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T-4363-75
Paul Ernest Lambert (Plaintiff)
v.
The Queen (Defendant)
Trial Division, Dubé J.—Ottawa, January 20 and 22, 1976.
Imprisonment—Application to strike statement of claim— Original sentence of 5 years Mandatory supervision—Man- datory supervision suspended and returned to prison Released again on mandatory supervision—Seeking declara tion that original sentence satisfied—Whether statement of claim vague and unanswerable Whether breach of Parole Act alleged—Whether Court prevented from granting relief— Parole Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. P-2, ss. 6, 15(1),(2), 16(1),(2), 20(1), 23 Penitentiary Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. P-6, ss. 22(1), 24(1) Federal Court Rule 419.
Plaintiff was released on mandatory supervision having served 41 months of a five-year term. His mandatory supervi sion was suspended November 15, 1974, and he was returned to prison. On September 11, 1975, he was released again, subject to mandatory supervision until June 14, 1976. He sought a declaration that the original sentence of August 4, 1970, had been satisfied as of August 4, 1975. Defendant brought a motion to strike out the statement of claim on the grounds (1) that the statement of claim is vague and unanswerable; (2) that it does not allege a breach of the Parole Act; and (3) that the Court is prevented by the Parole Act from granting the relief sought.
Held, striking out the statement of claim, the action is dismissed. (1) While deficiencies create difficulty in drafting a defence, they are not fatal. (2) Plaintiff alleges being credited with 578 days remission. Section 20 of the Parole Act provides, upon revocation of parole, for recommittal to serve the unex- pired portion, including remission and earned remission. Plain tiff has not alleged that June 14, 1976 is not in accord with this section. The August 4 date ignores all the events alleged by plaintiff. And, section 15(2) provides that section 20 applies to an inmate under mandatory supervision as though on parole; the Parole Board had full authority over plaintiff. (3) Plaintiff's counsel submitted that there had been a breach of natural justice, implying that this Court should review and set aside the Board's decision. Such a function falls under the jurisdiction of the Court of Appeal under section 28 if the decision is other than administrative. Finally, the Attorney General of Canada, and not the Queen, is the proper party.
Howarth v. National Parole Board (1975) 18 C.C.C. (2d) 385 and "B" v. Department of Manpower and Immigra tion [1975] F.C. 602, followed.
APPLICATION. COUNSEL:
K. E. Cartwright for plaintiff. P. J. Evraire for defendant.
SOLICITORS:
Cartwright and Cartwright, Kingston, for plaintiff.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada for defendant.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
Dust J.: This is an application pursuant to Rule 419 of the Federal Court Rules for an order striking out the statement of claim on the ground that it discloses no reasonable cause of action.
In his statement of claim, plaintiff states that on August 4, 1970 he was sentenced to five years in penitentiary for robbery. On January 2, 1974, having served forty one months of his sentence he was released under mandatory supervision. On November 15, 1974, his mandatory supervision was suspended and he was returned to Kingston Penitentiary because of mandatory parole viola tions. He denies the alleged violations and says he was given no opportunity to have counsel. He was released on September 11, 1975, and advised that he would be subject to mandatory supervision until June 14, 1976.
He therefore seeks a "declaration that his origi nal sentence of 5 years, assessed on August 4th, 1970, has been satisfied, as of August 4th, 1975, or such other order as this Court may deem just".
The above facts must be accepted as true and provable for the purposes of this case. The discre tion to strike a statement of claim should be exercised only in clear cases where it is plain that the plaintiff could not possibly succeed.
The defendant attacks the statement of claim on three grounds: (1) that it is vague and unanswer able; (2) it does not allege any breach of the Parole Act; (3) the Court is prevented by the Parole Act from granting the relief requested.
In his statement of claim the plaintiff does not allege that he was entitled to counsel or to a hearing under the circumstances, nor that there was a breach of the Parole Act', nor that he is entitled to the relief which he seeks, nor does he state why there should be a declaration that his original sentence of five years has been satisfied as of August 4, 1975.
Undoubtedly, such deficiencies make it very dif ficult to draft a defence that would properly meet allegations that are not formally made but can only be assumed. These deficiencies however are not necessarily fatal and could conceivably be cured by allowing amendments to the declaration. In any event, counsel for defendant attached more importance to his other two arguments based on the Parole Act.
Under section 22(1) of the Penitentiary Acte, prisoners are credited with statutory remissions amounting to one-quarter of the sentence. Under section 24(1) they may be credited three days per month for earned remission on good behaviour. Plaintiff alleges that he was credited a total of 578 days under both remissions.
Under section 15 (1) of the Parole Act where an inmate to whom parole was not granted is released as a result of any remission he shall be subject to mandatory supervision for the duration of his remission. But section 16 of the Parole Act author izes the Board to suspend and revoke parole and to apprehend the paroled inmate, which is precisely what the Board did. Subsections 16(1) and 16(2) read as follows:
R.S.C. 1970, c. P-2. 2 R.S.C. 1970, c. P-6.
16. (1) A member of the Board or any person designated by the Board may, by a warrant in writing signed by him, suspend any parole, other than a parole that has been discharged, and authorize the apprehension of a paroled inmate whenever he is satisfied that the arrest of the inmate is necessary or desirable in order to prevent a breach of any term or condition of the parole or for the rehabilitation of the inmate or the protection of society.
(2) A paroled inmate apprehended under a warrant issued under this section shall be brought as soon as conveniently may be before a magistrate, and the magistrate shall remand the inmate in custody until the suspension of his parole is cancelled or his parole is revoked or forfeited.
Section 20(1) of the Parole Act provides that where the parole granted to an inmate has been revoked he shall be recommitted to his former place of confinement to serve the portion of his term that remained unexpired at the time parole was granted to him including any period of remis sion, including earned remission. The section reads as follows:
20. (1) Where the parole granted to an inmate has been revoked, he shall be recommitted to the place of confinement from which he was allowed to go and remain at large at the time parole was granted to him, to serve the portion of his term of imprisonment that remained unexpired at the time parole was granted to him, including any period of remission, includ ing earned remission, then standing to his credit, less any time spent in custody as a result of a suspension of his parole.
In his statement of claim, the plaintiff alleges that he was recommitted to Kingston Penitentiary, his former place of confinement. There is no alle gation that the date of June 14, 1976 is not in accordance with the provisions of the above sec tion. The date of August 4, 1975 for which a declaration is sought by plaintiff does coincide with the end of a straight, uninterrupted five-year sentence from August 4, 1970, but it ignores all the events alleged by the plaintiff in his statement of claim and the relevant provisions of the Act above referred to.
Section 15(2) provides that the above section applies to an inmate who is subject to mandatory supervision as though he were an inmate on parole and as though the terms and conditions of his
mandatory supervision were terms and conditions of his parole.
It is therefore abundantly plain and clear that the Parole Board had full authority under the Act to deal with the plaintiff as alleged by him in his statement of claim.
The third argument of the defendant is to the effect that the Parole Act prevents this Court from reviewing decisions of the Board. Section 6 of the Act gives the Board exclusive jurisdiction to grant or revoke parole and section 23 provides that decisions under this Act are not subject to appeal or review by any Court.
6. Subject to this Act and the Prisons and Reformatories Act, the Board has exclusive jurisdiction and absolute discre tion to grant, refuse to grant or revoke parole.
23. An order, warrant or decision made or issued under this Act is not subject to appeal or review to or by any court or other authority.
In her oral argument counsel for the plaintiff submitted that there was a breach of natural jus tice implying that this Court should review and set aside the decisions of the Board. Such a review would fall under the jurisdiction of the Federal Court of Appeal under section 28 of the Federal Court Acta if the decision of the Board was other than a decision of an administrative nature not required by law to be made on a judicial or quasi-judicial basis. (See Howarth v. National Parole Board')
Although I am naturally reluctant, as I should be, to grant an order to strike out a statement of claim, I have no alternative but to do so in this instance, because it is plain and clear that plaintiff does not have a cause of action and moreover does not allege in his statement of claim that he has one.
3 R.S.C. 1970, (2nd Supp.) c. 10 as amended by 1973-74, c.
17, s. 8; 1974-75, c. 18.
(1975) 18 C.C.C. (2d) 385.
Counsel for the defendant has suggested that the proper party to be named as defendant should have been the Attorney General of Canada and not Her Majesty the Queen. The learned judgment of my brother Addy J. in "B" v. The Commission of Inquiry 5 would support that view.
ORDER
I hereby order that the statement of claim be struck out and the action dismissed with costs to the applicant if she wishes to claim them.
5 [1975] F.C. 602.
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