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R. v. Kirkness, [1990] 3 S.C.R. 74

 

Mark Walter Kirkness  Appellant

 

v.

 

Her Majesty The Queen    Respondent

 

indexed as:  r. v. kirkness

 

File No.:  21720.

 

1990:  May 3; 1990:  November 22.

 

Present:  Lamer C.J.* and Wilson, La Forest, L'Heureux‑Dubé, Sopinka, Gonthier and Cory JJ.

 

on appeal from the court of appeal for manitoba

 

    Criminal law ‑‑ Homicide ‑‑ Single transaction principle ‑‑ Principle derived from first degree murder classification ‑‑ Whether or not single transaction principle extends to manslaughter ‑‑ Criminal Code, R.S.C. 1970, c. C‑34, s. 214(5).

 

    Criminal law ‑‑ Attempts ‑‑ Party to offence ‑‑ Common intent ‑‑ Agreement to break and enter ‑‑ One party sexually assaulting and murdering victim ‑‑ Accused asking companion not to strangle victim but otherwise not preventing or dissociating self ‑‑ Whether or not accused aiding and abetting crime of manslaughter ‑‑ Criminal Code, R.S.C. 1970, c. C‑34, s. 21(1), (2).

 

    Appellant and a friend, Snowbird, had been drinking when they agreed to break into a house at Snowbird's suggestion.  Appellant entered through a window with a garden tool handle, let Snowbird in through the door and gave the broken handle to Snowbird as a weapon.  Snowbird sexually assaulted and killed the eighty‑three year old woman who lived there.  Appellant was told to leave the room when the assault began and remained across the hall while the assault was occurring.  He placed a chair against the outside door of the house and occupied himself with stealing various things from the house.  Snowbird dragged his unconscious victim into the hallway and began to choke her.  Appellant asked him "not to do that because he (Snowbird) was going to kill her."  Snowbird then suffocated the victim.

 

    The trial judge set out two options to the jury:  either they could find both Snowbird and appellant guilty of murder or the lesser included offence of manslaughter or alternatively they could find that the death occurred because of suffocation at the hands of Snowbird.  He did not charge the jury on s. 214(5)  of the Criminal Code .

 

    Snowbird was convicted of first degree murder.  Appellant was acquitted but the Court of Appeal set aside the verdict and directed a new trial on the charge of manslaughter.

 

    At issue here were:  (1) whether or not it was appropriate to apply the "single transaction" principle derived from the first degree murder classification in s. 214(5) to support an order for a retrial on a charge of manslaughter; and (2) whether or not the trial judge adequately charged the jury on the issue of party liability as it related to accused's liability in the homicide and the application of s. 21 of the Code.

 

    Held (Wilson and L'Heureux‑Dubé JJ. dissenting):  The appeal should be allowed.

 

    Per Lamer C.J. and La Forest, Sopinka, Gonthier and Cory JJ.:  The single transaction analysis should be limited to those cases of murder classified as being either in the first or second degree under s. 214(5).  To establish a single transaction analysis, the Crown must first establish that the accused committed the underlying offence and that he or she also committed the murder.  Similarly for party offences, the Crown must first establish that the accused was a party to both offences.  It is only when this has been accomplished that the court may then consider whether the two offences were sufficiently closely connected in time to allow the murder to be classified as first degree.  Manslaughter, however, is not classified as to category and can apply to a very broad range of circumstances.  The single transaction analysis, therefore, could not be used to direct a new trial on a charge of manslaughter.  Given the nature of the charge, the options left with the jury and Snowbird's conviction of first degree murder, appellant could not be part of a "single transaction" which resulted in the victim's death.

 

    Appellant could only be implicated as a party to the sexual assault through the operation of s. 21 of the Code.  The person aiding or abetting the crime must intend that death ensue or intend that he or the perpetrator cause bodily harm likely to result in death and be reckless whether death ensues or not.  If the intent of the aiding party is insufficient to support a murder conviction, then that party might still be convicted of manslaughter if the unlawful act which was aided or abetted is one he or she knows is likely to cause some harm short of death.  Neither intent was demonstrated by the appellant in the present case.

 

    Appellant, when he formed an intent in common with Snowbird to carry out the break and enter, did not know before entering that Snowbird would either commit a sexual assault or kill the victim.  Appellant was not a party to the suffocation and, indeed, put Snowbird on "timely notice" that he was acting on his own.  The single transaction principle was not applicable absent evidence linking appellant to the suffocation.

 

    The trial judge adequately instructed the jury as to the offences (including manslaughter), the law pertaining to parties to offences and the evidence implicating the appellant in relation to the applicable law.  A verdict of manslaughter was only open to the jury if the appellant was found to be a party to the sexual assault and the death was found to be a result of the sexual assault.  The possibility of reaching such a verdict was not withdrawn from the jury.

 

    Per Wilson and L'Heureux‑Dubé JJ. (dissenting):  The single transaction principle discussed in R. v. Paré had no application here.  The issue is whether the trial judge properly instructed the jury regarding appellant's possible liability as a party to the homicide under s. 21  of the Criminal Code .

 

    In the context of murder, a jury can find an accused guilty of the lesser included offence of manslaughter where that person aided or abetted a principal found guilty of murder.  In crimes of personal violence, the mens rea for manslaughter will often be present in a party who has assisted.  The possibility of convicting an accessory for manslaughter as opposed to murder should have been explained to the jury in this case.

 

    The mental element of the offence of aiding and abetting in the commission of a criminal offence is doing an act for the purpose of assisting the principal in the commission of the offence.  In the context of party liability the essential elements of the offence take a somewhat different form from that taken in the case of principal offenders because a party's acts and intent must be examined in relation to those of the principal.  Presence at the commission of an offence can be evidence of aiding and abetting if accompanied by other factors, such as prior knowledge of the principal offender's intention to commit the offence or attendance for the purpose of encouragement.  Distinguishing between acts amounting to "mere acquiescence" and acts amounting to "encouragement", however, is often difficult.  An aider or abettor must possess the necessary state of mind and evidence must support an inference that the accused had prior knowledge of the anticipated crime and that it was substantially similar to the actual crime.

 

    The accused neither aided nor abetted this murder because he did not have the specific intent to assist in bringing about the death of the victim.  His liability for the victim's death turned solely upon whether he aided or abetted the sexual assault of this woman.  The evidence supports such a finding.  His actions amounted to more than "mere acquiescence"; they were akin to those of a "look‑out" and therefore could be considered as assisting and encouraging Snowbird in the commission of the sexual assault which he knew was taking place.

 

    The crime committed by Snowbird was of a similar type to that which the accused believed he was aiding and abetting.  It may be somewhat artificial to draw a sharp line between the act of sexual assault and the act of suffocation where the violence inherent in the sexual assault escalated in a maniacal way to the violence accompanying suffocation.  The sexual assault and the suffocation are offences of the same type in the sense that together they combine to form the offences proscribed by either s. 246.2 or s. 246.3 of the Code.  Moreover, they are offences which could cause bodily harm short of death.  Even if the appellant intended only to assist in the commission of a sexual assault simpliciter, it would be open to the jury to find that in law he aided and abetted a crime of a type involving personal violence and hence a risk of bodily harm short of death.

 

    The common intent rule (codified in s. 21(2)) was specifically designed to determine liability in situations such as the present.  First the accused must be shown to have formed an intention in common with others to carry out an unlawful purpose and to assist them in achieving that purpose.  This common intention is usually implied from the facts.  It need not be pre‑planned in any way and may arise just prior to or at the time of the commission of the offence.  Here, the initial common purpose of the appellant and Snowbird was to break and enter.

 

    The nature of the common purpose is often determinative of whether an accused will be held responsible for the principal's subsequent acts.  The propensity for violence of each or any of the common intenders is relevant to a determination of the extent of the common purpose.  There was evidence here that resort to violence might occur in carrying out the common purpose.

 

    If the jury found that the common purpose encompassed only the breaking and entering it might be hard to justify a finding that the death of the occupant was a probable consequence of that purpose.  If, however, the jury determined that the common purpose also encompassed acts of physical violence against the occupant, then the route to party liability is much clearer.  Violence so often accompanies sexual crimes that the probability of harm short of death is implicit, especially when the common purpose contemplates physical interference with a person.  There may, of course, be situations where the level of physical violence contemplated is so minimal, even in some assaults of a sexual nature, that serious bodily harm is merely a possibility rather than a probability.  The question of whether the causing of bodily harm short of death was a probable consequence of the sexual offence was for the jury to decide.

 

    An accused may be absolved of criminal liability for the acts of the principal if he can show that he abandoned his purpose to assist in the commission of a criminal offence.  The standard varies in relation to the accused's degree of participation in the crime.  The central consideration relates to the quality of the withdrawal in relation to both the offence and the type of criminal participation in which the party has engaged.  The trial judge also erred in failing to explain the abandonment defence to the jury.

 

    The trial judge did not adequately instruct the jury with regard to the possibility of convicting the appellant of manslaughter.  The charge was confusing and it was erroneous and misleading with respect to the application of the common intent section.  By posing the question in terms of whether the sexual assault caused the death, he improperly implied that if appellant did not directly assist in the act of suffocation he could not be held responsible for the victim's death.  The question for the jury, however, was not whether the sexual assault caused the death but rather whether appellant aided or abetted Snowbird in a crime which was of the type which could have caused bodily harm or whether bodily harm could have resulted as a consequence of carrying out the sexual assault.  This point of fundamental importance was lost on the jury because of the trial judge's misdirection.

 

Cases Cited

 

By Cory J.

 

    Distinguished:  R. v. Paré, [1987] 2 S.C.R. 618; referred to:  R. v. Stevens (1984), 11 C.C.C. (3d) 518; R. v. Whitehouse, [1941] 1 D.L.R. 683; Miller v. The Queen, [1977] 2 S.C.R. 680.

 

By Wilson J. (dissenting)

 

    R. v. Paré, [1987] 2 S.C.R. 618; R. v. Kent, Sinclair and Gode (1986), 40 Man. R. (2d) 160; R. v. Hartford and Frigon (1979), 51 C.C.C. (2d) 462; R. v. Trudeau and Toulouse (1985), 12 O.A.C. 189; Murray v. The Queen, [1962] Tas. S.R. 170; Dunlop and Sylvester v. The Queen, [1979] 2 S.C.R. 881; R. v. Cunningham (1937), 68 C.C.C. 176; R. v. Lloyd (1890), 19 O.R. 352; R. v. Black, [1970] 4 C.C.C. 251; R. v. Cosgrove (1975), 29 C.C.C. (2d) 169; R. v. Clarkson, [1971] 3 All E.R. 344; R. v. Salajko (1970), 9 C.R.N.S. 145; R. v. Yanover and Gerol (1985), 20 C.C.C. (3d) 300; Director of Public Prosecutions for Northern Ireland v. Maxwell, [1978] 1 W.L.R. 1350; R. v. Stevenson (1984), 11 C.C.C. (3d) 443; Lord Dacre's Case (1543), 1 Hale H.P.C. 439; Plummer's Case, Kel J. 109, 84 E.R. 1103; R. v. Rice (1902), 5 C.C.C. 509, leave to appeal refused (1902), 5 C.C.C. 529; R. v. Govedarov, Popovic and Askov (1974), 16 C.C.C. (2d) 238; R. v. Viger (1985), 36 C.C.C. (3d) 18; Henderson v. The King, [1948] S.C.R. 226; Rex v. Whitehouse (1940), 55 B.C.R. 420; Miller v. The Queen, [1977] 2 S.C.R. 680; R. v. Becerra and Cooper (1975), 62 Cr. App. R. 212; R. v. Simpson, [1988] 1 S.C.R. 3.

 

Statutes and Regulations Cited

 

Criminal Code, R.S.C. 1970, c. C‑34, ss. 21, 212, 214(5) (rep. & sub. S.C. 1980-81-82-83, c. 125, s. 16; am. S.C. 1985, c. 19, s. 41(2) (item 3)), 246.1, 246.2, 246.3.

 

Authors Cited

 

Foster, Sir Michael.  Foster's Crown Law.  London:  1809.

 

Gillies, Peter.  Criminal Law.  Sydney:  Law Book Co., 1985.

 

Hale, Sir Matthew.  Historia Placitorum Coronae.  The History of the Pleas of the Crown, vol. 1.  London:  Nutt & Gosling, 1736.

 

Lanham, David.  "Accomplices and Withdrawal" (1981), 97 L.Q. Rev. 575.

 

Manson, A.  "Re‑codifying Attempts, Parties, and Abandoned Intentions" (1989), 14 Queen's L.J. 85.

 

Rose, V. Gordon.  Parties To An Offence.   Toronto:  Carswells, 1982.

 

Stuart, Don.  Canadian Criminal Law: A Treatise.   Toronto:  Carswells, 1982.

 

Wasik, Martin.  "Abandoning Criminal Intent", [1980] Crim. L. Rev. 785.

 

Williams, Glanville.  Textbook of Criminal Law, 2nd ed.  London:  Stevens & Sons, 1983.

 

    APPEAL from a judgment of the Manitoba Court of Appeal (1989), 61 Man. R. (2d) 167, 51 C.C.C. (3d) 444, setting aside an acquittal by Scollin J. sitting with jury.  Appeal allowed, Wilson and L'Heureux‑Dubé JJ. dissenting.

 

    Timothy J. Preston, for the appellant.

 

    Stuart J. Whitley, Q.C., for the respondent.

 

//Cory J.//

 

    The judgment of Lamer C.J. and La Forest, Sopinka, Gonthier and Cory JJ. was delivered by

 

    CORY J. -- Two questions must be answered in order to dispose of this appeal.  First, is it appropriate to apply the "single transaction" principle derived from the first degree murder classification appearing in s. 214(5) of the Criminal Code, R.S.C. 1970, c. C-34 (now R.S.C., 1985, c. C-46, s. 231(5) ) to support an order for a retrial on a charge of manslaughter?  Second, did the trial judge, by his instructions, withdraw from the jury the possibility of a verdict of manslaughter?

 

Factual Background

 

    The appellant and his friend, Alexander Snowbird, came from God's Lake Narrows.  On December 31, 1987 they were in Winnipeg.  That evening they went to a number of bars and undoubtedly drank a good deal.  In the early morning hours of New Year's Day, Snowbird took the appellant to the alley behind the residence of Elizabeth Johnson and suggested that they break into her house.  The appellant readily agreed.  They opened a window through which the appellant entered and opened the back door for Snowbird. 

 

    Elizabeth Johnson was a slight, frail woman of eighty-three years.  She was asleep in her bed when the two men broke into her house.  Snowbird saw her.  He went into her bedroom, removed her clothes and sexually assaulted her.  The appellant, on the instructions of Snowbird, remained outside.  He sat in a chair in the hallway on the other side of the bedroom door for some time and otherwise occupied himself by stealing various things from the house.  The appellant also placed a chair against the front door of the house while Snowbird was in the bedroom sexually assaulting Mrs. Johnson.  In the long and detailed statement which the appellant gave to the police he explained that he had taken this action because he thought someone might come into the residence while he and Snowbird were there.

 

    Subsequent to the sexual assault, Alexander Snowbird dragged Elizabeth Johnson from the bedroom into the hallway where, according to the appellant, she "just laid there".  The appellant then entered the bedroom and there proceeded to steal various items.  Upon leaving the bedroom, the appellant saw Snowbird begin to choke the victim.  The appellant told Snowbird "not to do that because he (Snowbird) was going to kill her."  According to the appellant, Snowbird then placed a plastic bag over the head of Elizabeth Johnson, dragged her into the bathroom, dumped her into the bathtub and turned on the hot water.

 

    In all of his statements to the police the appellant denied ever touching Elizabeth Johnson or that he had participated in either the sexual assault, the choking or the suffocation of the victim.

 

    The pathologist stated that in his opinion death was due to suffocation.  There was no physical or forensic evidence which linked the appellant to either the sexual assault or the suffocation of the victim.  The sole physical evidence against the appellant was a smear of blood on his underwear pants.  He confirmed that they were the same ones he had been wearing at the time of the break and enter.  However, he stated that a day or so after breaking into the Johnson house, he had been involved in a fight and beaten to such an extent that he was hospitalized two days before his arrest.  As well, it must be noted that the blood smear could not be typed or even identified as human blood.

 

    Both the appellant and Snowbird were charged with first degree murder.  Snowbird was convicted of that crime while the appellant was acquitted.

 

Some Comments Upon the Factual Background

 

    The facts of this case are depressing and sordid in the extreme.  Their simple recitation incites feelings of anger and utter revulsion.  That sense of disgust is bound to strengthen the very natural tendency to closely associate the appellant with the perpetrator of this particularly despicable crime.  The almost inevitable result is to think that the appellant must be guilty because of his association with Snowbird.  Nevertheless, principles of criminal law and fairness require that the guilt or innocence of Kirkness be determined solely on the evidence which implicates him in the killing of the victim.  Both the despicable and the personable are entitled to be judged guilty or innocent solely on the basis of the evidence relating to the crime with which they are charged.

 

    It must be remembered that the twelve members of the jury heard all the evidence and were for several days immersed in this tale of brutish violence and cruel insensitivity.  Indeed, they were complimented by counsel for the Crown for the careful attention that they had given to all the witnesses throughout the trial.  They listened to and obviously assessed the lengthy and detailed statement given by Kirkness to the police.  At the conclusion of the trial, the jury, acting as judges of the facts, acquitted the appellant.  They reached this decision as representatives of their community, no doubt carrying with them all of that community's natural sympathy for a frail, helpless, elderly lady brutally murdered in her own home.  The verdict of the jury constitutes, in a very real way, the verdict of the community.  Trial by jury in criminal cases is a process that functions exceedingly well and constitutes a fundamentally important aspect of our democratic society.  It is not members of the judiciary, but rather the members of the jury, sitting as members of the community, who make the decision as to guilt or innocence which is so vitally important both to the individual accused and the community.

 

    The jury in this case was obviously of the view that the evidence did not satisfy them beyond a reasonable doubt that the appellant was guilty of murder or manslaughter.  It was uniquely and properly the function of the jury to reach such a conclusion based upon all the evidence which they heard.  There is no suggestion that relevant evidence was improperly excluded or that irrelevant evidence was improperly admitted.  It follows that only if there was a significant error made by the trial judge in the course of the charge should the jury's verdict of acquittal be set aside.

 

Decision of the Court of Appeal (1989), 61 Man. R. (2d) 167

 

    The Court of Appeal set aside the verdict of acquittal and directed a new trial of the appellant on the charge of manslaughter.  There were two bases for the decision expressed by Monnin C.J.M., writing for the Court.

 

    First, he was of the opinion that the appellant was clearly a party to the sexual assault of the victim.  He observed that the appellant was aware that a sexual assault was taking place in the bedroom.  By placing the chair against the front door, he assisted Snowbird in carrying out that assault with impunity and he was therefore a party to the sexual assault.  He further stated that in his opinion the sexual assault could not be isolated from the other incidents and that it ultimately "resulted in the suffocation death of the victim".  He wrote at p. 171:

 

The totality of the events during the whole episode leads inevitably to the conclusion that what started out as a break and enter ended in the killing of this lady.  It is an entire sequence which cannot be broken down into components or into a half-dozen separate and distinct incidents or separate and different crimes.

 

He stated that he was applying the reasoning of this Court set out in R. v. Paré, [1987] 2 S.C.R. 618.

 

    Secondly, the Court of Appeal concluded that the trial judge had removed from the jury the possibility of the verdict of manslaughter.  Monnin C.J.M. expressed it in this way at p. 172:

 

    In my view Scollin, J., erred in stating that if Kirkness "simply wandered around the place, stealing things and picking things out of fridges, or whatever he says he did, if you accept that is the story, then Kirkness is not responsible for any criminal act that is before you".  Thus Scollin, J., withdrew from the jury the possibility of a verdict of manslaughter yet, under the circumstances of this case, manslaughter ought to have been seriously considered by the jury.

 

However, Monnin C.J.M. also noted that manslaughter was the only offence open to the jury because of the intoxicated state of the appellant.  Therefore, he set aside the verdict of acquittal and ordered a new trial solely on the charge of manslaughter.

 

Can the "Single Transaction" Principle be Applied to a Charge of Manslaughter?

 

    In my view the principle expressed in R. v. Paré, supra, is simply not applicable to this case.  In Paré, this Court dealt with a killing which had taken place shortly after a sexual assault had been completed.  Wilson J., writing for the Court, had to determine whether s. 214(5)  of the Criminal Code  applied and particularly what effect the words "while committing" had in such a situation.  That section reads as follows:

 

    214. (1)  Murder is first degree murder or second degree murder.

 

                                                                         ...

 

    (5)  Irrespective of whether a murder is planned and deliberate on the part of any person, murder is first degree murder in respect of a person when the death is caused by that person while committing or attempting to commit an offence under one of the following sections:

 

(a)  section 76.1 (hijacking an aircraft);

 

(b)  section 246.1 (sexual assault);

 

(c)  section 246.2 (sexual assault with a weapon, threats to a third party or causing bodily harm);

 

(d)  section 246.3 (aggravated sexual assault);

 

(e)  section 247 (kidnapping and forcible confinement); or

 

(f)  section 247.1 (hostage taking).

 

She concluded that the words "while committing" did not require an exact coincidence of the murder with the underlying offence, but did require a close temporal and causative link between the two.  She specifically adopted the reasoning of Martin J.A. in R. v. Stevens (1984), 11 C.C.C. (3d) 518 (Ont. C.A.), where he stated at p. 541:

 

    Thus, it appears clear that where death is caused after the underlying offence is complete and the act causing death is committed for the purpose of facilitating the flight of the offender, the murder is not under ss. 213 and 214(5)(b) first degree murder.

 

    I do not wish, however, to be taken as holding that where the act causing death and the acts constituting the rape, attempted rape, indecent assault or an attempt to commit indecent assault, as the case may be, all form part of one continuous sequence of events forming a single transaction, that death would not be caused during the commission of the offence, even though the underlying offence in s. 213 in a sense could be said to be then complete.

 

Wilson J. went on to observe that the effect of the reasoning expressed in Stevens is to eliminate the need to draw artificial lines separating the commission and the aftermath of an indecent assault.  As well, it would eliminate the arbitrariness inherent in an exactly simultaneous approach to the interpretation of the words "while committing".

 

    She explained her interpretation of the words "while committing" as comprising a single ongoing transaction based upon the continuing domination of the victim which inevitably occurs in cases of rape, attempted rape, indecent assault or an attempt to commit an indecent assault.  She noted that the ensuing murder represented the ultimate exploitation of the position of power created by the underlying crime and thus made the entire course of conduct a "single transaction".  She concluded that it was due to this continuing exploitation of power that, for policy reasons, Parliament had decided to classify murder which occurs "while committing" these acts as first degree murder.

 

    I believe that the single transaction analysis should be limited to those cases of murder where by the provisions of s. 214(5) murder is classified as being in either the first or second degree.  With respect, the Court of Appeal of Manitoba erred in using such an analysis for the purpose of directing a new trial on a charge of manslaughter.  There is no classification of manslaughter contained in the Criminal Code .  Whenever the death of one human being results from the unlawful act of another, it can constitute the crime of manslaughter.  The charge can be applicable to a very broad range of circumstances, in almost all of which the consideration of the single transaction would not be applicable.  In contrast, s. 214(5) represents a policy decision to classify murder in some specified situations as being of the first degree.

 

    The decision in Paré reflects and clarifies that policy decision by concluding that where death ensues as part of a single ongoing transaction in the course of committing crimes involving domination, it will be considered to be first degree murder.  The single transaction analysis utilized in Paré requires that the Crown first establish that the accused committed the underlying offence and that he or she also committed the murder.  Similarly for party offences, the Crown must first establish that the accused was a party to both offences before s. 214(5) could be applied.  It is only when this has been accomplished that the court may then consider whether the two offences were sufficiently closely connected in time to allow the murder to be classified as first degree.  This approach cannot be utilized in the context of manslaughter because there is no classification of that offence contained in the Code.  It follows that the Paré analysis should be restricted to the classification of murder.

 

Was it Possible for the Transaction Approach to be Taken in This Case?

 

    In the case at bar, the trial judge did not charge the jury with regard to s. 214(5).  Rather, he instructed them that they had two options.  First, they could find that the death had occurred as part or as a result of the sexual assault.  He stated that if this were their conclusion, it was open to them to find that both Snowbird and the appellant were guilty of murder or at least manslaughter.  Alternatively, he told the jury that they could find that the death had occurred due to suffocation at the hands of Snowbird.  However, in either case the murder could only be first degree if the jury was satisfied that there had been some degree of planning and deliberation.

 

    It was on the basis of these instructions that Snowbird was convicted of first degree murder and the appellant was acquitted.  The jury must thus have been satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that the murder was planned and deliberate, since that was the only route left open to them upon which to find first degree murder.  More importantly, the jury must have concluded that the death resulted from the subsequent act of suffocation, and not from the sexual assault.  If they had concluded that death resulted from the sexual assault and that Kirkness was a party to it, they would have been compelled to find him guilty of murder or at least manslaughter in light of the directions given to them on this issue.  Based on the verdict of the jury, Kirkness cannot therefore be deemed to be part of a "single transaction" which resulted in the death of Mrs. Johnson.

 

    Kirkness could only be implicated, pursuant to the provisions of s. 21 of the Code, as a party to the sexual assault.  He was not the prime mover in the crime.  He neither sexually assaulted, strangled nor suffocated the victim.  In the case of an accused who aids or abets in the killing of another, the requisite intent that the aider or abettor must have in order to warrant a conviction for murder must be the same as that required of the person who actually does the killing.  That is to say, the person aiding or abetting the crime must intend that death ensue or intend that he or the perpetrator cause bodily harm of a kind likely to result in death and be reckless whether death ensues or not.  If the intent of the aiding party is insufficient to support a conviction for murder, then that party might still be convicted of manslaughter if the unlawful act which was aided or abetted is one he or she knows is likely to cause some harm short of death.  Neither intent was demonstrated by the appellant in the present case.  I would observe that the constitutional issue as to whether there is a minimal mind set or intention necessary for the crime of manslaughter was not raised in this appeal.

 

    Nor can it be said that the appellant, who had formed an intent in common with Snowbird to carry out the unlawful purpose of breaking and entering, knew before entering that Snowbird would either commit a sexual assault or kill the victim.  It will be recalled that in this case the only evidence against the appellant was that contained in his statement that he placed a chair against the front door knowing that a sexual assault was taking place in the bedroom.  There is no indication that he knew that death or bodily harm short of death might result from the sexual assault.  He did not enter into the bedroom.  Indeed, it appears that the bedroom door was closed for some period of time so that he could not be aware of everything that was taking place.  Further, it is apparent from the verdict of the jury, which was obviously based upon the expert's testimony, that the bodily harm causing death resulted from suffocation.  The strangulation and suffocation of the victim occurred after the sexual assault.

 

    There is no evidence that the appellant was a party to the suffocation of Elizabeth Johnson.  Rather, he told Snowbird not to strangle the victim as he was going to kill her.  His statement makes it clear that he was not aiding or abetting Snowbird in the strangulation or suffocation of Mrs. Johnson.  These words of the appellant constituted "timely notice" to Snowbird that he was, from that point on, acting on his own and that the appellant was not a party to the strangulation and suffocation.  See R. v. Whitehouse, [1941] 1 D.L.R. 683 (B.C.C.A.), quoted with approval in Miller v. The Queen, [1977] 2 S.C.R. 680.  Thus in those misdeeds Snowbird was acting on his own.  It is therefore apparent that even if the appellant could be considered a party to the sexual assault, by the time of the attempted strangulation he had clearly resiled from any agreement or arrangement with Snowbird and was not a party to the suffocation of the victim.

 

    The single transaction principle is simply not applicable on the facts of this case since there is no evidence linking the appellant to the suffocation.  The evidence adduced provided a sound and reasonable basis for the jury's decision to acquit the appellant and there was no reason in law for the Court of Appeal to disturb that decision on that ground.

 

Did the Trial Judge Withdraw From the Jury the Possibility of a Verdict of Manslaughter?

 

    The jury was, I believe, adequately instructed with regard to the possibility of convicting the appellant of manslaughter, although the charge in this case did not follow the usual pattern.  The trial judge expressed the view that he did not wish to utilize what he referred to as the "boiler plate" in his instructions to the jury.  Effective as that approach might be, it should be implemented carefully and with discretion.  For example, in this case only at the conclusion of his charge and after being reminded by counsel did the trial judge instruct the jury as to the fundamental principle of the presumption of innocence.  While that omission could only have benefitted the Crown, it serves to demonstrate that at least some carefully prepared check must be followed to ensure that all the essential principles are clearly set forth and that all the pertinent issues are addressed in a charge to the jury.

 

    To determine the adequacy of the charge on the issue of manslaughter, it is necessary to once more consider the evidence.  Again the appellant could only be found guilty of either murder or manslaughter if he was found to be a party to the sexual assault.  The sole evidence which implicated him in the sexual assault was contained in the portion of his statement in which he said that he had placed a chair against the front door of the house when he knew Snowbird was assaulting the victim in her bedroom.  I would observe that this action could have been taken as much to prevent the apprehension of the two accused while they stole articles from the house as to facilitate the sexual assault by Snowbird.  Nonetheless, it was evidence upon which the jury could have found the appellant to be a party to murder or manslaughter as a result of being a party to the sexual assault if that assault had resulted in the death of the victim.

 

    However, there was no evidence that the appellant knew or had any reason to believe that death was likely to result from the sexual assault.  Nor did the death result from the sexual assault.  Rather, as stated above, the jury must have found that the death occurred due to strangulation.  There was no evidence that the appellant was a party to Snowbird's strangulation and suffocation of Mrs. Johnson.  Once again, the only evidence was that of his statement in which he denied any participation in those acts.  The fact that he told Snowbird to stop when he saw him strangling the victim indicates that if the appellant ever had been a party to any offences, from that point on he had removed himself from any joint enterprise with Snowbird that involved the killing of Mrs. Johnson.

 

    As for the charge to the jury, the evidence presented at the trial made it important that the trial judge give instructions to the jury as to the law pertaining to parties to offences.  He also had to instruct the jury on the evidence implicating the appellant, which was his statement, and relate it to the applicable law.  In my view the charge was adequate in these aspects.  It is significant that neither at trial nor on appeal did the Crown take objection to the directions given as to the law pertaining to parties or the references to the evidence that was applicable to that issue.  The trial judge stated:

 

    Now, reference has been made to a section of the Code by Mr. Preston which I will deal with in a few moments, dealing with common intention and dealing with aiding and so on.  You may but you are not obliged to accept Kirkness's version given to the police.  You may consider that it has got a reasonable ring of truth to it; it was given voluntarily, without a lawyer being there; it fits a lot of the facts that are known:  but you are not bound to accept it.

                                                                         ...

 

The offence here is the sexual assault and the murder.  The one that is charged here is the murder.  If each of them knew or ought to have known that the commission of the offence of murder would be a probable consequence of carrying out the common purpose, each of them is a full party to the offence.

 

    I am not suggesting that this is a proper case for that.  It is up to you to determine what the state of mind was when the assistance was given.  Was the assistance by way of blocking the front door?  Was that given, for example, in order to enable the sexual act to continue?  If it was, then it only makes Kirkness a party if the result or the likely result was known or was within his contemplation, and that is that the sexual assault would result or was likely to result in death.  If that was not the case, then the aiding, by placing that chair -- if that is what you find it was -- is related to the sexual assault and not to the murder.  [Emphasis in original.]

 

The trial judge thus properly instructed the jury as to the law pertaining to parties and the provisions of s. 21.

 

    Turning specifically to the instructions on manslaughter, the trial judge read to the jury the provisions of s. 212(a)(i) and (ii).  He stated:

 

For convenience, I will call that second element life-threatening harm.

 

    This requirement, set out in Section 212, constitutes the intent necessary to make culpable homicide murder.  Unless the person who does the fatal act has that intent, that is, either means to cause the death or means to cause harm of that sort I have described to you and does not care whether death ensues or not, unless the person has that intent in doing the act, the act may be unlawful, death may ensue but the act will not be murder, it will be manslaughter.  [Emphasis added.]

 

This was the first reference to manslaughter and no fault could be found with it.  The trial judge then went on to define murder as first degree "when it is planned and deliberate", and gave proper definitions of the words "planned" and "deliberate".

 

Later he referred to manslaughter again in these words:

 

    In the case of each accused, you may, of course, acquit the accused entirely and the fact that there was a break and enter and sexual assault, if one of the accused did not participate in it, then you would acquit him.  You might find, if you found he participated in the unlawful act but without the necessary intent and without the planning and deliberation, and you then convict him of manslaughter.  If an accused, one of the accused -- applied to each separately -- intentionally killed the woman, then second degree murder.  If, in addition to intentionally killing the woman, he had planned and deliberated the method, the mode in carrying out the killing, then you convict of first degree murder.  You have got these separate, alternative verdicts in respect of each of the two accused.  [Emphasis added.]

 

In response to a question from the jury, the trial judge once again gave proper directions in reasonable detail with regard to s. 21.  He stated:

 

    Now, you will have to determine what the cause of death was here.  Did that bodily harm addressed to the old lady during the sexual assault kill her?  Did she die because of that bodily harm?  Did she die then, because of it, or did she die because of a bag over her head, by way of suffocation, or did she die of fright?  You will have to determine the cause of death, but the question you then have to face is, all right, that makes him a party to sexual assault, if he did that for that purpose.  Now, having become a party to it by doing that, look at this other section.  Did that become a common intention with Snowbird?  By joining in and doing that for that purpose, was an implied or implicit common intention then formed by these two to help each other in the carrying out of the sexual assault?  Was that the net result of it?  Was that the result in reality?  You will have to ask yourself that.  If it was, then the consequence is:

 

    "Where two or more persons form an intention in common..."

 

and it needn't be by written agreement, it can be by conduct,

 

    "...to carry out an unlawful purpose..."

 

and here the unlawful purpose, in that situation, is the sexual assault by Snowbird.  If they form this intention in common to carry out this unlawful purpose,

 

    "...and to assist each other..."

 

is that also implicit and you draw that conclusion,

 

    "...therein and any one of them, in carrying out the common purpose..."

 

of sexual assault,

 

    "...commits an offence..."

 

Now, this would be if death resulted from the sexual assault.

 

    "...commits an offence..."

 

or whatever it would be, murder, first degree; murder, second degree; or manslaughter.  If the death occurs right and directly because of that sexual assault, ought Kirkness to have known, in those circumstances, that that killing, whether it be murder one, murder two or manslaughter, would be a probable consequence of the sexual assault?  If he knew that and became a party to the offence by blocking the door, then he becomes a party to the offence that is, in fact, committed, if you conclude it is committed.

 

    I have, of necessity, set out at some length the references in the charge to a possible finding that Kirkness was guilty of manslaughter.  The charge, taken as a whole and including these references, constitutes an adequate instruction to the jury as to the basis upon which they could reach a verdict of manslaughter.  On the facts, a verdict of manslaughter was only open to the jury if the appellant was found to be a party to the sexual assault and the death was found to be a result of the sexual assault.  Certainly the possibility of reaching such a verdict was not withdrawn from the jury.  The Court of Appeal erred in holding the contrary.

 

Disposition

 

    In the result, I would allow the appeal and restore the acquittal.

 

//Wilson J.//

 

    The reasons of Wilson and L'Heureux-Dubé JJ. were delivered by

 

    WILSON J. (dissenting) -- I have had the benefit of the reasons of my colleague Justice Cory and I agree with him that the single transaction principle, a principle which is embodied in s. 214(5) of the Criminal Code, R.S.C. 1970, c. C-34 (now R.S.C., 1985, c. C-46, s. 231(5) ) and which was explained in the decision of this Court in R. v. Paré, [1987] 2 S.C.R. 618, has no application in the present context.  I disagree with him, however, that this determines the outcome of this appeal.  The question for the Court is whether, in light of the evidence, the trial judge properly instructed the jury regarding Kirkness' liability as a party to the homicide of Elizabeth Johnson.  That issue is to be decided on the basis of the application of s. 21  of the Criminal Code .  In my view the Manitoba Court of Appeal was correct in holding that the trial judge failed to clearly and properly instruct the jury on the very complex issue of party liability.  The result must therefore be a new trial for the accused.

 

1.  Party Liability

 

    At the conclusion of the trial Scollin J. refused to deliver what is known as a "boiler plate" charge to the jury.  It has been noted by my colleague that while this practice is not inherently wrong, trial judges must exercise great caution in delivering such charges.  When a jury untrained in the law is called upon to deal with extremely complicated legal rules, I would consider it his or her duty to set out the law in the most detailed and coherent way possible.  The rules respecting the liability of parties to an offence are notoriously complex.  I propose therefore to set out those rules and deal with their application to the facts of this particular case.

 

    The concept of liability for those who assist in the commission of crime has long been part of our criminal law.  This concept springs from the notion that those who assist others to commit crimes are fully as blameworthy as the actual perpetrators.

 

    At common law a complex body of rules evolved in order to determine criminal complicity.  Participants in crime were classified according to the time at which they participated and whether they were present at the commission of the crime by the principal offender.  The categories which developed included accessories before the fact, accessories after the fact, principals in the first degree and principals in the second degree.

 

    A related doctrine of accessorial liability also developed called the doctrine of common purpose.  The doctrine applied to those situations where the principal offender, having been assisted in some way by a party to commit an agreed upon offence, went beyond the terms of the agreement and committed some other offence.  With certain limitations, accessories and principals in the second degree were considered to be in the eyes of the law equally responsible for the crime that was eventually committed.

 

    These common law rules are now codified, with some modification, in various sections of the Criminal Code .  Specifically, section 21 of the Code provides:

 

    21. (1) Every one is a party to an offence who

 

(a) actually commits it;

 

(b)                        does or omits to do anything for the purpose of aiding                                    any person to commit it; or

 

(c) abets any person in committing it.

 

    (2) Where two or more persons form an intention in common to carry out an unlawful purpose and to assist each other therein and any one of them, in carrying out the common purpose, commits an offence, each of them who knew or ought to have known that the commission of the offence would be a probable consequence of carrying out the common purpose is a party to that offence.

 

    Before turning to the elements of liability under s. 21(1) and (2), I think it would be helpful to add a few comments on the intricacies of party liability in the murder context.

 

2.  Murder and Party Liability

 

    At common law an accessory could only be guilty of the same offence as that committed by the principal.  That view has now been modified so that a party may be found guilty of either a more serious offence than the principal's or a less serious offence.  Particularly with respect to the latter, this change in the common law is a welcome one. 

 

    In keeping with this spirit of reform several courts have held that it is possible to find a party liable of the lesser included offence of manslaughter where the principal has committed an act of murder: see R. v. Kent, Sinclair and Gode (1986), 40 Man. R. (2d) 160 (Man. C.A.); R. v. Hartford and Frigon (1979), 51 C.C.C. (2d) 462 (B.C.C.A.), and R. v. Trudeau and Toulouse (1985), 12 O.A.C. 189.  Other common law jurisdictions have adopted the same approach: see Murray v. The Queen, [1962] Tas. S.R. 170 (C.C.A.).

 

    This approach makes excellent sense.  For party liability to obtain the accessory must also possess the requisite degree of subjective foresight before he or she may be found criminally responsible.  The different degrees of mental awareness that a party must possess in the homicide context were described by Twaddle J.A. in Kent, supra, at pp. 167-68:

 

    In the case of one who aids or abets the commission of a murder, the intent necessary for a conviction of murder is the same as that required of the person who actually does the act causing death.  The person aiding or abetting the commission of the crime must intend that death ensue or that bodily harm of a kind likely to cause death be caused, he being reckless whether death ensues or not.  If the intent of the aider or abettor is insufficient to support a conviction for murder, he still might be convicted of manslaughter if the unlawful act he aids or abets is one he knows likely will cause some harm short of death.

 

    I conclude that in the murder context it is open to a jury to find an accused guilty of the lesser included offence of manslaughter where he or she aided or abetted a principal who is found guilty of murder.  When dealing with crimes of personal violence the mens rea for manslaughter will often be present in a party who has assisted.  Thus, the possibility of convicting an accessory for manslaughter as opposed to murder must be included in the Court's analysis in this case.

 

3.  Aiding and Abetting

 

    As with any other criminal offence an accused may not be held criminally responsible unless the essential elements of the offence have been proved by the Crown.  In the context of party liability these elements take a somewhat different form from the form they take in the case of principal offenders.  The reason for this is that the acts and intent of a party must be examined in relation to the acts and intent of the principal.

 

    The leading case on the elements of s. 21(1) is the decision of this Court in Dunlop and Sylvester v. The Queen, [1979] 2 S.C.R. 881.  In that case two accused had been charged with the rape of a teenage woman.  They had been present at a party held by a motorcycle club of which they were members when a gang rape took place.  The victim testified that the two accused had intercourse with her against her will, an accusation which both accused denied.  The trial judge charged the jury on the application of subss. (1) and (2) of s. 21.

 

    Dickson J. (as he then was) held that there was no evidence that either Dunlop or Sylvester had any prior knowledge of the planned rape.  In his view, it was entirely inappropriate for the trial judge to have charged the jury on s. 21(2).  The issue, rather, was whether the accused had aided and abetted the rape within the meaning of s. 21(1).  He dealt with the requirements of s. 21(1) as follows at p. 896:

 

    In the case at bar I have great difficulty in finding any evidence of anything more than mere presence and passive acquiescence.  Presence at the commission of an offence can be evidence of aiding and abetting if accompanied by other factors, such as prior knowledge of the principal offender's intention to commit the offence or attendance for the purpose of encouragement.  There was no evidence that while the crime was being committed either of the accused rendered aid, assistance or encouragement to the rape of Brenda Ross.  There was no evidence of any positive act or omission to facilitate the unlawful purpose.

 

    Distinguishing between acts amounting to "mere acquiescence" and acts amounting to "encouragement" is often difficult.  Indeed, in Dunlop and Sylvester judicial opinion as to whether the accused had in fact encouraged the commission of the rape was deeply divided.  The four judges constituting the majority found that the evidence did not support a finding that the accused had abetted the rape.  Two members of the Court refrained from expressing an opinion on the matter.  Martland J.'s dissent, in which Ritchie and Pigeon JJ. concurred, turned on his view that the sufficiency of the evidence going to the s. 21(1) issue was purely for the jury.

 

    A reference to other circumstances in which courts and juries have had to confront this difficult determination may be useful.  For instance, in R. v. Cunningham (1937), 68 C.C.C. 176 (Ont. C.A.), the accused was convicted as a party to the offence of keeping a disorderly house.  The house was being operated as a gambling establishment and the accused acted as a "look out".  The Ontario Court of Appeal held that the stationing of the accused at the entrance to the house served not only the purpose of alerting the keepers to the coming of the police so that they might avoid apprehension, but also the purpose of alerting the keepers early enough that they might destroy or conceal evidence indicating the sort of activity in which the occupants of the house were engaged.  Given these functions the amount of participation in the crime by the look out satisfied the requirements for aiding or abetting.  See also R. v. Lloyd (1890), 19 O.R. 352 (C.A.).

 

    An absence of affirmative participation in the criminal activity of others (not dissimilar to that in the present case) was held to be sufficient in R. v. Black, [1970] 4 C.C.C. 251. In that case the accused had laughed and shouted at the victim who was being indecently assaulted by a group of men.  The British Columbia Court of Appeal held that Black had aided and abetted the offence because his "mere" presence in fact prevented any realistic possibility of the victim's escape, thus permitting the continuation of the offences being committed against him.

 

    In R. v. Cosgrove (1975), 29 C.C.C. (2d) 169 (Ont. C.A.), the accused was convicted at trial as a party to a gang rape.  The accused along with four of his companions drove their female passenger to a remote place, dragged her into a corn field and took turns raping her.  Cosgrove claimed that he remained asleep in the car while the assault took place.  The trial judge left the jury with the impression that Cosgrove was under a duty to prevent the offence which he knew was being committed.  The Court of Appeal overturned the conviction and ordered a new trial on the basis that the trial judge's charge to the jury was erroneous and misleading on this point.

 

    Similarly in R. v. Clarkson, [1971] 3 All E.R. 344, the Courts-Martial Appeal Court acquitted the accused who had been present at the gang rape of a young woman in an army barracks.  Aware that the rape was taking place, the accused along with several others piled into the room where the assault occurred and watched the attack.  As there was no evidence that the accused had committed any physical act or encouraged the rape by their words, there was no foundation upon which to ground liability.

 

    Perhaps the most troubling case on this issue to date is the decision of the Ontario Court of Appeal in R. v. Salajko (1970), 9 C.R.N.S. 145, in which the accused was held to have no criminal responsibility in a gang rape at which he was present.  The accused had stood by and witnessed the rape take place with his pants down.  Salajko has been the subject of some criticism in this Court.  In Dunlop and Sylvester, supra, Dickson J. commented at p. 894  that: "One might be forgiven for thinking that it was open to the jury to infer encouragement by conduct."  I agree with the statement of Professor Stuart in his text Canadian Criminal Law: A Treatise (Toronto 1982) that "This is surely the better view." (at p. 493).  I find it difficult to view such behaviour as "passive acquiescence".  In my view, the decision in Salajko is anomalous and should not be followed.

 

    To be convicted as an aider or abettor one must also possess the necessary state of mind.  Dickson J. addressed this issue also in Dunlop and Sylvester.  He found that there must be evidence supporting an inference that the accused had prior knowledge that an offence of the type committed was planned.

 

    How similar must the anticipated crime and the actual crime be before the requisite mental element is satisfied?  The case law on this issue seems to indicate that the two crimes must be substantially similar.  For example, in R. v. Yanover and Gerol (1985), 20 C.C.C. (3d) 300, Martin J.A. of the Ontario Court of Appeal said at p. 329:

 

    For liability to attach under s. 21(1)(b) or (c) it is unnecessary that the person supplying the instrument for the commission of the intended crime know the precise details of the crime intended to be committed such as the particular premises intended to be blown up or the precise time when the offence is intended to be committed, provided that he is aware of the type of crime intended to be committed.

 

Martin J.A. relied for this proposition on Director of Public Prosecutions for Northern Ireland v. Maxwell, [1978] 1 W.L.R. 1350 (H.L.), in which the accused was a member of an organization which, with the use of weapons, engaged in attacks against Roman Catholics and their property.  Maxwell was asked to drive his car to an inn and during the drive became aware that he was acting as a guide for another vehicle which was following him.  From his knowledge of the organization Maxwell knew that when he acted as a guide he was taking part in an attack that would involve weapons.  The House of Lords held that while knowledge of a general criminal intention would be insufficient to establish party liability, a conviction could follow as long as the offence actually committed was of the type that the accused aided or abetted.

 

    This approach has been adopted by other Canadian authors and courts.  For example, Rose, in his text on parties (Parties To An Offence (Toronto 1982)) states at pp. 10-11:

 

    One of the facts a person must know, in order to be susceptible to conviction as an aider and abettor, is the principal's intention to commit the offence.  It is not, however, essential to prove that an alleged aider or abettor knew the precise crime which would be committed; it will suffice that he actually knew that the principal planned on committing a certain type of offence, that a crime of that type was in fact committed, and that the accused had intentionally aided or abetted its commission. [Emphasis in original.]

 

    This passage was relied upon by the Nova Scotia Court of Appeal in R. v. Stevenson (1984), 11 C.C.C. (3d) 443.  In that case the principal offender had been charged and convicted of causing bodily harm with intent to wound.  His conviction arose out of a fight he had engaged in with a man who had insulted his wife.  The principal had asked the accused to come with him to the fight so as to prevent the victim's friends from participating.  Macdonald J.A., who wrote the decision for the court, held that it was not necessary that the accused know that the principal would only commit a common assault as opposed to an assault causing bodily harm.  It was enough that he knew that a "crime of personal violence" would be committed.

 

    Applying these elements to the case at bar, I agree with my colleague that the accused neither aided nor abetted the murder of Elizabeth Johnson.  In my view, Kirkness' liability for the death of the victim turns solely on the question whether he aided or abetted the sexual assault of this woman.  The issue therefore is whether the evidence is capable of supporting such a finding.

 

    Kirkness stated to the police that he and Snowbird broke into the house and then began looking around.  They saw Elizabeth Johnson lying on the bed in the bedroom.  Snowbird entered the room and Kirkness watched in the doorway.  Snowbird commenced his assault against the victim.  Kirkness watched.  Snowbird told Kirkness to wait outside.  Kirkness then placed a chair beneath the doorknob thereby blocking ingress to and egress from the house.   He sat in a chair outside the room and waited.  He again tried to look into the room and Snowbird informed him that he was not finished.  Snowbird then dragged the naked victim out into the hallway.

 

    In my view, it was open to the jury to find that the actions of the accused while in the home of the deceased amounted to more than "mere acquiescence".  Kirkness' initial presence in the room at the time the sexual assault began was transformed into active involvement with his placing of the chair beneath the door handle and his leaving of the room only at the request of Snowbird.  These acts are unlike those of the accused in both Dunlop and Sylvester and Cosgrove.  Kirkness did not sleep through the assault nor did he merely remain to observe the spectacle of an eighty‑three‑year‑old woman being raped.  His actions could therefore be considered akin to those of a "look-out" and therefore as assisting and encouraging the behaviour of Snowbird.

 

    Moreover, Kirkness may be viewed as having continued to encourage and assist Snowbird after the sexual assault in the bedroom had been completed.  When the victim was dragged out into the hallway and choked, Kirkness witnessed what was taking place.  Even although the level of violence in the house was to his knowledge escalating, the appellant did not alter his behaviour in any significant respect.  He remained in the house.  He did not remove the chair from under the door handle.  He persisted in his plan to rob the house.  Can these actions be described as passive acquiescence?

 

    Turning to the accused's state of mind during this period, Kirkness stated to the police that he told Snowbird to stop choking the victim because he might kill her.  This statement is completely inconsistent with any intent to aid in the killing.  Since the accused did not have the specific intent to assist in bringing about the death of the victim, conviction for murder as an aider or abettor is foreclosed.

 

    However, lack of intent to do anything or to omit to do anything for the purpose of causing death does not end the inquiry into Kirkness' liability under subs. (1).  As I indicated earlier, an accused may still be held criminally responsible in manslaughter for the death of the victim where it has not been established that he had the requisite intent for murder.

 

    The actions of the accused are, in my view, capable of supporting an inference that he intended to assist Snowbird in the commission of the sexual assault which he knew was taking place.  I personally find it hard to accept his argument that his actions were performed solely for the purpose of protecting himself.  When the police questioned him about the chair, his response was:

 

Yeah, I did that because I thought someone would come in while we were in the house.  Alex was [sexually assaulting] her in the bedroom when I was doing that.

 

This is, however, a matter for the jury to determine.

 

    The mental element of the offence of aiding and abetting in the commission of a criminal offence is doing an act for the purpose of assisting the principal in the commission of the offence.  The question thus becomes whether Kirkness placed the chair under the door handle specifically for the purpose of aiding in the crime of sexual assault or for aiding more generally in a crime of personal violence.  In other words, was the crime committed by Snowbird of a similar type to that which the accused believed he was aiding and abetting?

 

    There was a time when the violent aspect of the crime of rape was thought to be unduly underplayed by the law.  The Criminal Code  was amended to reflect the emerging view that rape is essentially a crime of violence.  The offence accordingly is now known as the crime of sexual assault and not the crime of rape.  This reconceptualization of the law has had an important influence on the way in which crimes of sexual violence are viewed by the courts.

 

    The law now recognizes that sexual assault is often accompanied by other forms of violence.  Thus, the Criminal Code  contains a number of offences of sexual violence rated in severity by the degree of violence which accompanies the sexual assault.  The scale in ascending order of severity runs from sexual assault (s. 246.1, now s. 271) to sexual assault with a weapon, sexual assault accompanied by threats of bodily harm and sexual assault causing bodily harm (s. 246.2, now s. 272), and finally to aggravated sexual assault (s. 246.3, now s. 273).

 

    Given this background and the legislative changes which resulted, it may be somewhat artificial to draw a sharp line between the act of sexual assault and the act of suffocation in a case such as this where the violence inherent in the sexual assault escalated in a maniacal way to the violence accompanying suffocation.  The sexual assault and the suffocation could be viewed as offences of the same type in the sense that together they combine to form the offences proscribed by either s. 246.2 or s. 246.3 of the Code.  Moreover, they are offences which could cause bodily harm short of death.  Even if the appellant intended only to assist in the commission of a sexual assault simpliciter, it would be open to the jury to find that in law he aided and abetted a crime of a type involving personal violence and hence a risk of bodily harm short of death.

 

    Applying each of these elements to the behaviour of Kirkness leads me to the conclusion that there was evidence on which a jury properly instructed could have convicted him of manslaughter.  Before considering whether the trial judge did properly instruct the jury on the application of s. 21(1) in the circumstances of this case, I believe it will be helpful to address the application of s. 21(2).

 

4.  Common Intender

 

    The common law is replete with examples of persons who, having assisted other people in the commission of a crime, are held criminally responsible for the criminal acts of the people they assisted.  According to Rose "The common unlawful purpose provisions of the criminal law seem to have developed under the common law as a doctrine of constructive murder -- a sort of "constructive aiding and abetting" in murder cases." (See Rose, supra, at p. 64).  The law's imposition of responsibility in such circumstances dates back to at least the time of Hale.  He recorded that in Lord Dacre's Case (1543), 1 Hale H.P.C. 439:

 

    The lord Dacre and divers others came to steal deer in the park of one Pelham, Rayden one of the company kild the keeper in the park, the lord Dacre and the rest of the company being in other parts of the park, it was ruled, that it was murder in them all, and they died for it.

 

Foster, writing in 1809, explained that the special intent required for murder was relaxed in such cases.  At page 351 of Foster's Crown Law (London 1809) he said:

 

    But if a fact amounting to murder should be committed in prosecution of some unlawful purpose, though it were but a bare trespass, to which A. in the case last stated had consented, and he had gone in order to give assistance, if need were, for carrying it into execution; this would have amounted to murder in him, and would in every person present and joining with him... .

 

    It is true, here might be no special malice against the party slain, nor deliberate intention to hurt him; but if the fact was committed in prosecution of the original purpose, which was unlawful, the whole party will be involved in the guilt of him who gave the blow.  For in combinations of this kind the mortal stroke, though given by one of the party, is considered in the eye of the law, and of sound reason too, as given by every individual present and abetting.  [Emphasis in original.]

 

    The common purpose rule cast a very wide net in terms of accessorial responsibility.  In order to attenuate the harshness of the rule the common law developed certain limitations to this broad principle.  In order to ground liability for the crime committed as opposed to the crime contemplated the crime committed must have been considered by the accessory as a possible incident of the planned venture.

 

    This limiting principle dates back to Plummer's Case, Kel J. 109, 84 E.R. 1103, in which a gang set out to transport wool illegally to France.  They were intercepted by the police and a scuffle ensued.  A gun was discharged by one of the gang killing not the police but another member of the gang.  The question was whether the remaining members of the gang were guilty of the murder of one of their own.

 

    It was agreed by the court that had one of the police been killed by the shot it would have been murder by all the gang.  Similarly, if the shot had been intended for the police but had by accident struck one of the gang, that too would have been murder by each member of the gang.  On the facts, however, the shot was not fired in furtherance of the purpose for which the gang had assembled.  Rather, the inference was that the shot was fired at the deceased because it was believed that he had informed the police of the plan.

 

    In my view, the common intent rule was specifically designed to determine liability in the kind of situation before the Court in the present appeal.  Applying each of the constituent elements of s. 21(2) to the present case leads, in my view, to the conclusion that it was open the jury to find that Kirkness was a party to the culpable homicide of the victim.

 

(a)Intention in Common

 

    The first step in establishing liability under s. 21(2) is to show that the accused formed an intention in common with others to carry out an unlawful purpose and to assist them in achieving that purpose.  This common intention need not be pre-planned in any way.  It is sufficient, and the case law supports this proposition, that such intention arise just prior to or at the time of the commission of the offence.  Indeed, the common design is usually implied from the facts.  For example, in R. v. Rice (1902), 5 C.C.C. 509 (Ont. C.A.), leave to appeal refused (1902), 5 C.C.C. 529, the accused were being transported by cab from the courthouse to the jail during the course of their trial on charges of burglary.  An unknown person threw a package into the cab which contained at least two revolvers.  A struggle ensued and one of the prisoners shot a police officer, killing him.  In upholding the jury's finding that the accused was guilty of the murder as a party Osler J.A. remarked at p. 523:

 

The common design might certainly be formed as soon as the prisoners found that weapons suitable as means of effecting an escape were in their possession; and the evidence, as reported in the case, supports the inference that there was a common design to effect an unlawful purpose by violent means.

 

    In my opinion, there is no question that a common purpose was shared by Snowbird and Kirkness in this case.  Where one has aided or abetted in the commission of an offence, there can be little doubt that a shared intention to effect an unlawful purpose existed.  In this case Kirkness was a principal in the break and enter.  By his own admission Snowbird asked him to come along in the plan to rob the house.  He agreed.  Moreover, it was he who effected the break and enter by prying open a window at the back of the house with a handle off a garden tool.  It was he who first entered and let Snowbird in through the back door.  There is not a scintilla of evidence to suggest that the accused did not share an intention in common with Snowbird.  The more troublesome question to my mind is the nature of the unlawful purpose to which they had agreed.

 

(b)  Unlawful Purpose

 

    The nature of the unlawful purpose will often be determinative of whether an accused will be held responsible for the subsequent acts of the principal.  Suppose, for instance, that the original unlawful purpose agreed upon by the common intenders was a robbery of a store without the use of violence or weapons  Unbeknownst to the others, the principal suddenly produces a pistol and kills the shopkeeper.  When the finder of fact comes to determine whether the killing of the shopkeeper was a probable consequence of the robbery about which the alleged accessories knew or ought to have known, the original plan not to use violence is obviously key.

 

    In determining the contours of the unlawful purpose the propensity for violence of each or any of the common intenders is relevant.  In R. v. Govedarov, Popovic and Askov (1974), 16 C.C.C. (2d) 238 (Ont. C.A.), Martin J.A. indicated that if during the course of a robbery one of the participants is informed that another of the participants is an extremely violent person, the failure of the first person to withdraw may be taken as an indication that he intended that resort to violence, if necessary, was part of the intended unlawful purpose.  See also: R. v. Viger (1985), 36 C.C.C. (3d) 18 (H.C.).

 

    Was there any indication in this case that resort to violence might occur in carrying out the common purpose?  I think there was.  First, Kirkness told the police that he had effected entry into the dwelling of Mrs. Johnson with the use of a garden tool handle.  Kirkness brought the broken handle into the house with him and gave it to Snowbird when he let him inside.  The retention of this weapon provides some indication that violence could have been contemplated by these two men.

 

    The behaviour of Snowbird himself is relevant to this determination as well.  What started out as a "simple" break and enter immediately escalated into a crime of personal violence the moment Snowbird discovered a female person in the house.  If this horrific behaviour on the part of Snowbird was not initially contemplated by Kirkness when the break and enter first began, it certainly was understood by him to be part of the overall purpose once it started.  For the reasons already discussed, it is arguable that Kirkness not only acquiesced, he assisted in the commission of this crime.  While the issue is of course a matter for the jury, it seems hard to believe that the perpetration of acts of physical violence were not part and parcel of the unlawful purpose in the minds of both accused.

 

(c)Knew or Ought to Have Known of the Probable Commission of the Offence

 

    Section 21(2) of the Code deems a party criminally liable for the acts of the principal offender when the accused knew or ought to have known of the probable commission of the acts which constitute the offence.  There are two elements to this last branch of s. 21(2): (i) the commission of the ultimate offence has to be probable; and (ii) the accused must know or ought to have known of this probability.

 

    The first question to be asked is whether the killing of the victim was a probable consequence of the unlawful purpose.  If the jury determined that the unlawful purpose encompassed only the breaking and entering it would be hard to justify a finding that the death of the occupant was a probable consequence of that purpose.  If, however, the jury determined that the unlawful purpose encompassed also acts of physical violence against the occupant, then the route to party liability on the part of Kirkness is much clearer.  Apart from the particular circumstances surrounding this series of events, it seems to me that violence so often accompanies sexual crimes that it is implicit in the very nature of the offence that some harm short of death is probable.  This is so, in my opinion, whenever the common unlawful purpose contemplates physical interference with a person.  There may, of course, be situations where the level of physical violence contemplated is so minimal that serious bodily harm is merely a possibility rather than a probability.  And it may indeed be the case that this observation would hold true even in some situations where the unlawful purpose is an assault of a sexual nature.  While I personally would not have thought that what occurred in this case is one of those instances, the question whether the causing of bodily harm short of death was a probable consequence of the sexual offence committed against Elizabeth Johnson was for the jury to decide.

 

    Did the accused Kirkness know, or ought he to have known, that this consequence of bodily harm was probable?  As the accused did not testify, his awareness has to be gleaned from his actions.  Setting aside the standard of objective foreseeability, the question becomes whether Kirkness did not know that Elizabeth Johnson would suffer bodily harm from the assault.  While he objected to Snowbird's strangling the victim, he did not appear to be shocked or appalled at the spectacle.  He merely indicated that the attack had gone too far.  His behaviour in this regard, coupled with the fact that he was aware that the victim was old and frail, leaves it an open question for the jury as to whether or not this branch of the s. 21(2) test was met.

 

5.  Abandonment

 

    As with other criminal offences, an accused whose liability is established under the provisions applicable to parties will still have open to him a number of defences.  In the context of accomplice liability, however, the defence of abandonment is particularly crucial.  According to this defence an accused may absolve himself of criminal liability for the acts of the principal if he can show that he abandoned his purpose to assist in the commission of a criminal offence.  Because of my conclusion respecting the appropriate disposition of this appeal, I include here a discussion of the elements of this defence.

 

    While the defence of abandonment is available to an accused charged under either subs. (1) or (2), the defence has usually been applied in Canada to the common intent provision. For instance, this Court considered the availability of this defence in Henderson v. The King, [1948] S.C.R. 226.  In that case, the trial judge had not adequately put the accused's defence of abandonment to the jury and a new trial on a charge of murder was ordered.  In the course of his reasons Taschereau J. referred to the test of abandonment as stated by Sloan J.A. in R. v. Whitehouse (1940), 55 B.C.R. 420, at p. 425:

 

After a crime has been committed and before a prior abandonment of the common enterprise may be found by a jury there must be, in my view, in the absence of exceptional circumstances, something more than a mere mental change of intention and physical change of place by those associates who wish to disassociate themselves from the consequences attendant upon their willing assistance up to the moment of the actual commission of that crime.  I would not attempt to define too closely what must be done in criminal matters involving participation in a common unlawful purpose to break the chain of causation and responsibility.  That must depend upon the circumstances of each case but it seems to me that one essential element ought to be established in a case of this kind:  where practicable and reasonable there must be timely communication of the intention to abandon the common purpose from those who wish to dissociate themselves from the contemplated crime to those who desire to continue in it. What is "timely communication" must be determined by the facts of each case but where practicable and reasonable it ought to be such communication, verbal or otherwise, that will serve unequivocal notice upon the other party to the common unlawful cause that if he proceeds upon it he does so without the further aid and assistance of those who withdraw.  The unlawful purpose of him who continues alone is then his own and not one in common with those who are no longer parties to it nor liable to its full and final consequences.

 

    In that case three young men arranged to hold up one Ingram, a local merchant.  One of the men approached Ingram with an iron pipe which was covered with a piece of hose.  Just as he got near him the other two young men ran away.  The pipe was later found with human blood on it.  Ingram died some time later.  At the trial the judge instructed the jury that they must consider only two elements in order to find abandonment: (1) a change of mental intention; and (2) quitting the scene before the crime was finally consummated.  Sloan J.A. held that the trial judge erred for the reasons I have quoted above.

 

    Whitehouse was followed by this Court in Miller v. The Queen, [1977] 2 S.C.R. 680, in which two accused were charged with the murder of a police officer.  They had been out drinking and were discussing their animosity towards the police.  They talked of shooting a police officer. They then left the tavern with a loaded rifle and proceeded to drive around in an erratic manner so as to attract the attention of the police.  Miller was at the wheel.  Cockriell threw a beer bottle at the local court house.  The pair were subsequently stopped by the police.  As the officer approached the car Cockriell pulled the trigger on the rifle which had been sitting in Miller's lap.

 

    The Court found that there was no evidence to support a defence of abandonment.  Ritchie J. followed the words of Sloan J.A. in Whitehouse and held that there was no clear evidence that the intention to abandon the common purpose had been communicated.  Ritchie J. also referred with approval to the decision of the Court of Criminal Appeal in R. v. Becerra and Cooper (1975), 62 Cr. App. R. 212, in which the appellant had broken into a house with two other men.  When they entered the house Becerra was carrying a knife.  Cooper, one of the other accused, knew that Becerra was in possession of this weapon.  He had asked to borrow it to cut the telephone wires leading to the house.  The three men entered by the window.  The occupant of the house, an elderly lady, began switching the bedroom light on and off, presumably to attract attention so that help might arrive.  Cooper punched her and covered her head with a pillow.  Becerra cut the wires of the telephone at the bedside.

 

    Cooper then took the knife and went into the kitchen.  Mr. Lewis, a neighbour, upon hearing the commotion below came downstairs.  Becerra and the third man heard him, climbed out the window, and ran away.  A struggle between Cooper and Lewis ensued.  Lewis was stabbed four times and died as a consequence.  Becerra was indicted for the murder of Lewis and convicted.  He appealed his conviction on the ground that the trial judge erred in failing to properly put the defence of abandonment to the jury.  The gist of his complaint was that the trial judge instructed the jury that the defence was not available to an accused who, in providing a weapon which he knows is for the purpose of at least occasioning bodily harm, merely quits the scene.  The trial judge in fact went further and suggested that there was some obligation on Becerra to physically intervene in order to dissociate himself from Cooper's act.

 

    The Court of Appeal unanimously upheld Becerra's conviction.  Drawing upon the words of Sloan J.A. in Whitehouse the Court found that Becerra was legally responsible for the acts of Cooper.  The Court of Appeal did not find it necessary to decide whether the accused needed to physically intervene.  Roskill L.J. said at p. 219:

 

    On the facts of this case, in the circumstances then prevailing, the knife having already been used and being contemplated for further use when it was handed over by Becerra to Cooper for the purpose of avoiding (if necessary) by violent means the hazards of identification, if Becerra wanted to withdraw at that stage, he would have to "countermand", to use the word that is used in some of the cases or "repent" to use another word so used, in some manner vastly different and vastly more effective than merely to say "Come on, let's go" and go out through the window.

 

    Commentators on the defence of abandonment appear to agree that a defendant will be held to a different standard depending upon the degree of his participation in the crime.  Glanville Williams has suggested that where a defendant has acted positively to assist a crime beyond merely inciting or encouraging it, he must do his best to prevent its commission in order to escape liability.  He says that the defendant must warn the victim or do something short perhaps of going to the police.  This restriction upon the right of withdrawal is, he contends, an exception to the usual requirement that mens rea and actus reus be contemporaneous.  "In effect the defendant is made liable for negligence in failing to prevent the crime": Textbook of Criminal Law (London 1983), at p. 364.  This distinction has also been recognized by Professor Lanham ("Accomplices and Withdrawal" (1981), 97 L.Q. Rev. 575).  He too states as a principle that "Where the act [of] participation goes beyond encouragement, mere countermand may not be sufficient to exculpate the accused" (at p. 591).

 

    Certain factors have been recognized as relevant to the determination of whether an accused's intention has been legally abandoned.  Professor Lanham lists the questions to be considered by the court as follows at p. 575:

 

1. Must withdrawal be voluntary?

 

2. Is countermand necessary?

 

3. Is countermand sufficient?

 

4. Must countermand be express?

 

5. Must withdrawal be timely?

 

6. Is attempted withdrawal sufficient?

 

7. Must countermand be communicated to all principals?

 

Put more succinctly, the issue is, as Professor Manson says, the quality of the withdrawal.  In "Re‑codifying Attempts, Parties, and Abandoned Intentions" (1989), 14 Queen's L.J. 85, he put the matter this way at p. 95:

 

    Looking at the defence of abandoned intention in respect of parties, the key issues relate to the quality of withdrawal from the original plan and whether more is required to exculpate.  These questions take on different significance depending on the form of accomplice liability in issue and the particular circumstances of a given case.

 

    I agree that it would not only be impossible but also inadvisable for the Court to attempt to set down precisely what should be required of an accused in order to demonstrate that he or she has withdrawn as an accomplice to an offence.  I agree with Professor Manson that the issue is the quality of the withdrawal in relation to both the offence and the type of criminal participation in which the party has engaged.  Of course, attempts to stop or prevent the commission of a crime which are insufficient to exculpate an accused may always be taken into consideration on sentencing: see Wasik, "Abandoning Criminal Intent", [1980] Crim. L. Rev. 785.

 

    In this case it was open to the jury to find that the participation of Kirkness went beyond mere encouragement.  He had physically placed a chair in front of the door to prevent their activities in the house from being discovered.  What evidence could the jury have relied upon to support a conclusion that he had effectively withdrawn himself?  Kirkness took no steps to remove the chair or to otherwise intervene in Snowbird's domination of the victim.  The only action upon which the accused relies to demonstrate his withdrawal is his act of saying to Snowbird, "stop that, you'll kill her".  The question for the jury is whether this statement, if believed, is sufficient to negate Kirkness' participation in the crime.

 

6.  Distinguishing Subs. 21(1) From Subs. 21(2)

 

    The foregoing summary of the relevant law indicates, I believe, that there were two avenues along which the jury could have reached a conclusion that Kirkness was responsible in law for the death of Elizabeth Johnson.  I wish to add a few remarks concerning the difference between the subs. (1) and subs. (2) routes.

 

    According to Gillies on Criminal Law (Sydney 1985), at p. 140, the common intender rule was developed to simplify the rules of accessorial liability for juries and was not created as an additional basis upon which to ground criminal liability.  On the other hand, this Court has stated that subss. (1) and (2) of s. 21 are conceptually distinct.  The essential difference between them was explained by McIntyre J., writing for the Court, in R. v. Simpson, [1988] 1 S.C.R. 3.  He said at p. 15:

 

The two subsections of s. 21 deal with different circumstances.  Subsection (1) applies to make everyone a party to an offence who commits it or who aids and abets in its commission.  Subsection (2) covers the case where, in the absence of aiding and abetting, a person may become a party to an offence committed by another which he knew or ought to have known was a probable consequence of carrying out an unlawful purpose in common with the actual perpetrator.

 

    Rose put the matter similarly at p. 65:

 

[Section 22(2)] is quite plainly intended to provide liability in the case of consequential offences which were not committed nor aided or abetted by the accused, but which resulted from the prosecution of the original offence.... [Emphasis in original.]

 

It is my view that since aiders and abettors have been treated differently from common intenders by Parliament, some difference between these two subsections must be recognized.

 

    On the other hand, circumstances may undoubtedly arise in which it will be difficult to distinguish the applicability of the two subsections.  Where an accused has aided or abetted the commission of some crime, party liability under subs. (1) follows where the crime which is ultimately committed is of the same type as the one in which the accused has assisted.  Under subs. (2), on the other hand, party liability follows upon a finding that the offence actually committed was one which the accused knew or ought to have known would be a probable consequence of the commission of the contemplated offence in which he assisted.  The difficult task for the jury in such cases is to distinguish between when the crime actually committed is of a similar type to that contemplated and when the crime actually committed is a probable consequence of the crime contemplated.

 

    In my view, the difference between the two is that the doctrine of similarity was not intended to include situations where the principal committed another offence, even a probable one, in order to cover up his crime or to facilitate his escape. I believe that, in order to be an offence "of the type" within the meaning of s. 21(1), the committed offence must not only be similar but must be sufficiently contemporaneous with the contemplated offence.  Section 21(2) is, in my view, reserved for those instances where there has been a break in time between the two offences and the offence actually committed follows after but as a consequence of the offence originally planned.

 

7.  Did the Trial Judge Err in His Charge?

 

    Contrary to the view expressed by my colleague Cory J., I do not believe that the trial judge adequately instructed the jury with regard to the possibility of convicting the appellant of manslaughter.  The most telling evidence of this, in my view, is that the jury twice asked for clarification of the charge.  Clearly, confusion existed.

 

    Beyond the fact of the jury's obvious confusion, it is also my opinion that the charge was misleading.  As I hope I have demonstrated, the appellant could be held responsible for the death of the victim in either of two ways.  In explaining these bases of liability, several fundamental errors were made by the trial judge.

 

    First, with respect to the application of s. 21(1), the trial judge said:

 

    Now, I instruct you that you may, not necessarily must, but you may consider that act [of placing the chair under the doorknob] as an act of aiding Snowbird in the commission of the offence of sexual assault on this old woman.  You will then have to go on and consider whether Kirkness's state of knowledge was such that he was aware that death would ensue.  If he was not, the act would not amount to aiding in either murder or manslaughter. [Emphasis added.]

 

This was the sum total of Scollin J.'s charge on the application of s. 21(1).  While I agree with Cory J. that the trial judge did adequately instruct the jury on the distinction between first degree murder, second degree murder and manslaughter elsewhere in his charge, the portion of his charge that I have quoted was not only inadequate but clearly erroneous.  First, it would have been preferable for Scollin J. to have defined the legal meaning of aiding and abetting.  Second, the trial judge made no mention of the "type of offence" rule which I have set out.  Third, and more importantly, if the jury found that Kirkness had aided the sexual assault, the question for the jury was not whether Kirkness was aware that death would ensue, but rather whether he was aware that bodily harm would have been the result.  Scollin J. was, in my view, quite wrong in his explanation of the mental element to be established for a conviction of manslaughter.  I believe that had these errors and omissions not been made, the verdict might not necessarily have been the same.

 

    With respect to the application of the common intent section, it is also my view that the charge was erroneous and misleading.  My colleague has set out the portion of the charge dealing with the applicability of s. 21(2) if the jury were to find that the common purpose consisted only of the breaking and entering.  I have no quarrel with this.  However, later in the trial the jury asked for clarification.  A discussion between counsel and the court ensued.  Two matters were addressed.

 

    First, a question arose respecting the defence of withdrawal.  Scollin J. disagreed with the suggestion of Crown counsel that if Kirkness was a party to the sexual assault then he had some legal duty to extricate himself.  The trial judge refused to place the issue before the jury.  While I am loath to cast the issue in terms of there being a legal duty on Kirkness, it is my opinion that the abandonment defence needed to be explained to the jury and that the trial judge was in error in failing to do so.

 

    The second question revolved around the common intent issue.  Whether the common purpose could have consisted of the sexual assault as opposed to only the break and enter was discussed with counsel.  The jury was brought back in and Scollin J. charged them as follows:

 

... was an implied or implicit common intention then formed by these two to help each other in the carrying out of the sexual assault?  Was that the net result of it?  Was that the result in reality?  You will have to ask yourself that.  If it was, then the consequence is:

 

"Where two or more persons form an intention in common ... "

 

and it needn't be by written agreement, it can be by conduct,

 

" ... to carry out an unlawful purpose ... "

 

and here the unlawful purpose, in that situation, is the sexual assault by Snowbird.  If they form this intention in common to carry out this unlawful purpose,

 

" ... and to assist each other ... "

 

is that also implicit and you draw that conclusion,

 

" ... therein and any one of them, in carrying out the common purpose ... "

 

of sexual assault,

 

" ... commits an offence ... "

 

Now, this would be if death resulted from the sexual assault.

 

" ... commits an offence ..."

 

or whatever it would be, murder, first degree; murder, second degree; or manslaughter.  If the death occurs right and directly because of that sexual assault, ought Kirkness to have known, in those circumstances, that the killing, ... would be a probable consequence of the sexual assault?

 

                                                                         ...

 

If you dismiss the sexual assault, itself, that bodily harm applied at that point, if you dismiss that as the cause of death, if you are not satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that that was how death occurred but it occurred later on because of suffocation, then if you dismiss that as the cause of death, the actual sexual assault, itself, then there can be no liability for murder or manslaughter on the part of Kirkness simply because he placed a chair against the door. [Emphasis added.]

 

Liability under s. 21(2) does not require the accused to assist directly in the act causing the death.  It is sufficient, with certain limitations, that manslaughter was a probable consequence of the offence in which the accused aided or abetted.  The trial judge, by posing the question in terms of whether the sexual assault caused the death, improperly implied that if Kirkness did not directly assist in the act which caused the death of the victim, i.e., the suffocation, then he could not be held responsible for the death of the victim.

 

    My colleague appears to agree with this.  I do not.  In my respectful view, the question for the jury never was whether the sexual assault caused the death.  Rather the question was whether Kirkness aided or abetted Snowbird in a crime which was of the type which could have caused bodily harm or whether bodily harm could have resulted as a consequence of carrying out the sexual assault.  This is a point of fundamental importance which I believe was lost on the jury because of the trial judge's misdirection.

 

8.  Disposition

 

    I would dismiss the appeal and confirm the Court of Appeal's order of a new trial for the accused on a charge of manslaughter.

 

    Appeal allowed, WILSON and L'HEUREUX‑DUBÉ JJ. dissenting.

 

    Solicitors for the appellant:  Kaufman, Cassidy, Winnipeg.

 

    Solicitor for the respondent:  The Attorney General of Manitoba, Winnipeg.

 



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