Section 92(14) of the Constitution Act, 1867

Section 92(14) of the Constitution Act, 1867, also known as the administration of justice power, grants the provincial legislatures of Canada the authority to legislate on:

14. The Administration of Justice in the Province, including the Constitution, Maintenance, and Organization of Provincial Courts, both of Civil and of Criminal Jurisdiction, and including Procedure in Civil Matters in those Courts.

It has been considered to be one of the major sources of conflict concerning the interpretation of the Constitution of Canada.[1]

Nature and extent of jurisdiction

Basic nature

In United Kingdom jurisprudence, the administration of justice is generally considered to include the following matters:[2]

  1. the organisation of the courts;
  2. the prerogative of justice, the prerogative of mercy, and any prerogative power to create new courts;
  3. nolle prosequi;
  4. the appointment, tenure and immunity of judges;
  5. the immunity of other participants in legal proceedings;
  6. contempt of court;
  7. the composition and availability of juries, any requirement that their verdict be unanimous, and the allowances they receive;
  8. the branches of the legal profession; and
  9. the provision of legal aid and advice.

However, the Constitution Act, 1867 divides the responsibility between the federal and provincial jurisdictions. Together with the grant under s. 92(14), s. 91(27) carves out "Procedure in Criminal Matters," while s. 96 requires the appointment of "the Judges of the Superior, District, and County Courts in each Province" to be done by the Governor General in Council, and s. 101 grants the Parliament of Canada the power to provide "for the Establishment of any additional Courts for the better Administration of the Laws of Canada."[lower-alpha 1]

Within the Canadian constitutional context, it has been held that provincial jurisdiction includes matters concerning law enforcement (including the appointment, control and discipline of police officers),[3] the establishment of facilities necessary for the enforcement of criminal law,[3] and public inquiries on how the power is executed.[4]

Interface with the federal criminal law power

In R v Wetmore, Dickson J (as he then was) observed:

There is ... a special relationship between s. 92(14) and s. 91(27), a relationship that cannot be said to obtain between s. 92(14) and the other heads of power in s. 91. Sections 91(27) and 92(14) together effect a careful and delicate division of power between the two levels of government in the field of criminal justice.... The singling out and the express conferral on the provinces under s. 92(14) of responsibility to constitute, maintain and organize courts for the administration of one particular area of federal law, namely, criminal law, is unique.[5]

In that regard, "investigation must be in accordance with federally prescribed criminal procedure and not otherwise."[6] Therefore, police officers are able to enforce the Criminal Code because they are designated as peace officers under it.[7] As well, Canadian National Transportation and Wetmore have held that prosecution falls within criminal procedure, and that it can be pursued by either federal or provincial prosecutors.[8] In a similar fashion, a Quebec measure[9] that diverted young people from the criminal justice system was held to be unconstitutional,[10] as it confliced with the Juvenile Delinquents Act.[lower-alpha 2][12]

There is no bright line test as to what falls within the area of criminal procedure, as Dickson J conceded in Di Iorio v Warden of the Montreal Jail:

The phrase "criminal procedure" does not lend itself to precise definition. In one sense, it is concerned with proceedings in the criminal courts and such matters as conduct within the courtroom, the competency of witnesses, oaths and affirmations, and the presentation of evidence. Some cases have defined procedure even more narrowly in finding that it embraces the three technical terms—pleading, evidence and practice. In a broad sense, it encompasses such things as the rules by which, according to the Criminal Code, police powers are exercised, the right to counsel, search warrants, interim release, procuring attendance of witnesses.

...

It is not necessary and perhaps impossible, to find a satisfactory definition of "criminal procedure." Although I would reject the view which would confine criminal procedure to that which takes place within the courtroom on a prosecution, I am equally of the opinion that "criminal procedure" is not co-extensive with "criminal justice" or that the phrase "criminal procedure" as used in the B.N.A. Act can drain from the words "administration of justice" in s. 92(14) that which gives those words much of their substance—the element of "criminal justice."[13]

In R v Hauser, Spence J later gave a more succinct explanation:

Criminal procedure, ... in its broadest sense, comprehends the mode of proceeding by which those rights and obligations are enforced. In a more narrow sense “procedure” means the machinery of the Court by which the formal steps in a judicial proceeding are regulated.[14]

Therefore, federal jurisdiction applies to how investigations and prosecutions may proceed, but not whether or when to conduct them.[15]

Interface with other federal powers

The Parliament of Canada can confer "new duties upon the existing Provincial Courts, or to give them new powers, as to matters which do not come within the classes of subjects assigned exclusively to the Legislatures of the Provinces."[16] By extension, measures such as the trial of federal election petitions and insolvency proceedings[lower-alpha 3] will fall outside the scope of s. 92(14).[16][17]

Dispute resolution by administrative bodies

Because of s. 96, the provinces are restricted in how they can remove disputes from the jurisdiction of the courts.[18] However, such jurisdiction has been held not to be "fixed forever as it stood at the date of Confederation,"[19] and a key question to be asked is whether an adjudication is to take place "between Crown and subject or between subject and subject." A negative answer would stand in favour of an administrative body's ability to act.[20]

Under the Residential Tenancies case, a three-part test has been devised to determine whether unconstitutional encroachment has occurred:[21]

  1. consideration, in the light of the historical conditions existing in 1867, of the particular power or jurisdiction conferred upon the tribunal;
  2. consideration of the function within its institutional setting to determine whether the function itself is different when viewed in that setting; and
  3. if the power or jurisdiction is exercised in a judicial manner, then it becomes necessary to review the tribunal’s function as a whole in order to appraise the impugned function in its entire institutional context.

If, after such review, the adjudication powers are determined to be "merely subsidiary or ancillary to general administrative functions assigned to the tribunal," or "necessarily incidental to the achievement of a broader policy goal of the legislature," then such powers are constitutionally valid.[22]

Conflict with the federal courts

The Federal Courts Act[23] grants the Federal Court concurrent jurisdiction with the provincial courts in various matters concerning federal law, together with exclusive original jurisdiction for:

  1. issues which "the Crown and any person" have agreed in writing to submit to the Federal Court;[24]
  2. applications for relief against "any federal board, commission or other tribunal" (including any proceeding brought against the Attorney General of Canada);[25]
  3. applications for writs "in relation to any member of the Canadian Forces serving outside Canada;"[26]
  4. applications for judicial review concerning "a decision or an order of a federal board, commission or other tribunal;"[27]
  5. where the Legislative Assembly of a province has passed assenting legislation, controversies between Canada and a province, or between a province and any other province that has passed similar legislation;[28]
  6. issues concerning applications or registrations of intellectual property;[29]
  7. reliefs or remedies not available through any other court;[30] and
  8. any matter, "not allocated specifically to the Federal Court of Appeal," in which an Act of the Parliament of Canada has granted jurisdiction.[31]

Even within such matters of exclusive jurisdiction, it has been held that provincial courts are not prevented from ruling on the constitutionality of federal laws,[32] as:

Any jurisdiction in Parliament for the grant of exclusive jurisdiction to the Federal Court must be founded on exclusive federal powers under s. 91 of the Constitution Act. In so far as there is an alleged excess of that jurisdiction by Parliament, s. 101 of the Constitution Act cannot be read as the constitutional justification for the exclusion from the superior courts of the jurisdiction to pronounce upon it.[33]

This has also been held to encompass determining the applicability of federal legislation,[34] as "both relate to constitutional jurisdiction,"[35] while the federal courts have similar jurisdiction in such matters.[34][36]

Further reading

Books and papers

Jurisprudence

  • Reference Re Authority to Perform Functions Vested by Adoption Act, The Children of Unmarried Parents Act, The Deserted Wives' and Children's Maintenance Act of Ontario (the "Adoption Act Reference") 1938 CanLII 2, [1938] SCR 398 (23 June 1938)
  • Labour Relations Board of Saskatchewan v John East Iron Works Limited [1948] UKPC 75, [1949] AC 134 (13 October 1948), Privy Council (on appeal from Saskatchewan)
  • Di Iorio v Warden of the Montreal Jail 1976 CanLII 1, [1978] 1 SCR 152 (1 April 1976)
  • Attorney General of Quebec and Keable v Attorney General of Canada 1978 CanLII 23, [1979] 1 SCR 218 (31 October 1978)
  • R v Hauser 1979 CanLII 13, [1979] 1 SCR 984 (1 May 1979)
  • Re Residential Tenancies Act 1981 CanLII 24, [1981] 1 SCR 714 (28 May 1981)
  • Attorney General of Canada v Law Society of British Columbia (the "Jabour case") 1982 CanLII 29, [1982] 2 SCR 307 (9 August 1982)
  • Northern Telecom v. Communication Workers 1983 CanLII 25, [1983] 1 SCR 733 (23 June 1983)
  • R v Wetmore 1983 CanLII 29, [1983] 2 SCR 284 (13 October 1983)
  • Canada Labour Relations Board v Paul L’Anglais Inc 1983 CanLII 121, [1983] 1 SCR 147 (8 February 1983)
  • Attorney General of Canada v Canadian National Transportation, Ltd 1983 CanLII 36, [1983] 2 SCR 206 (13 October 1983)
  • O'Hara v British Columbia 1987 CanLII 45, [1987] 2 SCR 591 (19 November 1987)

See also

Notes

References

  1. Whyte 1985, p. 173.
  2. Phillips, O. Hood (1960). "2: The Administration of Justice". A First Book of English Law (4th ed.). Sweet & Maxwell.
  3. 1 2 Bilton & Stenning 2001, p. 14.
  4. O'Hara, par. 1519
  5. Wetmore, p. 305
  6. Keable, p. 257
  7. Criminal Code, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-46, s. 2
  8. Bilton & Stenning 2001, p. 16.
  9. Youth Protection Act, L.Q. 1977, c. 20, ss. 40, 60, 61, 74.
  10. Attorney General of Quebec v Lechasseur 1981 CanLII 205, [1981] 2 SCR 253 (3 November 1981)
  11. Youth Criminal Justice Act, S.C. 2002, c. 1
  12. Whyte 1985, pp. 187–188.
  13. Di Iorio, pp. 208–210
  14. Hauser, p. 1027
  15. Bilton & Stenning 2001, p. 35.
  16. 1 2 Valin v Langlois [1879] UKPC 68, (1879-80) 5 AC 115 (13 December 1879), Privy Council (on appeal from Canada), affirming Valin v Langlois 1879 CanLII 29, (1879) 3 SCR 1 (28 October 1879)
  17. Cushing v Dupuy [1880] UKPC 22, (1880) 5 AC 409 (15 April 1880), Privy Council (on appeal from Quebec)
  18. Whyte 1985, pp. 181–182.
  19. Adoption Act Reference, p. 418
  20. John East, p. 149
  21. Residential Tenancies, pp. 734736
  22. Residential Tenancies, p. 736
  23. Federal Courts Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. F-7 , ss. 1726
  24. FC Act, s. 17(3)
  25. FC Act, s. 18(1)
  26. FC Act, s. 18(2)
  27. FC Act, ss. 18.818.4
  28. FC Act, s. 19. In Ontario, assent has been granted by the Courts of Justice Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. C.43, s. 148
  29. FC Act, s. 20
  30. FC Act, s. 25
  31. FC Act, s. 26
  32. Whyte 1985, p. 179.
  33. Jabour, pp. 328–329
  34. 1 2 Whyte 1985, p. 180.
  35. Paul L’Anglais Inc, p. 162
  36. Northern Telecom, p. 744
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