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T-2133-88
Alan Riddell (Applicant) . v.
Jean-Marc Hamel and Jean-Robert Gauthier (Respondents)
INDEXED AS: RIDDELL V. HAMEL
Trial Division, Muldoon J.—Ottawa, November 15 and 17, 1988.
Elections — Application for declaration Canada Elections Act, s. 72 valid, mandamus requiring enforcement of s. 72, and order for removal of campaign signs misnaming official agent, thereby not complying with s. 72 — Alberta Court of Queen's Bench declaring s. 72 inconsistent with Charter, s. 2(b) in Citizens' Coalition case — Sufficient justification for Chief Electoral Officer's refusal to enforce s. 72, until disapproved by court of concurrent or superior jurisdiction — No evidence supporting speculation of danger to democracy if s. 72 not enforced — No notice of proceedings to provincial attorneys general — No urgency shown — Serious questions to be tried, including whether s. 72 contrary to Charter, whether Chief Electoral Officer or Commissioner of Canada Elections responsible for enforcement of Act, and whether such officials immune from judicial review — Motion dismissed without prejudice to right to bring action within fixed period of time.
Federal Court jurisdiction — Trial Division — Application for declaration, mandamus and order requiring federal elec tion candidate to remove campaign signs not complying with Canada Elections Act, s. 72 — Court lacking jurisdiction over candidate as not federal board, commission or other tribunal.
Practice — Costs — Application concerning validity, enforcement of Canada Elections Act denied, as against candi date, for want of jurisdiction — Award of costs reduced due to counsel's unfounded allegations of malice, bad faith, dis honesty and unethical behaviour.
STATUTES AND REGULATIONS JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
Canada Elections Act, R.S.C. 1970 (1st Supp.), c. 14, ss. 2, 3(7), 4(1 )(a),(b),(c), 23(2)(a) (as am. by S.C. 1977- 78, c. 3, s. 21), 26(1), 62(1) (as am. by S.C. 1980-81- 82-83, c. 164, s. 10), (1.2) (as enacted idem), (2) (as am. idem), 70(3) (as am. by S.C. 1977-78, c. 3, s. 45), 70.1 (as added by S.C. 1973-74, c. 51,s. 12), 72(1) (as am. by S.C. 1980-8I-82-83, c. 164, s. 15), (2) (as am.
idem), 77(1), 78(1), 99(2),(3),(4) (as am. by S.C. 1973-74, c. 51, s. 13).
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, being Part I of the Constitution Act, 1982, Schedule B, Canada Act 1982, 1982, c. 11 (U.K.), s. 2(b).
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
FOLLOWED:
Wilson v. Minister of Justice, [ 1985] 1 F.C. 586 (C.A.).
REFERRED TO:
Nat. Citizens' Coalition Inc. Coalition Nat. des Citoyens Inc. v. A.G. of Can., [1984] 5 W.W.R. 436 (Alta. Q.B.); Operation Dismantle Inc. v. The Queen, [ 1984] 2 F.C. 98 (T.D.); Hamel v. Union Populaire, [1980] 2 F.C. 599; 118 D.L.R. (3d) 484 (C.A.).
APPEARANCE:
Alan Riddell on his own behalf.
COUNSEL:
Yvon Tarte for respondent Jean-Marc Hamel. Gérard Lévesque for respondent Jean-Robert Gauthier.
APPLICANT ON HIS OWN BEHALF:
Alan Riddell, Ottawa.
SOLICITORS:
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for
respondent Jean-Marc Hamel.
Lévesque & Terrien, Ottawa, for respondent
Jean-Robert Gauthier.
The following are the reasons for order ren dered in English by
MULDOON J.: The applicant seeks:
I. a declaration that section 72 of the Canada Elections Act R.S.C., (1st Supp.) Chap. 14 is valid;
2. an order of mandamus requiring the respondent, Jean-Marc Hamel to enforce compliance of section 72 of the Canada Elections Act pursuant to paragraph 4(1)(a) of the said Act; and
3. an order requiring the respondent Jean-Robert Gauthier to remove all campaign signs and replace them with material which complies with the Canada Elections Act.
The stated ground for the applicant's motion is that Mr. Hamel, the Chief Electoral Officer has refused to enforce section 72 of the Canada Elec tions Act [R.S.C. 1970 (1st Supp.), c. 14 (as am. by S.C. 1980-81-82-83, c. 164, s. 15)], on the mistaken legal premise that it is contrary to para graph 2(b) of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms [being Part I of the Constitution Act, 1982, Schedule B, Canada Act 1982, 1982, c. 11 (U.K.)]. The applicant appeared in person and, despite the not unusual tendency of non-lawyers to go on too long, and quite repetitively, he raised in an interesting manner not a few difficult points of law. The Court allowed the applicant very great latitude in his presentations. The applicant was met at the outset by preliminary objections by respective counsel on behalf of the respondents.
Before dealing with the arguments, the Court prefers to set out some background facts and information.
The legislative provisions cited by the applicant are as follow. Paragraph 4(1)(a) of the Act runs as follows:
4. (1) The Chief Electoral Officer shall
(a) exercise general direction and supervision over the administrative conduct of elections and enforce on the part of all election officers fairness, impartiality and compliance with the provisions of this Act;
Indeed, it would appear in light of one particu lar argument about the status of the respondent Gauthier and his official agent, that the applicant would also need to invoke paragraph (b) of that same section, thus;
4....
(b) issue to election officers such instructions as from time to time he may deem necessary to ensure effective execution of the provisions of this Act . ....
Section 72 of the Act is manifested in two subsections:
72. (I) Every printed advertisement, handbill, placard, poster or dodger that promotes or opposes the election of a registered political party or candidate and that is displayed or distributed during an election by or on behalf of a registered party or a candidate shall indicate that it was authorized by the registered agent of the party or by the official agent of the
candidate, as the case may be, and bear the registered agent's or official agent's name.
(2) Every one who prints, publishes, distributes or posts up, or who causes to be printed, published, distributed or posted up, any document referred to in subsection (1) is, unless it bears the name and authorization required under that subsection, guilty of an offence against this Act.
The reason for which the applicant seeks to have this Court declare the above recited section 72 to be valid, is that in 1984, Mr. Justice Medhurst of the Alberta Court of Queen's Bench declared section 72 inter alia to be inconsistent with para graph 2(b) of the Charter and to this extent of no force or effect. The decision of Medhurst J. is reported as Nat. Citizens' Coalition Inc. Coalition Nat. des Citoyens Inc. v. A.G. Can., [1984] 5 W.W.R. 436 (Alta. Q.B.), hereinafter the Citi zens' Coalition case.
The applicant is a duly qualified elector in the federal electoral district of Ottawa-Vanier, and is the canvass chairperson in the campaign organiza tion for one of the candidates therein, Gilles Gué- nette. The applicant tenders in substantive support of his motion, two affidavits by one, Bruce McIn- tosh, a businessman, who is assistant campaign manager for the said candidate. They allege that various printed pamphlets, signs and election ma terial promoting another candidate in Ottawa- Vanier, the respondent Jean-Robert Gauthier, bear the statement "Authorized by Robert Cusson, official agent" when, in fact, the candidate's offi cial agent is Vincent Gauthier. A sample was exhibited. Despite the fact that Mr. Gauthier's printed literature does not bear the name of his actual official agent, the respondent Chief Elec tions Officer declines to attempt to enforce section 72 of the Act. The deponent McIntosh relies on the Notice of Grant of a Poll issued by the Return ing Officer, provided for in subsection 62(1.2) [as enacted by S.C. 1980-81-82-83, c. 164, s. 10] of the Act, but does not purport to negative the applicability of subsection 62(2) [as am. idem] which considers the appointment of another offi cial agent in certain circumstance. In any event, the respondent Gauthier's counsel made no con trary allegation and hardly had sufficient time
even to notify his intention, if any, to cross-exam ine Mr. McIntosh on his affidavit.
Now, the respondent Gauthier's counsel advanced certain preliminary objections one of which was effective and many of which were simply objectionable. Among the latter are those which imputed malice, bad faith, dishonesty, and unethical behaviour on the part of the applicant, all without a scintilla of evidence. Although Mr. Gauthier was importuned out of the blue with little notice, he cannot expect to be awarded a full measure of costs when his counsel takes such an approach. Those who seek to uphold the law are not to be reviled.
The respondent Gauthier's counsel suggested that to seek to enforce a non-existent provision of law is abusive. He would be on stronger ground there, had he not overlooked that the applicant's first request is to declare that section 72 is revived and fully valid. Counsel's objection that this Court has no jurisdiction over the respondent Gauthier is all counsel needed to advance. The applicant ingeniously asserted that every candidate, Mr. Gauthier included, with their and his offficial agent, is a "federal board, commission or other tribunal" because he exercises functions pursuant, for example, to paragraph 23(2)(a) [as am. by S.C. 1977-78, c. 3, s. 21] and subsections 26(1) and 62(1) [as am. by S.C. 1980-81-82-83, c. 164, s. 10] of the Canada Elections Act. What the cadidate is permitted to do in his own interest, or required to do in the public interest, does not render him a federal board or other tribunal. The Court would have permitted Mr. Gauthier to intervene as an interested person in these'proceed- ings had he sought such standing, but it `will not purport to impose its jurisdiction over him. The applicant's motion is accordingly struck out in so far as it aims to implead Jean-Robert Gauthier in these proceedings, and Mr. Gauthier is awarded only two-thirds of his taxed party-and-party costs (in view of counsel's extravagant and unproved allegations) against the applicant who is ordered to pay the same.
In common with the respondent Gauthier, the Chief Electoral Officer objected to short notice of these proceedings which was served only the previ ous day. In fact, the Court is not well equipped to deal on an emergency basis—except perhaps for interim injunction with an undertaking as to dam ages or bond—in matters like this of only evanes cent duration. When an extraordinary remedy is sought in such matters, and not constabulary action, the Court should have the necessary tools, if needed in matters of great urgency.
This is not a matter of great urgency. The Court of course upholds the imperative to obey the law, but among the offences denounced by the elections legislation, a breach of subsection 72(1) is not among those which Parliament itself has charac terized as the most heinous. It bears the general penalties prescribed by section 78. But, for exam ple, removing or tampering with official notices without authority so to do, carries twice the possi ble term of imprisonment on summary conviction pursuant to subsection 77(1), and subsection 99(4) [as am. by S.C. 1973-74, c. 51, s. 13] carries five time the monetary fine on summary conviction for breach of subsections 99(2) and (3). This is not a matter of deceiving, obstructing or intimidating voters. In fact Parliament does not provide any deterrent or more draconian measure than pros ecution pursuant to subsection 72(2) which in turn is pursuant to subsection 78(1).
Now, the applicant speculated that the evil so deliberately minimized by Mr. Justice Medhurst in the Citizens' Coalition case will arise. That is: that affluent combinations, unions or coalitions will intervene with undue influence, compared with their principals' individual voting power, because they have the money to buy access to the mass media or, at least to turn on the printing presses; and that such wealth will be ruthlessly deployed to smother that hot house plant: democ-
racy. (It is just that, for it goes against nature to accord the weak equal political power—the individual ballot—with the strong in shaping gov ernmental policies and actions.) The applicant brought no evidence to that effect upon which he speculated.
The Court would not be unresponsive to cogent evidence of such an intended assault by sheer shadowy money on the political parties' abilities to compete among themselves in the public eye for the electorate's votes. Such potential responsive ness on the Court's part was indicated in analo gous circumstances in Operation Dismantle Inc. v. The Queen, [1984] 2 F.C. 98 (T.D.), at page 108. A cogent demonstration of real and proximate danger to this country, the people or their demo cratic institutions would certainly induce the Court to exert its powers. The applicant presents no such evidence, but he lamely suggests that he can get some. A court of law and equity does not act precipitously and on mere suspicion, no matter how compelling, such as an established counter- sabotage unit might justifiably do. If the applicant really has such evidence, it is the very sort of evidence upon which sections 70.1 [as added by S.C. 1973-74, c. 51, s. 12] and 72 of the Act could well be supported pursuant to section 1 of the Charter.
The application which the applicant says he might have brought could well be serious enough to move the Court to exercise its powers in the public interest. By comparison, the application which the applicant has brought—the misnamed official agent on partisan propaganda—is relative ly trivial and certainly not urgent. The Citizens' Coalition case, until disapproved by a court of concurrent or superior jurisdiction, provides the Chief Electoral Officer with sufficient justification not to have enforced section 72 of the Canada Elections Act during the current election cam paign. In the privileged shelter of the court room his counsel intimated that the Chief Electoral Officer thinks that the effect of that Citizens'
Coalition case has been positively harmful and he would be pleased to see it reversed. The defendant in that 1984 case, the Attorney General of Canada, took no appeal and the Chief Electoral Officer was not impleaded in the matter.
Now the Chief Electoral Officer's counsel also took the view that the Chief Electoral Officer is the wrong respondent in any event because the official directly made responsible for enforcement and compliance, pursuant to subsection 70(3) [as am. by S.C. 1977-78, c. 3, s. 45] of the Act, is not he himself, but is rather the Commissioner of Canada Elections (hereinafter: the C.C.E.). He argues that the direct designation of the C.C.E. in subsection 70(3) "to ensure that the provisions of this Act are complied with and enforced" is far more indicative of the will of Parliament than the somewhat more diluted provisions, designed princi pally for internal organizational administration; found in paragraph 4(1)(a) [or even (c)].
The above summarized arguments seems more plausible than the next, which is to the effect that, in any event, the Chief Electoral Officer and the C.C.E. being appointed by or through the House of Commons are both immune from the judicial supervision of this Court. This is as if in federal Canada today the ultimate appellate Court were a committee of the House of Lords which would thereby be called upon to adjudicate upon the rights and privileges of the Commons, a prospect long considered a potential malaise of the body politic in unitary Britain. The argument smacks of the mentality of colonial deference to the norms of a motherland which have no application here. Sec tion 3 of the Act makes the Chief Electoral Officer a very independent high official of state and the provisions, in particular, of subsection 3(7) where by he is removable "only for cause by the Gover nor General on address of [both] the Senate and the House of Commons," still do not put him above the law. Counsel says it is not the Chief
Electoral Officer, but the C.C.E. who would be responsible if one or either of them be exigible at all to this Court's supervision. Counsel says, in effect that the applicant has sued the wrong offi cial and ought to be dismissed on that ground.
This remaining respondent's counsel cites the statutory duties of the C.C.E. in section 70 of the Act, thus:
70....
(3) The Chief Electoral Officer shall appoint a Commission er of Canada Elections (in this Act referred to as the "Commis- sioner") whose duties, under the general supervision of the Chief Electoral Officer, shall be to ensure that the provisions of this Act are complied with and enforced.
The point is open to debate, for, the C.C.E. being an "election officer" within the meaning of section 2 of the Act is still subject to motivation in the performance of his duties by the Chief Electoral Officer, as above indicated in paragraph 4(1)(b), who shall from time to time instruct election offi cers, including the C.C.E. as necessary "to ensure effective execution of the provisions of this Act". It may be that upon the submission of further, more thorough and better arguments, one or even both officials would be found to carry the legal duty to enforce section 72 of the Act, if it be valid legislation.
Be that as it may the respondent's counsel still ultimately posits that neither is exigible to the Court's supervising jurisdiction, but that both are immune because the respondent is responsible only to Parliament. This, too, is a debatable contention which was raised, but not determined in Hamel v. Union Populaire, [1980] 2 F.C. 599, at page 604; 118 D.L.R. (3d) 484 (C.A.), at page 489. In reviewing a mandamus issued by the Trial Divi sion, the Appeal Division of this Court merely assumed that "the Chief Electoral Officer is sub ject to the supervision of the courts" but did not resolve the question. That indeed is a question which deserves better argumentation and more
thorough deliberation than can be accorded in summary proceedings such as these. However, it is by no means certain that the respondent's belief that he, an ex officio wielder of State authority and statutory power—a quintessential paradigm of "a federal board ... or other tribunal"—is immune from prerogative relief is sustainable. especially now in an era when Parliament and the government of the day are themselves subject to the law of the Constitution.
In any event the respondent's posture herein does make it necessary to determine the constitu tional validity of section 72 of the Act. No notice of these proceedings has been served on any Attor ney General within Canada to discover whether any be interested in intervening in these proceed ings. Such an opportunity should be accorded to the attorneys general. Therefore because: the matter is not shown to be of any appreciable urgency; there is at least one constitutional ques tion to be determined; and the applicant seeks not only relief by way of mandamus and mandatory injunction, but also by declaration of the validity of the impugned section 72, the Court will follow the direction given by the Appeal Division in Wilson v. Minister of Justice, [1985] 1 F.C. 586, at page 589:
It seems to me that, faced with an application for declaratory relief, a trial judge has two options: he may dismiss the application on the procedural ground without prejudice to the right of the applicant to bring his action within a prescribed time or he may on consent and not merely in the absence of objection, order that the proceeding be deemed to have been properly commenced provided the parties place on the record an agreed statement of all the facts upon which the issues are to be adjudicated. Failure to define the facts can lead to a situation as we presently face. There is no certainty that issues will be approached on appeal in precisely the same fashion as a trial.
Since there is no consent on the respondent's part and no possibility of an agreed statement of facts, the applicant's motion will be dismissed, with party-and-party costs to be borne by the applicant if the matter stops here. However, costs will be in the cause if the applicant proceeds to bring an action such as he may do, without preju dice. As prescribed by Mr. Justice Mahoney in the Wilson case, this dismissal is effected without
prejudice to the right of the applicant to bring action against the Chief Electoral Officer and/or the Commissioner of Canada Elections and/or the Attorney General of Canada as he may be advised, for the declaratory and other relief sought here, if so advised, before the close of business in the Court's registry office in Ottawa on Friday, December 9, 1988, failing which, the respondent the Chief Electoral Officer may tax his costs and have judgment for them against the applicant.
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