Judgments

Decision Information

Decision Content

CSIS 66-85
Harjit Singh Atwal (Applicant)
v.
The Queen (Respondent)
INDEXED AS: ATWAL V. CANADA
Heald J.—Ottawa, September 11 and October 1, 1987.
Security intelligence — Wiretap and search warrant — Rescission thereof for inadequacy of supporting affidavit and in view of respondent's express consent — At hearing, request for disclosure of affidavit — Rescission of warrant making disclosure pointless — Request for disclosure different matter from motion to rescind warrant — Motion for disclosure should be directed to Trial Division to be dealt with by judge appointed to Trial Division, not to Appeal Court Judge acting as Trial Division Judge.
Judges and courts — Jurisdiction of Federal Court under Canadian Security Intelligence Service Act (CSIS Act) — At hearing where wiretap and search warrant rescinded, motion for disclosure of supporting affidavit presented — Disclosure no longer needed for purpose of motion to rescind warrant — Request for disclosure, different matter from motion to rescind, to be directed to Trial Division and dealt with by judge appointed to Trial Division, not by Appeal Court Judge acting as Trial Division Judge for purposes of CSIS Act — Allowing applications for access to documents under jurisdic tion of one Division made to other would wreak havoc with work of both.
The Federal Court of Appeal set aside a judgment whereby Heald J., acting under the Canadian Security Intelligence Service Act (CSIS Act), refused to rescind a wiretap and search warrant issued pursuant to section 21 of that Act. The matter was referred back to His Lordship on the basis that he had erred in law in refusing to order the production of the affidavit submitted in support of the warrant after the appro priate security editing. At the subsequent hearing before Heald J., the respondent advised the Court that extensive and serious errors had been discovered in the supporting affidavit and that, as a consequence, insufficient evidence remained upon which to sustain the warrant.
The main issue, however, arises from the applicant's request, at the hearing, for disclosure of the supporting affidavit.
Held, the warrant should be rescinded and the request for disclosure of the affidavit denied.
Since it is well established that the judge who makes an ex parte order is competent to rescind it, and in view of the respondent's admissions and express consent, the warrant is rescinded.
The request for disclosure is denied because the affidavit is no longer needed for the purposes of obtaining what was originally sought in these proceedings: the rescission of the warrant. This has been granted. What is now asked for is something completely exterior to and apart from the Rule 330 motion to rescind. It is irrelevant that the affidavit could be useful to the applicant in civil or criminal proceedings.
It is true that a judge appointed to the Court of Appeal, as in this case, is ex officio member of the Trial Division, and vice versa. It is also true that a Court of Appeal judge who issues a warrant under the CSIS Act is acting as a judge of the Trial Division. This does not mean, however, that a judge of the Court of Appeal can routinely be asked to exercise an inherent control over Court documents under the jurisdiction of the Trial Division when that is not incident or ancillary to the powers exercised under the CSIS Act. Such a request should be directed to a judge appointed to the Trial Division. To allow applications for access to documents under the jurisdiction of one Division to habitually be made to judges of the other Division would wreak havoc with the work of both Divisions of the Court.
Finally the request for disclosure was not properly before the Court. It should have been submitted, and it still may be, by way of a separate notice of motion with supporting material as required by Rule 319.
STATUTES AND REGULATIONS JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
Canada Evidence Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. E-10, s. 36.2 (as added by S.C. 1980-81-82-83, c. Ill, s. 4).
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. 8.
Canadian Security Intelligence Service Act, S.C. 1984, c. 21, s. 21.
Federal Court Act, R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10, ss.
5(1)(c) (as am. by S.C. 1985, c. 38, s. 11), 26(1). Federal Court Rules, C.R.C., c. 663, RR. 319, 330 (as
am. by SOR/79-58, s. 1).
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED APPLIED:
Wilson v. The Queen, [1983] 2 S.C.R. 594; Dickie v. Woodworth (1883), 8 S.C.R. 192.
DISTINGUISHED:
Attorney General of Nova Scotia et al. v. Maclntyre, [1982] 1 S.C.R. 175; 65 C.C.C. (2d) 129.
COUNSEL:
Michael Code for applicant.
John H. Sims, Q.C. for respondent.
SOLICITORS:
Ruby & Edwardh, Toronto, for applicant.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for respondent.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
HEALD J.: These reasons relate to the continua tion on September 11, 1987, of the within applica tion under Rule 330 [Federal Court Rules, C.R.C., c. 663 (as am. by SOR/79-58, s. 1)] for an order rescinding a warrant which I issued on July 26, 1985 pursuant to the provisions of section 21 of the Canadian Security Intelligence Service Act, S.C. 1984, c. 21. The affidavit filed in support of the warrant application was sworn by Archie M. Barr on July 18, 1985 (the Barr affidavit). Subject application to rescind was originally argued before me on March 26 and 27, 1987. By judgment dated April 30, 1987 [[1987] 2 F.C. 309], I dismissed the within application to rescind.
By a judgment of the Federal Court of Appeal dated August 12, 1987 [1988] 1 F.C. 107], my judgment refusing to rescind subject warrant was set aside and the matter was referred back to me for a continuance of the hearing of the application to rescind "on the basis that it was an error in law to refuse to order production of the affidavit of Archie M. Barr referred to in the recitals to the said warrant after deleting therefrom anything from which the identity of any person described in paragraphs 18(1)(a) and/or (b) of the Canadian Security Intelligence Service Act can be inferred."
The hearing on September 11, 1987 was sched uled as a continuation of the application to rescind in accordance with the judgment of the Federal Court of Canada (supra). Prior to the September
11 hearing, it was indicated to the Registry by counsel for the respondent that he intended to object to the disclosure of the Barr affidavit pursu ant to the provisions of section 36.2 of the Canada Evidence Act [R.S.C. 1970, c. E-10 (as added by S.C. 1980-81-82-83, c. 111, s. 4)].
However, when the hearing began on September 11, counsel for the respondent did not pursue this course of action. To the contrary, he advised the Court that extensive and serious errors had been discovered by the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) in the Barr affidavit. The conse quence of these errors, in his submission, was that insufficient evidence remained upon which the warrant could be sustained. Accordingly, respond ent's counsel supported the position of counsel for the applicant that the warrant issued on July 26, 1985 in respect of the applicant should be rescinded.
In support of this submission, the respondent's counsel filed the affidavit of Francis Elmer Saun- ders sworn on September 11, 1987 (the Saunders affidavit). Mr. Saunders is the Regional Director General of the Toronto Region of CSIS. He was requested on August 27, 1987 by Mr. T. D. Finn (then the Director of CSIS) to conduct an immedi ate investigation to ascertain, inter alia, if any information contained in the Barr affidavit was unreliable or incorrect and, if so, to determine how and why such errors had been made. Mr. Saunders deposes that, as a result of his investigation, he was able to identify four instances wherein the Barr affidavit contained statements of fact which were inaccurate or could not be substantiated on the basis of the information known to CSIS when the affidavit was sworn on July 18, 1985. He deposes further that the internal audit group of CSIS found two other instances of unsubstantiated statements in the Barr affidavit.
I have re-read the original Barr affidavit as filed in support of the warrant application. I have also read it deleting therefrom the impeached informa tion as identified in the Saunders affidavit. Coun sel for the respondent stated that Mr. Finn had instructed him to advise the Court that the war rant would never have been applied for on the basis of the remaining facts set out in the affidavit
which have not been found to be inaccurate or unsubstantiated. I agree that the supporting Barr affidavit, stripped of the tainted material, would not likely form a proper basis for the issuance of a warrant pursuant to section 21 of the Canadian Security Intelligence Service Act.
Accordingly, and in view of the express consent of the respondent, I propose to rescind the within warrant. The jurisprudence makes it clear that I have jurisdiction to do so. In the case of Wilson v. The Queen, ([1983] 2 S.C.R. 594), Mr. Justice McIntyre, in writing for the majority of the Court cited with approval the decision of Dickie v. Woodworth (1883), 8 S.C.R. 192 where Ritchie C.J. said at page 195:
The judge having in the first instance made an ex parte order, it was quite competent for him to rescind that order, on its being shown to him that it ought not to have been granted, and when rescinded it was as if it had never been granted ....
The applicant is also entitled to his costs of the application to rescind under Rule 330 on a party and party basis.
Before the hearing on September 11, 1987 was concluded, counsel for the applicant requested that I order the Registry of this Court to permit him access to the Barr affidavit. I expressed doubts as to the propriety of my doing so in this proceeding. Since respondent's counsel resisted the applicant's request, I reserved judgment on the form the order should take and gave leave to both parties to file written argument in respect of this request by counsel for the applicant.
From the written argument, filed by counsel, it is clear that, on September 15, 1987, the Supreme Court of British Columbia stayed the proceedings against this applicant and eight other persons accused of conspiring to commit the murder of Malkiat Singh Sidhu. The basis for the stay was said to be the concession on behalf of the Crown that the wiretap evidence of the conspiracy obtained pursuant to the within warrant would be inadmissible at trial. It is also evident that this applicant, who had been imprisoned pending trial, has now been freed.
It is urged however, that the applicant requires access to the Barr affidavit:
(a) so that he may be advised by counsel con cerning a possible civil action; and
(b) in order to further protect himself against the criminal charges still before the Supreme Court of British Columbia (which, according to counsel, are capable of being reinstituted within a twelve month period following the issuance of the stay of proceedings).
Counsel relies on the Maclntyre case' as well as the comments by Mahoney J. in the majority decision of the Federal Court of Appeal in the instant case where he stated at page 38:
The public interest in the administration of justice must, it seems to me, invariably weigh in favour of the openness of all judicial processes.
In the submission of counsel, I should follow the directions of the Federal Court of Appeal and order disclosure of the Barr affidavit in this proceeding.
In order to assess the validity of this submission, I think it necessary to keep in mind the context within which the Federal Court of Appeal issued the instructions quoted supra. On the original motion to rescind pursuant to Rule 330, the appli cant asserted three broad grounds on which he attacked subject warrant: firstly, facial invalidity because of failure to comply with the authorizing section of the Canadian Security Intelligence Ser vice Act, namely, section 21 thereof; secondly, and, in the alternative, and assuming compliance with section 21, facial invalidity because of failure to comply with the minimum constitutional standards for a reasonable search and seizure pursuant to section 8 of the Charter [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.)]; and, thirdly, in the further alternative, sub-facial invalidity because the sup porting affidavit did not justify its issuance. Essen tial to this argument and a pre-condition to its
' Attorney General of Nova Scotia et al. v. Mac/ntyre, [1982] 1 S.C.R. 175, at p. 180; 65 C.C.C. (2d) 129, at p. 142, per Dickson J. (as he then was).
being made was the production of the supporting affidavit for inspection by the applicant.
As I perceive the majority reasons of the Feder al Court of Appeal, the first and second grounds of appeal were not accepted. However, the Court did conclude that the third ground of appeal was well-founded and that the Barr affidavit should be produced subject to certain exceptions as specified in the order of the Court.
In my view, it is obvious that the reasons given by Mahoney J. for reaching this conclusion must be read in the context of the proceedings before the Court. The Court of Appeal had before it an appeal from my decision pursuant to Rule 330 wherein I refused to rescind subject search war rant. The consequence of the order of the Court of Appeal would be to enable counsel for the appli cant to inspect the supporting affidavit in order to advance his argument of sub-facial invalidity. However, since the subject warrant is being rescinded, the applicant no longer needs to see the Barr affidavit in order to make the sub-facial invalidity argument or any other argument for that matter. The notice of motion herein filed on March 20, 1987 by the applicant asked only for an order rescinding the warrant issued by me on July 26, 1985. The applicant is going to receive all of the relief asked for in that notice of motion. What he is now asking for is something completely exterior to and apart from the Rule 330 motion to rescind.
Counsel for the applicant, however, submitted that, since the application was made before me acting as a judge of the Trial Division, I would have inherent power and jurisdiction to make an order requiring the Registry to disclose the Barr affidavit to the applicant and should do so pursu ant to the Maclntyre case and the instructions given by the Federal Court of Appeal herein.
Insofar as the order of the Court of Appeal is concerned, it is my view, for the reasons expressed supra, that the directions given therein were given in the context of the proceeding before them, namely the Rule 330 motion. I did not have before me, at the outset, nor do I have before me now, a motion to the Trial Division for an order that the Registry open the contents of a file rendered secret by the provisions of the Canadian Security Intelli gence Service Act. In the normal course of events, such a motion would be directed to the Trial Division and be dealt with by a judge appointed to the Trial Division. Furthermore, in the normal course of events, it would require a supporting affidavit.
Insofar as the Maclntyre case supra, is con cerned, the applicant in that case was a journalist who made an application to the Trial Division of the Supreme Court of Nova Scotia for an order in the nature of mandamus and/or a declaratory judgment that he was entitled to inspect search warrants and the informations used to obtain them after he was refused access to such documents by the Court Clerk. As indicated supra, it is my view that a similar procedure would have been the proper procedure to follow in this case.
It is true as a judge appointed to the Court of Appeal, I am ex officio a member of the Trial Division pursuant to paragraph 5(1)(c) of the Federal Court Act [R.S.C. 1970 (2nd Supp.), c. 10] (as am. by S.C. 1985, c. 38, s. 11)]. It is also true, pursuant to the same paragraph that judges appointed to the Trial Division are ex officio members of the Court of Appeal. This is not to say, however, that in the orderly and efficient conduct of the business of both Divisions of the Court, judges of the two Divisions should be expected to assert jurisdiction in the other Division on a customary and normal basis. Mahoney J. speaking for the majority of the Federal Court of Appeal in the instant case (A-339-87, August 12, 1987) said at page 8:
In my opinion a judge designated by the Chief Justice for the purposes of the Canadian Security Intelligence Service Act, in
exercising functions under that Act, is doing so as a Federal Court judge. [Emphasis added.]
He went on to observe, that pursuant to subsection 26(1) of the Federal Court Act, the original juris diction conferred by that Act is conferred on the Trial Division.
Accordingly, it is clear that I was acting as a judge of the Trial Division when I was exercising functions under the Canadian Security Intelli gence Service Act. However, what I am being asked to do here is to exercise an inherent control over Court documents generally and not something incidental or ancillary to the powers exercised by me under the Canadian Security Intelligence Ser vice Act. The request for the exercise of such an inherent power should be directed to a judge appointed to the Trial Division. If it were not so, then an application normally directed to the Fed eral Court of Appeal in respect of access to the documents under its jurisdiction and control could, for example, routinely be made to a judge of the Trial Division since he is, ex officio a member of the Federal Court of Appeal. Such a proposition is clearly impractical and calculated to wreak havoc with the work of both Divisions of the Court.
Accordingly, and for the reasons expressed supra, I decline to exercise any jurisdiction that I may have as an ex officio judge of the Trial Division to grant the applicant's request in respect of the Barr affidavit. Quite apart from any other considerations, the matter is not properly before me by way of a separate notice of motion with supporting material as required by Rule 319. If the applicant is still of the opinion that access to the Barr affidavit is required, I know of no present impediment that would foreclose such an applica tion to the Trial Division.
In conclusion, then, the application pursuant to Rule 330 for an order rescinding the warrant issued herein by me on July 26, 1985, is granted and said warrant is set aside with costs payable by the respondent to the applicant on a party and party basis.
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