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A-238-86
Arnold Rosevelt Hurd (Appellant) v.
Minister of Employment and Immigration (Respondent)
INDEXED AS: HURD V. CANADA (MINISTER OF EMPLOYMENT AND IMMIGRATION)
Court of Appeal, Urie, Stone and MacGuigan JJ.—Toronto, October 7; Ottawa, October 28, 1988.
Constitutional law — Charter of Rights — Criminal process
— Double jeopardy — Appellant convicted of crimes for which sentences exceeding six months imposed — Deportation order issued under Immigration Act, 1976, ss. 27(1) and 32(2)
— Provisions not contrary to Charter, s. 11(h) guarantee of right not to be punished twice for same offence — S. II applying to criminal or quasi-criminal proceedings and pro ceedings giving rise to penal consequences — Deportation neither criminal nor quasi-criminal proceeding — Implication from case law and purpose of deportation that deportation not true penal consequence — S. 11(h) aimed at larger-than- merely personal disadvantage — Deportation individual, not social, deterrence.
Immigration — Deportation — Appellant twice convicted of crimes carrying sentences exceeding six months — Deportation order issued — Deportation proceeding not within Charter, s. 11(h) proscribing double punishment for same offence as not: (1) criminal or quasi-criminal proceeding, or (2) proceeding giving rise to true penal consequence — Purpose of deportation to remove undesirable person from Canada — Deportation to homeland and transportation distinguished.
Criminal justice — Whether deportation proceedings crimi nal or quasi-criminal by nature — Whether deportation "true penal consequence" — Phrase including fine sufficient to redress wrong to society — Purposes of criminal conviction: redressing wrong done to society and deterrence of others — Criminal sanctions of banishment, transportation distin guished from deportation to homeland — Statutory definition of deportation as "punishment" for limited purpose.
This was an appeal from an Immigration Appeal Board decision declining to exercise its special powers under subsec tion 72(1) of the Act. The appellant, a permanent resident, was twice convicted of drug-related crimes and drew sentences exceeding six months. The Immigration Act, 1976, subsections 27(1) and 32(2) calls for deportation under such circumstances. Pending the immigration inquiry, the appellant was held in custody for two days, but was released when it was adjourned.
He was eventually ordered deported. The issue was whether the deportation was contrary to paragraph 11(h) of the Charter, which proscribes double punishment for the same offence.
Held, the appeal should be dismissed.
Charter, section 11 applies to "criminal or quasi-criminal proceedings giving rise to penal consequences": R. v. Wiggles- worth. The deportation proceeding was not by its very nature criminal or quasi-criminal. The implication from the case law was that deportation was not a true penal consequence. "True penal consequence" encompasses more than just imprisonment, i.e. a fine of such magnitude as would redress the wrong to society: Wigglesworth. On the other hand, the appellant's imprisonment for two days hardly constituted a true penal consequence. It merely assured his attendance at the inquiry.
A criminal conviction accomplishes the social purposes of redressing a wrong to society and deterrence. Deportation merely removes an undesirable person from Canada. It is individual, not social deterrence. The older criminal sanctions of banishment or transportation to a penal colony were to be distinguished from deportation to one's homeland. Although deportation may bring about a personal disadvantage, para graph 11(h) of the Charter is directed to the larger-than-mere- ly-personal disadvantage. Deportation is analogous to the loss of a licence or to dismissal from a police force, or to the forfeiture of a right to practice a profession.
Although paragraph 126(a) of the Act deems that deporta tion is a "penalty, forfeiture or punishment", that is with reference to paragraph 36(e) of the Interpretation Act, a bridging provision which applies when a penalty is imposed under an old Act, and new legislation reduces the penalty.
STATUTES AND REGULATIONS JUDICIALLY CONSI DERED
Canadian Bill of Rights, R.S.C. 1970, Appendix III, s. 2(b).
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, being Part I of the Constitution Act, /982, Schedule B, Canada Act 1982, 1982, c. II (U.K.), s. I 1(h).
Code of Offences, R.R.O. 1980, Reg. 791 (Schedule). Criminal Code, R.S.C. 1970, c. C-34.
Immigration Act, R.S.C. 1927, c. 93, ss. 40, 42, 43. Immigration Act, 1976, S.C. 1976-77, c. 52, ss.
27(1)(d)(i), 32(2), 72(1) (as am. by S.C. 1984, c. 21,s.
81), 84, 126(a).
Interpretation Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. 1-23, s. 36.
Ministry of Correctional Services Act, R.S.O. 1980, c. 275.
Police Act, R.S.O. 1980, c. 381.
Royal Canadian Mounted Police Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. R-9
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
APPLIED:
R. v. Wigglesworth, [1987] 2 S.C.R. 541; 45 D.L.R. (4th) 235; Reference as to the effect of the Exercise by His Excellency, the Governor General of the Royal Pre rogative of Mercy upon Deportation Proceedings, [1933] S.C.R. 269.
CONSIDERED:
Knockaert v. Canada (Commissioner of Corrections), [1987] 2 F.0 202; (1986), 72 N.R. 161 (leave to appeal refused [1987] 1 S.C.R. ix; (1987), 22 Admin.L.R. xxviii); R. v. Shubley (1988), 63 O.R. (2d) 161 (C.A.); Gittens (In re), [1983] I F.C. 152; (1982), 137 D.L.R. (3d) 687; 68 C.C.C. (2d) 438 (T.D.); Trimm v. Durham Regional Police, [1987] 2 S.C.R. 582; 45 D.L.R. (4th) 276; Bowen v. Minister of Employment and Immigration, [1984] 2 F.C. 507; (1984), 58 N.R. 223 (C.A.); Frangi- pane v. Minister of Employment and Immigration et al., T-1553-85, Jerome A.C.J., judgment dated 27/3/86, not reported; Secretary of State v. Delezos, [1989] I F.C. 297 (T.D.).
REFERRED TO:
Fong Yue Ting v. United States, 149 U.S. 698; 37 L. Ed. 905 (1893); Burnham v. Metropolitan Toronto Police, [1987] 2 S.C.R. 572; 45 D.L.R. (4th) 309; Trumbley and Pugh v. Metropolitan Toronto Police, [1987] 2 S.C.R. 577; 45 D.L.R. (4th) 318.
AUTHORS CITED
Gordon, Charles and Harry Nathan Rosenfield Immi gration Law and Procedure, vol. IA, New York: Mat- thew Bender, 1973.
COUNSEL:
Brent Knazan for appellant. Roslyn Levine for respondent.
SOLICITORS:
Sack, Charney, Goldblatt & Mitchell, Toronto, for appellant.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for respondent.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
MACGUIGAN J.: This case raises but a single issue: whether the deportation of the appellant
under the provisions of the Immigration Act, 1976 [S.C. 1976-77, c. 52], ("the Act") is contrary to
paragraph 11(h) of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms [being Part I of the Consti tution Act, 1982, Schedule B, Canada Act 1982, 1982, c. 11 (U.K.)], which proscribes double pun ishment for the same offence.
Section 11 of the Charter reads as follows:
11. Any person charged with an offence has the right
(a) to be informed without unreasonable delay of the specif ic offence;
(b) to be tried within a reasonable time;
(c) not to be compelled to be a witness in proceedings against that person in respect of the offence;
(d) to be presumed innocent until proven guilty according to law in a fair and public hearing by an independent and impartial tribunal;
(e) not to be denied reasonable bail without just cause;
(1) except in the case of an offence under military law tried before a military tribunal, to the benefit of trial by jury where the maximum punishment for the offence is imprison ment for five years or a more severe punishment;
(g) not to be found guilty on account of any act or omission unless, at the time of the act or omission, it constituted an offence under Canadian or international law or was criminal according to the general principles of law recognized by the community of nations;
(h) if finally acquitted of the offence, not to be tried for it again and, if finally found guilty and punished for the offence, not to be tried or punished for it again; and
(i) if found guilty of the offence and if the punishment for the offence has been varied between the time of commission and the time of sentencing, to the benefit of the lesser punishment.
The appellant is a permanent resident of Canada, having been granted landing on Novem- ber 10, 1968, when he was nineteen years old. His admitted criminal record in Canada is as follows (Appeal Book, pages 195-196):
November 15, 1971 indecent assault suspended sentence,
probation I year
January, 1979 assaulting a police 309 days gaol officer
December, 1979 creating a disturb- 15 days gaol &
ance by shouting 2 years probation
February, 1982 driving while fined
under suspension
November 4, 1981 possession for the 7 months
purpose of imprisonment
trafficking
(Marihuana)
March 10, 1983 possession for the 8 months
purpose of imprisonment
trafficking
(Marihuana)
The relevant provisions of the Act are as follows:
27. (I) Where an immigration officer or peace officer has in his possession information indicating that a permanent resident is a person who:
(d) has been convicted of an offence under any Act of
Parliament for which a term of imprisonment of
(i) more than six months has been imposed,...
he shall forward a written report to the Deputy Minister setting out the details of such information.
32....
(2) Where an adjudicator decides that a person who is the subject of an inquiry is a permanent resident described in subsection 27(1), he shall, subject to subsections 45(1) and 47(3), make a deportation order against that person.
On October 24, 1984, an immigration inquiry was held pursuant to a report issued under sub- paragraph 27(1)(d)(i) of the Act, which stated that the appellant had been sentenced to over six months' imprisonment following conviction for offences under an Act of Parliament. He was detained in custody for two days pending the inquiry, but was released from custody when the inquiry was adjourned. When the hearing was resumed on December 21, 1984, he was ordered deported on the grounds set out in subparagraph 27(1)(d)(i).
The appellant appealed to the Immigration Appeal Board, conceding that the deportation order was valid in law, but asking the Board to exercise its special powers under subsection 72(1) [as am. by S.C. 1984, c. 21, s. 81] of the Act. The Board declined to do so and dismissed his appeal
on December 17, 1985. The appellant appealed to this Court under section 84 of the Act, with leave.
The Charter argument now made was first raised in this Court.
The appellant contended that "punishment means a public act whereby an individual suffers a loss, disability or disadvantage as a result of miscon duct" (Memorandum of Fact and Law, paragraph 14). He supported this with the dissenting view of Brewer J. in the United States Supreme Court in Fong Yue Ting v. United States, 149 U.S. 698 at page 740; 37 L. Ed. 905 (1893), at page 922, that "deportation is punishment". He also cited the concurring opinion of Marceau J. in Knockaert v. Canada (Commissioner of Corrections), [ 1987] 2 F.C. 202, at pages 205-206; (1986), 72 N.R. 161, at page 165; leave to appeal refused [1987] 1 S.C.R. ix; 22 Admin.L.R. xxviii:
Punishment means "the imposition of a penalty" and a penalty [The definition given by The Shorter Oxford English Diction ary (1973), reads as follows: Penalty 1. Pain, suffering (rare). 2. A punishment imposed for breach of law, rule, or contract; a loss, disability, or disadvantage of some kind, either fixed by law for some offence, or agreed upon in case of violation of a contract;] is, in a broad sense, a "disadvantage of some kind" imposed as a consequence of a misbehaviour which, it seems to me, may include a loss of reward. Moreover, even if the earning of remission days reducing the length of the sentence pro nounced against him is not automatic for an inmate, in the sense that it is subject to good conduct, nevertheless it is not a discretionary reward and remains such a normal feature of the sentencing system that a prisoner is entitled to expect a reduc tion of his sentence by regular earned remission to the extent that the loss of a periodic addition to his entitlement has to be seen objectively as a sanction in the nature of a punishment. I would not be prepared to disavow what appears to me to be the implied finding of the learned Trial Judge that the decision of the Earned Remission Board amounted to a punishment, a finding which compelled her to deal with the double jeopardy argument on another basis.
The appellant also relied on the provision of the Act itself that deportation can properly be recog nized as "a penalty, forfeiture or punishment". This argument can be immediately dismissed, because in the relevant paragraph, 126(a) of the Act, there is a restricted context that is of no assistance with respect to the classification of deportation for purposes of the Charter:
126. For greater certainty,
(a) a deportation order made under the Immigration Act, as it read before it was repealed by subsection 128(1) of this Act, shall be deemed to be a penalty, forfeiture or punish ment within the meaning of paragraph 36(e) of the Interpre tation Act;
Paragraph 36(e) of the Interpretation Act [R.S.C. 1970, c. I-23] is, however, only a bridging provision:
36. Where an enactment (in this section called the "former enactment") is repealed and another enactment (in this section called the "new enactment") is substituted therefore,
(e) when any penalty, forfeiture or punishment is reduced or mitigated by the new enactment, the penalty, forfeiture or punishment if imposed or adjudged after the repeal shall be reduced or mitigated accordingly ...
The appellant also argued that the Minister's power to resort to both arrest and detention, and his use of that power in this case when the appel lant was detained for his inquiry, demonstrates that deportation is a disadvantage and a sanction.
The Supreme Court of Canada has recently defined the parameters of section 11 of the Char ter in R. v. Wigglesworth, [1987] 2 S.C.R. 541; 45 D.L.R. (4th) 235. In that case, a member of the RCMP was alleged to have assaulted a prisoner in his custody, as a result of which he was charged both with common assault under the Criminal Code [R.S.C. 1970, c. C-34] and with a major service offence under the Royal Canadian Mount ed Police Act [R.S.C. 1970, c. R-9] for which the maximum penalty is imprisonment for one year. On his appearance before an RCMP service court, he was convicted and fined $300. The accused in that case argued that to proceed with the Criminal Code charge, in view of his service offence convic-
tion, would constitute an infringement of his rights under paragraph 11(h) of the Charter.
The majority judgment (for six of seven judges) by Wilson J. favoured the narrower interpretation of section 11 as applying to "criminal or quasi- criminal proceedings and proceedings giving rise to penal consequences" (at pages 558 S.C.R., 250 D.L.R.).
The appellant in the case at bar attempted to argue that Wigglesworth is not in point because in that case the first conviction was in the service court, whereas here the first conviction was in a criminal court. But no such distinction as to the order of the convictions can be based on the Wig- glesworth reasoninng. In fact, in her analysis of the governing principles, Madam Justice Wilson was dealing with the whole of section 11, and not just with paragraph (h).
Her analysis of the scope of section 11 is as follows (at pages 559-561 S.C.R.; 251-252 D.L.R.):
While it is easy to state that those involved in a criminal or penal matter are to enjoy the rights guaranteed by s. 1l, it is difficult to formulate a precise test to be applied in determining whether specific proceedings are proceedings in respect of a criminal or penal matter so as to fall within the ambit of the section. The phrase "criminal and penal matters" which appears in the marginal note would seem to suggest that a matter could fall within s. 1l either because by its very nature it is a criminal proceeding or because a conviction in respect of the offence may lead to a true penal consequence. I believe that a matter could fall within s. Il under either branch.
There are many examples of offences which are criminal in nature but which carry relatively minor consequences following conviction. Proceedings in respect of these offences would nevertheless be subject to the protections of s. Il of the Charter. It cannot be seriously contended that, just because a minor traffic offence leads to a very slight consequence, per haps only a small fine, that offence does not fall within s. Il. It is a criminal or quasi-criminal proceeding. It is the sort of offence which by its very nature must fall within s. I 1.
In my view, if a particular matter is of a public nature, intended to promote public order and welfare within a public sphere of activity, then that matter is a kind of matter which falls within s. I1. It falls within the section because of the kind of matter it is. This is to be distinguished from private, domes tic or disciplinary matters which are regulatory, protective or corrective and which are primarily intended to maintain disci-
pline, professional integrity and professional standards or to regulate conduct within a limited sphere of activity .... There is also a fundamental distinction between proceedings under taken to promote public order and welfare within a public sphere of activity and proceedings undertaken to determine fitness to obtain or maintain a licence. Where disqualifications are imposed as part of a scheme for regulating an activity in order to protect the public, disqualification proceedings are not the sort of "offence" proceedings to which s. 1 l is applicable. Proceedings of an administrative nature instituted for the pro tection of the public in accordance with the policy of a statute are also not the sort of "offence" proceedings to which s. 1 l is applicable. But all prosecutions for criminal offences under the Criminal Code and for quasi-criminal offences under provincial legislation are automatically subject to s. 1 I. They are the very kind of offences to which s. I I was intended to apply.
This is not to say that if a person is charged with a private, domestic or disciplinary matter which is primarily intended to maintain discipline, integrity or to regulate conduct within a limited private sphere of activity, he or she can never possess the rights guaranteed under s. 11. Some of these matters may well fall within s. 1l, not because they are the classic kind of matters intended to fall within the section, but because they involve the imposition of true penal consequences. In my opin ion, a true penal consequence which would attract the applica tion of s. I l is imprisonment or a fine which by its magnitude would appear to be imposed for the purpose of redressing the wrong done to society at large rather than to the maintenance of internal discipline within the limited sphere of activity. [Emphasis added.]
Wilson J. concluded that a major service offence under the RCMP code of discipline does fall within section 11, because the possibility of impris onment for one year is a true penal consequence. Estey J. in dissent accepted the general analysis to this point and disagreed only with the majority's final holding, viz., that the two offences are never theless different offences so that the accused was not tried and punished a second time for the same offence.
In the case at bar, since the deportation pro ceeding was clearly not by its very nature criminal or quasi-criminal, the issue as defined in the terms of Wilson J. is whether deportation can rightly be considered a true penal consequence.
The respondent contended that only imprison ment was a true penal consequence, but that does not square with Wilson J.'s words that "a true penal consequence which would attract the application of s. 11 is imprisonment or a fine which by its magnitude would appear to be imposed for the purpose of redressing the wrong done to society at large rather than to the mainte nance of internal discipline within the limited sphere of activity." [Emphasis added.]
On the other hand, it is impossible to go along with the appellant's argument that the arrest and imprisonment for two days which befell the appel lant constituted a true penal consequence. This was not a consequence in the true sense, but rather a means of ensuring the appellant's presence at the initial immigration inquiry.
In my view, no answer to the question whether deportation is a true penal consequence leaps out from the analysis of Madam Justice Wilson. It is therefore necessary to look closely at all other relevant decisions.
The first cases that should be examined are these decided on the same day as Wigglesworth: Burnham v. Metropolitan Toronto Police, [1987] 2 S.C.R. 572; 45 D.L.R. (4th) 309; Trimm v. Durham Regional Police, [1987] 2 S.C.R. 582; 45 D.L.R. (4th) 276; and Trumbley and Pugh v. Metropolitan Toronto Police, [1987] 2 S.C.R. 577; 45 D.L.R. (4th) 318. In the Trimm case, the appellant police officer was charged under the Code of Offences [R.R.O. 1980, Reg. 791 (Schedule)] of the Ontario Police Act [R.S.O. 1980, c. 381] both with neglect of duty and with insubordination by disobeying a lawful order. The maximum penalty under the disciplinary proceed ings was dismissal or forced resignation, and Wilson J. held, for a unanimous court (at pages 589 S.C.R.; 282 D.L.R.):
Unlike Wigglesworth, the appellant is not subject to the possi bility of imprisonment under the Police Act. There are in this case no "true penal consequences".
The Court's conclusions in Burnham and Trumb- ley were to the same effect.
In R. v. Shubley (1988), 63 O.R. (2d) 161 (C.A.), and inmate in a provincial correctional institution, after assaulting another inmate, was found guilty of a misconduct under regulations enacted pursuant to the Ontario Ministry of Cor rectional Services Act [R.S.O. 1980, c. 275]. Subsequently, the victim of the assault laid an information charging assault causing bodily harm under the Criminal Code. After setting out the range of penalties available to the superintendent of an institution under the relevant regulations, Robins J.A. wrote for the Court (at pages 169-170):
The penalties that may be imposed by the superintendent under s. 31(1) involve mainly the loss or withdrawal of privi leges or benefits normally available to an inmate who conducts himself properly in accordance with the rules. The penalties for more serious misconducts under s. 31(2) involve a change in the nature of the inmate's confinement or (subject to the Minister's approval) forfeiture of a portion or all of the inmate's earned remission or suspension of his eligibility to earn remission. None of these penalties can be said to constitute true penal consequences so as to render the disciplinary offence a criminal or penal offence and thereby bring into play s. 11 of the Charter.
An inmate becomes an inmate because of the criminal or quasi -criminal proceedings which led to his imprisonment. Those proceedings are obviously criminal or quasi -criminal in nature and the consequences are penal. But once within the institution, changes in the form of an inmate's cell arrangement or the content of his diet or the loss, forfeiture or suspension of privileges or benefits otherwise available to him do not amount to true penal consequences such as to satisfy the second Wig- glesworth test. The term of imprisonment remains the same, only the manner in which or the arrangements under which the term is to be served have been changed, and that because of the inmate's own misconduct in the institution. The scale of punish ment involved reflects only the internal disciplinary interest and not the interest of the public at large.
Some years before Wigglesworth, Mahoney J., while still in the Trial Division, held in Gittens (In re), [1983] 1 F.C. 152, at page 158; (1982), 137 D.L.R. (3d) 687, at page 692; 68 C.C.C. (2d) 438, at page 443:
In its relevant parts, paragraph 11(h) vests the applicant with the right not to be punished again for his crimes. Deporta tion is not punishment for the offences, his conviction of which has rendered a person liable to deportation: Reference re the effect of the exercise of the Royal Prerogative of Mercy on Deportation Proceedings, [ 1933] S.C.R. 269 at p. 278.
Also, this Court held in Bowen v. Minister of Employment and Immigration, [ 1984] 2 F.C. 507, at page 509; (1984), 58 N.R. 223 (C.A.), at page 225, that "paragraph 11(c) of the Charter has no application to the testimony to be given by the person concerned at an inquiry under the Immi gration Act, 1976 . .. the purpose of which is to determine a person's status under that Act, since that person cannot be said to be a `person charged with an offence' (per Heald J.). Similarly, in a case where an immigrant was being deported for criminal activity, the associate Chief Justice held that deportation "can scarcely be characterized as punishment of any sort, much less of a cruel and unusual nature" contrary to paragraph 2(b) of the Canadian Bill of Rights [R.S.C. 1970, Appendix III]: Frangipane v. Minister of Employment and Immigration et al., decided March 27, 1986, no. T-1553-85, at page 4.
A good summary of the position of the Courts in the United States is found in Gordon and Rosen- field, Immigration Law and Procedure, Vol. 1A:
The courts repeatedly have said that a deportation edict does not involve criminal punishment. [1, at para. 4.1c] ...
Since deportation is not regarded as criminal punishment, the double jeopardy prohibition would not preclude a criminal prosecution of one subjected to deportation proceedings in the same ground. Conversely, of course, there would be no bar to bringing of deportation proceedings against a person subjected to criminal prosecution for the same offense. [2, para. 4.3(i)].
Finally, in Secretary of State v. Delezos, [ 1989] 1 F.C. 297 (T.D.), where the respondent had been convicted under the Criminal Code, on a guilty plea, of uttering a forged document in his applica tion for citizenship, in a subsequent proceeding for revocation of citizenship, Muldoon J. stated (at page 303):
Here there is no doubt in the present case that the respondent was indeed a "person charged with an offence" within the meaning of section 11 of the Charter when he was convicted of uttering a forged document, by a judge of the District Court of Ontario, on March 20, 1984. Equally without doubt is that the respondent is not charged with that offence, or even any offence in these proceedings.
The implication of all this case law is that a deportation proceeding should not be considered to be within paragraph 11(h) of the Charter. Besides authority, there is, moreover, good reason to come to the same conclusion. The necessary redressing of the wrong done to society, and the goal of deterrence of others, has already been accom plished through the criminal conviction. The pur pose of the deportation proceedings is not any larger-than-personal social purpose, but merely to remove from Canada an undesirable person. It is individual deterrence, as it were, not social deter rence. Deportation under the Immigration Act, 1976 is thus to be distinguished from the older criminal sanctions of banishment or transportation to a penal colony, in which a citizen was deported from his country of birth as part of his punish ment, and so was just another penal consequence. It cannot be supposed that deportation to a depor- tee's country of birth is a true penal consequence. It may, in particular circumstances, amount to a grave personal disadvantage, but not to the kind of larger-than-merely-personal disadvantage to which paragraph 11(h) of the Charter is directed. Depor tation is analogous, rather, to a loss of a licence or to dismissal from a police force, or to the forfeiture of a right to practice a profession.
The non-criminal character of deportation was in fact the very point decided by the Supreme Court in Reference as to the effect of the Exercise by His Excellency, the Governor General of the Royal Prerogative of Mercy upon Deportation Proceedings, [1933] S.C.R. 269, at page 278, when section 40 of the Immigration Act (R.S.C. 1927, c. 93) was the precursor of subsection 27(1) of the present Act and sections 42 and 43 the predecessors of subsection 32(2). Duff C.J. held for the Court:
It is, perhaps, almost unnecessary to observe that the group of sections under consideration is not concerned with the penal consequences of the acts of individuals. They are designed to afford to this country some protection against the presence here of classes of aliens who are referred to in the statute as "undesirable." The broad conception upon which they are based is indicated by the summary already given of the enact ments of s. 40. Persons convicted of crime in this country, persons who are inmates of prisons in this country, are classed with persons who are inmates of asylums for the insane, with persons implicated in the trade of prostitution, with persons known to have been convicted elsewhere of offences involving
moral turpitude, with persons who are remaining in this coun try in defiance of the prohibitions of the Immigration Act.
Moreover, the results which follow from proceedings under s. 42 are not attached to the criminal offence as a legal conse quence following de jure upon conviction for the offence or imposable therefor at the discretion of a judicial tribunal. They follow, if they follow at all, as the result of an administrative proceeding initiated at the discretion of the Minister at the head of the Department of Immigration.
In the words of the Supreme Court at that time, deportation is "not concerned with the penal consequences of the acts of the individuals", but is rather designed to afford protection against the presence in the country of undesirable persons.
I find the result clear both on precedent and on principle. I would therefore dismiss the appeal.
URIE J.: I agree. STONE J.: I agree.
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