Section 8: Everyone has the right to be secure against unreasonable search or seizure
Section 8 of the Charter protects privacy rights and your right to be free from unreasonable search and seizure. A search and/or seizure will violate section 8 if it was is carried out in a way that interferes with a person’s reasonable expectation of privacy. Section 8 law is continually evolving and highly dependent on context. Courts apply many different layers of tests that are regularly re-defined and narrowed. Therefore, it is difficult to state the rules for a s. 8 violation with certainty. This section provides an overview of the general principles behind the evolving laws.
There are two questions used to determine if there has been a violation of section 8:
If the answers to 1 and 2, were “yes” and “no” respectively, a third question arises: 3. Should the evidence turned up in the search or seizure be allowed in Court? If you think your rights under section 8 have been breached, click here to determine if that breach is unreasonable and unjustified.
When you have a reasonable expectation of privacy, you are entitled to freedom from government interference regarding your personal information and property. The degree of privacy you can reasonably expect varies depending on the type of activity or situation that brings you into contact with the state. Some the questions a Court will ask to assess your reasonable expectation of privacy are:
(see: F. P. Hoskins, “Search and Seizure” in J.E. Pink and D. C. Perrier, eds. From Crime to Punishment (Carswell: Scarborough, 1997) 303 at 303).
If you did not have a reasonable expectation of privacy, then you cannot rely on s. 8’s protections.
A search or seizure will be reasonable if:
A search can be “authorized by law” in one of several ways.
There is a presumption that a search done without a search warrant is unreasonable. In these cases, once it’s proven a warrantless search occurred, the state must prove that the search was nonetheless reasonable. (Collins, supra)
Laws that were once authority for search and seizures may themselves be found to be unreasonable over time, either through constitutional challenges or developing case law. If the law authorizing the search is itself unreasonable or unconstitutional, then the search flowing from it will be unreasonable. (R v Rao (1984), 12 CCC (3d) 97 (Ont CA), leave to appeal to SCC ref’d, [1984] 2 SCR ix.
The actual conduct of the search or seizure must be done reasonably. For example, a male peace officer strip searching a female suspect may be unreasonable if female peace officers were reasonably available and the search did not have to be performed immediately. Using force to conduct a search of someone’s mouth may be unreasonable if the person was cooperating and no force was required in the circumstances.
If a person had a reasonable expectation of privacy, and an unreasonable search and seizure took place, what ought to be done with the evidence obtained? There are many cases discussing what can be done with unreasonably obtained evidence (see, for example R v Grant, 2009 SCC 32). In some cases, the evidence is excluded (meaning it cannot be used in the accused’s trial). In other cases, despite the fact that it was illegally obtained, the evidence is nonetheless admitted. The admission or exclusion of illegally obtained evidence rests on preserving confidence in the justice system. The Court does not want to send the message that it condones state deviations of the rule of law. Nor does it want to let guilty parties go free on minor technical points. Three questions are asked to determine whether illegally obtained evidence ought to be admitted or excluded:
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