Psam wrote: ↑Thu Dec 24, 2020 10:34 pm
Here is a quote from the first case where the scope of jurisdiction of the courts conferred by section 24 was analysed, in
Mills v the Queen, at para 278.
“It is difficult to imagine language which could give the court a wider and less fettered discretion.“
So, what's your point -- IF you have one?
Point #1: I should know better. Normally I do know better. As to my transgression, I plead incompetence, driven in part by a very nice four-year-old bottle of Stone w00tstout! that I have retrieved from my cellar for the holiday.
Point #2: Full citations are essential. I'm assuming you meant to cite Mills v. The Queen, 1986 CanLII 17 (SCC), [1986] 1 SCR 863,
http://canlii.ca/t/1cxmx, retrieved on 2020-12-24. If not, too bad; write your cites next time.
Point #3: Reading is fundamental, and though this is a long and rangy case, the headnote explains:
The accused's appeal to this Court raised several issues: (1) Where an application alleges a breach of s. 11(b) of the Charter (a) is a judge or justice presiding at a preliminary inquiry a court of competent jurisdiction for the purposes of an application under s. 24(1) of the Charter; (b) is a judge of the supreme court of a province a court of competent jurisdiction for the purposes of an originating application under s. 24(1) of the Charter; (2) Assuming that a judge presiding at a preliminary hearing is a court of competent jurisdiction, is the decision of the inferior court susceptible to review either by prerogative writ or by independent application to a superior court pursuant to s. 24(1) of the Charter; and (3) Did the Court of Appeal for Ontario err in concluding that the appellant's constitutional right to be tried within a reasonable time had not been violated?
None of this has anything to do with...well, much of anything in this thread, since the question of which court to call on doesn't seem to have come up.
Point #4: The headnote also says, as one of the holdings,
When a Charter right is violated, s. 24(1) authorizes the court to grant an appropriate remedy. It neither excludes the court from further participation in the matter nor specifies the remedy. The remedy will vary with the circumstances.
This does not support your case as much as I think you think it does.
Point #5: You quote is deceptive. The full paragraph (with your portion highlighted) is:
[278] What remedies are available when an application under s. 24(1) of the Charter succeeds? Section 24(1) again is silent on the question. It merely provides that the appellant may obtain such remedy as the court considers "appropriate and just in the circumstances". It is difficult to imagine language which could give the court a wider and less fettered discretion. It is impossible to reduce this wide discretion to some sort of binding formula for general application in all cases, and it is not for appellate courts to pre‑empt or cut down this wide discretion. No court may say, for example, that a stay of proceedings will always be appropriate in a given type of case. Although there will be cases where a trial judge may well conclude that a stay would be the appropriate remedy, the circumstances will be infinitely variable from case to case and the remedy will vary with the circumstances.
This, too, does not seem to support your case. It says that,
if a
Charter application succeeds, then the court of competent jurisdiction (which is defined elsewhere in the case, according to the notes) gets to decide how to address it. That hardly compels any particular kind of relief: if anything, the Court here seems to be saying exactly the opposite of that. You certainly can't demand any particular outcome based on it.
Point #5: The law is not poker. You can't just draw a winning hand and slap it on the table like you do, even if you had one, and cry, "Aha!" and win the pot. At least you can't most of the time, and you certainly can't with the hands you're showing.
Point #6: The court is so pissed.
Baker et al. v. Allstate Insurance Co. et al., U.S.D.C. Cen. Dist. Calif. (W.D.) case 19-cv-08024, Transcript (Order to Show Cause Hearing) (
Doc. #44), p. 7: 2. That case is not directly relevant to yours, but the transcript is hilarious anyway in a definite
schadenfreude way and I hope it compensates in part for spilling more words over this topic.
Point #7: My own patience, beer, and tolerance from the forum are all likely to run out before you get a chance to respond, so please don't expect me to engage in a discussion around these things. I do not care. If you do take this to court, I wish you success, but I expect otherwise.