A Court of Competent Jurisdiction: Difference between revisions

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[23] This approach has the benefit of attributing Charter jurisdiction to the tribunal as an institution, rather than requiring litigants to test, remedy by remedy, whether it is a court of competent jurisdiction.  It is also an approach which emerges from a review of the three distinct constitutional streams flowing from this Court’s jurisprudence.  As the following review shows, this Court has gradually expanded the approach to the scope of the Charter and its relationship with administrative tribunals.  These reasons are an attempt to consolidate the results of that expansion.
[23] This approach has the benefit of attributing Charter jurisdiction to the tribunal as an institution, rather than requiring litigants to test, remedy by remedy, whether it is a court of competent jurisdiction.  It is also an approach which emerges from a review of the three distinct constitutional streams flowing from this Court’s jurisprudence.  As the following review shows, this Court has gradually expanded the approach to the scope of the Charter and its relationship with administrative tribunals.  These reasons are an attempt to consolidate the results of that expansion.


...
[34] More  recently, the Court has had two further opportunities to consider the Mills test.  In Dunedin, the issue was whether a provincial court judge with jurisdiction under Ontario’s Provincial Offences Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. P.33, was a court of competent jurisdiction for the purpose of ordering costs against the Crown for failure to comply with the Charter.  McLachlin C.J., writing for a unanimous Court, again confirmed that applying the Mills test is, first and foremost, a matter of discerning legislative intent.  The question in each case is whether the legislature intended to give the court or tribunal the power to apply the Charter:
::<i>[W]here a legislature confers on a court or tribunal a function that involves the determination of matters where Charter rights may be affected, and furnishes it with processes and powers capable of fairly and justly resolving those incidental Charter issues, then it must be inferred, in the absence of a contrary intention, that the legislature intended to empower the tribunal to apply the Charter. [para. 75]</i>





Revision as of 21:20, 21 March 2024


Caselaw.Ninja, Riverview Group Publishing 2021 ©
Date Retrieved: 2024-05-18
CLNP Page ID: 2359
Page Categories: [Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms (Annotated)]
Citation: A Court of Competent Jurisdiction, CLNP 2359, <>, retrieved on 2024-05-18
Editor: Sharvey
Last Updated: 2024/03/21


R. v. Conway, 2010 SCC 22 (CanLII), [2010] 1 SCR 765[1]

[20] We do not have one Charter for the courts and another for administrative tribunals (Cooper v. Canada (Human Rights Commission), 1996 CanLII 152 (SCC), [1996] 3 S.C.R. 854[2], per McLachlin J. (in dissent), at para. 70; Dunedin; Douglas College; Martin). This truism is reflected in this Court’s recognition that the principles governing remedial jurisdiction under the Charter apply to both courts and administrative tribunals. It is also reflected in the jurisprudence flowing from Mills and the Cuddy Chicks trilogy according to which, with rare exceptions, administrative tribunals with the authority to apply the law have the jurisdiction to apply the Charter to the issues that arise in the proper exercise of their statutory functions.


[21] The jurisprudential evolution has resulted in this Court’s acceptance not only of the proposition that expert tribunals should play a primary role in the determination of Charter issues falling within their specialized jurisdiction, but also that in exercising their statutory discretion, they must comply with the Charter.

[22] All of these developments serve to cement the direct relationship between the Charter, its remedial provisions and administrative tribunals. In light of this evolution, it seems to me to be no longer helpful to limit the inquiry to whether a court or tribunal is a court of competent jurisdiction only for the purposes of a particular remedy. The question instead should be institutional: Does this particular tribunal have the jurisdiction to grant Charter remedies generally? The result of this question will flow from whether the tribunal has the power to decide questions of law. If it does, and if Charter jurisdiction has not been excluded by statute, the tribunal will have the jurisdiction to grant Charter remedies in relation to Charter issues arising in the course of carrying out its statutory mandate (Cuddy Chicks trilogy; Martin). A tribunal which has the jurisdiction to grant Charter remedies is a court of competent jurisdiction. The tribunal must then decide, given this jurisdiction, whether it can grant the particular remedy sought based on its statutory mandate. The answer to this question will depend on legislative intent, as discerned from the tribunal’s statutory mandate (the Mills cases).

[23] This approach has the benefit of attributing Charter jurisdiction to the tribunal as an institution, rather than requiring litigants to test, remedy by remedy, whether it is a court of competent jurisdiction. It is also an approach which emerges from a review of the three distinct constitutional streams flowing from this Court’s jurisprudence. As the following review shows, this Court has gradually expanded the approach to the scope of the Charter and its relationship with administrative tribunals. These reasons are an attempt to consolidate the results of that expansion.

...

[34] More recently, the Court has had two further opportunities to consider the Mills test. In Dunedin, the issue was whether a provincial court judge with jurisdiction under Ontario’s Provincial Offences Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. P.33, was a court of competent jurisdiction for the purpose of ordering costs against the Crown for failure to comply with the Charter. McLachlin C.J., writing for a unanimous Court, again confirmed that applying the Mills test is, first and foremost, a matter of discerning legislative intent. The question in each case is whether the legislature intended to give the court or tribunal the power to apply the Charter:

[W]here a legislature confers on a court or tribunal a function that involves the determination of matters where Charter rights may be affected, and furnishes it with processes and powers capable of fairly and justly resolving those incidental Charter issues, then it must be inferred, in the absence of a contrary intention, that the legislature intended to empower the tribunal to apply the Charter. [para. 75]


[1] [2]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 R. v. Conway, 2010 SCC 22 (CanLII), [2010] 1 SCR 765, <https://canlii.ca/t/2b2ds>, retrieved on 2024-03-21
  2. 2.0 2.1 Cooper v. Canada (Human Rights Commission), 1996 CanLII 152 (SCC), [1996] 3 SCR 854, <https://canlii.ca/t/1fr4w>, retrieved on 2024-03-21