Warrantless Arrests (Until December 18, 2019)

From Criminal Law Notebook
Revision as of 09:23, 6 March 2018 by Admin (talk | contribs)

Introduction

See also: Compelling the Accused to Attend Court, Release by Police, and Arrest Procedure

Power to Arrest

Where there is no warrant for a person's arrest, a peace officer is governed by section 495:

Arrest without warrant by peace officer
495. (1) A peace officer may arrest without warrant

(a) a person who has committed an indictable offence or who, on reasonable grounds, he believes has committed or is about to commit an indictable offence;
(b) a person whom he finds committing a criminal offence; or
(c) a person in respect of whom he has reasonable grounds to believe that a warrant of arrest or committal, in any form set out in Part XXVIII [Miscellaneous, s. 841 to 849] in relation thereto, is in force within the territorial jurisdiction in which the person is found.

...
Consequences of arrest without warrant
(3) Notwithstanding subsection (2), a peace officer acting under subsection (1) is deemed to be acting lawfully and in the execution of his duty for the purposes of

(a) any proceedings under this or any other Act of Parliament; and
(b) any other proceedings, unless in any such proceedings it is alleged and established by the person making the allegation that the peace officer did not comply with the requirements of subsection (2).


R.S., 1985, c. C-46, s. 495; R.S., 1985, c. 27 (1st Supp.), s. 75.


CCC

A police officer can arrest where:

  1. there is reasonable grounds a person has committed an indictable offence;
  2. there is reasonable grounds a person is about to commit an indictable offence;
  3. a person is committing an indictable offence; or
  4. a person has a warrant out for his/her arrest.

There is limited power to arrest where the accused is found committing a summary offence and it is necessary to establish the accused's identity, among other things.[1]

There is also a common law power for peace officers to arrest without a warrant where the officer has an honest and reasonable belief that there is a breach of the peace.[2]

Section 495 (1)(b) does not require the officer to "rule out potential innocent explanations" to his observations.[3] The formation of reasonable grounds does not require a prima facie case.[4]

  1. Moore v The Queen, [1979] 1 SCR 195 1978 CanLII 160
  2. Hayes v Thompson 1985 CanLII 151 (BC CA), (1985), 18 CCC (3d) 254
    Brown v Durham (Regional Municipality) Police Force, [1998] O.J. No. 5274
    R v Collins, 2012 CanLII 26587 (NL PC)
  3. MacCannell, 2014 BCCA 254 (CanLII) at para 46
  4. MacCannell, ibid.

Duty Not to Arrest

495.
...

Limitation
(2) A peace officer shall not arrest a person without warrant for

(a) an indictable offence mentioned in section 553 [Absolute jurisdiction offences],
(b) an offence for which the person may be prosecuted by indictment or for which he is punishable on summary conviction [i.e. hybrid offences], or
(c) an offence punishable on summary conviction [see list of summary offences],

in any case where

(d) he believes on reasonable grounds that the public interest, having regard to all the circumstances including the need to
(i) establish the identity of the person,
(ii) secure or preserve evidence of or relating to the offence, or
(iii) prevent the continuation or repetition of the offence or the commission of another offence,

may be satisfied without so arresting the person, and

(e) he has no reasonable grounds to believe that, if he does not so arrest the person, the person will fail to attend court in order to be dealt with according to law.

...
R.S., 1985, c. C-46, s. 495; R.S., 1985, c. 27 (1st Supp.), s. 75.

[annotation(s) added]


CCC

Related to this duty, s. 497 imposes a duty to release an arrested person which applies the same consideration.

The failure to properly consider factors in favour of release may be grounds to find arbitrary detention.[1]

Right Against Unlawful Arrest

See also: Investigative Detention#Right Against Arbitrary Detention

Section 9 of the Charter prohibits arbitrary detention. Under the header "Detention or imprisonment" the Charter states:

9. Everyone has the right not to be arbitrarily detained or imprisoned.


CCRF

Purpose
The "purpose of s. 9, broadly put, is to protect individual liberty from unjustified state interference"[2] Thus "a detention in the absence of at least reasonable suspicion is unlawful and therefore arbitrary within s. 9"[3]

Burden
The burden is upon the applicant to prove that the accused was "detained" within the meaning of s. 9 which must be proven on a balance of probabilities.[4]

Standing
An accused arrested on grounds that included evidence obtained through the breach of a third party's Charter rights does not have standing to challenge the third party's rights.[5] The only remedy in such a situation would be in an abuse of process application.[6]

  1. see R v Baker (1988), 88 NSR (2d) 250 (NSCA)(*no CanLII links)
    R v Cayer (1988), OJ No. 1120 (ONCA)(*no CanLII links)
  2. R v Grant, 2009 SCC 32 (CanLII) at para 20
  3. R v Grant at para 55
  4. R v Bush, 2010 ONCA 554 (CanLII), (2010), 259 CCC (3d) 127 at para 74 (Ont. C.A.)
    R v B.(L.) 2007 ONCA 596 (CanLII), (2007), 227 CCC (3d) 70 at para 60 (Ont. C.A.)
  5. R v Todd, 2015 BCSC 680 (CanLII) R v Tran, 2016 BCPC 159 (CanLII) at paras 46 to 49
    C.f. R v Brown, 2014 BCSC 1665 (CanLII) per Funt J<r>
  6. Tran, ibid. at para 46

Reasonable and Probable Grounds

See also: Reasonable and Probable Grounds

An arresting officer must have reasonable and probable grounds to make the arrest. Those grounds must be subjectively held by the officer and must be reasonable.[1] Thus, the analysis considers both an objective and subjective component.[2]

An arresting officer is not required the same scrutiny as a justice of a peace would need to be in considering a search warrant.[3]

Objective Requirement
The objective component ask whether the "existence of objectively reasonable grounds for arrest requires that a Court consider whether a reasonable person would find reasonable and probable ground for arrest". This reasonable person must be "in the shoes" of the officer, taking into account "training and experience".[4]

The analysis is "approached as a whole" looking at the "cumulative effect" of all the evidence known at the time.[5]

Timing When Grounds are Formed
Police cannot arrest first and then determine after the fact whether the accused had a connection with their investigation.[6]

The reasonableness of an officers actions is based on what was known to them prior to acting, regardless of its accuracy and completeness. The court may take into account the nature of the power being exercised in its context. The dynamics of an arrest will vary in different circumstances and will sometimes need to be decided upon quickly.[7]

Sources
The officer may base his belief upon assumptions or secondary sources. However, the belief cannot be only a hunch. The circumstances must be sufficient to convince a reasonably fair-minded person put in the same position as the officer that the grounds for his or her belief are reasonable. The facts must not be considered piecemeal but in a holistic manner.[8]

Foundation of Belief
A conclusory statement from one officer to another, such as “a drug transaction has taken place ”, will not support an objective finding of reasonable and probable grounds for an arrest.[9]

Sharing of Reasonable Belief Between Officers
The arresting officer can safely assume grounds exist where he is directed by another officer to arrest the accused.[10]

Multiplicity of Beliefs
A police office can have more than one believe and objective in doing a search incident to arrest as long as it is objectively justifiable.[11]

Sufficiency of Investigation
An arrest may be invalid where the investigator failed to gather sufficient information to form grounds by abbreviating their investigation.[12]

The police observation of two men exchanging an unknown object, without anything more, does not meet the standard of reasonable suspicion to detain or reasonable and probable grounds to arrest.[13]

Timing at Which Grounds are Formed
Objective reasonableness is determined on the "factual matrix that existed at the time the arrest was made". Other information not known to the arresting officer is not relevant.[14]

  1. R v Storrey, 1990 CanLII 125 (SCC), [1990] 1 SCR 241 at pp. 250-1
  2. Storrey, ibid.
    R v Grotheim, 2001 SKCA 116 (CanLII)
    R v McClelland, 1995 ABCA 199 (CanLII), (1995), 165 A.R. 332 (C.A.) at para 21
    R v Juan, 2007 BCCA 351 (CanLII), at para 27
    R v Phung 2013 ABCA 63 (CanLII)
  3. see R v Polashek, 1999 CanLII 3714 (ON CA), (1999), 45 O.R. (3d) 434 Golub at p.750
  4. Phung, supra at para 10
  5. R v Nolet, 2010 SCC 24 (CanLII) at para 48
  6. see R v Whitaker, 2008 BCCA 174 (CanLII), and R v Chaif-Gust, 2011 BCCA 528 (CanLII)
  7. R v Golub, 1997 CanLII 6316 (ON CA), (1997), 34 O.R. (3d) 743, 117 CCC (3d) 193 (C. A.) at p. 750
  8. R v Chin, 2003 ABPC 118 (CanLII) at para 60
  9. R v Lal (1998), 130 CCC (3d) 413 (BCCA) 1998 CanLII 4393
  10. R v Chervinski, 2013 ABQB 29 (CanLII) at para 21, 22
  11. R v Chubak, 2009 ABCA 8 (CanLII), at para 18
    R v Galye, 2015 BCSC 1950 (CanLII) at para. 38 (an "arresting officer's subjective belief that he or she has the requisite reasonable grounds is insufficient by itself for an arrest under s. 495(1)(a) of the Code to be lawful. Those grounds must also be justifiable from an objective point of view")
  12. e.g. R v Munoz 2006 CanLII 3269 (ON SC), (2006), 86 O.R. (3d) 134, 205 CCC (3d) 70 (Ont. Sup. Ct. J.)
  13. R v NO, 2009 ABCA 75 (CanLII)
    R v Rahmani-Shirazi, 2008 ABQB 145 (CanLII)
  14. Galye, supra at para 38 ("Determining whether the arresting officer's grounds were objectively reasonable involves an assessment of the factual matrix that existed at the time the arrest was made. Whether other information, had it been available, might have strengthened or weakened those grounds is not a relevant consideration")

"About to Commit"

Under s. 495(1)(a) a peace officer may make a warrantless arrest of a person wo is "about to commit" a hybrid or indictable offence.

An inebriated person about to operate a motor vehicle will be "about to commit" an offence of impaired driving.[1]

  1. see R v Beaudette (1957), 118 CCC 295

"Finds Committing"

Under s. 495(1)(b) empowers a peace officer to make a warrantless arrest where a person is "apparently" committing an offence. This must be an honestly held belief and must be reasonable. The officer does not have to be so certain as equate with a conviction.[1]

It has been found that the strong smell of raw marijuana can be sufficient to conclude that the accused was in possession or marijuana and is arrestable under s.495(1)(b).[2] A faint and intermittent smell is not sufficient for arrest.

The person arresting does not mean that he "must be present when the offence is committed". He can "rely on reasonable inferences drawn from what he or she has seen transpire".[3]

  1. The Queen v Biron, [1976] 2 SCR 56 1975 CanLII 13
    R v Roberge 1983 CanLII 120 (SCC), (1983), 4 CCC (3d) 304
  2. R v Harding, 2010 ABCA 180 (CanLII), 482 AR 262, at para 29
  3. R v McCowan, 2011 ABPC 79 (CanLII)

Confidential Sources and Informers

Procedure

When an accused challenges the grounds of a warrantless arrest, trial fairness requires that the onus is on the Crown to establish the reasonable and probable grounds on direct examination and the defence must be permitted to cross-examine the officer.[1]

  1. R v Besharah, 2010 SKCA 2 (CanLII) at para 35

Types of Observations

An observed "hand to hand" exchange without any suggestive circumstances is no reasonable basis to conclude an illegal activity.[1]

However, certain activities may be interpreted using expertise and experience may be found to be reasonably believed to be connected to illegal activity.[2]

  1. R v Russell, 2017 ABQB 298 (CanLII), at para 35
    R v NO, 2009 ABCA 75 (CanLII) at paras 41 and 42
  2. R v Rajaratnam, 2006 ABCA 333 (CanLII) at para 25

Citizen's Arrest

Arrest without warrant by any person
494. (1) Any one may arrest without warrant

(a) a person whom he finds committing an indictable offence; or
(b) a person who, on reasonable grounds, he believes
(i) has committed a criminal offence, and
(ii) is escaping from and freshly pursued by persons who have lawful authority to arrest that person.

Arrest by owner, etc., of property
(2) The owner or a person in lawful possession of property, or a person authorized by the owner or by a person in lawful possession of property, may arrest a person without a warrant if they find them committing a criminal offence on or in relation to that property and

(a) they make the arrest at that time; or
(b) they make the arrest within a reasonable time after the offence is committed and they believe on reasonable grounds that it is not feasible in the circumstances for a peace officer to make the arrest.

Delivery to peace officer
(3) Any one other than a peace officer who arrests a person without warrant shall forthwith deliver the person to a peace officer.
For greater certainty
(4) For greater certainty, a person who is authorized to make an arrest under this section is a person who is authorized by law to do so for the purposes of section 25 [Protection of persons acting under authority].
R.S., 1985, c. C-46, s. 494; 2012, c. 9, s. 3.

[annotation(s) added]


CCC

An arrest by a private citizen will still enable the accused's Charter rights as the person is exercising a government function.[1]

"Finds committing" requires that the arresting person discover the suspect "in the very act of committing an offence".[2]

  1. R v Lerke (1986), 49 C.R. (3d) 324, 24 CCC (3d) 129, 1986 ABCA 15 (CanLII), (ABCA)
    R v McCowan, 2011 ABPC 79 (CanLII)
  2. R v Abel & Corbett, 2008 BCCA 54 (CanLII), at para 31

See Also