Thank you for the opportunity to speak with the committee today.
I teach in areas of constitutional law, evidence law, and legal issues concerning gender and sexuality. My main area of research is indeed sexual assault law. I'd like to focus my comments today on the third part of the bill as well, on the requirement for written reasons in sexual assault cases. My comments are based on my research in this area. I'm going to suggest to you three important justice interests that I think would be served by requiring written reasons in sexual assault cases.
The first, which Carissima touched upon to some extent, is transparency and accountability. I think it's inarguable that written decisions provide a degree of transparency and public accountability that's not available with oral decisions. There are several recent examples of cases that involve conduct or reasoning by trial judges that are problematic, but that only came to light because a reporter happened to be in the room and decided to report on the case, or the crown appealed.
There have been three very high-profile cases of this nature in recent memory. I'm referring here to Wagar; Rhodes, which involved Justice Dewar of Manitoba; and most recently, Al-Rawi, which was the recent Halifax taxi driver case. But there are others.
So, absent the crown's decision to appeal or a journalist's decision to report, sexual assault cases involving oral decisions provide almost no opportunity for scrutiny by researchers, legislators, or the public. For the most part, we don't even know they're occurring.
In its 2008 decision, in a case called Regina v. R.E.M., the Supreme Court of Canada identified public accountability as one of the three reasons that judges are and should be expected to issue reasons, albeit they weren't necessarily referring to written reasons, in criminal trials. So R.E.M. followed Sheppard, which Professor Mathen mentioned.
The degree of public accountability is greatly diminished, if not eliminated, when researchers, legislators, and the public have no way of accessing these reasons. You might say, yes, but that's true of any legal proceeding. My response to that, were resources unlimited would be, yes, indeed it would be desirable to require written reasons in all cases. Resources, of course, are not unlimited. So, why single out sexual assault trials?
I suggest to you that there are different considerations that play in the context of sexual assault cases. One is that, arguably, we are at a crisis point in terms of the public's confidence in the criminal justice system's ability to respond appropriately to allegations of sexual assault. Given this circumstance, in the sexual assault context in particular, we should ensure that judicial reasoning is as accessible as possible. Requiring written reasons would be the most effective way of making the process accessible and transparent.
There are other factors that make sexual violence and gendered violence more broadly, I think, different, including the role that stereotype sometimes plays in judicial reasoning involving sexual assault cases, as well as the nature of the potential harm both to the complainant and the accused at issue in these types of reasonings. That's my first point.
Second, requiring written decisions also has the potential to ensure more thorough, careful. and well-reasoned judgments in what is undoubtedly a very sensitive and difficult area of law. So, I'll use the example referenced in the Canadian Bar Association's brief to this committee, which again is Al-Rawi, the recent Halifax taxi driver case.
I've just finished studying the trial record in Al-Rawi. While Judge Lenehan's statement that “clearly a drunk can consent” was not legally incorrect, it was carelessly included in an oral judgment. The CBA, quoting Professor Sheehy in their brief, described this part of his judgment as “a slip of the tongue”. I think it's reasonable to suggest that in a written decision, he would have been more careful.
Third, requiring written decisions may also reduce what are in some cases shocking legal errors. Legal errors and overturned verdicts are costly and burdensome on all involved parties, but I think the costs to complainants in sexual assault cases imposed by judicial errors are greater. Imagine having to go through the process of testifying as a complainant in a sexual assault case not once but twice.