A-1002-88
Her Majesty the Queen and Canada Employment
and Immigration Commission (Appellants)
(Defendants)
v.
Shalom Schachter (Respondent) (Plaintiff)
and
Women's Legal Education Action Fund
(Respondent) (Intervenor)
INDEXED AS: SCHACHTER V. CANADA (CA.)
Court of Appeal, Heald, Mahoney and Stone
JJ.A.—Toronto, November 27, 28 and 29, 1989;
Ottawa, February 16, 1990.
Constitutional law — Charter of Rights — Equality rights
— S. 32 Unemployment Insurance Act granting child care
benefits to adoptive parents but not to natural parents — Trial
Judge finding s. 32 inconsistent with Charter s. 15 and,
pursuant to Charter s. 24(1), addressing underinclusiveness of
legislation by extending benefits to natural parents — Nature
and extent of Court's power to grant remedy where infringe
ment of equality rights — S. 15(1) conferring positive right to
equality which can only be guaranteed by positive remedy —
Extension of benefits in cases of underinclusive legislation
remedy respecting purposive nature of Charter while giving
effect to rights enshrined in s. 15 — Appeal dismissed.
Constitutional law — Charter of Rights — Enforcement —
Trial Judge finding s. 32 Unemployment Insurance Act (child
care benefits to adoptive parents) inconsistent with Charter s.
15(1) — Granting remedy pursuant to Charter s. 24(1) extend
ing benefits to natural parents — Whether erred in not declar
ing s. 32 of no force or effect pursuant to s. 52(1) Constitution
Act, 1982 — S. 52(1) not only remedial route where legislation
found inconsistent with Constitution — S. 52(1) not engaged as
underinclusive character of s. 32, not legislation itself, uncon
stitutional — Court not overstepping constitutional role of
judiciary although decision requiring expenditure of public
monies not appropriated by Parliament — Positive remedy
necessary to enforce Charter equality right.
Unemployment insurance — S. 32 Unemployment Insurance
Act granting child care benefits to adoptive parents only
inconsistent with Charter s. 15 — Trial Judge, under Charter
s. 24, extending benefits to natural parents — Interface be
tween ss. 15(1) and 24(1) Charter and s. 52(1) Constitution
Act, 1982 — Charter s. 24 empowering Court to address
underinclusiveness of legislation by extending benefits to
groups aggrieved by exclusion — Remedy constitutionally
permissible although resulting in appropriation of public
monies not otherwise authorized by Parliament.
The Trial Judge found section 32 of the Unemployment
Insurance Act, 1971 to be inconsistent with section 15 of the
Charter because it did not accord natural parents equal benefit
of the law. Section 32 entitles adoptive parents, but not natural
parents, to child care benefits. The Trial Judge, pursuant to
section 24 of the Charter, addressed the underinclusiveness of
the section by extending the section 32 benefits to natural
parents.
The finding that section 32 provides unequal benefit of the
law was not challenged. The appeal raises three issues: (1) the
jurisdiction of the Trial Judge to fashion a remedy under
subsection 24(1) notwithstanding subsection 52(1) of the Con
stitution Act, 1982; (2) the nature and extent of a court's
powers under subsection 24(1) to grant a remedy for the
infringement of section 15 equality rights in the case of
underinclusive legislation; (3) the role of the judiciary in grant
ing a remedy which results in a judicial amendment to the
legislation and entails the appropriation of public monies for a
purpose not authorized by Parliament.
Held (Mahoney J.A. dissenting): the appeal should be
dismissed.
Per Heald J.A. (Stone J.A. concurring): The Trial Judge had
jurisdiction to grant the relief embodied in the decision at issue.
The appellants' submission, that where a law is found to be
inconsistent with the provisions of the Constitution the only
recourse open to a court is to declare it of no force or effect
pursuant to subsection 52(1) of the Constitution Act, 1982,
could not be accepted. In Big M Drug Mart Ltd., Dickson J.
indicated that subsection 24(1) "[was] not ... the only recourse
in the face of unconstitutional legislation". Those remarks show
that there is more than one remedial route to pursue when an
individual's Charter rights have been infringed. They cannot be
read as precluding access to section 24 in cases where section
52 would apply. His Lordship added that "Where ... the
challenge is based on the unconstitutionality of the legislation,
recourse to s. 24 is unnecessary." In the case at bar, however, it
is the omission rather than the legislation that is unconstitu
tional. The language of section 32 does not contravene the
Charter; it is the underinclusive character of the provision that
renders it insufficient and accordingly unconstitutional.
Because of that underinclusive character, subsection 52(1)
cannot be engaged and the course adopted by the Trial Judge
does not run contrary to the remarks of Dickson J. in Big M.
The Trial Judge did not err in the exercise of the powers
conferred upon him by section 24. A court of competent
jurisdiction is empowered to use its section 24 powers with
flexibility and imagination and is free to employ a full discre
tion in the exercise of those powers. Subsection 15(1) confers a
positive right to equality which can only be guaranteed by the
fashioning of a positive remedy. The remedy granted below
protects that right; a declaration that section 32 is of no force
or effect would fail to do so.
Nor did the Trial Judge overstep his judicial function in
imposing a legislative scheme to replace that found constitu
tionally defective. Underinclusive legislation invites a remedy
extending benefits. Such a remedy respects the purposive
nature of the Charter while at the same time giving effect to
the equality rights enshrined in section 15. Since the remedy
granted was the only one appropriate and just in the circum
stances, it was constitutionally permissible. Furthermore, the
judgment of the Trial Division merely provided a temporary
remedy, leaving it to "Parliament to remedy the situation in
accordance with the Charter". The Court had not impinged on
Parliament's prerogative to choose amongst constitutionally
valid policy options in enacting legislation which conforms to
the Charter.
Support could not be found for the submission that the relief
granted represented an invasion of Parliament's constitutional
authority to exact taxes. This was not the first case of a court
having rendered a decision requiring the expenditure of public
funds not otherwise authorized by Parliament.
Per Mahoney J.A. (dissenting): Dickson J.'s comments in the
Big M case cannot be read as indicating that subsections 24(1)
and 52(1) offer alternative recourses in the case of legislative
underinclusion. The interaction of those provisions was not
really addressed. The only "remedy" sought, considered and
granted therein was a declaration of invalidity pursuant to
subsection 52(1).
Caution must be exercised when interpreting Charter rights
in a purposive and generous manner. The Charter is not the
whole Constitution; its provisions are neither subordinate nor
paramount. The entire Constitution, not the Charter alone, is
the "statement of the will of the people to be governed in
accordance with certain fundamental principles". No principle
is more firmly established than the one inherited from the
British Constitution that no money can be levied without the
authorization of Parliament. The appropriation of public
monies by a court is offensive to that principle. A purposive
approach to remedies under subsection 24(1) cannot take a
court that far. The responsibility of the courts is to define the
limits of legislation permissible under the Charter; that of
Parliament is to enact legislation that meets its requirements.
The Constitution of Canada does not permit the remedy
crafted by the Trial Judge. Having found section 32 to be
inconsistent with a provision of the Constitution, the Trial
Judge was bound to find it to be of no force and effect. Had
that finding been made, the absence of any conflict between
subsections 24(1) and 52(1) would be apparent. There is no
offending legislation and, therefore, no subsection 24(1)
remedy called for. Subsection 52(1) states a constitutional fact
which no court can ignore when it is invoked in a proceeding
and found to apply.
STATUTES AND REGULATIONS JUDICIALLY
CONSIDERED
An Act declaring the Rights and Liberties of the Subject,
and settling the Succession of the Crown, 1688 [Bill of
Rights], 1 Will & Mary, Sess. 2, c. 2 (U.K.).
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, being Part I
of the Constitution Act, 1982, Schedule B, Canada Act
1982, 1982, c. 11 (U.K.) [R.S.C., 1985, Appendix II,
No. 44], ss. 2, 7, 15(1), 24(1), 33.
Constitution Act, 1982, Schedule B, Canada Act 1982,
1982, c. 11 (U.K.) [R.S.C., 1985, Appendix II, No.
44], s. 52(1).
Constitution Act, 1867, 30 & 31 Vict., c. 3 (U.K.)
[R.S.C., 1985, Appendix II, No. 5], preamble.
Federal Court Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. F-7, ss. 52(b)(iii),
57(3).
Federal Court Rules, C.R.C., c. 663, R. 324.
Unemployment Insurance Act, 1971, S.C. 1970-71-72,
c. 48, s. 32 (as am. by S.C. 1980-81-82-83, c. 150, s. 5).
Unemployment Insurance Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. U-1,
s. 20.
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
APPLIED:
Andrews v. Law Society of British Columbia, [1989] 1
S.C.R. 143; (1989), 56 D.L.R. ( 4th) 1; [1989] 2 W.W.R.
289; 34 B.C.L.R. ( 2d) 273; 36 C.R.R. 193; 91 N.R. 255;
Brooks v. Canada Safeway Ltd., [1989] 1 S.C.R. 1219;
(1989), 59 D.L.R. (4th) 321; 94 N.R. 373; Re Hoogbruin
et al. and Attorney-General of British Columbia et al.
(1985), 24 D.L.R. (4th) 718; [1986] 2 W.W.R. 700; 70
B.C.L.R. 1 (C.A.).
CONSIDERED:
R. v. Big M Drug Mart Ltd. et al., [1985] 1 S.C.R. 295;
(1985), 60 A.R. 161; 18 D.L.R. ( 4th) 321; [1985] 3
W.W.R. 481; 37 Alta. L.R. (2d) 97; 18 C.C.C. (3d) 385;
85 CLLC 914,023; 13 C.R.R. 64; 58 N.R. 81; R. v.
Jones, [1986] 2 S.C.R. 284; (1986), 31 D.L.R. (4th) 562;
[1986] 6 W.W.R. 577; 28 C.C.C. (3d) 513; 25 C.R.R.
63; 69 N.R. 241; Re Blainey and Ontario Hockey Asso
ciation et al. (1986), 54 O.R. (2d) 513; 24 D.L.R. (4th)
728; 14 O.A.C. 194 (C.A.); leave to appeal to the
Supreme Court of Canada denied, [ 1986] 1 S.C.R. xii; R.
v. Rahey, [1987] 1 S.C.R. 588; (1987), 78 N.S.R. (2d)
183; 39 D.L.R. (4th) 481; 193 A.P.R. 183; 33 C.C.C.
(3d) 289; 57 C.R. (3d) 289; 75 N.R. 81; Califano v.
Westcott, 443 U.S. 76 (1979); Re B.C. Motor Vehicle
Act, [1985] 2 S.C.R. 486; (1985), 24 D.L.R. ( 4th) 536;
[1986] 1 W.W.R. 481; 69 B.C.L.R. 145; 23 C.C.C. (3d)
289; 48 C.R. (3d) 289; 18 C.R.R. 30; 36 M.V.R. 240; 63
N.R. 266; Hunter et al. v. Southam Inc., [1984] 2 S.C.R.
145; (1984), 55 A.R. 291; 11 D.L.R. (4th) 641; [1984] 6
W.W.R. 577; 33 Alta. L.R. (2d) 193; 27 B.L.R. 297; 14
C.C.C. (3d) 97; 2 C.P.R. (3d) 1; 41 C.R. (3d) 97; 9
C.R.R. 355; 84 DTC 6467; 55 N.R. 241; Reference re
Manitoba Language Rights, [1985] 1 S.C.R 721; (1985),
19 D.L.R. (4th) 1; [1985] 4 W.W.R. 385; 35 Man. R.
(2d) 83; 59 N.R. 321; R. v. Hamilton (1986), 57 O.R.
(2d) 412; 17 O.A.C. 241 (C.A.); R. v. Van Vliet (1988),
45 C.C.C. (3d) 481; 10 M.V.R. 190 (B.C. C.A.); Auck-
land Harbour Board v. The King, [1924] A.C. 318; Mills
v. The Queen, [1986] 1 S.C.R. 863; (1986), 29 D.L.R.
(4th) 161; 26 C.C.C. (3d) 481; 52 C.R. (3d) 1; 67 N.R.
241; R. v. Gamble, [1988] 2 S.C.R. 595; (1988), 31
O.A.C. 81; 45 C.C.C. (3d) 204; 66 C.R. (3d) 193; 89
N.R. 161; R. v. Rowbotham et al. (1988), 25 O.A.C. 321;
41 C.C.C. (3d) 1; 63 C.R. 113; Law Society of Upper
Canada v. Skapinker, [1984] 1 S.C.R. 357; (1984), 9
D.L.R. (4th) 161; 3 O.A.C. 321; 11 C.C.C. (3d) 481; 53
N.R. 169; Marchand v. Simcoe County Board of Educa
tion et al. (1986), 55 O.R. (2d) 638; 29 D.L.R. (4th) 596;
25 C.R.R. 139 (H.C.).
REFERRED TO:
Singh et al. v. Minister of Employment and Immigra
tion, [1985] 1 S.C.R. 177; (1985), 17 D.L.R. (4th) 422;
12 Admin. L.R. 137; 14 C.R.R. 13; 58 N.R. 1; R. v.
Edwards Books and Art Ltd., [1986] 2 S.C.R. 713;
(1986), 35 D.L.R. (4th) 1; 30 C.C.C. (3d) 385; Reg. v.
Barnet London Borough Council Ex parte Nilish Shah,
[1983] 2 W.L.R. 16 (H.L.); Addy v. The Queen, [1985]
2 F.C. 452; (1985), 22 D.L.R. (4th) 52; 8 C.C.E.L. 13; 5
C.P.C. (2d) 127; 19 C.R.R. 193 (T.D.); R. v. Punch,
[1985] N.W.T.R. 373; [1986] 1 W.W.R. 592; 22 C.C.C.
(3d) 289; 48 C.R. (3d) 374; 18 C.R.R. 74 (S.C.); Dixon
v. B.C. (A.G.), [1989] 4 W.W.R. 393 (B.C.S.C.); Refer
ence re an Act to Amend the Education Act (1986), 53
O.R. (2d) 513; 25 D.L.R. (4th) 1; 13 O.A.C. 241 (C.A.).
AUTHORS CITED
Canada. Special Joint Committee of the Senate and of
the House of Commons on the Constitution of Canada.
Minutes of Proceedings and Evidence, Issue No. 36
(January 12, 1981), at page 36:19.
Driedger, Elmer A. Construction of Statutes, 2nd ed.
Toronto: Butterworths, 1983.
COUNSEL:
David Sgayias and Roslyn J. Levine for
appellants (defendants).
Brian G. Morgan and Larry Ritchie for
respondent (plaintiff).
Mary Eberts and Jennifer E. Aitken for
respondent (intervenor).
SOLICITORS:
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for
appellants (defendants).
Osier, Hoskin & Harcourt, Toronto, for
respondent (plaintiff).
Tory, Tory, DesLauriers & Binnington,
Toronto, for respondent (intervenor).
The following are the reasons for judgment
rendered in English by
HEALD J.A.: I have read the reasons for judg
ment prepared in this appeal in draft form by my
brother Mahoney J.A. With every deference I am
unable to agree with the result which he proposes.
Accordingly, I think it necessary to discuss the
issues which, in my appreciation of the matter, are
raised by this appeal, and to explain my reasons
for reaching a conclusion different from that of my
colleague.
As I perceive this appeal, it raises three broad
issues: firstly, whether a court of competent juris
diction has the power to fashion remedies under
subsection 24(1) of the Charter [Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms, being Part I of
the Constitution Act, 1982, Schedule B, Canada
Act 1982, 1982, c. 11 (U.K.) [R.S.C., 1985,
Appendix II, No. 44]], notwithstanding the provi
sions of subsection 52(1) of the Constitution Act,
1982 [Schedule B, Canada Act 1982, 1982, c. 11
(U.K.) [R.S.C., 1985, Appendix II, No. 44]]. Put
another way, this appeal raises squarely the ques
tion of the interface between subsections 24(1) of
the Charter and 52(1)' of the Constitution Act,
1982; secondly, the relationship between subsec
tions 24(1) and 52(1) when considered in the
context of other sections of the Constitution Act,
1982 such as, for example, subsection 15(1) deal
' 24. (1) Anyone whose rights or freedoms, as guaranteed
by this Charter, have been infringed or denied may apply to a
court of competent jurisdiction to obtain such remedy as the
court considers appropriate and just in the circumstances.
52. (1) The Constitution of Canada is the supreme law of
Canada, and any law that is inconsistent with the provisions of
the Constitution is, to the extent of the inconsistency, of no
force or effect.
ing with equality rights, 2 and, specifically, the
nature and extent of the Court's power to grant a
remedy for the infringement of equality rights
under section 15 in the particular circumstances of
this case; and thirdly, the role of the judiciary in
circumstances where the granting of a Charter
remedy results in a judicial amendment to the
legislation and, as well, entails the appropriation of
public monies from the Consolidated Revenue
Fund for a purpose not authorized by Parliament.
As noted by Mr. Justice Mahoney, the learned
Trial Judge [[1988] 3 F.C. 515; (1988), 52 D.R.L.
(4th) 525; 18 F.T.R. 199] found section 32 of the
Unemployment Insurance Act, 1971 [S.C. 1970-
71-72, c. 48 (as am. by S.C. 1980-81-82-83,
c. 150, s. 5)] (now section 20, R.S.C., 1985, c.
U-1) to be inconsistent with section 15 of the
Charter because it did not accord natural parents
equal benefit of the law. It gave child care benefits
to adoptive parents, but not to natural parents.
The learned Trial Judge, pursuant to section 24 of
the Charter, addressed the underinclusiveness of
the section by granting an extension. The conse
quence of his judgment is to entitle natural parents
to the same child care benefits as adoptive parents.
1. The interface between subsections 24(1) of the
Charter and 52(1) of the Constitution Act, 1982
Counsel for the appellants stated at the outset
that there was no challenge to the finding by the
learned Trial Judge that section 32 provides un
equal benefit of the law, and, consequently, is
contrary to section 15 of the Charter. It is also
conceded that, assuming jurisdiction to grant a
remedy under section 24, the remedy devised was
just and appropriate in the circumstances. It is the
submission of the appellants, however, that the
learned Trial Judge erred in failing to declare
section 32 to be of no force and effect and further
2 15. (1) Every individual is equal before and under the law
and has the right to the equal protection and equal benefit of
the law without discrimination and, in particular, without
discrimination based on race, national or ethnic origin, colour,
religion, sex, age or mental or physical disability.
erred in purporting to amend section 32 by provid
ing for the payment of benefits to natural parents.
Couched in simple terms, the appellants' sub
mission is that subsection 52(1) operates automati
cally where there is a law that is found to be
inconsistent with the provisions of the Constitu
tion. It was the position of counsel that section 24
of the Charter cannot be used where section 52
applies. He did not go so far as to claim para-
mountcy for section 52. However, he did submit
that section 24 cannot be used to avoid the opera
tion of section 52. In paragraph 39 of his memo
randum of fact and law he expressed the submis
sion as follows:
... subsection 24(1) does not empower the Court to ignore the
clear dictate of subsection 52(1). Indeed, where the question is
one of the consistency of a statutory provision with the Charter,
subsection 24(1) does not come into play.
In support of this submission, counsel relies on a
statement by Dickson J. (as he then was) in R. v.
Big M Drug Mart Ltd. et a1. 3 Big M was a case
where the company was charged with a violation
of the Lord's Day Act [R.S.C. 1970, c. L-13]. The
ground of defence was that the Act violated the
Charter's guarantee of freedom of religion. The
Crown submitted that the trial court lacked the
competence to make a declaration of invalidity
under section 24. In rejecting this argument, Mr.
Justice Dickson stated, for the majority:
Section 24(1) sets out a remedy for individuals (whether real
persons or artificial ones such as corporations) whose rights
under the Charter have been infringed. It is not, however, the
only recourse in the face of unconstitutional legislation. Where,
as here, the challenge is based on the unconstitutionality of the
legislation, recourse to s. 24 is unnecessary and the particular
effect on the challenging party is irrelevant.
With deference to those who hold a contrary view,
it is my opinion that the above quoted opinion
makes it perfectly clear that there is more than one
remedial route to pursue when an individual's
Charter rights have been infringed by unconstitu
tional legislation. I think it apparent that Mr.
3 [1985] 1 S.C.R. 295; (1985), 60 A.R. 161; 18 D.L.R. (4th)
321; [1985] 3 W.W.R. 481; 37 Alta. L.R. (2d) 97; 18 C.C.C.
(3d) 385; 85 CLLC 914,023; 13 C.R.R. 64; 58 N.R. 81, at
p. 313 S.C.R.
Justice Dickson was not precluding access to
section 24 in cases where section 52 would apply. I
say this because of his statement that the section
24 remedy is not the only remedy in the face of
unconstitutional legislation. To the same effect are
the comments of Madame Justice Wilson in the
case of Singh et al. v. Minister of Employment
and Immigration. 4
It seems to me that the route to be followed by
an individual seeking redress may well depend
upon the manner in which the substantive right
was infringed. Mr. Justice Strayer focused on the
unusual way in which underinclusive legislation
violates Charter rights. He stated (at page 544
F.C.):
Section 32 is defective, not because the benefits it provides are
prohibited by the Charter, but rather because neither it nor any
other part of the Act goes far enough in equally providing
benefits to others similarly situated: that is, it is "under-inclu
sive".
In my view, Strayer J. is here distinguishing be
tween legislation which is unconstitutional because
of what it provides and legislation which is uncon
stitutional because of what it omits. Section 32 of
the Unemployment Insurance Act, 1971 falls into
the latter category. In the passage quoted supra,
Mr. Justice Dickson expressed the view that where
the challenge is based on the unconstitutionality of
the legislation, recourse to section 24 is unneces-
4 [1985] 1 S.C.R. 177; (1985), 17 D.L.R. (4th) 422; 12
Admin. L.R. 137; 14 C.R.R. 13; 58 N.R. 1, at p. 221 S.C.R.
where she stated:
4. Remedies
I turn now to the issue of the remedy to which the
appellants are entitled. Sections 24(1) of the Charter and
52(1) of the Constitution Act, 1982 both apply. Section
52(1) requires a declaration that s. 71(1) of the Immigration
Act, 1976, is of no force and effect to the extent it is
inconsistent with s. 7. The appellants who have suffered as a
result of the application of an unconstitutional law to them
are entitled under s. 24(1) to apply to a court of competent
jurisdiction for "such remedy as the court considers appropri
ate and just in the circumstances". What remedy is available
in the context of this case?
The Court's jurisdiction is invoked in two contexts. In the
first, these are appeals from dismissals by the Federal Court
of Appeal of applications for judicial review under s. 28 of
the Federal Court Act. In this context the Court is limited to
the powers the Federal Court is entitled to exercise pursuant
to s. 28. In the other context, however, the Court's broad
remedial powers under s. 24 of the Charter are invoked.
sary. However, that is not this case. Here the
language of section 32 itself does not contravene
the Charter. As submitted by counsel for the
respondent, its underinclusive character renders it
insufficient and therefore unconstitutional. It is
the omission in this case that is unconstitutional,
not the legislation itself. On this view of the matter
then, it would be permissible to resort to section 24
for a remedy. Hence, in my view, the course
adopted by Strayer J. does not run contrary to the
opinion expressed by Dickson J. supra.'
I find additional support for this approach to the
matter in the reasons for judgment of Madame
Justice Wilson in the case of R. v. Jones. 6 The
legislation under attack in that case was certain
sections of the Alberta School Act [R.S.A. 1980,
c. S-3]. The sections in issue were said to violate
paragraph 2(a) of the Charter (freedom of reli
gion) as well as section 7 thereof (interference
with liberty). All of the judges of the Supreme
Court of Canada hearing the appeal held that
paragraph 2(a) was not infringed. Additionally all
of the panel excepting Madame Justice Wilson
held that section 7 of the Charter was, likewise,
not infringed. Wilson J. was of the view that the
impugned legislation breached section 7 of the
Charter. Accordingly, she was the only member of
the panel who found it necessary to address the
question of remedy. At page 323 S.C.R. she said:
I would like to address one further point which was clearly a
matter of concern to the Court of Appeal. It found that the
appellant, not having been denied a certificate under s. 143(1),
was not entitled to raise the validity of the legislation "in the
abstract". If I understand the Court's thinking correctly, it
seems to be that no relief can be given under s. 24(1) on the
basis of the invalidity of the legislation per se but only on the
basis of some action taken under it. While the appellant could
have claimed relief by way of the prerogative writs if he had
been denied a certificate, the validity of the legislation can only
5 Chief Justice Dickson raises a similar point in R. v.
Edwards Books and Art Ltd., [1986] 2 S.C.R. 713; (1986), 35
D.L.R. (4th) 1; 30 C.C.C. (3d) 385, at p. 784 S.C.R.
6 [1986] 2 S.C.R. 284; (1986), 31 D.L.R. (4th) 562; [1986] 6
W.W.R. 577; 28 C.C.C. (3d) 513; 25 C.R.R. 63; 69 N.R. 241,
at p. 323 S.C.R.
be brought in issue through a constitutional reference or an
application for a declaratory judgment.
With respect, I think the Court must be in error in this
regard. A remedy must be available under s. 24(1) if legislation
is found under s. 52(1) to be inconsistent with the provisions of
the Constitution. [Emphasis added.]
While the factual situation at bar differs from
that in Jones (supra), in that this plaintiff did
commence an action for declaratory relief, and
would thus likely avoid the qualification imposed
by the Alberta Court of Appeal, I find particularly
persuasive the dicta of Madame Justice Wilson to
the effect that "A remedy must be available under
s. 24(1) if legislation is found under s. 52(1) to be
inconsistent with the provisions of the Constitu
tion."
In essence, the appellants' submission is that
section 24 can only be used where there is a
Charter infringement otherwise than by legisla
tion. As noted by counsel for the respondent, the
words "otherwise than by legislation" or other
language of like import, are not to be found in
section 24. In his submission, sections 24 and 52
do not conflict. I agree with this submission. How
ever, it is also important to remember, as noted
supra, that in the particular circumstances of this
case, the constitutional infirmity of section 32
arises not from its inconsistency, but, rather, from
its insufficiency. Accordingly, in this case, subsec
tion 52(1) of the Charter is not engaged. There is
no clear indication that one of the provisions was
intended to be exhaustive or inclusive; therefore,
both section 52 and section 24 prima fade
operate.' However, because of the underinclusive
character of the legislation, section 52 cannot
apply.
We were also invited by counsel for the respon
dent to consider remarks made by the Minister of
Justice and Attorney General of Canada to the
Special Joint Committee of Parliament on the
Constitution of Canada on January 12, 1981 [at
page 36:19]:
7 Compare: Construction of Statutes, 2nd ed., E. A. Driedg-
er, at p. 235.
Remedies:
The Canadian Civil Liberties Association, the Canadian
Jewish Congress, many members of this Committee and other
witnesses expressed the strong view that the Charter requires a
remedies section. This would ensure that the Courts could order
specific remedies for breach of Charter rights.
I would be prepared to see a new section stating that:
Anyone whose rights or freedoms, as guaranteed by this
Charter, have been infringed or denied may apply to a court
of competent jurisdiction to obtain such remedy as the court
considers just and appropriate in the circumstances.
This would ensure that an appropriate remedy as determined
by the courts would be afforded to anyone whose rights have
been infringed whether through enactment of a law or by an
action of a government official.
I am cognizant of the caveat articulated by
Lamer J. in the Re B.C. Motor Vehicle Act case 8
with respect to the Minutes of the Special Joint
Committee. However, it is my opinion that the
comments of the Minister of Justice supra clearly
indicate an intention by the addition of section 24
to the Charter to afford an appropriate remedy to
"anyone whose rights have been infringed whether
through enactment of a law or by action of a
government official". I think also that a court is
entitled to look at Parliamentary Debates as aids
to interpretation of the purpose or policy of
Parliament. 9 If this is permissible, then it seems to
me that, similarly, the Court is entitled to attach
some weight to such comments as those of the
Minister of Justice and Attorney General supra
made by him to the Special Joint Committee of
Parliament. I have this view because of the reality
that this Minister is the Minister charged with the
responsibility of piloting the Constitution Act
through the House of Commons.
For the foregoing reasons, then, I have conclud
ed that the learned Trial Judge had jurisdiction
under section 24 of the Charter to grant the relief
embodied in the decision a quo.
8 [1985] 2 S.C.R. 486; (1985), 24 D.L.R. (4th) 536; [1986] 1
W.W.R. 481; 69 B.C.L.R. 145; 23 C.C.C. (3d) 289; 48 C.R.
(3d) 289; 18 C.R.R. 30; 36 M.V.R. 240; 63 N.R. 266, at pp.
508-509 S.C.R.
9 See Reg. v. Barnet London Borough Council Ex parte
Nilish Shah, [1983] 2 W.L.R. 16 (H.L.), at p. 30.
2. The interface between subsections 24(1) and
52(1) when considered in the context of subsection
15(1)
The leading authority on section 15 of the
Charter is the Andrews case. 10 At page 170
S.C.R., Mr. Justice McIntyre stated:
The principle of equality before the law has long been
recognized as a feature of our constitutional tradition and it
found statutory recognition in the Canadian Bill of Rights.
However, unlike the Canadian Bill of Rights, which spoke only
of equality before the law, s. 15(1) of the Charter provides a
much broader protection. Section 15 spells out four basic
rights. (1) the right to equality before the law; (2) the right to
equality under the law; (3) the right to equal protection of the
law; and (4) the right to equal benefit of the law. The inclusion
of these last three additional rights in s. 15 of the Charter was
an attempt to remedy some of the shortcomings of the right to
equality in the Canadian Bill of Rights.
Again at pages 170 and 171 S.C.R., he said:
It is readily apparent that the language of s. 15 was deliberately
chosen in order to remedy some of the perceived defects under
the Canadian Bill of Rights. The antecedent statute is part of
the "linguistic, philosophic and historical context" of s. 15 of
the Charter.
It is clear that the purpose of s. 15 is to ensure equality in the
formulation and application of the law. The promotion of
equality entails the promotion of a society in which all are
secure in the knowledge that they are recognized at law as
human beings equally deserving of concern, respect and con
sideration. It has a large remedial component. Howland C.J.
and Robins J.A. (dissenting in the result but not with respect to
this comment) in Reference re an Act to Amend the Education
Act (1986), 53 O.R. (2d) 513, attempt to articulate the broad
range of values embraced by s. 15. The state at p. 554:
In our view, s. 15(1) read as a whole constitutes a compendi-
ous expression of a positive right to equality in both the
substance and the administration of the law. It is an all-encom
passing right governing all legislative action. Like the ideals of
"equal justice" and "equal access to the law", the right to equal
protection and equal benefit of the law now enshrined in the
Charter rests on the moral and ethical principle fundamental to
a truly free and democratic society that all persons should be
treated by the law on a footing of equality with equal concern
and respect.
In the quotation from the Ontario Court of Appeal
in the Reference re an Act to Amend the Educa
tion Act (1986), 53 O.R. (2d) 513; 25 D.L.R.
(4th) 1; 13 O.A.C. 241, reference is made to the
' 0 Andrews v. Law Society of British Columbia, [1989] 1
S.C.R. 143; (1989), 56 D.L.R. (4th) 1; [1989] 2 W.W.R. 289;
34 B.C.L.R. (2d) 273; 36 C.R.R. 193; 91 N.R. 255.
positive right to equality conferred by subsection
15(1). A mere declaration of invalidity is inade
quate in the circumstances at bar, because it would
not guarantee the positive right conferred pursuant
to subsection 15(1). That positive right can only be
guaranteed by the fashioning of a positive remedy.
That is precisely what the learned Trial Judge
attempted to do in the decision a quo. I find
further support for this approach in the decision of
the Supreme Court of Canada in the Brooks
case. " That case was concerned with Safeway's
Group Insurance Plan which disentitled pregnant
women during a seventeen-week period from
receiving accident or sickness benefits under the
Plan. Safeway argued, inter alla, that the Plan was
not discriminatory but merely underinclusive of
the potential risks it could conceivably insure. The
submission was that the decision to exclude preg
nancy from the scope of the Plan was not a
question of discrimination but was, rather, a ques
tion of deciding to compensate some risks and to
exclude others. Chief Justice Dickson, writing the
judgment of the Court, addressed this argument as
follows (at page 1240 S.C.R.):
In Canada, as I have noted, discrimination does not depend on
a finding of invidious intent. A further consideration militating
against the application of the concept of underinclusiveness in
this context, stems, in my view, from the effects of so-called
"underinclusion". Underinclusion may be simply a backhanded
way of permitting discrimination. Increasingly, employee ben
efit plans have become part of the terms and conditions of
employment. Once an employer decides to provide an employee
benefit package, exclusions from such schemes may not be
made in a discriminatory fashion. Selective compensation of
this nature would clearly amount to sex discrimination. Ben
efits available through employment must be disbursed in a
non-discriminatory manner.
These comments by the Chief Justice of Canada
are particularly apposite to the situation at bar.
The consequence of the underinclusiveness in sec
tion 32 of the Unemployment Insurance Act, 1971
results in discrimination against a natural parent
such as this respondent. In deciding that Safeway's
Plan discriminated on the basis of sex, the Court
allowed the appeal and remitted "the complaints
of the appellants to the adjudicator for determina
tion of the appropriate remedy pursuant to the
Manitoba Human Rights Act [S.M. 1974, c. 65]."
Iri other words, the Court in that case fashioned a
" Brooks v. Canada Safeway Ltd., [1989] 1 S.C.R. 1219;
(1989), 59 D.L.R. (4th) 321; 94 N.R. 373.
positive remedy in guarantee of a positive right. In
similar fashion, the remedy given by the Trial
Judge in this case, accomplishes a like result.
We were also referred to the decision of the
British Columbia Court of Appeal in the Hoog-
bruin case. 12 In that case, the petitioners, both
permanent residents and registered voters in Brit-
ish Columbia were temporarily absent while
attending University in Ontario. During their
absence from the province, a provincial election
was held in British Columbia. They were unable to
vote in that election because there was no provision
in the Election Act [R.S.B.C. 1979, c. 103] for
absentee voting. They applied for a declaration
that their right to vote, as guaranteed by section 3
of the Charter, had been infringed. The Court of
Appeal granted a declaration that, "in the court's
view the right to vote as guaranteed by s. 3 of the
Charter is denied to British Columbia registered
voters where the sole reason they are unable to
exercise their right to vote is that no procedural
mechanism exists which would reasonably enable
them to do so" [at page 723 D.L.R.]. At pages
722-723 D.L.R., the Court (Nemetz C.J.B.C.,
Aikins and Macdonald JJ.A.) stated:
Mr. Edwards, for the respondents, in urging that no remedial
action be taken by this court, has raised the spectre of the
danger of the court "subsuming or directing" the functions of
the Executive or Legislature if a declaration were to be made.
In our opinion there is no merit in this argument. If any law is
inconsistent with the provisions of the Charter, it is the court's
duty, to the extent of such inconsistency, to declare it to be of
no force or effect (s. 52(1)).
Before the Charter, the courts could and did declare legisla
tion invalid on division of powers grounds. When they did so,
we know of no recent occasion when the legislative branch of
government did not faithfully attempt to correct the impugned
legislation. Likewise, when this court declares a statute or
portion thereof to be "of no force and effect" where it is
inconsistent with the Charter, it is for the Legislature to decide
what remedial steps should be taken in view of the declaration.
Section 24(1) of the Charter empowers the courts to grant
citizens remedies where their guaranteed rights are infringed or
denied. The Charter provides:
12 Re Hoogbruin et al. and Attorney-General of British
Columbia et al. (1985), 24 D.L.R. (4th) 718; [1986] 2 W.W.R.
700; 70 B.C.L.R. 1 (C.A.).
24.(1) Anyone whose rights or freedoms, as guaranteed by
this Charter, have been infringed or denied may apply to a
court of competent jurisdiction to obtain such remedy as the
court considers appropriate and just in the circumstances.
It would be anomalous, indeed, if such powers were reserved
only for cases where limitations are expressly enacted and not
for cases where an unconstitutional limitation results because of
omission in a statute. [Emphasis added.]
It is apparent from these reasons that the Court
of Appeal of British Columbia was of the view that
a court of competent jurisdiction is empowered
pursuant to subsection 24(1) to provide a remedy
to address the underinclusiveness of a statute.
Counsel for the respondent as well as counsel for
the intervenor also relied on the Blainey case, a
decision of the Ontario Court of Appeal.' 3 In
Blainey the appellant was a twelve-year-old girl
who had been prevented from playing on a boys'
hockey team by the regulations of the Ontario
Hockey Association and the Canadian Amateur
Hockey Association. Section 1 of the Ontario
Human Rights Code, 1981 [S.O. 1981, c. 53]
provides that:
1. Every person has a right to equal treatment with respect
to services, goods and facilities, without discrimination because
of race, ancestry, place of origin, colour, ethnic origin, citizen
ship, creed, sex, age, marital status, family status or handicap.
However, subsection 19(2) of that Code [rep. by
S.O. 1986, c. 64, s. 18(12)] stated:
19....
(2) The right under section 1 to equal treatment with respect
to services and facilities is not infringed where membership in
an athletic organization or participation in an athletic activity
is restricted to persons of the same sex.
The appellant applied for a declaration that sub
section 19(2) of the Code is contrary to subsection
15(1) of the Charter. The majority of the Court of
Appeal panel held that subsection 19(2) infringed
section 15 of the Charter because its effect was to
permit direct discrimination on the basis of gender.
The majority held further that the subsection was
not saved by section 1 of the Charter since it was
13 Re Blainey and Ontario Hockey Association et al. (1986),
54 O.R. (2d) 513; 24 D.L.R. (4th) 728; 14 O.A.C. 194 (C.A.).
Leave to appeal to Supreme Court of Canada denied [[1986] 1
S.C.R. xii].
an unreasonable limit on the right to the equal
protection and equal benefit of the law. In Blainey
the offending subsection was drafted as an excep
tion to the general protection against discrimina
tion conferred by section 1 of the Code. Hence, in
that case, the relief sought by Ms. Blainey could
be achieved through a declaration of invalidity in
respect of subsection 19(2), pursuant to section 52
of the Constitution Act, 1982, since the conse
quence of such a declaration would result in Ms.
Blainey being afforded the general protection
against discrimination as set out in section 1 of the
Code. In other words the substantive effect of the
declaration of invalidity in Blainey resulted in an
extension to Ms. Blainey of the right to be free
from discrimination as conferred pursuant to sec
tion 1 of the Code.
Both counsel noted that a similar result was
achieved in the Andrews case supra. In Andrews
the Supreme Court of Canada declared that the
requirement in the Barristers and Solicitors Act of
British Columbia [R.S.B.C. 1979, c. 26] that only
a Canadian citizen may be called to the Bar of
British Columbia is inconsistent with section 15 of
the Charter and is, therefore, of no force and
effect. In the submission of counsel, the conse
quence of this decision is that the Court has
granted an extension to the applicant for admis
sion to the bar by removing a constitutionally
impermissible obstacle to that application. It is
further submitted that the Court's jurisdiction to
prescribe Charter remedies does not depend upon
the way in which a legislative provision is drafted.
For example, had section 32 of the Unemployment
Insurance Act, 1971 been drafted in the reverse,
i.e., by providing that child care benefits were
available to all parents excepting those who were
natural parents, appropriate relief could be given
by striking out the exception under section 32
since natural parents would then be restored to a
position of equality with all other parents. In
reality, the learned Trial Judge did exactly that,
since, by his order, he restored natural parents to a
position of equality with all other parents. As put
by counsel for the respondent:
It would otherwise be arbitrary and capricious to have such
great substantive differences turn solely on stylistic differences
in drafting. [Respondent's memorandum of fact and law, para
graph 64.]
Counsel for the intervenor stated (intervenor's
memorandum of fact and law, paragraph 44):
... while a declaration of invalidity in this case would place
natural and adoptive parents in the same position, it would not
promote equality. Ensuring that groups or individuals have the
same entitlement to no benefits is contrary to the purpose of the
equality guarantee in section 15 and, produces only sameness,
not equality.
In oral argument, she added that such a result
amounted to "Equality with a vengeance" because
of the punitive aspect of the result. She submitted
that it was not possible to achieve the equality
envisioned by section 15 simply by taking a benefit
away from others.
I agree with the submissions of both counsel in
this regard. In my view, the Canadian jurispru
dence does not foreclose the use of section 24 in
the circumstances of this case. To the contrary, my
belief is that the preponderance of that jurispru
dence supports the exercise of the Court's section
24 jurisdiction in a situation such as this. ' 4 At
page 636 S.C.R. of the decision of the Supreme
Court of Canada in R. v. Rahey, 15 Mr. Justice
La Forest, when discussing the "Interrelationship
of Right and Remedy" in the context of the tradi
tions of trial within a reasonable time, and the
similar requirement contained in paragraph 11(b)
of the Charter, stated:
What sets the Charter apart from this tradition is not solely
its constitutional expression of the right, a right known to the
common law, after all, for more than 750 years, but also the
broad and flexible nature of the remedy it provides for its
breach. In other words, it is not only the fact that the right is
constitutionally enshrined that requires us to look at it afresh,
but that it is reaffirmed in the context of an entirely novel
procedural mechanism, one which was obviously intended to be
used with flexibility and imagination. Courts, therefore, can no
longer treat existing remedies as defining the scope of the right.
14 In addition to cases analyzed supra, I refer to the case of
Addy v. The Queen, [1985] 2 F.C. 452; (1985), 22 D.L.R.
(4th) 52; 8 C.C.E.L. 13; 5 C.P.C. (2d) 127; 19 C.R.R. 193
(T.D.)' and R. v. Punch, [1985] N.W.T.R. 373; [1986] 1
W.W.R. 592; 22 C.C.C. (3d) 289; 48 C.R. (3d) 374; 18 C.R.R.
74 (S.C.).
15 [1987] 1 S.C.R. 588; (1987), 78 N.S.R. (2d) 183; 39
D.L.R. (4th) 481; 193 A.P.R. 183; 33 C.C.C. (3d) 289; 57 C.R.
(3d) 289; 75 N.R. 81.
In effect the Charter places the guarantee of trial within a
reasonable time in a procedural context that empowers the
courts to give full meaning to it for the first time.
At page 648 S.C.R. he said:
Remedy
As I have repeatedly indicated, a court of competent jurisdic
tion is free to employ the full discretion conferred on it by s.
24(1) of the Charter in choosing a remedy for breach of the
right to trial within a reasonable time. That choice as McIntyre
J. explains in the passage cited earlier will depend on all the
circumstances. The Charter clearly tells us that the remedy to
be given is that which "the court considers appropriate and just
in the circumstances".
Both of these quotations reinforce my view that
the Court is empowered to use its section 24
powers with "flexibility" and "imagination" and is
free to employ a full discretion in the exercise of
those powers.
Mr. Justice McIntyre, in Mills v. The Queen, 16
also makes a persuasive case for the breadth of the
jurisdiction conferred pursuant to section 24:
It is difficult to imagine language which could give the court a
wider and less fettered discretion. It is impossible to reduce this
wide discretion to some sort of binding formula for general
application in all cases, and it is not for appellate courts to
pre-empt or cut down this wide discretion .... the circum
stances will be infinitely variable from case to case and the
remedy will vary with the circumstances.
As noted in the jurisprudence discussed supra,
our courts have granted positive remedies, varying
those remedies to fit the circumstances present in
each particular case. In my opinion, and for all of
the reasons given supra, the learned Trial Judge,
in this case, did not err in his exercise of the
discretion conferred upon him pursuant to,
section 24.
16 [1986] 1 S.C.R. 863; (1986), 29 D.L.R. (4th) 161; 26
C.C.C. (3d) 481; 52 C.R. (3d) 1; 67 N.R. 241, at pp. 965-966
S.C.R.
3. The role of the judiciary where the granting of
a Charter remedy results in a judicial amendment
to the legislation and results, as well, in the appro
priation of public funds for a purpose not author
ized by Parliament
(a) Judicial amendment
The appellants submit that the Charter has not
transferred to the courts the power to rewrite or
amend legislation in order to bring it into accord
with the Charter. In the submission of counsel "it
remains the responsibility of Parliament to select
among the constitutionally permissible policy
options and enact legislation which meets the
Charter's requirements" (appellants' memoran
dum of fact and law, paragraph 43). On this basis
then, it is the view of the appellants that the Trial
Judge "overstepped the proper judicial function by
selecting and imposing a legislative scheme to
replace that found constitutionally defective"
(appellants' memorandum of fact and law, para
graph 44).
I have problems with this submission. Such an
approach ignores the existence of section 33 of the
Charter" which specifically preserves parliamen
tary supremacy concerning the rights enunciated
in section 2, as well as in sections 7 to 15 of the
Charter. It should be kept in mind that constitu
tional supremacy (including the Charter) was
imposed on the legislators by the legislators, after
a full airing in the political arena, the media and
" Section 33 reads:
33. (1) Parliament or the legislature of a province may
expressly declare in an Act of Parliament or of the legisla
ture, as the case may be, that the Act or a provision thereof
shall operate notwithstanding a provision included in section
2 or sections 7 to 15 of this Charter.
(2) An Act or a provision of an Act in respect of which a
declaration made under this section is in effect shall have
such operation as it would have but for the provision of this
Charter referred to in the declaration.
(3) A declaration made under subsection (1) shall cease to
have effect five years after it comes into force or on such
earlier date as may be specified in the declaration.
(4) Parliament or the legislature of a province may
re-enact a declaration made under subsection (1).
(5) Subsection (3) applies in respect of a re-enactment
made under subsection (4).
the courts. In the Skapinker' 8 case, Mr. Justice
Estey described the role of the courts vis-Ã -vis the
Charter as follows:
We are here engaged in a new task, the interpretation anc
application of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
... This is not a statute or even a statute of the extraordinary
nature of the Canadian Bill of Rights. ... It is a part of the
constitution of a nation adopted by constitutional process
which, in the case of Canada in 1982, took the form of a statute
of the Parliament of the United Kingdom. The adoptive mech
anisms may vary from nation to nation. They lose their relevan
cy or shrink to mere historical curiosity value on the ultimate
adoption of the instrument as the Constitution. The British
North America Act of 1867 was such a law .... In the inter
pretation and application of this document the Judicial Com
mittee of the Privy Council ... said: "The British North
America Act planted in Canada a living tree capable of growth
and expansion within its natural limits."
The Charter comes from neither level of the legislative
branches of government but from the Constitution itself. It is
part of the fabric of Canadian law. Indeed, it "is the supreme
law of Canada" ... The fine and constant adjustment process
of these constitutional provisions is left by a tradition of
necessity to the judicial branch. Flexibility must be balanced
with certainty. The future must, to the extent foreseeably
possible, be accommodated in the present .... With the Con
stitution Act, 1982 comes a new dimension, a new yardstick of
reconciliation between the individual and the community and
their respective rights, a dimension which, like the balance of
the Constitution, remains to be interpreted and applied by the
Court.
Keeping in mind the principles enunciated by
Mr. Justice Estey supra, I turn now to the circum
stances in the case at bar. The consequence of a
declaration of invalidity pursuant to subsection
52(1) is to deprive adoptive parents of the child
care benefits granted to them pursuant to section
32 of the Unemployment Insurance Act, 1971.
Such a result is just as much a judicial amendment
as the remedy proposed by the Trial Judge. Bear
ing in mind the view of the Supreme Court of
Canada that the proper approach to the granting
of Charter remedies should be both flexible and
functional 19 and that a purposive approach should
be applied to the administration of Charter reme
dies as well as in the interpretation of Charter
18 Law Society of Upper Canada v. Skapinker, [ 1984] 1
S.C.R. 357; (1984), 9 D.L.R. (4th) 161; 3 O.A.C. 321; 11
C.C.C. (3d) 481; 53 N.R. 169, at pp. 365-367 S.C.R.
19 Mills v. The Queen, [1986] 1 S.C.R. 863, at pp. 894-905
per Lamer J.
rights, 20 I have the view that the remedy provided
in this case is just and appropriate in the particular
circumstances of this case. In my view, underinclu-
sive legislation invites a remedy extending benefits.
The right to equality of result enshrined pursuant
to section 15 will be meaningless unless positive
relief is provided in cases of underinclusive provi
sions such as those to be found in section 32 of the
Unemployment Insurance Act, 1971. In these cir
cumstances, section 24 clearly contemplates and
sanctions the kind of remedy provided herein by
the Trial Judge. The remedy granted represents a
rational and reasonable "reconciliation between
the individual and the community" as envisaged
by Estey J. in Skapinker supra. The Charter deals
with the protection of existing rights. The judg
ment of the Trial Division protects the existing
rights of the respondent and others like him. On
the other hand, the judgment proposed by the
appellants will not protect those existing rights.
Accordingly I think the remedy prescribed is con
stitutionally permissible.
Furthermore, the judgment of the Trial Division
merely provides a temporary remedy, leaving it to
"Parliament to remedy the situation in accordance
with the Charter, either by extending similar ben
efits to natural parents, or by eliminating the
benefits given to adoptive parents, or by some
provision of more limited benefits on an equal
basis to both adoptive and natural parents in
respect of child-care" (at page 544 F.C.). The
remedy given by Mr. Justice Strayer does not in
any way impinge on Parliament's prerogative to
choose amongst constitutionally valid policy
options in enacting legislation which conforms to
the requirements of the Charter. Since the remedy
here is a temporary one, it is unlikely that Parlia
ment would find it necessary to rely upon section
33 of the Charter. For the foregoing reasons then,
I am unable to agree with the submissions of the
appellants on this issue.
2 0R. v. Gamble, [1988] 2 S.C.R. 595; (1988), 31 O.A.C. 81;
45 C.C.C. (3d) 204; 66 C.R. (3d) 193; 89 N.R. 161 at p. 641
S.C.R. per Wilson J.
(b) The appropriation of public funds for a pur
pose not authorized by Parliament
It is the submission of the appellants that the
relief granted by the learned Trial Judge repre
sents an invasion of the fiscal preserve of Parlia
ment in that the relief granted results in the
appropriation of public funds to pay the judicially
extended benefits. In the view of the appellants,
the power to exact taxes and to disburse revenues
falls within the exclusive province of Parliament.
In their view, the Court must respect Parliament's
constitutional authority over the public purse.
In my view, this proposition is not supported by
the jurisprudence. In the case of R. v. Rowbotham
et al., 2' the Ontario Court of Appeal (Martin,
Cory and Grange JJ.A.) ordered a remedy under
subsection 24(1) of the Charter which involved the
expenditure of public funds. At page 371 O.A.C.,
the Court said:
To sum up: where the trial judge finds that representation of an
accused by counsel is essential to a fair trial, the accused, as
previously indicated, has a constitutional right to be provided
with counsel at the expense of the state if he or she lacks the
means to employ one. Where the trial judge is satisfied that an
accused lacks the means to employ counsel, and that counsel is
necessary to ensure a fair trial for the accused, a stay of the
proceedings until funded counsel is provided is an appropriate
remedy under s. 24(1) of the Charter where the prosecution
insists on proceeding with the trial in breach of the accused's
Charter right to a fair trial. It is unnecessary in this case to
decide whether the trial judge in those circumstances would
also be empowered to direct that Legal Aid or the appropriate
Attorney General pay the fees of counsel.
Likewise, in the case of Marchand v. Simcoe
County Board of Education et al., 22 Sirois J. of
the Ontario High Court of Justice, after finding
that the plaintiffs constitutional rights to minority
language education had been denied, declared pur
suant to subsection 24(1) of the Charter, that the
plaintiff and those whom he represents have a
right under section 23 of the Charter to have their
children receive secondary school instruction in the
French language in French language educational
21 (1988), 25 O.A.C. 321; 41 C.C.C. (3d) 1; 63 C.R. 113.
22 (1986), 55 O.R. (2d) 638; 29 D.L.R. (4th) 596; 25 C.R.R.
139 (H.C.), at pp. 661 to 663 O.R.
facilities provided out of public funds. It should
also be kept in mind that in the Singh case supra,
the Supreme Court of Canada, in ordering that the
refugee claims of the appellants be remanded to
the Immigration Appeal Board for a full oral
hearing in each case was prescribing a remedy that
resulted in a substantial expenditure of public
funds not authorized by Parliament.
Furthermore, as noted by counsel for the inter-
venor, the remedy suggested by the appellants,
namely a declaration of invalidity pursuant to
subsection 52(1) will likewise impact upon the
public purse in that such a result would save the
Government of Canada monies heretofore payable
as child care benefits under section 32 to adoptive
parents. If a positive result is constitutionally
invalid for this reason, then surely a negative result
would, likewise be impermissible.
In my view, section 24 does empower a court to
extend benefits to groups aggrieved by an exclu
sion of benefits. Such an extension of benefits
appears to be the only remedy which respects the
purposive nature of the Charter while at the same
time giving effect to the equality rights enshrined
in section 15 of the Charter. Since in these circum
stances extension appears to be the only remedy
that is "appropriate and just", I think it to be
permissible even though the remedy granted does
result in the appropriation of funds not authorized
by Parliament.
CONCLUSION
In conclusion, since I have not been persuaded,
for all of the reasons advanced herein, that the
learned Trial Judge was in error in his disposition
of the issues raised by this appeal nor in his
judgment dated August 30, 1988, it follows that
the appeal should be dismissed. In so far as the
costs of the appeal are concerned, I agree with Mr.
Justice Mahoney that the respondent Schachter
should be allowed his party and party costs of the
appeal.
STONE J.A.: I agree.
* * *
The following are the reasons for judgment
rendered in English by
MAHONEY J.A. (dissenting): This appeal from
a reported decision of Mr. Justice Strayer, [ 1988]
3 F.C. 515, raises, in stark terms, a fundamental
constitutional question. That is whether a com
petent court, when it has found legislation to be
inconsistent with a provision of the Constitution of
Canada, has the power to grant a remedy which
trespasses upon Parliament's jurisdiction to legis
late and, in the present circumstances at least, to
appropriate monies. The legislation which was
found inconsistent with section 15 of the Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms, because it did
not accord natural parents equal benefit of the
law, is section 32 of the Unemployment Insurance
Act, 1971, now section 20, R.S.C., 1985, c. U-1. It
entitles adoptive parents, but not natural parents,
to child-care benefits. The learned Trial Judge
devised a remedy under section 24 of the Charter
which entitles natural parents to the same child
care benefits and requires the disbursement of
public monies in circumstances Parliament has not
provided for.
The precise wording of the impugned legislation
and the judgment below are not critical to these
reasons. They are, nevertheless, set out in the
Appendix.
Only one aspect of the order, other than the
power to make it at all, was raised on appeal. That
was the inclusion of the provision whereby natural
mothers' entitlement to the child-care benefits
under section 32 should not be abated by their
entitlement to maternity benefits otherwise pro
vided for. I see no discrete error in that. The
amendment to the prayer for relief allowed at trial,
A.B. XIV, pages 2032 ff., introduced the inter
action of child-care and maternity benefits into the
pleadings. While the respondent Schachter could
himself have no entitlement to maternity benefits,
the interaction necessarily came into play once the
Charter contravention was established, there being
no constitutionally supportable distinction between
fathers and mothers in the context of child-care
benefits.
Aside from that, none of the matters actually
dealt with by the learned Trial Judge are seriously
in issue. He found, and it is now conceded, that
section 32 denies by discrimination equal benefit
of the law to natural parents. It is not contended
that the order made, if it could be made at all, is
not a just and appropriate remedy. Among the
remedies sought in the alternative was a declara
tion that section 32 is invalid and of no force and
effect with the proviso that it remain in force for a
period to permit remedial legislation, A.B. I,
page 6.
The appellants say that when legislation is found
to be inconsistent with the Constitution which, of
course, includes the Charter, it must, by section 52
of the Constitution Act, 1982, be held to be of no
force and effect. That, in their submission, is the
end of the matter. It is up to Parliament to enact
legislation that does not offend the Constitution.
The Court is without jurisdiction to invoke section
24 of the Charter and devise a remedy that
extends the benefit of the law to those whom
Parliament has omitted, whether by design or
oversight. That argument, if put to the learned
Trial Judge, was not dealt with. He did not consid
er whether he was obliged to make the declaration
urged by the appellants although he certainly con
sidered it an option and rejected it.
The respondents do not deny that a declaration
of invalidity may be the appropriate and just
remedy in some circumstances where legislation is
inconsistent with the Charter. They cite an
absence of equal benefit of the law by reason of
legislative overintrusion. A just and appropriate
remedy may well lie in declaring a severable ove-
rintrusion to be of no force and effect. But here
equal benefit of the law is denied by legislative
underinclusion. To achieve it by denying some
thing, be it entitlement or exemption, to those
whom Parliament has expressly granted it is said
to be neither appropriate nor just; it is offensive to
reason and to Parliament's probable intention. It is
not to be achieved by depriving those whom Par
liament has endowed but by endowing those whom
Parliament has unconstitutionally overlooked.
Both appellants and respondents derive consid
erable comfort from the thought that the action
each urges is, at Parliament's option, of fleeting
legislative consequence. Legislation, retroactive in
its effect if desired, may address the matter should
Parliament not find the Court's solution satisfacto
ry.
The provisions of the Constitution in issue here
are subsections 15(1) and 24(1) of the Charter and
52(1) of the Constitution Act, 1982.
15. (1) Every individual is equal before and under the law
and has the right to the equal protection and equal benefit of
the law without discrimination and, in particular, without
discrimination based on race, national or ethnic origin, colour,
religion, sex, age or mental or physical disability.
24. (1) Anyone whose rights or freedoms, as guaranteed by
this Charter, have been infringed or denied may apply to a
court of competent jurisdiction to obtain such remedy as the
court considers appropriate and just in the circumstances.
52. (1) The Constitution of Canada is the supreme law of
Canada, and any law that is inconsistent with the provisions of
the Constitution is, to the extent of the inconsistency, of no
force or effect.
The respondents find highly respectable support
for the proposition that a section 24 remedy should
be available in the judgment of the Supreme Court
of the United States in Califano v. Westcott, 443
U.S. 76 (1979), a case factually similar to this.
The legislation in issue provided financial entitle
ment to needy children deprived of parental sup
port by their fathers' unemployment. It was found
unconstitutional in that it established a classifica-
tion which discriminated solely on the basis of sex.
The District Court had effectively amended the
legislation by substituting "parent" for "father".
The respondents sought, on appeal, to substitute
"principal wage-earner". The majority opinion had
this say, at pages 89 ff.:
"Where a statute is defective because of underinclusion,"
Mr. Justice Harlan noted, "there exist two remedial alterna
tives: a court may either declare [the statute] a nullity and
order that its benefits not extend to the class that the legisla
ture intended to benefit, or it may extend the coverage of the
statute to include those who are aggrieved by the exclusion."
Welsh v. United States, 398 U.S. 333, 361 (1970) (concurring
in result). In previous cases involving equal protection chal
lenges to underinclusive federal benefits statutes, this Court has
suggested that extension, rather than nullification, is the proper
course. [Citations omitted.] Indeed, this Court regularly has
affirmed District Court judgments ordering that welfare ben
efits be paid to members of an unconstitutionally excluded
class. [Citations omitted.]
There is no need, however, to elaborate here the conditions
under which invalidation rather than extension of an underin-
clusive federal benefits statute should be ordered, for no party
has presented that issue for review. All parties before the
District Court agreed that extension was the appropriate
remedy.
Whenever a court extends a benefits program to redress uncon
stitutional underinclusiveness, it risks infringing legislative pre
rogatives. The extension ordered by the District Court possesses
at least the virtue of simplicity: by ordering that "father" be
replaced by its gender-neutral equivalent, the court avoided
disruption of the AFDC-UF program, for benefits simply will
be paid to families with an unemployed parent on the same
terms that benefits have long been paid to families with an
unemployed father. The "principal wage-earner" solution, by
contrast, would introduce a term novel in the AFDC scheme,
and would pose definitional and policy questions best suited to
legislative or administrative elaboration.
Under these circumstances, any fine-tuning of AFDC coverage
along "principal wage-earner" lines is properly left to the
democratic branches of the Government. In sum, we believe the
District Court, in an effort to render the AFDC-UF program
gender neutral, adopted the simplest and most equitable exten
sion possible.
This decision demonstrates that the remedy
devised by the learned Trial Judge is well estab
lished as the sort of remedy that would, in the
circumstances, have been granted in the United
States and also the basic principle of its formula
tion. However, as observed by Mr. Justice Lamer,
speaking for the majority in Re B.C. Motor Vehi
cle Act, [1985] 2 S.C.R. 486, at page 498:
... [The U.S.] Constitution, it must be remembered, has no s.
52 nor has it the internal checks and balances of ss. 1 and 33.
We would, in my view, do our own Constitution a disservice to
simply allow the American debate to define the issue for us, all
the while ignoring the truly fundamental structural differences
between the two constitutions.
The respondents have advanced numerous argu
ments in support of maintaining the remedy grant
ed here. These include the purposive approach, and
generous rather than legalistic interpretation of
Charter guaranteed rights, propounded in Hunter
et al. v. Southam Inc., [1984] 2 S.C.R. 145;
(1984), 55 A.R. 291; 11 D.L.R. (4th) 641; [1984]
6 W.W.R. 577; 33 Alta. L.R. (2d) 193; 27 B.L.R.
297; 14 C.C.C. (3d) 97; 2 C.P.R. (3d) 1; 41 C.R.
(3d) 97; 9 C.R.R. 355; 84 DTC 6467; 55 N.R.
241, reiterated in R. v. Big M Drug Mart Ltd. et
al., [1985] 1 S.C.R. 295, and, perhaps, somewhat
extended in its application by the majority, per
Wilson J., in R. v Gamble, [1988] 2 S.C.R. 595, at
page 641:
A purposive approach should, in my view, be applied to the
administration of Charter remedies as well as to the interpreta
tion of Charter rights.
As to section 24 remedies, that approach is clearly
supported by the legislative history, particularly
the statement of the Minister of Justice, Minutes
of Proceedings and Evidence of the Special Joint
Committee of the Senate and of the House of
Commons on the Constitution of Canada, January
12, 1981, at page 36:19. The respondents urge the
availability of the remedy from the practical points
of view already stated: Parliament can effectively
act if it is not content with the remedy; a stay of
the remedy can be ordered should the Court con
sider it unduly disruptive, as in Reference re
Manitoba Language Rights, [1985] 1 S.C.R. 721;
(1985), 19 D.L.R. (4th) 1; [1985] 4 W.W.R. 385;
35 Man. R. (2d) 83; 59 N.R. 321, and the remedy
granted probably comes closer to the attainment of
Parliament's real intentions than would a bare
declaration of invalidity. They suggest that persons
whose equality rights are violated by legislative
underinclusion ought not be put in the "dog in the
manger" position of seeking, as the only available
remedy, to deprive others of some advantage and
ask, if that is the necessary result, why any right-
minded person would undertake such a Charter
challenge. Persons ought not be deterred from
asserting their rights. A declaration of invalidity
does nothing to promote equality; equal access to
nothing is not equality.
The validity of a purposive approach is not open
to question and I accept the logic and force of the
practical considerations. If the learned Trial Judge
had the power to grant the remedy he did, I would
not disturb it. I do think that it does best fulfil a
purposive approach to remedy; it does promote
equality while a declaration of invalidity cannot,
except in sterile formality. However, as counsel for
the respondent Schachter recognized in oral argu
ment, the appellants challenge the judgment below
on principle. They are not questioning an exercise
of discretion; they question the Court's power to
grant such a remedy at all.
I have found only one conceivable reference by
the Supreme Court of Canada to the interaction of
the subsections. That is in the judgment of Dick-
son J., as he then was, speaking for the majority in
R. v. Big M Drug Mart Ltd. et al., at page 313
S.C.R.:
Section 24(1) sets out a remedy for individuals (whether real
persons or artificial ones such as corporations) whose rights
under the Charter have been infringed. It is not, however, the
only recourse in the face of unconstitutional legislation. Where,
as here, the challenge is based on the unconstitutionality of the
legislation, recourse to s. 24 is unnecessary and the particular
effect on the challenging party is irrelevant.
Section 52 sets out the fundamental principle of constitution
al law that the Constitution is supreme.
The respondents would have us infer, from the
statement that subsection 24(1) is not the only
recourse in the case of unconstitutional legislation,
that subsections 24(1) and 52(1) necessarily offer
alternative recourses in an appropriate case, legis
lative underinclusion being such a case. I cannot
read the passage as indicating a concluded opinion
as to that. The interaction of the provisions is not
really addressed. Certainly the only "remedy", if
that be a proper description, sought, considered
and granted was a declaration of invalidity of the
impugned legislation pursuant to subsection 52(1).
The Supreme Court, again per Dickson J., in
Hunter et al. v. Southam Inc., a case of legislative
overintrusion, not underinclusion, has said at page
148 S.C.R.:
The Constitution of Canada, which includes the Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms, is the supreme law of
Canada. Any law inconsistent with the provisions of the Consti
tution is, to the extent of the inconsistency, of no force or effect.
Section 52(1) of the Constitution Act, 1982 so mandates.
and at pages 168 ff S.C.R.:
The appellants submit that even if subss. 10(1) and 10(3) do
not specify a standard consistent with s. 8 for authorizing entry,
search and seizure, they should not be struck down as inconsist
ent with the Charter, but rather that the appropriate standard
should be read into these provisions.... In the present case,
the overt inconsistency with s. 8 manifested by the lack of a
neutral and detached arbiter renders the appellants' submis-
sions on reading in appropriate standards for issuing a warrant
purely academic. Even if this were not the case, however, I
would be disinclined to give effect to these submissions. While
the courts are guardians of the Constitution and of individuals'
rights under it, it is the legislature's responsibility to enact
legislation that embodies appropriate safeguards to comply
with the Constitution's requirements. It should not fall to the
courts to fill in the details that will render legislative lacunae
constitutional. Without appropriate safeguards legislation
authorizing search and seizure is inconsistent with s. 8 of the
Charter. As I have said, any law inconsistent with the provi
sions of the Constitution is, to the extent of the inconsistency,
of no force or effect.
The responsibility of the courts is to define the
limits of legislation permissible under the Charter
but it remains the responsibility of Parliament to
enact legislation that meets its requirements.
R. v. Hamilton (1986), 57 O.R. (2d) 412; 17
O.A.C. 241 (C.A.) and R. v. Van Vliet (1988), 45
C.C.C. (3d) 481; 10 M.V.R. 190 (B.C.C.A.), both
considered equality before the law in relation to
provisions of the Criminal Code [R.S.C. 1970, c.
C-34] which were proclaimed in force in some, but
not all, provinces. They were not in force in either
Ontario or British Columbia when their Courts of
Appeal were called upon to deal with the claims of
persons convicted to be treated as though they had
been proclaimed. The Ontario Court of Appeal
granted that claim; the British Columbia Court of
Appeal, by a majority decision, rejected it. In
neither case was a declaration of invalidity of the
legislation sought, an important difference from
the present case.
For the Ontario Court, Dubin J.A., at page 438
O.R., said:
No attack having been made on the constitutionality of the
Criminal Code provisions under consideration, it is for an
individual to show that his rights or freedoms as guaranteed by
the Charter have been infringed or denied. Only such an
individual is entitled to a remedy. Where the evidence discloses
that the individual is within the class of persons contemplated
as one eligible for the court's consideration for a discharge, the
appropriate remedy is to provide such an individual with the
same right that individuals have in like circumstances in other
parts of Canada.
He appears not to have directed his mind to the
possibility that the grant of that remedy may, in
fact, have been a legislative act since it entailed
either treating the provisions as though they had
been proclaimed in force in Ontario or as though
the proclamation requirement had not been enact
ed. The B.C. Court of Appeal, on the other hand,
did consider it and it concluded that to grant the
same remedy would be to legislate and beyond its
power. At page 519 C.C.C., Southin J.A., (Car-
rothers J.A., concurring), said:
Parliament might very well not have included s-s.(5) in the
1985 Act if the proclamation section had not also been includ
ed. In reality, the Ontario Court of Appeal has repealed the
proclamation section.
To do what was done in R. y Hamilton is to amend the 1985
Act. To amend is to legislate. To legislate is to usurp the
function of Parliament.
Our political system as it is found in the Constitution Act,
1867, confers the power to legislate only upon Parliament and
the. Legislatures.
She then went on to consider sections 17, 18, 91
and 92 of the Constitution Act, 1867 [30 & 31
Vict., c. 3 (U.K.) [R.S.C. 1970, Appendix II, No.
5]], and, at page 520 C.C.C., concluded:
The executive power is vested in the Sovereign and the power
to legislate is vested in Parliament. Neither is vested in the
courts.
The Charter has not conferred the powers of ss. 91 and 92
upon the courts but has conferred only the power to strike down
legislation.
With respect, the last observation is not quite
accurate. It is not the Charter but subsection
52(1) of the Constitution Act, 1982, that provides
the courts' power to strike down legislation and, as
the Supreme Court observed in the Reference re
Manitoba Language Rights, at page 746 S.C.R.:
[It] does not alter the principles which have provided the
foundation for judicial review over the years. In a case where
constitutional manner and form requirements have not been
complied with, the consequence of such non-compliance contin
ues to be invalidity. The words "of no force or effect" mean
that a law thus inconsistent with the Constitution has no force
or effect because it is invalid.
I think the conclusion that under the Constitution
of Canada, the exclusive power to legislate is
vested in Parliament (and the provincial legislative
assemblies) is unexceptionable. I am content to
adopt the constitutional and historical observations
made by Southin J.A., in reaching that conclusion
and shall add my own only with respect to the
direct fiscal consequences of the judgment below,
an element not present in the Criminal Code cases.
The Unemployment Insurance Act [R.S.C.,
1985, c. U-1] provides:
117. (1) There shall be paid out of the Consolidated Reve
nue Fund and charged to the Unemployment Insurance
Account
(a) all amounts paid as or on account of benefits under this
Act;
An entitlement to benefits gives rise directly to a
liability to disburse monies from the Consolidated
Revenue Fund. The remedy in issue here creates
such a liability in circumstances not provided for
by Parliament. When, in R. v. Big M Drug Mart
Ltd. et al. at page 344 S.C.R., Dickson J., empha
sized the importance of a purposive and generous
approach to Charter rights, he went on to caution:
At the same time it is important not to overshoot the actual
purpose of the right or freedom in question, but to recall that
the Charter was not enacted in a vacuum, and must therefore,
... be placed in its proper linguistic, philosophic and historical
contexts.
It is also to be recalled that the Charter is part of
the Constitution; it is not the whole Constitution;
its provisions are neither subordinate nor para
mount. The Supreme Court, in the Reference re
Manitoba Language Rights, at page 745 S.C.R.,
defined a country's constitution as the:
... statement of the will of the people to be governed in
accordance with certain principles held as fundamental and
certain prescriptions restrictive of the powers of the legislature
and government.
The entire Constitution, not the Charter alone, is
that statement by the people of Canada.
The preamble to the Constitution Act, 1867,
proclaims the desire of the confederating provinces
"to be federally united ... with a Constitution
similar in Principle to that of the United King
dom". No principle of the British Constitution is,
or was in 1867, more firmly established or funda
mental than the Houses of Parliament's declara
tion "vindicating and asserting their ancient
Rights and Liberties", the Bill of Rights of 1688
[ 1 Will & Mary, Sess. 2, c. 2 (U.K.)], which
declared
That levying Money for or to the Use of the Crown, by
Pretence of Prerogative, without Grant of Parliament, for
longer Time, or in other Manner than the same is or shall be
granted, is illegal.
That this principle embraces the disbursement of
public funds as well as the levying of taxes is
beyond doubt. The Judicial Committee of the
Privy Council stated the constitutional position in
Auckland Harbour Board v. The King, [ 1924]
A.C. 318, at pages 326 ff.
... it has been a principle of the British Constitution now for
more than two centuries, a principle which their Lordships
understand to have been inherited in the Constitution of New
Zealand with the same stringency, that no money can be taken
out of the consolidated Fund into which the revenues of the
State have been paid, excepting under a distinct authorization
from Parliament itself. The days are long gone by in which the
Crown, or its servants, apart from Parliament, could give such
an authorization or ratify an improper payment.
The appropriation of public monies by a court is as
offensive to that principle as is its appropriation by
prerogative.
Parliament has made a general appropriation
for satisfying judgments of this Court by enacting
subsection 57(3) of the Federal Court Act, R.S.C.
1985, c. F-7:
57....
(3) There shall be paid out of the Consolidated Revenue
Fund any money or costs awarded to any person against the
Crown in any proceedings in the Court.
That appropriation does not cover the remedy
granted here. A declaration that a class of persons,
not designated for the purpose by Parliament, is
entitled to be paid unemployment insurance ben
efits is not an award of money.
With respect, I do not understand R. v. Rowbo-
tham et al. (1988), 25 O.A.C. 321, to be a prece-
dent for an appropriation of public funds by way
of a section 24 remedy. Indeed, as I read it, that is
precisely what the Ontario Court of Appeal
declined to deal with when, at page 371 O.A.C., it
concluded:
It is unnecessary in this case to decide whether the trial judge
in those circumstances would also be empowered to direct that
Legal Aid or the appropriate Attorney General pay the fees of
counsel.
Likewise, I do not consider that the myriad court
orders requiring local governments, be they munic
ipalities, school boards or other, to carry out their
mandates according to law and, thereby, requiring
them to spend money to be constitutionally compa
rable to a judicial appropriation of funds within
the exclusive control of a sovereign Parliament or
legislature.
Even if the power of a court to legislate by way
of a subsection 24(1) remedy were found to exist
in circumstances which do not entail the appro
priation of public monies, no such power can be
found to exist where the remedy appropriates
monies from the Consolidated Revenue Fund for a
purpose not authorized by Parliament. A purposive
approach to remedies under subsection 24(1)
cannot take a court that far.
In my opinion, the appellants are correct: the
Constitution of Canada does not permit the
remedy crafted by the learned Trial Judge. Having
found that section 32 of the Unemployment Insur
ance Act, 1971 was inconsistent with a provision of
the Constitution of Canada, the learned Trial
Judge was bound to find it to be of no force and
effect. Had that finding been made, the absence of
any conflict between subsections 24(1) and 52(1)
would be apparent. There is no offending legisla
tion and, therefore, no subsection 24(1) remedy
called for.
In my opinion, subsection 52(1) does not provide
a "remedy" in any real sense of that word. It states
a constitutional fact which no court can ignore
when it is invoked in a proceeding and found to
apply.
I would allow the appeal and set aside the
judgment of the Trial Division except as to costs.
Pursuant to subparagraph 52(b)(iii) of the Federal
Court Act, I would render the judgment that ought
to have been rendered and, in compliance with
subsection 52(1) of the Constitution Act, 1982,
declare that section 20 (formerly section 32) of the
Unemployment Insurance Act is of no force and
effect by reason of its inconsistency with section 15
of the Charter. As requested by the appellants, I
would not disturb the award of costs below and, in
the circumstances, would allow the respondent
Schachter his party and party costs of this appeal.
There is no compelling public interest justifying
a stay of execution of the judgment to permit
remedial legislative action, as was found in the
Reference re Manitoba Language Rights and
Dixon v. B.C. (A.G.), [1989] 4 W.W.R. 393
(B.C.S.C.). A stay, if sought, to permit an appeal
to be taken to the Supreme Court of Canada,
would be a different thing. It may be sought by
Rule 324 [Federal Court Rules, C.R.C., c. 663]
application.
APPENDIX
32. (1) Notwithstanding section 25 but subject to this sec
tion, initial benefit is payable to a major attachment claimant
who proves that it is reasonable for that claimant to remain at
home by reason of the placement with that claimant of one or
more children for the purpose of adoption pursuant to the laws
governing adoption in the province in which that claimant
resides.
(2) Subject to subsection 22(3), initial benefit is payable
under this section for each week of unemployment in the period
(a) that begins with the week in which the child or children
are actually placed with the major attachment claimant; and
(b) that ends
(i) seventeen weeks after the week in which the child or
children are so placed,
(ii) with the week in which it is no longer reasonable for
that claimant to remain at home for the reason referred to
in subsection (1), or
(iii) with the week immediately preceding the week for
which benefit is claimed and payable pursuant to another
section of this Part,
whichever is the earliest.
(3) Where benefits are payable to a major attachment
claimant under this section and earnings are received by that
claimant for any period that falls in a week in the period
described in subsection (2), the provisions of subsection 26(2)
do not apply and all such earnings shall be deducted from the
benefit payable for that week.
(4) Benefits shall not be paid pursuant to this section to
more than one major attachment claimant in respect of a single
placement of a child or children for the purpose of adoption.
(5) Where, before any benefit has been paid to a major
attachment claimant in respect of a single placement of a child
or children for the purpose of adoption, two insured persons
with whom the child or children are placed for the purpose of
adoption claim benefit under this section, no benefit shall be
paid under this section until one of such claims is withdrawn.
JUDGMENT
UPON this action having come on for trial in the presence of
counsel for each party on all juridical days commencing on
April 11, 1988 through April 20, 1988, at Toronto, Ontario;
and
UPON having read the pleadings, the agreement regarding
the admission of documents, statutes and international instru
ments, and the other documents exhibited, and having heard
the witnesses' testimony and what was alleged orally by coun
sel; and
UPON this Court having found that section 32 of the Unem
ployment Insurance Act, 1971, as amended, creates unequal
benefit of the law contrary to subsection 15(1) of the Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms by making a distinction
between natural and adoptive parents in respect of a period of
child-care benefits following introduction of a child into the
home; and
THERE BEING no justification tendered under section 1 of the
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms for that unequal
benefit; now
1. THIS COURT ORDERS AND ADJUDGES THAT a declaration be
issued that, during that period in which section 32 of the
Unemployment Insurance Act, 1971, as amended (the "Act")
remains in its present form, a major attachment claimant who
is the natural father or mother of a newborn child, or of
newborn children, shall be entitled to benefits under the Act in
respect of periods taken off work to care for that child or those
children on the same terms as adoptive parents are so entitled,
giving effect to the following criteria and conditions of benefits
under section 32;
(a) Fifteen weeks of benefits are provided for either parent
to stay home during the seventeen-week period after the child
arrives in the claimant's home, subject to the limit in para
graph 22(3)(a) of the Act referred to therein during any
benefit period, provided that the natural mother should not
be precluded by paragraph 22(3)(a) from entitlement to
child-care benefits, in whole or in part, by reason of having
received pregnancy benefits within the same benefit period.
Such benefits are payable even though the claimant is not
available for work, although the claimant must be otherwise
entitled to these benefits under the Act.
(b) Either parent if otherwise a qualified claimant can
receive these benefits if it is "reasonable" for the claimant to
remain at home by reason of the arrival in the home of the
child, but only so long as it remains "reasonable" to do so.
(c) Not more than one parent can receive benefits with
respect to the arrival in the home of the child.
(d) Such benefits are paid in respect of child-care and not in
respect of maternity.
2. THIS COURT FURTHER ORDERS AND ADJUDGES THAT the
defendant Canada Employment and Immigration Commission
shall review the plaintiff's claim for initial benefit made August
2, 1985 and shall determine the plaintiff's entitlement to initial
benefit on the basis that, if the plaintiff's claim meets the other
requirements of the Act and paragraph one of this judgment,
the plaintiff is entitled to such initial benefit.
3. THIS COURT FURTHER ORDERS AND ADJUDGES THAT this
judgment is hereby suspended until the expiry of the time for
appeal, and if an appeal is taken thereafter pending final
determination of that appeal.
4. THIS COURT FURTHER ORDERS AND ADJUDGES THAT the
defendants shall pay the plaintiff's costs of and incidental to
this action on a party-and-party basis forthwith after taxation
thereof.
You are being directed to the most recent version of the statute which may not be the version considered at the time of the judgment.