A-464-04
2005 FCA 283
Genex Communications Inc. (Appellant)
v.
Attorney General of Canada and The Canadian
Radio-television and Telecommunications Commis-sion
(CRTC) (Respondents)
and
The Canadian Civil Liberties Association and
Cogeco Diffusion Inc. and Canadian Association of
Broadcasters and Association québécoise
de l'industrie du disque, du spectacle et de la vidéo
(ADISQ) (Interveners)
Indexed as: Genex Communications v. Canada (Attorney
General) (F.C.A.)
Federal Court of Appeal, Richard C.J., Létourneau
and Nadon JJ.A.--Québec, May 24, 25, 26, and 27;
Ottawa, September 1, 2005.
Broadcasting
-- Appeal from decision of Canadian Radio-television and
Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) not to renew appellant's
broadcasting licence for French-language commercial radio
station CHOI-FM Québec (CHOI-FM) -- Appellant's
exclusive-use licence on FM frequency 98.1 expiring on August
31, 2002 -- Public complaints re: hosts making offensive,
sexist, aggressive, degrading comments on air -- After public
hearing, CRTC renewing licence for 24 months -- Imposing
conditions designed to secure compliance with Broadcasting
Act, Radio Regulations, 1986: compliance with Code of Ethics
proposed by appellant to provide guidelines for spoken-word
content of programming; establishment of Advisory Committee
to examine complaints -- New complaints about spoken-word
content by radio hosts made after licence renewed -- CRTC
holding second public hearing before deciding not to renew
licence -- (1) CRTC's judisdiction -- CRTC's statutory powers
including implementation of Canadian broadcasting policy,
exclusive power to issue licences, make regulations regarding
program standards -- Broadcasting Act, ss. 3, 9(1)(b), Radio
Regulations, 1986, s. 3 giving CRTC power to infringe freedom
of expression to implement Canadian broadcasting policy while
protecting other fundamental Charter rights -- CRTC must
verify quality of programming, broadcasts to determine
whether standards met -- In regulatory, supervisory function,
CRTC also having duty to review complaints against licensees,
examine, determine outcome of licence renewal applications --
CRTC also master of own procedure -- Under Act, s. 21, CRTC
having power to make procedural rules for licence renewal
applications, complaints, public hearings -- (2) CRTC's
decision not violating principles of natural justice, rules
of procedural fairness, own rules of procedure -- CRTC taking
statutory restrictions (Broadcasting Act, ss. 3, 9(1)(b),
Radio Regulations, 1986, s. 3) into account, exercising
jurisdiction within statutory limits -- Following same
prescribed procedure on second renewal application as on
first renewal application -- Rejection of application
justifiable given appellant's failure to comply with licence
conditions imposed in public interest when licence initially
renewed -- CRTC considering relevant factors, not considering
irrelevant factors in exercising discretion -- CRTC's field
of expertise dictating Court's deference -- CRTC not making
error in law in decision, exercising discretion
judicially.
Administrative Law
--
Judicial Review
-- Standard of review -- CRTC's decision not to renew
appellant's broadcasting licence calling for two distinct
review standards: administrative, constitutional -- As to
former, CRTC entitled to curial deference on questions of law
within area of jurisdiction and expertise, even in absence of
privative clause, statutory right of appeal -- Same standard
applying to licence renewal decisions whether review by way
of judicial review, appeal -- Decision to renew broadcasting
licence discretionary -- Questions of law pertaining to
CRTC's competence, expertise to be reviewed on reasonableness
standard -- As to standard of review concerning questions of
law allegedly committed in process leading to CRTC's
decision, constitutional validity of decision, Court only
having power to examine manner in which CRTC's discretion
exercised -- Required to ensure discretion so exercised as to
keep limitation on freedom of expression within reasonable
limits demonstrably justified in free, democratic
society.
Constitutional Law
-- Charter of Rights and Freedoms -- Fundamental Freedoms --
Appellant submitting CRTC's refusal to renew radio station's
broadcasting licence violating right to freedom of expression
under Charter, s. 2(b) -- CRTC's decision not
constitutionally invalid -- Non-compliance with licence
condition potentially warranting non-renewal of broadcasting
licence without infringing freedom of expression -- Freedom
of expression, opinion, speech not meaning freedom of
defamation, oppression, opprobrium -- CRTC exercising
discretion within parameters of Broadcasting Act, ss. 3, 9 --
Exercise of discretion not exceeding limitations on freedom
of expression permitted by such statutory provisions within
Charter, s. 1.
Practice
--
Parties
--
Standing
-- Appeal from CRTC's refusal to renew broadcasting licence
-- Status of parties to appeal governed by Federal Courts
Rules, s. 338 -- CRTC adjudicative body in application for
licence renewal -- Absent statutory exemption, body whose
decision attacked not entitled to appear in appeal, review
proceedings to defend, justify decision -- CRTC's
interventions limited to objective description of
jurisdiction, regulatory framework, procedure, licence
renewal application proceeding.
This was an appeal from a decision of the Canadian
Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) not
to renew the appellant's broadcasting licence for the
French-language commercial radio station CHOI-FM
Québec (CHOI-FM). In February 1997, the appellant was
awarded an exclusive-use licence on FM frequency 98.1, which
expired on August 31, 2002, but which could be renewed. That
licence was subject to conditions, including compliance with
guidelines on non-sexist representation of individuals. The
appellant's operation under this initial licence resulted in
numerous public complaints that offensive, sexist,
aggressive, discriminatory and degrading comments were made
on air by the station's hosts. In 2002, the appellant applied
for a renewal of its licence, and the CRTC held a public
hearing with respect thereto. Despite serious reservations
about the appellant's failures to meet the objective of high
standard programming, the CRTC renewed the licence for a
24-month period, under special conditions designed to secure
compliance with the Broadcasting Act and Radio
Regulations, 1986. One such condition was that the
appellant comply with the Code of Ethics it had itself
proposed. Another condition was the establishment of an
Advisory Committee to examine complaints against the
appellant. After the CRTC renewed the licence, new complaints
about the spoken-word content by the station's radio hosts
were made, including some by the intervener Cogeco Diffusion
Inc., a competitor of the appellant concerning derogatory
comments made on air against Cogeco's employees and
executives. There were also complaints that a radio host had
incited the pirating of television signals, such as Bell
ExpressVu. These complaints were later considered at the
second public hearing on the appellant's application for
licence renewal. Moreover, some of the hosts' degrading
comments regarding a well-known Quebec weather presenter
resulted in an action for damages against the appellant
before the Superior Court of Québec, which ultimately
awarded the plaintiff damages. The CRTC decided not to renew
the appellant's licence (decision 2004-271).
The appellant submitted that the CRTC had violated its
right to freedom of expression guaranteed by paragraph
2(b) of the Canadian Charter of Rights and
Freedoms and that the CRTC had made numerous errors in
making its decision. The issues were whether the CRTC
rendered an unlawful decision or erred in law when it refused
to renew the appellant's broadcasting licence and whether, in
making its decision, it failed to comply with the principles
of natural justice, the rules of procedural fairness, and the
CRTC's own rules of procedure.
Held, the appeal should be dismissed.
Given the appellant's allegations that the CRTC decision
was unconstitutional or that it was vitiated by
intra-jurisdictional errors of law, the analysis of the CRTC
decision called for two distinct standards of review: one
constitutional, the other adminstrative. With respect to the
latter, case law has established that the CRTC is entitled to
curial deference with respect to questions of law within its
area of jurisdiction and expertise, even if there is no
privative clause or a statutory right of appeal. The same
standard of review applies, whether the CRTC's decision is
reviewed by way of an application for judicial review or by
way of appeal. The decision to renew a broadcasting licence
is discretionary, and deals with a matter that lies at the
very heart of the CRTC's expertise. Questions of law that
pertain to its area of competence and expertise must be
reviewed according to the reasonableness standard. The Court
cannot intervene in regard to such a question unless the
resulting conclusion or decision is at least
unreasonable.
The standard of review applicable to the constitutional
validity of the decision is determined according to different
factors. Absent a power conferred either expressly or by
necessary implication to infringe a protected right, a
discretionary decision by the CRTC cannot be contrary to the
Charter. The case at bar dealt with statutory provisions
giving the CRTC the power to infringe freedom of expression
by establishing restrictive licence conditions. Since the
CRTC was simply exercising the discretion conferred on it by
the Act, the Court could examine the manner in which the
discretion was exercised, specifically to ensure that the
exercise of that discretion kept the limitation on freedom of
expression within reasonable limits that can be demonstrably
justified in a free and democratic society.
The CRTC's status in the proceedings, or locus
standi, involved its right to participate and its role if
permitted to do so. The status of the parties to an appeal is
governed by rule 338 of the Federal Courts Rules. In
the application for renewal of the appellant's licence, the
CRTC was not a party but the adjudicative body. Absent a
statutory exemption, a body whose decision is attacked is not
entitled to appear in the appeal or review proceedings.
Whether in judicial review or appeal proceedings, the federal
agency that made a decision is not authorized to defend its
decision in Court, still less to justify itself. Accordingly,
the CRTC's interventions were limited to an objective
description of its jurisdiction, the regulatory framework in
which it operates, its procedure and the facts indicating how
the proceeding before it had unfolded.
The Broadcasting Act and Radio Regulations,
1986 give the CRTC, an independent authority, all of its
statutory powers. The CRTC is responsible for implementing
the broadcasting policy for Canada and was given exclusive
power to issue licences, make regulations regarding program
and advertising standards, define classes of persons allowed
to hold broadcasting licences, and prescribe conditions for
the operation of broadcasting stations. Paragraphs
9(1)(b) and (d) of the Act give the CRTC the
power to infringe freedom of expression by establishing
restrictive licence conditions. Section 3 of the Act declares
Canadian broadcasting policy, and paragraph 3(b) of
the Radio Regulations, 1986 prohibits any abusive
comment that is likely to expose an individual, group or
class to hatred. These provisions give the CRTC the power to
infringe freedom of expression for the purpose of
implementing Canadian broadcasting policy while protecting
other fundamental rights guaranteed by the Charter. In
exercising its discretion not to renew the appellant's
licence, the CRTC had to take into account these restrictions
and exercise its jurisdiction within the limits prescribed by
the Act and the Regulations. It is also the duty of the CRTC,
in its regulatory and supervisory function, to review
complaints brought against licensees. When a licence is being
suspended, revoked or renewed, the CRTC's duty of
surveillance implies a verification of the quality of the
programming and broadcasts to determine whether they meet the
standards established by the Act, the Regulations, the Codes
of Ethics and licence conditions. This requires verification
of allegations or complaints that these standards have not
been met. In a licence renewal, suspension or revocation
context, such verification is a manifestation of the CRTC's
power of review and supervision. Finally, the CRTC is the
master of its procedure. Under section 21 of the Act, it may
make rules respecting the conduct of its business, notably
the procedure for applications for renewal of licences, for
making representations and complaints to the Commission and
for the conduct of hearings.
The CRTC's decision 271 did not violate the principles of
natural justice, the rules of procedural fairness or its own
rules of procedure. The CRTC's decision was rendered after
almost five months of deliberation and stated the reasons for
dismissing the preliminary motion challenging its
jurisdiction. The appellant's submissions and grievances
regarding the breaches were based on the postulate that it
was deprived of the opportunity to submit a full answer and
defence. The appellant was amply informed of the issues and
allegations on its record and was warned of complaints about
the derogatory nature of its spoken-word programming. It was
given notice of possible steps to be taken and was given an
opportunity to explain itself at a public hearing, in
accordance with the rules laid down by the CRTC. The
procedure followed on the second renewal application was the
same as that on the first renewal application. A similar
procedure taken on a second licence renewal application
involving the same general problem as the first cannot be
considered fair or unfair depending solely on whether the
ultimate conclusion is favourable or not to the
appellant.
Nor did the CRTC by its practices, conduct or
representations, reasonably lead the appellant to believe
that it would retain its licence. The issue of non-renewal
per se was on the public hearing's agenda since the
discretionary power to renew includes the power not to renew.
The appellant's licence was a fixed-term licence and the
appellant was not automatically entitled to the renewal,
particularly in the circumstances.
The CRTC's choice of measure to enforce compliance with
the Act and the Regulations did not amount to an error in law
or a jurisdictional error. Failure to comply with a condition
of licence imposed in the public interest constitutes conduct
that may justify a refusal to renew a licence without such
refusal infringing freedom of expression or the Charter. If
the administrative measure adopted is authorized by the
legislature, the Court should not interfere in the
correctness or appropriateness of the measure taken, still
less rule on the merits and appropriateness of selecting a
particular measure. At most, the Court may satisfy itself
that the CRTC, in the exercise of its discretion, considered
the relevant factors and did not consider any irrelevant
factors. The actual exercise of weighing these factors, which
generally pertains to the CRTC's field of expertise, is a
matter for the CRTC. The appropriate disciplinary sanction is
the one that is justified by the facts and circumstances of
the case. If the facts warrant a withdrawal of an operating
licence rather than a mere suspension, then ordering the
withdrawal involves no breach of the law.
The CRTC exercised its discretion on the renewal
application judicially. It scrupulously examined and weighed
all of the factors it considered relevant in making its
decision. It dwelt at some length on the choice of the
measure, the relative ineffectiveness of the measures adopted
at the time of the first renewal, the appellant's attitude
and the gravity and frequency of the offences noted. The
CRTC's field of expertise dictated the Court's deference.
Furthermore, decision 271 was not constitutionally invalid.
Non-compliance with a condition of licence is conduct that
may warrant non-renewal of a broadcasting licence without
necessarily resulting in an infringement of freedom of
expression and a Charter breach. Freedom of expression,
freedom of opinion and freedom of speech do not mean freedom
of defamation, freedom of oppression and freedom of
opprobrium. The CRTC's decision 271 was based on a number of
findings about the appellant's conduct, including the
appellant's violations of its own Code of Ethics, and
measures intended to ensure its compliance with the
regulatory regime. The CRTC exercised its discretion within
the parameters of sections 9 and 3 of the Act and the
discretion it exercised did not go beyond the limitations on
freedom of expression that these two statutory provisions
themselves may allow constitutionally within the confines of
section 1 of the Charter. The appellant was unable to
demonstrate a jurisdictional error or such material error in
law that would make decision 271 on non-renewal unreasonable
and require that it be set aside.
statutes and regulations judicially
considered
Broadcasting Act, S.C. 1967-68, c. 25, ss. 2, 15,
16.
Broadcasting Act, S.C. 1991, c. 11, ss. 2(1)
"broadcasting", "broadcasting undertaking", "programming
undertaking", (3), 3, 5(1),(2), 6,
9(1)(b),(c),(d),(e),
10(1)(c),(k), 12, 18(2), 21, 31, 32, 33.
CRTC Rules of Procedure, C.R.C., c. 375, ss. 32,
33, 34.
Canada Labour Code, R.S.C., 1985, c. L-2, s.
22(1.1) (as enacted by S.C. 1998, c. 26, s. 9).
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, being Part
I of the Constitution Act, 1982, Schedule B, Canada
Act 1982, 1982, c. 11 (U.K.) [R.S.C., 1985, Appendix II,
No. 44], ss. 1, 2(b), 15, 24(1), 27.
Constitution Act, 1867, 30 & 31 Vict., c. 3
(U.K.) (as am. by Canada Act 1982, 1982, c. 11 (U.K.),
Schedule to the Constitution Act, 1982, Item 1)
[R.S.C., 1985, Appendix II, No. 5], ss. 92(10),(13),(16),
93.
Federal Courts Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. F-7, ss. 1 (as
am. by S.C. 2002, c. 8, s. 14), 28 (as am. idem, s.
35).
Federal Courts Rules, SOR/98-106, ss. 1 (as am. by
SOR/2004-283, s. 2), 2 "parties", 65, 70 (as am. by
SOR/2002-417, s. 9), 104, 109, 303, 338.
Radio Regulations, 1986, SOR/86-982, s. 3 (as am.
by SOR/91-586, s. 1).
cases judicially considered
applied:
Canadian Broadcasting Corp. v. Métromédia
CMR Montréal Inc. (1999), 254 N.R. 266 (C.A.);
Procureur général du Canada v. Compagnie de
Publication La Presse, Ltée (La), [1967]
S.C.R. 60; (1966), 63 D.L.R. (2d) 396; 66 DTC 5492; Baker
v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
[1999] 2 S.C.R. 817; (1999), 174 D.L.R. (4th) 193; 14 Admin.
L.R. (3d) 173; 1 Imm. L.R. (3d) 1; 243 N.R. 22; British
Columbia Telephone Co. v. Shaw Cable Systems (B.C.) Ltd.,
[1995] 2 S.C.R. 739; (1995), 125 D.L.R. (4th) 443; 31 Admin.
L.R. (2d) 169; 183 N.R. 184; Slaight Communications Inc.
v. Davidson, [1989] 1 S.C.R. 1038; (1989), 59 D.L.R.
(4th) 416; 26 C.C.E.L. 85; 89 CLLC 14,031; 40 C.R.R. 100; 93
N.R. 183; Arthur v. Canada (Attorney General) (2001),
283 N.R. 346; 2001 FCA 223; 2636-5205 Québec Inc.
(Re), [1993] R.J.Q. 2522; (1993), 58 Q.A.C. 81 (C.A.);
2620-5443 Québec Inc. c. Québec
(Régie des alcools, des courses et des jeux),
[1997] R.J.Q. 2059 (C.A.); Ferroequus Railway Co. v.
Canadian National Railway Co., [2004] 2 F.C.R. 42;
(2003), 313 N.R. 363; 2003 FCA 454.
considered:
R. v. Sharpe, [2001] 1 S.C.R. 45; (2001), 194
D.L.R. (4th) 1; [2001] 6 W.W.R. 1; (2001), 88 B.C.L.R. (3d)
1; 146 B.C.A.C. 161; 150 C.C.C. (3d) 321; 39 C.R. (5th) 72;
86 C.R.R. (2d) 1; 2001 SCC 2; Short-term licence renewal
for CHOI-FM (16 July 2002), Broadcasting Decision CRTC
2002-189; Genex Communications Inc. v. Canada (Canadian
Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission)
(2004), 329 N.R. 53; 2004 FCA 279; Law Society of New
Brunswick v. Ryan, [2003] 1 S.C.R. 247; (2003), 257
N.B.R. (2d) 207; 223 D.L.R. (4th) 577; 48 Admin. L.R. (3d)
33; 31 C.P.C. (5th) 1; 302 N.R. 1; 2003 SCC 20; Dr. Q v.
College of Physicians and Surgeons of British Columbia,
[2003] 1 S.C.R. 226; (2003), 223 D.L.R. (4th) 599; [2003] 5
W.W.R. 1; 11 B.C.L.R. (4th) 1; 48 Admin. L.R. (3d) 1; 179
B.C.A.C. 170; 302 N.R. 34; 2003 SCC 19; Northwestern
Utilities Ltd. et al. v. City of Edmonton, [1979] 1
S.C.R. 684; (1978), 12 A.R. 449; 89 D.L.R. (3d) 161; 7 Alta.
L.R. (2d) 370; 23 N.R. 565; Chiasson c. Fillion,
[2005] R.J.Q. 1066; [2005] R.R.A. 459 (Sup. Ct.); CHOI-FM
re Le monde parallèle de Jeff Fillion, [2003]
C.B.S.C.D. No. 21 (QL); Capital Cities Communications Inc.
et al. v. Canadian Radio-Television Commn., [1978] 2
S.C.R. 141; (1977), 81 D.L.R. (3d) 609; 36 C.P.R. (2d) 1; 18
N.R. 181; CKOY Ltd. v. Her Majesty The Queen on the
relation of Lorne Mahoney, [1979] 1 S.C.R. 2; (1978), 90
D.L.R. (3d) 1; 43 C.C.C. (2d) 1; 40 C.P.R. (2d) 1; 24 N.R.
254; CRTC v. CTV Television Network Ltd. et al.,
[1982] 1 S.C.R. 530; (1982), 134 D.L.R. (3d) 193; 65 C.P.R.
(2d) 19; 41 N.R. 271; Kitkatla Band v. British Columbia
(Minister of Small Business, Tourism and Culture), [2002]
2 S.C.R. 146; (2002), 210 D.L.R. (4th) 577; [2002] 6 W.W.R.
1; 1 B.C.L.R. (4th) 1; 1 B.C.L.R. (4th) 1; [2002] 2 C.N.L.R.
143; 165 B.C.A.C. 1; 2002 SCC 31; Blencoe v. British
Columbia (Human Rights Commission), [2000] 2 S.C.R. 307;
(2000), 190 D.L.R. (4th) 513; [2000] 10 W.W.R. 567; 23 Admin.
L.R. (3d) 175; 81 B.C.L.R. (3d) 1; 3 C.C.E.L. (3d) 165; 77
C.R.R. (2d) 189; 260 N.R. 1; 2000 SCC 44; Bell Canada v.
Canadian Telephone Employees Association, [2003] 1 S.C.R.
884; (2003), 227 D.L.R. (4th) 193; [2004] 1 W.W.R. 1; 3
Admin. L.R. (4th) 163; 109 C.R.R. (2d) 65; 306 N.R. 34; 2003
SCC 36; Moreau-Bérubé v. New Brunswick
(Judicial Council), [2002] 1 S.C.R. 249; (2002), 245
N.B.R. (2d) 201; 209 D.L.R. (4th) 1; 36 Admin. L.R. (3d) 1;
281 N.R. 201; 2002 SCC 11; C.U.P.E. v. Ontario (Minister
of Labour), [2003] 1 S.C.R. 539; (2003), 226 D.L.R. (4th)
193; 50 Admin. L.R. (3d) 1; 304 N.R. 76; 173 O.A.C. 38; 2003
SCC 29.
referred to:
Canada (Attorney General) v. Purcell, [1996] 1 F.C.
644; (1995), 40 Admin. L.R. (2d) 40; 96 CLLC 210-010; 192
N.R. 148 (C.A.); VIA Rail Canada Inc. v. Cairns,
[2005] 1 F.C.R. 205; (2004), 241 D.L.R. (4th) 700; 16 Admin.
L.R. (4th) 55; 321 N.R. 201; 2004 FCA 194; Star Choice
Television Network Inc. v. Canada (Customs and Revenue
Agency), 2004 FCA 153; Acquisition of assets (26
February 1997), Broadcasting Decision CRTC 97-86; R. v.
Latimer, [2001] 1 S.C.R. 3; (2001), 193 D.L.R. (4th) 577;
203 Sask. R. 1; [2001] 6 W.W.R. 409; 150 C.C.C. (3d) 129; 39
C.R. (5th) 1; 80 C.R.R. (2d) 189; 264 N.R. 99; 2001 SCC 1;
Re C.F.R.B. and Attorney-General for Canada (1973), 38
D.L.R. (3d) 335 (Ont. C.A.); leave to appeal to S.C.C.
refused 13/11/73; National Indian Brotherhood v. Juneau
(No. 3), [1971] 1 F.C. 498 (T.D.); Martineau v.
Matsqui Institution Disciplinary Board, [1980] 1 S.C.R.
602; (1979), 106 D.L.R. (3d) 385; 50 C.C.C. (2d) 353; 13 C.R.
(3d) 1; 15 C.R. (3d) 315; 30 N.R. 119; Singh et al. v.
Minister of Employment and Immigration, [1985] 1 S.C.R.
177; (1985), 17 D.L.R. (4th) 422; 12 Admin. L.R. 137; 14
C.R.R. 13; 58 N.R. 1; Therrien (Re), [2001] 2 S.C.R.
3; (2001), 30 Admin. L.R. (3d) 171; 155 C.C.C. (3d) 1; 43
C.R. (5th) 1; 84 C.R.R. (2d) 1; 271 N.R. 1; 2001 SCC 35;
IWA v. Consolidated-Bathurst Packaging Ltd., [1990] 1
S.C.R. 282; (1990), 68 D.L.R. (4th) 524; 42 Admin. L.R. 1; 90
CLLC 14,007; 38 O.A.C. 321; Complaints and the public
examination files (18 May 1982), Public Notice CRTC
1982-36; Old St. Boniface Residents Assn. Inc. v. Winnipeg
(City), [1990] 3 S.C.R. 1170; (1990), 75 D.L.R. (4th)
385; [1991] 2 W.W.R. 145; 2 M.P.L.R. (2d) 217; 69 Man.R. (2d)
134; 46 Admin. L.R. 161; 116 N.R. 46; CJMF-FM Ltée
v. Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications
Commission--CRTC, [1984] F.C.J. No. 244 (C.A.) (QL);
Mount Sinai Hospital Center v. Quebec (Minister of Health
and Social Services), [2001] 2 S.C.R. 281; (2001), 200
D.L.R. (4th) 193; 36 Admin. L.R. (3d) 71; 271 N.R. 104; 2001
SCC 41; Coaticook FM Inc. (17 September 1987),
Decision CRTC 87-756; CJMF-FM Ltée (29 February
1984), Decision CRTC 84-209; affd [1984] F.C.J. No. 244
(C.A.) (QL); Communications communautaires des
Portages (17 September 1987), Decision CRTC 87-754;
Félicien Messier, doing business under the name and
style of "Cablo-Vision
Saint-François-Xavier-des-Hauteurs Enr." and
"Cablo-Vision Saint-Valérien Enr." (20 August
1991), Decision CRTC 91-610; Fundy Broadcasting Co.
Limited, CRTC 77-148; Radio communautaire du Bas
St-Laurent (17 September 1987), Decision CRTC 87-753;
Riverport Satellite T.V. Limited (7 June 1995),
Decision CRTC 95-296.
authors cited
Broadcasting Notice of Public Hearing CRTC 2001-14,
December 14, 2001 (CRTC)
Broadcasting Notice of Public Hearing CRTC 2003-11,
December 18, 2003 (CRTC).
Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications
Commission. Circular No. 444. "To all licensees of radio
programming undertakings: Practices regarding radio
non-compliance" (7 May 2001).
Nouveau Petit Robert: dictionnaire alphabétique
et analogique de la langue française, Paris:
Dictionnaires Le Robert, 2000, "censure".
Petit Larousse illustré. Paris: Larousse,
2000, "censure".
APPEAL from a decision of the Canadian Radio-television
and Telecommunications decision (CHOI-FM--Non-renewal of
licence (13 July 2004), Broadcasting Decision CRTC 2004-271)
not to renew, under the Broadcasting Act, the
appellant's broadcasting licence based on its failure to
comply with licence conditions. Appeal dismissed.
appearances:
Guy Bertrand for appellant.
René LeBlanc and Bernard Letarte for
respondent Attorney General of Canada.
Caroline Matte and Guy J. Pratte for
respondent The Canadian Radio-television and
Telecommuni-ations Commission (CRTC)
Frédéric Bachand for intervener
Canadian Civil Liberties Association.
Eric Mongeau for intervener Cogeco Diffusion
Inc.
No one appeared for intervener Canadian Association of
Broadcasters.
Stefan Martin for intervener Association
québécoise de l'industrie du disque, du
spectacle et de la vidéo (ADISQ).
solicitors of record:
Guy Bertrand et associés, Québec, for
appellant.
Deputy Attorney General of Canada, for respondent
Attorney General of Canada.
Borden Ladner Gervais LLP, Montréal, for
respondent The Canadian Radio-television and
Telecommunications Commission (CRTC).
Shadley Battista, s.e.n.c., Montréal,
for intervener Canadian Civil Liberties Association.
Stikeman Elliot LLP, Montréal, for
interveners Canadian Association of Broadcasters and Cogeco
Diffusion Inc.
Fraser Milner Casgrain LLP, Montréal, for
intervener Association québécoise de
l'industrie du disque, du spectacle et de la vidéo
(ADISQ).
The following is the English version of the reasons for
judgment rendered by
Létourneau J.A.:
Grounds of appeal
[1]Did the Canadian Radio-television and
Telecom-munications Commission (CRTC) render an unlawful
decision or err in law when it refused to renew the
broadcasting licence of the French-language commercial radio
station CHOI-FM Québec (CHOI-FM), owned by the
appellant?
[2]Did the CRTC, in making its decision, fail to comply
with the principles of natural justice, the rules of
procedural fairness and its own rules of procedure?
[3]Those, in short, are the two major questions which, in
this appeal, underlie the 11 grounds of appeal relied on by
the appellant in order to have the CRTC decision set aside.
Before embarking on a more detailed presentation of the
grounds of appeal, I include, for reference and for the
benefit of the parties, interveners and readers, a table of
contents of the topics that will be discussed:
Table of
Contents Para.
Purpose and limitations of the proceeding before the
| Court and definition of the
issue
20 |
Applicable standard of review on an appeal in review
of the CRTC's decision not to renew the appellant's
1. Identification of the standard of review
applicable to intra-jurisdictional errors
2. Identification of the standard of review
applicable to the constitutional validity
Status and role of the CRTC in the present appeal
| CRTC decision
2004-271 104 |
1. Factors considered by the CRTC in the
| exercise of its judicial
discretion 105 |
| 2. CRTC's
conclusions 111 |
| 3. Proceedings before the
CRTC 112 |
| Analysis of grounds of
appeal 125 |
1. Parliament's jurisdiction to make laws governing
2. Allegation that the CRTC unlawfully set itself
up as a censor of the content of the appellant's
3. Violation of the principles of natural justice,
the rules of procedural fairness and the
| CRTC's Rules of
Procedure
149 |
(a) hearing before an independent and
(b) right to a hearing, procedural fairness
| and the CRTC Rules of of
Procedure 155 |
Did the CRTC err in law or make a jurisdictional error
in
its choice of the measure to enforce compliance with
the
| Act and the
Regulations? 176 |
1. Breach of the principle of gradation of
2. Reasonable and legitimate expectation concerning
the coercive measure that would be applied and
| the failure to proceed
accordingly 190 |
| 3. An unprecedented and extremely harsh
measure 204 |
| Did the CRTC exercise its discretion
judicially? 210 |
1. No error of law in the consideration of factors
| relevant to the exercise of the
discretion 210 |
2. Nullity of paragraph 3(b) of the Regulations
and the impact of this nullity on decision
3. Constitutional invalidity of decision
| Reconnecting the judicial
respirator 227 |
[4]The appellant argues that at the heart of this case is
the freedom of expression guaranteed by paragraph 2(b)
of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms [being
Part I of the Constitution Act, 1982, Schedule B,
Canada Act 1982, 1982, c. 11 (U.K.) [R.S.C., 1985,
Appendix II, No. 44]] (Charter), a freedom which, I hasten to
point out, is not absolute, as is confirmed by section 1 of
the Charter, which allows for the application thereto of
reasonable limits prescribed by law and demonstrably
justified in a free and democratic society: see R. v.
Sharpe, [2001] 1 S.C.R. 45, at paragraphs 22 and 80. In
the latter paragraph, Chief Justice McLachlin writes:
Section 1 of the Charter belies the suggestion that
any Charter right is so absolute that limits on it can
never be justified. The argument posits that some rights are
so basic that they can never be limited as a matter of
principle, precluding any evaluation under s. 1. This is both
undesirable and unnecessary. It is undesirable because it
raises the risk that laws that can be justified may be struck
down on the basis of how they are characterized. It is
unnecessary because s. 1 provides a basis for fair evaluation
that upholds only those laws that do not unjustifiably erode
basic liberties.
[5]More specifically, the appellant submits that section 3
[as am. by SOR/91-586, s. 1] of the Radio Regulations,
1986 [SOR/86-982] (Regulations) and paragraphs
3(1)(g), 10(1)(c) and (k) of the
Broadcasting Act, S.C. 1991, c. 11 (Act), are
unconstitutional by virtue of their incompatibility with
paragraph 2(b) of the Charter and, in the case of
section 3 of the Regulations, with classes 13 and 16 of
section 92 of the Constitution Act, 1867 [30 & 31
Vict., c. 3 (U.K.) (as am. by Canada Act 1982, 1982,
c. 11 (U.K.), Schedule to the Constitution Act, 1982,
Item 1) [R.S.C., 1985, Appendix II, No. 5]].
[6]The constitutional invalidity under the Charter is
alleged to lie, first, in the fact that the disputed
provisions unduly, unlawfully and unjustly breach the freedom
of expression guaranteed by the Charter.
[7]Second, these provisions are alleged to be too vague
and imprecise for a person to understand their scope and the
parameters of the obligations they contain--in short, to
enable the person subject to those obligations or
prohibitions to adapt his or her conduct to the standard and
thus comply with it. They are therefore unjust because they
punish the unknown and unforeseeable. They are also
excessively broad, and thereby vulnerable to arbitrary
application.
[8]Although I have managed, to this point, to focus the
discussion around the two major issues defined above, it is
useful nevertheless to indicate for the reader the 11 grounds
of appeal submitted by the appellant in the form of
questions, and authorized by this Court:
Question No. 1
[9]Should CRTC decision 2004-271 [CHOI-FM-- Non-renewal
of licence] (hereinafter identified as decision 271) be
declared of no force and effect by virtue of its
inconsistency with paragraphs 2(b) and 1(b)
(sic) of the Charter, entitling the appellant to an
appropriate and just remedy under subsection 24(1) of the
Charter?
Question No. 2
[10]Does the Act give the CRTC the power to rule on the
content of broadcasting or to act as a censor of the content
of radio broadcasts?
Question No. 3
[11]Accordingly, are section 3, and in particular its
paragraph (b) of the Regulations, the Code of Ethics
imposed by CRTC decision 2002-189 [Short-term licence
renewal for CHOI-FM] and CRTC decision 2004-271, dated
July 13, 2004, of no force and effect?
Question No. 4
[12]In the alternative, is section 3 of the Regulations
unconstitutional by virtue of its incompatibility with
paragraph 2(b) of the Charter and subsections 92(13)
and 92(16) of the Constitution Act, 1867?
Question No. 5
[13]In the further alternative, are paragraphs
3(1)(g), 10(1)(c) and (k) of the Act
unconstitutional by reason of their incompatibility with
paragraph 2(b) of the Charter?
Question No. 6
[14]Did the CRTC violate subsection 5(2) of the Act by
failing to display flexibility in its supervision of
CHOI-FM?
Question No. 7
[15]Did the CRTC issue decision 271 without exercising its
jurisdiction under paragraphs 5(2)(g), 3(1)(d)
and 9(1)(d) of the Act?
Question No. 8
[16]Did the CRTC refuse or fail to exercise its
jurisdiction by way of an order under section 12 of the
Act?
Question No. 9
[17]Did the CRTC refuse or fail to exercise its
jurisdiction by way of a penal proceeding pursuant to
sections 32 and 33 of the Act?
Question No. 10
[18]Has the CRTC mistakenly and absurdly interpreted
paragraph 3(b) of the Regulations prohibiting the
broadcasting of abusive comment?
Question No. 11
[19]Has the CRTC manifestly breached the principles of
natural justice, the rules of procedural fairness and the
CRTC Rules of Procedure [C.R.C., c. 375] before,
during and after the public hearing on the renewal of the
CHOI-FM licence?
Purpose and limitations of the proceeding before the
Court and definition of the issue
[20]In order to dispel any possible ambiguity about this
appeal, it is important to define and explain, from the
outset, the purpose of the proceeding before us, its
governing limitations and the real issue in dispute.
[21]Because the argument, in both the written and oral
submissions, has broadened substantially, I must redefine its
parameters. This is not a matter of mere caprice or an
exercise in evasion. I am impelled to do so, as we will be
able to see, by the purpose of the proceeding at issue, the
nature of the decision that was made and the nature of the
body that made that decision, in this case the CRTC.
[22]The appellant is seeking a number of remedies,
including a declaration that decision 271 of the CRTC, dated
July 13, 2004, is void and of no effect. However, it should
be understood that this CRTC decision is a decision not to
renew the appellant's licence, which has terminated through
the passage of time alone.
[23]As I mentioned at the hearing, the appellant has
functioned throughout the appeal on a judicial respirator as
a result of what amounts in practical terms to a court
licence following from this Court's decision to grant leave
to appeal: see order Genex Communications Inc. v. Canada
(Canadian Radio-Television and Telecommunications
Commission) (2004), 329 N.R. 53 (F.C.A.), in which the
licence granted to the appellant is deemed to remain in force
in order to enable it to exercise usefully its right of
appeal to this Court and pending judgment therein on the
merits. The rendering of the decision on the merits in this
appeal brings the appeal to an end and is tantamount to
disconnecting the respirator, irrespective of whether the
decision is favourable or unfavourable to the appellant.
[24]The appellant is also asking this Court to order the
CRTC to accept its application for a licence renewal for the
period that the Court may wish to determine.
[25]In the alternative, the appellant asked in its written
pleadings that the matter be sent back to the CRTC for a
rehearing on and redetermination of the appellant's renewal
application. This alternative remedy implicitly contains, I
imagine, a request to be reconnected to the judicial
respirator so that the judicial licence be extended to allow
the appellant to operate throughout the redetermination
proceeding.
[26]At the beginning of the hearing the appellant
abandoned this alternative remedy, stating emphatically that
it had completely lost confidence in the CRTC's capacity to
act impartially in its regard, given the memorandum of facts
and law submitted to the Court by the CRTC. It therefore
asked that the Court grant it a broadcasting licence or, in
the alternative, supervise the negotiations it would
undertake with the CRTC and that the Court subsequently
ratify any agreement that was reached. I can only express my
astonishment at this position, according to which the
appellant thinks the CRTC enjoys sufficient neutrality and
credibility to negotiate a licence renewal but not enough of
either to determine whether the licence should be
renewed.
[27]That being said, faced with the lack of enthusiasm for
its proposals, particularly the one pertaining to the
negotiations period, the appellant fell back on its two
original requests, contained in its written pleadings and
which I set out earlier. It says it is prepared to go back to
the CRTC as long as the hearing is held before a panel with a
different composition than the earlier one.
[28]We can find, if the evidence takes us there, that the
CRTC has erred in law or has failed to act fairly or
judicially, or both. If the error in law or the departure
from the principles of natural justice or the standards
governing the exercise of judicial discretion are
sufficiently serious to taint the CRTC decision, we may, at
most, set it aside and order the CRTC to start over and
arrive at a new decision that is not impaired by the
irregularities affecting the previous one. In short, we are
unable to renew the appellant's licence, and there are many
reasons why we are unable or powerless to do so.
[29]In the first place, the power to issue, revoke or
renew a licence has been expressly and exclusively given by
Parliament to the CRTC, the only independent public authority
to which Parliament has entrusted the regulation and
supervision of the Canadian broadcasting system: see
subsection 3(2) of the Act. We cannot appropriate that power
to ourselves.
[30]Secondly, the exercise of this jurisdiction requires
expertise and a knowledge of the communications environment
and programming and broadcasting policies that this Court
does not possess. In Canadian Broadcasting Corp. v.
Métromédia CMR Montréal Inc. (1999),
254 N.R. 266, this Court notes in paragraph 6 that an
application for a licence, which is tantamount to an
application for renewal, "involves economic and cultural
policy considerations which come within the CRTC's expertise
and for which the agency has discretion."
[30]Deuxièmement, l'exercice de cette
compétence fait appel à une expertise ainsi
qu'à une connaissance du milieu des
communications, des politiques de programmation et de
diffusion que la Cour ne possède pas. Dans l'affaire
Société Radio-Canada c.
Métromédia CMR Montréal Inc., [1999]
A.C.F. no 1637 (C.A.) (QL), cette Cour rappelle au
paragraphe 6 qu'une demande d'attribution d'une licence,
laquelle s'apparente à une demande de renouvellement,
« met en cause des éléments de
politique économique et culturelle qui relèvent
de l'expertise du CRTC et à l'égard desquels
l'organisme possède une
discrétion ».
[31]Thirdly, this exercise must take into account the
public interest, which is reflected in the numerous
objectives of the Act and of Canadian broadcasting policy.
Again, the definition of the public interest and the
protection that Parliament wishes to give to it necessitate
specialized knowledge in the area of communications and
broadcasting policy. In this regard, the Court writes at
paragraph 5 of the Canadian Broadcasting Corp.
case:
. . . the Act (s. 3) identifies about forty sometimes
conflicting objectives which must guide the CRTC in
exercising its powers. This leads to a polycentric
adjudication process, involving numerous participants with
opposing interests, with a view to implementing the
broadcasting policy set out in the Act.
[32]Fourthly, the renewal or refusal to renew a licence is
the end result of the exercise of a discretionary power. The
legal rule in such matters is unequivocal: the Court does not
have the power to substitute its own discretion for that of
the authority whose decision is being reviewed. I will return
later and in greater detail to the legal standard of review
of a discretionary decision.
[33]Finally (and I stop at this last reason for I think
that the limitations on the powers of this Court both legally
and in terms of appropriateness are fairly obvious), the CRTC
decision was made at the conclusion of a hearing during which
the appellant and other stakeholders were heard on the merits
and the appropriateness of the renewal. The appeal in this
Court did not and could not address these questions of
appropriateness since the right of appeal of CRTC decisions
is exercised only on questions of law. Section 31 of the Act
limits judicial review of CRTC decisions and orders in the
following words:
31. (1) Except as provided in this Part, every
decision and order of the Commission is final and
conclusive.
(2) An appeal lies from a decision or order of the
Commission to the Federal Court of Appeal on a question of
law or a question of jurisdiction if leave therefor is
obtained from that Court on application made within one month
after the making of the decision or order sought to be
appealed from or within such further time as that Court under
special circumstances allows.
(3) No appeal lies after leave therefor has been obtained
under subsection (2) unless it is entered in the Federal
Court of Appeal within sixty days after the making of the
order granting leave to appeal.
(4) Any document issued by the Commission in the form of a
decision or order shall, if it relates to the issue,
amendment, renewal, revocation or suspension of a licence, be
deemed for the purposes of this section to be a decision or
order of the Commission.
[34]The sole objective of the debate on appeal, which is
much more limited than a debate on the appropriateness of a
licence renewal, is to verify whether the CRTC erred in law
in its analysis of the appellant's application for a renewal
of its licence and in the exercise of its discretion while
doing so.
[35]Simply stated, the most the appellant can hope for is
that we will order a new hearing before the CRTC. So that is
an initial limit on the remedy that can be sought. But there
is another limit, just as important, regarding the appeal
itself.
[36]This appeal is doubtless an important one for the
appellant, its listeners and the communications milieu in
general, for a host of reasons. But we should not lose sight
of the purpose of the appeal. It must be clearly understood
that this appeal, contrary to the apparent belief and desire
of the appellant, does not give rise directly or in general
to a comprehensive debate over freedom of expression. The
issue is, and remains, whether the CRTC's discretionary
decision not to renew the appellant's licence was made
judicially and in compliance with the rules of natural
justice, the standards of procedural fairness and its own
procedures.
[37]A discretionary power is exercised judicially when the
holder of that power acts in good faith, in accordance with
the law, does not take into account irrelevant factors and
does not fail to consider relevant factors: see Canada
(Attorney General) v. Purcell, [1996] 1 F.C. 644
(C.A.).
[38]The rules of natural justice or standards of
procedural fairness are breached when a party before a
tribunal or administrative agency, whose interests will be
affected by the decision that is to be made, is deprived of
the right to be heard by an impartial and independent
tribunal.
[39]Freedom of expression is, of course, a relevant
consideration in the CRTC's exercise of its discretion. In
fact, subsection 2(3) of the Act, which I reproduce, states
that the Act is to be construed and applied in a manner that
is consistent with freedom of expression:
2. . . .
(3) This Act shall be construed and applied in a manner
that is consistent with the freedom of expression and
journalistic, creative and programming independence enjoyed
by broadcasting undertakings.
But, I agree, it is one important factor among others, all
equally objective, that must be taken into account.
[40]Among these other factors, we will note in
particular:
(a) The notices and warnings given to the appellant to
comply with the Act, the Regulations and its conditions of
licence;
(b) The appellant's reaction to these notices and the
efforts made to bring about remedial action;
(c) Compliance with the undertakings made under the Act,
the appellant's own Code of Ethics and the Regulations;
(d) The steps taken by the appellant to control and
discipline its staff, for which it is responsible;
(e) The nature and gravity of the actions that were taken
and of the comments that gave rise to the complaints;
(f) Their frequency and repetition;
(g) The deliberate, intentional or grossly negligent
nature of the alleged breaches;
(h) The appellant's acceptance of its statutory and
regulatory responsibilities as a licensee and the cooperation
offered and provided to the CRTC to comply with the
prescriptive framework;
(i) The appellant's cavalier or defiant attitude, if
applicable;
(j) The appellant's structural organization, as this
organization may influence the willingness and capacity to
take the appropriate remedial action; and
(k) The effectiveness of the alternatives to non-renewal
that were or could be used by the CRTC.
[41]The very object of the CRTC's exercise of its
discretionary power, i.e. the appropriateness in the
circumstances of renewing the appellant's licence, defines
the parameters of the appeal before us, which cannot be
transformed into a crusade for freedom of expression without
substantially distorting it.
[42]A third limit should also be noted: the CRTC's
decision will not necessarily be set aside because one or
more errors of law may have been committed by it in its
exercise of the powers given to it under the Act. Those
errors must, at a minimum, be material, that is they must
have had an impact on the making of the decision and on the
decision that was made. An error is material if the decision
that was made would probably have differed absent that error
or, in the context of applying the reasonableness standard,
if those errors affect the decision as a whole: see Law
Society of New Brunswick v. Ryan, [2003] 1 S.C.R. 247, at
page 270. Otherwise, the decision must be upheld. I will have
the occasion to return to this question later when I discuss
the standard of review that is applicable to a review on
appeal of a decision of the CRTC.
[43]Finally--and this is an extremely important
consideration, as we will see later--the appeal before us is
not challenging a CRTC decision that deprives or strips the
appellant of a right. The appeal has to do with a decision
not to renew a privilege that had been granted to the
appellant. The obtaining or exercise of a privilege is
generally accompanied by conditions with which the licensee
undertakes to comply subject to penalties for non-compliance,
including possible non-renewal or loss of the privilege. In
other words, the appellant not only has no right to a
broadcasting licence, it also has no vested interest in the
fixed-term privilege that was granted to it: see Procureur
général du Canada v. Compagnie de Publication
La Presse, Ltée (La), [1967] S.C.R. 60, where the
Court writes [at page 76]: "there was no contractual
relationship between the Crown and respondent, and the latter
had no vested or property right in the licence which it
held."
[44]However, I hasten to add that while the appellant has
no entitlement to the renewal of the privilege that was
granted, it is entitled not to be deprived of it arbitrarily
or unfairly. "The fact that a decision is administrative and
affects `the rights, privileges or interests of an
individual' is sufficient to trigger the application of the
duty of fairness": Baker v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), [1999] 2 S.C.R. 817, at
paragraph 20. The existence of this right conditions and
structures the analysis of the appellant's recriminations
against the CRTC's decision not to renew its licence.
[45]In conclusion, the real issue in this appeal proves to
be much more concise and limited than it appears to be at
first sight, and certainly much more limited than the
questions that were proposed for our consideration by the
appellant. It comes down to this: did the CRTC exercise its
discretion judicially, in compliance with the rules of
natural justice, the standards of procedural fairness and its
own rules of procedure when it decided not to renew the
appellant's licence? I have added, in the formulation of the
question, compliance with the rules of natural justice, the
standards of procedural fairness and the rules of procedure
although this was not really necessary. To exercise a
discretionary power in breach of those principles, standards
and rules means not acting in accordance with the law and
therefore judicially. However, since the appellant has made
these three questions distinct grounds of appeal, I will
address them together, but separately from the question of
the judicial exercise of the discretion.
[46]This leads me to a discussion of the standard of
review applicable to the appeal of this decision.
Applicable standard of review on an appeal in review of
the CRTC's decision not to renew the appellant's
licence
[47]The appellant alleges that the CRTC decision is
unconstitutional or, if it is not, that it is vitiated by
intra-jurisdictional errors of law. In view of these
allegations, the analysis of the CRTC decision calls for two
distinct standards of review, one constitutional, the other
administrative. I will begin with the latter.
1. Identification of the standard of review applicable
to intra-jurisdictional errors of the CRTC
[48]In the Canadian Broadcasting Corp. case, this
Court recognized in these words the need to show a great deal
of deference toward decisions of the CRTC [at paragraphs
2-6]:
The CRTC is a specialized, independent agency to which,
precisely because of its expertise, Parliament has granted
extensive powers for the supervision and regulation of the
Canadian broadcasting system to allow it to implement the
broadcasting policy set out in section 3 of the
Broadcasting Act, S.C. 1991, c. 11. It is settled that
the CRTC has broad discretion in exercising its powers to
issue or revoke licences.
Although CRTC decisions are not protected by a privative
clause, the fact remains that the courts which are called
upon to review these decisions must show a great deal of
deference when the agency is acting within its field of
expertise and specialized knowledge, it is required under the
objectives of the Act which governs it to find a delicate
balance between the competing interests of the parties and it
rules on a question of fact related to its expertise. In our
view, these three factors are present in the decision
challenged by the appellant and it merits the required
deference on our part.
First, the application submitted to the CRTC concerns the
use of a radio frequency which falls under the powers of
supervision and regulation which Parliament has granted to
the CRTC (s. 5 of the Act) and for which the CRTC may issue
licences (s. 9 of the Act).
Second, the Act (s. 3) identifies about forty sometimes
conflicting objectives which must guide the CRTC in
exercising its powers. This leads to a polycentric
adjudication process, involving numerous participants with
opposing interests, with a view to implementing the
broadcasting policy set out in the Act.
Finally, the CRTC's decision concerns an application for a
licence which essentially involves economic and cultural
policy considerations which come within the CRTC's expertise
and for which the agency has discretion. [Footnotes
omitted.]
The situation is no different in the case of licence
renewals, which call for analogous if not identical
considerations.
[49]The need for great deference toward the CRTC exists
even where there is a right of appeal. In British Columbia
Telephone Co. v. Shaw Cable Systems (B.C.) Ltd., [1995] 2
S.C.R. 739, the Supreme Court notes the principle at
paragraphs 30-31:
The case at hand concerns a specialized administrative
tribunal, the CRTC, which possesses considerable expertise
over the subject matter of its jurisdiction. However,
despite the expertise of the CRTC, its decision in the case
at hand is not protected by a privative clause and is, in
fact, subject to an express statutory right of appeal.
Nonetheless, it was clearly established in both Pezim,
supra, and Bell Canada v. Canada (Canadian
Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission),
[1989] 1 S.C.R. 1722, that a specialized tribunal such as the
CRTC, acting within its area of expertise and
jurisdiction, is entitled to curial deference, even in the
absence of a privative clause and the presence of a statutory
right of appeal.
. . .
Accordingly, I conclude that the CRTC is entitled to
curial deference with respect to questions of law within its
area of jurisdiction and expertise. However, as regards
jurisdictional questions and questions of law outside the
CRTC's area of expertise, the CRTC is entitled to no
deference and is to be reviewed on a standard of
correctness. [Emphasis added.]
[50]The standard of review remains the same, whether the
review of the CRTC decisions is conducted by way of an
application for judicial review under section 28 [as am. by
S.C. 2002, c. 8, s. 35] of the Federal Courts Act [s.
1 (as am. idem, s. 14)] or by way of appeal under
section 31 of the Act.
[51]For example, in Dr. Q v. College of Physicians and
Surgeons of British Columbia, [2003] 1 S.C.R. 226, the
Supreme Court of Canada was confronted with the postulate
that it was unnecessary to apply the usual principles of
administrative law regarding the standards of review when, as
in that case, a right of appeal is allowed from a decision by
a tribunal or administrative agency.
[52]After rejecting this postulate as erroneous, the
Supreme Court writes, at paragraph 21:
In a case of judicial review such as this, the Court
applies the pragmatic and functional approach that was
established by this Court in U.E.S., Local 298 v.
Bibeault, [1988] 2 S.C.R. 1048, and gained ascendancy in
Canada (Director of Investigation and Research) v. Southam
Inc., [1997] 1 S.C.R. 748, and Pushpanathan v. Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [1998] 1
S.C.R. 982. The term "judicial review" embraces review of
administrative decisions by way of both application for
judicial review and statutory rights of appeal. In every
case where a statute delegates power to an administrative
decision-maker, the reviewing judge must begin by determining
the standard of review on the pragmatic and functional
approach. [Emphasis added.]
[53]Obviously, it is not necessary to try to reinvent the
wheel by devoting oneself to an exhaustive pragmatic and
functional approach whenever the applicable standard of
review is raised, if that standard has already been
determined: see VIA Rail Canada Inc. v. Cairns, [2005]
1 F.C.R. 205 (F.C.A.).
[54]The decision whether or not to renew a broadcasting
licence involves a question of appropriateness. It is a
discretionary decision on a matter that lies at the very
heart of the CRTC's expertise. Furthermore, questions of law
that pertain to its area of competence and expertise must be
reviewed according to the reasonableness standard. In other
words, the Court cannot intervene in regard to such a
question unless the resulting conclusion or decision is at
least unreasonable. I repeat that the very question of the
appropriateness of renewing the appellant's licence and the
merits of the CRTC's decision in this regard are not
questions that are before us on this appeal. Other than the
allegation that the final and discretionary decision of the
CRTC not to renew the licence is invalid because it is
unconstitutional, the appeal has to do with errors of law
that were allegedly committed in the process leading to that
decision. These are questions of law that we must analyze on
the basis of a standard of review that bears exclusively on
questions of law: see Star Choice Television Network Inc.
v. Canada (Customs and Revenue Agency), 2004 FCA 153, at
paragraph 6.
2. Identification of the standard of review applicable
to the constitutional validity of the CRTC decision
[55]The appellant submits that the CRTC's decision is void
or invalid because it conflicts with or violates the
prescriptions of the Charter. Absent a power expressly or by
necessary implication conferred by law to infringe a
protected right, I think there is no dispute that a
discretionary decision by the CRTC cannot be contrary to the
Charter: see Slaight Communications Inc. v. Davidson,
[1989] 1 S.C.R. 1038. In this case the discretionary power is
conferred by paragraphs 9(1)(b) and (d) of the
Act, which read:
9. (1) Subject to this Part, the Commission may,
in furtherance of its objects,
. . .
(b) issue licences for such terms not exceeding
seven years and subject to such conditions related to the
circumstances of the licensee
(i) as the Commission deems appropriate for the
implementation of the broadcasting policy set out in
subsection 3(1), and
(ii) in the case of licences issued to the Corporation, as
the Commission deems consistent with the provision, through
the Corporation, of the programming contemplated by
paragraphs 3(1)(l) and (m);
. . .
(d) issue renewals of licences for such
terms not exceeding seven years and subject to such
conditions as comply with paragraph
(b); [Emphasis added.]
These paragraphs expressly authorize the CRTC to determine
the conditions that it deems appropriate for the
implementation of Canadian broadcasting policy. Considered in
isolation, it is not immediately apparent that they infringe
or authorize the infringement of freedom of expression since,
as mentioned earlier, the appellant has no inherent right to
be given a broadcasting licence and it is not obvious that
its freedom of expression is breached if, in compliance with
the law, its licence is not renewed. However, when read
bearing in mind other provisions of the Act and the
Regulations, which the CRTC must take into consideration in
the exercise of its discretionary power, as we will see
later, it seems quite clear that these paragraphs give the
CRTC the power to infringe freedom of expression by
establishing restrictive licence conditions. So how and
according to what standard is the validity of such a decision
to be reviewed?
[56]In Slaight Communications Inc., Mr. Justice
Lamer [as he then was], at page 1080, suggests an approach
that varies according to whether or not the infringement of a
Charter right is authorized by a statute that, either
expressly or by necessary implication, confers the power to
infringe that protected right. Where such power is conferred,
it is then necessary to submit the text of the provision to
the test set out in section 1 of the Charter by ascertaining
whether it constitutes a reasonable limit that can be
demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society.
[57]However, where the legal provision on which the
impugned decision is based confers an imprecise discretion
and does not, either expressly or by necessary implication,
provide the authority to limit the rights guaranteed by the
Charter, it is the decision itself that must be submitted to
the section 1 test. If the decision does not meet this test,
it must be concluded that the administrative tribunal has
exceeded its jurisdiction. Conversely, if it is justified
under the section 1 criteria, the tribunal has acted within
the limits of its jurisdiction.
[58]In the case at bar, we are dealing with statutory
provisions, in particular section 3 of the Act and paragraph
3(b) of the Regulations, which, for the purpose of
implementing Canadian broadcasting policy while protecting
other fundamental rights guaranteed by the Charter, give the
CRTC the power to infringe freedom of expression. These
statutory provisions lay down restrictive parameters to
ensure that the content broadcast over publicly owned radio
frequencies is not incompatible with, for example, the right
to privacy, human dignity and reputation, or does not
infringe them outright.
[59]In exercising its discretion not to renew the
appellant's licence, the CRTC had to take into account
statutory and regulatory restrictions on the exercise of
freedom of expression over publicly owned radio frequencies.
In doing so, it exercised its jurisdiction within the limits
prescribed by the Act and the Regulations. I take the liberty
of quoting (with the necessary adaptations, i.e. replacing
the word "adjudicator" with "CRTC") the following extract
from Lamer J. in Slaight Communications Inc., at pages
1080-1081, which, I think, accurately summarizes what
occurred in the instant case both factually and legally:
The [CRTC] derives all [its] powers from statute and can
only do what [it] is allowed by statute to do. It is the
legislative provision conferring discretion which limits the
right or freedom, since it is what authorizes the holder of
such discretion to make an order the effect of which is to
place limits on the rights and freedoms mentioned in the
Charter. The order made by the [CRTC] is only an
exercise of the discretion conferred on [it] by statute.
[60]Since the CRTC was simply exercising the discretion
conferred on it by the Act, the control that this Court may
exercise in the course of its review consists in examining
the manner in which that discretion was exercised. More
specifically, since the provision conferring discretion
limited freedom of expression, the task is to ensure that
"the use made of the discretion has the effect of keeping the
limitation within reasonable limits that can be demonstrably
justified in a free and democratic society": Slaight
Communications Inc., at page 1081. In other words, our
task is to ascertain that the exercise of the discretion does
not go beyond what the statutory provision may
constitutionally limit without itself infringing the limits
of section 1 of the Charter.
Status and role of the CRTC in the present appeal
proceedings
[61]Before reciting the facts at the source of this
litigation and analyzing the grounds of appeal, something
should be said about the CRTC's status in these proceedings,
what the appellant has called the locus standi of the
CRTC. This question of locus standi involves the
CRTC's right to participate in the proceedings and its role
in doing so.
[62]In judicial review proceedings, section 303 of the
Federal Courts Rules [SOR/98-106, s. 1 (as am. by
SOR/2004-283, s. 2)] stipulates that an applicant shall name
as a respondent every person affected by the order sought in
the application, other than a tribunal in respect of which
the application is brought. If these proceedings were by way
of judicial review rather than by way of appeal, as is the
case, it is clear that the CRTC would not be a respondent.
However, it could request status as an intervener in the
proceedings: see section 109 of the Rules. The legal
situation does not differ on an appeal. However, it is
arrived at by a different route.
[63]In fact, the status of the parties to an appeal is
governed by section 338 of the Rules. Under that section, an
appellant shall include as a respondent every party in the
first instance who is adverse in interest to the appellant in
the appeal. Section 2 of the Rules defines a party in the
first instance in an action as a plaintiff, defendant or
third party. In the case of an application, such as an
application for judicial review, the word "party" refers to
an applicant or respondent.
[64]In the application for renewal of the appellant's
licence before the CRTC, the latter was not a party in this
first instance; it was the adjudicative body. Furthermore, it
is not a person who, in the appeal, has interests adverse to
those of the appellant. In fact, the appellant should not
have made the CRTC a respondent in its proceedings. The
appellant no doubt mistakenly thought it was necessary to
make it a party to the appeal in order to ensure that all
matters in dispute in the proceeding could be effectually and
completely determined. That is the test laid down in section
104 of the Rules in order to obtain from the Court an order
either to add a party to the proceeding or to remove it.
Furthermore, the appellant probably thought that it was
necessary to name the CRTC as a party, given the injunctive
nature of the conclusion it was seeking against it, i.e. that
this Court order it to issue a licence to the appellant.
[65]Irrespective of the reasons that led the appellant to
name the CRTC as respondent on appeal, this act was a source
of confusion since, as a general rule, the rights of a
respondent on appeal are different from and much more
extensive than those of an intervener. Failing a statutory
exemption, as in the case of the Canada Industrial Relations
Board (see subsection 22(1.1) [as enacted by S.C. 1998, c.
26, s. 9] of the Canada Labour Code, R.S.C., 1985, c.
L-2), a body whose decision is attacked is not entitled to
appear in the appeal or review proceedings. Were it not for
the fact that it was implicated as a party to the appeal by
the appellant, the CRTC would have had to make a motion for
leave to intervene under section 109 of the Rules. Its status
would then have been clear and spelled out in the order
authorizing it to intervene, as was the case for the
interveners Cogeco Diffusion Inc., the Canadian Association
of Broadcasters, the Association québécoise de
l'industrie du disque, du spectacle et de la vidéo and
the Canadian Civil Liberties Association.
[66]Whether in judicial review or appeal proceedings, the
federal agency that made a decision is not authorized to come
and defend the decision it made, still less to justify
itself. As Mr. Justice Estey said in Northwestern
Utilities Ltd. et al. v. City of Edmonton, [1979] 1
S.C.R. 684, at page 709 (where the agency had presented on
appeal detailed and elaborate arguments in support of its
decision), "[s]uch active and even aggressive participation
can have no other effect than to discredit the impartiality
of an administrative tribunal either in the case where the
matter is referred back to it, or in future proceedings
involving similar interests and issues or the same parties."
The agency is entitled to be represented on appeal, but its
submissions must in principle be limited to an explanation of
its jurisdiction, its procedures and the way in which they
unfolded.
[67]Although the CRTC had the status of a respondent in
the proceedings, this Court has at all times considered it as
an intervener. At the hearing, at the request of the
appellant and with the concurrence of the CRTC's counsel, we
accordingly agreed to limit the CRTC's interventions to an
objective description of its jurisdiction, the regulatory
framework in which it operates, its procedure and the facts
indicating how the proceeding before it had unfolded.
Facts and proceedings
[68]The CRTC's decision not to renew the appellant's
licence is based on a set of facts and circumstances the
genesis of which should be indicated.
[69]Because of interference that could make the radio
broadcasting system cacophonous, not to say unworkable and
useless, the number of broadcasting frequencies in the
Québec City region is limited to 12. The shortage of
frequencies is a physical phenomenon to which no radio
broadcasting system is at this point immune. The
Québec City region is no exception to this rule.
[70]Due to the shortage of frequencies and the importance
of communications, the government intervened early on during
the development of communications to give broadcasting
systems the characteristics of both public property and an
essential service. A procedure for supervising the use and
allocation of this limited resource was therefore established
in the collective interest.
[71]The CRTC, which came into being in 1968 through the
Broadcasting Act, S.C. 1967-68, c. 25, as a successor
to a series of regulatory agencies, was given the
responsibility of implementing the broadcasting policy for
Canada. Section 2 of the Act stated, for example, that radio
frequencies are public property, that broadcasting
undertakings have a responsibility for the programs that they
broadcast, that the programming provided by each broadcaster
should be of high standard, and that the objectives of the
broadcasting policy for Canada can best be achieved by
providing for the regulation and supervision of the system by
"a single independent public authority." These pronouncements
are found in the Act.
[72]This independent authority, the CRTC, was required by
section 15 to regulate and supervise all aspects of the
Canadian broadcasting system. Thus, in the performance of its
duty of supervision and regulation, it was given exclusive
power by Parliament to issue licences, to make regulations
respecting standards of programs and advertising, to define
the classes of persons who could be allowed to hold
broadcasting licences and to prescribe the conditions for the
operation of broadcasting stations as part of a network and
the conditions for the broadcasting of network programs: see
section 16 of the Act and paragraphs 66 and 116-118 of the
affidavit of Mr. Pierre Trudel.
[73]The broadcasting policy enunciated by the Act was also
addressed to a number of issues of public interest including
the language of broadcasting, the need for a national public
broadcasting service, diversity and quality of programming,
and recognition and supervision of broadcasting undertakings,
to mention only a few of these issues.
[74]It was in this essential and inevitable prescriptive
context that the appellant was awarded a broadcasting
licence, in February 1997, after acquiring the assets of the
radio programming undertaking CHOI-FM Québec, owned by
Les Entreprises de Radiodiffusion de la Capitale Inc. (see
CRTC decision 97-86 [Acquisition of assets], dated
February 27, 1997). This decision allowed it to operate a
French-language FM radio station with commercial programming
(CHOI-FM). It was an exclusive-use licence on FM frequency
98.1.
[75]The licence had a limited duration: it expired on
August 31, 2002, but it could be renewed on application,
which the appellant did. It was also subject to some
conditions, including compliance with the guidelines on the
non-sexist representation of individuals set out in the
"Sex-Role Portrayal Code for Television and Radio
Programming" of the Canadian Association of Broadcasters
(CAB). The appellant was also to comply with the provisions
of the "Broadcast Code for Advertising to Children". This
Code was published by the CAB.
[76]The appellant's operation under this initial licence
was not without problems. From 1999 to December 2001, 47
complaints had been brought against the appellant by the
public concerning its programming on CHOI-FM. The
subject-matter of the complaints was consistent: making
comments considered by the complainants to be offensive,
sexist, aggressive, surly, degrading, discriminatory,
harassing and hateful and contemptuous, holding offensive
contests and making on-air personal attacks against
individuals and groups.
[77]In 2002, the CRTC held a public hearing on the
appellant's application for a renewal of its licence. A
Notice of Public Hearing was sent to the appellant informing
it that the CRTC was concerned by the numerous complaints
received, the apparent failure to comply and the content of
the spoken-word programming in light of the high standard
objective stipulated in the Act. This notice of Public
hearing CRTC 2001-14, dated December 14, 2001, also informed
the appellant that these issues would be discussed at the
hearing and it was invited to participate in these
discussions.
[78]The appellant was also warned, through this notice, to
show cause at the hearing why an order should not be issued
against it, requiring it to comply with the Regulations to
which it had agreed to submit when applying for a
licence.
[79]As it was required to do, the CRTC, during this public
hearing, reviewed all of the complaints in light of the
objectives of the Act, the undertakings made by the appellant
and the programming authorized by its licence. In doing so,
it was complying with the Act and the decision of this Court
in Arthur v. Canada (Attorney General) (2001), 283
N.R. 346, at paragraph 27, where the following passage
describes the role and responsibility of the CRTC when
confronted with complaints brought against a licensee:
In fact, it is inevitable that, in the licence renewal
context, the CRTC will be sensitive to the public's
complaints and to the licensee's reaction to those complaints
that allege an abuse of rights. The CRTC would not be playing
its role and would be abdicating its responsibilities if it
were indifferent to the public interest or to allegations
that a licensee is compromising the public interest by its
deeds and actions or its excessive passivity or tolerance. In
this context of a licence renewal in the best interests of
the public, it must be able to report abuses that the public
complains of and to verify whether the licensee has complied
with the Act, the Regulations, its conditions of licence or
any specific undertakings it may have made.
[80]At the conclusion of its review, after having heard
the representations of the appellant, the CRTC said it was
extremely concerned by the remarks that had been broadcast
concerning women, Aboriginal peoples and disabled
persons.
[81]For example, in the context of one discussion, the
host employed by the appellant, Mr. Fillion, compared
disabled children to animals without a conscience or emotion.
Referring to the Latimer case [R. v. Latimer,
[2001] 1 S.C.R. 3], in which a father had put to death his
daughter with disabilities, the host said on air, referring
to the child:
[translation] But in any case, she was just a garbage
can that was spitting shit from both ends and it was costing
a lot to maintain a person like that; basically, that kid
doesn't even know she exists, all she does is eat and
shit! And when you discover a problem with a foetus, you
save the shrimp! [Emphasis added.]
The host added, so he would be understood clearly, that he
meant to say the foetus when referring to the shrimp: see the
transcript of the CRTC hearings, February 20, 2002, volume 3,
pages 652-654. The content of the remarks was such that the
CRTC considered them offensive and inciting to hatred and
contempt.
[82]At paragraph 60 of his memorandum of facts and law,
the CRTC's counsel recounts in these words a finding made by
the CRTC in relation to some broadcast comments that were
said to be in contravention of the Sex-Role Portrayal Code.
This finding is located at paragraph 29 of CRTC decision
2002-189:
The Commission finds that some of the remarks referred to
in the complaints and found during the Commission's analyses
violate the Sex-role Portrayal Code and therefore
constitute a breach of CHOI-FM's condition of licence. The
Commission notes in particular the complaints about women
being reduced to sex objects by the host regularly inquiring
about their weight and the size of their chest, the
complaints about fellatio and sex contests, and the very
graphic descriptions of pornographic images the host
allegedly found on the Internet.
[83]The appellant admitted that the remarks did not comply
with the Sex-role Portrayal Code's guidelines and undertook
to refrain from airing offensive or degrading sexual
contests: ibid.
[84]Finally, the CRTC said it had "serious reservations
about the flagrant failures to meet the objective of high
standard programming as evidenced by the remarks made on air
at CHOI-FM, many of which the licensee also acknowledged
during the hearing."
[85]The appellant's first licence renewal application led
on July 16, 2002 to a renewal for a limited duration of 24
months, accompanied by a number of special conditions. One of
these conditions was that the appellant would comply with the
Code of Ethics it had proposed in order to provide clearer
guidelines for the spoken-word content of its programming and
the work of its hosts and producers. Compliance with the
principles contained in this Code was imposed as a condition
of renewal and use of the licence. In its decision CRTC
2002-189, the CRTC informed the appellant that it expected
that a copy of what was referred to as the Code of Ethics
would be given to each of the station's program hosts and
producers and to anyone who requested a copy: see the CRTC
compendium in the appeal record, Vol. 1, page 81.
[86]The appellant had also proposed, as a remedy to the
situation, the establishment of an Advisory Committee, which
would examine complaints made against the appellant and
provide opinions concerning the application of the Code of
Ethics. The establishment of such a committee was also
required as a condition of licence.
[87]The CRTC thought that, during the public hearing, it
perceived an intention by the appellant to comply with its
obligations in the future. That is why, after imposing
conditions of licence designed to secure compliance with the
Act and the Regulations, it said it was prepared not to use
its power to issue an order under subsection 12(2) of the Act
or to resort to further enforcement measures in the Act such
as suspension or revocation of the licence.
[88]The CRTC did inform the appellant, however, that if
these conditions of licence, the Act or the Regulations were
breached, it might be called again to a public hearing to
answer for its conduct. This warning met with little
response, to put it mildly.
[89]From September 1, 2002 to January 2004, 45 new
complaints were received concerning the spoken-word content
of the appellant's broadcast programming. Twenty-nine of
these complaints were considered at the public hearing of
February 18, 2004 on the application for renewal of licence
made by the appellant.
[90]Overall, these complaints against the licensee alleged
the making of comments that were defamatory, offensive,
vulgar, blasphemous, malicious, false, discriminatory and
demeaning of individuals. Once again, they complained of
personal attacks. Some of the comments, it appears, were
actual incitements to the commission of offences. All of the
complaints were in relation to the program of Mr. Jeff
Fillion, broadcast Monday to Friday, entitled "Le monde
parallèle de Jeff". This program was aired at peak
listening hours in the morning, from 6:00 to 10:00. During a
segment of about one-half hour, the host, Mr. Fillion, was
joined by another host, Mr. André Arthur, from radio
station CKNU-FM, Donnacona.
[91]It is not my intention to repeat the content of each
complaint. But in order to put the dispute in perspective, I
must refer to some of them. I will do so by reproducing, in
most cases, the comments put in evidence before the CRTC.
[92]One complaint, dated May 8, 2003, concerns the
comments made about psychiatric patients who had been
mistreated in a hospital. At paragraph 49 of the CRTC
decision [2004-271], we can read:
Commenting on a news story about the mistreatment of a
patient in a psychiatric hospital, host Fillion stated the
following on CHOI-FM on 8 May 2003: "[translation] Why
don't they just pull the plug on him? He doesn't deserve to
live. The guy's a freaking burden on society." A few
minutes later, a worker from the treatment centre called the
host and said that the wing in which the serious cases, like
the one being discussed, [were kept] was referred to by staff
as "the zoo." After that call, Mr. Fillion added,
"[translation] What I think they should do in the zoo is
fill up the rooms, and then there'd be a switch, and once
every four months, they press the button and just a little
bit of gas comes out, and then you go in and pick it all up
and put it in bags." [Emphasis added.]
[93]The complaint from Laval University concerned the
following comments made by the co-host, Mr. André
Arthur, on November 3, 2003, on CHOI-FM. They are found at
paragraph 56 of the decision:
[translation] All that aside, we're always saying how
global we are and taking in foreign students in Québec
at the university, especially students from North Africa.
Laval University is one of the biggest universities in
North Africa.
The problem is, people forget that in Africa, in Muslim
countries and countries in Black Africa, the ones who are
sent abroad to study are the sons of people who are
disgusting, the sons of the people who own the country so
that they can govern it better. They're the sons of
plunderers, cannibals who control certain Third World
countries and can afford to send their children to Quebec to
go to school, if it's not outright corruption by companies
that want to get access to natural resources in Africa and
will pay to have the sons of the disgusting people who
govern those countries study in Québec.
But they're still proud in Laval to accept foreign
students. They forget to say that those foreign students,
by definition, with some exceptions, are all children of the
most disgusting political leaders in the world, people who
are sucking their countries dry, people who kill to gain
power and torture to keep it. People we call
cannibals, people who are extremely cruel. [Emphasis
added.]
[94]On November 1, 2002, Mr. Fillion, as host, urged
people in the Saguenay to commit suicide at home instead of
in Québec, by throwing themselves from the
Québec bridge [translation] "because when they get to
the bottom on the pavement, it creates `shit' and we're fed
up with picking up their `shit'."
[95]On the programs on February 18 and 19, 2003, the same
host urged people to pirate Bell ExpressVu signals:
[translation]
February 18, 2003 It's a good thing to pirate Bell
ExpressVu, you show the cable companies and the CRTC. . .
that you are disgusted with being scammed. The message is
loud and clear.
Someone this week was telling us that in Beauce, whenever
you see a Bell ExpressVu antenna, you know that every second
one is pirated. Well, they sell them by the ton. That's one
of the ways you show the CRTC that you are being scammed.
So keep on scamming the system by pirating. Me, I pay
Star Choice, I'm an idiot. I took the wrong system, they
can't be pirated. But those who have Bell ExpressVu,
look, they still haven't understood your heartfelt cry. They
haven't understood that you are fed up with paying for things
you don't want, they haven't understood that we. . . the
basic service we pay for through our taxes, no one listens to
it.
February 19, 2003 Listen, I'm going to tell you again
what I told you yesterday: Keep on scamming the system and
pirating signals, either Vidéotron or Bell
ExpressVu. [Emphasis added.]
[96]The CRTC also upheld a complaint by Cogeco Diffusion
Inc., a radio broadcaster competing with the appellant. It
considered the comments broadcast on CHOI-FM repetitive and
relentless personal attacks and unwarranted insinuations of
grave misconduct against Mr. Gillet, a host employed by
Cogeco, and certain shareholders, executives and employees of
Cogeco, including CJMF-FM's general manager, Mr. Geoff Brown,
and Cogeco Radio-TV's president. These comments, motivated in
the CRTC's view by a spirit of vengeance, went on for several
weeks. Here is an extract, taken from paragraph 79 of the
decision:
[translation] Another question for the executives at
Cogeco, whether it's little Mr. Brown or Mr. Carter, his
Mormon priest boss, or the Audet family, why not ask them
this: since most people in the community know that Robert
[Gillet] has problems, why was he so staunchly defended Did
anyone in the chain of command owe him anything? Did
anyone in the chain of command go on trips with
Robert?
[translation] Look, is there someone at FM 93 who didn't
know that Robert [Gillet] made, and still makes, regular
trips to two of the most popular places for child
prostitution in the world? Namely Thailand, where Robert goes
regularly, and Czechoslovakia, Prague.
[translation] [Mr. Gillet couldn't] get
it up with an adult woman any more?
[translation] Who is protecting Robert
Gillet at FM 93? Is it Brown? Is it Carter? Who at FM 93 is
unable to say no to Robert?
[translation] to tell Geoff Brown: you're good looking,
you're tall, you're great, you smell good, and I don't
notice when you scratch your ass in front of
everyone?
[translation] everyone knows that if Geoff Brown farts
while he's walking down a gravel road, it makes a little puff
of smoke, it makes a little cloud of dust, because his ass is
dragging, you see.
[translation] Should it have come as a surprise to the
people at FM 93? I don't think so. They knew that he [Robert
Gillet] was going to Thailand; they went with him.
[translation] second, Prague is the world capital, the
European capital, for young girl prostitutes. Did the
Québec police or the journalists go to Voyages Paradis
and say, were there FM 93 executives on Robert Gillet's
trips? Were there any other accused?
[translation] And my question to journalists now is, how
come Charles Paradis, who arranged the trips to Prague, was
never asked by other journalists about Robert Gillet's role?
Was Robert bringing in customers? Did he get a commission
when he brought someone in? Did he take anyone there
personally? Did any FM 93 executives go on those trips to
Thailand or Prague? And did any sales representatives or
business managers from FM 93 or Cogeco go on those
trips?
[translation] Oh, I don't know. I think there are personal
connections. I think there are true friendships, but
there's also the fact that there are executives at FM 93 who
went to Thailand with Robert Gillet. I know things are
said . . . that they were allowed to advertise trips to
Prague, with Voyages Paradis on FM 93, trips to the European
capital for young girl prostitutes. I know that Robert was
drumming up business for Voyages Paradis, which was his
job. I don't know, but I ask Québec journalists:
when are you going to do your job? When are you going to go
to FM 93? When are you going to go to Voyages Paradis and
ask, who here went on trips with Robert? But I know that
there were Cogeco executives who went to Thailand with Robert
Gillet. Child prostitution is more widespread in Thailand,
Bangkok, than in any other country in the world.
[Emphasis added.]
[97]The host, Mr. Fillion, asked CHOI-FM listeners on air
for personal information that could identify two female
persons who had participated, with their faces hidden, in a
televised report about an "erotic golf tournament". Once the
necessary information was obtained, he disclosed, on air,
their names and e-mail addresses.
[98]CHOI-FM also organized and held a broadcast
competition inviting people to denounce on air neighbours who
were "disgusting" and did a poor job of maintaining their
property. A family was denounced by some neighbours. CHOI-FM
went to visit this family, while not disclosing to them the
real purpose of its visit. A direct broadcast was made from
there during which, unknown to this family, both the hosts
and some listeners calling the station were ridiculing them
and their way of life.
[99]I will close, finally, by noting the defamatory
remarks broadcast by CHOI-FM about a complainant, Ms. Sophie
Chiasson. These comments resulted in an action for damages
against the appellant, Mr. Patrice Demers, the principal
shareholder and sole director of the appellant, in his
personal capacity, Mr. Fillion, and certain hosts on his
program.
[100]At the civil trial, the defamatory nature of the
comments and consequently the civil wrong giving rise to
civil liability was admitted by all the defendants other than
Mr. Demers. More specifically, they acknowledged that certain
comments were insulting and likely to offend the dignity,
honour and integrity of Ms. Chiasson: see the judgment of the
Superior Court of Québec in Chiasson c.
Fillion, [2005] R.J.Q. 1066. Because of these comments,
they were jointly and severally ordered by the Superior Court
of Quebec to pay $340,000, including $100,000 in "moral"
damages, $200,000 in punitive damages and $40,000 in
out-of-court fees. This judgment has been appealed as to the
amounts awarded.
[101]Here is an extract from the words uttered and from
the licensee's reply to the complainant, as found at
paragraphs 61-63 of the CRTC decision:
The complainant is a television host on the TVA television
network and the two specialty services,
MétéoMédia and Canal Vie. In her
complaint, she alleged that numerous personal attacks were
made against her during the licensee's morning show on 10
September 2002 and 8 October 2002. After listening to the
recordings containing the remarks made by on-air
personalities on 10 and 27 September and 8 October and
reading the stenographic notes, the Commission identified
several remarks about the complainant related to her physical
attributes, and sexual attributes in particular. There are
multiple references to the size of her breasts;
[translation] "her incredible set of boobs" and
suggested that "the size of the brain is not directly
proportional to the size of the bra" and that, "in her case,
it might actually be inversely proportional." The
participants even wondered about the texture of the
complainant's breasts and whether anyone has asked the
gropers about them, and whether they
"[translation] defied gravity." The host
said, "[translation] it's all in the breasts" and that
that pair of breasts "did the job on Alexandre Daigle,"
which is why the host said Daigle chose the complainant over
Sheryl Crow.
The participants also referred to the complainant as
"[translation] a consummate liar," "a cat in heat" and "a
leech on Alexandre Daigle" and "an airhead; it's all
well and good to have big boobs, a tiny waist and a tight
ass, but it doesn't mean a thing," "there are some
seriously sick people at MétéoMédia;"
"the girls that are attractive and look good, are always
idiots" and "an idiot could do the weather." They
also said that the complainant "[translation] had been
around" and that "it happens behind the scenes" and
made a number of remarks which suggested that she used
personal relationships and even sex to land contracts as a
television host.
In response, the licensee alleged that the remarks were
an aside in a program on "showbiz" that it always
treated as comedy, and that since everything was done in a
humorous way that used imagery, the remarks were not
personal attacks. According to the licensee, critiquing
the body and presentation of a weather channel host is
permitted in the context of a public debate because that is
the way the person earns a living, before the public.
[Emphasis added; footnote omitted.]
[102]In relation to the allegation that the complainant
was using her physical attributes to obtain contracts, I
would add that the host had also, during the year 2000,
alluded to the way in which she obtained them. He stated that
during interviews the complainant might, in some cases, go
down on her knees in front of her interlocutors to give them
sexual favours. He then characterized her as "a vacuum
cleaner" and said she was "great at vacuuming": see paragraph
27 of the Superior Court of Quebec judgment in Chiasson c.
Fillion.
[103]It was in this context that the decision not to renew
the appellant's licence was made on July 13, 2004. Leave to
appeal that decision was granted on August 26, 2004 and the
appeal was heard from May 24 to 27, 2005 [Genex
Communications Inc. v. Canada (Attorney General) (2005),
338 N.R. 268 (F.C.A.)].
CRTC decision 2004-271
[104]The CRTC decision is substantial and well documented.
It contains 144 paragraphs. I have no intention of repeating
it other than to reproduce the findings, identify the factors
the CRTC considered in the exercise of its judicial
discretion not to renew the operating licence, and describe
the process it followed in reaching that conclusion.
1. Factors considered by the CRTC in the exercise of
its judicial discretion
[105]As its duties require, the CRTC, for the purposes of
the renewal application, considered the statutory and
regulatory framework and the conditions of licence governing
the appellant's use of its licence. To that end, it referred
to subsections 5(1) (CRTC's duty of regulation and
supervision), 3(1) (policy and objects of the Canadian
broadcasting system), 2(3) (construction and application of
the Act in a manner that is consistent with freedom of
expression), 3(2) (the singularity of the Canadian
broadcasting system), 9(1) (its powers to issue, suspend,
revoke and renew licences), and 10(1) of the Act (its power
to set standards for programs and to take such other steps as
it deems necessary for the furtherance of its objects) of the
Act and paragraph 3(b) of the Regulations (prohibition
on any abusive comment that is likely to expose an individual
or a group or class of individuals to hatred or contempt on
the basis of race, national or ethnic origin, colour,
religion, sex, sexual orientation, age or mental or physical
disability).
[106]The CRTC also recognized the need to establish and
maintain a balance between freedom of expression and the
other values mentioned in the Charter and its enabling
legislation: see paragraphs 27-39 of the decision. It
referred to the freedom of expression in paragraph
2(b) of the Charter and to section 15 of the Charter,
which grants the right to equality without discrimination on
the enumerated grounds. It also considered section 27 of that
document, which requires that the Charter, including
therefore freedom of expression, be interpreted in a manner
consistent with the preservation and enhancement of the
multicultural heritage of Canadians. Finally, it also drew on
the values that are acknowledged in section 1, which provides
that the fundamental rights in the Charter may be limited by
law. The values that are relevant and important in these
proceedings are the protection of human dignity, physical and
psychological integrity, privacy, honour and reputation.
[107]The CRTC spent some considerable time on the
complaints received and the contextual explanations provided
by the appellant for the comments made and criticized. It
analyzed them in light of the Act, the Regulations and the
appellant's Code of Ethics, compliance with which, we repeat,
was a condition of CHOI-FM's operating licence.
[108]It also took note of a decision made by the Canadian
Broadcast Standards Council (CBSC) on July 17, 2003
[CHOI-FM re Le monde parallèle de Jeff Fillion,
[2003] C.B.S.C.D. No. 21 (QL)], in which the CBSC concluded
that the appellant had acted in violation of paragraph
9(c) of the CAB Code of Ethics. The CBSC had found
that the expressions "conceited asshole", "that worthless
piece of trash", a "loser", a "piece of vomit", a "shit
disturber" and a "tree with rotten roots" used to describe a
competitor were coarse, injurious and offensive and thus in
violation of the requirements of the Code of Ethics. The
appellant said it disagreed with this conclusion of the CBSC:
see paragraphs 102-104 of the decision.
[109]The CRTC continued its analysis of the situation by
examining the appellant's responsibility as a person licensed
to carry on broadcasting undertakings. Under paragraph
3(1)(h) of the Act, the appellant has a responsibility
for the programs it broadcasts. The CRTC compiled the
explanations of the appellant, which, in relation to the
broadcast in which listeners were urged to pirate Bell
ExpressVu's signals, amounted to saying that this was not
what the host had intended to say. It also examined this
responsibility in light of the obligations imposed by the Act
and the Regulations, as it had done for obligations under the
Charter: see paragraphs 105- 110 of the decision.
[110]Finally, the CRTC discussed the record of the
remedial measures imposed in the past and not complied with,
the importance and frequency of the repeat offences and the
appellant's conduct at the hearing when it argued that the
comments made were appropriate and justified. It also
reviewed the remedial measures proposed by the appellant in
order to guarantee greater control over its hosts and the
spoken-word content of the programs. Some of these proposed
measures would dilute the requirements of its Code of Ethics
and reduce its obligations: see paragraphs 111-124 of the
decision.
2. CRTC's conclusions
[111]To facilitate understanding of the discussion of
certain grounds of appeal, I reproduce in full the CRTC's
conclusions, which appear at paragraphs 125- 142 of the
decision:
The spoken-word content aired on CHOI-FM since its
licence was last renewed in 2002, together with the
licensee's conduct with respect to its regulatory
obligations during the licence term, and throughout this
current proceeding to renew its broadcasting licence,
leave the Commission with few options.
The Commission notes that it took measures to give Genex
numerous warnings of the possible consequences of its
actions. Firm, unequivocal notices of regulatory measures
that might be taken were included in Notice of Public Hearing
2001-14. In Decision 2002-189, the Commission renewed
CHOI-FM's licence for only two years, far short of the
maximum seven-year term allowed under the Act. The Commission
stated that it was deeply concerned about the licensee's
repeated failure to comply with the Act, the Regulations and
its conditions of licence. The Commission added that, during
the two-year renewal period, it would closely monitor the
licensee's fulfilment of its obligations, in particular its
compliance with the Code of Ethics, which was appended to
Decision 2002-189 as a condition of licence. As noted
earlier, the Commission warned Genex that if it committed
further breaches, the Commission might call it to a public
hearing to show cause why it should not issue a mandatory
order or apply any of its enforcement measures, including
revocation or suspension of CHOI-FM's licence.
After receiving a large number of complaints in the
first 17 months of the short renewal period established
in Decision 2002-189, and observing new apparent failures to
comply regarding the spoken-word content broadcast by
CHOI-FM, the Commission decided to call Genex to the public
hearing held in Québec in February 2004. In Notice of
Public Hearing 2003-11, the Commission again warned the
licensee that it would have to show cause at the hearing why
the Commission should not issue a mandatory order or suspend
or refuse to renew CHOI-FM's licence.
The Commission also notes that, in the correspondence with
Genex during the current licence term, there were several
apparent failures to comply and the licensee was warned,
that, in keeping with the Commission's long-standing practice
for handling complaints, Genex should be prepared to discuss
the complaints at the hearing.
The Commission notes that the spoken-word content, that
was the subject of the complaints received, does not reflect
isolated incidents, but appears to be part of a pattern of
behaviour by the licensee that continued and even grew worse,
over the course of two consecutive licence terms despite
clear, unequivocal warnings from the Commission, the CBSC and
even, on occasion, its own advisory committee.
After a comprehensive review of the licence renewal file
and all of the circumstances surrounding the programs that
gave rise to the complaints, the Commission concludes that
the remarks made on CHOI-FM during the morning show
constituted new serious, repeated failures to comply with the
Act, the Regulations and one of the licensee's conditions of
licence.
The Commission also cannot rely on the licensee's good
will to implement other proposed measures, such as adherence
to the revised Code of Ethics, some of the requirements of
which it proposed to dilute, or a delay mechanism, which
the licensee itself considered would not be effective.
The Commission notes that, barely a month after the
release of Decision 2002-189, in which the Commission
expressed serious concerns and warned the licensee that new
violations could lead to its licence being suspended or
revoked, Genex signed an agreement with Mr. André
Arthur to have him co-host CHOI-FM's daily morning show. This
decision by Mr. Demers was discussed on CHOI-FM on 16 August
2002. Asked to explain Genex's actions, Mr. Demers
specifically stated on air on CHOI-FM:
[translation] I think that the ratings that André
Arthur has drawn through his career and the ratings that CHOI
generates are what really count.
The Commission considers that all of the above calls
into question the credibility of Genex and its controlling
shareholder, sole director and chief executive officer, Mr.
Patrice Demers, regarding Genex's ability to understand and
exercise its responsibilities under the Act as the holder of
a broadcasting licence. The seriousness and frequency of the
violations noted, the fact that they were not first
violations, the licensee's general attitude of denial, and
the stall tactics that the licensee used in dealing with
complaints throughout the current licence term have persuaded
the Commission that Genex does not accept its regulatory
obligations and is not committed to meeting them.
The Commission has reviewed the various measures it could
adopt to ensure that broadcasting licensees meet their
obligations where it finds that they are in repeated
non-compliance. Those measures range from a short-term
licence renewal, to the issuance of a mandatory order, to the
suspension, revocation or non-renewal of the licence. The
latter measures are rarely used, and in the Commission's
view, should generally be confined to cases where it is
satisfied that none of the other available measures would be
effective.
When questioned at the hearing about the additional
measures the Commission might take to ensure that Genex
fulfils its obligations in the future, Genex maintained that
it had done everything it could and that the corrective
measures it had put in place or proposed were sufficient. As
to the prospect of a mandatory order, the licensee stated,
"[translation] whether you issue a mandatory order or not
won't change our view of the equation, which is that we're
making every effort to comply with our conditions of
licence."
The Commission notes that the only purpose for issuing a
mandatory order would be to ensure that the licensee complies
with what is already required of it by the Regulations and
its conditions of licence. For this measure to be effective,
however, the Commission must be satisfied that the licensee
understands its obligations and is committed to meeting them.
The Commission considers that, in this case, Genex has not
shown that it understands its obligations, or that it is
committed to meeting them, and has not demonstrated any real
desire to change. The issuance of a mandatory order would
not, in the Commission's view, be an effective measure to
fulfil the objective in the circumstances.
The Commission issued only a short-term renewal to Genex
in Decision 2002-189. This measure was ineffective in
compelling the licensee to take the necessary measures to
rectify the violations contained in the spoken-word content
of the programming broadcast by CHOI-FM. The failure by
the licensee to establish sufficient parameters for its hosts
and the ineffectiveness of the proposed new corrective
measures lead the Commission to conclude that another
short-term renewal of CHOI-FM's licence would not attain the
intended objective either.
Suspension of the licence would be another option. The
licensee stated at the hearing that a licence suspension
would have an immediate impact on several employees. It added
that a suspension during a ratings period would have a
negative long-term impact on the station and would lead to a
loss of listeners. The licensee concluded by mentioning that
it was a question of money.
The Commission considers that a suspension would only
be effective if the evidence showed that the licensee's
behaviour might change as a result. In the circumstances,
however, there is no reason to believe that such a change
would occur. The Commission is of the view that the problems
identified in Decision 2002-189 and in this decision can
reasonably be expected to persist, even if the licence were
suspended for a period of time. The Commission considers
that it cannot be concluded in this case that suspension of
the licence would have the desired corrective effect of
ensuring compliance with the Act and regulatory requirements.
In fact, the statements made by Mr. Demers at the hearing,
his reluctance and his apparent lack of understanding of his
responsibilities under the Act lead the Commission to think
the opposite.
The Commission acknowledges the concrete measures put in
place by Genex to respond to other concerns raised in
Decision 2002-189 with regard to the broadcast of short
versions of musical selections, the broadcast of musical
montages, incomplete logger tapes, the promotion of the
consumption of alcoholic beverages, and the use of English on
the air. It further recognizes the contribution the licensee
makes to musical diversity through its alternative rock
format and its contribution to the promotion of bands that
play such music and the station's involvement in the
community. The Commission also recognizes that the
licensee provides employment for a number of people.
Nevertheless, the Commission is of the view that these
factors do not come close to outweighing the gravity of
Genex's repeated violations of the Regulations and its
condition of licence related to the spoken-word content, its
inability to recognize or to accept responsibility for such
violations and to implement the necessary corrective
measures.
Ultimately, in view of the licensee's inflexible
behaviour, its lack of acceptance of its responsibilities and
the lack of any demonstrated commitment to rectify the
situation, the Commission cannot reasonably conclude that
Genex will comply with the Act, the Regulations and its Code
of Ethics if its licence is renewed. The Commission also
concludes that the measures available to it, such as another
short-term renewal, the issuance of a mandatory order, or the
suspension of the licence, would not be effective in
overcoming the problems that have been identified.
Consequently, the Commission denies the application by
Genex Communications inc. for renewal of the licence of radio
programming undertaking CHOI-FM Québec. Broadcasting
by CHOI-FM must therefore cease by 31 August 2004.
In keeping with its mandate, the Commission must ensure
the integrity of the licensing process and the public's right
to programming that complies with the Act and the
Regulations. It cannot permit the broadcast of abusive
comments that contravene the Regulations, or programming that
does not reflect the broadcasting policy set out in section
3(1) of the Act. Furthermore, the Commission cannot allow
anyone to use the public airwaves to pursue his or her own
agenda without regard for the rights of others. [Emphasis
added; footnotes omitted.]
3. Proceedings before the CRTC
[112]Under subsection 18(2) of the Act, the CRTC shall
hold a public hearing in connection with the renewal of a
licence unless it is satisfied that such a hearing is not
required in the public interest. In the case at bar, the CRTC
concluded that it was in the public interest to hold one.
[113]As it was invited to do by the Notice of Public
Hearing CRTC 2003-11 dated December 18, 2003, the appellant
initially filed, on January 22, 2004, a 42-page written brief
asking the CRTC to revise the findings of its staff in
relation to Mr. R. Gillet's complaints. It asked that these
complaints be dismissed, or, in the alternative, withdrawn
from the public record of CHOI-FM and CKNU-FM: see the CRTC
compendium in relation to the Appeal Record, Vol. 2, tab
35.
[114]The brief discloses that the appellant complained
that the comments had been taken and analyzed out of context.
The brief notes some criteria for analyzing a text or radio
program, including the necessity to resituate comments in
their context. It then explains the context of the comments
made by the hosts and analyzes them, noting that, in good
faith and in the public interest, the hosts were questioning
the actions of older adults who were looking for sexual
activities with persons of minor age.
[115]The brief goes about refuting each of the allegations
made against the appellant and concludes that the appellant
has complied with its Code of Ethics. The appellant alleges
that the CRTC procedure deprives it of a fair trial and cites
the rights of an accused under the Charter. Finally, the
appellant cites the defences it intends to present, including
that the hosts were justified in making the comments they did
because they were based either on true facts or on an honest
belief in the truth of these facts, and because the comments
were made in good faith and in the public interest.
[116]By a letter dated February 3, 2004, the CRTC replied
to the letter from the appellant's counsel dated January 16,
2004 and the brief dated January 24, 2004. It rejected the
appellant's request to provide for two to three weeks of
hearings in order to enable it to present a full answer and
defence. It explained that the findings of its staff in
relation to complaints are simply an opinion that is not
binding on it.
[117]Concerning the criticisms that the CRTC does not have
evidence pertaining to the context in which the alleged
comments were made, the CRTC reminds the appellant that it
had asked it to retain the logger tapes of the programs in
question and that it is the appellant which erased them.
Retaining the tapes was in fact a condition of licence: see
the CRTC compendium in relation to the Appeal Record, Vol. 1,
tab 3, Appendix I, paragraph 7. It refers to secondary
evidence of hundreds of pages of transcripts by the Verbatim
firm, which constitutes the best available evidence in the
circumstances.
[118]Finally, the CRTC informs the appellant that if it
thinks that certain matters should be considered by the CRTC
in order to complete the analysis of Mr. Gillet's complaints,
it can file this additional information in the public record.
It was given until February 10, 2004 to do so. No information
was filed by the appellant: see the CRTC Appeal Record
compendium, Vol. 2, at tab 38, the letter of the CRTC of
February 11, 2004, and paragraph 3991 of the transcript of
the February 18, 2004 hearings.
[119]The CRTC hearings began on February 18, 2004. They
were to last two days. At the opening of the hearings, the
appellant filed a second brief of 23 pages with three
appendices of approximately 20 pages: ibid., tab 41.
Apart from an argument on the jurisdiction of the CRTC, this
second brief repeats the points in the first brief on which
the CRTC had already adjudicated.
[120]Following a preliminary exchange of correspondence
between the CRTC, the appellant and its counsel, the
appellant informed the CRTC that at the hearing its
participating group would be composed of three individuals:
Mr. Demers, the controlling shareholder and sole director of
the appellant, Mr. Dion, the director of legal services and
Mr. Bertrand, the attorney retained for the defence of its
interests. It also identified, in the list of persons
supporting its renewal application, 15 favourable interveners
that the CRTC was prepared to hear.
[121]At the commencement of the hearing, the CRTC invited
the appellant's counsel to address the five members of the
panel orally for 15 minutes, according to the usual practice
of the CRTC. In fact, his remarks ran for 25 minutes: see the
Appeal Record, Vol. 2, pages 199-209. After these submissions
by the appellant's counsel, Mr. Demers made an oral
presentation of 20 minutes during which he stressed the
importance of freedom of expression and the fact that the
appellant had demonstrated that it was a responsible licensee
which had taken all of the steps demanded by the CRTC and had
even gone beyond what was asked of it: ibid, at pages
211-215.
[122]He thanked the 7,000 or so listeners who had written
to the CRTC in opposition to what he called censorship of
on-air remarks. He criticized Genex's Code of Ethics,
particularly article 4, which he considered subjective and
consequently difficult to apply. He closed by emphasizing the
importance and excellence of its alternative rock format,
which encourages the development of rock in French and of
young performers.
[123]The presentations by Mr. Bertrand and Mr. Demers were
followed by an intensive question and answer period. The
questions were put to Mr. Demers by the panel members, and
Mr. Bertrand and Mr. Dion, as well as Mr. Demers, were
allowed to answer. The hearing ended with the presentation of
the interveners.
[124]For the moment, that is basically the summary, a bit
succinct I will agree, of the proceedings before the CRTC.
The time has come to address the grounds of appeal.
Analysis of grounds of appeal
[125]In his written submissions and at the hearing, the
appellant's counsel grouped the issues into three different
blocks:
(a) Block I, which deals with breaches of the principles
of natural justice: it relates to question 11;
(b) Block II, pertaining to the intra-jurisdictional
questions of administrative law; it encompasses questions 2,
6, 7, 8, 9 and 10; and
(c) Block III, which concerns the constitutional questions
and tallies with questions 1, 4 and 5.
[126]I note that question 3 does not appear in any of the
three blocks. However, the nature of its content (a
declaration that section 3 of the Regulations and the Code of
Ethics are void) indicates that it belongs in block III.
[127]At the hearing, some of the questions raised in the
voluminous written brief of the appellant were not discussed
directly or substantially, either because they had a rather
subsidiary purpose or because they intersected with those
already argued. I will concentrate, therefore, on the
questions given particular emphasis by the appellant and
which constitute the essence or foundation of its appeal.
[128]I think it is useful to begin the analysis of the
grounds of appeal by disposing of those that clearly have
little or no merit.
1. Parliament's jurisdiction to make laws governing
broadcasting
[129]The appellant initially questioned Parliament's
authority to legislate concerning the content of
broadcasting, citing subsections 92(13) and 92(16) of the
Constitution Act, 1867, in relation to the
distribution of powers. According to the appellant, the CRTC
has the power to regulate the nature and format but not the
particular content of a program. For example, the CRTC could
authorize a one-hour public affairs broadcast, but it lacks
the statutory jurisdiction to--and I use the appellant's
expression--"censor" the content of the program and the
remarks made therein.
[130]In reply, the appellant softened its position and
explained what it meant or, more accurately, what should be
understood from what it had said. Programs and broadcasts
often have a cultural content and the provinces, especially
Quebec, have an interest in culture and its development, so
there must be a division of powers. It is interesting to note
that, although duly invited by the appellant to intervene in
the proceedings and to participate in the constitutional
argument on this issue of Parliament's lack of jurisdiction
or division of powers, the Attorney General of Quebec
declined the invitation.
[131]The appellant's contention that Parliament, and
accordingly the CRTC, does not have jurisdiction to regulate
and monitor broadcast content is without merit and does
violence to the legislative intention and the courts'
interpretation of the Act and the statutory provisions
pertaining to the distribution of powers. In other words,
Parliament's power to make laws concerning the content of
radio programs is illustrated clearly in the Act and
especially in the case law.
[132]In the first place, the Act, in subsection 2(1),
defines a "programming undertaking" as an "undertaking for
the transmission of programs." Also in that section, a
broadcasting undertaking means a programming undertaking and
therefore an undertaking for the transmission of programs.
Subparagraph 3(1)(i)(iii) stipulates that, in the
context of Canadian broadcasting policy (which the CRTC has
an obligation to implement through the regulation and
supervision of the Canadian broadcasting system), the
programming provided should "include educational and
community programs." How is one to find out whether a program
is educational and community-oriented, and ensure that it
remains so, without auditing and regulating the content?
[133]Furthermore, "broadcasting" is defined in subsection
2(1) of the Act as any transmission of programs. To regulate
and supervise broadcasting is to exercise control over the
transmission of programs. Paragraph 3(1)(g) requires
that the programming originated by broadcasting undertakings
be of high standard. How can one say that a broadcaster's
programming is of high standard if the programs it contains
and disseminates are obscene, worthless or inane? How can the
CRTC monitor the standard of the programming without
examining its content, which is composed of broadcasted
programs?
[134]As mentioned earlier, section 3 contains a host of
objectives for the implementation of Canadian broadcasting
policy. Is it reasonable to think that Canada's broadcasting
policy is addressed only to the container but not the content
of the broadcasting? I think that to ask the question is to
answer it.
[135]I could go much further and demonstrate more fully
the lack of merit in the appellant's submission. I could
review other provisions of the Act, the requirements in the
Regulations and the various codes of ethics adopted by the
broadcasting undertakings, all of which testify to the
regulation and supervision of program content.
[136]The cases are clear, as well, that Parliament's
legislative authority extends to the regulation of program
content. In Capital Cities Communications Inc. et al. v.
Canadian Radio-Television Comm., [1978] 2 S.C.R. 141, at
page 162, Chief Justice Laskin writes, on behalf of a
unanimous Court:
I am therefore in no doubt that federal legislative
authority extends to the regulation of the reception of
television signals emanating from a source outside of Canada
and to the regulation of the transmission of such signals
within Canada. Those signals carry the programmes which
are ultimately viewed on home television sets; and it
would be incongruous, indeed, to admit federal legislative
jurisdiction to the extent conceded but to deny the
continuation of regulatory authority because the signals
are intercepted and sent on to ultimate viewers through a
different technology. Programme content regulation is
inseparable from regulating the undertaking through which
programmes are received and sent on as part of the total
enterprise. [Emphasis added.]
[137]CKOY Ltd. v. Her Majesty The Queen on the relation
of Lorne Mahoney, [1979] 1 S.C.R. 2, at pages 12 and 13
(see also Re C.F.R.B. and Attorney-General for Canada
(1973), 38 D.L.R. (3d) 335 (Ont. C.A.), at page 340, leave to
appeal to the S.C.C. denied November 13, 1973), establishes
unambiguously that programming includes content and that
control over the quality of programming includes control of
its content:
Moreover, the expressed policy is that "programming
provided by each broadcaster should be of high standard . .
.". With respect, I am not in agreement with Dubin
J.A. who would confine that policy to the content of such
programming or, to put it in another way, to the mere words
which go out over the air.
. . .
That "an undesirable broadcasting technique" may well
affect the high standard of programming is, I think,
self-evident. I am in agreement with counsel for the
respondent that the word "programming" extends to more
than the mere words which go out over the air but the
total process of gathering, assembling and putting out the
programmes generally which is covered by the requirement of a
high standard of programming. The Commission might well have
concluded that the enactment of s. 5(k) was necessary
to prevent development of programming which was the opposite
of "high standard". [Emphasis added.]
This position taken by the Supreme Court concerning the
regulation of content was reaffirmed in CRTC v. CTV
Television Network Ltd. et al., [1982] 1 S.C.R. 530, at
page 545, where Chief Justice Laskin wrote:
The CKOY case turned on other considerations, but in
recognizing that standards of programs include program
content it merely reflected the broad interpretation given to
the Broadcasting Act and to the powers
thereunder vested in CRTC and in the Executive Committee
respectively under ss. 16 and 17. [Emphasis added.]
[138]This leads me to conclude with this part of the
appellant's argument that legislative jurisdiction should be
shared, given the important cultural element involved in
broadcasting policy.
[139]The appellant is asking us to re-examine this
previous case law, which I cited, in light of the Charter,
subsections 92(10), (13), (16), section 93 of the
Constitution Act, 1867 and the following underlying
constitutional principles: federalism, democracy,
constitutionalism and the rule of law and the protection of
the rights of minorities.
[140]In support of this request, it cites the need to
protect the Quebec nation against any form of interference,
encroachment or invasion by the federal authority in its
fields of jurisdiction. I reproduce the heading and
paragraphs 672-674 of its memorandum of fact and law:
[translation]
THE QUEBEC NATION MUST BE PROTECTED
AGAINST ANY FORM OF INTERFERENCE,
ENCROACHMENT OR INVASION BY THE
FEDERAL AUTHORITY IN ITS FIELDS
OF JURISDICTION
The Constitution, which includes the underlying
constitutional principles, belongs to the citizens and it is
the duty of the courts to protect them against any form of
legislation that would infringe their fundamental rights.
The appellant submits that, in the circumstances, the
courts have an obligation to protect and support the Quebec
nation, not only in all of its cultural and linguistic
claims, but also in its rights under the Constitution,
particularly in ss. 92.13, 92.16 and 93 of the
Constitution Act, 1867.
Any doubt in the interpretation of the Constitution
Act, 1867 must be resolved in favour of the Francophone
minority in Canada and, in particular, in favour of Quebec,
which has consistently claimed jurisdiction over culture and
communications.
[141]"The Constitution of Canada does not include an
express grant of power with respect to `culture' as such":
see Kitkatla Band v. British Columbia (Minister of Small
Business, Tourism and Culture), [2002] 2 S.C.R. 146, at
paragraph 51. As Mr. Justice LeBel of the Supreme Court of
Canada states, constitutional litigation on cultural issues
has generally arisen in the context of other rights such as
language and education rights. The Court notes that the
federal government affects cultural activity in this country
"through the exercise of its broad powers over
communications." It concludes that "cultural issues must be
analyzed in their context, in relation to the relevant
sources of legislative power."
[142]With respect, I do not think the issue before us--the
non-renewal of a licence for failure to comply with the Act,
the Regulations, its conditions of licence and its Code of
Ethics--is the appropriate vehicle, and that consequently
this Court is the adequate forum, in which to redefine the
distribution of powers between the federal and provincial
authorities on the basis of culture.
[143]In short, the appellant's argument concerning the
lack of jurisdiction of Parliament and the CRTC over the
content of programs and the need to review the distribution
of powers is out of place in the present context, and without
merit.
2. Allegation that the CRTC unlawfully set itself up as
a censor of the content of the appellant's broadcasts
[144]Given the CRTC's power of regulation and supervision
over program content to ensure the implementation of
broadcast policy in Canada, and given the constitutional
validity of this power, it is false to contend that the CRTC
has unlawfully set itself up as a censor of the content of
the appellant's programs.
[145]When the appellant's licence was first renewed, the
CRTC accepted as a corrective measure proposed by the
appellant the Code of Ethics the appellant submitted and
undertook to implement. The Code's provisions, which were
proposed by the appellant, covered the content of programs
and were meant to be a means for controlling this content to
ensure that the appellant's spoken-word programming was of
high standard. On the second licence renewal application, the
CRTC simply ascertained to what degree the appellant had
conformed to its own Code of Ethics and consequently complied
with the conditions of its broadcasting licence. In doing so,
it was not acting as a censor of the appellant's program
content but as an agency monitoring compliance with the
statutory and regulatory standards and the undertakings that
had been made.
[146]It is also incorrect to state that by engaging in an
examination of the complaints received concerning the
appellant, the CRTC exceeded its mandate and had in fact and
in law set itself up as a censor of the appellant's
broadcasts. Legally speaking, this Court has previously held,
in Arthur v. Canada (Attorney General), and I referred
to this in the "Facts and proceedings" section, that it is
the duty of the CRTC, in its regulatory and supervisory
function, to review complaints brought against licensees. It
may be relevant to recall the findings reached by this Court,
which are found at paragraph 27 of that decision:
In fact, it is inevitable that, in the licence renewal
context, the CRTC will be sensitive to the public's
complaints and to the licensee's reaction to those complaints
that allege an abuse of rights. The CRTC would not be
playing its role and would be abdicating its responsibilities
if it were indifferent to the public interest or to
allegations that a licensee is compromising the public
interest by its deeds and actions or its excessive passivity
or tolerance. In this context of a licence renewal in the
best interests of the public, it must be able to report
abuses that the public complains of and to verify whether the
licensee has complied with the Act, the Regulations, its
conditions of licence or any specific undertakings it may
have made. [Emphasis added.]
[147]Actually, there was no censorship since the remarks
that were complained about were made and disseminated on
public airwaves. They were not subject to any prior
pre-broadcast authorization by the CRTC, as the modern
meaning of the notion of censorship would imply: see Le
Nouveau Petit Robert: diction-naire alphabétique et
analogique de la langue française, Dictionnaires
Le Robert, Paris: 2000, where the modern meaning of the word
is defined as the need to obtain prior authorization for
broadcast, in comparison with the older meaning from the 16th
century, which conveyed instead a notion of after-the- fact
criticism or condemnation of the words uttered: see also
Le Petit Larousse illustré, Paris: Larousse,
2000.
[148]When a licence is being suspended, revoked or
renewed, the CRTC's duty of surveillance implies a
verification of the quality of the programming and broadcasts
to determine whether they meet the standards established by
the Act, the Regulations, the Codes of Ethics and the
conditions of licence. Needless to say, such verification
requires verification of allegations or complaints that these
standards are being diluted, distorted, ignored or flouted by
a licensee. In a context of licence renewal, suspension or
revocation, such verification is a manifestation of the
CRTC's power of review and supervision: see National
Indian Brotherhood v. Juneau (No. 3), [1971] F.C. 498
(T.D.), at page 513. Should such review prove to be excessive
or arbitrary, it will be judged for what it is. But the
actual nature of the function will not be altered,
nevertheless: it remains one of review and economic
regulation, accompanied by a system of measures and, if
necessary, sanctions for the achievement of the legislative
and regulatory objectives.
3. Violation of the principles of natural justice, the
rules of procedural fairness and the CRTC's Rules
of Procedure
[149]There is some contention in the cases and authorities
as to whether the rules of procedural fairness are simply a
component of the principles of natural justice or vice
versa, or whether there is a distinction between the two.
Originally, the distinction between them was significant,
owing to the differentiation that was made between
quasi-judicial decisions and decisions of an administrative
nature: see Martineau v. Matsqui Institution Disciplinary
Board, [1980] 1 S.C.R. 602; Singh et al. v. Minister
of Employment and Immigration, [1985] 1 S.C.R. 177.
[150]More recently, in Blencoe v. British Columbia
(Human Rights Commission), [2000] 2 S.C.R. 307, at
paragraph 106, Mr. Justice Bastarache recalled the comment by
Dickson J. [as he then was] in Martineau, that "the
drawing of a distinction between a duty to act fairly, and a
duty to act in accordance with the rules of natural justice,
yields an unwieldy conceptual framework."
[151]In Bell Canada v. Canadian Telephone Employees
Association, [2003] 1 S.C.R. 884, we can read at
paragraph 21 that the "requirements of procedural
fairness--which include requirements of independence and
impartiality--vary for different tribunals."
[152]That being said, it is not necessary to decide this
issue in order to dispose of the appellant's arguments. That
is why I discuss both questions at the same time, along with
the question of the CRTC's alleged breach of its own rules of
procedure.
(a) hearing before an independent and impartial
tribunal
[153]At the hearing in this Court, the appellant
complained of the treatment it received from the CRTC, but it
submitted no evidence that the agency was neither independent
nor impartial, other than the fact that it thought the 35
minutes of deliberation on its preliminary motion was too
short and indicated to observers of the process that the
decision had been made in advance. I make no judgment on the
adjudication process on this preliminary motion since the
dispute today has to do with decision 271 refusing to issue a
renewal of licence.
[154]Decision 271 came after deliberation of almost five
months. The CRTC also indicated in its decision the reasons
for dismissing the preliminary motion. One may disagree with
and even be disappointed by these reasons and the dismissal
of the motion, but one cannot, in the circumstances, infer
from them any evidence, still less a finding of bias.
(b) right to a hearing, procedural fairness and the
CRTC Rules of Procedure
[155]Sections 32-34 of the CRTC Rules of Procedure,
state that witnesses at a public hearing may be examined
orally upon oath or in such other manner as the Commission
may direct. The CRTC may, where it deems it advisable to do
so, direct that written briefs be submitted by the parties to
a hearing in addition to or in lieu of oral argument.
Evidence may be introduced at a public hearing in support of
statements contained in an application, intervention or reply
or in support of documents or material filed in support
thereof.
[156]The nature and extent of an administrative body's
duty to act fairly or in accordance with the principles of
natural justice vary with the specific context and the
various fact situations dealt with by the administrative
body, as well as the nature of the disputes it must resolve:
see Therrien (Re), [2001] 2 S.C.R. 3, at paragraph 82.
They do not have a fixed content irrespective of the nature
of the tribunal and of the institutional constraints it
faces: see IWA v. Consolidated-Bathurst Packaging
Ltd., [1990] 1 S.C.R. 282, at page 324.
[157]In Arthur v. Canada (Attorney General), at
paragraph 31, a case involving a licence renewal application,
in which an issue was whether there had been a breach of the
rules of procedural fairness in regard to an employee of a
licensee, this Court described the following procedure as
being consistent with those rules:
The hearing held by the CRTC was addressed to the renewal
of the holder's licence and not the applicant. The licensee
was properly summoned to the hearing. It was informed of the
public's complaints against it. It was also notified in
Notice of Hearing 1998-7 that the complaints against station
CKVL would be discussed when the interventions that had been
received were heard. The licensee, in writing prior to the
hearing and orally at the hearing itself, supplied the
explanations it considered appropriate. It was able to lay
out the measures it intended to take in order to produce high
quality programming that complied with the Act and the
Regulations.
The procedure described above is exactly the same as the
procedure that was followed in the case at bar. In the
section "Facts and proceedings", I described the process
involved in CRTC proceedings.
[158]Apologizing in advance for certain inevitable
repetitions, while striving to limit them as much as
possible, I think it is useful to reproduce, somewhat
schematically, the following chronology of the events and how
they unfolded. In my humble opinion, it illustrates
compliance with the principles of natural justice, the rules
of procedural fairness and the CRTC Rules of
Procedure:
February 27, 1997: purchase of the radio station by the
appellant
Period from 1999 to 2001: 47 complaints and four
programming analyses
During this period, the CRTC received 47 complaints about
the programming broadcast by CHOI-FM, which can be broken
down into three main categories: spoken-word content
(offensive remarks or language), offensive competitions held
on air and personal attacks/harassment.
The appellant had an opportunity to respond to each
of these complaints. It was notified that the complaints
might be reviewed subsequently by the CRTC in light of,
inter alia, its condition of licence in relation to
the Sex-Role Portrayal Code for Television and Radio
Programming and paragraph 3(b) of the Regulations.
During the same period, the CRTC carried out four
programming analyses of the station during specific periods
(from March 7 to 13, 1999, from July 2 to 8, 2000, from
December 31, 2000 to January 6, 2001 and from January 21 to
27, 2001). The results of each analysis were communicated to
the licensee, which was given an opportunity to comment on
them.
The four analyses revealed offences of several kinds and
raised some concerns for the Commission, regarding such
things as the quality of spoken-word content of the
programming, including the licensee's compliance with
paragraphs 3(b) and 3(c) of the
Regulations.
December 14, 2001: notice of public hearing CRTC
2001-14
The appellant was briefed on the complaints and
informed that they would be discussed at the public
hearing.
February 18, 2002: commencement of public hearings at
Québec
The appellant made written and oral submissions to
these hearings explaining the context in which the words
complained about were made and the steps taken and that it
intended to take to correct the situation.
July 16, 2002: short-term renewal of appellant's
licence with a number of conditions and warnings
The appellant was warned that any violation of the
conditions of licence, including the Code of
Ethics, could result in the application of further
coercive measures under the Act, including suspension or
revocation of the licence.
Period from 2002 to 2004: 45 new complaints
September/October 2002: the appellant becomes a member
of the Canadian Broadcast Standards Council (CBSC)
January 29, 2003: letter from CRTC to appellant
concerning relationship between CRTC and CBSC
In this letter, the CRTC explains to appellant the
relationship that exists between it and the CBSC
concerning processing of complaints. The appellant is
informed that the CBSC, and not the CRTC, is the agency
responsible for analyzing complaints for breaches of the
Code of Ethics.
March 6, 2003: letter from CRTC to appellant pursuant
to latter's reply to a listener complaint
This letter warned appellant about a breach of
condition of licence and informed it that the
correspondence concerning the complaint would be placed in
the public record for discussion during the next licence
renewal.
I reproduce here the two paragraphs of the letter
containing this warning and informing the appellant:
[translation]
In closing, we remind you that the Code of Ethics
was imposed on you as a condition of licence when your
licence was renewed (Broadcasting Decision CRTC 2002-189) and
that any contravention of this Code could then constitute
a breach of condition of licence.
The correspondence concerning this complaint will be
placed in the public record of CHOI-FM to be consulted by any
interested person and for subsequent discussion by the
Commission during your next renewal of licence.
June 2, 2003: letter from CRTC to appellant concerning
complaints that the appellant characterizes as
anonymous
The CRTC informs the appellant of its position and
the way in which it deals with complaints originating from
"Hotmail" e-mail addresses. It draws its attention to
article 9 of its Rules of Procedure and informs it
that under this clause, the CRTC must know the name and
address of the complainant so that he or she is informed of
the reply by the licensee. The appellant is notified
that a complaint filed with the CRTC under an e-mail address,
including "Hotmail", which includes a name in the e-mail
message, suffices to identify the complainant.
June 20, 2003: letter from CRTC to appellant concerning
an incitement to pirate television signals
The appellant is reminded that a licence is
a privilege that cannot be abused.
It is also warned that apologies do not suffice to
remove a complaint and clear the conduct on which the
complaint is based.
This letter contains the following two paragraphs:
[translation]
Although the staff were of the opinion that it was
unnecessary to intervene in the circumstances, they wish
to remind the licensee that holding a licence is a privilege
and not a right and that this privilege should not be
unreasonably abused. The staff are also of the opinion
that CHOI-FM's hosts and journalists must not make
inappropriate remarks on air in the belief that they will be
exculpated subsequently by their apologies. Apologies are
not in themselves sufficient to state that there is no reason
to intervene in response to a complaint.
October 7, 2003: appellant's application for a renewal
of licence
In this application, the appellant states that it
believes it has complied with its conditions of
licence since its renewal in 2002. It tells the CRTC
not to concern itself with the content of the 45
complaints it has received.
It asks the CRTC to amend its licence to relieve it of
the conditions concerning the Code of
Ethics, the need to have an advisory committee and
to retain the logger tapes for 90 days.
December 18, 2003: notice of public hearing
On this occasion the appellant is notified that 29
complaints will be reviewed during the hearing and that the
CRTC staff believe that offences to clauses 2, 3, 6, 17 and
18 of the Code of Ethics may have been committed.
The appellant is also warned of the possibility
that an order under section 12 of the Act will be
issued against it or that its licence will be suspended or
not renewed under sections 24 and 9 of the Act. The text
of these warnings reads:
[translation]
The Commission expects the licensee to show cause
at this hearing why a mandatory order under section 12
of the Broadcasting Act (the Act), requiring the
licensee to conform to the Regulations and to the condition
of licence that requires the licensee to comply with the
CHOI-FM Code of Ethics should not be
issued.
The Commission also expects the licensee to
demonstrate at this hearing why the Commission should not
suspend or refuse to renew the licence, under sections 24
and 9, respectively of the Act.
January 22, 2004: request by appellant
The appellant asks by way of written request to the CRTC
to withdraw from the file the complaints of Mr. R. Gillet or
to postpone the hearing.
It requests a hearing of two to three weeks in duration
and it files a 42-page brief explaining its position, the
context in which the comments complained of were made, and
how they are justified and acceptable.
February 3, 2004: Five-page letter from CRTC rejecting
the appellant's request
This letter informs the appellant that it may make
additional representations if it so desires, and gives it
until February 10 to comply. The offer goes unanswered.
February 18 to 20, 2004: public hearing on the renewal
of the licence [Emphasis added.]
[159]At the commencement of the hearing the appellant
brought a motion in writing challenging the CRTC's
jurisdiction to deal with complaints, including those of Mr.
R. Gillet and Cogeco Radio-Télévision Inc. The
motion also reiterated all the submissions made in the brief
of January 22, 2004 that had been rejected by the CRTC.
[160]As mentioned previously, a second brief of 23 pages
and three appendices of about 20 pages were also filed by the
appellant at the hearing.
[161]The appellant's counsel and Mr. Demers, the principal
shareholder and sole director of the appellant, were each
heard in turn. And, let it be recalled, there were two days
of discussion with Mr. Demers, the appellant's counsel at the
hearing, its director of legal services and the interveners
concerning the appropriateness of renewing the appellant's
licence and, if so, on what conditions.
[162]As we will see in the analysis of the appellant's
submissions, all of its grievances concerning breaches of
natural justice, procedural fairness and the CRTC's rules of
procedure converge toward and are based on a single
postulate: the appellant is entitled to a full answer and
defence and was deprived of the time and the opportunity
needed to submit it.
[163]In fact, the appellant sought to transform the public
hearing on the renewal of its licence into a criminal trial
in which it could have cross-examined witnesses and
challenged each complaint on its merit, calling the hosts and
several witnesses who endorse the remarks in question. It
criticizes the CRTC for not laying penal charges against it,
as allowed by sections 32 and 33 of the Act, and makes this
an independent ground of appeal that I will have an
opportunity to consider when discussing the hierarchy of
enforcement measures under the Act.
[164]As an integral part of its full answer and defence,
the appellant sought to present a defence of truth or honest
belief in the truth, that is, to establish that the remarks
were true or that it believed them to be true and that
consequently they were justified.
[165]The CRTC is the master of its procedure. Under
section 21 of the Act, it may make rules respecting the
conduct of its business, notably the procedure for
applications for renewal of licences, for making
representations and complaints to the Commission and for the
conduct of hearings. It would be total anarchy if each
licensee could dictate to it, as it wished, the procedure
that was most convenient to it. In Baker v. Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), at paragraph
27, Madam Justice L'Heureux-Dubé restates the
principle applicable to the duty of procedural fairness:
Fifth, the analysis of what procedures the duty of
fairness requires should also take into account and
respect the choices of procedure made by the agency itself,
particularly when the statute leaves to the decision-maker
the ability to choose its own procedures, or when the agency
has an expertise in determining what procedures are
appropriate in the circumstances: Brown and Evans,
supra, at pp. 7-66 to 7-70. While this, of course, is
not determinative, important weight must be given to the
choice of procedures made by the agency itself and its
institutional constraints: IWA v.
Consolidated-Bathurst Packaging Ltd., [1990] 1 S.C.R.
282, per Gonthier J. [Emphasis added.]
[166]A public hearing on the renewal of a licence and the
procedure governing it takes place in an administrative and
regulatory law context where the purpose of the exercise is
not to determine for punitive purposes whether a licensee has
committed one or more offences but to find out whether, in
the public interest, and in compliance with Charter values
and the implementation of broadcasting policy in Canada, it
is appropriate to continue to provide a radio frequency to a
licensee. In the case at bar, this issue was posed in a
particularly striking way in regard to a licensee on whom
conditions of licence had already been imposed on a previous
renewal because it was not complying with or adhering to
those criteria. This was an opportunity to assess the overall
performance of a licensee: see Public Notice CRTC 1982-36, a
copy of which was given to the appellant, entitled
Complaints and the public examination files, where the
objective in processing complaints is explained: CRTC
compendium respecting Appeal Record, Vol. 2, tab 36. In other
words, the purpose of the public hearing is not to examine
the complaints one by one to determine whether the licensee
has committed a penal offence, but to discuss the complaints
overall and find out whether, in the context in which the
alleged remarks were made and repeated, it is appropriate to
renew a licence that would have the effect of allowing such
remarks to be made, endorsing them and, for all practical
purposes, promoting them on the airwaves.
[167]The procedure followed by the CRTC provides that
complaints are analyzed as a group. The appellant would like
to have a trial on each complaint with a corresponding right
of appeal. The CRTC processes 2000 broadcasting licences and
some 800 applications for amendment of licences per year. One
need not be particularly foresighted to predict the paralysis
entailed by the procedure advocated by the appellant. The
more complaints there were against a licensee, the more
trials there would be and the more delays in the decision on
the appropriateness or not of renewing the licence while
awaiting a final decision on these trials. Meanwhile, the
licensee, whose licence would have expired by lapse of time,
would continue to operate under its licence with some
judicial stays, as in the present case. The same system would
then have to be applied to licence suspension or revocation
proceedings. This is tantamount to saying that these measures
to enforce compliance with the Act, the Regulations, the
conditions of licence and the other Charter values become a
dead letter.
[168]I am far from being persuaded--this euphemism denotes
understatement on my part--that the CRTC's procedure in the
treatment of complaints on a renewal of licence is a breach
of the rules of natural justice or procedural fairness.
[169]The facts behind a complaint are generally conceded
by the licensee or readily established and virtually
undeniable based on the logger tapes or other forms of
recording and preserving the remarks made on the public
airwaves. In this context, I do not see very clearly what the
right to cross-examination, claimed so fiercely by the
appellant, could actually contribute or accomplish,
especially when the remarks are its own and it is acquainted
with them. It can always correct them if the allegations are
inaccurate. In that case we are not talking about
cross-examination but about representations and, if
necessary, testimony by it to explain them. It is then up to
the CRTC to determine whether these facts or remarks meet the
requirements of the Act, the Regulations, the conditions of
licence or the Codes of Ethics.
[170]For that purpose, the licensee is invited to explain
how and why these facts or remarks, when resituated in
context, are not, for example, degrading personal attacks,
obscene remarks, defamatory, invasive of privacy or
integrity, or remarks that might expose a person or class of
persons to hatred or contempt on grounds of discrimination
prohibited by the Charter or the Codes of Ethics. The
licensee is fully able to express its point of view on the
context, the nature of the remarks, their meaning, the scope
and lawfulness of the applicable legal standards, its good
faith, the efforts made to comply with the Act and other
legal provisions.
[171]Actually, in this case, that is precisely what the
appellant did, both in writing and orally. To do so, it
elected to resort to the services of its president, its
counsel, its director of legal services and some favourable
interveners.
[172]The appellant is attempting to develop an argument
from criminal law based on the expression "apparent failure
of the licensee to comply" in the Notice of Public Hearing
CRTC 2003-11 dated December 18, 2003, in which the CRTC says
it "notes the apparent failure of the licensee to comply with
section 3 of the Radio Regulations, 1986". This is a
standard formula used by the CRTC to inform a licensee of the
nature of the offences alleged against it and the fact that
this issue will be discussed at the public hearing. For
example, on the appellant's first application for licence
renewal, the apparent failure had to do with the logger
tapes. The Notice of Public Hearing [CRTC 2001-14] of
December 14, 2001 stated: "The Commission notes the apparent
failure of the licensee to comply with the Radio
Regulations, 1986 concerning the provision of logger
tapes."
[173]The complainant argues that the CRTC, through its use
of these terms, has convicted it and put the onus on it to
come and prove the contrary, which, it says, violates the
Charter and criminal law rules that an accused is presumed
innocent and the prosecution has the burden of proving guilt
beyond a reasonable doubt.
[174]It is really scraping the bottom of the barrel to
make such an argument. I agree, the expression is an
unfortunate one and should refer instead to an alleged
failure to comply. But it is obvious, when the expression is
resituated in its context, as the appellant asks be done when
the issue is its own on-air remarks, that the expression is
not a presumed finding of guilt, does not convert the
forthcoming public hearing into a criminal trial and does not
turn the appellant into an accused with the burden of
exculpating itself. We are talking about information in a
Public Notice intended to inform the appellant more clearly
so that it can prepare adequately for an administrative and
regulatory hearing on the renewal of its privilege. The
appellant is not an accused and the rules governing the
burden of proof in criminal proceedings do not apply in this
case. It is necessary to bear in mind the purpose and nature
of the public hearing: it is a hearing, at the appellant's
request, on its own application for renewal of its
broadcasting licence.
[175]In conclusion, the procedure followed by the CRTC is
not sullied by any breach of the principles of natural
justice, the rules of procedural fairness and its own rules
of procedure. The appellant was amply informed of the issues
and allegations placed on its record. It was warned on more
than one occasion of the derogatory nature of its spoken-word
programming. It was given notice of possible steps to be
taken, including non-renewal of its licence. It was invited
to explain itself in accordance with the rules laid down by
the CRTC and it availed itself of this invitation by filing
written briefs, making submissions and having its own lawyers
and favourable interveners make submissions. It did not
consider it advisable to avail itself of the invitation made
to it by the CRTC, in its letter of February 3, 2004, to file
additional information concerning the analysis of the
complaints filed by Mr. R. Gillet. The procedure followed on
this second renewal application was the same as the one that
prevailed on the first application for renewal and which
ended in favour of the appellant through a conditional
renewal of licence. A similar procedure taken on a second
licence renewal involving the same general problem as the
first cannot be considered fair or unfair on the basis of
whether the ultimate conclusion of the proceeding is
favourable or unfavourable to the appellant.
Did the CRTC err in law or make a jurisdictional error
in its choice of the measure to enforce compliance with the
Act and the Regulations?
[176]The CRTC has a number of means or measures to get
licensees to comply with the Act, the Regulations, its
decisions and its orders: establishing conditions for
operating under the licence issued (paragraphs 9(1)(b)
and (c)), suspending or revoking licences (paragraph
9(1)(e)), issuing orders to enforce compliance with
the obligations under the Act, its orders, decisions, or
regulations or the licences issued, prohibiting the doing of
anything in contravention thereof (subsection 12(2)),
refusing to renew licences (paragraph 9(1)(d)),
initiating penal prosecutions (sections 32 and 33) and making
regulations respecting such other matters as it deems
necessary for the furtherance of its objects (paragraph
10(1)(k)).
[177]At the hearing the appellant submitted three
arguments to establish that the CRTC had either erred in law
in the exercise of its jurisdiction or had refused to
exercise its jurisdiction.
[178]First, by refusing to renew the appellant's licence,
the CRTC had failed to comply with the principle of gradation
of measures. It should have renewed the licence with some
conditions, issued an order to comply with the Act or
resorted to penal proceedings. It could not, the appellant
says, impose the death penalty on it as it did in not
renewing its licence.
[179]Second, the CRTC did not live up to the reasonable
and legitimate expectation it had created that it would issue
a mandatory order under subsection 12(2) of the Act.
[180]Finally, the measure chosen was, in the appellant's
view, extremely harsh and unprecedented. I will discuss these
arguments in that order.
1. Breach of the principle of gradation of enforcement
measures
[181]The appellant raised the issue by speaking about the
principle of gradation of sentences and referring us to some
principles of criminal law and disciplinary law. With
respect, I do not think the analogy is appropriate and
completely accurate.
[182]I agree with the representatives of the Attorney
General of Canada that the decision not to renew a licence
cannot, strictly speaking, be considered a disciplinary or
penal sanction. The context, need it be recalled, is an
administrative and regulatory one in which the issue is the
appropriateness from the standpoint of the public interest of
renewing a licence. In that context, failure to comply with a
condition of licence imposed in the public interest, as this
Court has previously held, constitutes conduct that may
justify a refusal to renew a licence without such refusal
infringing freedom of expression or the Charter: see
CJMF-FM Ltée v. Canadian Radio-television and
Telecommuni-cations Commission--CRTC, [1984] F.C.J. No.
244 (C.A.) (QL). If we are to talk about sanctions, we must
then talk about an administrative sanction and apply the
appropriate legal regime which, as we know, is different from
the legal regime applicable to penal or disciplinary
sanctions.
[183]In 2636-5205 Québec Inc. (Re), [1993]
R.J.Q. 2522 (C.A.), where the appellant was summoned to
appear before the Commission des transports du Québec
to justify the renewal of its transportation licence, the
Quebec Court of Appeal, at pages 2542, 2560 and 2561, notes,
as we did in the CJMF-FM Ltée case, that a
licensee must always comply with the conditions of issuance
and use of its licence.
[184]Furthermore, in reply to the appellant's argument
that other sanctions, less costly to it, ought to have been
imposed, the Court, first, restates the importance of the
fact that the legislature had delegated to the Commission
[translation] "the responsibility to assess the needs of the
public and how to meet them, to the exclusion of all other
tribunals or agencies": idem, at page 2548.
[185]Turning to the question of the Commission's choice of
measures, the Court writes, at page 2548:
[translation]
The question is not whether other sanctions could have
been imposed but whether the one that was imposed by the
Commission members is one that is provided by law.
Having held in fact that the appellant had itself, without
prior authorization, ceased to provide the services covered
in its licences, the Commission held that the appellant no
longer merited its confidence as a carrier serving that
region and revoked its licences.
The law provides for such sanctions. This Court does
not have authority to assess the correctness of the sanction,
as in criminal matters. [Emphasis added.]
[186]Similarly, in 2620-5443 Québec Inc. c.
Québec (Régie des alcools, des courses et des
jeux), [1997] R.J.Q. 2059 (C.A.), where a liquor permit
was revoked for failure to respect public tranquillity, the
Quebec Court of Appeal rejected the licensee's contention
that the Régie's decision to revoke its permit
violated the principle of gradation of sentences, which would
require that the power of revocation or suspension of a
permit be used only in case of extreme necessity. At page
2064, after criticizing the Trial Judge's approach of
engaging in a comparison of the various penalties imposed in
a number of cases, the Court writes that [translation] "any
difference in penalties between the cases is dependent on the
facts of each case; and the assessment of those facts by the
specialized tribunal is first and foremost a matter for its
discretion."
[187]I agree with these conclusions of the Quebec Court of
Appeal. If the administrative measure adopted is one that is
authorized by the legislature, it is not the job of this
Court to interfere in the correctness or appropriateness of
the measure taken, still less to rule on the merits and
appropriateness of selecting this rather than that measure
and vice versa. At most, the Court may satisfy itself
that the CRTC, in the exercise of its discretion, considered
the relevant factors without adding to them any irrelevant
factors. The actual exercise of weighing these factors, which
generally pertains to the CRTC's field of expertise, is a
matter for the CRTC. "It is not normally the business of a
reviewing court to substitute its view of the relative weight
to be attributed to various factors considered in the
exercise of discretion for that of the specialist
administrative agency to which Parliament has entrusted the
task": Ferroequus Railway Co. v. Canadian National Railway
Co., [2004] 2 F.C.R. 42 (F.C.A.), at paragraph 14
(per Evans J.A.).
[188]Even in disciplinary law, to which the appellant
refers us, the principle remains that the appropriate
disciplinary sanction is the one that is justified by the
facts and circumstances of the case. If the facts warrant a
withdrawal of an operating licence rather than a mere
suspension, then ordering the withdrawal involves no breach
of the law. For example, in Law Society of New Brunswick
v. Ryan, where Ryan, a lawyer, was disbarred by a
discipline committee of the Law Society, the Supreme Court
writes, at paragraph 59:
There is nothing unreasonable about the Discipline
Committee choosing to ban a member from practising law when
his conduct involved an egregious departure from the rules of
professional ethics and had the effect of undermining public
confidence in basic legal institutions.
[189]The appellant's argument has no legal basis in the
present context and must be rejected.
2. Reasonable and legitimate expectation concerning the
coercive measure that would be applied and the failure to
proceed accordingly
[190]The appellant submits that the CRTC, through Notice
of Hearing CRTC 2003-11, dated December 18, 2003, and
particularly through Circular No. 444, dated May 7, 2001, led
it to believe that the appropriate measure in its case would
be a renewal of licence accompanied by an order to comply
with the Act, the Regulations and its Code of Ethics.
[191]It is well known that the doctrine of reasonable
expectations is procedural and does not create any
fundamental rights: it is simply an extension of the
principles of natural justice and the rules of procedural
equity: see Old St. Boniface Residents Assn. Inc. v.
Winnipeg (City), [1990] 3 S.C.R. 1170, at page 1204;
Moreau-Bérubé v. New Brunswick (Judicial
Council), [2002] 1 S.C.R. 249. "The doctrine can give
rise to a right to make representations, a right to be
consulted or perhaps, if circumstances require, more
extensive procedural rights. But it does not otherwise
fetter the discretion of a statutory decision-maker in order
to mandate any particular result" (emphasis added). See
Moreau-Bérubé, at paragraph 78. The
expectation must not conflict with the public authority's
statutory mandate and substantive relief is not available
under this doctrine: see Mount Sinai Hospital Center v.
Quebec (Minister of Health and Social Services), [2001] 2
S.C.R. 281, at paragraphs 29, 32 and 38.
[192]In the case at bar, the choice of enforcement
measures lies with the reviewing agency and it is
discretionary: see section 9 of the Act. The doctrine of
reasonable expectations cannot, therefore, force it to renew
a licence with, in support, an order to comply with the law.
That would suffice to dispose of the appellant's argument.
But there is more.
[193]For the doctrine to operate, the agency's conduct in
the exercise of its discretion "including established
practices, conduct or representations that can be
characterized as clear, unambiguous and unqualified" must
have induced in the complainant a reasonable expectation that
it will retain a benefit or be consulted before a contrary
decision is taken (emphasis added): see C.U.P.E. v.
Ontario (Minister of Labour), [2003] 1 S.C.R. 539, at
paragraph 131. Furthermore, "[t]o be `legitimate', such
expectations must not conflict with a statutory duty."
[194]In the case at bar, I do not think it is possible to
conclude that, by its practices, conduct or representations,
the CRTC could reasonably have led the appellant to believe
that it would retain its licence. On the contrary.
[195]The Notice of Public Hearing of December 18, 2003,
which the appellant cites in support of its contention, is
quite far from creating the reasonable expectation that it
claims. The most that can be said in its favour is that the
Notice is ambiguous and does not contain a clear, unambiguous
and unqualified represen-tation that the appellant will
retain its licence but will be issued an order to comply with
the law. At worst, it clearly, unambiguously and specifically
states that all of the options are open in regard to
enforcement measures. Let us see what this Notice
contains.
[196]First, the Notice makes an explicit reference to the
CRTC decision on the first renewal of the appellant's
licence, in which the CRTC informs it that if in the future
there is a contravention of the Regulations or the conditions
of licence, it could be called to a public hearing "to show
cause why the Commission should not issue such an order or
apply any of its enforcement measures including revocation or
suspension of the licence" (emphasis added): see the CRTC
compendium in regard to the Appeal Record, Vol. 1, tab
19.
[197]After referring the appellant to the numerous
complaints received concerning the spoken-word content of its
programming and informing it that there appeared to be a
violation of section 3 of the Regulations and sections 2, 3,
6, 17 and 18 of its Code of Ethics, the Notice contains the
following two paragraphs:
The Commission expects the licensee to show cause at this
hearing why a mandatory order under section 12 of the
Broadcasting Act (the Act), requiring the licensee to conform
to the Regulations and to the condition of licence that
requires the licensee to comply with the CHOI-FM Code of
Ethics should not be issued.
The Commission also expects the licensee to demonstrate
at this hearing why the Commission should not suspend or
refuse to renew the licence under sections 24 and 9,
respectively of the Act. [Emphasis added.]
[198]At the public hearing, the appellant, in accordance
with the Notice, was invited to discuss non-renewal in view
of the violations of the Act, the Regulations and its
conditions of licence.
[199]It should be kept in mind that the hearing occurred
pursuant to the appellant's application for renewal of its
broadcasting licence. The issue of non-renewal per se
was already on the agenda of the public hearing since the
discretionary power to renew includes the power not to
renew.
[200]Circular No. 444 is a directive or information of a
general nature concerning the practices pertaining to
non-compliance of a radio station. Dated May 7, 2001, it is
addressed to all licensees of radio programming undertakings.
I reproduce it for consultation and analysis, while
underlining certain passages:
CIRCULAR No. 444
Ottawa, 7 May 2001
To all licensees of radio programming
undertakings
Practices regarding radio non-compliance
Each year, the Commission processes numerous licence
renewal applications, including those relating to radio
stations. This circular clarifies how the Commission deals
with the licence renewals of radio stations that have been
found in apparent non-compliance with the provisions of
the Broadcasting Act, the Radio Regulations, 1986
or the conditions of their licence.
1. The Commission assesses the compliance of radio
licensees with requirements set out in the Broadcasting
Act (the Act), the Radio Regulations, 1986 (the
regulations) and in conditions of licence through the
complaints process or on its own initiative pursuant to its
compliance monitoring plan. The compliance record of each
station during a licence period is usually reviewed at the
time that the Commission considers the renewal of the
station's licence. When a station is found to be operating in
compliance, the Commission normally renews the licence for a
term of seven years, subject to its regional licence renewal
plan and considerations related to its workload.
2. Non-compliance most often occurs with respect to
requirements regarding logger tapes, the level of Canadian
music broadcast and, for French-language stations, the level
of French-language vocal music selections. Requirements
related to logger tapes are set out in sections 8(5) and 8(6)
of the regulations, while those related to levels of Canadian
and French-language vocal selections are found within section
2. Stations can, however, be in non-compliance with other
requirements.
3. When analyses of stations are performed, the Commission
affords each the opportunity to comment in writing on the
preliminary results. When apparent non-compliance is observed
for the first time in relation to a station, the Commission
notes that observation in the Public Notice that calls for
public comment on the renewal of the licence. Since the
licensee has been given an opportunity to comment on the
findings of apparent non-compliance through correspondence
and to specify the measures that will be put into place to
ensure future compliance, the licensee is usually not asked
to appear at a public hearing. The station normally is
granted a short-term licence renewal, generally for four
years, to permit a further review of its compliance within a
reasonable period of time.
4. The procedure is different where a licensee is already
operating under a short-term renewal due to non-compliance
during the previous licence term and is found to be in
apparent non-compliance during the current licence term, or
where a licensee is found in apparent non-compliance twice
during a full licence term. In these situations, the
Notice of Public Hearing calling for public comment on the
renewal of the licence mentions the nature of the
non-compliance and generally specifies that the
licensee is expected to show cause why a mandatory order
should not be issued pursuant to section 12(2) of the Act. As
well, the licensee is generally called to appear at a public
hearing to discuss the problem.
5. Based on the evidence filed or heard, the Commission
may issue a mandatory order requiring the fulfilment of
any requirement after it has considered an instance of
apparent non-compliance with that requirement. A mandatory
order may become an order of the Federal Court or any
superior court of a province when the Commission files the
order with the court. The mandatory order then becomes
enforceable in the same manner as orders of the Court.
According to the Federal Court Rules, anyone who
disobeys an order of the Court may be found guilty of
contempt of court, and may be subject to a financial
penalty.
6. If the Commission is fully satisfied with the measures
that the licensee has taken and is satisfied that
non-compliance is not likely to recur, it generally does not
impose a mandatory order but renews the licence for a term
not exceeding two years. Where the Commission is not
satisfied that the licensee has taken all necessary measures
to ensure that non-compliance will not recur, and where it
considers that a short-term renewal may not in itself correct
the non-compliance situation, it may also issue a mandatory
order.
Secretary General [Emphasis added.]
[201]Circular No. 444 indicates in a general way the
process that is followed when a radio station does not comply
with the statutory and regulatory requirements. It is not
intended to solve individual cases. It does not have the
effect of binding the CRTC's exercise of its discretion in
the choice of enforcement measures to ensure the
implementation of Canadian broadcasting policy. Section 6 of
the Act expressly provides that the CRTC is not bound by the
guidelines or statements it issues:
6. The Commission may from time to time issue
guidelines and statements with respect to any matter within
its jurisdiction under this Act, but no such guidelines or
statements issued by the Commission are binding on the
Commission.
[202]If this general circular of 2001 may, by its general
nature, have created some doubt in the appellant's mind, or
even a legitimate expectation of favourable treatment at the
time of renewal, I think the Notice of Public Hearing and the
exchanges between the appellant and the CRTC, before and
during the hearing, should have dispelled that doubt and
indicated to the appellant that its expectation was neither
legitimate nor reasonable in the circumstances. It would be
extremely naive to think that the possibility of a licence
non-renewal was not a contemplated option and conceivable
when an initial renewal was for a short term (two years
instead of seven) in order to ensure compliance with the
regulatory system and monitor the licensee's compliance
within a reasonable period, when this initial renewal had
been made subject to significant conditions of licence, when
an Advisory Committee and a Code of Ethics had been imposed,
when 47 new complaints had been filed within the following
year and a half, and when the appellant was informed more
than once that non-renewal was an option being
contemplated.
[203] The appellant's contention that it believed in the
existence of a reasonable expectation that its licence would
be renewed with an order has no factual or legal basis.
3. An unprecedented and extremely harsh measure
[204]It is false to say that the non-renewal of the
appellant's licence is unprecedented. The following decisions
are cases in which the CRTC, in the public interest, did not
renew a broadcaster's licence: CJMF-FM Ltée,
CRTC 84-209, upheld by this Court, [1984] F.C.J. No. 244
(C.A.) (QL); Coaticook FM Inc., CRTC 87-756;
Communications communautaires des Portages, CRTC
87-754; Félicien Messier, doing business under the
name and style of "Cablo-Vision
Saint-François-Xavier-des-Hauteurs Enr." and
"Cablo-Vision Saint-Valérien Enr.", CRTC 91-610;
Fundy Broadcasting Co. Limited, CRTC 77-148; Radio
communautaire du Bas St-Laurent, CRTC 87-753; and
Riverport Satellite T.V. Limited, CRTC 95-296. It is
true that there are not many cases, but this indicates two
things: that broadcasting undertakings, as a general rule,
act in a responsible way, and that the CRTC is parsimonious
in its exercise of this coercive measure, using it when the
public interest so requires and other measures prove
ineffective.
[205]The appellant's counsel compared the non-renewal of
the appellant's licence, on a scale of severity, to a death
sentence. It is a striking image, but the factual and legal
reality is somewhat different.
[206]Legally, as I said earlier, the appellant's licence
was a fixed-term licence and the appellant was not
automatically entitled to the renewal, particularly in the
circumstances.
[207]Factually, the term has expired and the licence has
come to an end. Non-renewal in these circumstances means that
the radio frequency becomes available and will be offered on
the market. The appellant is not excluded from the bidding
process that normally follows. If it offers the necessary
guarantees, it may be awarded the licence again.
[208]There is no doubt that the decision not to renew a
licence is a serious measure and a source of inconvenience.
However, the issue for the CRTC was not whether the decision
would have some detrimental consequences for the appellant,
but whether it was appropriate and justified in the
circumstances.
[209]The time has now come to consider the nub of the
question, the CRTC's exercise of its discretion, to determine
whether it was lawfully exercised.
Did the CRTC exercise its discretion
judicially?
1. No error of law in the consideration of factors
relevant to the exercise of the discretion
[210]An analysis of the CRTC decision reveals that the
agency scrupulously examined and weighed all of the factors
it considered relevant in making a decision on a renewal of
licence. I listed them at the very beginning of these reasons
and in the part dealing with decision 271. I have no
intention of repeating them.
[211]The appellant has not denied that these factors were
relevant. It wanted them to be weighted differently, but it
was unable to demonstrate that the CRTC had committed any
error of law in the weighting exercise in which it engaged.
Similarly, it was unable to identify any relevant factors
that the CRTC had supposedly failed to consider and that
would have affected its decision-making and its decision.
[212]As one can read in the conclusions and reasons of its
decision, the CRTC dwelt at some length on the choice of the
measure, the relative ineffectiveness of the measures adopted
at the time of the first renewal, the appellant's attitude
and the gravity and frequency of the offences noted, to
recall only a few of the grounds. Again, the appellant is
unable to criticize it for anything, other than the question
of the appropriate weight to be given to the factors
considered. That is the CRTC's field of expertise, which
dictates deference on our part.
[213]That being said, it is necessary to consider, in this
context, the appellant's argument that paragraph 3(b)
of the Regulations is unconstitutional and that decision 271
is also unconstitutional.
2. Nullity of paragraph 3(b) of
the Regulations and the impact of this nullity on decision
271
[214]Paragraph 3(b) of the Regulations imposes a
limitation on the broadcasting of any abusive comment that
incites hatred or contempt on the basis of prohibited grounds
of discrimination. For greater accuracy, I reproduce the full
text of the paragraph:
3. A licensee shall not broadcast
(a) anything in contravention of the law;
(b) any abusive comment that, when taken in
context, tends to or is likely to expose an individual or a
group or class of individuals to hatred or contempt on the
basis of race, national or ethnic origin, colour, religion,
sex, sexual orientation, age or mental or physical
disability;
[215]The appellant is asking that paragraph 3(b) be
declared of no force and effect because it is in breach of
the freedom of expression guaranteed by paragraph 2(b)
of the Charter.
[216]The appellant is also asking that its own Code of
Ethics be likewise declared of no force and effect. This is
the Code that it developed and undertook to comply with
during its first renewal of licence. The CRTC made it a
condition of licence. I do not think it is necessary to
decide this question. The appellant's licence has ended, and
to the degree that the Code was made a condition of licence,
it too has ended with the licence, other than for the
duration of the present proceedings pursuant to the order of
this Court. If the matter were to be sent back to the CRTC
for re-adjudication on the issue of renewal, it would be up
to the CRTC to make a decision on whether or not to impose a
Code of Ethics and to determine the content thereof.
[217]With respect, I do not think it is possible to find
that the CRTC failed to exercise judicially its discretion
not to renew the appellant's licence, even if I were to
declare paragraph 3(b) unconstitutional.
[218]The CRTC found violations by the appellant of clauses
2, 3, 6, 17 and 18 of its Code of Ethics. Under clause 2 of
this Code, the appellant undertook to make every effort to
ensure that its programming is of high standard and not an
instigation to contempt or hatred. It acknowledged the right
to privacy (clause 3). It undertook that its hosts and
journalists would not use the airwaves to launch personal
attacks (clause 6). It agreed that participants in a program
or an open-line program, public figures, listeners, and
formal or informal groups are entitled to respect and should
not be harassed, insulted or ridiculed (clause 17). Finally,
it recognized that coarse or vulgar remarks have no place in
programming (clause 18).
[219]As mentioned previously, compliance with this Code
became a condition of use of the licence, and it was simply
not respected. Non-compliance with a condition of licence is
conduct that may warrant non-renewal of a broadcasting
licence without necessarily resulting in an infringement of
freedom of expression and a breach of the Charter: see
CJMF-FM Ltée v. Canada. A finding that such a
case produces an infringement of freedom of expression or a
breach of the Charter would lead to forced or automatic
renewals of licences, even when confronted with egregious
violations of the policies and objectives of the Act or of
other Charter rights.
[220]Simply stated, the CRTC's decision 271 is based on a
number of findings about the appellant's conduct and the
measures that were to ensure its compliance with the
regulatory regime: the ineffectiveness and obsequiousness of
its Advisory Committee, a breach of the Act and the Codes of
Ethics concerning the quality of spoken-word programming, a
violation of the rights to privacy and human dignity
guaranteed by the Charter and the Codes of Ethics, a
violation of the rights to psychological integrity and
reputation also guaranteed by the Charter, unjustified
personal attacks, insults, and vulgar and crude comments in
contravention of the conditions of licence. Even if the
consideration of paragraph 3(b) of the Regulations is
excluded from the decision, and even admitting for the sake
of argument that it was an error to refer to that paragraph,
this error in no way affects the decision as a whole and
cannot warrant any intervention on our part: see Law
Society of New Brunswick v. Ryan, at page 270.
[221]The appellant makes much of the guarantee of freedom
of expression in paragraph 2(b) of the Charter and
seems to want to treat it as unqualified, something that the
courts have never recognized. I do not think I am mistaken in
saying that freedom of expression, freedom of opinion and
freedom of speech do not mean freedom of defamation, freedom
of oppression and freedom of opprobrium. Nor do I think I am
mistaken in saying that the right to freedom of expression
under the Charter does not require that the State or the CRTC
become accomplices in or promoters of defamatory language or
violations of the rights to privacy, integrity, human dignity
and reputation by forcing them to issue a broadcasting
licence used for those purposes. To accept the appellant's
proposition would mean using the Charter to make the State or
its agencies an instrument of oppression or violation of the
individual rights to human dignity, privacy and integrity on
behalf of the commercial profitability of a business.
[222]In view of the conclusion I have reached concerning
the lack of impact of paragraph 3(b) of the
Regulations on decision 271, it is unnecessary to rule on its
constitutional validity.
3. Constitutional invalidity of decision 271
[223]The appellant's argument that decision 271 of the
CRTC is constitutionally invalid appears to me to be without
merit, essentially for the reasons given in the preceding
paragraphs.
[224]The CRTC exercised its discretion within the
parameters of sections 9 and 3 of the Act. I am satisfied
that this exercise of discretion does not go beyond the
limitations on freedom of expression that these two statutory
provisions themselves may allow constitutionally within the
confines of section 1 of the Charter: see Slaight
Communications Inc., at page 1081. This conclusion is
also compatible with this Court's conclusion in CJMF-FM
Ltée.
Conclusion
[225]The appellant attempted, but without success, to
demonstrate that the CRTC failed to exercise judicially its
discretion on renewals of licences. It was unable to
establish a breach of the principles of natural justice, the
standards of procedural fairness and the CRTC's own rules of
procedure, which would amount to an error of law warranting
our intervention. It was also unable to demonstrate a
jurisdictional error or such material error in law as would
make decision 271 on non-renewal unreasonable and require
that it be set aside.
[226]Consequently, I would dismiss the appeal with costs
to the Attorney General of Canada, but without costs to or
against the interveners. I would include the CRTC for this
purpose in the category of interveners, notwithstanding that
the appellant made it a party to this appeal.
Reconnecting the judicial respirator
[227]It now remains for me to examine the issue of
reconnecting the judicial respirator, which allowed the
appellant to continue operating its radio station pending the
outcome of the appeal until a judgment of this Court is
rendered.
[228]At the hearing, the parties were questioned about the
appropriateness of reconnecting the judicial respirator if
the appeal were dismissed and the appellant wished to appeal
to the Supreme Court of Canada. The appellant, of course,
asked that its judicial licence be extended. The respondents,
for their part, preferred to study the judgment and the
reasons before determining and stating their position. I
think that is a legitimate preference. In any case, no
agreement was possible at that time on the duration of this
extension, even if the appropriateness of granting such an
extension had been conceded.
[229]If, once they have examined the judgment, the
appellant and the Attorney General of Canada were to agree on
the question of an extension and its duration, the appellant
could, within 20 days of the date on which it was informed of
the judgment, present to the Court, by a letter addressed to
the Registrar of the Federal Court of Appeal, in Ottawa, a
request for extension under the terms of the consent and
attach that consent to it. It is clear that the Court is not
bound by a request on consent and may deny it or amend its
terms.
[230]Should there be no agreement between the appellant
and the Attorney General of Canada, I would order that the
appellant, if it wishes to obtain an extension of its
judicial licence, serve and file, within 20 days of the date
on which it is informed of this judgment, a motion in writing
to that effect. The motion shall be served on the Attorney
General of Canada.
[231]As under the principles applicable to a stay of
execution of a judgment, the appellant would have to
establish that its application for leave to appeal to the
Supreme Court of Canada raises a serious question for
determination, that it will suffer irreparable harm that
cannot be compensated monetarily if there is no extension and
that the balance of convenience favours it.
[232]Within 20 days of the date on which he is served with
the motion and motion record, the Attorney General of Canada
shall serve and file his record in reply.
[233]The written submissions of the appellant/ applicant
and of the respondent on the motion shall not exceed 30 pages
each and must be consistent with sections 65 and 70 [as am.
by SOR/2002-417, s. 9] of the Federal Courts Rules, or
they will be rejected.
[234]The decision on the motion will be made on the basis
of the written submissions by the parties.
[235]The appellant's licence will be deemed to remain in
force, in accordance with all of its terms and conditions,
including compliance with all the regulatory requirements
imposed under the Act and the regulations pertaining thereto,
until the end of the 20th day from the date on which the
appellant was informed of this judgment, if no motion for
extension is served and filed or if no request for extension
on consent is sent to the Registrar within this period.
[236]Should any such motion be filed or any such request
be sent, the licence will be deemed to remain in force on the
same conditions and in accordance with the same terms until a
decision is made by this Court on the motion or on the
request.
Richard C.J.: I agree.
Nadon J.A.: I agree.