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A-275-91
National Parole Board (Respondent) (Appellant)
v.
Paul Pomerleau (Applicant) (Respondent)
and
Correctional Service Canada
and
Commission québécoise des libérations conditionnelles (Mis en cause)
INDEXED AS: POMERLEAU Y. CANADA (NATIONAL PAROLE BOARD) (CA.)
Court of Appeal, Marceau, Desjardins and Décary JJ.A.—Montréal, December 4, 1991; Ottawa, January 14, 1992.
Parole — Appeal from Trial Division order granting certio- rari against NPB decisions — Respondent, sentenced for Criminal Code offences, transferred from federal penitentiary to provincial prison — Released on mandatory supervision under Parole Act, s. 21 and returned to federal penitentiary system as of December 5, 1988 — Jurisdictional conflict between NPB and Quebec Board — Whether NPB retaining jurisdiction over convict despite Quebec Board's failure to decide parole issue — Trial Judge erred in holding certificate issued November 28, 1988 separate decision and that Quebec Board, not NPB, had jurisdiction to make impugned decisions — Release on mandatory supervision under Act, s. 21 and release on parole distinguished — Origin and aim of both sys tems explained — Trial Judge wrong in linking two systems and making application of mandatory supervision conditional on parole — Misinterpretation of word "solely" in Act, s. 21(1).
This was an appeal from an order of Denault J. finding that the appellant lost jurisdiction in making the respondent subject to mandatory supervision under subsection 21(1) of the Parole Act, because the Commission québécoise des liberations condi- tionnelles failed to grant respondent parole while he was under its jurisdiction. Sentenced to fourteen years in penitentiary for various Criminal Code offences, the respondent was trans ferred, for security reasons, from a federal penitentiary to a
provincial prison on June 25, 1982 pursuant to the Prisons and Reformatories Act, and to an agreement between the Govern ment of Canada and the Government of Quebec; he remained there until December 5, 1988. He became eligible for parole on March 20, 1984, but the Quebec Board failed to make a deci sion thereon, even though it was empowered to do so. Since the provincial authority refused to deal with parole cases, the Correctional Service of Canada prepared a report to the National Parole Board recommending Pomerleau's conditional release under Parole Act, paragraph 16(1)(b) as of December 5, 1988, the date of his return to the federal penitentiary sys tem. The appellant made a number of decisions, all pertaining to respondent's mandatory supervision, and which the latter contested by way of certiorari on the ground that he could not be subject to a mandatory supervision administered by the appellant since such release applied to people who had been refused parole, which was not his case. The Trial Judge allowed the application for certiorari in its entirety, ruling that the failure of the Commission québécoise des libérations con- ditionnelles to decide the case of the respondent resulted in the National Parole Board losing the right to make the respondent subject to mandatory supervision.
Two issues were addressed to the Court herein: 1) whether the Trial Judge was correct to treat the first two decisions of the Parole Board, dated November 7 and 28, 1988, as being different and 2) whether he was right in holding that, since the Commission québécoise des libérations conditionnelles had failed to deal with the respondent's parole, the National Parole Board had lost the right to impose mandatory supervision on him under subsection 21(1) of the Parole Act.
Held, the appeal should be allowed.
1) The decision dated November 7, 1988 refused the respon dent the right to leave the country and work abroad, while the parole certificate issued on November 28 gave effect to that decision, attesting that the respondent would be released on mandatory supervision on December 5, 1988. There is no doubt, on the face of the document itself, that the November 7 decision took effect only on December 5, the date when the inmate returned to the federal penitentiary system. If the appel lant had jurisdiction on that date, it in no way infringed on the jurisdiction of the provincial parole board. The Trial Judge therefore erred in holding "that on those dates it was for the Commission québécoise, and not the National Parole Board, to decide such a request". Moreover, the certificate issued on November 28, 1988, in accordance with subsection 18(1) of the Act, was not a separate decision and could not be the sub ject of certiorari.
2) An historical review of the provisions dealing with parole and mandatory supervision indicates that application of section
21 of the Parole Act, which governs mandatory supervision, is not conditional on release on parole. In Re Moore and the Queen, the Ontario Court of Appeal defined mandatory super vision as a procedure whereby an inmate, who has not been granted parole, is released before the expiration of the sentence imposed at a date set by statute and over which the National Parole Board has no control. It should be pointed out that the words "to whom parole was not granted" appearing in former subsection 15(1) of the Parole Act have been deleted and replaced by the word "solely" in the present subsection 21(1) in order to clarify the definition of "mandatory supervision". The formula established by section 25 of the present Act for determining the date of release on mandatory supervision pro duces a maximum earned remission of one third of the sentence imposed by the Court, which means that an inmate must theoretically serve two thirds of his sentence before being released on mandatory supervision. As explained in Moore and clarified in the Ouimet Report, the provisions dealing with mandatory supervision were adopted for the purpose of reme dying the situation preceding the enactment of the Criminal Law Amendment Act, 1968-69, whereby anyone released by reason of the provisions of the Penitentiary Act relating to earned remission was not subject to the supervision of the National Parole Board for the balance of his sentence. The aim was to develop a system under which almost every convict would be released under some form of supervision.
Parole is a completely separate system. It is defined in sec tion 2 of the Parole Act as "authority granted under this Act to an inmate to be at large during the inmate's term of imprison ment and includes day parole". According to paragraph 16(1)(a) of the Act, it may be granted to an inmate, subject to any terms or conditions the Parole Board considers reasonable. The Trial Judge was obviously influenced by the wording of section 15 of the Act itself, namely the words "the Board shall review". He could not, however, link these two systems and make the application of mandatory supervision conditional on parole, since the words "solely as a result of remission, includ ing earned remission, and the term of the remission exceeds sixty days" in subsection 21(1) of the Act refer to earned remission and have nothing to do with parole. Parliament's intention as to the meaning of the word "solely" was not that given by the Trial Judge. During consideration of Bill C-51 by the Committee on Justice and Legal Affairs, the words "to whom parole was not granted" were replaced by the word "solely" to clarify the definition of "mandatory supervision". It appears that some inmates to whom parole had been granted but later revoked or forfeited claimed that they were not sub ject to mandatory supervision because of the words "to whom parole was not granted". Parliament's clear intention was therefore to make the inmate subject to mandatory supervision, even where parole has been granted and revoked. The same is undoubtedly true where parole has never been granted. Accordingly, the Trial Judge erred in holding that the National
Parole Board had no right to impose mandatory supervision on the respondent because of the failure of the Quebec Board to grant parole.
STATUTES AND REGULATIONS JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
An Act to Promote the Parole of Inmates, R.S.Q., c. L-1.1, s. 20.
Criminal Law Amendment Act, 1968-69, S.C. 1968-69, c. 38, s. 101.
Criminal Law Amendment Act, /977, S.C. 1976-77, c. 53, ss. 28(1), 40.
Federal Court Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. F-7, s. 2(g).
Parole Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. P-2, s. 15(1).
Parole Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. P-2, ss. 2, 12(1), 15(1) (as am. by R.S.C., 1985 (2nd Supp.), c. 34, s. 3), 16(1)(a),(b), 18(1) (as am. idem, c. 35, s. 6), 19(1), 21(1),(2) (as am. by R.S.C., 1985 (2nd Supp.), c. 35, s. 10), 21.1 to 21.6 (as enacted by R.S.C., 1985 (2nd Supp.), c. 34, s. 5), 22 to 25 (as am. by R.S.C., 1985 (1st Supp.), c. 27, s. 203; (2nd Supp.), c. 34, ss. 6, 7, 13; c. 35, ss. 11, 12), 26.
Parole Regulations, C.R.C., c. 1249, s. 5 (as am. by SOR/79-88, s. 1), 19.1 (as am. by SOR/86-9l5, s. 5; SOR/91-563, s. 18).
Penitentiary Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. P-6, s. 24.
Penitentiary Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. P-5, s. 25 (as am. by R.S.C., 1985 (2nd Supp.), c. 34, s. 10).
Prisons and Reformatories Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. P-20, s. 5 (as am. by R.S.C., 1985 (2nd Supp.), c. 35, s. 31). The Penitentiary Act of 1868, S.C. 1868, c. 75.
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
APPLIED:
Re Moore and The Queen (1983), 41 O.R. (2d) 271; 147 D.L.R. (3d) 528; 4 C.C.C. (3d) 206; 33 C.R. (3d) 99; 52 N.R. 258 (C.A.), affd sub nom. Oag v. The Queen et al., [1983] 1 S.C.R. 658; (1983), 41 O.R. (2d) 281; 52 A.R. 347; 147 D.L.R. (3d) 538; [1984] 2 W.W.R. 191; 29 Alta. L.R. (2d) 1; 33 C.R. (3d) 97.
REVERSED:
Pomerleau v. Canada (National Parole Board), (T-413-91, Denault J., order dated 25/3/91, not yet reported).
REFERRED TO:
Truscott v. Director of Mountain Institution et al. (1983), 147 D.L.R. (3d) 741; 4 C.C.C. (3d) 199; 33 C.R. (3d) 121 (B.C.C.A.).
AUTHORS CITED
Canada, House of Commons, Standing Committee on Jus tice and Legal Affairs. Minutes of Proceedings and Evi dence. Issue No. 22 (June 16, 1977), at p. 22:100.
Cole, David P. and Manson, Allan. Release from Imprisonment—The Law of Sentencing, Parole and Judicial Review, Toronto: Carswell, 1990.
Report of the Canadian Committee on Correc- tions—Toward Unity: Criminal Justice and Corrections (Ottawa: Queen's Printer, 31 March 1969) (Chair: R. Guimet).
COUNSEL:
David Lucas for respondent (appellant).
No one appearing for applicant (respondent).
SOLICITORS:
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for respon dent (appellant).
Pierre Cloutier, Montréal, for applicant (respon- dent).
The following is the English version of the reasons for judgment rendered by
DESJARDINS J.A.: This is an appeal from a decision of the Trial Division* dealing with the issue of whether the appellant retains jurisdiction to decide with respect to the respondent's mandatory supervi sion under the authority of subsection 21(1) of the Parole Act 1 (the "Act") because the Commission
* Editor's Note: The order of Denault J. herein was issued on March 25, 1991 but not made public until April, 1992. The Trial Division Court file number was T-413-91. The reasons for order of Denault J. have not been selected for publication in the Federal Court Reports as the facts of the case are suffi ciently set out in the reasons for judgment of Desjardins J.A.
1 R.S.C., 1985, c. P-2:
21. (1) Where an inmate is released from imprisonment prior to the expiration of his sentence according to law solely as a result of remission, including earned remission, and the term of the remission exceeds sixty days, the inmate
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québécoise des libérations conditionnelles, mise en cause herein, failed to grant the respondent parole while he was under its jurisdiction.
The respondent was sentenced to fourteen years in penitentiary on July 20, 1979, for various offences under the Criminal Code. For security reasons, he was transferred from a federal penitentiary to a pro vincial prison on June 25, 1982, pursuant to section 5 of the Prisons and Reformatories Act, 2 and to an agreement entered into between the Government of Canada and the Government of Quebec on February 15, 1974. He remained there until December 5, 1988. Beginning on June 25, 1982, he was granted tempo rary absences, renewable every fourteen days, on a continuous basis. According to section 16 of the
Parole Act and section 5 of the Regulations [Parole Regulations, C.R.C., c. 1249 (as am. by SOR/79-88,
s. 1], he became eligible for parole on March 20, 1984. The Commission québécoise des libérations conditionnelles, which was empowered to review the parole records of inmates incarcerated in institutions under subsection 12(1) of the Parole Act 3 and section 20 of An Act to Promote the Parole of
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shall, notwithstanding any other Act, be subject to manda tory supervision commencing on the inmate's release and continuing for the duration of the remission.
2 R.S.C., 1985, c. P-20. S. 5 as am. by R.S.C., 1985 (2nd Supp.), c. 35, s. 31] reads as follows:
5. (1) The Minister may, with the approval of the Gover nor in Council, enter into an agreement with the government of any province for the transfer of inmates from any peniten tiary in Canada to any prison in that province.
(2) The Commissioner of Corrections or a member of the Canadian Penitentiary Service designated by the Commis sioner may direct transfers of inmates in accordance with agreements entered into under subsection (I).
(3) An inmate transferred under this section or under an agreement made pursuant to any other lawful authority shall be deemed to be lawfully confined in the receiving prison and is subject to all the statutes, regulations and rules appli cable in the receiving prison.
3 12. (1) The lieutenant governor in council of a province may appoint a Board of Parole for that province to exercise parole jurisdiction, in accordance with this Act and the regula tions, in respect of inmates detained in a provincial institution,
(Continued on next page)
Inmates, 4 failed to make a decision with respect to the respondent's parole. However, he was to be released on mandatory supervision, starting on December 5, 1988, in accordance with section 21 of the Parole Act. Given that the provincial authority refused to deal with parole cases in the province, offi cials of the Correctional Service Canada (CSC) pre pared a report in order to present recommendations to the appellant so that starting on December 5, 1988, the day when the respondent returned to the federal penitentiary system, he could be released on the con ditions imposed by the appellant pursuant to para graph 16(1)(b) of the Parole Act.
The appellant made a number of decisions which were contested by the respondent via certiorari on the ground that he could not be released subject to a mandatory supervision administered by the appellant since, according to him, such release applied to peo ple who had been refused parole, which was not the case in his situation since no authority had ever reviewed his case. The decisions of the appellant against which the application for certiorari was brought were as follows: 5
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other than inmates sentenced to life imprisonment as a mini mum punishment, inmates in respect of whom sentences of death have been commuted to life imprisonment or inmates sentenced to detention in a penitentiary for an indeterminate period.
4 R.S.Q., c. L-1.1, s. 20:
20. From the time an inmate is committed to a house of detention, the commission is seized of right of his record and examines it at the times fixed by regulation, unless he renounces thereto in writing.
The commission may, upon application, examine the case of an inmate whose parole it has previously refused or revo ked. However, it is not bound to examine an application for parole produced within six months following the decision to refuse or to revoke parole, by an inmate whose sentence of imprisonment is less than two years, nor an application pro duced within two years of that decision, by an inmate whose sentence of imprisonment is at least two years.
5 Appeal Book, at pp. 8 to 11. The expression "libération sous surveillance obligatoire", which is found in some of the appellant's decisions, was replaced by "liberté surveillée" in accordance with the new French terminology found in the
(Continued on next page)
(a) A decision dated November 7, 1988, refusing the respondent the right to leave the country and work abroad; 6
(b) A parole certificate issued on November 28, 1988, giving effect to the decision of November 7, 1988, attesting that the respondent would be released on mandatory supervision on December 5, 1988, in accordance with the conditions set out in section 19.1 [as am. by SOR/86-915, s. 5; SOR/91- 563, s. 18] of the Regulations, reproduced on the back of the certificate;?
(c) A decision dated February 13, 1989 authorizing the respondent to leave Canada permanently; 8
(d) A decision dated June 8, 1989, amending the conditions of mandatory supervision and providing that the respondent was required to meet annually with a representative of the Correctional Service Canada and to maintain monthly contact with the person responsible for his case in the anti-gang section of the Montreal Urban Community police department; 9
(e) A decision dated July 6, 1990, providing, inter alia:
[TRANSLATION] Special conditions imposed:
— Refrain from associating with any person whom you know to have a criminal record, or for whom you have reason to believe that he/she has a criminal record, includ ing members of your family who have criminal records. (Mr. Pomerleau agrees to these special conditions of his own free will.)
— Given that most of your problems are in general a result of the fact that your brothers, as well as certain other peo ple, incited you to commit criminal offences, the Board believes that by imposing these conditions it might to some extent protect you from negative influences and at the same time might facilitate your social reintegration. These special conditions will remain in effect until the end of your sentence.m
(f) A decision dated August 3, 1990 authorizing the respondent to travel to New York, in the United
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Parole Regulations, C.R.C., c. 1249 (as am. by SOR/91-563), 26 September 1991.
6 A.B., at pp. 42 and 44.
7 A.B., at p. 47.
8 A.B., at pp. 49-50.
9 A.B., at pp. 57-58. m A.B., at p. 72.
States, for purposes of his work, from August 6, 1990 to August 7, 1990. 11
The Trial Judge allowed the application in its entirety. First, he gave the following explanation with respect to the two decisions of November 7, 1988 and November 28, 1988: 12
On November 7, 1988, the National Parole Board refused the applicant the right to leave the country, which request had been made to the Correctional Service Canada. The C.S.C. issued a report which was favourable to the applicant, which report was apparently sent to the National Parole Board. It refused to grant the request. On November 28, 1988, the National Parole Board also issued a mandatory supervision certificate (R-10) setting the conditions of the applicant's mandatory supervision, commencing on December 5, 1988. It appears from the evidence (paragraph 8 of the affidavit of Claude Barrette) that as of the mandatory supervision date "the province would return the applicant to the federal system on that date, given that the province refused to deal with mandatory supervision cases in the province".
I believe that on these dates it was the Quebec Commission and not the National Parole Board which should have decided such a request. Under the terms of section 6 of the feder- al/provincial agreement signed in 1974, the parties covenanted and agreed "that, to the extent permitted by law, persons whose custody is transferred pursuant to clause 1 or clause 2 of this agreement shall, during such custody, be subject in all matters to the jurisdiction of the lawful authorities of the party hereto to whom such custody has been transferred". (Emphasis added.) Undoubtedly section 13 of the Act gives exclusive jurisdiction to the National Parole Board with respect to grant ing or refusing parole or escorted temporary absences, but the beginning of the section provides that this power must be exer cised "subject to this Act", which clearly includes section 12. An inmate incarcerated in a provincial institution which has appointed a board of parole is therefore subject to that board. The National Parole Board therefore erred in making decisions on November 7 and 28 with respect to the applicant.
He continued:
Subsequently, on February 13, 1989, June 8, 1989, July 16, 1990 [sic] and August 3, 1990, the National Parole Board made certain decisions with respect to him under the terms of which he was refused the right to leave the country perma nently and was required to meet annually with a representative of the Correctional Service Canada and to maintain monthly contact with the person responsible for his case. The last deci-
11 A.B., at p. 72.
12 A.B., at pp. 101-103.
sion (August 3, 1990) permitted him to go to New York for purposes of his work, in response to a request by him for such permission.
All these decisions, even the decisions dated November 7 and 28, 1988, were the subject of an application for certiorari based on a narrow interpretation of subsection 21(1) of the Parole Act. This section reads as follows:
21. (1) Where an inmate is released from imprisonment prior to the expiration of his sentence according to law solely as a result of remission, including earned remission, and the term of the remission exceeds sixty days, the inmate shall, notwithstanding any other Act, be subject to mandatory supervision commencing on the inmate's release and continuing for the duration of the remission. [Emphasis added.]
We should also take note of section 21.1 [R.S.C., 1985, c. 34 (2nd Supp.), s. 5], also reproduced as an annex:
21.1 Remission is credited, in accordance with the Peniten tiary Act and the Prisons and Reformatories Act, against the sentence being served by an inmate and entitles the inmate to be released from imprisonment prior to the expiration of the sentence according to law unless the Board directs pur suant to paragraph 21.4(4)(a) that the inmate shall not be so released. [Emphasis added.]
According to the applicant, mandatory supervision applies to an inmate who is released prior to the expiration of the sentence according to law, solely as a result of remission, including earned remission, and the term of the remission exceeds sixty days, that is, to an inmate who has been refused parole or who has waived parole in writing.
I believe that in this case the failure or neglect of the Com mission québécoise des libérations conditionnelles to decide the case of the applicant, who was an inmate in a provincial prison and under its jurisdiction, when it was obliged to do so under sections 12 and 15 of the Parole Act and under its own enabling legislation, resulted in the National Parole Board los ing the right to make the applicant subject to mandatory super vision as set out in section 21 of the Act cited above.
He then examined section 21 of the Parole Act and mandatory supervision: 13
Section 21, which deals with mandatory supervision, applies to everyone who was sentenced to imprisonment in or trans ferred to a penitentiary on and after August 1, 1970. This is the substance of subsection 21(6).
In order to understand the actual effect of subsection 21(1), relating to mandatory supervision, we must examine the provi sions of the Parole Act as a whole and read each in relation to the others. This statute establishes two broad categories of release. This may be inferred both from section 18 of the Act, under which the Board grants "parole to an inmate, or an
13 A.B., at pp. 103-105.
inmate is released from imprisonment subject to mandatory supervision", and from the general scheme of the Act. The first category, parole, is defined in section 2 of the Act as "author- ity granted under this Act to an inmate to be at large during the inmate's term of imprisonment and includes day parole". Within this category, as the definition indicates, there is what is called "day parole": "parole the terms and conditions of which require the inmate to whom it is granted to return to prison from time to time during the duration of the parole or to return to prison after a specified period".
Under the terms of section 15 of the Act, the Board shall review the case of an inmate unless he advises the Board in writing that he does not wish to be granted parole, and in all cases it must decide whether to grant or refuse day parole. Under section 17, the Board is not required, in considering whether parole should be granted or revoked, to personally interview the inmate or any person on behalf of the inmate, subject to such regulations as the Governor in Council may make in that behalf. However, section 19.2 of the Regulations has been adopted, providing that not later than 15 days before the Board reviews the case of an inmate for the first time to decide whether parole should be granted or denied, the Board shall notify the inmate, in writing, of the terms and conditions of parole. As I noted earlier, the Commission québécoise des libérations conditionnelles did not examine the applicant's case, let alone notify him of the terms and conditions of parole.
The other broad category is "mandatory supervision". It is not defined in section 2 of the Act, but, as is set out in subsec tion 21(1) of the Act, it applies to an inmate who is released prior to the expiration of his sentence, solely as a result of remission, including earned remission, and the term of the remission exceeds sixty days. For this system to apply, the inmate must have been refused parole by the Board, or have waived it in writing, which the applicant did not do. I believe that section 15 of the Act imposes an obligation on the National Parole Board to review the case of every inmate at the time established by subsection 15(1), and that this obligation is binding on a provincial board in respect of federal inmates serving their sentence in a provincial prison. Subsection 12(1) provides that "The lieutenant governor in council of a province may appoint a Board of Parole for that province to exercise parole jurisdiction, in accordance with this Act and the regula tions, in respect of inmates detained in a provincial institu tion ... ". Because there is an obligation under subsection 15(1) of the Act to examine the case of every inmate, it is mandatory that the National Parole Board or the provincial boards, as the case may be, decide whether to grant or refuse parole to an inmate.
The Trial Judge then stated: 14
I believe that under this Act there is a fundamental right in Canada for any inmate who is serving a sentence of two years or more to have his case reviewed by a parole board (national or provincial) and to have it decide whether the inmate will be
14 A.B., at pp. 105-106.
released on parole. This right exists independently of the parole system provided in section 26 of the Penitentiary Act (R.S.C. 1970, c. P-6, now R.S.C., 1985, c. P-5, section 28) or similar systems established by the provincial governments. When the National Parole Board or a provincial board, as the case may be, has decided the case of an inmate who is eligible for parole after serving one third of his sentence, two situations may arise: either the board agrees to release the inmate on parole, on the terms and conditions set out in section 16 of the Act cited above, or it refuses to do so. If it agrees, the inmate will be released on parole on the terms and conditions which it deems desirable. On the other hand, if it refuses, the inmate will remain in penitentiary, although this does not mean that he cannot be granted temporary absences. If the inmate is not released under the parole system, he may nonetheless be granted release under another system, "mandatory supervision" which, as set out in section 21.1 of the Act cited above, entitles him "to be released from imprisonment prior to the expiration of the sentence according to law unless the Board directs pur suant to paragraph 21.4(4)(a) that the inmate shall not be so released". I conclude from this that mandatory supervision applies only to an inmate who has been refused parole or who has waived parole in writing. Accordingly, the National Parole Board had no jurisdiction to impose mandatory supervision on an inmate who had been sentenced to imprisonment in or transferred to a penitentiary on and after August 1, 1970, to use the words of subsection 21(6) of the Act, unless the inmate had been refused parole or had waived parole in writing.
He then concluded: 15
Despite the temporary absences granted to the applicant, he has been deprived of his right to have his case reviewed by a board for the purpose of obtaining parole, and accordingly the National Parole Board had no jurisdiction to impose mandatory supervision on him under section 21 of the Act.
Was the Trial Judge correct to treat the first two decisions of the Parole Board, dated November 7 and 28, 1988, as being different, and, second, to hold that since the Commission québécoise des libérations conditionnelles had failed to deal with the respon dent's parole the National Parole Board had lost the right to impose mandatory supervision on the respon dent under subsection 21(1) of the Parole Act?
The appellant submits that he was not. 15 A.B., at pp. 106-107.
The appellant contends, first, that it made only one decision, dated November 7, 1988, and not two, as the Trial Judge stated. The appellant made its deci sion with respect to the terms and conditions of mandatory supervision on November 7, 1988. It did not impose any special term or condition on the respondent. Release on mandatory supervision was subject only to the mandatory terms and conditions set out in section 19.1 of the Regulations. Because the appellant refused to modify the condition set out in paragraph 19.1(c) of the Regulations, which pro vides that the inmate must remain in Canada, the effect was to prevent the respondent from leaving the country and working abroad. The certificate issued on November 28, 1988 was merely an attestation of the decision of November 7, 1988, and so, according to the appellant, cannot be considered to be a deci sion within the meaning of paragraph 2(g) of the Federal Court Act [R.S.C., 1985, c. F-7]. Inciden tally, subsection 18(1) [as am. by R.S.C., 1985 (2nd Supp.), c. 35, s. 6] of the Parole Act provides for the issuance of this certificate. The appellant further sub mits that the Trial Judge confused the date of that decision and the day when it was to take effect, that is, December 5, 1988. On that date, the respondent returned to the federal penitentiary system. The appellant submits that the Trial Judge erred in finding that the appellant had no jurisdiction to decide the terms and conditions of mandatory supervision since on that date the respondent returned to the federal penitentiary system.
With respect to the decisions dated February 13, 1989, June 8, 1989, July 6, 1990 and August 3, 1990, the appellant submits that the respondent cannot rely on the failure of the provincial board to act and that board's silence to argue that the National Parole Board had no jurisdiction to impose or modify the terms and conditions of mandatory supervision which, by operation of the Act and Regulations, apply to the respondent. Starting the moment when an inmate is released as a result of remission, the Act requires that the inmate be supervised and that he not breach any of the conditions on which he is released. The absence of any decision dealing with an inmate's parole has no impact on the legal obligation imposed by section 21 of the Act, by virtue of which any inmate released before the expiration of his sentence
is subject to mandatory supervision. The situations of an inmate on parole and an inmate on mandatory
supervision are the same, except for the date of release. For each of them, the term of imprisonment is deemed to continue in force until the expiration thereof according to law; 16 terms and conditions may be imposed; 17 parole or mandatory supervision may be terminated or revoked for breach of any term or condition. 18
The respondent did not appear and made no sub missions, since, we are told, he is outside the country and in custody.
With respect to the first point raised by the appel lant, there is no doubt, on the face of the document itself, 19 that the decision dated November 7, 1988 took effect only on December 5, 1988, the date when the inmate returned to the federal penitentiary sys tem. If the appellant had jurisdiction on that date it in no way infringed on the jurisdiction of the provincial parole board. The Trial Judge therefore erred in hold ing "that on those dates it was for the Commission québécoise, and not the National Parole Board, to decide such a request". Moreover, the certificate issued on November 28, 1988, in accordance with subsection 18(1) of the Act, is not a separate decision and cannot be the subject of certiorari.
With respect to the second issue raised by the appellant, an historical review of the provisions deal ing with parole and mandatory supervision indicates that application of section 21 of the Act, which deals with mandatory supervision, is not conditional on release on parole.
16 See s. 19(1) of the Parole Act with respect to parole and s. 21(2) [as am. by R.S.C., 1985 (2nd Supp.), c. 35, s. 10] with respect to mandatory supervision.
17 See s. 16(1)(a) of the Act with respect to parole and s. 16(1)(b) with respect to mandatory supervision.
18 See s. 22 to 25 [as am. by R.S.C., 1985 (1st Supp.), c. 27, s. 203; (2nd Supp.), c. 34, ss. 6, 7, 13; c. 35, ss. 11, 12] of the Act with respect to parole and s. 21(2) with respect to manda tory supervision.
19 A.B., at p. 47.
In Re Moore and the Queen, 20 Mr. Justice Dubin, speaking for the Ontario Court of Appeal, defined mandatory supervision as follows:
Release on mandatory supervision is a procedure whereby an inmate of a prison who has not been granted parole is released before the expiration of the sentence imposed at a date set by statute so that the inmate may serve the balance of his sentence at large in society but under supervision and subject to return to prison if the former inmate fails to comply with the conditions governing the release. The statutory provision which governs the date of such release is to be found in s. 24 of the Penitentiary Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. P-6, subsequently referred to. It is a date over which the National Parole Board has no control. [Emphasis added.] 21
Section 24 of the Penitentiary Act, 22 to which Mr. Justice Dubin refers, became section 25 of the present Act [R.S.C. 1985, c. P-5 (as am. by R.S.C., 1985 (2nd Supp.), c. 34, s. 10)]; this section, which deter mines the date of release on mandatory supervision, reads as follows:
25. (1) Subject to this section and section 26.1, every inmate shall be credited with fifteen days of remission of the sentence of the inmate in respect of each month and with a number of days calculated on a pro rata basis in respect of each incom plete month during which the inmate has been industrious, as determined in accordance with any Commissioner's directives made in that behalf, with regard to the program of the peniten tiary in which the inmate is imprisoned.
20 (1983), 41 O.R. (2d) 271, at pp. 272-273, affirmed with slight variation by the Supreme Court of Canada; the decision of that Court is reported at p. 281 of the same report series. See also [1983] 1 S.C.R. 658 [sub nom. Oag v. The Queen et al.].
21 It should be noted, however, that s. 15(1) of the Parole Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. P-2 (now s. 21(1) of the Parole Act), on which the definition proposed by Mr. Justice Dubin was based, then read as follows:
15. (1) Where an inmate to whom parole was not granted is released from imprisonment, prior to the expiration of his sentence according to law, as a result of remission, inclu ding earned remission, and the term of such remission exceeds sixty days, he shall, notwithstanding any other Act, be subject to mandatory supervision commencing upon his release and continuing for the duration of such remission. [Emphasis added.]
The words "to whom parole was not granted" have been deleted by S.C. 1976-77, c. 53, s. 28(1) and do not appear in the present s. 21(1) of the Act. There will be a comment later on in this judgment.
22 R.S.C. 1970, c. P-6.
(2) The first credit of earned remission pursuant to subsec tion (1) shall be made not later than the end of the month next following the month the inmate is received into a penitentiary, and thereafter a credit of earned remission shall be made at intervals of not more than three months.
(3) Where an inmate was received into a penitentiary before July 1, 1978, the date of the first credit of earned remission referred to in subsection (2) is August 31, 1978, and the subse quent intervals run from that date.
(4) For the purposes of this section and section 26.1, a refer ence to the expiration of a sentence of an inmate according to law shall be read as a reference to the day on which the sentence expires, without taking into consideration any remis sion standing to the credit of the inmate.
(5) An inmate is not entitled to be released from imprison ment, solely as a result of remission,
(a) prior to the expiration according to law of the sentence the inmate is serving at the time an order is made in respect of the inmate pursuant to paragraph 21.4(4)(a) of the Parole Act, as determined in accordance with section 20 of that Act at the time the order is made; or
(b) where the case of the inmate is referred to the Chairman of the National Parole Board pursuant to subsection 21.3(3) of the Parole Act during the six months immediately preced ing the presumptive release date of the inmate, prior to the rendering of the decision of the Board in connection there with.
(6) Where an order is made in respect of an inmate pursuant to paragraph 21.4(4)(a) of the Parole Act, the inmate shall for feit all statutory and earned remission standing to the credit of the inmate, whether accrued before or after the coming into force of this section.
(7) Any remission of sentence forfeited pursuant to subsec tion (6) shall not thereafter be recredited pursuant to subsection 25(3) of the Parole Act.
This formula, when read with the other provisions of the Act, as Mr. Justice Dubin stated, 23 actually produces a maximum earned remission of one third of the sentence imposed by the Court, which amounts to saying that in theory an inmate must serve two thirds of his sentence before being released on mandatory supervision. Earned remission may, how ever, be forfeited under section 26 of the Act.
Also in Moore, 24 Mr. Justice Dubin explained that the origin of the provisions dealing with mandatory supervision, which are set out, inter alia, in section 21 of the Parole Act, is found in section 101 of the
23 Moore, supra, at p. 276.
24 Ibid., at pp. 277-278.
Criminal Law Amendment Act, 1968-69. 25 During the period which preceded the enactment of that Act, unlike the case of a person under parole, anyone released by reason of the provisions of the Peniten tiary Act relating to earned remission was not subject to the supervision of the National Parole Board for the balance of his sentence. The Ouimet Report made the following comments: 26
Canada's experience, like that in most other countries, has been that during the early development of parole releases were made cautiously and were granted to the better risks among prison inmates. This is a necessary stage in development, par ticularly in view of the fact that the occasional dramatic inci dent whereby a parolee commits some violent crime tends to create strong public reaction against parole as a whole. Increas ingly, however, it is being pointed out that the practice of parolling only the better risks means that those inmates who are potentially the most dangerous to society are still, as a rule, being released directly into full freedom in the community without the intermediate step represented by parole.
At present, about 25 per cent of inmates coming out of the federal penitentiaries do go on parole. The other 75 per cent come out without any formal supervision, although many of them do apply voluntarily for assistance to the private after care agencies. Since there are about 3,500 releases from the penitentiaries each year, the number who are being released without supervision is considerable. Among them are many of the most dangerous who could not meet the requirements for parole.
The aim should be to develop a system under which almost everyone would be released under some form of supervision. It is best if he is released at the point at which the chances for his successful reintroduction to community life would be highest. This means the extension of parole as we now know it to every case possible.
However, there will be many who will not qualify for parole and they should also be subject to supervision. This can be accomplished by making the period of statutory remission a period of supervision in the community, subject to the same
25 S.C. 1968-69, c. 38.
26 Canada, Report of the Canadian Committee on Correc- tions—Toward Unity: Criminal Justice and Corrections. Ottawa, Queen's Printer, March 1969 (Chairman: Roger Oui - met), at pp. 348, 350-351.
procedures that apply to parole. This means the releasee would be subject to conditions and to return to complete his sentence in the institution if he violates those provisions. He should also receive the same kind of assistance and control through super vision that applies to parolees.
For practical reasons, there would be little purpose in super vising an inmate whose statutory remission period is only a few days in length. Perhaps a period of sixty days should be seen as the minimum when supervision could be effective.
Since the success rate among these inmates is apt to be less than among those who qualify for parole, some name for this program other than parole should be used so that there will be no confusion between the success rates of parole and the suc cess rates of this new program.
The Committee recommends that a system called Statu tory Conditional Release be introduced through appropri ate legislation to make any period of statutory release longer than sixty days subject to the same rules and condi tions that govern parole.
Such legislation should increase the number of inmates applying for parole instead of waiting for conditional release since either form of release will imply supervision. It will pre vent the unconditional release of so many inmates who need supervision but do not receive it because it cannot be imposed under present circumstances.
Because the Parole Board could not prevent an inmate from being released under mandatory supervi sion, since it had no control over the date when such release took effect, and the technique of arresting an inmate immediately upon release under mandatory supervision (gating) had been held to be ultra vires, 27 the federal Parliament adopted measures to give the Board jurisdiction to prohibit the release of the inmate. These are found in sections 21.1 to 21.6 [as enacted by R.S.C., 1985 (2nd Supp.), c. 34, s. 5] of the Parole Act, from which the Trial Judge quoted section 21.1, inter alia:
27 Moore, supra; Truscott v. Director of Mountain Institution et al. (1983), 147 D.L.R. (3d) 741 (B.C.C.A.), both affirmed by the Supreme Court of Canada; the decision of that Court is reported at p. 538 of the same report series. See also [1983] 1 S.C.R. 658.
21.1 Remission is credited, in accordance with the Peniten tiary Act and the Prisons and Reformatories Act, against the sentence being served by an inmate and entitles the inmate to be released from imprisonment prior to the expiration of the sentence according to law unless the Board directs pursuant to paragraph 21.4(4)(a) that the inmate shall not be so released. [Emphasis added.]
On the other hand, parole, which started in 1868 with the first Act respecting Penitentiaries [The Peni tentiary Act of 1868, S.C. 1868, c. 75], 28 except in the case of the royal prerogative, is a completely sep arate system. The Act defines it in section 2 as "authority granted under this Act to an inmate to be at large during the inmate's term of imprisonment and includes day parole". According to paragraph 16(1)(a) of the Act, it may be granted to an inmate, subject to any terms or conditions the Parole Board considers reasonable, if it considers that:
16. (1)...
(i) in the case of a grant of parole other than day parole, the inmate has derived the maximum benefit from impris onment,
(ii) the reform and rehabilitation of the inmate will be aided by the grant of parole, and
(iii) the release of the inmate on parole would not consti tute an undue risk to society;
It is not necessary for me to consider here whether the Trial Judge was correct in stating " . .. that under this Act there is a fundamental right in Canada for any inmate who is serving a sentence of two years or more to have his case reviewed by a parole board (national or provincial) and to have it decide whether the inmate will be released on parole". It is obvious, however, that the Trial Judge was influenced by the wording of section 15 [as am. by R.S.C., 1985 (2nd Supp.), c. 34, s. 3] of the Act itself, inter alia the words "the Board shall review". 29 The Trial Judge could not, however, link these two systems and make
28 See D. P. Cole, A. Manson, Release from Imprison- ment—The Law of Sentencing, Parole and Judicial Review (Toronto: Carswell, 1990), at pp. 159ff.
29 S. 15(1) of the Parole Act reads in part:
15. (1) Subject to subsection (2), the Board shall review ... and shall do so at the times prescribed by the regulations but not later than the day on which an inmate has served the
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the application of mandatory supervision conditional on parole, since the words "solely as a result of remission,[ 30 ] including earned remission, and the term of the remission exceeds sixty days" [under- lining added] in subsection 21(1) of the Act refer to earned remission and have nothing to do with parole.
Here we should recall what the Trial Judge said with respect to the word "solely": 31
The other broad category is "mandatory supervision". It is not defined in section 2 of the Act, but, as is set out in subsec tion 21(1) of the Act, it applies to an inmate who is released prior to the expiration of his sentence, solely as a result of remission, including earned remission, and the term of the remission exceeds sixty days. For this system to apply, the inmate must have been refused parole by the Board, or have waived it in writing, which the applicant did not do.
Parliament's intention with respect to the meaning to be assigned to the word "solely" is not the mean ing given by the Trial Judge. As I indicated earlier in examining Moore, 32 subsection 15(1) of the Parole Act, as it was in effect on August 1, 1970, started with the words:
15. (1) Where an inmate to whom parole was not granted is released from imprisonment, prior to the expiration of his sentence ... [Emphasis added.]
In 1977 Parliament repealed the words I have underlined, and enacted the following version: 33
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portion of the term of imprisonment, as prescribed by the regulations, that must be served before day parole may be granted. [Emphasis added.]
S. 5 [as am. by SOR/9l-563, s. 4] of the Regulations pro vides:
5. Subject to sections 6, 8 and 11.1, the portion of the term of imprisonment that an inmate must serve before full parole may be granted is one third of the term of imprison ment imposed on the inmate or seven years, whichever is the lesser. [Emphasis added.]
30 Statutory remission was abolished by the Criminal Law Amendment Act, 1977, S.C. 1976-77, c. 53, s. 40.
31 A.B., at pp. 104-105.
32 See footnote 21.
33 Criminal Law Amendment Act, 1977, S.C. 1976-77, c. 53, s. 28(1). This section came into force on October 15, 1977, S 1 / 7 7-217, 9 November 1977.
15. (1) Where an inmate is released from imprisonment, prior to the expiration of his sentence according to law, solely as a result of remission ... and the term of such remission exceeds sixty days, he shall, notwithstanding any other Act...
During consideration of Bill C-51 by the Commit tee on Justice and Legal Affairs, the repeal of the words "to whom parole was not granted", which were replaced by the word "solely", prompted the follow ing exchange: 34
Mr. Halliday: Mr. Chairman, what does the word "solely" mean there?
Mr. Fox: Mr. Chairman, this clause has been reworded to clarify the definition of "mandatory supervision". Previously, some inmates for whom parole had been granted and later had parole revoked or forfeited claimed they were not suject [sic] to mandatory supervision because of the words:
. to whom parole was not granted...
The intention was therefore clearly to make the inmate subject to mandatory supervision, even where parole has been granted and revoked.
The same is undoubtedly true where parole has never been granted.
For all these reasons, I would allow the appeal, I would quash the judgment of the Trial Division dated March 25, 1991, and I would declare the decisions of the appellant dated November 7, 1988, February 13, 1989, June 8, 1989, July 6, 1990 and August 3, 1990 to be valid and proper, with costs both on appeal and at trial.
MARCEAU J.A.: I agree. DECARY J.A: I agree.
34 Canada. Proceedings and evidence before the Standing Committee on Justice and Legal Affairs (concerning Bill C-51, Criminal Law Amendment Act, 1977), issue 22, June 16, 1977, at p. 22:100.
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