THE JUDGMENT OF THE COURT
ON 'CRUEL AND UNUSUAL' PUNISHMENT
Mr. Justice Heald ruled that confinement of the plaintiffs in SCU did
constitute cruel and unusual punishment or treatment within the meaning
of section 2(b) of the Bill of Rights. In so finding he applied the tests
set out in Mr. Justice McIntyre's judgment in Miller
and Cockriell, preferring it to that of the majority of the Court
of Appeal. However, the way in which the McIntyre tests are applied in
the McCann judgment is somewhat elliptical,
and some elaboration is necessary in order to assess the contribution
the judgment makes to the interpretation of the 'cruel and unusual punishment'
clause.
Mr. Justice Heald, having adopted Mr. Justice McIntyre's view that the
terms 'cruel' and 'unusual' are to be viewed disjunctively, proceeded
to deal with the terms conjunctively, characterizing the treatment of
prison- ers in SCU first as 'cruel' and then as 'unusual.' In finding
that the treatment was cruel, Mr. Justice Heald cited the fact that the
plaintiffs' experts, Dr. Korn, Dr. Fox, and Dr. Marcus, 'had no hesitation
in describing it as cruel treatment.' He added that 'when the expert evidence
is considered along with the evidence of the plaintiffs themselves, I
have no hesitation in concluding that the treatment afforded them in solitary
at the BC Penitentiary has been cruel.'84
One way of reading Mr. Justice Heald's conclusion would be to see it
as a referential incorporation of the experts' personal views of what
constitutes cruelty. Indeed, this is just how Mr. Justice Toy in the later
case of R. v. Bruce, Lucas and Wilson 85
so interpreted it. That case involved criminal charges of forcible confinement
brought against three prisoners, including Andy Bruce; who had taken hostages
inside the penitentiary when they were in the general population. Their
defence was that of 'necessity'; they stated that they honestly believed
that they were about to be returned to SCU and took the hostages as the
lesser evil to avoid the greater evil of being placed in confinement that
amounted to the imposition of cruel and unusual punishment or treatment.
Dr. Korn and Dr. Fox testified before Mr. Justice Toy as witnesses for
the defendants. In refusing to follow Mr. Justice Heald's conclusion that
the conditions in SCU were cruel and unusual (the conditions in Bruce
et al. were in all material respects identical to those which were
the subject of the McCann case) Mr. Justice
Toy viewed Mr. Justice Heald's conclusion that the conditions amounted
to cruel treatment as being based upon the definitions of cruelty proferred
by the expert witnesses. Mr. Justice Toy was of the opinion that in giving
their definitions, Dr. Fox and Dr. Korn 'were, quite naturally for them,
carrying on their dialogue in the witness box in the language of their
discipline, namely Psychology ...In the context of construing and / or
applying the laws of this coun try, however, such terminology overstates
or exaggerates the effects and consequences on the accused in the context
of section 2(b) of the Bill of Rights.'86
It can be argued, however, that Mr. Justice Heald was not simply adopting
the experts' definitions of cruelty expressed in the technical language
of psychology. Dr. Korn's definition of cruelty was directly related to
Mr. Justice McIntyre's test of the punishment's unnecessary and gratuitous
nature. Similarly, the conclusions of Dr. Marcus and Dr. Fox that the regime
in SCU was cruel were related to the test of whether the punishment degraded
the dignity of the prisoners as human beings. The evidence of these witnesses
was extensively reviewed by Mr. Justice Heald, and his reference to their
characterization of treatment in SCU as 'cruel' is to be seen against
the backdrop of that review.
In dealing with the concept of 'unusual' Mr. Justice Heald applied the
tests of Mr. Justice McIntyre. He concluded, based on the evidence of
the expert witnesses and the admission of the director of the penitentiary,
that the treatment served no positive penal purpose.87
However, the penal-purpose test was identified by MrJ ustice McIntyre
not as a separate one for 'unusual' but rather for the compendious phrase
'cruel and unusual.' Indeed, Mr. Justice Heald seemed to acknowledge this
in his application of the other McIntyre tests: 'Furthermore, even if
it served some positive penal purpose, I still think the treatment would
be cruel and unusual because it is not
in accord with public standards of decency and propriety, since it is
unnecessary because of the existence of adequate alternatives [emphasis
added]'.88
In concluding that the regime in SCU did not accord with public standards
of decency and propriety, Mr. Justice Heald did not rely upon the historical
analysis submitted by the plaintiffs. He found that this non- accordance
arose because he was 'satisfied that adequate alternatives do exist which
would remove the 'cruel and unusual' aspects of solitary while at the
same time retaining the necessary security aspects of dissociation.'89
Mr. Justice Heald appears here to be making the 'public decency' test
conditional upon the 'necessity' test. However, Mr. Justice McIntyre clearly
saw the tests of public decency and necessity as discrete, and not as
so interrelated that the violation of the latter was a prerequisite to
the violation of the former. In addition to giving no independent meaning
to the public decency test, Mr. Justice Heald did not make any reference
to the 'arbitrariness' test in reaching his conclusion on 'cruel and unusual.'
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