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Acknowledgements
First, I would like to acknowledge the Supreme Court of Canada. Over the decades, the membership of this nine-person Court has altered through retirement (mandatory at age seventy-five) or death. Increasingly, the Court has tried to hand down judgments that come ever closer to being decisions that can be read, understood, and discussed by those who want to be informed about the structure of our law, of our government, and more importantly, of our society’s values. So, I thank — most profusely — the Supreme Court of Canada.
A second link in the chain between the law and the people is the media. It is possible, of course, in our highly computerized society to read the decisions of the Supreme Court of Canada online, but that can be an arduous process. On occasion, magazines such as Maclean’s feature a particular subject for investigative reporting, in which the Supreme Court of Canada’s judgments (such as those relating to tobacco) may form a part. Newspapers such as the Toronto Star may select a story reflecting a matter of social concern, such as bullying. And, on a daily basis, radio or television may briefly report on such stories.
The net effect of media reporting, at best, ranges from episodic to minimal. Perhaps the one constant to which we frequently refer in this series is the informed editorials in Canada’s national newspaper, the Globe and Mail. Without hesitating, the Globe and Mail granted the right to reprint editorials (and there were many) on Supreme Court of Canada decisions. The approach of the Globe and Mail seems to be: Let the public be made aware. I thank them for their generosity and for maintaining consistently high standards.
Ordinarily, I would say that I take full responsibility for the contents of this book. Hopefully, however, the contents do not reflect my judgments but those of the Supreme Court of Canada. My task, as I saw it, was to discuss those judgments in a nonjudgmental and accessible way.
Introduction
“It’s the law!” What does that mean? If the law is “broken,” especially the criminal law, then there may be a penalty, such as a fine or jail time, or community service, or conditional release. But who makes the law? Is it the government? How can a legislature draw clear lines, for example, in imposing individual responsibility?
Consider a fifteen-year-old victim of school bullying. He has “had enough.” He takes his father’s gun from a locked closet, loads it, and goes to school, where he shoots and seriously wounds one of his bullies. He is apprehended and charged. But how is he to be tried and, if found guilty, sentenced? Is he to be treated as a young offender or as an adult? If convicted, will he have a record that will follow him through high school and university, and into the job market? Is it really enough to say that a court will make the decisions?
The central issue explored in Youth and the Law is how a court makes such decisions. We will find that, like most laws intended to carry forward important public policy, those relating to young offenders significantly depend upon the courts to give such policy meaning in specific applications. Public policy has not varied for decades: protect and guide the young — and, at the same time, protect society. How is a court to interpret this policy in legal decisions? After all, isn’t the only real meaning of the law how it is applied in specific cases?
The several thousand courts in Canada operate under certain principles or guidelines. A primary source of those principles is the Supreme Court of Canada. That is our jumping-off point: specific cases decided by that final arbiter, the Supreme Court of Canada. It may take five or more years for the Supreme Court to hear and decide an appeal. Yet, once the Supreme Court decides the case, it becomes the law. The majority decision of the nine justices of the Supreme Court is binding not only on the parties to the case, but on all people living in this country. The Court’s ruling is the law of the land. It binds lower courts, legislatures, citizens, and residents of Canada. Only with considerable difficulty can a legislature overturn a Supreme Court ruling.
The Court generally does not make law; rather, it interprets the law in a specific case. In doing so, the lower court’s findings are reviewed, and the Court then applies those findings to its own interpretation of the law. The parties to a case get an answer to their conflict: yes, no, or maybe. Sometimes the case is returned to the lower court for further proceedings on issues outlined but not resolved by the Court. For the most part, the parties are not interested in much else other than an answer.
The decision that is binding on the nation is how the Court explains itself — how it defines the issues and its reasoning in bringing them to conclusion. In this book, every effort has been made to present the Court’s reasoning objectively and clearly. Readers will be given citations to access the Court’s decisions online and will be left to critique judgments.
Let there be no doubt that public opinion can and does play a role in shaping law enforcement policy. Occasionally, if a Supreme Court decision is seen as moving too far from public acceptance, the government may decide that the decision should be clarified or redefined by new law. This is what happened when the Young Offenders Act was recast as the Youth Criminal Justice Act, which exposes youth offenders to adult sentences.
Still, both the Court and the legislature must operate in the context of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, part of the Constitution of Canada and, as such, the supreme law of the nation. This is partly what is meant by Canada being a nation of law. The Charter, enacted in 1982, can be seen as a firewall against popular sentiment. For example, the Charter tends to inhibit any government action that limits the rights of minority groups, such as the incarceration of Japanese-Canadians during the Second World War.
This book presents many case studies that focus on specific situations applied to the Charter. Through these decisions, we become aware of our responsibilities and our rights as citizens. And we see, as the Supreme Court must see, that process never ends. New cases, reflecting new facts, will continue to be presented, and their outcomes will be measured against the law, both constitutional and statutory.
Who Are the Judges?
A few words must be said about the judges (or justices, as Supreme Court of Canada judges are called). Who are they? How are they chosen? How do they go about coming to decisions? The answer to these questions may help us better understand the decisions that we will be examining.
In 1989, Beverley McLachlin, then chief justice of British Columbia, received a telephone call from the prime minister of Canada. He asked if she would consider a new position: that of a justice of the Supreme Court of Canada.
It was within the power of the prime minister, accepted by his Cabinet, to offer the position. The appointment of a justice of the Supreme Court of Canada did not have to go through parliamentary committee or parliamentary consent, as such — a process enormously different from that of the United States where the president nominates and the Senate, following hearing, either gives the nomination a stamp of approval or rejection. (If the Senate rejects, then the candidacy of that person comes to an end.)
Justice McLachlin thanked the prime minister, accepted his offer, and became a justice of the Supreme Court of Canada. On January 7, 2000, the prime minister offered Justice McLachlin the position of chief justice of the Supreme Court, and she accepted.
There are nine justices who make up the Supreme Court of Canada. The conditions for their appointment are few, but they are important. They are appointed through the prime minister and the Governor in Council. In this regard, the “pool” for appointment by law is comprised of superior court judges or barristers with at least ten years in practice in a province or territory.
Once named to the Supreme Court, a justice cannot be removed from office so long as the justice carries out her/his duties