CONSTITUTIONAL CHALLENGE TO SECTION
43
OF THE CRIMINAL CODE
LITIGATION
SUMMARY
Section 43 of the Criminal Code of Canada states:
Every school teacher, parent or person
standing in the place of a parent is justified in using force by way of
correction toward a pupil or child, as the case may be, who is under his
care, if the force does not exceed what is reasonable in the
circumstances.
·
Section 43 creates a defence for parents, parent
substitutes and teachers who are charged with physically assaulting a
child in their care. It assumes that using force to "correct" a child's
behaviour can be "reasonable".
·
The Canadian Foundation for Children, Youth and the Law
was funded by the Court Challenges Program to challenge section 43 of
the Criminal Code based upon the constitutional argument that it
infringes a child's equality rights under section 15 of the Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms. Ailsa Watkinson initially applied
to the program to fund the litigation and worked in consultation with
Canadian Foundation for Children, Youth and the Law throughout the
litigation.
·
Cheryl Milne, staff lawyer with the clinic, and Paul
Schabas of Blake, Cassels & Graydon were legal counsel on the case.
Paul Schabas provided his services on a pro bono basis.
·
In 1998, the Canadian Foundation for Children, Youth and
the Law commenced an application in the Ontario Court (General
Division), now the Ontario Superior Court, as a public interest litigant
for a declaration that section 43 of the Criminal Code is
unconstitutional. The primary basis for the challenge was the legal
argument that the defence infringes the child's right to equal benefit
and protection of the law under section 15 of the Charter, and
the child's right to security of the person under section 7 of the
Charter. Reliance was also placed upon
Canada's obligations under the U.N. Convention on the
Rights of the Child.
·
The expert witnesses who filed affidavits in support of
the application included Dr. Murray Straus, a sociologist with the
University of New Hampshire and a leading researcher on corporal
punishment; Dr. Joan Durrant, a psychologist at the University of
Manitoba; Dr. Jim Garbarino, a leading expert on child abuse and youth
violence at Cornell University; Dr. George Holden, a psychologist at the
University of Texas and an expert on child development; Peter Newell, a
leading international advocate on the issue of corporal punishment and
the U.N. Convention on the Rights of the Child; Prof. A. Wayne
MacKay, a law professor at Dalhousie Law School and an education and
constitutional law expert; Prof. Edward Morgan, an international law
expert at the University of Toronto Law School; and Prof. Tammy Landau,
a criminology professor at
Ryerson Polytechnic University, who conducted research on
police response to incidents involving the corporal punishment of
children in some Canadian communities.
·
A coalition of groups filed an application to intervene
in the matter in support of our application at the Ontario Superior
Court. This group included the Ontario Association of Children's Aid
Societies, Defence for Children International, Child Welfare League of
Canada the National Youth in Care Network, Society for Children and
Youth B.C., Canadian Council of Provincial Child Advocates, the Repeal
43 Committee, the Canadian Nurses Association and the Canadian
Association of Social Workers. Intervener status was granted only to
the Ontario Association of Children's Aid Societies. They were
represented throughout, on a pro bono basis, by Greg Richards of the law
firm Weir Foulds LLP.
·
The Attorney General in Right of Canada as represented by
the Department of Justice opposed the application. The Canadian
Teachers' Federation was granted intervener status as a party to file
evidence with respect to the effect of section 43 on teachers. They
opposed the repeal of section 43 although their stated policy position
is that teachers should not use corporal punishment on students. A
coalition of groups calling itself the Coalition for Family Autonomy,
which included Focus on the Family, REAL Women of Canada, Canadian
Family Action Coalition, and the Home School Legal Defence Association
of Canada, also were granted intervener status to argue in favour of the
section.
·
In July 2000, Justice McCombs ruled that section 43 was
constitutional and dismissed the application. An appeal was heard by
the Ontario Court of Appeal in September 2001. On January 15, 2002, that
Court dismissed the appeal and again upheld the constitutionality of the
section stating that the objective of the section is “to permit parents
and teachers to apply strictly limited corrective force to children
without criminal sanctions so that they can carry out their important
responsibilities to train and nurture children without the harm
that such sanctions would bring to them, to their tasks, and to the
families concerned” [emphasis added].
·
The Foundation was granted leave to appeal to the Supreme
Court of Canada. The interveners at the courts below continued to
participate with the addition of the Child Welfare League of Canada,
represented by Michael Barrick and Christopher Whalen of McCarthy
Tetrault LLP, and the Commission des droits to de la personne and des
droits de la jeunesse, on its own behalf and on behalf of the Canadian
Counsel of Provincial Child Advocates.
·
The Appeal was heard on
June 6, 2004, and the Supreme Court delivered its decision on
January 30, 2005. A majority of the Court declared the section to be
constitutional but narrowed its interpretation to include only the use
of force that was of a trifling nature. Specifically, the majority of
the held that the following actions would not be reasonable under the
section:
·
Force that causes harm or might cause bodily harm;
·
Force used because the person is angry, frustrated, have
lost their temper or because they have an “abusive personality”;
·
Use of force on a child under 2 years old or a on a
teenager;
·
Use of an object to hit a child;
·
Hitting a child on the head;
·
Doing anything degrading, inhumane or harmful;
·
Use of force on children who have disabilities which make
it hard for them to learn;
·
Use of corporal punishment by a teacher.
·
The Court was divided in its decision with a minority
stating that the section did infringe the Charter. Justice Binnie would
have held that the section infringed section 15 of the Charter but was
justified under section 1 with respect to parents but not teachers.
Justice Arbour found that the section infringes children’s rights under
section 7 of the Charter, while Justice Deschamps found that it violated
section 15. Both Justices Arbour and Deschamps were of the opinion that
the infringements were not justified under section 1.
Any requests for
additional information about the litigation should be directed to Cheryl
Milne at Justice for Children and Youth at (416) 920-1633.
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