Jump to content

Supreme Court of Canada

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 24.68.249.69 (talk) at 03:38, 18 December 2007. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

The Supreme Court of Canada (French: Cour suprême du Canada) is the highest court of Canada and is the final court of appeal in the Canadian justice system.[1] The court grants permission to fewer than one hundred litigants each year to appeal decisions rendered by provincial, territorial and federal appellate courts, and its decisions are, by tradition (stare decisis), binding upon all lower courts of Canada. The Supreme Court of Canada is composed of nine judges: eight Puisne Justices and the Chief Justice of Canada.[2]

History

The creation of the Court was provided for by the British North America Act, 1867, renamed in 1982 the Constitution Act, 1867. The first bills for the creation of federal supreme court, introduced in the Parliament of Canada in 1869 and in 1870, were withdrawn. On April 8, 1875, however, a bill was finally passed providing for the creation of a Supreme Court of Canada.

File:CourtroomOldSupremeCourt.jpg
Old Courthouse building.

Until 1949, however, the Supreme Court was not the court of last resort: litigants could appeal to the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council in London. As well, some cases could bypass the Court and go directly to the Judicial Committee from the provincial courts of appeal. The Supreme Court's influence was thus rather modest. Attitudes among many English Canadians changed when the Privy Council made some unpopular decisions in the 1930s, striking down several overreaching federal legislative initiatives.[citation needed] The Judicial Committee's view of the division of powers was that it provided for strong provincial powers, whilst many Canadian nationalists believed the opposite. Consequently, public pressure forced the federal government to push for complete judicial independence from the United Kingdom. The Supreme Court of Canada formally became the court of last resort for criminal appeals in 1933 and for all other appeals in 1949. The last decisions of the Judicial Committee on cases from Canada were made in the mid-1950s.

Prior to 1949, most of the judges of the Supreme Court of Canada were patronage appointments. Each judge had strong political ties to the government in power at the time of their appointment. The appointment of a constitutional law professor, Bora Laskin, as Chief Justice in 1973 represented a major turning point for the Court. Many of the justices by this time were either academics or well-respected practitioners, most had several years experience in appellate courts. Laskin's federalist and liberal views were an influence in many of the Court's decisions.

File:Supreme Court of Canada Courtroom.jpg
The SCC Coutroom

The Constitution Act, 1982 greatly expanded the role of the Court in Canadian society by the addition of a Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms which greatly broadened the scope of judicial review. The evolution from the Dickson Court through to the Lamer Court remained aggressive in the protection of civil liberties. Lamer's criminal law background proved an influence on the number of criminal cases heard by the Court during his time as Chief Justice. Nonetheless, the Lamer Court was more conservative with Charter rights, with only about one-percent success rate for Charter claimants.

The appointment of Beverly McLachlin as Chief Justice in 2000 has resulted in a more centrist and unified Court. Dissenting and concurring opinions are fewer than during the Dickson and Lamer Courts. With the 2005 appointments of Justices Charron and Abella, the Court has become the world's most gender-balanced national high court with a total of four female justices of nine.

The role of the Supreme Court

The Canadian court system may be seen as a pyramid, with a broad base formed by the various provincial and territorial courts whose judges are appointed by the provincial or territorial governments. At the next level are the provinces' and territories' superior courts whose judges are appointed by the federal government. Judgments from the superior courts may be appealed to the next level, the provincial or territorial courts of appeal. There are also federal courts: the Tax Court of Canada, the Federal Court, the Federal Court of Appeal and the Court Martial Appeal Court of Canada. Unlike the provincial superior courts, which exercise inherent or general jurisdiction, the federal courts' jurisdiction is limited by statute. In all there are over 1000 federally-appointed judges at various levels across Canada.

The Supreme Court of Canada hears appeals from the provincial courts of last resort, usually the provincial or territorial courts of appeal, and the Federal Court of Appeal (although in some matters appeals come straight from the trial courts, as in the case of publication bans and other orders that are otherwise not appealable). In most cases, permission to appeal must first be obtained from a panel of three judges of the court. By convention, this panel never explains why it gives leave to appeal or not. Cases for which leave to appeal is not required are primarily criminal cases (in which a Judge below dissented on a point of law) and appeals from provincial references. A final source of cases is the referral power of the federal government. In such cases, the Supreme Court is required to give an opinion on questions referred to it by the Governor-in-Council (cabinet). In many cases, however, including the most recent Same-Sex Reference, the Court has declined to answer a question from the Cabinet. In that case, the Court said it would not decide if same-sex marriages were required by the Charter of Rights, because the government had announced it would change the law regardless of its opinion, and subsequently did.

File:Canadian Supreme Court justices circa 1950.jpg
Courtroom of the Supreme Court of Canada, circa 1950.

The Supreme Court thus performs a unique function. It can be asked by the Governor-in-Council to hear references considering important questions of law. Such referrals may concern the constitutionality or interpretation of federal or provincial legislation, or the division of powers between federal and provincial levels of government. Any point of law may be referred in this manner. However, the court is not often called upon to hear references. When it is, the opinion on the question referred is often of national importance; one recent example concerns the constitutionality of Same-sex marriage. References have been used to re-examine criminal convictions that have concerned the country as in the cases of David Milgaard and Stephen Truscott.

Constitutional questions may, of course, also be raised in the normal case of appeals involving individual litigants, governments, government agencies or crown corporations. In such cases the federal and provincial governments must be notified of any constitutional questions and may intervene to submit a brief and attend oral argument at the court. Usually the other governments are given the right to argue their case in the Court, although on rare occasions this has been curtailed and prevented by order of one of the Court's judges.

Sessions of the Court

File:CourtSeal-400.jpg
The Court logo.

The Court sits for 18 weeks of the year beginning the first Monday of October and usually runs until the end of June and sometimes into July. Hearings only take place in Ottawa, although litigants can present oral arguments from remote locations by means of a video-conference system. The court's hearings are open to the public. Most hearings are taped for delayed telecast in both of Canada's official languages. When in session, the court sits Monday to Friday, hearing two appeals a day. A quorum consists of five members for appeals. A panel of nine justices hears most cases.

On the bench, the Chief Justice of Canada, or, in her absence, the senior puisne justice, presides from the centre chair with the other justices seated to her right and left by order of seniority of appointment. At sittings of the Court, the justices usually appear in black silk robes but they wear their ceremonial robes of bright scarlet trimmed with Canadian white mink in court on special occasions and in the Senate at the opening of each new session of Parliament.

The decision of the court is sometimes rendered orally at the conclusion of the hearing. More often, judgement is reserved to enable the justices to write considered reasons. Decisions of the court need not be unanimous; a majority may decide, with dissenting reasons given by the minority. Each justice may write reasons in any case if he or she chooses to do so.

The Supreme Court has the ultimate power of judicial review over Canadian federal and provincial laws' constitutional validity. If a federal or provincial law has been held contrary to the division of power provisions of one of the various Constitution Acts, the legislature or Parliament must either live with the result, amend the law so that it complies, or obtain an amendment to the constitution. If a law is declared contrary to certain sections of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, Parliament or the provincial legislatures may make that particular law temporarily valid again against by using the "override power" of the notwithstanding clause. In one case, the Quebec National Assembly invoked this power to override a Supreme Court decision (Ford v. Quebec (A.G.)) that held that one of Quebec's language laws banning the display of English commercial signs was inconsistent with the charter. Saskatchewan used it to uphold labour laws. This override power can be exercised for five years, after which time the override must be renewed, or the decision comes into force.

In some cases, the Court may stay the effect of its judgments so that unconstitutional laws continue in force for a period of time. Usually this is done to give Parliament or the legislature time to enact a new replacement scheme of legislation. For example, in Reference re Manitoba Language Rights the Court struck down Manitoba's laws because they were not enacted in the French language, as required by the constitution. However the Court stayed its judgment for 5 years to give Manitoba time to re-enact all its legislation in French. It turned out five years was insufficient so the Court was asked, and agreed to give more time.

A puisne justice of the Supreme Court of Canada is referred to as "The Honourable Mr/Madam Justice" and the chief justice as "Right Honourable." Judges used to be called "My Lord/Lady" during sessions of the court, but this style of address was disapproved of by the current Chief Justice, Rt. Hon. Beverly McLachlin, who has directed lawyers to use the simpler "Your Honour" or "Justice." The designation "My Lord/My Lady" continues in many provincial Superior Courts, and in the Federal Court of Canada and Federal Court of Appeal where it is optional.

Building

The Supreme Court Building in Ottawa

The Supreme Court of Canada Building is home to the Supreme Court of Canada. It also contains two court rooms used by both the Federal Court of Canada and the Federal Court of Appeal when it sits in Ottawa. Construction began in 1939, with the cornerstone laid by Queen Elizabeth, consort to King George VI and later Queen Mother. It was built by Ernest Cormier, architect of the Quebec Court of Appeal Building, the Government Printing Bureau in Gatineau, Quebec, and the Université de Montréal. The Court began hearing cases in the new building by January of 1946. The building is renowned for its Art Deco details. [1]

Outside the building are several statues:

Previous homes of Canada's top courts include:

Appointments

File:Supreme Court of Canada from Ottawa River.JPG
View from the Ottawa River

Justices of the Supreme Court of Canada are appointed by the Governor-in-Council — that is, the Governor General makes appointments based on the advice of the Queen's Privy Council for Canada. By tradition and convention, only the Cabinet advises the Governor General (as opposed to the entire Privy Council — technically speaking, the Cabinet is only a standing committee in the larger council), and this advice is usually expressed to the Queen's representative exclusively through a consultation with the Prime Minister. The provinces and Parliament have no formal role in such appointments, a point of ongoing contention.

The Supreme Court Act limits eligibility for appointment to persons who have been judges of a superior court, or members of the bar for ten or more years. Members of the bar or superior judiciary of Quebec, by law, must hold three of the nine positions on the Supreme Court of Canada.[3] This is justified on the basis that Quebec uses civil law, rather than common law, as in the rest of the country, and persists even though Quebec makes up only about 24 percent of the population. By convention, the remaining six positions are divided in the following manner: three from Ontario, two from the western provinces and one from the Atlantic provinces, alternating between Nova Scotia and New Brunswick.

A Supreme Court justice, as with all federal judges, may only sit on the bench until the age of 75 years.

In February 2006, an interview phase by an ad hoc committee of Parliamentarians was added. Justice Marshall Rothstein became the first justice to undergo the new process. The Prime Minister still has the final say on who becomes the candidate that is recommended to the Governor General for appointment to the Court.

Current membership

The current Justices of the Supreme Court of Canada are as follows. See also List of Justices of the Supreme Court of Canada.

Name and title Date of birth Home province Appointed by (Governor General) Chosen by (Prime Minister) Took office Mandatory retirement date Prior positions
The Right Honourable Madam Justice Beverley McLachlin, P.C., B.A., M.A., LL.B. - Chief Justice 09/07/43 Alberta (1)Sauvé (as puisne justice); (2)Clarkson (as Chief Justice) (1)Mulroney; (2) Chrétien (1)03/30/89; (2) 01/07/00 09/07/18 Bar of Alberta from 1969; Bar of British Columbia from 1971; Associate Professor of Law, University of British Columbia, 1974-1981; County Court of Vancouver, 1981; Supreme Court of British Columbia, 1981--1985; British Columbia Court of Appeal, 1985-1989, Chief Justice, 1988-1989
The Honourable Mr. Justice Michel Bastarache 06/10/47 New Brunswick LeBlanc Chrétien 09/30/97 06/10/22 Law, University of Moncton until 1983; University of Ottawa, 1983-1988; Lang Michener firm; private practice; New Brunswick Court of Appeal, 1995-1997
The Honourable Mr. Justice William Ian Corneil Binnie 04/14/39 Ontario Clarkson Chrétien 01/08/98 04/14/14 Partner Wright & McTaggart; Associate Deputy Minister of Justice for the Government of Canada; partner at McCarthy Tétrault
The Honourable Mr. Justice Louis LeBel 11/30/39 Quebec Clarkson Chrétien 01/07/00 11/30/14 practice in Quebec; professor at University of Ottawa and University of Laval; Quebec Court of Appeal (1984-2000)
The Honourable Madam Justice Marie Deschamps 10/02/52 Quebec Clarkson Chrétien 08/07/02 10/02/27 practice in Quebec; Superior Court of Quebec (1990-1992); Quebec Court of Appeal (1992-2002)
The Honourable Mr. Justice Morris Fish 11/16/38 Quebec Clarkson Chrétien 08/05/03 11/16/13 Law practice in Quebec (1967-1989); Quebec Court of Appeal (1989-2003)
The Honourable Madam Justice Rosalie Abella 07/01/46 Ontario Clarkson Martin 10/04/04 07/01/21 Family Court Judge (1976-1992); Ontario Court of Appeal (1992-2004)
The Honourable Madam Justice Louise Charron 03/02/51 Ontario Clarkson Martin 10/04/04 03/02/26 Ontario Crown Attorney 1980; professor at University of Ottawa; District Court Judge (1988-1995); Ontario Court of Appeal (1995-2004)
The Honourable Mr. Justice Marshall Rothstein 12/25/40 Manitoba Jean Harper 03/01/06 12/25/16 Partner at Aikins, MacAulay & Thorvaldson (1970-1992); Federal Court Trial Division (1992-1999), Federal Court of Canada, Appeal Division (1999-2006)

Supreme Court clerks

Since 1967 the Court has hired clerks to assist in legal research. Typically, the clerks are selected from among the top students of each law school across the country. Between 1967 and 1982, each puisne justice had one clerk and the chief justice had two. From 1982, the number was increased to three.

Clerks conduct research, draft bench memorandum, assist in drafting judgments, as well as assist with any other duties of the judge such as drafting speeches or articles.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Supreme Court of Canada (2007). "Role of the Court" (asp). About the Court. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |accessmonthday= ignored (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  2. ^ Supreme Court of Canada (2007). "Judges of the Court" (asp). About the Court. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |accessmonthday= ignored (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  3. ^ Supreme Court Act, s. 6.

References

  • Martin, Robert, The Most Dangerous Branch: How the Supreme Court of Canada Has Undermined Our Law and Our Democracy, McGill-Queen's University Press, 2003, ISBN 0773526145

Template:Geolinks-Canada-streetscale

Template:Canadian topics