On December 4, 2003, Gilles Caron was charged with failure to make a left turn safely contrary to
The traffic court trial was lengthy. The record was substantial. The trial of the allegation of improper left turn, which ordinarily would involve little in the way of time and complexity, became a trial that lasted many days over the course of two years. Its length was solely attributable to the constitutional challenges advanced by Mr. Caron. The trial included 12 witnesses, eight of whom were experts, 9,164 pages of transcripts and 93 exhibits.
Mr Caron did not pay all the costs of his trial. The
Less obviously appropriate is the government funding provided. The federal Court Challenges Program provided $70,000 (paid in increments as the trial lengthened from month to month). While somewhat contentious, the Court Challenges Program was legislatively created and represented the will of Parliament to fund meritorious public interest litigation. But the largest amount of funding was provided by
The net result was that taxpayers (federal and provincial) paid at least $190,000 to defend a $100 ticket for an improper left turn (and remember the turn itself was admitted as being improperly made).
As might be imagined, the
The Supreme Court held that “the fundamental purpose (and limit) on judicial intervention is to do only what is essential to avoid an injustice” and so as avoid a “lopsided contest in which the challenger, by reason of impecuniosity, had to abandon his defence” funding was properly granted.
Certainly the issue raised by Mr. Caron’s case is significant. If Mr. Caron is correct the entire corpus of
But why does that significance mean that a $100 ticket should be the basis for taxpayers to be required to spend significant funds without legislative approval? Legal aid in
Certainly there are times when the Court must, in order that justice is done, make orders that do for the expenditure of taxpayers’ money. Serious criminal cases, murder, arson, terrorism offences, require legal assistance to see justice is done. In those cases if legal aid is not available the Courts rightly must direct that lawyers be paid for. But in the case of an improper left hand turn, no matter how elevated the defence, it is unseemly for taxpayers to have to foot the bill. The justice of the case did not require the extraordinary remedy of mandating government funding and Mr. Caron and his supporters should have paid for his own traffic court trial.
2 comments:
wow -- I would never have know about this it you hadn't posted it on your blog. This is simply astounding! Great article -- thanks!
I wonder if government funded this case?
http://csc.lexum.umontreal.ca/en/1979/1979scr2-1032/1979scr2-1032.html
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