Judgments

Decision Information

Decision Content

T-560-84
George Gordon Rollinson (Plaintiff) v.
Her Majesty the Queen in Right of Canada (Defendant)
T-245-87
Her Majesty the Queen in Right of Canada (Plaintiff)
v.
George Gordon Rollinson (Defendant)
INDEXED AS: ROLLINSON V. CANADA (T.D.)
Trial Division, Muldoon J.—Vancouver, Novem- ber 29 and 30, December 1, 2 and 3, 1988; Ottawa, January 17, 1991.
Constitutional law — Charter of Rights — Criminal process
— S. 8 right to be secure against unreasonable search and seizure — Customs inspectors boarding yacht without warrant to search for contraband alcohol — Finding no contraband — Seizing documents to examine for evidence of administrative offences — Seizure without warrant of papers from vessel used as dwelling unconstitutional — Border search exception to warrant requirement applying only to contraband, not per sonal papers.
Constitutional law — Charter of Rights — Criminal process
— Illegal interference with property under cover of misstate ment of law, other bizarre, malicious and dishonest dealings by customs officers, constituting cruel and unusual treatment within s. 12.
Constitutional law — Charter of Rights — Equality rights
— Customs Act s. 11(1) requiring master of inbound vessel to report in person to custom house — Plaintiff other regular pleasure and commercial traffic, reporting by telephone only pursuant to arrangement improvised by customs — Telephone reports accepted from others as sufficient — Customs officers seizing plaintiff's vessel for non-compliance with letter of statute — Enforcement action unconstitutional — Denial of s. 15 right to equality before law where state allows some class members to depart from general statutory requirement and singles one out for strict enforcement.
Constitutional law — Charter of Rights — Life, liberty and security — Customs officers seizing, without warrant, vessel on which citizen lived for failure on unspecified occasions to report inward — No reasonable and probable grounds —
Property of nature to support life or security of person (such as home) not to be seized except in accordance with fundamen tal justice.
Customs and excise — Customs Act — Obligation of master to attend in person at custom house — Customs authorities erecting sign on pier instructing vessels to report by telephone — Compliance with sign good defence to charge of failing to report — Rule ignorantia juris non excusat limited to crimes, not applying to regulatory infractions.
Practice — Evidence — Court has discretion, at common law, to exclude evidence obtained by trick; or if prejudicial, of tenuous admissibility, and probative force trifling.
The plaintiff brought an action for a declaration that the seizures of his papers, boat, and automobiles were illegal, and for damages. The Crown's action was to confirm the seizures.
Held, the plaintiff's action should be allowed, and the Crown's dismissed.
The seizure of the personal papers was a breach of section 8 of the Charter. Since the seizure of the boat was judged "premature" by the manager nominally responsible for the inspectors, the seizure of the papers was so a fortiori; that seizure cannot, therefore, be reasonable.
The exceptional power to detain persons to effect a "border search", recognized by the Supreme Court of Canada in R. v. Simmons and R. v. Jacoy, applies to contraband goods, and does not confer the power to search, or to seize, personal papers. Here, the "border search" ended when the inspectors failed to turn up any liquor.
At common law, the Crown is required to obtain a judicial warrant before proceeding to seize private papers: Entick v. Carrington. Although the Supreme Court left open the possibil ity for exceptions where it is not feasible to obtain prior authorization, the general requirement that a valid warrant is a precondition to a valid search or seizure is entrenched by section 8 of the Charter: Hunter et al. v. Southam Inc.
It can be inferred from the demeanour on the stand of the inspectors that the seizure of the papers was not truly made in the belief, held in good faith, that they had a legal duty to carry out the seizure. The illegal seizure was attended with intimida tion of an older couple, as well as with misstatements to them about the law. It would therefore bring the administration of justice into disrepute to admit the diaries as evidence.
The Court has the discretion, at common law and apart from subsection 24(2) of the Charter, to rule out relevant evidence obtained from the defendant by a trick: Karuma v. The Queen. Evidence may also be excluded if its admission would be unfair, in that it is gravely prejudicial, its admissibility is on other
grounds tenuous, and its probative force is trifling in relation to the main issue before the Court: R. v. Wray.
Although there is no entrenched right to property in the Charter, section 7 protects the individual's interest in certain transcendent kinds of property, such as essential medicines or the shelter of home, which support life and security of the person. It is a breach of section 7 to lure, entrap or trick a person into a situation, contrived by the State, in which the draconian application of statutory provisions permits the State to seize that person's dwelling without compensation.
The defendant's employees subjected the plaintiff and Mrs. Rollinson to cruel and unusual treatment, within the meaning of section 12 of the Charter, in: the bizarre manner of boarding their boat and the warrantless seizure of private papers carried out with a misrepresentation as to the legal requirement; the interrogation of the plaintiff and the demand that he prove that which he had no legal duty to prove; the mockery by the customs staff at Douglas station when he was sent to ask them to confirm his reports; seizing the Rogue a third time, just after he had paid for its release; the several threats to the safety and integrity of the vessel herself; losing some of his private papers; and entrapping him into a situation of non-compliance.
The seizure of the Rogue for failure to report inward accord ing to the letter of the Customs Act was a violation of the plaintiff's constitutional right to equality before the law, when Customs had placed a sign on the pier requiring boaters to use the extra-statutory telephone reporting procedure which it had improvised. It is contrary to subsection 15(1) of the Charter to take enforcement action against one member of a class, for alleged non-compliance with a statutory provision, when the state accepts the same behaviour on the part of other members of the class subject to the statutory regime.
The Crown's argument that, in spite of the sign, ignorance of the law does not justify the plaintiff in departing from the requirements of the statute, had to be rejected. The maxim ignorantia juris non excusat applies only to crimes in the true sense. It has no application to an infraction of the essentially civil revenue provisions of the Customs Act.
The Crown is liable when its servants fail to exercise due care, as well as for intentional abuses of power on their part. The sign on the pier was either a deliberate trap or a negligent misstatement as to arriving sailors' reporting obligations; either way it is actionable in tort.
The cost of repairs to the vessel to make it as good as before the seizure, and other provable damage to property, sound in special damages. General damages lie for the offence given by the Crown's servants' importunity, their harassment of the plaintiff, and actual malice on the part of one of them.
STATUTES AND REGULATIONS JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, being Part I of the Constitution Act, 1982, Schedule B, Canada Act 1982, 1982, c. 11 (U.K.) [R.S.C., 1985, Appendix II, No. 44], ss. 6(1), 7, 8, 12, 15, 24.
Constitution Act, 1867, 30 & 31 Vict., c. 3 (U.K.) (as am. by Canada Act 1982, 1982, c. 11 (U.K.), Schedule to the Constitution Act, 1982, Item 1) [R.S.C., 1985, Appendix II, No. 5], ss. 92(14), 101.
Criminal Code, R.S.C. 1970, c. C-34, s. 19.
Customs Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. C-40, ss. 11, 18, 231(1). Customs Act, R.S.C., 1985 (2nd Supp.), c. 1.
Customs Act, S.C. 1986, c. 1, s. 212(3).
National Defence Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. N-4, s. 128.
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
APPLIED:
Hunter et al. v. Southam Inc., [1984] 2 S.C.R. 145; (1984), 55 A.R. 291; 11 D.L.R. (4th) 641; [1984] 6 W.W.R. 577; 33 Alta. L.R. (2d) 193; 27 B.L.R. 297; 14 C.C.C. (3d) 97; 2 C.P.R. (3d) 1; 41 C.R. (3d) 97; 9 C.R.R. 355; 84 D.T.C. 6467; 55 N.R. 241; Entick v. Carrington (1765), 95 E.R. 807 (K.B.); Paragon Proper ties Ltd. v. Magna Envestments Ltd. (1972), 24 D.L.R. (3d) 156; [1972] 3 W.W.R. 106 (Alta. C.A.).
DISTINGUISHED:
R. v. Schwartz, [1988] 2 S.C.R. 443; (1988), 55 D.L.R. (4th) 1; [1989] 1 W.W.R. 289; 56 Man. R. (2d) 92; 45 C.C.C. (3d) 97; 66 C.R. (3d) 251; 88 N.R. 90; R. v. Simmons, [1988] 2 S.C.R. 495; (1988), 67 O.R. (2d) 63; 55 D.L.R. (4th) 673; 45 C.C.C. (3d) 296; 66 C.R. (3d) 297; 89 N.R. 1; 30 O.A.C. 241; R. v. Jacoy, [1988] 2 S.C.R. 548; [1989] 1 W.W.R. 354; (1988), 18 C.E.R. 258; 38 C.R.R. 290; 2 T.C.T. 4120; R. v. Rao (1984), 46 O.R. (2d) 88; 9 D.L.R. (4th) 542; 12 C.C.C. (3d) 97; 40 C.R. (3d) 1; 10 C.R.R. 275; 4 O.A.C. 162 (C.A.).
CONSIDERED:
Kuruma v. The Queen, [1955] A.C. 197 (P.C.); R. v. Wray, [1971] S.C.R. 272; (1970), 11 D.L.R. (3d) 673;
[1970] 4 C.C.C. 1; 11 C.R.N.S. 235.
REFERRED TO:
R. v. Therens et al., [1985] 1 S.C.R. 613; (1985), 18 D.L.R. (4th) 655; [1985] 4 W.W.R. 286; 38 Alta. L.R. (2d) 99; 40 Sask. R. 122; 18 C.C.C. (3d) 481; 13 C.P.R. 193; 45 C.R. (3d) 57; 32 M.V.R. 153; 59 N.R. 122; Noor Mohamed v. The King, [1949] A.C. 182 (P.C.); Callis v. Gunn, [1964] 1 Q.B. 495; Nicholson v. Haldimand-Nor- folk Regional Board of Commissioners of Police, [1979] 1 S.C.R. 311; (1978), 88 D.L.R. (3d) 671; 78 CLLC 14,181; 23 N.R. 410; Martineau v. Matsqui Institution
Disciplinary Board, [1980] 1 S.C.R. 602; (1979), 106 D.L.R. (3d) 385; 50 C.C.C. (2d) 353; 13 C.R. (3d) 1; 15 C.R. (3d) 315; 30 N.R. 119.
AUTHORS CITED
Linden, Allen M., Canadian Tort Law, 4th ed., Toronto: Butterworths, 1988.
Linden, Allen M., "Tort Law's Role in the Regulation and Control of the Abuse of Power", in Special Lec tures of the Law Society of Upper Canada, Toronto: Richard De Boo, 1979.
Sopinka, John and Sidney N. Lederman, The Law of
Evidence in Civil Cases, Toronto: Butterworths, 1974. Williams, Glanville, Textbook of Criminal Law, 2nd ed.,
London: Stevens & Sons, 1983.
COUNSEL:
J. C. Blewett for plaintiff.
Gunnar O. Eggertson for defendant.
SOLICITORS:
J. C. Blewett, White Rock, British Columbia for plaintiff.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for defendant.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
MULDOON J.:
EDITOR'S NOTE
The Executive Editor has decided, pursuant to the Federal Court Act, subsection 58(2), that parts of His Lordship's 103-page reasons for judgment herein are of sufficient importance to warrant publication in the official reports.
This judgment is of significance by reason of the Charter issues raised in two actions for dam ages arising out of a series of seizures of the plaintiff's motor vehicles and residence, the motor yacht Rogue. In seizing the vessel, the customs officers confiscated plaintiff's personal papers, which took the form of diaries or "logs", and the Court had to consider whether these were seized in a "border search" and whether this was a necessary act of law enforcement. Since this was a warrantless search, Muldoon J. reviewed the landmark judgments — from the 1765 case of
Entick v. Carrington to Hunter et al. v. Southam Inc. — on the common law requirement of a warrant as authorization for the seizure of private papers. His Lordship then discussed the statutory exigencies of the Customs Act in relation to the constitutional imperatives of the Charter. Another issue was whether the seized papers were admis sible in light of common law principles governing the exclusion of evidence and subsection 24(2) of the Charter. Also included in the published report are the Trial Judge's remarks on the question of the Crown's liability for general and special dam ages and as to the fact that enactment of the Charter and Canadian Bill of Rights had been necessitated by decades of "deplorable state misconduct". Brief summaries have been pre pared indicating the nature of the omitted portions of the reasons for judgment.
The plaintiff and his wife were an older couple who maintained a postal address at White Rock, British Columbia but resided on their forty-five foot yacht Rogue. The couple frequently had occasion to travel in the Rogue south of the American border to visit friends and to take advantage of the services offered at marinas in the State of Washington which were both better and cheaper than those available at their home port. The suspicion of customs officials was aroused by reports from informers to the effect that plaintiff was smuggling alcohol. At the same time, the customs operation was under an internal investigation as to whether the local officials were properly carrying out their duties. Plaintiff himself was formerly a customs officer but had not been well liked by his colleagues. The Rogue was seized on some three occasions by customs offi cers while plaintiff's two automobiles were seized by the RCMP.
The initial seizure of the Rogue took place on February 1, 1984. Plaintiff docked at the govern ment pier, had nothing to declare and was cleared by the uniformed customs inspector.
Minutes later, however, four plain clothes officers raided the vessel in "gang-busters" fashion — plaintiff's evidence, that they acted in a rough and ignorant manner in regard to the vessel's integri ty, was believed. No contraband was found. Nevertheless, the leader of the raiding party decided to seize the Rogue. He completed a seizure receipt, stating that the vessel's forfeiture under the Customs Act was for failing to report inward to Canadian Customs upon her return to Canada. The vessel was ordered to be held at the government dock pending terms of release. The Court found that there had been no reasonable and probable grounds for this search and seizure and that the officials had no idea of any but a vague generic alleged breach. The search and seizure were disproportionate and oppressive in every way. While there may be nothing amiss in intimidating terrorists and narcotics dealers, decent citizens, even if suspected of an offence against the Customs Act, should be treated with sensitivity and respect by servants of the State.
The statement of claim contained an allegation that, at the conclusion of the search, defendant's servants seized plaintiff's diaries and records, contrary to Charter sections 8 and 24. His Lord ship's conclusion was that the official in charge of the raiding party "thought he had struck gold (in the sense of law enforcement) in the citizen's so-called 'ship's logs' which, he believed as and when he got his hands on them, would prove the variable numbers of instances of non-reporting which have been alleged herein. Having received, through modest, but real, intimidation during his raid that which turned out to be dross, or even that which raises inferences of laxity on the part of the customs agents at Douglas Station and the Pacific Highway station, Borisenko would not — could not — relent, but had to press on against Rollinson and the other Crown witnesses went willy-nilly along with Borisenko, to a greater or lesser degree, either for 'the good of the service'
or to save their own jobs, pensions or service records".
Is the seizure of personal papers subsumed in the vessel's seizure?
Despite all the foregoing, can the Crown validly claim that the seizing of the citizen's private papers was a necessary act of law enforcement? It does not appear to have been such, even upon the evidence thus far reviewed: but there is more. Although the Crown has engaged counsel, resisted Mr. Rollinson's claims and sued him to confirm seizure of the Rogue (plus two automobiles serially owned by and seized from him), the seizure of which vessel is founded on the acts, words and testimony of former agent Borisenko, yet the Crown's agents were not so single-minded as would appear in the pleadings. "Premature" is how Terry Arthur Langley described the seizure of the citizen's vessel on February 1, 1984. On exami nation in chief by the Crown's counsel, Langley testified [transcript, at page 487]:
A. Okay. The document of February the 1st [Ex. 2(79)], in my opinion was premature, in that Mr. Rollinson had not been given the opportunity to respond to the allegations, and hence the meeting of February the 7th.
On cross-examination, Langley testified [tran- script, at pages 509-510]:
Q. All right now, the seizure of February 1st, that's the one that is shown at Document 2, *79 [Ex. 2(79)], if I could take you to that. I think this is the one that you've testified that you thought was premature?
A. Yes, processing this document definitely was premature.
Q. And how did that come about?
A. Well the preparation of this document is the result of the Mobile Unit's attention relative to comparison of the vessel reports inward into the United States and inward into Canada.
Q. Yes, now this is signed by Mr. Borisenko. When you say that it was premature, was Mr. Borisenko a little impul sive in charging ahead with this at that time?
A. Well, certainly from my perspective. I had been a Cus toms investigator for a number of years and was involved in seizure actions on a regular basis. Now, as I under stand it, Mr. Rollinson provided certain explanations at the time of the initial boarding of his vessel and it was
commonly my practice to sit down with the individual alleged to be committing the Customs offenses and dis cuss the offenses with them to give them an opportunity to respond.
So also this witness testified again and again, as recorded in the transcript at pages 511-512 and 531.
Who is Terry Arthur Langley? As of January 1, 1984, he was the Acting Manager of the Interna tional Marine and Rail Unit of Canada Customs in metropolitan Vancouver. The Mobile Inspection Unit was a subordinate organization within the International Marine and Rail Unit. Below Lang- ley in the hierarchy was Charles Szalai and below him were Borisenko, Savaia and Tufts (Transcript, at pages 477, 480, 688 and 710). So, while the Crown now seeks energetically to characterize the February 1 seizure of the citizen's vessel as lawful, normal and unexceptionable, that was not always the view of the Crown's high official who was nominally, but not truly, responsible for that sei zure. If the seizure of the vessel on February 1, 1984, were "premature" and therefore unneces sary, even from the viewpoint of a responsible officer of the Crown, then a fortiori so, and even more so, was the seizure of the citizen's private papers. It was unreasonable. Section 8 of the Charter [Canadian Charter of Rights and Free doms, being Part I of the Constitution Act, 1982, Schedule B, Canada Act 1982, 1982, c. 11 (U.K.) [R.S.C., 1985, Appendix II, No. 44]] was breached.
The manner of infringing section 8 Section 8 of the Charter runs thus:
8. Everyone has the right to be secure against unreasonable search or seizure.
An unlawful seizure is ipso facto unreasonable. Borisenko's warrantless seizure of the citizen's pri vate papers, in circumstances of intimidation, in which he wrongly purported to be required by law to seize them, constituted an infringement of Rol- linson's right guaranteed by section 8 of the Chart er. Borisenko's seizure of those papers on behalf of the Crown was unlawful. It therefore was unrea sonable. That constitutes infringement of section 8
by means of overriding the citizen's will through intimidating force of numbers intruding into the home after dark and falsely stating a requirement which was illegal.
Were the papers seized in a "border search"?
In this regard the Crown's counsel makes much of the notion of "border searches" in order to save his client's agent's misconduct from curial denun ciation as being unconstitutional. It has been asserted that the four strong men, without a search warrant among them, boarded the Rogue after dark on February 1, 1984, in order to search for contraband liquor. In any event, they found none. Even if that action can be legitimately likened to a search at the secondary customs line in order to verify the declaration of "no goods to declare" asserted by the incomer at the first line, what is being sought is undeclared goods, or contraband, not the individual's private papers. When the pre mature seizure of the vessel is instead said to be based on the citizen's previous failure (or was it previous failures?) to report to customs, the ordi nary statute law, much less the supreme law of the realm, does not accord the Crown's agents any warrantless authority to seize the citizen's private papers. Such papers are not contraband.
It would be absurd for first-line agents to refer the citizen to the second line on suspicion of having private papers and it would be, and is, illegal for second-line agents to seize, without a warrant, the citizen's private papers — as distinct from undeclared goods bought or acquired abroad — for neither the Customs Act [R.S.C., 1985 (2nd Supp.), c. 1], then and now, nor any other revenue statute includes such papers in the notion of con traband, or dutiable goods. They are akin to one's driver's licence, the deed or title to one's home, one's diary or correspondence, one's lawyer's writ ten opinion or one's physician's written diagnosis or prescription. Any agent of the State who wishes to seize that sort of document, from the citizen's abode, believing it will furnish evidence of the citizen's having committed an offence, must first, on oath, persuade a justice of the peace or other
appropriate judicial officer of the reasonableness of such a belief, and may not act upon it until furnished with a properly issued warrant.
The Crown's counsel, however, argues that the seizure of the citizen's private papers constituted what has been called a "border search" (fouilles effectuées à la frontière) and that the said seizure did not violate the citizen's right to be secure from an unreasonable seizure, as prescribed in section 8 of the Charter. In principal support of that conten tion, counsel cited two recent majority judgments of the Supreme Court of Canada, both delivered on December 8, 1988: R. v. Simmons, [1988] 2 S.C.R. 495; and R. v. Jacoy, [1988] 2 S.C.R. 548.
Mrs. Simmons arrived in Canada by aeroplane from Jamaica, and Mr. Jacoy arrived in Canada — at Douglas Station — by automobile from Seattle, U.S.A., so, the question arose as to wheth er each had been detained within the meaning ascribed in R. v. Therens et al., [1985] 1 S.C.R. 613, so as to invoke paragraph 10(b) of the Chart er, which guarantees the right to retain and to instruct counsel without delay and to be so informed. It may be left to some other case, per haps, to determine whether, when one's private papers are seized from and in one's dwelling in one's very presence, one is necessarily "detained". On the facts of the case at bar, it must be held that the Rollinson's were not detained, for the search for contraband yielded nothing. So, while the Crown succeeds in fending off any finding that the Customs inspectors violated paragraph 10(b) in the circumstances, the circumstances do reveal a warrantless search of the citizens' dwelling after dark and the seizure of private papers.
It is the last element which distinguishes the case at bar from those Supreme Court judgments relied on by the Crown here. They were concerned with the bringing into Canada of "goods subject to entry at the customs, or prohibited goods, secreted [sic] about [the] person" in the words of the
previous statute's [R.S.C. 1970, c. C-40] section 143. A citizen's private papers are simply not such goods. They never become such goods, even if, as here, the citizens' dwelling is a vessel capable of crossing the border. So, the Court concludes that the jurisprudence which enhances the authority customs agents have to detain border-crossers and to search for and seize goods including contra band, does not carry such authority in regard to seizing personal papers.
The common law has required the Crown's agents to procure a valid warrant for the seizure of pri vate papers
In that landmark judgment of the Supreme Court of Canada, Hunter et al. v. Southam Inc., [1984] 2 S.C.R. 145, the unanimous reasons of the Court were written by Mr. Justice Dickson, later Chief Justice of Canada. He cited and quoted from "the great case" of Entick v. Carrington (1765), 95 E.R. 807 (K.B.), as expressing the authentic statement of the common law in regard to the seizure of personal property. Apart from the passages of Entick v. Carrington quoted by Dick- son J., there are also published therein the follow ing highly pertinent passages [at pages 807 and 814]:
In trespass; the plaintiff declares that the defendants on the 11th day of November ... 1762, at Westminster ... with force and arms broke and entered the dwelling-house of the plaintiff ... and continued there four hours without his consent and against his will ... and read over, pryed into, and examined all the private papers, books, &c. of the plaintiff there found, whereby the secret affairs, &c. of the plaintiff became wrong fully discovered and made public; and took and carried away
Lord Chief Justice. — I shall not give any opinion at present ; I shall only just mention a matter which has slipped the sagacity of the counsel on both sides, that it may be taken notice of upon the next argument.... suppose a justice of peace issues a warrant to search a house for stolen goods, and directs it to four of his servants, who search and find no stolen goods, but seize all the books and papers of the owners of the house, whether in such a case would the justice of peace, his officers or servants, be within the Stat. 24 Geo. 2? [Emphasis not in original text.]
In Entick v. Carrington, "the Earl of Halifax was .. . one of the lords of the King's Privy Council, and one of his principal Secretaries of
State, and" [at page 809] he had "made his warrant under his hand and seal directed to the defendants, ... in the King's name ... taking a constable to your assistance, to make strict and diligent search" for "several weekly very seditious papers . . . contain[ing] gross and scandalous reflections and invectives upon His Majesty's Gov ernment, and upon both Houses of Parliament .. . to seize and apprehend, and to bring [the plain tiff], together with his books and papers, in safe custody before me [the Earl of Halifax] to be examined concerning the premises" [at pages 808 and 810]. Upon the very issues which concern the parties in the cases at bar, "the whole Court gave judgment this term for the plaintiff" [at page 815] as demonstrated in the following pertinent pas sages [at pages 817-818]:
The warrant in our case [found to be issued by the Secretary of State without jurisdiction to do so] was an execution in the first instance, without any previous summons ... or proof that he [the plaintiff] was the author of the supposed libels; a power claimed by no other magistrate whatever ... ; it was left to the discretion of these defendants to execute the warrant ... when he might have no witness present to see what they did; for they were to seize all papers, bank bills, or any other valuable papers they might take away if they were so disposed; there might be nobody to detect them. ... [W]e were told by one of these messengers that he was obliged by his oath to sweep away all papers whatsoever; if this is law it would be found in our books, but no such law ever existed in this country; ... [W]e can safely say there is no law in this country to justify the defend ants in what they have done; if there was, it would destroy all the comforts of society; for papers are often the dearest prop erty a man can have. ... (B]ut if the goods are not found there, he [the one who searches and seizes] is a trespasser; the officer in that case is a witness; there are none in this case, no inventory taken; if it had been legal many guards of property would have attended it. ... The law never forces evidence from the party in whose power it is; when an adversary has got your deeds, there is no lawful way of getting them again but by an action. [Emphasis not in original text.]
Now that expression of the common law rights of the citizen from some 225 years ago, stated in Entick v. Carrington, may be contrasted with the actions of the four modern "messengers" under Borisenko's leadership, when they seized the citi zen's papers telling him that it was "required", without even holding so much as a spurious war rant, "no inventory taken" either. Since Rollinson
did not willingly part with his papers, the Crown's servants were purporting to force evidence from the party (Rollinson) in whose power (custody) it was.
The Charter requires the Crown's agents to pro cure a valid warrant for the seizure of private papers
It must not be thought that in this era of the Charter a citizen's rights are less than those of 225 years ago. Here is what Dickson J. wrote on that score for the unanimous Supreme Court in the Hunter et al. v. Southam Inc. case, above cited [at page 158]:
In my view the interests protected by s. 8 are of a wider ambit than those enunciated in Entick v. Carrington. Section 8 is an entrenched constitutional provision. It is not therefore vulnerable to encroachment by legislative enactments in the same way as common law protections. There is, further, noth ing in the language of the section to restrict it to the protection of property or to associate it with the law of trespass. It guarantees a broad and general right to be secure from unrea sonable search and seizure.
Dickson J. then made a comparison with the provisions of the U.S. Constitution which are per tinent here [at pages 158-159]:
The Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution, also guarantees a broad right. It provides:
The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and sei zures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.
Construing this provision in Katz v. United States, 389 U.S. 347 (1967), Stewart J. delivering the majority opinion of the United States Supreme Court declared at p. 351 that "the Fourth Amendment protects people, not places". Justice Stew- art rejected any necessary connection between that Amendment and the notion of trespass. With respect, I believe this approach is equally appropriate in construing the protections in s. 8 of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms. [Emphasis not in original text.]
Having performed the second stage of a border search, and having turned up no contraband, the Borisenko boarding party was without lawful au thority to seize the citizen's private, personal papers. Borisenko testified that as far as he knew a search warrant was not necessary under the Cus toms Act and Regulations on February 1, 1984,
less than a year after the proclamation in vigour of the Charter. For that state of knowledge he may be forgiven, for Hunter et al. v. Southam Inc. was not published by the Supreme Court until Septem- ber 17, 1984. But that forgiveness does not dilute the citizen's undoubted right even in February, 1984, to be secure against unreasonable seizure of his papers, nor does it dilute the intimidating number of agents who jumped aboard the Rogue as daylight disappeared and "required" the citizen to surrender his papers, without providing any inventory of them and in the absence of an objec tive witness or a valid warrant.
The right which the citizen must have enjoyed after the coming into force of the Charter, and which exists to the present, in regard at least to personal papers, can be appreciated in the follow ing definitive passage in the Hunter et al. v. Southam Inc. case [at pages 160-1611:
A requirement of prior authorization, usually in the form of a valid warrant, has been a consistent prerequisite for a valid search and seizure both at common law and under most statutes. Such a requirement puts the onus on the state to demonstrate the superiority of its interest to that of the individual. As such it accords with the apparent intention of the Charter to prefer, where feasible, the right of the individual to be free from state interference to the interests of the state in advancing its purposes through such interference.
I recognize that it may not be reasonable in every instance to insist on prior authorization in order to validate governmental intrusions upon individuals' expectations of privacy. Neverthe less, where it is feasible to obtain prior authorization, I would hold that such authorization is a precondition for a valid search and seizure.
It matters nothing that the personal papers, the so-called logs shown in Exhibit 1, prattle on about pleasant domestic and social matters such as the quality of a meal, "Doady made Roast Beef dinner for us all. (Great)" at page 23, or visits, "Visited by Pam & Baby Courtney & a friend Sue John- ston" at page 3, among many other such entries. Nor does it matter that the recorded weather and barometric reports were taken from The Province newspaper, instead of readings at the place where the Rogue was. Papers, as was stated in 1765, are a person's dearest property and section 8 of the Charter is aimed at preventing their unreasonable seizure in the first place, not just the obtaining of a
judicial enquiry after their seizure as is occurring here. Even if the citizen enjoyed playing the role of ship's master on a 45-foot wooden cruiser with his various "logs" of variably trivial and serious con tents, he remains constitutionally entitled to the protection of section 8. If the Crown's agents here fondly believed, as Borisenko said he at least did, that the citizen's personal papers would provide evidence of offenses allegedly committed by the citizen, all the more obligation for obtaining the prior judicial or other objective permission needed to obtain a valid warrant or other lawful authori zation. The Charter plainly requires that.
Statutory exigency v. Constitutional imperative
Borisenko testified (transcript, at pages 694- 695), that he as a customs agent needed no war rant, but was invested with the statutory authority to do what he did, for which he took full responsi bility (transcript, at page 632), by virtue of the now repealed Customs Act's sections 11 and 231, as they were in 1984, thus:
11. (1) The master of every vessel coming from any port or place out of Canada, or coastwise, and entering any port in Canada, whether laden or in ballast, shall go without delay, when such vessel is anchored or moored, to the custom-house for the port or place of entry where he arrives, and there make a report in writing to the collector or other proper officer, of the arrival and voyage of such vessel.
231. (1) All goods shipped or unshipped, imported or export ed, carried or conveyed, contrary to this Act or to any regula tion, and all goods or vehicles, and all vessels, with regard to which the requirements of this Act or any regulation have not been complied with, or with respect to which any attempt has been made to violate the provisions of this Act or any regula tion, are liable to forfeiture.
Although the Customs Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. C-40, was repealed by subsection 212(3) of the Customs Act, S.C. 1986, c. 1, the former Act furnishes the statute law in effect at all material times. The former Customs Act was pre-Charter legislation. The Crown's written argument, filed March 9, 1989, under tab 8, page 133, asserts the following:
[Amy question as to the constitutionality of the Customs Act as it existed at the time of the incidents, the subject matter of the two actions, is now academic in that a new Customs Act has been brought into force. It is submitted that none of the three Acts referred to are in breach of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, either as alleged or at all.
This argument is untenable and would really request the Court to proceed on the basis either that there was no applicable statute law at the material times, or that the Charter although then fully in force, is ineffectual.
Many draconian provisions of the former Act have been cited by the Crown. They do not need to be recited here. After careful perusal the Court concludes that none of them overrides the constitu tional imperative expressed in section 8 of the Charter so as to authorize the warrantless seizure of the citizen's personal papers. To the extent that any such provisions of that former statute purport ed to authorize such an unreasonable seizure, they are of no force and effect.
The actual seizure by Borisenko and/or his cohort on February 1, 1984, of the citizen's per sonal or private papers, called "ship's logs" infringed the citizen's right guaranteed by section 8 of the Charter. The citizen never waived his right.
The seizure of those papers constituted no "bor- der search" as referred to in R. v. Simmons (above) and in R. v. Jacoy. The "border search" was effected when the Borisenko boarding party sought, but could find no contraband in the citi zen's possession. The Charter imperatively gov erned the situation which former agent Borisenko and his boarding party created on February 1, 1984, in regard to the seizure of the papers.
Section 24 of the Charter
Section 24 of the Charter contemplates the sit uation found here. It runs:
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.
(2) Where, in proceedings under subsection (1), a court concludes that evidence was obtained in a manner that
infringed or denied any rights or freedoms guaranteed by this Charter, the evidence shall be excluded if it is established that, having regard to all the circumstances, the admission of it in the proceedings would bring the administration of justice into disrepute.
The Court has found that Rollinson's right to be secure against unreasonable seizure has been infringed. That citizen has applied to this Court in these two properly constituted actions to obtain the remedies of damages and exclusion of the evi dence, such as it is, provided by his said unreason ably seized personal papers, pursuant to subsection 24(2).
The next question to be answered is whether, according to subsection 24(2) of the Charter, "the admission of [the wrongfully seized papers] in the[se] proceedings would bring the administration of justice into disrepute."
The term "administration of justice" does not restrict itself to criminal law proceedings, for according to section 101 of the Constitution Act, 1867 [30 & 31 Vict., c. 3 (U.K.) (as am. by Canada Act 1982, 1982, c. 11 (U.K.), Schedule to the Constitution Act, 1982, Item 1) [R.S.C., 1985, Appendix II, No. 5] ] and amendments thereto, these civil proceedings are based on Parliament's view of "the better administration of the laws of Canada", "notwithstanding anything in this [Con- stitution Act, 1867]" [emphasis added]. These words in the first adopted part of the Constitution are capable of receiving and subsuming, and do receive and subsume, the later expression "the administration of justice" as naturally as do the words of section 92 head 14 of the same constitu tional documents even if the last mentioned expression is confined to operation "within the province" whereas the similar expression in section 101 may operate notwithstanding anything in the Constitution.
The repute of the administration of justice
The Crown's counsel argues that even if, as the Court finds, the manner of the seizure infringed the citizen's rights guaranteed by the Charter, the admission of the personal papers into evidence would not bring the administration of justice into disrepute. In so arguing, counsel reverts again, at page 141 of written argument, to the Jacoy judg-
ment of the Supreme Court of Canada, and the concept of "border searches". In that regard Crown counsel wrote:
The [Supreme] Court held that the evidence (the cocaine) should not have been excluded under s.24(2) of the Charter. The evidence of the narcotics was real evidence which existed independently of the Charter violation and its admission would not detract from a fair trial. The Customs officers were acting in good faith. There was a serious social evil with which the accused was charged. Administration [sic] of the evidence would not bring the administration of justice into disrepute.
It is submitted that similar criteria apply here. Ex. 1 is real evidence. A sovereign nation must be able to control access to its borders. The evidence existed independently of the Charter violation.
This argument entirely misses the point of the citizen's complaint. In the first place private papers are vastly different from cocaine, and indeed cannot be classified as any kind of contra band. They are not generally, and despite the citizen's playing at being a ship's master, were not in the instant case, anything akin to "business records", a claim not heard here on the Crown's behalf. The Court so characterizes the citizen, because that which he said was the genuine "ship's log" was not produced, it having been lost, or least never returned to him, by Borisenko. What appears as Exhibit 1 is not business-like in the manner of a real "ship's log". Moreover, there is assuredly no "social evil" whatever in the citizen keeping and having private papers, whose privacy the common law itself has protected for centuries from the prying eyes of minions of the State. Far from any social evil, the privacy is in sweet accord with what the law calls public policy.
The Crown's counsel argues that the "customs officers were acting in good faith". Such might be conceded in so far as they conceived that they had the overriding right to effect a secondary border search for contraband, but there having been none for them to find, the concession of good faith diminishes abruptly at that point. In resolving the witnesses' credibility in their conflict of "hard swearing" the Court has hereinbefore preferred the citizen's testimony. The Court finds that,
although Borisenko in his first written account of the seizure of the papers did indicate, in Exhibit 2(77), that he told Rollinson that the customs agents were "required" to take away the papers — an erroneous, or deliberate, misstatement of the law — which the citizen well remembered in tes timony, Borisenko purported to dress up that wrongful seizure with accounts of Rollinson's cooperation and willingness to press those papers on Borisenko. Neither of the two of three customs agents present aboard the Rogue who testified, could remember that anything of that nature was said between Rollinson and Borisenko. Rollinson denies it and his testimony is preferred. The mis statement was continued into Borisenko's testimo ny. Borisenko's fulsome and repetitious embroider ing of tales of Rollinson's utter willingness to part with his papers is an egregious misstatement of fact from which the Court draws the natural infer ence of Borisenko's consciousness of wrongdoing. Despite the former inspector's asserted belief that he was empowered to seize the vessel and every thing aboard it, he was aware that the Rogue was the Rollinson's abode or dwelling, and the Court, by inference, holds that he was conscious of doing wrong in asserting that he was "required" to take away those papers and, then, in taking them away without so much as giving the citizen an inventory- receipt for them. The Court, therefore, rejects the Crown's argument about the "good faith" of its customs agents.
There is no doubt that a sovereign nation must be able to control access to its borders, but that lofty principle looks gratuitous when applied to the citizen's personal papers. That is because, by sub section 6(1) of the Charter, this sovereign nation guarantees the citizen "the right to enter, remain in and leave Canada", personal papers and all.
In the Attorney General's written reply to Rol- linson's counsel's written argument, filed April 4, 1989, the Crown's counsel virtually makes the citizen's argument for him. Citing R. v. Rao (1984), 46 O.R. (2d) 88, a judgment of the Ontario Court of Appeal in which, in regard to warrantless searches, it is said that different stand ards applied to vehicles, vessels and aircraft because of their mobility, counsel wrote at page 48 therein at page 121 [of Rao]:
The legitimate expectation of privacy in one's home or office is one of the most valued rights of the individual afforded protection by a democratic society. As Mr. Justice Lamer, speaking for the Supreme Court of Canada, said in Descoteaux et al. v. Mierzwinski et al., [1982] 1 S.C.R. 860 at p. 889, 70 C.C.C. (2d) 385 at p. 410, 141 D.L.R. (3d) 590 at p. 615: "Searches are an exception to the oldest and most fundamental principles of the common law, and as such the power to search should be strictly controlled."
To that, this Court responds "amen". The Borisen- ko boarding party knew that the vessel Rogue was that nearly elderly couple's home. They also knew, or ought to have known, from their documentary research and all the informers who, they said, alleged anonymously the Rollinsons' trading in contraband U.S. liquor, that White Rock was their home port.
Since the common law for at least 225 years (and longer) has enshrined the individual's expec tation of privacy as a right, one would think that those who administer the law, including the Cus toms Act, would be aware of that right. Indeed the Court infers that Borisenko was not so ignorant of it as he later asserted, and was, on February 1, 1984, conscious of his wrongdoing in "requiring" the citizen to hand over the latter's private papers.
Having acknowledged the distinction between a dwelling and a mere means of transportation, the Crown's counsel, still at page 48 of the said reply, pointed out the very difference between seizure of contraband and private papers, even in a dwelling- vessel by citing this passage from Rao at page 125:
Further, a warrantless search of vehicles, vessels or aircraft, which may move quickly away, may be reasonable where there are reasonable grounds for believing that such contains a narcotic. [Emphasis not in original text.]
Before he seized the citizen's private papers, Bori- senko knew to a first-hand certainty that the vessel contained no narcotic, or any other kind of contra band. He, nevertheless, went on to exceed his authority and to infringe the citizen's rights, con scious of his wrongdoing.
The administration of justice would be brought into disrepute, whereupon the evidence shall be excluded
The manner of the infringement of the citizen's right guaranteed by section 8 of the Charter — the intimidation effected by four able-bodied men boarding and searching their dwelling-vessel after dark, the misstatement of the law's requirement, the agent's consciousness of infringing the citizen's right by dissembling and further misstatement and all the other recited circumstances — is such that to permit the Crown to bring about those papers' admission in these proceedings would bring the administration of justice into disrepute. The Court is concerned with only these proceedings, the two actions numbers T-560-84 and T-245-87. How ever, in further terms of the intimidation inflicted on that nearly elderly couple, the Rollinsons, it may be assumed that Borisenko's boarding party's aggressiveness could have signalled his willingness to prosecute them for alleged offenses in and under the Customs Act. This all happened to them in the context of a seizure which Superintendent Langley described as premature. Borisenko could not have reasonably believed that the Rollinsons would escape out to sea and never again be seen at White Rock or any other Canadian port. The foregoing circumstances establish that the seized papers must be excluded, pursuant to subsection 24(2) of the Charter.
Alternatively, excluded on common law principles
In the event that it should be held that the remedy provided in subsection 24(2) of the Chart er be not applicable in these circumstances, never theless and in the alternative, the papers ought to be, and will be excluded from the evidence in these cases on common law principles. In effect such a decision is taken according to principles which themselves are exceptions to the principal princi ple.
The principal principle is well known in Canada. It states that material which constitutes evidence
relevant and probative to the matters in issue is admissible and its having been obtained by improper means does not affect either the rele vance or the trustworthiness of the evidence. The judge has negligible discretion to exclude such evidence. The learned authors of The Law of Evidence in Civil Cases, Butterworths, Toronto, 1974, deal with this principle in chapter 3 of their work under the heading of "Illegally Obtained Evidence" at pages 335 and following. The authors treat this subject with considerable irony and dis taste for it evinces neither justice nor logic. First, however, the authors, Sopinka and Lederman, note at page 335:
Any examination of the present law must, of necessity, deal with criminal [law] decisions, for they are the leading ones, and they have had considerable impact on the admissibility of such evidence in civil cases.
The first exception: document obtained by trickery
First, regarding the exceptions, the learned authors cite the ill-regarded and melancholy deci sion of the Judicial Committee of the Privy Coun cil in Kuruma v. The Queen, [1955] A.C. 197. It can be asserted with justification that the Kuruma judgment was the modern unintended progenitor of section 24 of the Charter which, as analyzed above, is the antithesis of the principal principle which latter was enunciated with deplorable rigidi ty in the Kuruma judgment. The judge's negligible discretion to exclude illegally obtained evidence was however illustrated by Lord Goddard C.J. (at page 204) thus:
1f, for instance, some admission of some piece of evidence, e.g., a document, had been obtained from a defendant by a trick, no doubt the judge might properly rule it out.
This Court considers that in the above expression of an exception to the principle of the unconcerned admission of relevant, but illegally obtained, evi dence, the common law is to be discovered. Sopin- ka and Lederman suggest at page 347 of their opus that the discretion's existence in Canada is in considerable doubt, as of 1974. Here the doubt cannot continue but must be resolved. The Court asserts the discretion.
The above expressed common law exception to the principal rule is the basis for the Court's decision to "rule out" the contents of Exhibit 1, the personal papers, the so-called "logs" which were seized from the citizen by former inspector Borisenko on the basis of the latter's misstatement of law to the effect that he was "required" to take them. The Court has already found that Borisenko was fixed with a consciousness of wrongdoing when he misstated the law to the citizen as a compelling reason for seizing the papers. The quintessence of a trick, in so far as it relies on oral or written communication, is conscious misstate ment, or deception. On the basis, then, of the exceptional but negligible judicial discretion enun ciated by Lord Goddard C.J. for the unanimous tribunal in the Kuruma case, the Court now "rules out", or excludes from evidence the contents of Exhibit 1, being the seized "logs" or diaries, wher ever and whenever they are additionally tendered in the two cases at bar.
The second exception: evidence gravely prejudicial, of tenuous admissibility and of trifling probative force
This matter was much considered by a pro foundly riven Supreme Court of Canada in the case of R. v. Wray, [1971] S.C.R. 272, in which the Kuruma case and that of Noor Mohamed v. The King, [1949] A.C. 182 (P.C.), as well as Collis v. Gunn, [1964] 1 Q.B. 495, at page 501, were carefully weighed and considered. Writing for what appears to be the majority in the Wray case, Mr. Justice Martland (at page 293) expressed these thoughts:
This development of the idea of a general discretion to exclude admissible evidence is not warranted by the authority on which it purports to be based. The dictum of Lord Goddard, in the Kuruma case, appears to be founded on Noor Mohamed, and it has, I think, been unduly extended in some of the subsequent cases. It recognized a discretion to disallow evi dence if the strict rules of admissibility would operate unfairly against the accused. Even if this statement be accepted, in the way in which it is phrased, the exercise of a discretion by the trial judge arises only if the admission of the evidence would operate unfairly. The allowance of admissible evidence relevant to the issue before the court and of substantial probative value may operate unfortunately for the accused, but not unfairly. It is only the allowance of evidence gravely prejudicial to the accused, the admissibility of which is tenuous, and whose probative force in relation to the main issue before the court is trifling, which can be said to operate unfairly.
In the cases at bar the admission of the so-called logs — the citizen's personal papers — would without doubt operate unfairly. The purpose for which former agent Borisenko sought, and the Crown's counsel seeks, to utilize the papers in Exhibit 1 would be gravely prejudicial for in real ity their probative force in relation to the issue of the citizen's inbound customs reports is trifling because together and separately those papers are quite unreliable for that purpose, rendering their admissibility tenuous. From the Crown's point of view, the evidential weight of the content of Exhib it 1 is not only zero, it is negative, for it tends to corroborate the Rollinsons' testimony (although the papers were written more or less sporadically, but sometimes regularly over the course of some fourteen months prior to seizure by Borisenko), and it tends to corroborate certain of the govern ment's agents' recorded observations, which are adverse to the Crown's posture herein.
His Lordship explained that the customs agent in charge of the investigation believed that by comparing the log notations for entering the U.S.A. with those for returning to Canada, the allegation of non-reporting would be substantiat ed. But this proposition depended upon certain assumptions, all of which were false.
There was much discussion of form E-99 — a document to be prepared by the customs official and issued to those reporting inbound. Plaintiff's testimony was that the officials sometimes did not attend at the dock and that on such occasions a form E-99 was not received. The position taken by counsel for the Crown was that the onus was on plaintiff to disprove the allegations of non- reporting by production of an E-99 for each occa sion. The Crown did not, however, indicate any statutory obligation for the retention of E-99 forms. There was no analogy between form E-99 and the restricted weapon certificate considered in R. v. Schwartz, [1988] 2 S.C.R. 443. That which was certified under the Criminal Code — the possession of a restricted weapon — could be for a lengthy duration while that which was per-
mitted by form E-99 was the transitory action of entering Canada. There was no legal or logical requirement that a citizen retain all the E-99s issued to him.
Upon the evidence, Muldoon J. concluded that plaintiff had been a victim of the customs inspec tors' overwork or laxity coupled with zeal on the part of management. The agents were either lax or overwhelmed, middle managers were asserting that duties were properly performed and when the internal investigation was launched no one would admit that there were problems. Those involved with the West Coast customs service thought it would be better "if the axe were to fall only on Rollinson's neck". The Court accepted as cred ible plaintiff's evidence in every instance where it was in conflict with that of the Crown's witnesses. This preference was based on the demeanour of the various witnesses, the objective evidence and the reasonable inferences drawn therefrom. The Court found as a fact that plaintiff had reported each entry to Customs but on many occasions the officials had failed to discharge their duty of coming down to the dock and preparing a form E-99.
On February 21, 1984 the Rogue was seized for a second time. This was for repairs made to her in the U.S.A. and not reported to Canadian Customs. Plaintiff's lawyer paid the amount demanded "pending resolution of the matter".
On March 13, 1984 plaintiff's vessel was again seized by officials who ordered that she not be moved from the White Rock pier without prior authorization. While the Rogue was thus tied up under seizure, a severe storm occurred in which plaintiff's wife was swept into the sea but he was able to rescue her. The Rogue suffered damage in this storm. Furthermore, officials threatened plaintiff with having the Rogue towed by an unseaworthy vessel.
Special and general damages
This third seizure of the Rogue, based on uncon- stitutionally obtained, inadmissible and thoroughly unreliable documents for the purpose, the citizen's private papers, that is: based upon uncertain evi dence of breaches of the Act, which the citizen credibly repudiates, is an unlawful seizure ab initio and cannot be sustained in law nor approved by the Court. It was tortiously effected by the Crown's servants, for which the Crown is liable to the citizen for general and special damages, to gether with interest thereon if the same be lawfully available to any other successful, sui generis liti gant of full age. Special damages, requiring fur ther evidence no doubt will relate to the cost of "good-as-before-the-seizure" repairs to the vessel and any other loss or damage of and to the citi zen's property, but including any provable although unlikely economic loss. General damages will be awarded as compensation for the Crown's servants' importunity, not to forget harassment, wrongful seizure with consciousness of wrong doing, malice on the part of Borisenko, who in addition to all else went to some length to preju dice the adjudicator Marilyn Maskell and poison her mind against the citizen in Exhibit 2(108) where his report, covered by a "Dear Marilyn" letter, states: "All are VERY serious charges, demanding the utmost attention of the person charged. All are as a result of blatant refusal by ROLLINSON to comply with the laws of Canada!" Borisenko is both investigator and prosecutor here, and he takes on the role also of instructing the one person, Maskell, who is both judge and jury. Gen eral damages will also lie for the cavalier treat ment of the citizen and Canada Customs' abuse of process by seizing the vessel first on February 1, 1984, upon a singular unspecified allegation of non-reporting which the Crown's servants conven iently just forgot and elided it into the repairs allegation which, when settled, was followed by a third seizure based on the allegation of some 22 non-reports for following their own invented non- statutory procedure for reporting, when it was in their hands that their invented procedure so often turned to ashes. So, wounded feelings created by oppressive and malicious conduct by Borisenko and his crew, amply established, and general harassment, the terror of the storm, and the gener al violation of rights will all generate general
damages, which after being assessed by the Court, will be payable to the citizen by the Crown.
The Crown's posture
The Crown's witness Deszcz was examined in chief by the Crown's counsel as to the inbound reporting procedure in relation to which the vessel was seized and the sum of $1,100 levied for its release. (Exhibit 2(129)A; transcript, at page 95.) Here is the passage in volume 1 in which Deszcz is reported to have explained [transcript, at pages 96-97]:
Q. And turning now to ... Exhibit 2, document 130, which purports to be a deputy ministerial recommendation ... by Ms. Maskell under the provisions of Section 162 of the Customs Act dealing with the March 13, 1984 seizure, is that correct?
A. That's correct.
Q. And do you know if any other inquiries were made other than that which is contained in the material that was presented by either Customs or on behalf of Mr. Rollinson?
A. Ms. Maskell did make inquiries by phone before she made this recommendation as to the procedure for report ing inward of vessels, that report in question. It was determined from that phone discussion that the procedure was that inner reports could not be made by telephone. That is the report could be notified by phone, but the procedure was that an officer would go to the dock in question on every occasion and make a report.
THE COURT: Do you know anything about that procedure in your official capacity, Mr. Deszcz?
A. No, I do not, sir.
THE COURT: So you don't know what the person reporting his presence would or could do if the cus toms officer did not go to the dock? He could hardly bring the boat to the Douglas station?
A. That's correct. I don't, I can't give you a definite answer on that, My Lord. I'm only going by what the informa tion we received by making the phone inquiry at the time. And I was satisfied that that was sufficient confirmation as to the procedure.
Now, the Court hardly needs to recite any fur ther evidence about the customs-invented non- statutory, ostensibly authoritative procedure for the inbound reporting of vessels, which was in place at all material times at White Rock pier. What must now be recited to be appreciated is Crown's counsel's statement in written argument of the Crown's astounding posture in this regard.
In the initial argument of Her Majesty the Queen, at pages 95-96, counsel wrote:
The Customs Act, R.S.C. 1970, Chap. 40, provides by sections 11 and 18 that a person in charge of a vessel or vehicles entering Canada must go to the Customs-House at the port or place of entry and report.
Customs has set up a system at the White Rock pier to accommodate incoming vessels. The policy followed by Cus toms of dispatching Customs officers to the pier to inspect and clear the vessel does not remove the obligation to report. To control entries, a system was in operation whereby a Customs form, an E99, was filled out upon entry of a vessel, one copy handed to the Master of the vessel and the other copy retained by Customs. At the same time, an entry would be made in another Customs form, an E63. If the Customs officer did not attend on the vessel, an E99 would be made out anyway and the number of the E99 supplied to the Master to provide him with a means of reference to allow Customs, or the R.C.M.P., to verify that the vessel had legally entered Canada.
Rollinson argues that the Master, in this case Rollinson, has fulfilled his duty under the Customs Act to report inward by simply making the phone call.
He knew, or should have known, the correct procedure and
the requirements of the Customs Act.
"None are [sic] so blind as those who will not see."
The argument runs obliviously to the inherent contradiction between asserting the vessel's master "must go to the Customs-House", and acquiescing in the supposition that, "If the Customs officer did not attend on the vessel".
After considering the citizen's counsel's written argument, counsel for the Crown riposted by re-stating the Crown's position, starting at page 22 of the reply, thus:
Section 11(1) makes it clear that the duty of a Master such as Rollinson coming into White Rock harbour was as follows:
1. To go without delay to the customs-house for the port where he entered and anchored or moored.
2. At such customs-house make a report in writing.
Clearly, Rollinson has not complied with section 11 on any of the occasions of the alleged non-reports.
— He did not go to the Douglas Port of entry customs-house.
— He did not there make a report in writing as required.
On the question of whether Customs officials can waive the provisions of the Customs Act, and other matters the case of R. v. Sun Parlor (F.C.T.D.) 1973 F.C.R. [sic] 1055 is relevant.
The provisions appear harsh but they are, in my opinion, clear and unambiguous and while I have some sympathy for the defendants it is clear that their failure to declare and enter the imported goods as required by sections 18, 20, 21 and 22 ... has caused their misfortune.
It is submitted that the reasoning in Sun Parlor supra applies to the M.V. "Rogue" which the Crown alleges has been forfeited for failure to report inward as required under s. 11 of the Customs Act 1970 and by reason of s. 231 of the Customs Act set out below:
(1) All goods shipped or unshipped, imported or exported, carried or conveyed, contrary to this Act or to any regula tion, and all goods or vehicles, and all vessels, with regard to which the requirements of this Act or any regulations have not been complied with, or with respect to which any attempt has been made to violate the provisions of this Act or any regulations, are liable to forfeiture. [Underlining added.]
Kong et al. v. The Queen (1984), 10 D.L.R. (4th) 226 (F.C.T.D.) Collier J. is relevant.
At pages 235-238:
Put simply: all goods, of any kind, no matter where, when, or how acquired, no matter whether reported in writing a hundred times before, must be reported in writing each time any person arrives in Canada from elsewhere.
Further, the duty to report is not dependent on any question ing, or prompting by a customs officer, as to whether any goods are being brought in. The section requires everyone to seek out a customs officer and to "report".
In Glisic v. The Queen (1988) [sic] 8 [sic] D.L.R. (4th) 90 [(1984), 3 D.L.R., and [1984] 1 F.C. 797] ... My colleague, Strayer J., at pp. 92-4 said:
Thus it is the position of the Crown that, even accepting the evidence of the plaintiff that he owned this jewellery since at least 1967, he should have declared it when he first arrived in Canada and on every subsequent occasion when he returned to Canada with it in his possession
including April 7, 1980. A failure to do so makes his goods subject to forfeiture by virtue of ss. 180(1) ...
Section 18 of the Customs Act requires a voluntary, unsolicited written report ("declaration" in modern language).
I turn now to Grace Kong.
It was contended she had complied with the statutory requirements when she returned to Canada in 1975. She can didly said she could not recall whether she made a written declaration. Unfortunately, the onus is on her to establish she did.
In the absence of that proof, her contentions must suffer the same fate as those of her mother. [Underlining added.]
It is submitted that section 11 is to be construed the same way as section 18.
The administration of the Douglas port tried to accommodate the difficulties of complying with s.11 at the Douglas port of entry where the customs-house was several miles from the White Rock pier.
The administration at the Douglas port arranged for a system of reporting which would satisfy the administration. This involved the use of Customs forms E99 as a method of verifying reporting into Canada as required by s.11. A Customs Inspec tor would attend on the vessel at the White Rock pier, make an oral report and issue an E99, a copy of which was given to the Master or person in charge of the vessel. On occasion, a Customs Inspector could not attend and in such cases, an E99 would be issued and the identifying number of such E99 would be supplied to such person seeking to report. The system afforded verification to the person seeking to land and to Customs of a report accepted by Customs.
If this Honourable Court does not agree that Rollinson on a number of occasions failed to comply with s. 11(1), it is submitted in the alternative, that Rollinson did not comply with the administrative policy above outlined which would have allowed Customs to verify that he reported the vessel to Customs.
Under the administrative system in force at the relevant times, the person seeking to report would have either the E99 or the number of the E99 which would allow Customs to verify that the vessel had been cleared by Customs.
It is submitted that s. 11 of the Customs Act was not complied with by Rollinson. Compliance by Rollinson with the policy outlined in Ex. 12 and in the viva voce evidence mentioned in the preceding paragraph would have meant that seizure action would no doubt not have been taken against the vessel. Since that policy was not complied with, proceedings were taken. It is submitted that there is a clear breach of s.11 by Rollinson in the case of each of the alleged non-reports.
The Crown's argument would make duplicitous deceivers and callous oppressors out of the customs
personnel employed at Douglas station and their superiors right up to, if not past, middle manage ment. They do not deserve such harsh contumely, for they invented their non-statutory procedure, requiring inbound mariners to telephone to Doug- las station, out of sheer necessity. In trying to make it operate, they failed from time to time, because of pressure of work at the highway station and the distance to go in order to meet an inbound vessel, described by Toomey. They failed, from time to time, because of the negligence, laxity, impatience or fatigue of some of them. Threatened as they may well have been by their superiors with prosecution under the Act, a matter mentioned in Crown counsel's argument, or with jeopardy to their employment or other disciplinary measures conjured up by the investigations by Langley and of the internal affairs investigator, Wincherook, it is no wonder that none of the customs inspectors has volunteered any information or testimony about the system's 22 alleged failures to attend in the Rollinsons' reporting, and the couple of fail ures to attend in Clarke's reporting.
Here, it is not clear whether the Crown is accusing the citizen of not complying with the signboard or with the statute. However, for the Crown to place an official, although non-statutory sign indicating the necessity, and indeed, the com mand to the citizen and all others to telephone and then to repudiate that system devised by its ser vants, and to seize the citizen's vessel for not complying with the Act when he tried to comply with the sign, is an abuse of power by the Crown. In its counsel's argument, the Crown claims that it can, with impunity, lead the citizen and other boaters astray from the statute by means of its servants' official sign, and then seize the citizen's vessel because he complied with the Crown's sign and not with the strict provisions of the Act!
Seen clearly in the transcript, volume 2, pages 273-274, is the passage in which counsel flaunted that abuse of power, cross-examining the citizen:
Q. Well, I'm asking whether you were familiar with the
Customs Act?
A. No, sir.
Q. You were familiar with the powers of a Customs officer
given by the Customs Act?
A. In general, yes.
Q. You were familiar with the duty to report to a Customs house upon entry into Canada with a vessel?
A. With a vessel, I was familiar that was required to tele phone in and report your vessel and any passengers, and any articles that you were returning to Canada.
Q. Now, I have a copy of the Customs Act here, Mr. Rollinson. I am certainly unfamiliar with that provision that says you can telephone in. If you want to glance through it you're welcome.
A. Thank you, sir, but the only instructions regarding it that I have any knowledge of are nailed to a sign at the end of the pier, which directs incoming vessels to telephone Customs at that particular telephone number ascribed [sic] there. [Emphasis not in transcript.]
The Court finds that the citizen did "invariably and without exception" (transcript, at page 277) report to customs in compliance with customs' official sign requiring him to do so.
Now, the Crown purports to spring the trap. Now, it is said that it is not good enough to comply with the Crown's official sign, when the citizen should have gone up along the pier and up along the road in order to make an official, spontaneous, written report at Douglas station, in accordance with the provisions of the previous Customs Act. If this were not the Crown's assertion and the Crown's sign, but those of a private person, firm or corporation, one would quickly characterize this behaviour as fraud and misrepresentation. It is beyond doubt a misrepresentation amounting to wrongful entrapment. After all, the Crown's ser vants in the instant matters were not, and do not purport to have been, engaged in matters of coun terintelligence or any kind of activity of the nature of national emergency or State security. No inter dicted drug dealings are alleged, either. In that regard, and by contrast with all the foregoing absent considerations, the Crown's posture in these cases is all the more strange and startling. The Crown's arguments proclaim that it is willing, with apparent equanimity, to engage in abuse of power.
Had such deplorable State misconduct not been all too well known in this country over the decades since Confederation, one would be hard pressed to account for the enactment of the Canadian Bill of Rights, S.C. 1960, c. 44, now R.S.C., 1985, Appendix III, or the entrenchment of the Canadi- an Charter of Rights and Freedoms, being Part I of the Constitution Act, 1982, enacted by the Canada Act 1982, 1982, c. 11 (U.K.). What else but abuse of State power induced judgments based on common law principles alone from Entick v. Carrington (earlier cited) to Nicholson v. Haldi- mand-Norfolk Regional Board of Commissioners of Police, [1979] 1 S.C.R. 311; and Martineau v. Matsqui Institution Disciplinary Board, [1980] 1 S.C.R. 602?
The Special Lectures of the Law Society of Upper Canada in 1979, considered the topic of abuse of power. Mr. Justice Linden contributed a paper titled "Tort Law's Role in the Regulation and Control of the Abuse of Power", beginning at page 67 of the De Boo Limited publication. Here, written some three years before the entrenchment of the Charter, are passages from chapter 3, "Con- trol of Governmental Officials" (at pages, 73-82):
Although once immune from liability, governments have gradu ally allowed themselves to be held civilly responsible for their wrongful acts, despite some lingering procedural problems... . Since the usual systems of control over these employees (train- ing, discipline, firing, etc.) has proved somewhat imperfect, tort law has been used as one method of combating some of the misconduct of certain public officials. Tort law has recognized that ordinary citizens rely for protection and advice on govern ment employees, and that they are entitled to competent service.
With the advent and expansion of Hedley Byrne & Co. Ltd. v. Heller & Partners Ltd., [1964] A.C. 465, governmental officials have also been held liable for giving negligent advice, leading to economic loss.... A similar case is Windsor Motors Ltd. v. Corporation of Powell River (1969), 68 W.W.R. 173 (B.C.C.A.), where liability was found when a municipal licence inspector negligently informed the plaintiff that a certain loca tion was suitable for an automobile dealership, when in fact the zoning regulations prohibited such a use.... Another surpris ingly ad'.-e case is Gadutsis v. Milne et al., [1973] 2 O.R. 503 (see also 11.1. & M. Shoppers Ltd. v. Town of Berwick (1977), 82 D.L.R. (3d) 23), where liability was imposed against a
municipality when it negligently issued a building permit, which was later revoked, to someone who began to build in reliance upon it. Mr. Justice Parker explained (at page 507):
` ... the employees in the zoning department of the munici pality were there to give out information as to zoning. [They] must have known that persons inquiring would place reliance upon what they said. [The employee] gave out incorrect information in the course of employment directly to the person seeking information. Under these circumstances, I find that the municipality owed a duty of care ... , that it failed to discharge such duty and that as a consequence, the plaintiffs suffered loss."
Similarly, in Couture v. The Queen (1972), 28 D.L.R. (3d) 301 (Fed. Ct.), it was decided that, if a C.R.T.C. officer's negli gence leads a person to believe that he has a licence when in fact he does not, and he relies on this to his detriment, liability may be found (see [1972] F.C. 1137).
The function of negligence law is, thus, to be limited primari ly to the review of lesser officials and the way in which they conduct ordinary business. It will have little impact upon the discretionary or quasi-judicial functions of the more senior civil servants, who will remain subject to other remedies. In support of this view, Mr. Justice Laskin suggested that "the risk of loss from the exercise of legislative and adjudicative authority is a general public risk and not one for which compensation can be supported on the basis of a private duty of care. The situation is different where a claim for damages for negligence is based on acts done in pursuance or in implementation of legislation or of adjudicative decrees" [We[bridge Holdings Ltd. v. Metropoli tan Corp'n of Greater Winnipeg, [1971] S.C.R. 957; (1972), 22 D.L.R. (3d) 470 (S.C.C.).]
If senior officials, including even Ministers of the Crown, deliberately abuse their power, and thereby cause loss to citi zens, they may be answerable in damages.
Perhaps the most celebrated case, in this area is Roncarelli v. Duplessis, [1959] S.C.R. 121.... The Court indicated that a public officer "is responsible for acts done by him without legal justification". Although there was some reliance on Article 1053 of the Civil Code, the judges treated the principle as though it was also part of the common law.
Another well-known case is Farrington v. Thompson, [1959] V.R. 286, where some police officers, purporting to exercise their power under the Licensing Act which provided that conviction of a third offence would render a licence forfeited, required the plaintiff to close down his hotel. There was no third conviction, according to the judge, and the jury found that the defendants failed to exercise due care in ascertaining whether a third conviction had been obtained. The Court found, nevertheless, that the defendants were liable for "mis-
feasance in a public office". Mr. Justice Smith said that "if some other public officer does an act, which, to his knowledge, amounts to an abuse of his office, and thereby causes damage to another person, then an action in tort for misfeasance in a public office will lie" (ibid.; see also Molot, "Tort Remedies Against Administrative Tribunals for Economic Loss", Law Society of Upper Canada Special Lectures on New Develop ments in the Law of Torts (1973), at page 425). There was apparently sufficient knowledge of lack of jurisdiction to satisfy the court that liability was called for.
These cases are just a few of many that require governmental officials to exercise their power, at the least honestly and in good faith, and at the most legally and carefully. Wide latitude should be permitted to governmental officials in the legitimate conduct of their activity, but the courts seem to be moving toward holding them liable in much the same way as other professionals.
To seize a person's vessel, especially if it be also that person's dwelling, and to seize the same per son's automobiles, and to hold those goods against the exacted payment of a penalty, or outright forfeiture, is certainly not to confer a benefit, but rather to inflict a detriment, harm, loss or injuriam, even if permitted by statute or judg ment. Such are acts which impoverish and thereby do injury to a person's estate and security. One requires lawful authority to do this to anyone.
The same author quoted earlier herein, Mr. Justice Linden, about a decade later, in 1988, opens the second chapter of his fourth edition of Canadian Tort Law with these words (at pages 31-32):
The first basis of tort liability is the intentional infliction of harm. Where one person deliberately causes damage to another, tort law generally requires that person to make good the loss so inflicted. In rendering civilly responsible all inten tional wrong-doers, tort law seeks to advance its various aims. Individuals whose interests are deliberately interfered with must be compensated for their losses.
[Molding intentional wrong-doers liable focusses attention on their acts and enables citizens and government officials to react to them, if they choose to do so.
Conduct is intentional if the actor desires to produce the consequences that follow from his act. ... Intention, therefore, is a concept which connects conduct with its results.
Conduct may be treated as intentional even though its results are not actually desired, if the consequences are known to be substantially certain to follow. ... In these circumstances it is sometimes said that the intention is "constructive", or that it has been "imputed" to the defendant. In other words, the conduct is treated as though it were intentional, while strictly it is not, because the law will not tolerate anyone being dealt with less leniently on such facts. This is not unlike the criminal law principle which holds that individuals are deemed to intend the natural and probable consequences of their acts.
Given the Crown's argument to the effect that the citizen ought to have known and complied with the literal provisions of the previous Customs Act, what can one make of the Crown's own sign placed visibly on the White Rock pier, requiring inbound mariners to telephone to the customs-house at Douglas or at Vancouver? Does it evince the Crown's servants' intention to entrap such persons so that their property may be seized? Is that what the Crown's posture in these cases amounts to? Or does that behaviour evince a constructive inten tion, whose consequences are sure to follow because inbound mariners would naturally tele phone rather than set out personally to go the significant distance (assuming they could find the correct direction) to the customs-house? Then, the Crown could say, when its servants did not attend upon the vessel, that the master did wrong by not attending at the customs-house. In insisting upon this line of argument, is the Crown not promoting and admitting its servants' tortious misconduct against the citizen? These are adversarial proceed ings. The Crown may abandon this line of argu ment if it so choose, prior to the next stage of this litigation, upon which it has agreed with the citi zen: the assessment of damages. One can com prehend readily that the measure of special dam ages alone on this argument, which evinces tortious misconduct, would be the value of every thing which the Crown has seized from the citizen in wielding its statutory powers, because it has misled him, or entrapped him, into not complying with the strict requirements of the statute. That, by the Crown's own view of these cases, is the Crown's own responsibility, acting through its offi cials and servants.
The rule of criminal law, ignorantia juris non excusat, is not applicable against the citizen in the cases at bar. As Glanville Williams has stated in his Textbook of Criminal Law, (Stevens & Sons, London, 1983) at page 456, the most important limitation of the rule is that it applies only to criminal law. Moreover, it should be noted that Parliament did not append to sections 11 or 18 of the previous Customs Act any provision akin to section 19 of the Criminal Code [R.S.C. 1970, c. C-34] then in force or akin to section 128 of the National Defence Act [R.S.C. 1970, c. N-4], also at all material times, then too in force. Therefore the Crown's sign on the White Rock pier which led the citizen and, as the evidence amply discloses, all other inbound mariners, astray provides a good answer and excuse against the Crown's later aston ishing repudiation of its own published, misleading sign with its contrastingly harsh invocation of the literal provisions of sections 11 and 18 of the old Customs Act.
Denial of Charter rights
This betrayal of the citizen, this tortious miscon duct on the part of the Crown's servants, in light of the Crown's argued position herein, could arguably not have been permitted to succeed even before the constitutional entrenchment of the Charter, and it certainly cannot be permitted to succeed as of 1984, well into the era of the Charter. The provi sions of the Charter which, being "the supreme law of Canada", operate to relieve the citizen in this case, both directly, and alternatively to his common law rights against abuse of State power, are these:
7. Everyone has the right to ... security of the person and the right not to be deprived thereof except in accordance with the principles of fundamental justice.
[Admittedly, the application of section 7 may be seen to be tenuous, but also the seizure of the citizen's dwelling surely strikes at his "security of the person".]
8. Everyone has the right to be secure against unreasonable search and seizure.
12. Everyone has the right not to be subjected to any cruel and unusual treatment ....
15. (1) Every individual is equal before and under the law and has the right to the equal protection and equal benefit of the law without discrimination ....
In regard to section 7, it is true that it does not accord entrenched rights in and to property. There are, however, certain kinds of property which are of a nature to transcend that salutary general principle and relate directly to the security of the person: necessary drugs and medicines; a coronary pacemaker with the power source and other neces sary parts of the apparatus; a respirator device; and of course, that physical property which affords warmth and shelter and requires the State to respect it and to enter only upon proper previous judicial authorization, a person's dwelling; and necessary personal clothing appropriate to the season. Some of the above comprehend both "life" and "security of the person". In any event, no one is to be deprived of those transcendant kinds of property when, at the same time they support "life" and "security of the person", except in accordance with the principles of fundamental jus tice. It is manifestly contrary to all principles of fundamental justice to lure, entrap or trick a person into a situation contrived, not by him or her, but by the State, in which the draconian application of statutory or regulatory provisions permits the State to seize that person's dwelling not only without compensation, but upon a demand to pay a monetary penalty to the State. This application of section 7 appears to be novel, but not groundless.
The breaches of the citizen's right under section 8 of the Charter have been canvassed earlier herein. They reside in: the warrantless, unlawful seizure of his personal papers; the harassing, groundless, on-again, off-again first and third sei zures of his vessel for non-reporting when, upon the witnesses' testimony and all of the evidence, and the reasonable inferences drawn by the Court therefrom, the citizen has established not merely on a balance of probabilities, but in displacement of every civil onus of proof, that he scrupulously and invariably followed the procedure described on the Crown's public sign erected on the White Rock pier; and the possibility, upon which more argu-
ment, if not evidence, will be heard that the Crown owes him the refund, at interest, of his $312.58 upon the second, "amended seizure" for that pos sibly unreasonable seizure of the Rogue.
The breaches of section 12 of the Charter reside in: the bizarre boarding by Borisenko's boarding party and warrantless seizure of the citizen's per sonal papers; the interrogation after which the citizen was accorded two weeks to prove that which he was under no legal obligation to record or prove and absent belief in his word, was unprov- able — a negative pregnant — for the proof of which he was directed to the Douglas customs- house where other Crown servants mocked him for his effort; the third seizure of his vessel after having been told by Crown servants that it was released; the threats to have the Rogue towed by the inadequate and unseaworthy Deep Six oper ated by its unsavoury master; the insensitive threats to have the vessel hoisted ashore by inap propriate and damaging means; the malicious threats to have the vessel stored in an inaccessible place ashore; the multiple seizures of the vessel; the loss of some of the citizen's private papers, including probably, some E-99 forms which could have proved an inbound report or several, actually responded to by the Crown's servants, according to the Crown's non-statutory procedure according to its public sign for reporting inbound at White Rock pier; the Crown's importunity upon the citi zen for its servants' failures to comply with its own non-statutory system; and the Crown's servants' tortious trickery, entrapment and misrepresenta tion, whether intentional or negligent retrospec tively rendered such by the Crown's repudiating that procedure in the citizen's cases and insisting upon invocation of the very statute of which the Crown's procedure incited non-compliance.
The breach of subsection 15(1) resides in the Crown's infliction of a different (if not double) standard upon the citizen from that which per tained over the years to all other inbound mariners
who, like the citizen, telephoned to the Douglas station in order to report to Customs. When the Crown's servants, in whose hands the administra tion of the previous Customs Act was, always considered that compliance with their non-statuto ry directions written on their ostensibly official public sign constituted compliance with that stat ute and acted upon that consideration, they denied the citizen equal protection and equal benefit of the law by changing the rules in his case. The Crown is not entitled in these circumstances to create an extra-legal system with which it directs compliance, and then, when it was discovered that the system was inadequate due to the laxity or overwork and fatigue of its servants, to enforce the law not against all inbound mariners, but only selectively against Rollinson. It is not entitled to vent its frustration or fury upon the citizen when its non-statutory procedure failed in his case on some 22 occasions, but to continue to operate that extra-legal system for the benefit (a dubious, dan gerous "benefit" to be sure) of all others in the same class of mariners as the citizen. To make a scapegoat of that individual (even when his per sonality was not liked by the law enforcers) con stituted a breach of his right under subsection 15(1) of the Charter in the circumstances here revealed by the evidence and the inferences drawn therefrom. Rollinson was singled out for denial of his "right to the equal protection and equal benefit of the law, without discrimination".
The Court finds that the citizen's above speci fied rights, guaranteed constitutionally by the Charter have been infringed or denied. Being a superior Court of competent jurisdiction estab lished pursuant to section 101 of the Constitution Act, 1867, this Court is bound to accord such remedy to the citizen as the Court considers appro priate and just in the circumstances.
Remedies accorded pursuant to section 24 of the Charter
In regard to the seizures of the vessel, the Rogue, the citizen's dwelling place, the Court accords the following remedies which the Court considers are appropriate and just in these circumstances:
(1) A finding and declaration that the citizen's private papers (the so-called "ship's logs" of every kind and nature) which were seized from him on February 1, 1984, were seized tortiously, illegally and unconstitutionally, in denial of his rights under section 8 of the Charter; and they are inadmissible in these proceedings;
(2) A finding and declaration that Borisenko and his mobile investigation unit on February 1, 1984 and by various subsequent actions and threats, and Toomey by his mockery of the citizen, and the Crown, by entrapping and misrepresenting, both negligently, on the part of the customs inspectors, and intentionally, on the part of its middle-man agement and its law officers, tortiously crossed-up and tricked the citizen into failing to comply with the inbound reporting provisions of the previous Customs Act to his loss, injury and detriment when the Crown on two distinct occasions, Febru- ary 1, 1984, and March 13, 1984, purported to seize his vessel; and that all the foregoing inter alia constituted cruel and unusual treatment;
(3) A finding and declaration that the above recit ed first and third seizures of the vessel were unlaw ful and will be quashed so that the vessel shall be released, free and clear, to the citizen or his direc tion; and that all provisions of the previous Cus toms Act upon which the Crown based its seizures of that vessel are and were, in the circumstances of this case, inoperative and of no effect as against the citizen; or in the alternative, at the Crown's option, that the Act prevails and that the Crown is liable upon its servants' tortious misconduct to compensate the citizen fully for replacement value of the seized and forfeited vessel, his dwelling, as at and from the time it was taken from the citi zen's possession, and control;
(4) A finding and declaration that in regard to its seizures of the Rogue, the Crown is liable to compensate the citizen fully in special and general damages, and any exemplary damages which the Court may assess for:
(a) breach and denial of the citizen's rights guar anteed by sections 7, 8, 12 and 15 of the Charter;
(b) harassment, mental anguish, humiliation and inconvenience tortiously inflicted by Crown servants upon the citizen as indicated in the evidence before the Court, and inferences therefrom, in the two cases herein, tried joint ly; and
(c) interest upon such damages as are exigible from any ordinary private tortfeasor of full age and capacity in British Columbia, as of and from February 1, 1984 or from such later date as the appropriate law makes such inter est so exigible.
Two further points relative to the assessment of damages herein ought to be expressed. Firstly, if the Borisenko boarding party on February 1, 1984, were conducting a border search, upon which the Court would hear more argument, if not also evidence, upon assessment of damages, the Court nevertheless holds that their presence was not an ordinary secondary inspection which would not necessarily attract damages. Inspector Shukin clearly swore (transcript, at page 821) that the one officer who inspects a vessel for clearance inbound performs both primary and secondary functions. The intimidating intrusion of the boarding party alone is, in the circumstances, capable of generat ing damages. The second point to be noted is that punitive or exemplary damages may be awarded, if not asked for in the plaintiff's prayer for relief. The authority is the Alberta Court of Appeal in Paragon Properties Ltd. v. Magna Envestments Ltd. (1972), 24 D.L.R. (3d) 156.
His Lordship next took the opportunity to review the evidence presented on the adjudications pro cess in the Department of National Revenue "in the interests of the parties and incidentally of the public, too." The Court found that several factors marred the adjudications process and badly com promised its fairness. The adjudicator, in dealing
with the third seizure of the Rogue, relied on an aide memoire, prepared by a government official, which contained flagrant errors and misleading information.
The Crown's seizure of plaintiff's Pontiac Pari- sienne automobile should be set aside. Plaintiff had driven to the primary line at Douglas station. The Customs Inspector says she told him to open his trunk but plaintiff drove off. The siren was sounded but plaintiff kept going. Plaintiff's story was that he heard neither her request nor the siren. After travelling a short distance, plaintiff received a CB radio message that he was wanted back at Customs. He returned but was handed a detention receipt and a penalty of $800 was imposed. At trial, the Inspector testified in such a low voice that she could hardly be heard. This tended to corroborate plaintiff's evidence that he had not heard her request when he was going through Customs.
Plaintiff's claim with regard to the seizure of his Chrysler New Yorker should be dismissed. In this case, plaintiff did not give evidence to contradict that of the Customs Inspector who was subjected to but a desultory cross-examination which served only to confirm her testimony in chief. Her testimony, that plaintiff disobeyed her order to report to secondary, was corroborated by other witnesses.
Plaintiff was awarded costs on a solicitor-and- client basis with an abatement of 6% of counsel fees since he did not succeed as to the Chrysler seizure.
Application may be made to the Associate Chief Justice regarding the assessment of dam ages unless the parties can reach agreement between themselves in which event that would be ratified by the Court.
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