Articles
& News
May 24, 2008
Canada remand laws and Mathieu
By Shannon Kari,
The Law
Times
The Supreme Court of Canada has found that
pre-sentence custody is not a potential impediment to a trial judge
imposing a probation order in addition to a jail term.
The decision in R. v. Mathieu and three related Quebec cases,
finally settles an issue where there had been conflicting decisions
in appellate courts across the country.
The court was asked to interpret parts of s. 719 of the Criminal
Code and how pretrial custody should be considered when a judge
would otherwise have imposed a penitentiary term.
“Pre-sentence custody cannot really be interpreted as a sentence,”
wrote Justice Morris Fish. “The term of imprisonment is the term
imposed by the judge at the time of the sentence,” said Fish.
Probation orders under s. 731 of the code may be imposed on
offenders receiving a jail term “not exceeding” two years.
Mathieu means probation orders may be imposed by trial judges even
if the combined pretrial detention and custodial sentence exceeds 24
months.
A 2006 decision by the B.C. Court of Appeal in R. v. Goeujon was
cited by Fish as authority for the purpose of a probation order.
“Probation is not intended to punish the offender as much as to
rehabilitate the offender,” said Fish.
The use of a probation order is a “useful tool” for a trial judge,
he noted. “If it were to be concluded that a probation order is not
available in cases where the total of the time spent in pretrial
custody and the sentence of imprisonment imposed by the judge is
more than two years, this could have a harmful consequence, as the
judge might decide to impose a longer term of incarceration.
This interpretation, which must be rejected, would have the
unfortunate effect of unjustifiably increasing the length of time to
be served in prison; in addition, the probation order’s effect of
facilitating an offender’s reintegration into society would be
unavailable to offenders who might benefit from it,” wrote Fish.
The Supreme Court has previously found that pretrial custody can be
treated as part of the term of imprisonment in the context of a
minimum sentence (R. v. Wust) or whether an offender is eligible for
a conditional sentence (R. v. Fice). “These are exceptions that
prove the rule,” said Fish, who distinguished those decisions.
The ruling in Mathieu will have a significant practical impact for
trial courts across the country, says Vincenzo Rondinelli, a
Toronto. defence lawyer. “Judges do not have to second-guess whether
they have jurisdiction to make a probation order in light of Wust or
Fice. Lawyers can advise clients with much more clarity as to the
possible sentences he or she will be facing,” he says.
The ruling is a very conservative approach to statutory
interpretation, notes Rondinelli, who says it will “widen the net”
of probation orders and could lead to inconsistent sentences.
For example, two offenders who a court finds should get the
equivalent of a 30-month sentence will be treated differently
depending on whether they have spent time in pretrial custody, says
Rondinelli.
An offender with four months in pretrial custody (counted as eight
months with standard two-for-one “dead time” credit), will now be
considered to have received a 22-month sentence and will be subject
to a probation order of up to three years. If the other offender has
been free on bail, he will be sent to the penitentiary to serve the
30-month sentence. He will be subject to parole upon release, but
for a shorter period than someone on a probation order.
In addition to its findings related to probation orders, the court
narrowed the opportunity for judges to delay an offender’s parole
eligibility under s. 743.6 of the code.
Pretrial custody cannot be included to find that an offender has
received a sentence of more than two years and is subject to the
provisions in 743.6, said Fish. As well, the section can only be
invoked if an individual count meets the threshold.