Interpreters: Difference between revisions

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==General Principles==
==General Principles==
Every person charged with a crime has a right to the assistance of an interpreter where they cannot understand the English or French language.<ref>Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms [http://canlii.org/en/ca/charter_digest/s-14.html section 14]</ref>  
Every person charged with a crime has a right to the assistance of an interpreter where they cannot understand the English or French language.<ref>Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms [http://canlii.org/en/ca/charter_digest/s-14.html section 14]</ref>  
Section 14 of the Charter states:
Section 14 of the Charter states:
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; Competence
; Competence
This right requires that the interpreter be a competent one.<ref>
This right requires that the interpreter be a competent one.<ref>
{{CanLIIRP|Rybak|1wsq6|2008 ONCA 354 (CanLII)|[2008] OJ No 1715}}{{perONCA|Watt JA}}{{atL|1wsq6|84}}<br>
{{CanLIIRP|Rybak|1wsq6|2008 ONCA 354 (CanLII)|[2008] OJ No 1715}}{{perONCA-H|Watt JA}}{{atL|1wsq6|84}}<br>
{{CanLIIRP|Sidhu|1jlfq|2005 ONCJ 8 (CanLII)|[2005] OJ No 4881}}{{perONCJ|Lampkin J}}</ref>  
{{CanLIIRP|Sidhu|1jlfq|2005 ONCJ 8 (CanLII)|[2005] OJ No 4881}}{{perONCJ|Lampkin J}}</ref>  
This does not mean that s. 14 of the Charter extends guarantee to an accredited or certified interpreter.<ref>
This does not mean that s. 14 of the Charter extends guarantee to an accredited or certified interpreter.<ref>

Latest revision as of 07:09, 23 July 2024

This page was last substantively updated or reviewed January 2016. (Rev. # 95825)

General Principles

Every person charged with a crime has a right to the assistance of an interpreter where they cannot understand the English or French language.[1] Section 14 of the Charter states:

14. A party or witness in any proceedings who does not understand or speak the language in which the proceedings are conducted or who is deaf has the right to the assistance of an interpreter.

CCRF

Interpretation must be continuous, precise, impartial and contemporaneous. [2]

Evidence given through an interpreter in court is presumed to have provided an accurate interpretation unless the claimant can demonstrate otherwise.[3]

Competence

This right requires that the interpreter be a competent one.[4] This does not mean that s. 14 of the Charter extends guarantee to an accredited or certified interpreter.[5] The interpreter must simply be a competent and qualified court interpreter.[6] Unaccredited interpreters will often be held to be inadequate.[7]

To determine whether an interpreter is sufficiently competent the court must look at "the nature of the accreditation and the validity of the test upon which it is based, the test results attained, the mode of interpretation required, the expected length of the proceedings, and the technical nature of the subject matters in the proceeding."[8]

Procedure

Before an interpreter can testify, he must be sworn.[9]

  1. Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms section 14
  2. R v Wong, 2011 ONCJ 264 (CanLII), per Horkins J, at para 20
  3. R v Titchener, 2013 BCCA 64 (CanLII), 333 BCAC 234, per Ryan JA, at para 30
  4. R v Rybak, 2008 ONCA 354 (CanLII), [2008] OJ No 1715, per Watt JA, at para 84
    R v Sidhu, 2005 ONCJ 8 (CanLII), [2005] OJ No 4881, per Lampkin J
  5. See R v Sidhu, 2005 CanLII 42491 (ONSC), 203 CCC (3d) 17, per Hill J, at para 298
  6. R v Tran, 1994 CanLII 56 (SCC), 92 CCC (3d) 218, per Lamer CJ
  7. R v NS , [2010] OJ No 3255(*no CanLII links)
    R v Thillayampalam, 2011 ONCJ 800 (CanLII), 248 CRR (2d) 373, per Bourque J, at para 8
  8. R v Dutt, 2011 ONSC 3329 (CanLII), 236 CRR (2d) 305, per Hill J, at para 12
  9. Tran, supra, at p. 988 ("an interpreter must at least be sworn by taking the interpreter’s oath before beginning to interpret the proceedings")