Friday, February 27, 2015

SUPREME COURT OF CANADA REFUSED TO HEAR OATH TO THE QUEEN CASE

The Supreme Court of Canada yesterday refused to hear the case where several individualist objected to taking the Oath to the Queen to become citizens. Here is the brief decision:

McAteer v. Canada (Attorney General)

Michael McAteer, Simone E.A. Topey, Dror Bar-Natan
v.
Attorney General of Canada
[2014] S.C.C.A. No. 444
[2014] C.S.C.R. no 444
File No.: 36120

 Supreme Court of Canada

Record created: October 8, 2014.
Record updated: February 26, 2015.
Appeal From:
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF APPEAL FOR ONTARIO

Status:
Application for leave to appeal dismissed without costs (without reasons) February 26, 2015.

Catchwords:


 Charter of Rights -- Freedom of expression -- Freedom of religion -- Freedom of conscience -- Right to equality -- Citizenship -- Legislation -- Interpretation -- Does a statutory requirement that compels a ceremonial oath or pledge have the purpose of "controlling expression" -- Does this Court's Amselem test apply to a freedom of conscience claim and, if so, how -- What evidence or rationale does the government need to constitutionally justify its requirement for a ceremonial oath or pledge -- Citizenship Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-29, ss. 3(1)(c) and 12(3) -- Syndicat Northcrest v. Amselem, [2004] 2 S.C.R. 551, 2004 SCC 47.
Case Summary: 
The three applicants are permanent residents of Canada. Although they wish to become Canadian citizens, they each object to the statutory requirement under the Citizenship Act to take an oath of allegiance to the Queen. Michael McAteer emigrated from Ireland and argues taking the oath would be a betrayal of his republican heritage and impede his activities in support of ending the Canadian monarchy. Simone Topey emigrated from Jamaica and claims that it would violate her religious beliefs as a Rastafarian to make an oath to the person who is the head of Babylon. Dror Bar-Natan emigrated from Israel and argued that it would violate his belief in equality of all persons to swear allegiance to a symbol of inequality where some must bow to others for reasons of ancestry. They seek a declaration that an oath requiring them to bear true allegiance to "Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth the Second, Queen of Canada, Her Heirs and Successors" violates their rights under sections 2(a), (b) and 15(1) of the Charter and are not saved by s. 1.
The Ontario Superior Court of Justice dismissed the application, holding: i) there was no violation of sections 2(a) and 15(1) of the Charter; ii) the oath was a form of compelled speech that prima facie violates s. 2(b) Charter rights; and iii) the violation was justified under s. 1 of the Charter. The Court of Appeal for Ontario dismissed the applicants' appeal but allowed the respondent's cross-appeal and set aside that part of the lower court judgment holding that the oath violates s. 2(b) of the Charter.



Chronology:

·        1. 
Application for leave to appeal: 

·        FILED: October 8, 2014.
SUBMITTED TO THE COURT: January 26, 2015.
DISMISSED WITHOUT COSTS: February 26, 2015 (without
reasons).
Before: Abella, Karakatsanis and Côté JJ. 
Procedural History:
Judgment at first instance: Applicants' application for a
declaration dismissed.
Ontario Superior Court of Justice (Morgan J.), September
20, 2013.
2013 ONSC 5895.

Judgment on appeal: Appeal dismissed; respondent's
cross-appeal allowed.
Court of Appeal for Ontario (Weiler, Lauwers and Pardu
JJ.A.), August 13, 2014.
2014 ONCA 578; [2014] O.J. No. 3728.

No comments:

Visalaw International CS CBA OBA-ABO AILA IPBA NYSRA ABA IBA