Accéder au contenu principal
recherche

On December 23, 2024, the Canadian Civil Liberties Association (CCLA) was granted leave to intervene at the Ontario Court of Appeal (ONCA) in the case of Ontario v. Animal Justice.

This case is an appeal by Ontario from a 2024 Superior Court decision which struck down significant parts of provincial regulations limiting the investigative work of undercover journalists and whistleblowers on livestock farms. The impugned regulations threaten to impose hefty fines on anybody who gains access to agricultural premises based on false pretences. The trial court found that some provisions of these regulations unreasonably violate freedom of expression.

In appeal, Ontario disputes that its regulations are even subject to Charte scrutiny, on the grounds that they apply on private properties.

CCLA’s position is that no place, public or private, is categorically excluded from the protective scope of the Charte. State-imposed limits on expression are subject to Charte scrutiny even if they apply on private property. Our submissions will focus on why the location of expression cannot be used by the state to create Charte-free zones.

This point is important. Should the ONCA accept Ontario’s argument, this model of regulations could be used to create Charte-free zones on countless other “private properties” where undercover work and exposés contribute to public transparency.

Ontario also argues that conduct that constitutes a tort is necessarily excluded from Charte protection under s. 2(b) (freedom of expression). The implications of this argument are that the state could impose penal consequences on expression, without Charte scrutiny, merely because the same expression may attract civil consequences among private parties.

CCLA’s position is that potential common law tort liability cannot narrow the constitutional protection of fundamental freedoms guaranteed by the Charte. Otherwise, there would be differing levels of constitutional protection depending on the province in which the constitutional challenge is brought.

CCLA is grateful to David Rankin and Ankita Gupta of Osler, Hoskin & Harcourt LLP for their excellent pro bono représentation dans ce cas.

À propos de l’association canadienne sur les libertés civiles

L’ACLC est un organisme indépendant à but non lucratif qui compte des sympathisant.e.s dans tout le pays. Fondé en 1964, c’est un organisme qui œuvre à l’échelle du Canada à la protection des droits et des libertés civiles de toute sa population.

Pour les médias

Pour d'autres commentaires, veuillez nous contacter à media@ccla.org.

Pour les mises à jour en direct

Veuillez continuer à vous référer à cette page et à nos plateformes de médias sociaux. On est dessus InstagramFacebook, et Twitter.

Fermer le menu
fr_CAFrançais du Canada