- R. v. Hess; R. v. Nguyen
SCCInfoBox
case-name=R. v. Hess; R. v. Nguyen
full-case-name=Victor John Hess v. Her Majesty The Queen; Van Hung Nguyen v. Her Majesty The Queen
heard-date=February 1, 1990
decided-date=October 4, 1990
citations= [1990] 2 S.C.R. 906
ruling= Appeal allowed.
SCC=1989-1990
Majority=Wilson J.
JoinMajority=Lamer C.J.(*) and La Forest and L'Heureux-Dubé JJ.
(*)Chief Justice at time of judgment
Dissent= McLachlin J.
JoinDissent=Gonthier J.
NotParticipating=Dickson C.J., Cory and Sopinka JJ.
LawsApplied="R v. Hess; R. v. Nguyen", [1990] 2 S.C.R. 906 is a leading decision of the
Supreme Court of Canada where the Court struck down part of theCriminal Code of Canada offence ofrape as a violation of section 7 of the "Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms ".Background
Victor Hess and Van Nguyen were both charged in two separate incidents with having sexual intercourse with a female under the age of fourteen contrary to section 146(1) of the "
Criminal Code of Canada ". The provision specifically prohibited a male from having sex with a female under the age of fourteen "whether or not he believes that she is fourteen years of age or more".In Hess's trial, the conviction was quashed on the basis that the offence violated section 15 of the "Charter". The verdict was overturned at the Court of Appeal and a new trial was ordered.
In Nguyen's trial, he was convicted, which was upheld on appeal. The court did not find a violation of section 15, but there was a violation of section 7, which was saved under section 1.
The question before the Supreme Court was whether the criminal provision violated sections 7 or 15 of the "Charter".
Opinion of the Court
Justice Wilson, writing for the majority, found a violation of section 7 as the provision did not require a "
mens rea " element in establishing the offence as the accused did not need to know the girl's age. Wilson noted that a provision that convicts morally innocent individuals as a means to control a certain area of crime is inconsistent with the principles of fundamental justice. [at p.923] She further noted that this form of constructive culpability was not proportional and so it could not be justified through judicial discretion.As a remedy, the Court severed the infringing words from the text so that to secure a conviction, it must be proved that the accused knew the girl was under fourteen (or was wilfully blind to that fact).
References
External links
*
* [http://www.mapleleafweb.com/scc/public3/decisions/1990_2scr_906_02.html case summary at mapleleafweb.com]
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