Ontario court judges upbraided for bad conduct in court
A much-admonished Ontario Court judge has been
taken to task again – this time for convicting a mentally ill man after the
Crown backed off the case.
Ontario Court Judge John Ritchie was upbraided on
Friday by Ontario Superior Court Judge Michael Code for failing to give fair
consideration to evidence that favoured the defendant, Nicholas Augustine, at
Mr. Augustine’s trial for failing to appear for a court proceeding.
Judge Code noted that even the Crown conceded that
Mr. Augustine may well have simply gone to the wrong courthouse on the day of
his trial. Nonetheless, Judge Ritchie had registered a conviction.
It was the latest reversal for a judge whose name
strikes fear into the hearts of many Toronto defence counsellors. Defence
lawyer Jonathan Rosenthal says that, rather than face a trial presided over by
Judge Ritchie, he and other lawyers have advised clients to seek a plea bargain
from the Crown because a conviction is a near certainty.
Those who appear before Judge Ritchie are
frequently indigent or mentally unstable individuals charged with minor
offences, said Carlos Rippell, Mr. Augustine’s lawyer. “Wrongful convictions in
big cases get all the attention,” he said. “But miscarriages of justice in
provincial court have a real effect on people’s lives.”
Another Toronto
defence lawyer, Edward Royle, said he has notified other lawyers at his firm
that he is willing to represent indigent defendants pro bono should they wish to appeal a conviction
by Judge Ritchie.
Mr. Royle said it is exceedingly rare for a judge
to convict someone after the Crown has thrown in the towel, yet he has
encountered two such cases himself. “When you have decisions the Crown doesn’t
even try to uphold, I think you have to wonder what is going on,” he said.
Appellate judges who reverse Judge Ritchie’s
decisions tend to fault him either for giving short shrift to the defence or
for issuing unacceptably sketchy reasons.
In 2003, Judge Sandra Chapnik criticized Judge
Ritchie in the case of R v Sahota for not backing up his conclusion that the
defence witnesses were liars. “It is not sufficient to use glib, pro forma
platitudes and generalities – which is what appears to have occurred here,” she
said.
In another 2003 ruling, R v Punzo, Superior Court
Judge Anne Molloy examined several of Judge Ritchie’s decisions and discovered
a troubling formula. She said that he provided identical, “boilerplate”
comments instead of indicating his reasons for finding some witnesses not believable.
“Either the trial judge misapprehended the evidence
and based his credibility findings on inconsistencies that did not exist – or
he did not consider inconsistencies but merely said that he did because this is
part of the boilerplate he uses in every case,” Judge Molloy said. “Either
alternative is problematic.”
Last year, in R
v Gregory Chue, Superior Court Judge Ian Nordheimer took Judge Ritchie to
task for being “entirely unfair to the defence.” He said that Judge Ritchie
gave the appearance of someone who made up his mind about a key pre-trial
motion before it had even been argued.
Mr. Rosenthal, Mr. Chue’s lawyer, recalled the
trial as a “surreal” experience in which Judge Ritchie displayed no interest in
his evidence and legal arguments.
He said in part; “I’ve been practising law for
close to 25 years and done thousands of provincial court trials, but never in
my career have I seen a defendant treated so thoroughly below the standard of
fairness as Mr. Chue was by Justice Ritchie,” Mr. Rosenthal said in an interview.
Judge Nordheimer again chastised Judge Ritchie last
year in R v Adams for refusing to adjourn a trial to enable a mentally ill
woman to obtain a lawyer.
And in yet another 2001 ruling R v E.S.
Superior Court Judge S.R. Goodman observed that Judge Ritchie had provided no
cogent reasons for
preferring Crown evidence over that of the defence
at a sexual assault trial.
Judge Ritchie, an Ontario government lawyer before
his appointment more than 10 years ago, did not respond to requests for an
interview.
Criticisms of
Ontario Court Judge John Ritchie by appellate judges:
“The reasons for judgment are brief, generic and
conclusory. They fail to provide any explanation for the trial judge’s outright
rejection of the appellant and the defence witnesses. R v Sahota, in 2003.
“In each of
these cases – just as in the case before me – the trial judge makes the general
statement that he has had the opportunity to observe demeanour, but then fails
to provide any information as to how, if at all, that has influenced his
decision The reasons were so deficient as to preclude any meaningful appellate
review R v Punzo, in 2004.
“Unfortunately, the actions of the trial judge,
taken collectively would leave an informed and reasonable outside observer of
the proceedings with the distinct impression that the trial judge had
predetermined the result of the application if not the likely outcome of the proceeding as
a whole R v Chue in 2011.
“The trial
judge’s misapprehension of important evidence adds to the concern that the
accused’s evidence was not fully and fairly considered before findings of fact
were made by the trial judge. Where the record does not appear to disclose a
case that is one-sided and black-and-white in its strength, the trial judge
must do more than reject the defence evidence because it differs from that of
the complainant R v E.S.in 2011.
Unfortunately, there are too many bad judges in the Canadian province of Ontario who don't know what they are doing.
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