The Judge's Charge to the Jury
Mr. Justice Singh, in his charge to the jury, reviewed the evidence
they had heard and instructed them on the law applicable to the charge
against Hughie MacDonald. The centrepiece of that charge was the law of
self-defence. In accordance with well-established principles of criminal
law, his Lordship explained that the burden of proving the guilt of the
accused lay with the Crown and that this burden included not only proving
that Mr. MacDonald had the necessary intention (" mens
rea ") -- either intending to kill Mr. Allen or intending to cause
him serious bodily harm knowing that death was likely and being reckless
as to that death -- but also proving beyond a reasonable doubt that the
elements of the defence of self-defence were not established. If, at the
end of their deliberations, the jury entertained a reasonable doubt on
the issue of self-defence, then the Crown had not proved its case and
Mr. MacDonald was entitled to be acquitted.
In light of the primary function of the Criminal
Code of Canada -- to provide a clear articulation of the behaviour
society condemns on pain of official punishment -- one might reasonably
expect that the principles governing the circumstances under which persons
can invoke self-defence, as a justification for what otherwise would be
criminal conduct, would be clearly set out in the Code.
However, as the Chief Justice of Canada has observed, the law on self-defence
has often been criticized for its "complexity and lack of coherence" ( R.
v. Petel [1994] 1 S.C.R. 3 at 12). Despite
this complexity, the basic elements of a claim of self-defence are the
accused's apprehension of harm and the proportionality of the accused's
response to that harm. The law, as set out in the Criminal
Code and interpreted by the courts, is a blend of subjective and
objective considerations. Unlike areas of the law where the sole inquiry
is directed to what the accused person honestly believed to be the state
of affairs, the law on self-defence, while giving important weight to
what the accused thought to be the facts, also requires that there be
an objective reasonable basis for that belief. The reason for this limitation
is not difficult to fathom. As articulated by the New York Court of Appeals,
in one of the most publicized cases in which self-defence was raised --
that of Bernie Goetz, who shot several young black men on the New York
subway -- to base self-defence solely on the subjective beliefs of the
accused "would allow citizens to set their own standards of permissible
use of force" and risk acquitting an individual who resorts to violence
"no matter how aberrational or bizarre his thought patterns" ( People
v. Goetz, 497 N.E.2d 41 at 50 (N.Y.Ct.App.
1986) .
The Criminal Code provisions governing
self-defence draw a distinction between a situation in which the accused
person intended to cause death or grievous bodily harm and one in which
he or she had no such intent. Section 34(2) is the section engaged by
the facts in Hughie MacDonald's case. It reads:
34 (2) Everyone who is unlawfully assaulted and who
causes death or grievous bodily harm in repelling the assault is justified
if
(a) he causes it under reasonable apprehension of death or grievous bodily
harm from the violence with which the assault was originally made or with
which the assailant pursues his purposes; and
(b) he believes, on reasonable grounds, that he cannot otherwise preserve
himself from death or grievous bodily harm.
The Supreme Court has held that there are three constituent elements
for self-defence under this subsection: (1) the existence of an unlawful
assault; (2) a reasonable apprehension of a risk of death or grievous
bodily harm; and (3) a reasonable belief that it is not possible to preserve
oneself from harm except by killing the adversary. With all three elements,
the jury must determine how the accused perceived the relevant facts and
whether that perception was reasonable. The test, therefore, is a blend
of subjective and objective factors. A mistake by the accused as to the
harm threatened or force needed does not destroy a claim of self-defence
so long as the mistake was reasonable.
The Supreme Court, in its 1990 decision in Lavallee ( [1990]
1 S.C.R. 852 ), made some pronouncements that significantly enlarged the
scope for a claim of self-defence. In Lavallee,
the accused was a woman who had a history of experiencing abuse from her
partner and who shot him in the back of the head after he threatened on
one occasion that she would be harmed when their guests had left the house.
The Crown argued that self-defence was not available because at the time
Ms. Lavallee shot her partner she was not facing an "imminent attack."
The Supreme Court rejected any rule requiring that the apprehended danger
be imminent. Madam Justice Wilson held that expert evidence about the
effects of battering on women cast doubt on the view expressed in a previous
case that it was "inherently unreasonable to apprehend death or grievous
bodily harm unless or until the physical assault is actually in progress"
( Lavallee, at 877). Rather, "it may in
fact be possible for a battered spouse to accurately predict the onset
of violence before the first blow is struck, even if an outsider to the
relationship cannot." (at 880-1) As Madam Justice Wilson stated,
The issue is not, however, what an outsider would reasonably perceive
but what the accused would have reasonably perceived, given her situation
and her experience. I do not think it is an unwarranted generalization
to say usually the size, strength, socialization, and lack of training
of women are typically no match for men in hand-to-hand combat. The requirement
. . . that a battered woman wait until the physical assault is "under
way" before her apprehensions can be validated in law would . . . be tantamount
to sentencing her to "murder by instalment." ( Lavallee,
at 883)
Madam Justice Wilson, in the context of spousal battering, made it clear
in Lavallee that "the definition of what
is reasonable must be adapted to circumstances which are, by and large,
foreign to the world inhabited by the hypothetical 'reasonable man' "
( Lavallee, at 874). Page 1 of 2
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