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T-1124-77
In the matter of the application of Hon Kwing Shum for a writ of prohibition directed to His Honour Judge John L. McIntyre of the Provincial Court of British Columbia, sitting as a magistrate under the Fugitive Offenders Act
Trial Division, Cattanach J.—Vancouver, May 16 and June 2, 1977.
Jurisdiction — Application for prohibition — Fugitive Offenders Act — "12 months' imprisonment with hard labour" prerequisite to operation of Act — Wide definition of "hard labour" in the Act — Hard labour abolished in Canada and Hong Kong — Work required of prisoners in Hong Kong Whether magistrate has jurisdiction to entertain matter because offence not punishable by imprisonment for 1 year with hard labour — Fugitive Offenders Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. F-32, ss. 3, 12 — Criminal Code, R.S.C. 1970, c. C-34, s. 660.
Applicant seeks a writ of prohibition prohibiting a magis trate, acting under the Fugitive Offenders Act, from commit ting him to prison to await his return to Hong Kong to stand trial. The Fugitive Offenders Act applies to persons who have committed crimes punishable by imprisonment for twelve months or more with hard labour in part of Her Majesty's Realms or Territories. Although the punishment of hard labour has been abolished in both Hong Kong and Canada, the Fugitive Offenders Act has never been amended. The Hong Kong authorities, therefore, argue that the Act includes a very wide definition of hard labour and that the "useful work" required of prisoners by the Hong Kong Prison Rules meets that definition. The issue is whether there is or is not jurisdic tion in the magistrate to entertain the matter because the offence is not one punishable by imprisonment for twelve months or more "with hard labour".
Held, the application is allowed. Simple imprisonment and imprisonment with hard labour are different punishments. Since Lord Parker had contrasted simple imprisonment with imprisonment of a rigorous nature, it was argued that "rigorous imprisonment" must be synonymous with "imprisonment with hard labour". It does not follow that the Prison Rules, which are purely administrative rules for the better administration of the conduct of the institution and of life of inmates within a prison, requiring that an inmate shall engage in useful employ ment can be construed as punishment with hard labour or even labour. It is not part and parcel of the punishment of imprison ment but only arises as a necessary consequence of convicted offenders being incarcerated. Although there is a right to seek a section 28 review of the magistrate's decision, as persona designata, that right to apply for review does not normally arise except on the final decision of the inferior tribunal, but on that event interlocutory and procedural decisions can be considered to establish that the tribunal failed to observe the principles of natural justice or otherwise acted beyond its jurisdiction. With respect to the provincial court Judge who decided that he had
jurisdiction to hear the matter, a contrary conclusion must be reached, and prohibition should be granted.
R. v. Morton-Stewart, London Times, 27 March, 1953, p. 6, referred to. R. v. Boyd (1896) noted in 18 C.C.C. at 167-168, referred to. R. v. Governor of Brixton Prison. Ex parte Percival [1907] 1 K.B. 696, followed. R. v. Governor of Brixton Prison. Ex parte Sadri [1962] 1 W.L.R. 1304, agreed with. R. v. Dean (unreported decision of Vanek P.C.J., Provincial Court in Judicial District of York, dated May 17, 1974), disagreed with. Stafford v. St. Louis (1957) 107 Law Journal 507, considered and distin guished.
APPLICATION for prohibition. COUNSEL:
H. A. D. Oliver and G. C. Deedman for applicant.
M. M. de Weerdt, Q.C., for Government of Hong Kong.
SOLICITORS:
Oliver, Waldock & Richardson, Vancouver, for applicant.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for Gov ernment of Hong Kong.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
CATTANACH J.: By originating notice of motion the applicant seeks to prohibit a magistrate from committing him to prison there to await his return to stand trial in Her Majesty's Crown Colony of Hong Kong for an offence there alleged to have been committed contrary to section 10 of the Prevention of Bribery Ordinance, 1970 of that Crown Colony.
The Ordinance became law on May 14, 1971. Section 10 thereof provides:
10. (1) Any person who, being or having been a Crown servant—
(a) maintains a standard of living above that which is com mensurate with his present or past official emoluments; or
(b) is in control of pecuniary resources or property dispro portionate to his present or past official emoluments,
shall, unless he gives a satisfactory explanation to the court as to how he was able to maintain such a standard of living or how such pecuniary resources or property came under his control, be guilty of an offence.
By virtue of section 12 of the Ordinance any person guilty of an offence under section 10 shall be liable on conviction on indictment "to a fine of one hundred thousand dollars and to imprisonment for seven years;" and on summary conviction, "to a fine of fifty thousand dollars and to imprisonment for three years" and shall also be ordered to pay to such person or public body the amount or value of any advantage received by him or such part there of as the court may specify.
The magistrate against whom prohibition is being sought is acting under section 12 of the Fugitive Offenders Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. F-32, which reads:
12. If the endorsed warrant for the apprehension of the fugitive is duly authenticated, and such evidence is produced as, subject to this Act, according to the law ordinarily adminis tered by the magistrate, raises a strong or probable presump tion that the fugitive committed the offence mentioned in the warrant, and that the offence is one to which this Act applies, the magistrate shall commit the fugitive to prison to await his return, and shall forthwith send a certificate of the committal and such report of the case, as he thinks fit, to the Governor General.
The contention of applicant is that the offence is not one to which the Fugitive Offenders Act applies particularly in the light of section 3 thereof which reads:
3. This Act applies to treason and to piracy, and to every offence, whether called felony, misdemeanour, crime or by any other name, that is, for the time being, punishable in the part of Her Majesty's Realms and Territories in which it was commit ted, either on indictment or information, by imprisonment with hard labour for a term of twelve months or more, or by any greater punishment; and, for the purposes of this section, rigorous imprisonment, and any confinement in a prison com bined with labour, by whatever name it is called, shall be deemed to be imprisonment with hard labour.
By virtue of section 3 above, in order for the magistrate to be vested with jurisdiction, the offence must be one "punishable ... by imprison ment with hard labour for a term of twelve months or more, or by any greater punishment ...".
The offence with which the applicant is charged is punishable by a substantial fine and for impris onment for more than twelve months. However I do not construe the language of section 3 as mean-
ing that the punishment being imprisonment for seven or three years is covered by the words "or by any greater punishment". The natural way to read the section is that the words "or more" refer to a sentence of more than twelve months accompanied by hard labour.
Neither do I construe the fact that the court may direct payment of the amount or value of any advantage as punishment. It is, in my view, an order for restitution or an order to ensure that an offender shall not profit from the offence. Neither do I think that the imposition of a fine, in addition to imprisonment, amounts to greater punishment within the meaning of section 3. While I did not have evidence on the matter, I would assume that the court, on conviction of an accused, has the discretion of imposing the maximum fine provided or a lesser fine without the imposition of imprison ment or to impose a term of imprisonment without a fine or to impose both a fine and imprisonment. Put another way, the imposition of the fine of one hundred thousand dollars and imprisonment for seven years, if the matter was proceeded with on indictment, or the imposition of a fine of fifty thousand dollars and to imprisonment for three years, if the matter were proceeded with on sum mary conviction, is not mandatory. A person con victed is liable to punishment in that manner but because the offender is so liable to the maximum punishment, it seems to me to follow there is a discretion in the court to impose punishment lesser than a combined maximum. Put still another way because imprisonment may be combined with a fine at the discretion of the court that does not, in my opinion, constitute greater punishment than imprisonment "with hard labour".
On the other hand, I would find it difficult to believe that if imprisonment for life were provided as the maximum penalty for the offence that that punishment would not be "greater punishment" than imprisonment for seven years with hard labour as also would be capital punishment if provided. Accordingly it is in this latter sense that I construe the meaning to the words "or by any greater punishment" as they appear in section 3.
In the United Kingdom the punishment of hard labour accompanied by imprisonment was abol ished in 1948. Hard labour was abolished in Hong Kong years ago and prior to the alleged commis-
sion of the offence in 1971 with which the appli cant is charged. More recently hard labour has been abolished in Canada as it has in most of Her Majesty's Realms but section 3 of the Fugitive Offenders Act has not been amended as was the similar legislation in the United Kingdom from which section 3 derives but rather section 3 has been continued in the precise language in which it was originally cast.
The neat issue in the present application there fore stands out in crystal clear relief and it is simply whether there is no jurisdiction in the magistrate to entertain the matter because the offence is not one within section 3 in that it is not punishable by imprisonment for more than twelve months "with hard labour".
That this is so is the contention of counsel for the applicant.
Counsel for the Crown Colony of Hong Kong, on the other hand, relies on the Prison Rules enacted under the Prisons Ordinance of the laws of Hong Kong, and which rules became law on April 15, 1954 and remain in force, by which it is provided that every prisoner under sentence of imprisonment is required to engage in useful work for not more than ten hours a day subject only to excuse or certification by a medical officer. The Rules also provide that the work requirements may be reduced on certain days and on grounds of caste or religion.
It is the contention of counsel that this require ment that a prisoner sentenced to imprisonment shall perform useful work during his confinement falls within the deeming provision of section 3 that portion of which I repeat for emphasis.
...,and, for the purposes of this section, rigorous imprison ment, and any confinement in a prison combined with labour, by whatever name it is called, shall be deemed to be imprison ment with hard labour.
In order for the prescribed punishment for the offence alleged to have been committed by the applicant herein it must be found that "useful work" within the meaning of those words in the Prison Rules falls within the meaning of "labour" where that word appears in the deeming provision, and that does not necessarily follow from the words as used in common parlance.
The Prison Rules were made under the au thority of section 25(1)(h) of the Prisons Ordi nance which reads:
25. (1) The Governor in Council may make rules providing for—
(h) the classification, clothing, maintenance, employment, discipline, instruction and correction of the prisoners.
The pertinent word in the Prisons Ordinance is "employment" which is the state of being employed and "to employ", in ordinary usage, means to make use of time, that is to be occupied.
Section 38 of the Prison Rules made under that authority of section 25(1)(h) of the Prisons Ordi nance is ranged under the heading "(f) Work" and reads in part,
38. Every prisoner shall be required to engage in useful work for not more than ten hours a day, of which so far as practi cable at least eight hours shall be spent in associated or other work outside the cells:
The word "work" means an action requiring effort and to engage in some systematic occupa tion. There is the common element between "employment" and "work" in the occupation of time.
The word "labour" involves bodily toil which may be paraphrased as "hard work".
On the ordinary meaning of words it cannot be said that "labour" is completely synonymous with "work" but rather the words "useful work" as used in section 38 of the Prison Rules are more compa rable with "employment" and the adjective "use- ful" signifies something more than work for the sake of labour in itself.
In Hodge v. The Queen (1883-4) 9 App. Cas. 117 it was held that in item No. 15 of section 92 of
The British North America Act, 1867 which pro vides for "The Imposition of Punishment by Fine, Penalty, or Imprisonment for enforcing any Law of the Province made in relation to any Matter coming within any of the Classes of Subjects enumerated in this Section", the word "imprison- ment" there means restraint by confinement in a prison, with or without its usual accompaniment, "hard labour".
The converse is not so. When the punishment prescribed is imprisonment with hard labour it cannot mean imprisonment without hard labour.
In the 3rd edition of Halsbury's Laws of Eng- land, (the Lord Simonds edition) Vol. 16, at pages 585-586, section 1217 the following appears:
1217. Application to offences. The provisions of Part I of the Fugitive Offenders Act, 1881 (t), apply to treason and piracy and to every offence which is for the time being punishable in that part of Her Majesty's dominions in which it was commit ted, either on indictment (u) or on information, by imprison ment with hard labour (a) for twelve months or more, or by any greater punishment (b).
Footnote (a) reads:
(a) Imprisonment with hard labour includes rigorous impris onment and any confinement in a prison combined with labour, by whatever name it is called (Fugitive Offenders Act, 1881 (44 & 45 Vict. c. 69), s. 9). The application of the Act is therefore not affected by the abolition in England of imprison ment with hard labour by the Criminal Justice Act, 1948 (11 & 12 Geo. 6 c. 58), s. 1(2). For a decision to the contrary, however, see R. v. Morton-Stewart (1953), Times, 27th March, at p. 6 (magistrate's decision in Western Australia).
Section 9 of the Fugitive Offenders Act, 1881 was identical with section 3 of the Fugitive Offenders Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. F-32. With the abolition of imprisonment with hard labour in England by the Criminal Justice Act 1948 the Fugitive Offenders Act was substantially revised [1967, c. 68 (U.K.)] in that the offences for which an offender may be returned to another of Her Majesty's Realms are listed in a schedule as is done in the Extradition Act. A corresponding change in the Canadian statute has not been made upon the abolition of imprisonment with hard labour in Canada.
At one time, under the Penitentiary Act, a sentence to imprisonment in a penitentiary was to
be served with hard labour. By section 1057 of the Criminal Code, [R.S.C. 1927, c. 36] imprisonment might be with or without hard labour at the discre tion of the court for offences under the provisions of certain parts of the Code. In other cases impris onment may be with hard labour, if hard labour is part of the punishment for the offence, and if such imprisonment is to be with hard labour, the sen tence shall so direct. With the advent of the aboli tion of hard labour in Canada section 1057 was not included in the 1955 revision of the Criminal Code but section 660 (then section 653) was introduced.
Section 660 reads:
660. (1) A sentence of imprisonment shall be served in accordance with the enactments and rules that govern the institution to which the prisoner is sentenced, and a reference to hard labour in a conviction or sentence shall be deemed to be a reference to the employment of prisoners that is provided for in the enactments or rules.
(2) A conviction or sentence that imposes hard labour shall not be quashed or set aside on the ground only that the enactment that creates the offence does not authorize the imposition of hard labour, but shall be amended accordingly.
In my view section 660 and its antecedent histo ry is of no assistance in the interpretation of section 3 of the Fugitive Offenders Act. As I see it there were two different punishments, imprison ment and imprisonment with hard labour and section 660 is in the nature of a transitory provi sion following on the abolition of hard labour as an accompaniment of imprisonment. By section 660 a sentence which imposes hard labour should not be quashed for that reason but the sentence shall be amended by the deletion of hard labour. By section 660(1) a sentence of imprisonment shall be served in accordance with the rules which govern the institution to which the prisoner is sentenced and if the sentence should provide for hard labour then that reference is deemed to be a reference to employment of prisoners which the rules of the institution dictate.
The need to govern the discipline of prisoners in a penal institution is self-evident. The institutional staff must have authority to enforce discipline and the observance of standards of conduct necessary for the orderly conduct of the institution. That the
inmates engage in useful employment relieves the boredom of enforced confinement which, in all likelihood, leads to breaches of discipline which should be avoided and goes, as well, to the rehabilitation of the prisoner.
There is no doubt whatsoever that the require ment of inmates performing useful work is purely administrative within the institution and as such has nothing to do with punishment per se.
It is merely an incident to the punishment of imprisonment. That being so I find it difficult to follow how the prison rules requiring an inmate to do useful work while there confined can possibly be understood as being synonymous with a sen tence of imprisonment with hard labour as it was understood prior to the abolition of hard labour.
There is a dearth of binding authority on the deeming provision of section 3 of the Fugitive Offenders Act.
Oliver Nugent, the author of "Extradition and Fugitive Offenders" in the third edition of Hals- bury's Laws of England, was of the opinion that the application of the Fugitive Offenders Act was not affected by the abolition of imprisonment with hard labour in England in view of the provision that imprisonment with hard labour includes rigor ous imprisonment and any confinement in prison combined with labour by whatever name it is called. This is evident from footnote (a). The corresponding footnote in the two earlier editions of Halsbury's Laws of England simply reads:
This includes rigorous imprisonment and any confinement in a prison combined with labour, by whatever name it is called.
The fourth edition of Halsbury's Laws of Eng- land was compiled after the Fugitive Offenders Act, 1881 had been repealed and no note appears.
It is equally evident that the opinion of the author of the article in the third edition was unaffected by the decision in R. v. Morton-Stew- art, London Times, 27 March, 1953, at page 6.
The report of this decision reads as follows:
MORTON-STEWART RELEASED
From our correspondent
Perth, WA., March 26
Norman James Edward Morton-Stewart, a Birmingham busi ness man, against whom extradition proceedings had been taken, was to-day discharged from custody by Mr. R. P. Rodriguez, acting stipendiary magistrate. Mr. Rodriguez said that for a man to be liable for extradition he must be liable for a minimum term of 12 months' imprisonment with hard labour. But under the English Criminal Jurisdiction Act, 1948, a term of imprisonment recorded as "imprisonment with hard labour" had been abolished. Morton-Stewart's counsel told the magis trate that his client wanted to return to England but not in custody.
Counsel for the parties have made efforts to obtain from the registry of the magistrate's court of Western Australia a record of the decision but have been unsuccessful.
However it is evident from the press report, which did not find its way into the Times Law Reports, that the stipendiary magistrate held that to be liable to be returned to the Realm where the offence was committed the punishment must be a minimum term of imprisonment with hard labour but since imprisonment with hard labour had been abolished in England the offender must be discharged.
In Canadian Criminal Cases Vol. 18, at pages 167-168 the following note appears:
In R. v. Boyd (1896), editorially noted, 21 C.L.T. 80, the accused was charged in London, England, with an offence at Montreal under the Canadian Customs Act, and his deporta tion to Canada was asked that he might be tried there for the offence. The penalty, however, which the former Customs Act then in force (R.S.C. 1886, c. 32, s. 192) provided for the offence of fraudulently forging an invoice and making a false declaration with a customs entry was a fine or imprisonment for a term not exceeding one year or both fine and imprison ment, but nothing was said in the statute about hard labour. Sir John Bridge, presiding at Bow Street Police Court, discharged the prisoner on the ground that the English statute 44-45 Vict. c. 69 applied only to offences punishable with hard labour which could not be imposed for the offence in question.
In Rex v. Governor of Brixton Prison. Ex parte Percival [1907] 1 K.B. 696 Lord Alverstone C.J. said at page 706:
I am of opinion that under s. 9 of the Fugitive Offenders Act, 1881, the magistrate has to be satisfied that the crime, "wheth- er called felony, misdemeanour, crime or by any other name," is one "which is for the time being punishable in the part of Her Majesty's dominions in which it was committed, either on indictment or information, by imprisonment with hard labour
for a term of twelve calendar months or more, or by any greater punishment."
That is to say that before a magistrate makes an order for committal, he must be satisfied that the offence is one which is punishable in the other Realm by imprisonment with hard labour.
However in Ex parte Percival the prisoner was discharged because there was no satisfactory evi dence before the magistrate from which he could so determine.
In Re Henry (1976) 23 C.C.C. (2d) 38, the argument was raised before Eckardt, a provincial court Judge, that because section 3 of the Fugitive Offenders Act provides that an offence must be punishable by imprisonment with hard labour for twelve months or more and hard labour had been abolished in England the application must fail because the offences alleged against the fugitive were not punishable by imprisonment with hard labour in England which is precisely the argument raised before me in the present instance.
The learned magistrate found that there was no prima facie evidence that the alleged offence had been committed and accordingly he did not have to consider the argument that the offence was not punishable by imprisonment with hard labour.
In an unreported decision in The Queen v. Dean of His Honour Judge D. Vanek in the Provincial Court, Judicial District of York, May 17, 1974, this was said:
I have also considered another possible ground of objection to an order being made under Section 12 of the Fugitive Offend ers Act while this question was not raised or argued by counsel on behalf of the fugitive, Dean. It is that the offences charged in the information are no longer punishable in England by imprisonment with hard labour and therefore do not come within the application of the Act under Section 3, which reads as follows:
3. This Act applies to treason and to piracy, and to every offence, whether called felony, misdemeanor, crime or by any other name, that is, for the time being, punishable in the part of Her Majesty's Realms and Territories in which it was committed, either on indictment or information, by imprison ment with hard labour for a term of 12 months or more, or by any greater punishment; and, for the purposes of this Section, rigorous imprisonment, and any confinement in a prison combined with labour, by whatever name it is called, shall be deemed to be imprisonment with hard labour.
It appears that by the Criminal Justice Act, 1948, the criminal law of England was amended by deleting all reference to "hard labour" from all statutes of the United Kingdom dealing with the sentences that may be imposed upon convic tion for all criminal offences.
It would be strange if by this unilateral modification of the stringency of its own penal laws the United Kingdom should become deprived of the right and lose all benefit of extradition under the Canadian Statute, a result obviously not intended by either country. By definition in Section 3, however, the expres sion "hard labour" includes "rigorous" punishment. The sen tences charged in the warrant of arrest in the present case are punishable with imprisonment for two years, as to one charge, and a much longer term with respect to the other charge. I am satisfied that a sentence of two years or more imposed in the United Kingdom and equivalent to a term which in Canada would be served in the penitentiary and being the punishment reserved and provided for the commission of a serious offence, constitutes rigorous punishment. Moreover, such a sentence of imprisonment would import some labour and fall within the designation of "any confinement in a prison combined with labour". In this construction, the meaning and intent of Section 3 is to make the Fugitive Offenders Act applicable to serious or major offences and not to minor or trivial charges. This con struction was implicitly adopted by McRuer, C.J.H.C. in Ex P. Rabin for while that case was decided some years after the concept of "hard labour" was abandoned in the United King dom, no objection appears to have been taken or reference made to any suggested absence of jurisdiction on that ground. I hold that the offences charged are offences to which the Fugitive Offenders Act applies.
It was the provincial Judge's conclusion that punishment of imprisonment for two years or more without hard labour constitutes "rigorous impris onment" and that such a sentence would import some labour and therefore fall within the words "any confinement in a prison combined with labour" within the meaning of section 3 of the Fugitive Offenders Act.
The provincial Judge states that the construc tion he placed upon section 3 was implicitly adopt ed by McRuer C.J.H.C. in Ex parte Rabin [1961] O.W.N. 231.
I have read the decision in Ex parte Rabin with care and I can find no justification therein that this decision is authority for the proposition for which he cites it.
McRuer C.J.H.C. directed his attention to sec tion 12 and section 17 of the Fugitive Offenders Act as to the evidence before the magistrate rais ing a strong and probable presumption that the fugitive committed the offences alleged against him as required by section 12, and that it would be unjust or oppressive or too severe a punishment to
return the fugitive. It was his opinion that the evidence was flimsy under section 12 and that the unreasonable delay in launching the prosecution and the distance involved was oppressive to the fugitive because of the difficulty of defending him self after such a delay. He relied on a decision of Lord Goddard to like effect. The Lord Chief Jus tice refused to order the return of a fugitive because the long delay there involved was prejudi cial to the fugitive's defence and oppressive and accordingly unjust in the light of all the circum stances. There was no suggestion that the offences were merely trivial and not of a serious nature.
A decision contrary to the applicant's contention herein is found in Stafford v. St. Louis (1957) 107 Law Journal 507, a decision of the Supreme Court of Trinidad and Tobago consisting of Mathieu- Perez C.J. and Williams J.
Before the magistrate the fugitive admitted the offence (escape from prison) but contended that escape from prison was not an offence within the Fugitive Offenders Act, 1881 because it was not punishable by imprisonment with hard labour which punishment was abolished by the Criminal Justice Act 1948, [11 & 12 Geo. 6, c. 58].
Section 9 of the Act of 1881 is identical to section 3 of the Fugitive Offenders Act of Canada. The magistrate held that all sentences of imprison ment in the United Kingdom constituted confine ment in a prison combined with labour within section 9 owing to the obligation in prison on prisoners by Rule 56 of the Prison Rules 1949 to engage in useful work for not more than ten hours a day (a rule similar to that in the Hong Kong Prison Rules).
On appeal it was held that the order was rightly made by the magistrate. The offence of escape from lawful custody had been punishable by imprisonment with hard labour by virtue of section 29 of the Criminal Procedure Act 1851 [14 & 15 Vict., c. 100], (subsequently repealed) but that the repeal of section 29 of the Act of 1851 by the Criminal Justice Act 1948, and the abolition of imprisonment with hard labour did not affect the application of section 9 of the Fugitive Offenders
Act, 1881 owing to the wide meaning given to the term "imprisonment with hard labour" therein.
Accordingly there are ranged on the side of the applicant's contention R. v. Morton-Stewart, and R. v. Boyd, both decisions of magistrates, and contrary to the applicant's contention are R. v. Dean, also a magistrate's decision and Stafford v. St. Louis and the opinion of the author in the article on "Extradition and Fugitive Offenders" in the Lord Simond edition of Halsbury's Laws of England.
The most authoritative decision mentioned on this point is that in Stafford v. St. Louis.
However in Regina v. Governor of Brixton Prison. Ex parte Sadri [1962] 1 W.L.R. 1304, Lord Parker C.J. said at page 1308:
Before leaving that point, I should mention that Mr. Mathew who, I think, is concerned with quite a number of these cases representing requisitioning countries, in his anxiety to get all the assistance he can out of this court, has pointed to the difficulties nowadays of that expression, "imprisonment with hard labour," particularly having regard to the words which follow later defining hard labour as including "any confinement in prison combined "with labour." He has really invited us to say that in every case where evidence is now given as to a term of imprisonment it should be inferred that that is imprisonment with hard labour within the meaning of the section. I would only say that I should hesitate very long before coming to that conclusion. There may be a number of cases where distinctions are capable of being drawn between what one might call simple imprisonment and imprisonment of a rigorous nature. However, it is unnecessary to come to any decision on that point, since in any event the affidavit is defective in not saying whether or not the offences are punishable on indictment or information.
While I recognize this statement by the Lord Chief Justice to be obiter dictum it is nevertheless most persuasive dictum. The proposition advanced to Lord Parker was that by virtue of the deeming provisions of section 9 of the U.K. Act (and sec tion 3 of the Canadian Fugitive Offenders Act), any imprisonment combined with labour, which must follow when the rules of the prison require an inmate to engage in useful employment, must mean "imprisonment with hard labour". Lord Parker expressed a very great and serious hesitan cy in accepting that conclusion.
Lord Parker's dictum is consistent with my own conclusion that simple imprisonment and impris onment with hard labour are different punish ments. I gain no assistance from the use of "rigor- ous imprisonment" as used in section 3. Lord Parker contrasts simple imprisonment with impris onment of a rigorous nature. Therefore "rigorous imprisonment" must be synonymous with "impris- onment with hard labour". Further I fail to follow that because the prison rules, which are purely administrative rules for the better administration of the conduct of the institution and of life of inmates within a prison, require that an inmate shall engage in useful employment that this can be construed as punishment with hard labour or even labour. It is not part and parcel of the punishment of imprisonment but only arises as a necessary consequence of convicted offenders being incar cerated.
There remains the question whether prohibition is the appropriate remedy.
Like all prerogative writs prohibition is discre tionary to be granted or withheld according to the circumstances of the particular case. It is to be used with caution and forbearance for the further ance of justice when none of the ordinary remedies is available. In the present instance there is a right to seek a review of the magistrate's decision, as a persona designata, by an application to the Feder al Court of Appeal under section 28 of the Federal Court Act. However that right to apply for review does not normally arise except upon the final decision of the inferior tribunal but on that event interlocutory and procedural decisions can be con sidered to establish that the tribunal failed to observe the principles of natural justice or other wise acted beyond its jurisdiction.
However while prohibition is discretionary it should be granted where the lack of jurisdiction is apparent on the face of the proceedings.
In the present matter the question was raised and argued before the learned provincial court Judge who concluded that he had jurisdiction to hear the matter on its merits. With respect to the
provincial court Judge I have reached a contrary conclusion for the reasons expressed above from which it follows that the magistrate will have erroneously assumed jurisdiction to proceed to hear the evidence and give judgment.
For the foregoing reasons and in the circum stances of this particular case the application must succeed, with costs to the applicant.
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