitation clause — Forfeiture under Excise Act, s. 163(3) justified as reasonable measure designed to frustrate further criminal enterprise, protect public welfare and secure Crown revenue.
This was a determination on a point of law. The plaintiff's 1986 Toyota truck, valued at $14,000, was seized under subsec tion 163(3) of the Excise Act when he was apprehended for transporting illegally manufactured spirits. He subsequently pleaded guilty to the offence and was fined. Subsection 163(3)
provides that all such spirits and all vehicles used to transport them shall be forfeited to the Crown. The plaintiff argued that subsection 163(3) was contrary to Charter, sections 8 (protec- tion against unreasonable search and seizure), 11(d) (presump- tion of innocence), (h) (protection against double jeopardy) and 12 (protection against cruel and unusual punishment). The question was whether the forfeiture provision was rendered inoperative under the Charter provisions.
Held, the action should be dismissed.
The Court examined the Charter provisions as well as the historical and current theory of the law of forfeiture, including the American experience, in order to resolve the clash between the ancient practice of forfeiture and the contemporary eleva tion of individual rights and freedoms. Historically, forfeiture has been accepted by the courts as necessary "for the purpose of working some great public good", including protection of revenue and public health. American courts have found that forfeiture was too firmly fixed in the punitive and remedial case law to be displaced. In Canada, the legitimacy of forfeiture provisions had never been put in serious doubt prior to the advent of the Charter.
Section 11 applies only to a person charged with an offence. When the plaintiffs truck was forfeited, the proceeding was against the truck itself by reason of its use as a carrier of illicit spirits. The forfeiture was not double punishment prohibited under paragraph 1 1(h) of the Charter because in law, an action in rem is divorced from considerations of ownership.
Forfeitures may serve to (1) regulate illegal activities or (2) punish those who engage in such activies. It is difficult to characterize the law here as regulatory since it avoids the imposition of forfeiture on the innocent. If its primary function was to regulate the transportation of illicit spirits, forfeiture would be imposed in all cases. Even if the impugned provision had a punitive aspect, the plaintiff was unable to invoke paragraph 11(h) because the punishment did not involve double jeopardy as an accused is not finally punished until all possible penal consequences for the offence are exhausted. Section 12 could not be invoked because the forfeiture was not cruel and unusual. Cruel and unusual punishment is excessive, but also grossly disproportionate. Forfeiture is not unusual, and in light of its long history is not so excessive as to outrage standards of decency. Acts of a legislative body are presumed to be constitu tional until proven otherwise. The plaintiff did not demonstrate that the forfeiture provisions are unconstitutional.
It was argued that it was unreasonable to seize such a valuable piece of property as a consequence of this type of violation of the Excise Act. Charter, section 8 was, however, designed primarily to protect the privacy of individuals, and affords protection to property only where that is required to uphold the protection of privacy. There was no allegation that any privacy interest of the plaintiff had been violated.
The plaintiff also argued that as the forfeiture provisions apply before the owner of the vehicle has been tried and convicted of the offence, there is a presumption of guilt. The forfeiture was based, not on the ultimate conviction, but on the fact that it was used in the carriage of illicit spirits.
The preoccupation with the security of revenue arising from excise taxes, hallowed by ancient doctrine and historical legitimacy, is deserving of continued respect, since through the years, draconian as forfeiture may appear to be, it has been good and necessary policy to retain it. Judicial interference with legislative policy is always undertaken at the risk of upsetting the delicate balance which must be maintained be tween individual and private rights guaranteed by the Charter and the obligations on Parliament to secure and protect the public interest. As section 12 is couched in terms which include qualifying adjectives, it must be subject to some limits within itself, including respect for legitimate state interests. What is cruel and unusual may vary in different circumstances and this need not always be proven strictly by the Crown in the context of section 1, but may be considered by the judge in attempting to define the guaranteed right.
There is nothing improper about balancing state interests with individual concerns within rights-defining clauses them selves. In any case, a similar limit to that protected right would prevail in a section 1 analysis. The legitimacy of forfeiture could easily be justified as a reasonable measure designed to frustrate further criminal enterprise, protect the public welfare and secure the Crown revenues.
STATUTES AND REGULATIONS JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
Canadian Bill of Rights, R.S.C. 1970, Appendix III. Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, being Part I
of the Constitution Act, 1982, Schedule B, Canada Act
/982, 1982, c. 11 (U.K.), ss. 1, 8, 11(d),(h), 12. Customs Act, S.C. 1986, c. 1.
Excise Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. E-12, ss. 115, 163(1)(a) (as am. by S.C. 1976-77, c. 28, s. 49), (3).
Lord Campbell's Act, 9 & 10 Vict., c. 62.
Narcotic Control Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. N-1, s. 10(9).
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED APPLIED:
Re Regina and Green (1983), 5 C.C.C. (3d) 95; 41 O.R. (2d) 557 (H.C.); R. v. Smith (Edward Dewey), [1987] 1 S.C.R. 1045.
CONSIDERED:
Regina v. Woodrow (1846), 153 E.R. 907 (Exch.); United States v. Balint, 258 U.S. 250 (1922); U.S. v. One
1963 Cadillac Coupe de Ville, Two-Door, 250 F. Supp. 183 (W.D. Mo. 1966); Calero-Toledo v. Pearson Yacht Leasing Co., 416 U.S. 663 (1974); The Palmyra, 12 Wheat. 1 (1827); Goldsmith, Jr.-Grant Co. v. United States, 254 U.S. 505 (1921); The King v. Krakowec et al., [1932] S.C.R. 134; In re Gittens, [1983] 1 F.C. 152; (1982), 137 D.L.R. (3d) 687 (T.D.); R. v. Simon (No. 3) (1982), 5 W.W.R. 728 (N.W.T.S.C.); R. v. Mitchell (1987), 39 C.C.C. (3d) 141 (N.S.C.A.); F.K. Clayton Group Ltd. v. M.N.R., [1988] 2 F.C. 467; (1988), 82 N.R. 313 (F.C.A.); Bertram S. Miller Ltd. v. R., [1986] 3 F.C. 291; 28 C.C.C. (3d) 263 (F.C.A.); R. v. Simmons, [1988] 2 S.C.R. 495.
REFERRED TO:
Mayberry, Herbert Frederick v. The King, [1950] Ex.C.R. 402; Koschuk, John v. The King, [1950] Ex.C.R. 332; Re Vincent and Minister of Employment and Immigration (1983), 148 D.L.R. (3d) 385 (F.C.A.); Hunter et al. v. Southam Inc., [1984] 2 S.C.R. 145; (1984), 55 N.R. 241.
AUTHORS CITED
Clark, J. Morris "Civil and Criminal Penalties and For- feitures: A Framework for Constitutional Analysis" (1976), 60 Minn. L. Rev. 379.
Finkelstein, Jacob "The Goring Ox: Some Historical Perspectives on Deodands, Forfeitures, Wrongful Death and the Western Notion of Sovereignty" (1973), 46 Temple L.Q. 169.
COUNSEL:
Christene H. Hirschfeld for plaintiff. Michael F. Donovan for defendant.
SOLICITORS:
Cooper & McDonald, Halifax, for plaintiff.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for defendant.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
JOYAL J.: BACKGROUND
The facts in this matter are undisputed and relatively straightforward. The plaintiff was apprehended on September 4, 1987, when trans porting illegally manufactured spirits contrary to paragraph 163(1)(a) of the Excise Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. E-12 [as am. by S.C. 1976-77, c. 28, s. 49].
On the same date, his truck, a 1986 Toyota truck with an estimated value of some $14,000, was seized pursuant to subsection 163(3) of the statute.
The plaintiff later pleaded guilty to the offence and was fined $650 and costs. Meanwhile, he had filed notice of his intention to oppose the seizure pursuant to section 115 of the Act.
Ultimately, the Crown filed an information in this Court to have the Toyota truck condemned and forfeited. The plaintiff objected to this on the grounds that subsection 163(3) of the Act was contrary to sections 8, 11 and 12 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.)].
In the face of this constitutional challenge, the parties consented, on the basis of an agreed state ment of facts, that there be a determination on a point of law and, pursuant to an order of the Associate Chief Justice of this Court dated November 23, 1988, the matter came on to be heard in Halifax on December 13, 1988.
THE ISSUES
Subsection 163(3) of the Excise Act reads as follows:
163... .
(3) All spirits referred to in subsection (1) wherever they are found, and all horses and vehicles, vessels and other appliances that have been or are being used for the purpose of transporting the spirits so manufactured, imported, removed, disposed of, diverted, or in or upon which the spirits are found, shall be forfeited to the Crown, and may be seized and detained by any officer and be dealt with accordingly.
To the jaundiced eye of the casual truck owner or of the Canadian traveller returning from a motor trip abroad, this "forfeiture" provision in the Excise Act or in the Customs Act [S.C. 1986, c. 1] has a certain draconian aspect to it. Although the practice of forfeiture has been in existence for centuries, it smacks of a penalty or of a sanction which in many cases appears to go far beyond the requirements of punishment and retribution. There is a seemingly disproportionate relationship be tween the loss of revenue to the Crown and, as in
the case before me, the value of the forfeited vehicle in which the illicit goods were being transported.
This kind of disproportionality becomes a more vexing problem when viewed in the context of the rights and freedoms declared in the Charter and its obvious purpose in guaranteeing some measure of fairness or common sense in the exercise of public authority when facing the illegal behaviour of its citizens.
The question posed by the parties brings into perspective a variety of complex issues not the least of which is the clash between the ancient practice of forfeiture and the more contemporary elevation of individual rights and freedoms. In these banner years of the Charter, is there still a place for such a brutal measure as the forfeiture of a vehicle when its owner is also subjected to fines, to imprisonment and to the loss of the goods seized? On the other hand, to what extent can the venerable practice of forfeiture be stricken from the statute books on the grounds of Charter infringement and thereby deny the public author ity its most effective enforcement tool?
The constitutionality of the forfeiture clause in the Excise Act must therefore involve an examina tion of the Charter, of its terms and meanings, and to determine the various individual interests which are meant to be protected. One must also examine the historical and more current theory of the law of forfeiture, determine its meaning, its nature and more importantly, its impact on an individual so as to decide whether it is inconsistent with the Charter.
HISTORY OF FORFEITURE
Jacob Finkelstein, a Yale professor of Assyriolo- gy and Babylonian Literature, wrote what appears to my untrained eye to be an authoritative article "The Goring Ox: Some Historical Perspectives on Deodands, Forfeitures, Wrongful Death and the Western Notion of Sovereignty" found at (1973), 46 Temple L.Q. 169.
The author suggests that the idea of forfeiture goes back to the biblical prescription in Exodus
21:28: "If an ox gore a man or a woman, and they die, he shall be stoned and his flesh shall not be eaten." Professor Finkelstein finds the true application of the law of expiation in the surrender of the offensive chattel and its ultimate destruc tion.
The concept went through several subtle changes over the following centuries. Under Alfred the Great in the ninth century, it had developed into the notion of "noxal surrender" by means of which one kin would surrender the instrument of accidental death to the aggrieved kin in order to prevent any action by the latter against the former.
By the time it was incorporated into the laws of England, the concept had become known as "deo- dand", from the latin "deo dandum" meaning "given to God", which proves at least an etymolog ical relationship to the goring ox of biblical times. The philosophical relationship, however, was less clear. No longer was the surrender of the offend ing chattel given to God or to next of kin, but rather to the King. As the Crown increasingly supplanted the Church as the ultimate authority in the land, deodand adopted an increasingly secular posture, becoming over the years an important source or guarantee of revenue, yet at the same time, maintaining some element of its original expiatory function.
With respect to its complete ineffectiveness as a remedy for accidental death, the institution of the deodand was finally abolished in 1846 by the adoption of Lord Campbell's Act [9 & 10 Vict., c. 62]. Nevertheless, the tool of forfeiture in the hands of the Crown was continued, nourished as it was by other principles of common law as, for example, where the goods of convicted felons were forfeited to the Crown.
It found further application in the so-called "public welfare" cases, as in Regina v. Woodrow (1846), 153 E.R. 907 (Exch.), where a quantity of adulterated tobacco was forfeited to the Crown even though its owner was morally innocent of the matter. Chief Baron Pollock noted in that case [at page 911] the stringent nature of the law but found it necessary "for the purpose of working some great public good". I infer from that judg-
ment that the protection of revenue as well as the protection of public health were of equal value in terms of public good.
Professor Finkelstein at page 204 of his article sees in this a "clear solicitude for the protection of the Crown revenue" and an acceptance even on the part of those who had hailed the abolition of the deodand of "the right of the sovereign to impose and exact forfeitures and fines, with or without the proof of mens rea against the defendant ...."
THE UNITED STATES' EXPERIENCE
The treatment given in the United States to the law of forfeiture might be particularly relevant because it comes in the face of strong constitution al guarantees of due process and enjoyment of property. Professor Finkelstein cites the case of United States v. Balint, 258 U.S. 250 (1922), as an American counterpart to the Woodrow decision (supra) because it requires vigilance in the protec tion of revenue equal to that in keeping diseased food or poison out of the public's hands.
In U.S. v. One 1963 Cadillac Coupe de Ville, Two-Door, 250 F. Supp. 183 (W.D. Mo. 1966), the Court required that the proceeding to enforce forfeiture accord with due process, but it did not interfere with forfeiture on substantive due process grounds.
The strict and absolute recognition of forfeiture provisions was made manifest by the U.S. Supreme Court decision in Calero-Toledo v. Pearson Yacht Leasing Co., 416 U.S. 663 (1974). In that case, the owners of a yacht which had been seized when its lessees were found in possession of an illicit drug challenged the constitutionality of forfeiture which operated in complete disregard for their claim of innocence.
Mr. Justice Brennan, in noting that from the earliest days of the republic forfeiture of convey-
ances used to frustrate the customs laws had been commonplace, said at page 683:
[T]he enactment of forfeiture statutes has not abated; contem porary federal and state forfeiture statutes reach virtually any type of property that might be used in the conduct of a criminal enterprise.
Mr. Justice Brennan went on to note that in English practice, forfeiture was not tied down to felony convictions where the forfeiture naturally relied on the conviction. At page 684, he quoted from the judgment of Mr. Justice Story in The Palmyra, 12 Wheat. 1 (1827) as follows:
But this doctrine never was applied to seizures and forfeitures, created by statute, in rem, cognizable on the revenue side of the Exchequer. The thing is here primarily considered as the offender, or rather the offence is attached primarily to the thing; and this, whether the offence be malum prohibitum or malum in se... .
In an earlier case, Goldsmith, Jr.-Grant Co. v. United States, 254 U.S. 505 (1921), and quoted with approval in the Calero- Toledo case (supra), the U.S. Supreme Court conceded that there might be a certain amount of legal fiction in ascribing complicity to a vehicle in an ad rem proceeding, but the Court found that forfeiture was too firmly fixed in the punitive and remedial jurisprudence of the country to now be displaced.
THE CANADIAN EXPERIENCE
Before the advent of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, the legitimacy of forfeiture provisions was never put in serious doubt. The English practice of using forfeiture as an effective method of protecting the sovereign's revenues found ready application here.
It was in the case of The King v. Krakowec et al., [1932] S.C.R. 134, that the Supreme Court of Canada enforced the forfeiture of a truck, the property of an innocent owner, when the vehicle had been used to transport illicit liquor. The Supreme Court held that the forfeiture applied regardless of the guilt or innocence of the owner in so far as the proceedings are in rem against the offending article itself.
It is admitted that since the Krakowec case, the statute has been amended to provide for remission to an innocent owner but this has no bearing on the issues before me.
It is also admitted that in other cases, the courts have acknowledged a lack of discretionary author ity to grant relief to either innocent owners or to persons whose conviction for transporting illicit liquor was ultimately quashed. The statute demanded then and continues to demand today that any conveyance used in the transportation of illegal spirits be forfeited to the Crown. See May- berry, Herbert Frederick v. The King, [1950] Ex.C.R. 402; and Koschuk, John v. The King, [1950] Ex.C.R. 332.
In consequence, the only question left remaining is whether or not this forfeiture provision is ren dered inoperative under the provisions of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
POST-CHARTER FORFEITURE
The plaintiff alleges that the provisions of sub section 163(3) of the Excise Act relating to forfeit ure are contrary to a number of Charter rights and freedoms.
Specifically, the plaintiff relies on section 8 which gives everyone the right to be secure against unreasonable search and seizure. The plaintiff also relies on paragraph 11(d) which gives the right to any person charged with an offence to be pre sumed innocent until proven guilty according to law in a fair and public hearing by an independent and impartial tribunal. There is also reliance on paragraph 11(h) giving any person a right not to be tried or punished again for an offence for which he has been finally acquitted or for which he has been found guilty and punished. Finally, the plain tiff finds support in section 12 which gives every one the right not to be subjected to cruel and unusual treatment or punishment.
Paragraph 11(h) of the Charter
If one is to analyze the foregoing rights and freedoms, it is first necessary to look at the words
used in the Charter to establish the substance as well as the degree of protection or guarantee which is covered by the enactment.
It is clear that section 11 only applies to a person charged with an offence. It is a condition sine qua non to the presumption of innocence, to the protection against double jeopardy as well as to the application or relevancy of the other rights set out in that section.
In the case of the seizure or forfeiture of the plaintiff's truck, however, the proceeding, at least in accordance with traditional doctrine, is against the truck itself, as a thing which is liable to forfeiture to the Crown by reason of its use as a carrier of illicit spirits. As we know from decided cases, the ownership of the vehicle is not material to the exercise of the right of forfeiture. The owner might very well be innocent of any wrongdoing, yet his vehicle is no less liable to forfeiture.
The quick thought which comes to mind in this respect is that it would be paradoxical indeed to have forfeiture upheld against an innocent owner and at the same time, provide relief against forfeit ure to the actual perpetrator on the grounds that his rights under section 11 have been infringed or denied.
Quick thoughts, however, do not settle all issues. The thrust of able counsel's argument is that the forfeiture, added to the conviction entered against the plaintiff is the kind of double punishment prohibited under paragraph 11(h) of the Charter. The facts before me certainly give the appearance of a double punishment. Not only is a fine imposed on the plaintiff but also his valuable truck is seized and forfeited.
Any reasonable man would endorse this proposi tion. He would say that no eclectic rationalization in construing an action in rem to punish the wrong-doing vehicle, as if it were the contempo rary equivalent of the goring ox, could possibly change the reality. He would look at the value of the truck and the amount of the fine imposed and find little difference in the nature of these two
consequences resulting from the same offence. He would conclude that the financial penalties suf fered by the plaintiff are cumulative and any argument to the contrary is pure fiction.
That it is pure fiction is the reasonable man's perception. From the perception of the law, how ever, an action in rem is very much a reality completely divorced from considerations of owner- sliip or interest and, in a sense, creates a personal ity out of the res. That personality is such that the blameworthy or unblemished behaviour of its owner is of no concern to the law. It is to say that the "lien de droit" between the thing and its owner does not apply or is removed from legal scrutiny. It is to say that nowhere in section 11 can either the thing or its owner find some kind of shelter or protection.
Yet, on the subject of double jeopardy, section 11 does speak of punishment. It says in paragraph 11(h) that any person found guilty and punished for an offence has the right not to be tried or punished for it again. If one again takes on the mantle of the reasonable man, the forfeiture of a valuable asset cannot be regarded as anything else but a punishment, at least of the economic kind, over and above the punishment meted out to the plaintiff by way of a fine. In that event, the problem becomes hydra-headed: the forfeiture can be considered a double punishment for the same offence, contrary to paragraph 11(h) of the Chart er and, assuming that the loss of revenues to the Crown from the illicit spirits is relatively modest, it can also constitute the kind of cruel and unusual treatment or punishment set out in section 12 of the Charter.
Paragraph 11(h) and section 12 of the Charter
Again, the Court must seek guidance outside of Canadian jurisprudence. J. Morris Clark in his article "Civil and Criminal Penalties and Forfeit- ures: A Framework for Constitutional Analysis" (1976), 60 Minn. L. Rev. 379, suggests that in the United States, forfeiture provisions may have a double character serving both to regulate illegal activities and to punish those who engage in such
activities. In some cases, forfeiture serves simply to regulate and is not conceptually a punishment at all. Such could be the case in the seizure of illicit spirits or drugs or counterfeit money or unregis tered sawed-off shotguns. There is no deprivation of property as such goods are never legally owned.
The author goes on to say, at page 479:
Forfeiture of such items does not depend on their use to commit an illegal act, so that the sanction of forfeiture does not apply uniquely to lawbreakers. The state's interest in keeping danger ous items out of the hands of the public is properly fulfilled by forbidding their use by all persons whether or not those persons have committed offenses, and whether or not the forbidden items have been used to commit offenses.
Mr. Clark, at page 478, must nevertheless admit to the great difficulty in keeping a clear distinction between a regulatory forfeiture and a punitive forfeiture. He refers to many cases in U.S. law where forfeited property was not contraband, or illicit, or peculiarly suited for criminal activities, "yet where forfeitures have been held not to affect personal interests or not to punish the owner".
The observations bring us right back to square one. If the forfeiture of the plaintiff's truck which has been used in the transportation of illicit spirits is primarily designed to punish the offender, that is one thing. If it is primarily designed to regulate the flow of such illegal spirits, that is another.
It is not an easy judgment call to make. If I were faced with a law similar to the one in dispute before the United States Supreme Court in Calero, I would have little difficulty in character izing it as primarily regulatory in nature despite the fact that one of its consequences might be to impose a so-called economic penalty. However, the statute here is not so clearly regulatory. If the law's primary function was to regulate the trans portation of illicit spirits, such a goal would best be served by ensuring forfeiture in all cases irrespec-
tive of the guilt or innocence of the owner or operator of the vehicle. While it is true (as noted above) that forfeiture does not rely on a finding of guilt, it is clear that the law permits a completely innocent owner or lien-holder to be spared from the consequences which might otherwise prevail. Put another way, the law avoids the imposition of forfeiture on the morally blameless. While this fact alone does not deny the regulatory purpose behind the law, it does deviate the difficulty in determining that there is not an equally strong punitive intent underlying the statute.
Having said that, however, I must nevertheless find that the plaintiff is unable to invoke either paragraph 11(h) or section 12 of the Charter in aid of his cause. Even admitting that the impugned provision has a punitive aspect (without determin ing whether that aspect is of equal or lesser impor tance than the law's regulatory aspect), I do not find that the punishment involved constitutes double jeopardy, nor do I find it to be cruel and unusual. I might sum up my reasoning as follows:
There is a presumption in law whereby Acts of a legislative body are presumed to be constitutional until proven otherwise. I need only say that on the plaintiff rests the burden of demonstrating that the forfeiture provisions of the Excise Act are unconstitutional.
The doctrine of forfeiture in the laws of Canada has remained unchallenged for many generations. It has become enshrined in our consciousness as a measure of both compliance and regulation, ref lecting age-old principles of the action in rem with the resulting forfeiture or destruction of the res used in an illegal activity.
In Re Regina and Green (1983), 5 C.C.C. (3d) 95; 41 O.R. (2d) 557, and as analyzed in the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms Annotated, page 16.7-4, the High Court of Ontario ruled that the forfeiture of a conveyance
used in the commission of an offence contrary to the Narcotic Control Act [R.S.C. 1970, c. N-1], as authorized by subsection 10(9) of that Act, does not contravene paragraph 11(h) of the Charter. The Court found that the fact that forfeiture is not automatic and can be sought after a term of incarceration has already been imposed does not mean that the accused is being punished again for the same offence. Moreover, an accused is not finally punished until all possible penal conse quences for the offence are exhausted. The law of Canada permits a variety of sanctions to be imposed in conjunction with other forms of punish ment. On the strength of that case, one may conclude that if forfeiture of the plaintiffs truck constitutes a punishment, it is not a double punish ment for the same offence as is prohibited by paragraph 11 (h).
Furthermore, if it should be attractive to catego rize forfeiture as a punishment, I should not be able to conclude that such punishment is cruel and unusual within the terms of section 12. There is an accumulation of case law on this issue which clear ly indicates the narrow interpretation which must be given to that provision.
In In re Gittens, [1983] 1 F.C. 152; (1982), 137 D.L.R. (3d) 687, the Trial Division of the Federal Court of Canada held that the execution of a deportation order did not constitute cruel and unjust treatment or punishment. The same princi ple was followed by the Federal Court of Appeal in Re Vincent and Minister of Employment and Immigration (1983), 148 D.L.R. (3d) 385.
In R. v. Simon (No. 3) (1982), 5 W.W.R. 728 (N.W.T.S.C.), it was held that an indeterminate period of incarceration for a dangerous offender did not contravene the same provision found in the Canadian Bill of Rights [R.S.C. 1970, Appendix III]. Mandatory minimum sentence of life impris onment without parole over a prescribed period was found in R. v. Mitchell (1987), 39 C.C.C. (3d) 141 (N.S.C.A.), not to violate the guarantee against cruel and unusual punishment.
The thrust of challenges to the constitutionality of statutory provisions regarded as imposing cruel
and unjust punishment has been substantially directed to the physical and emotional constraints of the person. The test, as stated by the Supreme Court of Canada in R. v. Smith (Edward Dewey), [1987] 1 S.C.R. 1045, is that to bring into play section 12 of the Charter, the punishment must not be merely excessive but also grossly disproportion ate. In that case, however, the Supreme Court was dealing with the minimum sentence of seven years under the Narcotic Control Act. It found this provision contrary to section 12 by reason of its immutability in dealing with the various consider ations to which a court should apply its mind in determining a just and proper sentence.
In the case at bar, the forfeiture of the truck causes financial loss to the plaintiff but it cannot be said that such loss is so cruel and unusual as to give it the protection of the Charter. Forfeiture, under either the Customs Act or the Excise Act, is certainly not unusual and, in terms of our long and historical experience with it, cannot be said, to quote the words of Lamer J. in the Smith case [at page 1072] (supra) to be "so excessive as to outrage standards of decency". To adopt a con trary position would be to conclude that Canadian standards of decency were radically altered on the coming into force of the Charter.
I must therefore conclude that even if subsection 163(3) of the Excise Act contains a punitive aspect, its harsh quality does not make it cruel and unusual.
Section 8 of the Charter
The plaintiff raises another Charter issue under section 8 which guarantees everyone the right to be secure against unreasonable search and seizure. In the present dispute, there is no allegation that the search which preceded the seizure was invalid, rather only that it is unreasonable to seize as forfeit such a valuable piece of property as a consequence of this type of violation of the Excise Act. By raising such an argument, the plaintiff seeks to locate a substantive property right as implicit in our Constitution.
Heavy emphasis is placed upon the Federal Court of Appeal ruling in F.K. Clayton Group Ltd. v. M.N.R., [1988] 2 F.C. 467; (1988), 82 N.R. 313, a case dealing with a search for and subsequent seizure of documents presumed to be evidence of an offence under the Income Tax Act. Mr. Justice Hugessen noted (in conformity with the Supreme Court of Canada decision in Hunter et al. v. Southam Inc., [1984] 2 S.C.R. 145; (1984), 55 N.R. 241) that the search, being war- rantless, was prima facie unreasonable and was further invalidated by the vague directions which the statute gave as to when a search was justified. The Court ordered the documents returned, not however because their retention and use violated any substantive property right, but only because the procedure involved in attaining them was unreasonable, i.e. it was an invasion of privacy not cognizable in the face of the Charter. The return of the property is a necessary concomitant to the protection of privacy.
This property/privacy dichotomy is more evident upon a reading of the earlier Federal Court of Appeal decision in Bertram S. Miller Ltd. v. R., [1986] 3 F.C. 291; 28 C.C.C. (3d) 263. In that case, the owner of a plant nursery consented to an inspection of his imported trees, whereupon they were found to be infested and ordered to be destroyed. The owner alleged a violation of section 8. The Federal Court of Appeal overturned the Trial Judge's award of damages. Mr. Justice Hugessen noted [at pages 341 F.C.; 302 C.C.C.] that because the search was consensual, and the destruction of the trees grounded upon reasonable belief of necessity, the issue could be characterized as one of "infringement of property rights wholly divorced from any question of privacy" for which rights he found no protection in section 8 of the Charter.
These cases lead one to the conclusion that section 8 is designed primarily to protect the priva cy interests of individuals and affords protection to property only where that is required to uphold the protection of privacy. (In that sense, it might be said to be a "dependent" property right.) In the
case before me, there is no allegation that any privacy interest of the plaintiff has been violated. The search which resulted in the discovery of the illicit spirits is presumed to be valid. Therefore, the subsequent seizure as forfeit (based on actual dis covery of the spirits, not simply on a reasonable belief of their presence) cannot be gainsaid on the basis of the minimal "dependent" property rights which section 8 may be said to afford.
Paragraph 11(d) of the Charter
The plaintiff also relies on paragraph 11(d) of the Charter which gives any person the right "to be presumed innocent until proven guilty accord ing to law in a fair and public hearing by an independent and impartial tribunal". If I should properly interpret counsel's argument in this respect, I am asked to conclude that the forfeiture provisions of the statute apply before the owner of the vehicle, or the person in possession of it, has been tried with the offence and convicted of it. I am asked to conclude that forfeiture is, in fact and in law, a presumption of guilt against the accused.
That approach is not without originality, never theless, I should dispose of it very quickly. The forfeiture of the plaintiff's vehicle is statutorily based not on the ultimate conviction of the plain tiff but on the simple fact that it was used in the carriage of illicit spirits. If it should have turned out in subsequent proceedings that the spirits were not illicit, then of course the forfeiture provisions would not apply and there would be no issue before the Court. The fact is, however, that the spirits found in the vehicle were illicit and, accord ing to the statute, that is the end of the matter.
CONCLUSION
As I have expressed earlier, the Charter issues raised by the plaintiff are neither trivial nor vexa tious. The forfeiture of the plaintiff's vehicle does indeed take on the colour or countenance of a malevolent and stern legislative measure to ensure compliance with the revenue laws. It smacks of a
historical period where the King's revenue rested on few sources and beware the man, including his property, who should attempt to evade lawful payment.
Nevertheless, I have failed to find any grounds upon which the plaintiff may prove a violation of his rights as guaranteed by the Charter. The preoccupation with the security of revenue arising from customs duties or excise taxes, hallowed by ancient doctrine and historical legitimacy, is, in my view, deserving of continued if grudging respect. It is the kind of respect which a court owes to Parliament which has found through the years that, draconian as forfeiture might appear to be from time to time, it has been good and necessary policy to retain it.
However, there may be those who feel that this sort of respect runs contrary to the purposive manner in which the Charter is to be interpreted. I do not wish to be taken as saying that judicial restraint should always preclude a court from rushing in where angels might otherwise fear to tread. Rather, judicial interference with legislative policy is always undertaken at the risk of upsetting the delicate balance which must be maintained between individual and private rights guaranteed by the Charter and the obligations on Parliament to secure and protect the public interest. The necessity of the balancing may be made evident by a brief reconsideration of the alleged violation of section 12.
To begin with, it must be understood that I am not unaware of the fact that some may feel such balancing properly belongs within the context of section 1 of the Charter where Parliament's obli gation to protect the public interest would have to be proven according to a strict formula which balances that obligation against the equally impor tant obligation not to deny individual rights.
However, it seems inescapable to me that a right which is, like section 12, couched in terms which include qualifying adjectives, must be subject to some limits within itself and that respect for legiti mate state interests is one such limit that may be
considered in determining the scope of the protect ed interest. In other words, in interpreting terms such as "cruel and unusual" it is neither desirable nor necessary to establish a once-and-for-all set of indicia by which a determination of "cruelty" must be made. What is "cruel and unusual" may vary in different circumstances and this need not always be proven strictly by the Crown in the context of section 1, but may be considered by the judge in attempting to define the guaranteed right.
I take support for this view from the judgment of Chief Justice Dickson in R. v. Simmons, [1988] 2 S.C.R. 495, a case involving a challenge to a strip search at airport customs on the ground that it violated the guarantee in section 8 that everyone be free from unreasonable search and seizure. In reasons concurred in by three other members of the seven-member panel, the Chief Justice refused to apply the criteria established in Hunter et al. v. Southam Inc., [1984] 2 S.C.R. 145 for determin ing the "reasonableness" of a search. Instead, he said [at page 537] that "a determination of rea sonableness must depend to some degree on the circumstances in which a search is performed", although he stressed that "it would be incorrect to place overwhelming emphasis" on such circum stances. In any event, it was in the context of section 8 and not section 1 that he abridged the requirements of Hunter because Simmons was a customs case and special consideration had to be accorded the state's interest in protecting its bor ders and frustrating the flow of illegal narcotics.
If this be the case, there is nothing improper about balancing state interests with individual con cerns within rights-defining clauses themselves and in that context, I reiterate my reluctance to disturb the balance which Parliament has struck, notwith standing that the measures appear harsh and excessive.
However, even if I were mistaken in reading such a limit into section 12, I feel certain that a similar limit to that protected right would prevail, with even greater force, in a section 1 analysis. Under that rubric the legitimacy of forfeiture could easily be justified as a reasonable measure
designed to frustrate further criminal enterprise, protect the public welfare and secure the Crown revenue. While a less harsh penalty could easily be imagined, and the degree of penalty in this respect might cover a very wide spectrum, Parliament may justifiably be given some latitude in determining the appropriate remedy to ensure compliance in matters relating to revenue (including customs, excise and income tax) where voluntary disclosure is the rule and inspection and enforcement by the state the exception.
I must therefore dismiss the plaintiffs action. In the circumstances of the case, however, I should make no order as to costs.
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