Judgments

Decision Information

Decision Content

T-186-88
Maya Singh Gill (Applicant) (Respondent) v.
Arthur Trono, in his capacity as Deputy Commis sioner, Pacific Region, Correctional Service of Canada (Respondent) (Appellant)
T-187-88
Jason Gallant (Applicant) (Respondent) v.
Arthur Trono, in his capacity as Deputy Commis sioner, Pacific Region, Correctional Service of Canada (Respondent) (Appellant)
INDEXED AS: GILL V. CANADA (DEPUTY COMMISSIONER, PACIFIC REGION, CORRECTIONAL SERVICE)
Trial Division, Muldoon J.—Vancouver, March 7 and 17, 1988.
Penitentiaries — Application to stay order quashing deci sion to transfer two convicts to another maximum security institution — Judge quashing transfer for failure to identify details of alleged extortion schemes, including names of vic tims — Duty to keep prisoners in safe custody — Common law rule of non-disclosure of identities of police informers para mount federal law — Applies to informers in prison — Judicial notice of "convict code" and high risk of retaliation against informers — Murder convictions and numerous insti tutional offences grounds to suspect violent reprisals from convicts — Conflicting rights to safety of life and security of person of inmates at Kent weighed against liberty of two convicts.
Practice — Judgments and orders — Stay of execution — Judge quashing transfer of convicts from one penitentiary to another for failure to disclose informers' names and details of allegations — Order under appeal — Deputy Commissioner seeking stay for fear convicts, who have prior murder convic tions, causing death or injury to other inmates — Motion granted to obviate risk pending judgment of Appeal Division.
Practice — Parties — Standing — Deputy Commissioner, Pacific Region, Correctional Services, applying to stay execu tion of order quashing decision to transfer inmates — Duty to keep prisoners in safe custody — Apprehension of danger sufficient to accord status to bring application.
This was an application to stay an order quashing a decision to transfer two convicts from Kent Institution to the Saskatche- wan Penitentiary pending the disposition of the appeal of that
order. The Warden of Kent Institution had received informa tion from six inmates that these convicts were extorting money from other inmates and converting that money into drugs. The information was obtained under an assurance that the inform ers' identities would be kept confidential. The decision to transfer the convicts was set aside on the ground that they were perhaps "expected to fight six shadows". (The Warden had refused to give details of the extortion schemes, which could possibly identify the informers, thus endangering their lives.) The two convicts have murdered a total of seven people, both outside and inside prison. Each has numerous convictions for institutional offences.
Held, the application should be allowed.
The Deputy Commissioner had standing to apply for a stay of the previous orders. It is a gaoler's duty to keep a prisoner in safe custody. Apprehension of risk or danger to the safety of prisoners was sufficient to accord the Deputy Commissioner status in these proceedings. It would have been counter-produc tive for the informers to bring such an application in their own names as that would identify the inmates at risk.
The secrecy rule regarding police informers' identity, articulated in Bisaillon v. Keable, applies to informers in prison. The rule of non-disclosure is paramount federal law, even though it is federal common law. The Deputy Commis sioner and the Warden of Kent Institution were bound to enforce the secrecy rule. Although the Bisaillon case was heard before the Charter came into force, the decision would be the same today. The reason for the secrecy rule is the fear of retaliation. The Courts take judicial notice of the "convict code" which makes it an offence to seek protection from, or co-operate with the prison administration, and the high risk of retaliation against the identified informers.
In light of the common law rule of secrecy of the identity of informers, the well-known "convict code", and the duty to keep prisoners in safe custody, only the most cogent and compelling evidence should ever persuade the Court that a deputy commis sioner or warden was taking an alarmist, frivolous or careless view of the risks. There was no evidence that such was the case here. That the two convicts had convictions for murder demon strated that they could not be trusted to behave peaceably towards the informers. In any event, the burdens of proof and persuasion were not on the Deputy Commissioner. Whether the allegations were true or false did not affect the risk of retalia tion against the informers. Indeed, if they were false—the possibility underlying the order to quash the decision to trans- fer—the two convicts would have been more aggrieved than if they were true. The Court gave credence to the high probability of risk asserted by the Deputy Commissioner. If the order is stayed until the Appeal Division makes its judgment, the risk will be postponed or even obviated, and the Warden will have time to make protective arrangements.
The Court had to weigh the conflicting rights to safety of life and security of the person of inmates at Kent Institution, against the liberty of the two convicts incarcerated at the Saskatchewan Penitentiary. To have to endure the time for the appeal process within the already restricted liberty of one high security institution instead of another, pales to insignificance when compared with the high probability of menace to the lives or security of the persons who expect and fear violent reprisal in Kent Institution. The ancient right to be kept in safe custody is really the right to life and security of the person, even if liberty be drastically diminished.
STATUTES AND REGULATIONS JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
Federal Court Rules, C.R.C., c. 663, RR. 341A (as added by SOR/79-57, s. 8), 1909.
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
APPLIED:
Bisaillon v. Keable, [1983] 2 S.C.R. 60.
DISTINGUISHED:
Communications Workers of Canada v. Bell Canada, [1976] 1 F.C. 282; (1975), 64 D.L.R. (3d) 171 (T.D.); Rose et al. v. International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (1985), 7 C.P.R. (3d) 141 (F.C.T.D.).
COUNSEL:
Bruce H. Ralston for applicant (respondent)
Gill.
J. P. Benning for applicant (respondent)
Gallant.
F. D. Banning for respondent (appellant).
SOLICITORS:
B. H. Ralston, Vancouver, for applicant (respondent) Gill.
J. P. Benning, Legal Services Society, Prison Legal Services, Abbotsford, British Columbia, for applicant (respondent) Gallant. Deputy Attorney General of Canada for respondent.
The following are the reasons for order ren dered in English by
MULDOON J.: Arthur Trono, in his official capacity is styled "appellant" by his solicitors, because he is such in proceedings in the Appeal
Division of this Court in which he appeals to reverse the orders made and pronounced on March 2, 1988, in the Trial Division, by the Honourable Mr. Justice Dubé [T-187-88, not yet reported]. By means of those orders, Dubé J. quashed the deci sions of the said respondent (appellant) to transfer the two applicants (respondents) from Kent Insti tution to the Saskatchewan Penitentiary.
The affidavit of Pieter H. DeVink, Warden of Kent Institution, filed February 18, 1988, reveals:
2. That based on information given to me in confidence by inmates of Kent Institution, I verily believe that Jason Gallant and Maya Singh Gill have been involved in a scheme to extort money from inmates and convert that money into drugs which were imported into Kent Institution.
3. The information leading me to this conclusion was exclusive ly obtained by informants under an assurance that their identi ty would be kept confidential.
4. The information upon which I base my opinion consists of confidential statements taken from six informants. [Certain information follows.] In my opinion, to provide the name of the victims, the amounts of money extorted, the threats used or the machinery employed to collect the money would likely lead to the identity of the victim becoming known.
5. One of the informants was a member of .... [Here follows more information.] In my opinion, to reveal the particulars of this scheme would lead to the knowledge that one of the small groups of persons involved was the informant and thus endan ger the informant's anonimity [sic].
6. The sixth statement was taken from an informant who is not an inmate, but who is a relative of an inmate who had been threatened by Maya Singh Gill and Jason Gallant .... [Here follows more cogent information.] In my opinion, giving further particulars of the amount extorted, the services extorted, or the person involved would lead to an increased likelihood that the identity of the informant would become known.
7. I am of the opinion that if the identity of any of the informants becomes known, they will be in danger of death or serious bodily injury by other members of the inmate population.
8. I provided Jason Gallant and Maya Singh Gill with such particulars of these incidents as in my opinion could be safely released to them, and invited written representations regarding their proposed transfer to a high maximum security facility in Saskatchewan. I received written representations from both Jason Gallant and Maya Singh Gill. I read and took those representations into consideration before confirming my recom mendation for the transfer of Jason Gallant and Maya Singh Gill to the high maximum facility in Saskatchewan.
Mr. Justice Dubé quashed the decision to trans fer the prisoners, noting [at page 6] that the prisoners were perhaps "expected to fight six shadows".
The appellant filed no affidavit in the present proceedings, in which he seeks an order pursuant to Rules [Federal Court Rules, C.R.C., c. 663] 341A [as added by SOR/79-57, s. 8] and 1909, to stay Mr. Justice Dubé's order, pending the Appeal Division's disposition of the appellant's appeal. His counsel did tender, however, a memorandum of argument. Counsel also relied on the affidavits already filed in the proceedings before Dubé J.
The appellant, apparently sensing some doubt about his standing to apply for a stay of the previous orders of the Court, expresses the follow ing justification in paragraph 3 of the memoran dum of argument.
3. The grounds upon which this application is based are some what unusual in that the Correctional Service of Canada per se has no interests at stake in the appeal. Aside from some administrative inconvenience and expense to the taxpayer in retransfering the applicants from Saskatchewan to Kent Insti tution and possibly back, the Correctional Service of Canada does not stand to be prejudiced by the execution of the Order pending appeal. This application is brought by the Correctional Service of Canada on behalf of members of the population of Kent Institution who are under its charge and who may suffer irreparable harm of the most extreme order should the Learned Chambers Judge's Order be implemented and subsequently be found incorrect.
In fact and in law the appellant's status is utterly secure. From time immemorial the duty of every constable, gaoler, or warder into whose care the custody of any prisoner or other person is commit ted, has been to keep that prisoner in safe custody. Indeed, the highest and most trenchant expression of that duty exacts that the constable, gaoler or other warder must risk his or her own life and limb to ensure the safety of the person kept in custody. That safety must be maintained against mobs outside the prison walls as well as against the dangers of conditions of work and the dangers presented by the prisoner's fellow inmates, within the walls. It may also be noted that negligent or wilful dereliction of such duty is actionable, although this is not the occasion for discussion of either liability or quantum of compensation in that regard.
Apprehension of risk or danger to the safety of prisoners (of which the warder is the best judge) is sufficient to accord the appellant ample status in
these proceedings. The Court will not gainsay the Deputy Commissioner, Pacific Region, Correction al Service of Canada in his judgment of his role in what he perceives as an emergent situation, at least in so far as his status to bring this application on behalf of inmates under his charge, is con cerned. In the alternative, it would be highly coun- ter-productive for any such inmate or inmates to bring such an application in their own names, for the danger apprehended by the Deputy Commis sioner is precisely that of identifying the inmates whom he perceives to be at risk.
It would be difficult to imagine a stronger state ment of the real nature and scope at common law of the secrecy rule regarding police informers' identity than that which was articulated by Mr. Justice Beetz for the Supreme Court of Canada in Bisaillon v. Keable, [1983] 2 S.C.R. 60, beginning at page 88 and following. That nature and scope, the fundamental reason for the rule and its hardi ness of emplacement are neither displaced nor diluted by its application to and in the present situation of a prison community. Indeed, to the extent that the nature of a prison community differs from that of the civilian community at large, to that extent is the rule of more urgent import for informants in prisons.
Although all of reasoning of Beetz J. is lucidly instructive, and ought to be read in full, it is too extensive to recite here. Counsel for the respond ents acknowledged the expression of the rule, they seemed not to appreciate one of its important operative effects. Here are some passages drawn from the text of that Bisaillon case [at pages 94, 95-96 and 102]:
The exclusionary rule was not recognized in the interests of police informers, but it in fact protects each of them.
The secrecy rule regarding police informers has chiefly taken the form of rules of evidence in criminal and civil proceedings, but it can be said that the rule gives rise to rules of another kind, which impose duties on a peace officer. If the law prohibits a peace officer from disclosing an informer's identity in judicial proceedings based on the public interest which it considers to be superior to that of the administration of justice by the Court, a fortiori it does place on him a duty to maintain confidentiality outside of any judicial proceedings, when the administration of justice by the courts is not in issue. I would accordingly have no difficulty in finding, although I know of no precedent on the point, that a peace officer who for example
gave the media a list of his informers would be liable to severe disciplinary action and could be made to pay damages. The question might even arise whether such a peace officer was not, depending on the circumstances, committing the indictable offence of obstructing justice under s. 127(2) of the Criminal Code.
The law itself decided that it is always contrary to the public interest for a peace officer to be required to disclose the identity of a police informer, and that this aspect of the public interest must always take precedence over the need to do more complete justice, subject to a single exception in criminal law. [i.e. if upon the trial of a defendant for a criminal offence disclosure of the identity of the informer could help to show that the defendant was innocent of the offence—in that case only, the balance falls upon the side of disclosure: cited by Martland J. in the Health Records case [Solicitor General of Canada et al. v. Royal Commission of Inquiry (Health Records in Ontario) et al.], [1981] 2 S.C.R. 494, at page 533.]
Perhaps, for the case at bar, the most pertinent of Mr. Justice Beetz' passages in Bisaillon is this [at pages 105-106]:
The common law did not give a peace officer this right simply because it would be useful to him, but because it concluded empirically that the right was necessary. It is cer tainly not possible to go so far as to say that, without this right, a peace officer would be entirely powerless and the criminal laws would be totally ineffective. However, the inability of the one to act and the ineffectiveness of the other would reach a point where they could no longer be tolerable. This is what Lord Simon of Glaisdale is referring to when he writes in N.S.P.C.C., at p. 232:
Another facet is effective policing. But the police can func tion effectively only if they receive a flow of intelligence about planned crime or its perpetrators. Such intelligence will not be forthcoming unless informants are assured that their identity will not be divulged ..
Haines J. of the Supreme Court of Ontario also properly recognized this in R. v. Lalonde (1971), 15 C.R.N.S. 1, at p. 13:
Over and above all of this is the recognition that without our citizens giving information to the police the investigation of a crime would be seriously impaired or even defeated. Without witnesses our courts could not function. Those who know of material facts should be able to disclose them to the police with the assurance that they will be treated in confidence. In an aggressive community fear of retaliation can be very real.
In the next and last quotation [at page 108] from the Bisaillon case, Beetz J. leaves no doubt that the rule of non-disclosure is paramount feder al law, even although it is federal common law.
It is true that the federal Parliament has not given legislative form to the secrecy rule regarding police informers' identity. Section 41 of the Federal Court Act, in force at the relevant time, in my view, has no bearing on this rule. To the best of my recollection, I recall no case where the non-legislative "federal law" has been given paramountcy over provincial laws. How ever, I do not see why the federal Parliament is under an obligation to codify legal rules if it wishes to ensure that they have paramountcy over provincial laws, at least when some of those legal rules fall under its exclusive jurisdiction, as for example do rules of evidence in criminal proceedings.
Beetz J. wrote the above passage within his expla nation of the rule's necessary and paramount oper ation in civil proceedings and in proceedings undertaken wholly pursuant to provincial laws. Clearly, the Deputy Commissioner, Pacific Region, Correctional Service of Canada is obliged to respect and enforce the secrecy rule, as is the warden of the Kent Institution.
The Bisaillon case was heard by the Supreme Court of Canada early in March, 1982, before the coming into force 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.)]. Consideration of both the decision and of the Charter leads to the conclusion that such decision would of necessity be the same if the case were adjudicated today, as it was in 1982.
The reason for the secrecy rule is abundantly clear, and it operates in any civilized society, be it a free and democratic society like Canada, or a totalitarian one like many other countries in the world. It resides in the very real, and realistic, fear of retaliation in an aggressive society, which, in this instance, is the population of a maximum security penitentiary. That apprehension of likely retaliation, wherever and whenever possible, is well known and commonly known from long ago and unto these days by lawyers, judges, prison social workers and teachers, custodial personnel and even among the public at large.
That fear of retaliation is so well known and its realistic, factual basis is such that the Court would be wilfully blind not to take judicial notice of that savage, unwritten "code" of conduct which is kept alive by the dominant inmates in those "aggressive
[inmate] communities" in Canadian prisons. The so-called "convict code" was in no way ameliorat ed by the State's adoption of either the Canadian Bill of Rights [R.S.C. 1970, Appendix III] or of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. That abominable "code" makes an offence of seek ing protection from, or co-operating with, the prison administration; and even though Parliament has eschewed capital punishment, the supporters and enforcers of the "convict code" do not flinch at murder, maiming, wounding, beating, or some times sexual indignities according to "culpability" in the administration of their brand of rotten injustice.
Needless to say, prison administrators justifi ably do everything within their power and wiles to suppress, detect, discourage, dilute and thwart the operations of those perversions of justice in such an effective way that some inmates come through their terms of imprisonment virtually unscathed, although hardly unaware of that callous "code".
It is primarily a "code" of retribution and ven geance for the "offences" of co-operation with, and the reporting of objectively genuine offences and other misbehaviour to, the prison authorities. It is surrounded by prudent, fearful silence which serves only to protect the perpetrators of domi nance, extortion, threats and violence. Every free and democratic society, Canada included, is a civilized society. However, conceived and operat ing in necessary isolation from society in general, in the "aggressive society" of prisons, the "convict code" is an attempt to establish, to honor and to exact fearing tribute, and obedience, to the savage ry of the barbarian princes among the inmate population. How often in courts of criminal juris diction does an inmate choose an additional term of imprisonment, rather than give incriminating testimony about a fellow inmate!
So, for this reason, ultimately the probability of retribution, have Courts defined, developed and upheld the rule of non-disclosure of the identity of informants. In so doing, the judiciary, including the Supreme Court of Canada, have taken, and do take, judicial notice of the so-called "code" and
the high risk of the infliction of savage vengeance upon the identified, or purportedly identified, informer. It is that risk of vengeance which could be inflicted on the informers or on the merely rumoured informers among Kent's inmate popula tion which motivates the appellant Deputy Com missioner to move for a stay of Mr. Justice Dubé's order pending appeal.
Is it justifiable to accord such weight to the Deputy Commissioner's concern for the probable risk to the informers' rights of security of their persons, or is he being an alarmist? Apart from the Correctional Service's general duty to keep inmates in safe custody, there is much pertinent information in, and appended to, the affidavits filed for the hearing before Mr. Justice Dubé, upon which the Deputy Commissioner relies for support on his present application. Before proceed ing to turn to that information the Court observes that given the common law rule of secrecy of the identity of informers, given the reality of that well-known abomination—the "convict code", and given the historic and subsisting duty of a custodi al authority to keep those prisoners committed into his, her or its charge in safe custody, only the most cogent and compelling evidence should ever per suade the Court that a deputy commissioner or warden would be taking an alarmist, frivolous or careless view of the risks. No such evidence was led here and the Court will not reject the Deputy Commissioner's present application.
Now the Court turns to the pertinent evidence about the two inmates who are the subject of the Deputy Commissioner's concern. They are still lodged in Saskatchewan Penitentiary and will be promptly restored to residence at Kent Institution if Mr. Justice Dubé's order be not stayed pending the disposition of the Deputy Commissioner's appeal against that order.
The applicant (respondent) Maya Singh Gill, in his affidavit filed on February 2, 1988, deposed as follows:
2. On December 11th, 1987, I was a prisoner at Kent Institu tion where I was serving three sentences of life imprisonment for murder. Two of these sentences were imposed on the 10th of June 1977, one for first and one for second degree murder. The third sentence was imposed on the 27th of January 1983, for first degree murder.
The deposition is rather curt and sparse when related to the contents of exhibit "D" to the affidavit, a "Progress Summary Report" which the applicant (respondent) refused to sign on January 20, 1988. It notes that his case management team recommended that he "be placed in a High Max imum Security Facility". The murder of Gill's aunt and uncle, at which his father's hired assassin flinched, was carried out by this inmate, in a particularly brutal merciless manner, not to say that any murder is in the least bit civilized con duct. Approximately four and a half years after the first murder convictions he was once more convicted of the first degree murder, by stabbing, of a fellow inmate of Kent Institution. His previ ous history reveals no violence toward people, only property, but his long institutional record reveals threatening to assault, and again later actually assaulting, prison staff members, an attempt to incite fellow inmates and fighting with another inmate. There are 37 institutional offence convic tions noted. There is much more to that six-page foolscap exhibit "D" than needs to be recited here.
The applicant (respondent) Jason Gallant, in his affidavit filed on February 2, 1988 deposed as follows:
2. On December 11th, 1987, I was a prisoner at Kent Institution where I was serving four life sentences for first degree murder. The first of these was imposed on the 4th of June, 1977, the other three were imposed on the 22nd of February, 1983 following upon my plea of guilty.
The deposition is rather curt and sparse when related to the contents of exhibit "B" to the affida vit, a "Progress Summary Report", which is not signed by the applicant (respondent). Dated in
January, 1988, it bears the recommendation that he "be transferred to Higher Maximum Security" because he "presents a risk to the safety and security of Kent Institution and potentially to members of the community". The first of his convictions for first degree murder appears to relate to a murder committed out of prison. The other three convictions for first degree murder relate to the deaths of three corrections officers during a disturbance in Archambault Institution on July 25, 1982. His previous criminal history begins in 1970. In 1975 Jason Gallant was convict ed of assault causing bodily harm; and in 1976 he was convicted of possession of a weapon and break and enter with intent to commit an offence. Also, he was re-committed to Saskatchewan Penitentia ry for violation of mandatory supervision. There are 65 institutional offence convictions noted, of which 7 occurred at Kent Institution.
The progress summary is not bereft of positive assessments. For example, it is noted that Jason Gallant has improved his inter-personal skills with various levels of staff and contract workers. It is further stated that he "has taken three life skills courses and has participated in a constructive and committed manner in each one". Gallant has also just completed an alcohol and drug self-awareness program and according to the director "he par ticipated in the meetings in a very real and produc tive manner". There is much more to that five- page foolscap exhibit "B" than needs to be recited here.
Exhibit "D" to the applicant (respondent) Gal lant's affidavit is a photocopy of an eleven-page, letter-size, handwritten submission by him, appar ently intended for the warden. In it Jason Gallant denies most of the unfavourable reports and obser vations expressed in the progress report, exhibit "B". He pleads his own good influence in his own words, thus:
I was often involved in a "mediative capacity" between warring factions in the institution. Sometimes the problems involved drugs disputes (who owed who what). Sometimes the disputes
involved money. Others were centered around someone accus ing another of being no good, another a rat etc. One was accused of screwing some one else's girl friend. So on and so forth.
In every case where a weapon was threatened as the only alternative I was able to use my influence if not in every occasion to stop the altercation then at least to leave out the weapons.
While on the committee on more than one occasion punching a less moderate inmate seemed to be the only way to stop the spread of more serious situations. Both myself and [another inmate] openly discussed these incidents with staff (where necessary)—excluding the names of parties where the individu als involved were not known by staff members.
In Dec. of 1976 1 killed a man in an alcoholic blackout. I do not remember doing this. I thought I could beat the system and lied at the trial believing an acquittal was possible. I gambled it all on this and lost. I further acknowledge my guilt. And for most part have come to terms with this.
On July 25, 1982, three guards were killed in Archambault. I never killed these men. I did however plead guilty to these charges as a plan to get [another inmate] taken off an attempt ed murder charge I knew he was not guilty of. Another inmate had promised then to help me escape. So I pled guilty for this.
Although the 'new wave' coming into prison with guys who haven't done time before allows that one can 'rip' another inmate for his things & still be solid—it to me amounts paramount to nothing less than a cell-thief to one who is suppose to hold to the old "con-code". Whatever that is ...
Much of the perspective of me by staff is that I hold to the old way which is why I am told I have difficulty with the L.U. system. [This sentence difficult to understand] ... Always (whether misguided or no) I have tried to fight for prisoners rights, create a sense of unity in the population.
I've held to a view of myself whatever my failures in this life that I have never intentionally "fucked over" a fellow con. Now at 34 being known by staff as being somewhat less hostile towards them—for I've never talked to them until I came to Kent—I stand to be accused by my fellow-con as "burnt-out", can't fight the system any more, but now with these accusations of extortion I've turned against the prisoner in the process??
The submission is too long to recite in full here. It is no doubt self-serving, but what else can the applicant (respondent) Gallant have done to respond to the warden's investigation? The above passages are selected for the insights they provide
not only into this prisoner, but also into that aggressive prison community.
Also noted are exhibit "G", a copy of a suppor tive letter from a life skills instructor at Fraser Valley College, and exhibit "I", a copy of a further supportive letter from the director of Set Free Ministries, which express favourable reports about Jason Gallant.
The total of six first degree and one second degree murder convictions against the two appli cants (respondents) Gill and Gallant hardly make it incumbent on the Deputy Commissioner to demonstrate why he will not trust the two inmates to behave peaceably towards the informers, or those who may be reputed to be the informers. The burdens of proof and persuasion are not on him. While it must be acknowledged that no one is so clairvoyant as to be able with absolute certainty to predict that one or both of them will definitely attempt to molest the actual or suspected inform ers, the Deputy Commissioner, in pursuance of his legal duty to provide safe custody (in so far as possible), has no reason to trust the applicants (respondents) not to harbour, nor once again to give vent to murderous impulses against those who have informed against them.
The Deputy Commissioner and the warden face the same dilemma whether the accusations upon which they have acted be true or false. Indeed, if they be false, the applicants (respondents) can be expected to be even more aggrieved than if they be true. That possibility of false accusation by "six shadows" underlies the reasons for which Mr. Justice Dubé quashed the decisions to transfer the two applicants (respondents) from Kent to the Saskatchewan Penitentiary.
Thus, whether the informers' complaints be true or false, and only they and the applicants (respondents) can know for certain, it is eminently reasonable to apprehend the real and substantial risk of the tatters' attempts at violent vengeance. The risk would be proximate if the applicants
(respondents) were at large in the Kent Institu tion's inmate population with the informers. Even if a Court or other adjudicator were to conclude and declare that the informers' complaints have no basis, it realistically seems highly unlikely, in that aggressive prison society, that the applicants (respondents) would feel civilly satisfied and peacefully but fully vindicated by a mere adjudica tion. They may have made some psycho-social progress in prison, but if one or both of them were again to murder someone they believe deserves their brand of capital punishment, the risk taken by the warden or this Court would be demonstrat ed to have been unwarranted.
A warden's lot is clearly not a happy one, but this Court cannot purport to ameliorate it by sitting in appeal on the decision of Dubé J. This Court should, however, give credence to the high probability of risk asserted by the Deputy Com missioner. If action on the existing order be stayed until the Appeal Division's judgment be made known the risk will be postponed or even obviated, and the warden will have time and opportunity, should the Deputy Commissioner's appeal be dis missed, to make protective arrangements.
Counsel for the applicants (respondents) argued that because of the warden's dilemma, the balance of convenience lies with their clients. The (appli- cants) respondents might be returned to Kent in any event, as a result of the Appeal Division's dismissal of the appeal. Why, it is asked, should they have to wait in Saskatchewan during the appeal process? Conflicting rights to safety of life and security of the person, and liberty, arise here as between inmates of Kent Institution and the applicants (respondents) lodged now in the Sas- katchewan Penitentiary. The conflict must be resolved. To have to endure the time for the appeal process within the already restricted liberty of one high security institution instead of the other, pales to insignificance when compared with the high probability of menace to the lives or security of the persons who expect and fear violent vengeance in Kent Institution. That is what the ancient right to
be kept in safe custody really is in such circum stances. It is the right to life and security of the person, even if liberty be drastically diminished. It logically and lawfully transcends the inconvenience and chagrin of applicants (respondents) now lodged in the Saskatchewan Penitentiary.
Counsel for the applicants (respondents) cited two cases in opposing a stay of Mr. Justice Dubé's order. The cited decisions are: Communications Workers of Canada v. Bell Canada, [1976] 1 F.C. 282; (1975), 64 D.L.R. (3d) 171 (T.D.), and Rose et al. v. International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (1985), 7 C.P.R. (3d) 141 (F.C.T.D.). These are civil cases in which stays of previous orders were refused and the pertinent principles appear to be correctly stated. They involve nothing so gravely important as real risk to the lives and security of the persons of several people. In the earlier case Mr. Justice Dubé declined to stay the execution of an order of the Canada Labour Rela tions Board pending appeal to the Appeal Division of this Court. In the later case, the Court declined to stay execution of a judgment prohibiting the use of an infringing trade mark on office stationery also pending the outcome of an appeal. As above noted, the balance tips sharply in favour of pro tecting those at risk of extreme prejudice to life and security of the person, when this value con flicts with what amounts to little more than the inconvenience of parties who have as recently as earlier in this decade, finally "achieved" the total of seven murder convictions between them. The principles expressed in those two judgments favour the Deputy Commissioner's contentions in these circumstances.
For the above reasons the Court accedes to the Deputy Commissioner's motion. Pursuant to Rules 341A and 1909, the Court orders that the order pronounced by Mr. Justice Dubé on March 2, 1988, be stayed pending the disposition of the Deputy Commissioner's appeal therefrom by the Appeal Division of this Court, without costs for or against any party hereto. The Court considers that an award of costs against the applicants (respond- ents) for failing to maintain the benefit of the previous order pending appeal, would not be appropriate. The denial of costs in the Court's discretion reflects no criticism whatever of the Deputy Commissioner or his counsel.
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