R. v. Reeves
R. v. Reeves
R. v. Reeves
BETWEEN:
Thomas Reeves
Appellant
and
- and -
CORAM: Wagner C.J. and Abella, Moldaver, Karakatsanis, Gascon, Côté, Brown,
Rowe and Martin JJ.
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT: Karakatsanis J. (Wagner C.J. and Abella, Gascon, Brown,
(paras. 1 to 69) Rowe and Martin JJ. concurring)
v.
and
2018 SCC 56
Present: Wagner C.J. and Abella, Moldaver, Karakatsanis, Gascon, Côté, Brown,
Rowe and Martin JJ.
and seizure of computer from shared space — Child pornography found on seized
computer and accused charged with possessing and accessing child pornography —
and seizure by entering shared home and seizing shared computer without warrant —
charges of domestic assault against the accused, a no-contact order was issued which
prohibited the accused from visiting the home without his spouse’s prior, written and
revocable consent. When the spouse contacted the accused’s probation officer to
withdraw her consent for him to enter the home, she reported that she had found what
she believed to be child pornography on the home computer which she shared with
the accused. A police officer came to the family home without a warrant. The
accused’s spouse allowed the officer to enter and signed a consent form authorizing
him to take the computer, which was located in a shared space in the home. The
police detained the computer without a warrant for more than four months before
searching it. They also failed to report the seizure of the computer to a justice, despite
the requirements of s. 489.1 of the Criminal Code. When the police finally obtained a
warrant to search the computer, they found 140 images and 22 videos of child
pornography. The accused was charged with possessing and accessing child
pornography but applied to exclude the computer-related evidence claiming that his
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms had been violated. The application judge
Charter and the accused was acquitted. The Court of Appeal allowed the Crown’s
appeal from the acquittal, set aside the exclusionary order and ordered a new trial.
Held: The appeal should be allowed, the evidence excluded and the
acquittal restored.
Per Wagner C.J. and Abella, Karakatsanis, Gascon, Brown, Rowe and
Martin JJ.: The police infringed the accused’s Charter rights when they took the
computer from his home. Although the computer was shared, the accused maintained
a reasonable expectation of privacy in it. The consent of the accused’s spouse did not
nullify his reasonable expectation of privacy, or operate to waive his Charter rights in
the computer. The warrantless seizure of the computer and the search of it without a
valid warrant were unreasonable, and the admission of the child pornography
It is not necessary in this case to decide whether the entry into the home
constituted a separate violation of the accused’s rights under s. 8 of the Charter. Even
if the officer had lawfully been in the home, this would not make the seizure of the
computer lawful. The officer testified that he asked for the spouse’s consent to seize
the computer because he did not believe he had grounds to obtain a warrant. Further,
whether police entry into a shared home with the consent of one resident violates the
Charter raises complex questions that require a considered response. They are best
answered in a case that directly turns on the issue, with the benefit of full
submissions.
warrant violates s. 8 of the Charter unless the claimant has no reasonable expectation
of privacy in the item or has waived his Charter rights. In assessing whether a
claimant has a reasonable expectation of privacy in an item that is taken, courts must
consider the totality of the circumstances. In particular, they must determine (1) the
subject matter of the alleged seizure; (2) whether the claimant had a direct interest in
the subject matter; (3) whether the claimant had a subjective expectation of privacy in
the subject matter; and (4) whether this subjective expectation of privacy was
objectively reasonable.
shared computer. The subject matter of the seizure was the computer, and ultimately
the data it contained about the accused’s usage, including the files he accessed, saved
and deleted. When the police seize a computer, they not only deprive individuals of
control over intimate data in which they have a reasonable expectation of privacy,
they also ensure that such data remains preserved and thus subject to potential future
state inspection. Thus, seizing the computer interfered with the accused’s expectation
of privacy in its informational content. The accused undoubtedly had a direct interest
and subjective expectation of privacy in the computer and the data it contained, as he
used the computer and stored personal data on it. Finally, the accused’s subjective
control fatal to a privacy interest. In this case, the accused’s control over the computer
was limited, as compared to someone who is the sole user of a personal computer.
However, shared control does not mean no control. By choosing to share a computer
with others, people do not relinquish their right to be protected from the unreasonable
joint ownership of the computer does not render the accused’s subjective expectation
While it is reasonable to ask citizens to bear the risk that a co-user of their
shared computer may access their data on it, and even perhaps discuss this data with
the police, it is not reasonable to ask them to bear the risk that the co-user could
consent to the police taking this computer. By choosing to share their computers with
friends and family, Canadians are not required to give up their Charter protection
from state interference in their private lives, and to accept that their friends and
family can unilaterally authorize police to take things that they share. In light of the
deeply intimate nature of information that can be found on a personal computer, the
Charter is not triggered if an accused’s Charter rights were waived. However, waiver
by one rights holder does not constitute waiver for all rights holders. To hold that
there is no seizure within the meaning of the Charter when a party with an equal and
overlapping privacy interest provides consent would effectively permit the consenting
party to waive the privacy rights of the other parties. While the accused’s spouse
this did not entitle her to relinquish the accused’s constitutional right to be left alone.
The accused had a reasonable expectation of privacy in the shared computer and his
rights had not been waived. Accordingly, the taking of the computer by the police
seizure was not reasonable because it was not authorized by any law. It therefore
The Charter-infringing state conduct in this case was serious. The police
service’s specialized cyber-crime unit should have been aware of the unique and
heightened privacy interests in computers and should have known that a third party
cannot waive another party’s Charter rights. Because there were multiple serious
Charter breaches throughout the investigative process, the police conduct undermined
public confidence in the rule of law. While society’s interest in the adjudication of
this case on its merits was strong and the alleged offences were serious, given the
seriousness of the state conduct and its impact on the accused’s Charter-protected
interests, the admission of the evidence would bring the administration of justice into
disrepute.
Per Moldaver J.: There is agreement with the majority that the accused
had a reasonable expectation of privacy in the shared computer and that in the
under s. 8 of the Charter, despite his spouse’s consent. There is also agreement that
While counsel for the accused here did not challenge the police entry into
the home and conceded that police entry into a shared residence is not a search, the
possible alternate basis for concluding that the police entry in this case was lawful is
that the police had the power to enter the shared residence at common law under the
ancillary powers doctrine. The analysis under this doctrine, which is used to assess
whether the police have the authority at common law to take an action that interferes
with an individual’s liberty or property, proceeds in two stages: whether the police
conduct at issue falls within the general scope of their statutory or common law duties
and whether the conduct involves a justifiable use of police powers associated with
that duty.
At the first stage, entering into a shared residence when invited to take a
witness statement in connection with a criminal investigation falls within the scope of
within the community, apprehend criminals and assist victims of crime. At the second
stage, the proposed power may well be a reasonably necessary interference with
individuals’ privacy interests in their homes. The ability of the police to enter into a
occasioned by that action is minimal. When the police enter a home, they interfere
with the expectation of privacy of all residents who did not consent to that entry.
Specifically, five constraints on the police entry power operate to minimize the extent
of the interference with the expectation of privacy: (1) the police must offer the
interview location — if one is available — that does not potentially intrude upon the
reasonable expectations of privacy of co-residents in their home; (2) the purpose of
the entry must be limited to taking a statement from the authorizing resident or one or
more willing occupants in connection with a criminal investigation; (3) the police are
only permitted to enter the home’s common areas into which they have been invited;
(4) the police can only enter if invited in by a resident with the authority to consent
and that consent must be voluntary, informed and continuous; and (5) unless the
police obtain the necessary grounds to take further investigative action, the duration
of the entry must be limited to taking a statement from the authorizing resident or one
or more willing occupants. These constraints act to limit the impact of the police
entry on the non-consenting resident’s privacy interests while allowing the police to
engage in an important and necessary facet of their duty to investigate crime. This
entry power may well be a reasonably necessary, and therefore justifiable, incursion
Per Côté J.: There is agreement with the majority that the evidence
should be excluded under s. 24(2) of the Charter, and therefore that the appeal should
be allowed. However, there is disagreement that the issue of the entry into the home
should not be addressed and that the police removal of the computer was unlawful.
The issue of whether the police can lawfully enter common areas of a
shared home with the consent of one cohabitant should be addressed as it was argued
by the parties and is relevant to the analysis pursuant to s. 24(2) of the Charter. One
cohabitant can validly consent to a police entry into common areas of a shared
residence, obviating the need for a warrant. The alternative rule — that the police
may enter the common areas of a shared home only if they obtain consent from each
and every person who lives there — is entirely unworkable. It is not objectively
reasonable for a cohabitant, who shares a residence with others, to expect to be able
to veto another cohabitant’s decision to allow the police to enter any areas of the
home that they share equally. Other persons with overlapping privacy interests in and
right to common spaces can validly permit third parties, including the police, to enter
cohabitant’s liberty and autonomy interests with respect to those spaces. However,
the ability of law enforcement officials to enter on the basis of consent is not without
limits. The consenting person must have the authority to consent; the consent must be
limited to shared places or things; the consent must be informed and voluntary; and
the police must respect the limits of the consent, which is freely revocable at any
In this case, the accused’s spouse permitted a police officer to enter the
home she shared with the accused. Not only do the police have a common law power
to enter a shared residence for the purpose of taking a statement, but there is no
violation of s. 8 in any event, because the accused’s expectation of privacy was not
consent for the police to enter common areas of the home. The reason that the entry
by the police was lawful was not because the accused’s spouse waived the accused’s
Charter rights. The accused’s spouse did not waive anyone’s rights except her own.
In the context of a shared home, the scope of the accused’s reasonable expectation of
privacy was limited in recognition of the fact that his spouse was a first-party rights
holder who should be permitted to freely exercise her rights of access and control
over common areas. The accused’s reasonable expectation of privacy was not
to give the police access to common areas, particularly since he had no legal right to
As with the police entry into the home, the accused’s expectation of
privacy with respect to the computer he shared with his spouse was attenuated by the
realities of joint ownership and use. It was not objectively reasonable for him to
expect that his spouse could not exercise her own authority and control over the
computer to consent to a seizure by the police. The subject matter of the seizure, that
is, what the police were really after through the seizure of the computer, was only the
physical device, not the data itself. At no point were the computer’s contents ever
searched or examined by the police prior to obtaining a warrant. The law enforcement
objective in seizing the computer was simply to preserve potential evidence. The
seizure did nothing to interfere with the accused’s expectation of privacy in its
informational content because that content remained private. When the subject matter
of the seizure is properly defined as the physical computer, it is clear that it was not
objectively reasonable for the accused to expect that he could prohibit his spouse
from exercising her own authority and control over the computer to consent to a
police seizure. Further, it is not objectively reasonable for the accused’s subjective
expectation of privacy to act as a veto on his spouse’s ability to exercise her own
property rights in the physical device. The scope of the accused’s s. 8 protection is
limited by the fact that the computer was jointly owned and used by another person.
His spouse’s rights in the computer — including her property rights in the device and
her right to waive her own privacy protections — would be rendered meaningless if
the accused could prevent her from consenting to the physical removal of the
computer.
Even though the entry into the home and the seizure of the computer were
both lawful, the evidence should still be excluded under s. 24(2) of the Charter based
on the other violations of law in this case — specifically, the fact that the police failed
to comply with ss. 489.1 and 490 of the Criminal Code by improperly detaining the
computer and the fact that the search warrant was ultimately found to be invalid.
Cases Cited
By Karakatsanis J.
Applied: R. v. Cole, 2012 SCC 53, [2012] 3 S.C.R. 34; referred to:
Hunter v. Southam Inc., [1984] 2 S.C.R. 145; R. v. Edwards, [1996] 1 S.C.R. 128; R.
v. Dyment, [1988] 2 S.C.R. 417; R. v. Borden, [1994] 3 S.C.R. 145; R. v. Wills (1992),
12 C.R. (4th) 58; R. v. Monney, [1999] 1 S.C.R. 652; R. v. Collins, [1987] 1 S.C.R.
265; R. v. Silveira, [1995] 2 S.C.R. 297; R. v. Tessling, 2004 SCC 67, [2004] 3 S.C.R.
432; R. v. T. (R.M.J.), 2014 MBCA 36, 311 C.C.C. (3d) 185; R. v. Clarke, 2017
BCCA 453, 357 C.C.C. (3d) 237; R. v. Squires, 2005 NLCA 51, 199 C.C.C. (3d) 509;
R. v. Marakah, 2017 SCC 59, [2017] 2 S.C.R. 608; R. v. Spencer, 2014 SCC 43,
[2014] 2 S.C.R. 212; R. v. Patrick, 2009 SCC 17, [2009] 1 S.C.R. 579; R. v. Ward,
2012 ONCA 660, 112 O.R. (3d) 321; R. v. Wong, [1990] 3 S.C.R. 36; R. v. Vu, 2013
SCC 60, [2013] 3 S.C.R. 657; R. v. Plant, [1993] 3 S.C.R. 281; R. v. Morelli, 2010
SCC 8, [2010] 1 S.C.R. 253; R. v. Fearon, 2014 SCC 77, [2014] 3 S.C.R. 621; R. v.
Buhay, 2003 SCC 30, [2003] 1 S.C.R. 631; R. v. Duarte, [1990] 1 S.C.R. 30; R. v. M.
(M.R.), [1998] 3 S.C.R. 393; R. v. Gomboc, 2010 SCC 55, [2010] 3 S.C.R. 211; R. v.
C.C.C. (3d) 525; R. v. Grant, 2009 SCC 32, [2009] 2 S.C.R. 353; R. v. Tse, 2012 SCC
16, [2012] 1 S.C.R. 531; R. v. Paterson, 2017 SCC 15, [2017] 1 S.C.R. 202.
By Moldaver J.
Evans, [1996] 1 S.C.R. 8; R. v. Spencer, 2014 SCC 43, [2014] 2 S.C.R. 212; R. v.
Tessling, 2004 SCC 67, [2004] 3 S.C.R. 432; R. v. Bartle, [1994] 3 S.C.R. 173; R. v.
Grant, [1993] 3 S.C.R. 223; R. v. Collins, [1987] 1 S.C.R. 265; R. v. Stillman, [1997]
1 S.C.R. 607; Dedman v. The Queen, [1985] 2 S.C.R. 2; R. v. Mann, 2004 SCC 52,
[2004] 3 S.C.R. 59; Cloutier v. Langlois, [1990] 1 S.C.R. 158; R. v. Godoy, [1999] 1
S.C.R. 311; R. v. Kang-Brown, 2008 SCC 18, [2008] 1 S.C.R. 456; R. v. MacDonald,
2014 SCC 3, [2014] 1 S.C.R. 37; R. v. Bui, 2002 BCSC 289, [2002] B.C.J. No. 3185
(QL); R. v. Caslake, [1998] 1 S.C.R. 51; R. v. Jones, 2011 ONCA 632, 107 O.R. (3d)
241; R. v. Borden, [1994] 3 S.C.R. 145; R. v. Wills (1992), 12 C.R. (4th) 58; Hunter v.
By Côté J.
to: R. v. Law, 2002 SCC 10, [2002] 1 S.C.R. 227; R. v. Edwards, [1996] 1 S.C.R.
128; R. v. Marakah, 2017 SCC 59, [2017] 2 S.C.R. 608; R. v. Quesnelle, 2014 SCC
46, [2014] 2 S.C.R. 390; R. v. M. (M.R.), [1998] 3 S.C.R. 393; R. v. Patrick, 2009
SCC 17, [2009] 1 S.C.R. 579; R. v. Reeves, 2017 ONCA 365, 350 C.C.C. (3d) 1; R. v.
Clarke, 2017 BCCA 453, 357 C.C.C. (3d) 237; R. v. T. (R.M.J.), 2014 MBCA 36, 311
C.C.C. (3d) 185; R. v. Squires, 2005 NLCA 51, 199 C.C.C. (3d) 509; R. v. Morelli,
2010 SCC 8, [2010] 1 S.C.R. 253; R. v. Vu, 2013 SCC 60, [2013] 3 S.C.R. 657; R. v.
Buhay, 2003 SCC 30, [2003] 1 S.C.R. 631; R. v. Mercer (1992), 7 O.R. (3d) 9; R. v.
Stevens, 2011 ONCA 504, 106 O.R. (3d) 241; R. v. Ward, 2012 ONCA 660, 112 O.R.
(3d) 321; R. v. Spencer, 2014 SCC 43, [2014] 2 S.C.R. 212; R. v. Belnavis (1996), 29
O.R. (3d) 321, aff’d [1997] 3 S.C.R. 341; R. v. Garcia-Machado, 2015 ONCA 569,
126 O.R. (3d) 737; R. v. Grant, 2009 SCC 32, [2009] 2 S.C.R. 353; R. v. Villaroman,
Criminal Code, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-46, ss. 487.11, 489(2), 489.1, 490.
Authors Cited
Fontana, James A., and David Keeshan. The Law of Search and Seizure in Canada,
10th ed. Toronto: LexisNexis, 2017.
Rouleau and Brown JJ.A.), 2017 ONCA 365, 350 C.C.C. (3d) 1, 38 C.R. (7th) 87,
[2017] O.J. No. 3038 (QL), 2017 CarswellOnt 7617 (WL Can.), setting aside a
decision of Guay J., 2015 ONCJ 724, [2015] O.J. No. 6750 (QL), 2015 CarswellOnt
Frank Au, Michelle Campbell and Randy Schwartz, for the respondent.
James C. Martin and Eric Marcoux, for the intervener the Director of
Public Prosecutions.
Ann Ellefsen-Tremblay and Nicolas Abran, for the intervener the Director
Michael Lacy and Bryan Badali, for the intervener the Criminal Lawyers’
Association (Ontario).
The judgment of Wagner C.J. and Abella, Karakatsanis, Gascon, Brown, Rowe and
Martin JJ. was delivered by
KARAKATSANIS J. —
I. Overview
accused, Thomas Reeves, shared with his spouse. His spouse consented to the police
entry into the home and the taking of the computer from a shared space. The officer
did not have a warrant. Reeves claims that the police obtained the child pornography
evidence in a manner that infringed his rights under s. 8 of the Canadian Charter of
Rights and Freedoms, and that it should be excluded under s. 24(2) of the Charter.
The key issue in this case is whether the police officer could rely on the consent of
search and seizure. In assessing whether s. 8 has been infringed, courts consider
whether an individual’s privacy interests must give way to the state’s interest in law
enforcement. The challenge of s. 8 is that courts are most often called on to interpret
its scope in cases, like this, where the police have found evidence that the claimant
has engaged in criminal activity. Child pornography offences are serious and
insidious, and there is a strong public interest in investigating and prosecuting them.
However, in applying s. 8, the question is not whether the claimant broke the law, but
rather whether the police exceeded the limits of the state’s authority. The answer in
this case impacts not only Reeves, but also the privacy rights of all Canadians in
[3] The judge hearing the Charter application concluded that the police
infringed Reeves’ s. 8 Charter rights, and excluded the child pornography evidence
under s. 24(2) (2015 ONCJ 724). Reeves was acquitted at trial. The Court of Appeal
did not agree with the application judge that the police infringed s. 8 when they took
the computer with the consent of Reeves’ spouse (2017 ONCA 365, 350 C.C.C. (3d)
1). It allowed the appeal, admitted the evidence, and ordered a new trial.
[4] I agree with the application judge that the police infringed Reeves’
Charter rights when they took the computer from his home, and that the child
spouse did not nullify his reasonable expectation of privacy, or operate to waive his
Charter rights in the computer. The warrantless seizure of the computer and the
search of it without a valid warrant were unreasonable, and the admission of the child
II. Background
[6] Thomas Reeves, the appellant, shared a home with Nicole Gravelle, his
common-law spouse. They were joint titleholders and had lived with their two
daughters in this home for ten years. In 2011, Reeves was charged with domestic
assault following an altercation with Gravelle and her sister. After this incident, a
no-contact order was issued which prohibited Reeves from visiting the family home
without Gravelle’s prior, written, and revocable consent. In October 2012, Gravelle
contacted Reeves’ probation officer to withdraw her consent. She also reported that
she and her sister had found what they believed to be child pornography on the home
warrant. Gravelle allowed the officer to enter. Gravelle signed a consent form
authorizing the officer to take the home computer, which was located in the
basement, a shared space in the home. The officer testified that he sought Gravelle’s
consent because he did not believe he had reasonable grounds to obtain a warrant to
search the home and seize the computer. The computer was owned and used by both
spouses. Reeves was in custody on unrelated charges when the computer was taken
by the police.
[8] The police detained the computer without a warrant for more than four
months, but did not search it during this time. They failed to report the seizure of the
C-46, during this period. In February 2013, the police finally obtained a warrant to
search the computer and executed it two days later. The police found 140 images and
22 videos of child pornography on the computer. Reeves was charged with possessing
[9] The application judge, Guay J., concluded that the police had violated
Reeves’ s. 8 Charter rights. First, the warrantless search of the home and seizure of
the home computer breached s. 8. While the police obtained the consent of Reeves’
spouse to enter the home and remove the home computer, a third party cannot waive
another party’s Charter rights. Reeves had a reasonable expectation of privacy in the
home and the home computer, and he did not consent to the entry of the police and
the removal of the computer. Second, the police failed to comply with ss. 489.1 and
490 of the Criminal Code by detaining the computer for over four months without
reporting its seizure to a justice. Third, the information to obtain a search warrant
(ITO) was goal-oriented, misleading, unbalanced, and unfair, and the search warrant
should not have been granted. The application judge excluded the computer evidence
under s. 24(2) of the Charter given “the flagrant disregard of the accused’s section 8
[10] The Court of Appeal allowed the Crown’s appeal from the acquittal, set
aside the exclusionary order, and ordered a new trial. LaForme J.A., writing for the
court, determined that the entry of the police into the home and the taking of the
home computer did not violate Reeves’ s. 8 rights. He explained that, while one
privacy in the shared spaces of the home and the computer was “greatly diminished”
(para. 59). Therefore, it was reasonable for him to expect that Gravelle would be
“able to consent to police entry into the common areas of the home or to the taking of
the shared computer” (para. 62). However, the Court of Appeal agreed with the
application judge that the continued detention of the computer and the subsequent
computer search both violated s. 8 of the Charter. While noting that this was a
“borderline case”, the Court of Appeal concluded that the evidence should not have
[11] Under s. 8 of the Charter, “[e]veryone has the right to be secure against
individuals from unjustified state intrusions upon their privacy” (Hunter v. Southam
Inc., [1984] 2 S.C.R. 145, at p. 160). The s. 8 analysis is geared towards determining
individual’s privacy in order to advance its goals, notably those of law enforcement”
(pp. 159-60).
[12] Section 8 of the Charter is only engaged if the claimant has a reasonable
expectation of privacy in the place or item that is inspected or taken by the state (R. v.
Cole, 2012 SCC 53, [2012] 3 S.C.R. 34, at paras. 34 and 36). To determine whether
the claimant has a reasonable expectation of privacy, courts examine “the totality of
the circumstances” (R. v. Edwards, [1996] 1 S.C.R. 128, at paras. 31 and 45(5)).
[13] Further, “the essence of a seizure under s. 8 is the taking of a thing from a
person by a public authority without that person’s consent” (R. v. Dyment, [1988] 2
S.C.R. 417, at p. 431 (emphasis added)). In contrast, valid consent acts as a waiver of
the claimant’s s. 8 rights. In such cases, there is no search or seizure within the
meaning of the Charter, even though the claimant would ordinarily enjoy a
reasonable expectation of privacy in the thing the police have taken or inspected (R. v.
Borden, [1994] 3 S.C.R. 145, at pp. 160-62; R. v. Wills (1992), 12 C.R. (4th) 58 (Ont.
C.A.), at p. 81).
[14] If s. 8 of the Charter is engaged, “the court must then determine whether
the search or seizure was reasonable” (Cole, at para. 36). A warrantless search or
seizure is presumptively unreasonable, and the Crown bears the burden of rebutting
this presumption (Hunter, at p. 161; R. v. Monney, [1999] 1 S.C.R. 652, at para. 29).
reasonable and if the manner in which the search [or seizure] was carried out is
[15] The only s. 8 issues raised before this Court are whether the police
infringed Reeves’ Charter rights by (1) entering the shared home without a warrant;
and (2) taking the shared computer without a warrant. The Court of Appeal agreed
with the application judge that the police infringed Reeves’ Charter rights by
detaining the computer and subsequently searching it, and the Crown now concedes
these points.
[16] In his written submissions, the appellant, Reeves, argues that the search
of his home and the seizure of the home computer violated his rights under s. 8 of the
Charter. He had a reasonable expectation of privacy in the home and computer and
his spouse’s consent did not render the police’s conduct Charter-compliant.
home and computer, control does not need to be exclusive to support a reasonable
does not assume the risk that the police can enter a shared home and seize its contents
[17] In his oral submissions, Reeves’ counsel maintained that the seizure of
the computer violated the Charter, but submitted that the police entry into the home
did not.
[18] The respondent, Her Majesty the Queen, submits that the police did not
infringe the Charter by entering the home and taking the home computer. The
Charter permits police to access shared places without a warrant when they act on the
consent of a party who has a privacy interest in the place that is equal to and
overlapping with the privacy interests of the other co-residents. A consent search or
seizure is not a “search or seizure” within the meaning of the Charter. It is not
reasonable for one cohabitant to expect that his or her right to exclude others will
trump another cohabitant’s right to admit others. While one cohabitant cannot waive
those premises for section 8 Charter purposes” (para. 11). He noted the police officer
entered the shared home for the purpose of obtaining the computer. In his view,
Gravelle’s consent did not render the officer’s entry Charter-compliant because a
third party cannot waive another party’s Charter rights. The Court of Appeal
disagreed, and concluded that Gravelle could consent to the search of shared areas of
the home.
[20] While the lower courts assessed whether the police entry into the home
violated the Charter, given my conclusions on the other issues raised in this case, it is
not necessary for me to decide whether the entry into the home constituted a separate
[21] Even if the officer had lawfully been in the home, this would not make
the seizure of the computer lawful. Section 489(2) of the Criminal Code provides that
in the execution of duties may, without a warrant, seize any thing that the officer
afford evidence of an offence. Here, however, this section was not available; the
officer testified that he asked for Gravelle’s consent to seize the computer because he
did not believe he had grounds to obtain a warrant. Irrespective of whether the officer
was “lawfully present” in the home, by his own admission, he did not have
[22] Therefore, in this case, the legality of the police entry does not affect the
legality of the taking of the computer. As such, I proceed on the assumption that the
[23] In any event, I do not think it prudent to explore this issue in the absence
whether and when police entry into a shared home on the consent of one resident
[24] Of course, the law has long recognized the prime importance of privacy
within our homes (R. v. Silveira, [1995] 2 S.C.R. 297, at para. 140; see also R. v.
Tessling, 2004 SCC 67, [2004] 3 S.C.R. 432, at para. 22). However, if a resident cannot
consent to police entry to a shared home without the consent of all the other residents, it
could undermine the dignity and autonomy of that resident — especially for a victim
of a crime.
[25] Several provincial appellate courts have concluded that a resident has the
right to permit police entry into common areas of the home without the consent of all
other residents (R. v. T. (R.M.J.), 2014 MBCA 36, 311 C.C.C. (3d) 185, at paras. 41-
52; R. v. Clarke, 2017 BCCA 453, 357 C.C.C. (3d) 237, at paras. 55-56 and 62-63; R.
v. Squires, 2005 NLCA 51, 199 C.C.C. (3d) 509, at para. 34). However, without
deciding the issue, police entry into a shared home with the consent of only one
search common areas of the home? Should the privacy interests of other residents
affect the authority to seize evidence, even if in plain view? Could another resident
who is present object to the police entry? What if the officers seek entry for the
[26] In short, the issue of whether police entry into a shared home with the
consent of one resident violates the Charter raises complex questions that require a
considered response. They are best answered in a case that directly turns on this issue,
[27] The key issue in this case is whether the police violated Reeves’ Charter
rights when they took the shared computer without a warrant but with Gravelle’s
consent. There is a presumption that the taking of an item by the police without a
warrant violates s. 8 of the Charter unless the claimant has no reasonable expectation
of privacy in the item or has waived his Charter rights. I start by assessing whether
an item that is taken, courts must consider “the totality of the circumstances”
(Edwards, at para. 45(5)). In particular, they must determine (1) the subject matter of
the alleged seizure; (2) whether the claimant had a direct interest in the subject
matter; (3) whether the claimant had a subjective expectation of privacy in the subject
matter; and (4) whether this subjective expectation of privacy was objectively
reasonable (Cole, at para. 40; R. v. Marakah, 2017 SCC 59, [2017] 2 S.C.R. 608, at
para. 11). The reasonable expectation of privacy standard is normative, rather than
descriptive (Tessling, at para. 42; R. v. Spencer, 2014 SCC 43, [2014] 2 S.C.R. 212, at
para. 18; R. v. Patrick, 2009 SCC 17, [2009] 1 S.C.R. 579, at para. 14). The question
is whether the privacy claim must “be recognized as beyond state intrusion absent
open society” (R. v. Ward, 2012 ONCA 660, 112 O.R. (3d) 321, at para. 87, per
Doherty J.A.). Further, the inquiry must be framed in neutral terms — “[t]he analysis
turns on the privacy of the area or the thing being searched and the impact of the
search on its target, not the legal or illegal nature of the items sought” (Spencer, at
para. 36; see also R. v. Wong, [1990] 3 S.C.R. 36, at pp. 49-50; Patrick, at para. 32).
[29] Turning first to the subject matter of the alleged seizure, in oral argument,
the Crown distinguished between the taking of the physical hardware and a
subsequent search of the computer’s data, which, in this case, occurred pursuant to a
search warrant. However, this Court has held that the subject matter must not be
defined “narrowly in terms of the physical acts involved or the physical space
invaded, but rather by reference to the nature of the privacy interests potentially
compromised by the state action” (Marakah, at para. 15, citing Ward, at para. 65).
The guiding question is “what the police were really after” (Marakah, at para. 15,
[30] Here, the subject matter of the seizure was the computer, and ultimately
the data it contained about Reeves’ usage, including the files he accessed, saved and
deleted. I acknowledge that the police could not actually search the data until they
obtained a warrant (see R. v. Vu, 2013 SCC 60, [2013] 3 S.C.R. 657, at paras. 3 and
49). Nevertheless, while the privacy interests engaged by a seizure may be different
computer data were still implicated by the seizure of the computer. When police seize
a computer, they not only deprive individuals of control over intimate data in which
they have a reasonable expectation of privacy, they also ensure that such data remains
[31] Thus, I disagree with the Court of Appeal’s assertion that “[s]eizing the
computer did not interfere with Reeves’ heightened expectation of privacy in its
informational content; it did not imperil any of his legitimate interests, beyond mere
property rights” (para. 61). Clearly, the police were not after the physical device (to
collect fingerprints on it, for example), but rather sought to preserve and permit
access to the data it contained. To focus exclusively on the property rights at issue
(that is, on Reeves’ interest in the computer) neglects the important privacy rights in
privacy in the home computer and the data it contained. He used the computer and
stored personal data on it (see Cole, at para. 43). The computer was password-
personal information which individuals in a free and democratic society would wish
to maintain and control from dissemination to the state” (R. v. Plant, [1993] 3 S.C.R.
281, at p. 293). Although a seizure of a computer may be less intrusive than a search
of its contents, both engage important privacy interests when the purpose of the
seizure is to gain access to the data on the computer. Privacy includes “control over,
access to and use of information” (Spencer, at para. 40). Thus, the personal or
confidential nature of the data that is preserved and potentially available to police
through the seizure of the computer is relevant in determining whether the claimant
“[c]omputers often contain our most intimate correspondence. They contain the
details of our financial, medical, and personal situations. They even reveal our
specific interests, likes, and propensities” (R. v. Morelli, 2010 SCC 8, [2010] 1 S.C.R.
253, at para. 105; see also Vu, at paras. 40-41; Cole, at paras. 3 and 47-48).
Computers act as portals — providing access to information stored in many different
locations (Vu, at para. 44; R. v. Fearon, 2014 SCC 77, [2014] 3 S.C.R. 621, at paras.
unbeknownst to the user” (Vu, at para. 42). They retain information that the user may
think has been deleted (Vu, at para. 43). By seizing the computer, the police deprived
Reeves of control over this highly private information, including the opportunity to
delete it. They also obtained the means through which to access this information.
Indeed, these are the reasons why the police seized the computer.
[35] Given the unique privacy concerns associated with computers, this Court
has held that specific, prior judicial authorization is required to search a computer
(Vu, at para. 2) and that police officers cannot search cell phones incident to arrest
unless certain conditions are met (Fearon, at para. 83). The unique and heightened
privacy interests in personal computer data clearly warrant strong protection, such
computer from a home. This presumptive rule fosters respect for the underlying
more accurately accords with the expectations of privacy Canadians attach to their
[36] The Crown’s submissions and the Court of Appeal’s analysis emphasize
the fact that Reeves shared control over, and access to, his computer with others. I
computer was limited, as compared to someone who is the sole user of a personal
computer. He shared the computer with his spouse and, at the time of the seizure, he
could only access the home (where the computer was stored) with her consent, which
had been revoked. As this Court has recognized, “in certain circumstances, sharing
(Marakah, at para. 68). I agree with the Court of Appeal that Reeves’ shared control
of privacy, nor is lack of control fatal to a privacy interest” (Marakah, at para. 38).
privacy in places and things that are not exclusively under the claimant’s control. In
R. v. Buhay, 2003 SCC 30, [2003] 1 S.C.R. 631, it held that a person had a reasonable
expectation of privacy in a bus depot locker where he had stored and locked
belongings, even though a company owned the lockers and could access them at any
time (paras. 22-23). In Cole, it held that an employee had a reasonable expectation of
privacy in the data he stored on his work computer, even though “both policy and
technological reality deprived him of exclusive control over — and access to — the
personal information he chose to record on it” (para. 54; see also Marakah, at paras.
38-45). Shared control does not mean no control. By choosing to share a computer
with others, people do not relinquish their right to be protected from the unreasonable
seizure of it.
[38] In any event, lack of control is not fatal to finding a reasonable
“[w]here a loss of control over the subject matter is involuntary, such as where a
person is in police custody or the subject matter is stolen from the person by a third
party, then a reasonable expectation of personal privacy may persist” (para. 130).
Here, Reeves was in police custody when the computer was seized and he was
restrained from accessing the house by court order. At no point did Reeves
voluntarily relinquish control of his personal computer. Any resulting lack of control
para. 45(6)(iii); Cole, at para. 51). The joint ownership of the computer does not
Cole, this Court concluded that the accused had a reasonable expectation of privacy in
a work computer, even though the device and the data were owned solely by his
[40] The Crown further submits that, because Reeves’ spouse had an equal
and overlapping privacy interest in the computer, its removal with her consent did not
constitute a “seizure” within the meaning of the Charter. In the Crown’s view, it is
reasonable to recognize that a co-user of a device can permit police access in her own
right, so a claimant’s reasonable expectation of privacy is not violated when this right
is exercised. Similarly, the Court of Appeal held that “[i]t was not reasonable for
Reeves to expect [his spouse] would not be able to consent to . . . the taking of the
shared computer” (para. 62). Effectively, these arguments mean either that Reeves
had no reasonable expectation of privacy in the computer when it was taken by the
police, or that his spouse’s consent operated to waive Reeves’ Charter rights. I will
[41] I cannot agree with the first proposition — that Reeves had no reasonable
expectation of privacy in the computer. The consent of Reeves’ spouse cannot nullify
computer. Admittedly, when we share a computer with other people, we take the risk
that they will access information we hoped to keep private. They may wish to share
the information they find with others, including the police. But, as noted above, the
is not which risks the claimant has taken, but which risks should be imposed on him
[42] Thus, in R. v. Duarte, [1990] 1 S.C.R. 30, this Court concluded that the
violated s. 8 of the Charter, even if one of the participants in the conversation had
between the “tattletale” risk (the risk that someone will tell the police what you said)
and the risk that someone will consent to the police making an electronic record of
your words (p. 48). The Court concluded that “[t]hese risks are of a different order of
magnitude” — the tattletale risk is one that is reasonable to ask citizens to bear in a
free and democratic society, whereas the surveillance risk is not (p. 48.).
[43] Similarly, while it is reasonable to ask citizens to bear the risk that a co-
user of their shared computer may access their data on it, and even perhaps discuss
this data with the police, it is not reasonable to ask them to bear the risk that the co-
user could consent to the police taking this computer. In Marakah, this Court held
that, when a claimant shares information with another person through a text message,
he accepts the risk that this information may be disclosed to third parties. But that
does not mean the claimant “give[s] up control over the information or his right to
[44] I cannot accept that, by choosing to share our computers with friends and
family, we are required to give up our Charter protection from state interference in
our private lives. We are not required to accept that our friends and family can
unilaterally authorize police to take things that we share. The decision to share with
others does not come at such a high price in a free and democratic society. As the
s. 8 may also disproportionately impact the privacy rights of low income individuals,
the taking of the computer grants insufficient protection to her privacy rights. It
submits that privacy is not just a right to exclude, but also a right to admit. I disagree.
393, at paras. 31-34; R. v. Gomboc, 2010 SCC 55, [2010] 3 S.C.R. 211, at para. 109,
per McLachlin C.J. and Fish J., dissenting, but not on this point), they cannot
eliminate it. I would note that Gravelle was of course free to, and did, notify the
police about what she saw on the computer. Further, while Gravelle also had a
reasonable expectation of privacy in the computer data, she is not the claimant in this
appeal. This Court has acknowledged that several parties can have a reasonable
expectation of privacy in the same place or thing, and thus distinct s. 8 Charter claims
[46] The Crown also argues that rejecting its approach will prevent victims of
crime who have received threatening or harassing text messages from showing them
to the police. However, the issue of whether s. 8 of the Charter is engaged when a
private citizen offers information or an item to the police in which another person
may have a reasonable expectation of privacy does not arise in this case (see
649, 352 C.C.C. (3d) 525, at paras. 21-35). Indeed, Gravelle did not bring the
computer to the police, but rather signed a consent form authorizing them to take it.
(She testified that she signed the form because she did not think she had a choice).
The issue of whether s. 8 is engaged when a citizen voluntarily brings an item to the
police remains for another day. This case deals squarely with the taking of a computer
by the state.
[47] In short, in light of the deeply intimate nature of information that can be
objectively reasonable. His spouse’s consent could not nullify his reasonable
expectation of privacy in the computer data. Indeed, both the Crown and the Court of
in the computer was limited, given that he shared control over the computer with his
spouse, it still suffices to trigger the protection of s. 8 of the Charter (see Buhay, at
[48] I turn now to the alternative proposition that underlies the Crown’s
argument — that Reeves’ Charter rights were waived by Gravelle’s consent. The
triggered if Reeves’ Charter rights were waived. The Crown’s argument that there is
no seizure within the meaning of the Charter when a party with an equal and
overlapping privacy interest provides consent would effectively permit the consenting
party to waive the privacy rights of the other parties. This would be inconsistent with
[49] This Court has long held that a claimant can waive his or her s. 8 Charter
force of the consent given must be commensurate with the significant effect which it
[50] In Cole, this Court considered whether this first-party consent doctrine
should be extended to third parties. A school board had discovered child pornography
files on the work computer of the accused, a teacher. The school board consented to a
warrantless search and seizure of the computer by the police. The Crown argued that
the taking of the computer and the examination of its data by the police complied
with the Charter because the school board (a third party) could waive the accused’s
privacy rights. This Court rejected this argument, concluding that the doctrine of
third-party consent should not be adopted in Canada, despite its acceptance in the
United States. Cole explains that this doctrine would be “inconsistent with this
“voluntarily given by the rights holder” and “based on sufficient information in his or
her hands to make a meaningful choice” (paras. 77-78). The Court also held that the
adoption of this doctrine in the United States was based on the type of “risk analysis”
that had been rejected in Duarte (Cole, at paras. 75-76). The approach in Cole aligns
with Wong, where this Court held that video surveillance of a hotel room violated the
occupant’s rights under s. 8 of the Charter, even though the hotel management had
[51] The Crown endeavors to distinguish Cole by arguing that Gravelle is not
a “true” third party because she had an equal and overlapping privacy interest in the
computer. In contrast, in Cole the school board was a true third party because it did
not have a privacy interest in the personal data the accused stored on the computer.
suggestion in Cole that the school could not consent to the search because it had no
equal and overlapping privacy interests in the computer. While Gravelle undoubtedly
has constitutionally-protected privacy interests in the shared computer, this does not
entitle her to relinquish Reeves’ constitutional right to be left alone (Cole, at para. 78;
see also Borden, at p. 162). Waiver by one rights holder does not constitute waiver for
all rights holders. This Court has set a high bar for first-party consent because
consent must be informed and voluntary because it wants to ensure that a waiver by
this jurisprudence.
Public Interest Clinic aptly remarked, although the privacy interests of co-occupants
or co-users over some shared premises or items may be “overlapping”, it does not
follow that those interests are “coextensive”. Indeed, where the consent giver and the
claimant are not the same person, the s. 8 Charter inquiry does not concern the
legitimacy of the former’s privacy interests in the subject matter of the search or
[54] I recognize that rejecting the Crown’s approach may interfere with
protects the unique and heightened privacy interests in home computers. At the same
time, in appropriate circumstances, police may exercise other common law powers.
For example, in exigent circumstances, police may conduct warrantless seizures (see
[55] Further, adopting the Crown’s approach based on equal and overlapping
privacy interests would raise practical issues. Before taking a computer, it may be
difficult, if not impossible, for police to know whether the privacy interests in the data
they are after are “equal and overlapping,” and thus whether the taking would be
unclear how police could proceed if the target of the investigation were at home when
the police arrived, and explicitly refused to consent to the computer’s removal.
[56] For these reasons, the taking of the computer without Reeves’ consent
interfered with his reasonable expectation of privacy and thus constituted a seizure
within the meaning of the Charter (Cole, at para. 59). A warrantless seizure is
presumptively unreasonable, and the burden falls to the Crown to rebut this
presumption (Hunter, at p. 161; Monney, at para. 29). Indeed, because someone is
taking of a personal computer without a warrant and without valid consent will
rebut the presumption in this case, as it relies on Gravelle’s consent to show that no
seizure occurred.
[57] Further, no statutory or common law authority could have justified the
computer seizure in this case. If the police had had a warrant to search the home, Vu
would have justified the seizure — but not the search ― of the computer. In Vu, this
Court held that, while a warrant to search a place generally entitles police to search
anything they find in that place, this is not true for computers (paras. 23-24). Given
As the police did not have a warrant to search the home in this case, Vu does not
computer and his rights had not been waived. Accordingly, the taking of the computer
by the police constituted a seizure within the meaning of s. 8 of the Charter. This
warrantless seizure was not reasonable because it was not authorized by any law. The
of justice into disrepute.” In this analysis, courts must consider (1) the seriousness of
the Charter-infringing state conduct; (2) the impact of the breach on the Charter-
protected interests of the accused; and (3) society’s interest in the adjudication of the
case on its merits (R. v. Grant, 2009 SCC 32, [2009] 2 S.C.R. 353, at para. 71).
[60] The application judge determined that the evidence should be excluded
under s. 24(2). The Court of Appeal conducted a fresh Grant analysis, given its
determination that the application judge erred in concluding that the entry into the
home and the taking of the home computer violated s. 8 of the Charter. It assessed
whether the computer evidence should be excluded on the basis of the two other
Charter breaches — the detention of the computer in violation of ss. 489.1 and 490 of
the Criminal Code and the computer search without a valid warrant. The Court of
Appeal noted that these breaches had a significant impact on Reeves’ Charter-
protected privacy interests and that this was “a borderline case” (para. 109). However,
[61] I agree with the application judge that the seizure of the home computer
breached s. 8 of the Charter and that the computer evidence should be excluded.
[62] Although I am assuming (without deciding the issue) that the police entry
was lawful, I agree with the application judge that the Charter-infringing state
conduct in this case was serious. With respect to the seizure of the shared computer,
while the officer believed that Gravelle’s consent allowed him to take it, the police
service had a specialized cyber-crime unit that should have been aware of the unique
and heightened privacy interests in computers. The unit also should have known that
a third party cannot waive another party’s Charter rights. Although this Court’s
decision in Cole was released only a few days before the computer was seized in this
case, the Ontario Court of Appeal decision in Cole, which found the school board
could not consent to the search of an employee’s computer, was released over a year
earlier.
[63] With respect to the other Charter breaches found in the courts below, the
officer could not explain why the police had detained the computer for months
without respecting the reporting requirements in ss. 489.1 and 490 of the Criminal
Code. Under s. 489.1, police must report a warrantless seizure to a justice “as soon as
is practicable”. Under s. 490(2), the seized item cannot be detained for over three
months unless certain conditions are met. In this case, the police only made a report
to a justice as required by s. 489.1 of the Criminal Code after the computer was
searched and almost five months after it was initially seized. These reporting
accountability for seizures that have not been judicially authorized (see R. v. Tse,
[64] Additionally, as in Morelli, the ITO upon which the search warrant was
obtained was “[a]t best . . . improvidently and carelessly drafted” (para. 100). The
application judge concluded that the computer search breached the Charter because
the ITO reflected “‘a goal-oriented, selective presentation of the facts’ that resulted in
[65] In short, there were serious Charter breaches throughout the investigative
process. Overall, the police conduct in this case undermined “public confidence in the
rule of law” and favours exclusion of the evidence (Grant, at para. 73).
[66] I see no reason to disturb the application judge’s conclusion that the state
conduct had a serious impact on Reeves’ Charter-protected interests. The fact that
diminishes the seriousness of the unreasonable search and seizure of this computer
(Cole, at paras. 91-92; Grant, at para. 78; R. v. Paterson, 2017 SCC 15, [2017] 1
S.C.R. 202, at para. 49; J.A. Fontana and D. Keeshan, The Law of Search and
Seizure in Canada (10th ed. 2017), at p. 23). Nonetheless, as this Court held in
Morelli, “[i]t is difficult to imagine a search more intrusive, extensive, or invasive of
one’s privacy than the search and seizure of a personal computer”, given the
extremely private nature of the data that a personal computer may contain (para. 2,
[67] With respect to society’s interest in the adjudication of this case on its
merits, I agree with the application judge that it was strong. The unconstitutional
search and seizure of the computer revealed reliable evidence that was important to
the prosecution’s case (see Grant, at paras. 81 and 83). Further, as the application
judge and the Court of Appeal both noted, the alleged offences were serious. Child
pornography offences are “particularly insidious” (Morelli, at para. 8). Cases in which
a court must decide whether to exclude probative evidence of a serious crime are
always challenging. However, the seriousness of the offence “has the potential to cut
both ways” in assessing whether evidence should be excluded (Grant, at para. 84; see
also Paterson, at para. 55). Indeed, “while the public has a heightened interest in
seeing a determination on the merits where the offence charged is serious, it also has
a vital interest in having a justice system that is above reproach” (Grant, at para. 84).
[68] Ultimately, the application judge concluded that, despite society’s strong
interest in the adjudication of this case on the merits, the evidence should be excluded
due to “the flagrant disregard of the accused’s section 8 Charter rights” (para. 49).
This approach aligns with Paterson, where this Court remarked that “[i]t is . . .
important not to allow the third Grant 2009 factor of society’s interest in adjudicating
a case on its merits to trump all other considerations, particularly where (as here) the
impugned conduct was serious and worked a substantial impact on the appellant’s
Charter right” (para. 56). Given the seriousness of the state conduct and of its impact
on Reeves’ Charter-protected interests, I agree with the application judge that the
admission of the evidence would bring the administration of justice into disrepute.
IV. Conclusion
[69] For these reasons, I would allow the appeal, set aside the judgment of the
Court of Appeal, exclude the evidence obtained from the seizure and subsequent
MOLDAVER J. —
[70] I have read the reasons of my colleague, Justice Karakatsanis for the
particular, I agree that Mr. Reeves had a reasonable expectation of privacy in the
shared computer and that, in the circumstances, its warrantless seizure constituted a
breach of his rights under s. 8 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms,
despite Ms. Gravelle’s consent. I further agree, for the reasons expressed by my
importance to the administration of criminal justice — and one which Parliament has
[72] As the majority notes, counsel for Mr. Reeves conceded during oral
submissions before this Court that he was not challenging the police entry into the
home for the purpose of interviewing a witness as a “search” for s. 8 purposes “would
defines a “search” under s. 8 as any state action that intrudes upon a reasonable
Spencer, 2014 SCC 43, [2014] 2 S.C.R. 212, at para. 16; R. v. Tessling, 2004 SCC 67,
[2004] 3 S.C.R. 432, at para. 18; and H. Stewart, “Normative Foundations for
being so, the effect of counsel’s concession could be taken to mean that Mr. Reeves
contentious proposition to be sure, albeit one which my colleague Justice Côté has
assiduously considered and resolved against Mr. Reeves, in favour of the state.
whether to accept it in this case necessitates a particularly cautious approach for two
reasons. First, the issue is an important one. The police entry into the Reeves-Gravelle
residence on the strength of Ms. Gravelle’s consent was the catalyst giving rise to a
chain of events that culminated in the discovery of child pornography on the shared
computer. If the entry contravened s. 8, it follows that the evidence discovered during
the search of the computer was “obtained in a manner that infringed or denied” Mr.
Bartle, [1994] 3 S.C.R. 173, at p. 209; R. v. Grant, [1993] 3 S.C.R. 223, at p. 255.
[74] Second, the legality of the police entry has implications beyond the four
ongoing criminal activity. Many of those residences are inhabited by more than one
person with authority to permit third parties to enter the home. Counsel’s concession
that police entry into a shared residence is not a “search” therefore has the potential to
affect a large swath of Canadian society by shifting our understanding of the right to
beyond this case. In these circumstances, I am of the view that caution is warranted in
deciding whether to accept counsel’s concession. That said, the importance of the
entry, in particular, its legality — as it relates to this case and the permissible scope of
police power more generally — provides a compelling reason to consider the issue.
While I am prepared to accept counsel’s concession that the entry in this case was
lawful — I offer an alternate route as a possible basis for so concluding, namely: that
the police conceivably had the authority to enter the shared residence at common law
II. The Common Law Power to Enter a Shared Residence to Take a Statement
[76] I accept for the purpose of this analysis that Mr. Reeves had a reasonable
expectation of privacy in the common areas of the home that he and Ms. Gravelle
jointly owned and that Ms. Gravelle’s consent to the police entry did not serve to
negate that expectation. The police entry was therefore a “search” within the meaning
of the Charter and it will only have complied with s. 8 if it was authorized by law, if
the law was reasonable, and if the search was carried out in a reasonable manner: R.
v. Collins, [1987] 1 S.C.R. 265, at p. 278; R. v. Stillman, [1997] 1 S.C.R. 607, at para.
25. What follows is a tentative articulation of the lawful authority under which the
police officer acted when he entered the residence to take Ms. Gravelle and her
sister’s statements. I say “tentative” because the paradigm I am proposing was not
raised by the parties. Therefore, any final determination of whether police may
lawfully enter a joint residence when invited by one of the occupants must be left for
another day.
[77] Whether police have the authority at common law to take an action that
interferes with an individual’s liberty or property is assessed using the framework set
out by the U.K. Court of Criminal Appeals in R. v. Waterfield, [1963] 3 All E.R. 659,
at pp. 660-62, per Ashworth J. Canadian courts have used the Waterfield framework
stops (Dedman v. The Queen, [1985] 2 S.C.R. 2), investigative detentions (R. v.
Mann, 2004 SCC 52, [2004] 3 S.C.R. 59), searches incident to arrest (Cloutier v.
Langlois, [1990] 1 S.C.R. 158), 911 home entries (R. v. Godoy, [1999] 1 S.C.R. 311),
sniffer dog searches (R. v. Kang-Brown, 2008 SCC 18, [2008] 1 S.C.R. 456), and
safety searches (R. v. MacDonald, 2014 SCC 3, [2014] 1 S.C.R. 37) were all affirmed
(1) Does the police conduct at issue fall within the general scope of their
statutory or common law duties? Common law duties include keeping the
(2) Does the conduct involve a justifiable use of police powers associated with
regard to:
(a) the importance of the performance of the duty to the public good;
criminal investigation falls within the scope of police duties. Investigating crime is a
primary police function: Kang-Brown, at para. 52, per Binnie J., concurring. Police
the community, apprehend criminals, and assist victims of crime: Police Services Act,
[80] Turning to stage two, in my view, the proposed power may well be a
The ability to enter into a home to take a statement when invited serves an important
investigative function. As I have noted, police officers routinely seek to make contact
with individuals within their homes. At times, the police themselves initiate contact
with the occupant — for example, when canvassing a neighbourhood for information
about a violent crime perpetrated in the area. This routine investigative tactic can
yield fruitful information that would otherwise have eluded police: see, e.g., R. v. Bui,
2002 BCSC 289, [2002] B.C.J No. 3185 (QL), at para. 10.
investigation becomes even more apparent when a resident contacts the police to
provide information about past or ongoing criminal activity within the home. In some
cases, the reporting resident is the victim of a crime committed by a co-resident, such
as the spouse who calls the police to report that her partner has physically abused her.
The reporting resident may also contact the police to provide information about
harmful activities or items present in the home, such as a concerned spouse who
believes there may be child pornography on the family computer used by the children
firearms. Finally, as the Crown points out, the reporting resident may have a
legitimate interest in contacting police to report illegal activity within the home to
dispel suspicion against him or her. In my view, no quarrel can be taken with the
[82] The next consideration in deciding whether the impugned police action is
justified is the necessity of the interference for the performance of the duty. To be
expectation of privacy in his or her home to do so? In my view, the answer may well
be yes.
[83] For a variety of reasons, individuals who are prevented from speaking
with the police in their homes may be unwilling, or unable, to speak with them at all.
Individuals who live in high-crime neighbourhoods may fear for their safety if they
are seen speaking to police, and may well refuse to do so outside the privacy of their
homes. For the elderly, chronically ill, or parents taking care of small children,
leaving the home to speak with police may simply not be feasible. In cases of
suspected child abuse, the police may need to interview children in their home, in a
parent or guardian’s presence. Canadians living in rural areas are often situated far
from the nearest police station. Even for urban Canadians, inclement weather or
calls the police and informs them that her partner has physically abused her but has
left the house. There is no emergency that would allow the police to enter the home
under the emergency search power articulated in Godoy. Without each occupant’s
consent, the police would be unable to enter the home. At present, the police would
appear to have two options. They could ask the complainant, who has just been
assaulted, to suffer the embarrassment of speaking to the police outside of her home
— a request that could understandably be met with a refusal. Or, they could try to
obtain the consent from the co-resident who allegedly perpetrated the abuse — an
[85] Further complications arise in cases where several occupants reside at the
same address. Are the police, after being called by a resident who reports a theft of
property from a home she shares with six roommates, required to (1) determine how
many people live in the home, and (2) seek out and obtain the consent of each before
have observed, when the police enter a home, they interfere with the expectation of
privacy of all residents who did not consent to that entry. However, properly
is minimally intrusive on the other residents’ privacy interests. I appreciate that the
home is unquestionably a private place. Our homes have the potential to reveal the
most intimate details about our personal lives. Individuals therefore typically have a
heightened expectation of privacy within their homes: Evans, at para. 42; Tessling, at
para. 22. That said, five constraints on the police entry power that I am articulating
[88] First, the police must query whether conducting the interview in the
person’s home is necessary. If, after being presented with the option of having the
then the interview should be conducted outside the home. On the other hand, if the
person indicates a preference to speak with the police at home, the police may act
upon that preference. They need not attempt to weigh the strength of the person’s
conviction not to be interviewed outside the home. Nor ought the police to cross-
examine the person about his or her underlying fears and motivations, in an effort to
determine whether the person will leave the home if pressed or cajoled.
[89] Second, the scope of the entry power would be narrowly tailored to its
evaluate its legality. For example, in Evans, this Court held that residents are deemed
to grant the public, including police, an implied licence to approach their home and
knock. However, the police may only approach a residence under the implied licence
occupant: Evans, at paras. 13-16. Similarly, a search incident to arrest is only lawful
if the purpose of the search relates to the purpose of the arrest: R. v. Caslake, [1998] 1
[90] The purpose of the entry power that I am articulating is to take one or
authorizing resident, or from other willing occupants, as the authorizing resident may
permit. Thus, in the present case, the police would be entitled to speak with Ms.
Gravelle, who let the officer in, and her sister, who agreed to give a statement. Absent
further lawful authority, the legality of the entry ends when the police exceed that
purpose.
[91] To be precise, the police may not go further and lawfully search the
residence or seize evidence from it unless they obtain the necessary grounds in the
course of taking the statement or statements. For example, if after taking one or more
statements, the police develop reasonable grounds to believe that a computer in the
house has child pornography on it, they would be able to seize that computer: see
Criminal Code, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-46, s. 489(2). Similarly, the police might be able to
2011 ONCA 632, 107 O.R. (3d) 241, at para. 56. I wish to stress, however, that the
lawfulness of any subsequent police investigative action hinges on them having the
[92] Third, the police would only be permitted to enter the common areas of
the home. This too flows from the purpose of the entry. Because the police are only in
the residence to take a statement, there is no need to enter any private areas, such as
their home. In this regard, I agree with LaForme J.A. that when two people share a
home, each “knows from the outset that the other co-resident has the right to invite
others into the shared spaces”: 2017 ONCA 365, 350 C.C.C. (3d) 1, at para. 48.
Limiting the police entry to these shared spaces — specifically, the common area into
which the police have been invited — reduces the intrusiveness of that entry.
[93] Fourth, the police can only enter if invited in by an occupant with the
authority to consent. Unlike many of the other statutory and common law police entry
powers, forced entry would be strictly prohibited. Furthermore, the consent must be
voluntary and informed: see R. v. Borden, [1994] 3 S.C.R. 145; R. v. Wills (1992), 12
C.R. (4th) 58 (Ont. C.A.). Requiring a valid consent greatly reduces the intrusiveness
of the subsequent entry. Furthermore, the resident’s consent must be continuous and
may therefore be revoked. The police must respect the resident’s wishes if he or she
[94] Fifth, the entry would only be for a limited duration. If, after taking the
statement, or statements, the police do not obtain the requisite grounds to undertake
any further investigative action, they must immediately leave the residence.
[95] These constraints act to limit the impact of the police entry on the non-
important and necessary facet of their duty to investigate crime. In short, the entry
the issue, a narrow entry power to take a statement from an individual with the
authority to grant police entry, or from other willing occupants, as the authorizing
resident may permit, along the lines that I have articulated, would appear to meet the
[96] To summarize, the common law police power that I have tentatively
(1) The police must offer the authorizing resident, and any other cooperating
and search for or seize evidence unless they obtain the necessary grounds to
(3) The police are only permitted to enter the home’s common areas into which
(4) The police can only enter if invited in by a resident with the authority to
(5) Unless the police obtain the necessary grounds to take further investigative
[97] The existence of a legal authority to search, however, does not end the
Southam Inc., [1984] 2 S.C.R. 145, at p. 168, sets the presumptive constitutional
benchmark at reasonable grounds to believe that the search would uncover evidence
of an offence. I acknowledge that the police purporting to rely on the entry power I
have articulated would rarely, if ever, have reasonable grounds to believe either that
an offence had been committed or that evidence of an offence would be found within
the home. Indeed, predicating the entry power on that standard would render it
redundant, as police who have reasonable grounds to believe that an offence has been
committed and that entry into the house would provide evidence of that offence could
my view, the proposed power may nonetheless be constitutional. This is because “the
(M.R.), [1998] 3 S.C.R. 393), sniffer dog searches (Kang-Brown), and border-
crossing searches (R. v. Simmons, [1988] 2 S.C.R. 495). Searches incident to arrest
their purpose and the manner in which they are carried out: Cloutier, at pp. 185-86.
limitations I set out above narrowly constrain the entry power in a way that may well
IV. Application
[100] As indicated, the common law power that I have been discussing is a
tentative articulation of the lawful authority under which the police could enter a
that the police entry in this case would not have constituted a breach of Mr. Reeves’ s.
8 rights up to the point where the officer seized the computer. The officer testified
that his purpose in entering the residence was not to seize a computer, but rather “to
investigate what possibly was a computer crime”: A.R., vol. III, at p. 41. He asked for
and received Ms. Gravelle’s consent before entering. Both lower courts found that
Ms. Gravelle’s consent was voluntary and informed. Once inside, the officer took
[101] On the other hand, it is not clear on this record whether — assuming there
was an alternative suitable location — the officer offered to interview Ms. Gravelle
and her sister elsewhere. The answer to this question would go a long way to
determining whether the police were authorized at common law to enter the Reeves-
Gravelle residence. Thus, I can only say with confidence that the officer met four out
[102] In any event, the officer proceeded to seize the shared computer. As
discussed, the officer would only have been lawfully entitled to seize the computer
had he gained the requisite grounds to do so in the course of taking the statements. As
the majority points out, the officer himself testified that he did not have reasonable
grounds to believe that the computer would afford evidence of an offence. The
seizure therefore constituted a s. 8 breach which, in combination with the invalid ITO
and the failure to comply with the Criminal Code evidence retention regime, warrants
[103] I would therefore allow the appeal and restore Mr. Reeves’ acquittal.
CÔTÉ J. —
I. Overview
[104] This case presents two principal issues. First, can the police lawfully
enter common areas of a shared home with the consent of one cohabitant, or are they
required to obtain the unanimous consent of all persons who live in that home in
order to enter on the basis of consent? Second, can the police lawfully seize a jointly-
owned computer (i.e., physically remove the computer, without searching its
contents) when that computer is located in a common area of a shared home and one
[105] Karakatsanis J. for the majority declines to discuss the first issue. Since it
was ably argued by the parties, and since the lawfulness of the police entry into the
validly consent to a police entry into common areas of a shared residence, obviating
the need for a warrant. The alternative rule — that the police may enter the common
areas of a shared home only if they obtain consent from each and every person who
[106] On the second issue, the majority concludes that the police removal of the
computer was invalid because Ms. Gravelle, on her own, was not capable of
Ms. Gravelle had physically taken the computer to a police station and turned it over,
surely the police would not have been prohibited from accepting it. There is no
where the police request consent to physically remove jointly owned property and
privacy concerns that simply do not arise when the police physically remove an
[107] Nevertheless, even though I am of the view that the entry into the home
and the seizure of the computer were both lawful, I would still exclude the evidence
under s. 24(2) of the Charter based on the other violations of law in this case —
specifically, the fact that the police failed to comply with ss. 489.1 and 490 of the
Criminal Code, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-46, by improperly detaining the computer and the
II. Analysis
[108] A police entry into a home based on valid consent does not run afoul of
s. 8. As the majority notes, valid consent means that there is no search or seizure
within the meaning of the Charter (para. 13). Here, Ms. Gravelle permitted a police
officer to enter the home she shared with Mr. Reeves. At the time of the police entry,
Mr. Reeves had no authority to enter the home himself, as Ms. Gravelle had exercised
her right, pursuant to a no-contact order, to keep him out of the house. The question,
then, is whether Mr. Reeves’ Charter rights were violated by the police entry into
[109] Although I agree with the result that Moldaver J. reaches with respect to
this question — namely that the police entry did not violate Mr. Reeves’ s. 8 rights —
in what follows, I offer what I view as a more compelling basis for reaching that
result. Not only do the police have a common law power to enter a shared residence
for the purpose of taking a statement (a power that satisfies the reasonableness
Ms. Gravelle, provided her consent for the police to enter common areas of the home.
against unreasonable intrusions by the state into the privacy interests of an accused
(R. v. Law, 2002 SCC 10, [2002] 1 S.C.R. 227, at para. 15). This constitutional
having regard to the totality of the circumstances (R. v. Edwards, [1996] 1 S.C.R.
128). In drawing the line between expectations that are reasonable and those that are
not, it is important to recognize that privacy itself is not an all or nothing concept (R.
v. Marakah, 2017 SCC 59, [2017] 2 S.C.R. 608, at para. 143; R. v. Quesnelle, 2014
SCC 46, [2014] 2 S.C.R. 390, at para. 29). Expectations of privacy in respect of
circumstances, but not in others (R. v. M. (M.R.), [1998] 3 S.C.R. 393, at para. 33).
[111] Here, it is clear that Mr. Reeves had a reasonable expectation of privacy
in the home he shared with Ms. Gravelle in at least some contexts. But what is really
at issue in this case is the scope or extent of a resident’s expectation of privacy with
respect to the common areas of a shared home when another resident of that home
allow the police to enter any areas of that home that they share equally. Although
Mr. Reeves did have an expectation of privacy in those areas, that expectation was
attenuated and limited by the reality of cohabitation. Other persons with overlapping
privacy interests in and rights to common spaces can validly permit third parties to
enter those spaces. This includes the police. To hold otherwise would be to interfere
with the consenting cohabitant’s liberty and autonomy interests with respect to those
spaces. Thus, I would reject the argument that the entry was invalid because
Ms. Gravelle could not waive Mr. Reeves’ Charter rights. That is beside the point.
Properly understood, Ms. Gravelle did not waive anyone’s rights except her own. But
in the context of a shared home, Mr. Reeves’ reasonable expectation of privacy was
decision to give the police access to common areas. This is especially true on the
facts of this case, where Mr. Reeves had no legal right to be in the home at the time of
the police entry because Ms. Gravelle had revoked her permission for him to enter it
earlier that day pursuant to the no-contact order. The analysis is of course different
bedroom or office — types of spaces that are not involved in this case.
[113] Moreover, this Court has repeatedly recognized that s. 8 strikes a balance
between privacy and law enforcement interests: “The need to balance ‘societal
interests in protecting individual dignity, integrity and autonomy with effective law
reasonable expectation of privacy test” (Marakah, at para. 179 (per Moldaver J.,
dissenting, but not on this point), quoting R. v. Patrick, 2009 SCC 17, [2009] 1 S.C.R.
[114] The effect of Mr. Reeves’ position — that the police must obtain the
and would substantially undermine effective law enforcement. It would require the
police to identify, locate and obtain the consent of every person who lives in the
home, or has any expectation of privacy with respect to common areas of the home,
no matter how onerous that task might be. This would effectively negate all
tip off potential suspects to an investigation. In others, it would likely render consent
warrant, rather than entering on the basis of consent, in all but the most
might also result in entries or searches that are more extensive (and therefore more
accordance with the scope of the consent. And, of course, warrants require a
sufficient evidentiary basis. In some instances, a suspect who cohabitates with others
may wish to consent to a police entry or a search, even where a warrant could not
otherwise be obtained, in order to quickly dispel suspicion or for other reasons. But
under Mr. Reeves’ proposed approach, any other cohabitant could veto that suspect’s
ability to do so. In fact, a cohabitant could even be precluded from permitting the
police to search his or her own bedroom — one that is completely private and not
shared with others — if accessing that bedroom would require entering shared areas
of the home.
Mr. Reeves’ reasoning when applied to other contexts. In Marakah, a majority of this
Court held that the sender of a text message may have a reasonable expectation of
privacy in the contents of an electronic conversation. But that case did not address a
related question: can the recipient of a text message consent to a police search of that
electronic conversation on his or her phone? Or, for that matter, can the recipient
volunteer to turn over the contents of the message to the police? If Mr. Reeves’
position were to be adopted, the answer would be no. This is because Marakah
recognized that both parties to a text message chain can have a reasonable expectation
of privacy in that electronic conversation, just as two cohabitants can have a shared
home. If Mr. Reeves is correct that he could veto Ms. Gravelle’s ability to consent to
a police entry into common areas of their home, it must also be the case that the
sender of text messages can veto the recipient’s ability to consent to a search of their
messages stored on the recipient’s own phone. It is clear, then, that the autonomy
implications of Mr. Reeves’ argument extend beyond entries into physical spaces and
[116] That said, the ability of law enforcement officials to enter on the basis of
consent is not without limits. As the Crown acknowledges, the consenting person
must have the authority to consent (as a first-party rights holder with his or her own
Charter-protected privacy right in the shared place or thing); the consent must be
limited to shared places or things; the consent must be informed and voluntary; and
the police must respect the limits of the consent, which is freely revocable at any
point during the entry or search. Each of these requirements was satisfied here.
[117] Finally, it is telling that every provincial appellate court in the country
including the lower court in this case that has considered this issue has come to the
same conclusion: the consent of one co-resident is sufficient to permit the police to
enter common areas of a shared home (see, e.g., R. v. Reeves, 2017 ONCA 365, 350
C.C.C. (3d) 1, at paras. 32, 43 and 46-52; R. v. Clarke, 2017 BCCA 453, 357 C.C.C.
(3d) 237, at paras. 55-56 and 62-63; R. v. T. (R.M.J.), 2014 MBCA 36, 311 C.C.C.
(3d) 185, at paras. 41-52; R. v. Squires, 2005 NLCA 51, 199 C.C.C. (3d) 509, at
para. 34). Mr. Reeves does not point to a single case that has held otherwise. Instead,
in the absence of any directly relevant authority, he relies heavily on R. v. Cole, 2012
SCC 53, [2012] 3 S.C.R. 34, where this Court found that a search of an employee’s
computer on the basis of his employer’s consent was unlawful. But Cole is
[118] First, the outcome in Cole was inextricably tied to the informational
privacy concerns that were implicated by the police search of Mr. Cole’s computer.
Fish J., writing for the Court, stressed that a search of a computer can reveal
extremely private information that falls within the “biographical core” protected by
s. 8, including browsing history that may offer an intimate account of an individual’s
para. 105, Fish. J. observed that “it is difficult to imagine a more intrusive invasion of
privacy than the search of one’s home and personal computer.” Subsequent case law
has confirmed that searches of computers raise distinctive privacy concerns that
justify special rules — for example, a rule requiring specific authorization to search a
computer that is found in the place of search, which departs from the general rule that
applies to other types of physical receptacles (R. v. Vu, 2013 SCC 60, [2013] 3 S.C.R.
[119] A search of a common area of a shared home does not present the same
an entry into a common area is unlikely to yield the same intensely private
drive. The physical contents of a living room shared by roommates, for example, are
less likely to immediately reveal “our most intimate correspondence”, “the details of
our financial, medical, and personal situations”, “our specific interests, likes, and
propensities”, or “the information we seek out and read, watch, or listen to” (Morelli,
at para. 105). This is precisely why Vu distinguished computers from other types of
objects by requiring specific judicial authorization to search computers that are found
in places the police are otherwise permitted to search. I would therefore decline to
extend Cole from the context of computer searches to the context of physical searches
of shared spaces in dwellings — an issue that Cole did not address because it was not
[120] Second, unlike Ms. Gravelle in the present case, the school board in Cole
was not a first-party rights holder. The school board’s interest in the laptop was only
proprietary in nature, and mere ownership of the laptop was found not to be a
sufficient basis for the board to be able to consent to a police search of the data stored
on it (Cole, paras. 51 and 58). This principle applies equally to physical spaces. For
unit occupied by a tenant or guest based only on the fact that he or she owns the
premises (see, e.g., R. v. Buhay, 2003 SCC 30, [2003] 1 S.C.R. 631, at para. 22; R. v.
Mercer (1992), 7 O.R. (3d) 9 (C.A.); R. v. Stevens, 2011 ONCA 504, 106 O.R. (3d)
context. This case, however, is different. Ms. Gravelle is not merely an owner (or
co-owner) of the home. She is also a resident — and as a result, she has her own
privacy and autonomy interests in the home’s common areas. Those interests are
opposed to an owner who merely rents out an apartment (or, in the case of Cole, an
Ms. Gravelle’s consent to enter the home is not properly understood as a waiver of
Mr. Reeves’ rights. Rather, the scope of Mr. Reeves’ reasonable expectation of
privacy is limited in recognition of the fact that Ms. Gravelle is a first-party rights
holder who should be permitted to freely exercise her rights of access and control
over common areas. Therefore, Cole does not support a finding that the police entry
[121] The second issue in this case is whether the fact that the police physically
took (i.e., seized) the computer from the home with Ms. Gravelle’s consent violated
Mr. Reeves’ s. 8 rights. As with the police entry into the home, my view is that
Mr. Reeves’ expectation of privacy with respect to the computer he shared with
Ms. Gravelle was attenuated by the realities of joint ownership and use. It was not
objectively reasonable for him to expect that Ms. Gravelle could not exercise her own
authority and control over the computer to consent to a seizure by the police. As a
reasoning with respect to the police entry — specifically, the fact that Mr. Reeves’
cohabitation and co-ownership — necessarily leads to the conclusion that the physical
[122] First, it is necessary to define the subject matter of the seizure. The
majority correctly observes (at para. 29) that the subject matter must be carefully
defined “by reference to the nature of the privacy interests potentially compromised
by the state action” (Marakah, at para. 15, quoting R. v. Ward, 2012 ONCA 660, 112
O.R. (3d) 321, at para. 65). In certain cases, this may require examining “the
connection between the police investigative technique and the privacy interest at
stake” (R. v. Spencer, 2014 SCC 43, [2014] 2 S.C.R. 212, at para. 26). Ultimately, in
defining the subject matter of the search or seizure, the court’s task “is to determine
‘what the police were really after’” (Marakah, at para. 15, quoting Ward, at para. 67).
[123] The majority defines the subject matter of the seizure as “the computer,
and ultimately the data it contained” (para. 30). But “what the police were really
after” through the seizure of the computer was only the physical device, not the data
itself. At no point were the computer’s contents — that is, the data stored on the hard
drive — ever searched or examined by the police prior to obtaining a warrant. That
makes this case quite different from Cole, where the teacher’s laptop was actually
privacy. Here, though, the law enforcement objective in seizing the computer was
simply to preserve potential evidence. As LaForme J.A. held in the court below, the
seizure of the computer did nothing to interfere with Mr. Reeves’ expectation of
privacy in its informational content because that content remained private. Thus, the
“privacy interests potentially compromised by the state action” suggest that the
subject matter of the search should be defined as the physical device alone, and not
[124] Recognizing that the informational content of the computer was not made
available to the police by the seizure, the majority pivots to a different argument for
defining the subject matter of the search to include the data: Mr. Reeves was deprived
of his control over that data. But with respect, this too is misguided. Since
Ms. Gravelle had exercised her authority to prohibit Mr. Reeves from entering the
home in accordance with the terms of the no-contact order, Mr. Reeves would have
had no ability to access the computer even if the seizure had not occurred. Thus, the
seizure did nothing to alter his ability (or lack of ability) to access the informational
content of the hard drive. In any event, any alleged deprivation of control over the
data is properly characterized as an interference with his property rights in that data,
not as a violation of his privacy rights, since the informational content remained
private from the police. The majority suggests that the Court of Appeal’s focus on
property rights neglects “important privacy rights in the data” (at para. 31 (emphasis
in original)); but without further explanation as to exactly what those privacy rights
were (as distinct from his proprietary rights in the data) and how they were at all
[125] Turning, then, to the question of whether Mr. Reeves had an objectively
reasonable expectation of privacy with respect to the subject matter of the seizure, the
majority repeats the same arguments by focusing on the informational content of the
hard drive. Although I agree that computers “contain highly private information”,
“retain information that the user may think has been deleted” and therefore present
“unique privacy concerns” (at paras. 34 and 35), none of this is relevant here. As the
majority acknowledges, “the police could not actually search the data until they
obtained a warrant” (para. 30). These concerns are therefore not at issue.
[126] When the subject matter of the seizure is properly defined as the physical
computer, it is clear that it was not objectively reasonable for Mr. Reeves to expect
that he could prohibit Ms. Gravelle from exercising her own authority and control
[127] As with the police entry, I agree that Mr. Reeves’ expectation of privacy
example, had Ms. Gravelle not consented to the removal, I do not dispute that a
warrantless seizure would have violated Mr. Reeves’ s. 8 rights. But in my view, it is
not objectively reasonable for his subjective expectation of privacy to act as a veto on
Ms. Gravelle’s ability to exercise her own property rights in the physical device. The
scope of Mr. Reeves’ s. 8 protection is limited by the fact that the computer was
jointly owned and used by another person. Ms. Gravelle’s rights in the computer —
including her property rights in the device and her right to waive her own privacy
protections — would be rendered meaningless if Mr. Reeves could prevent her from
(M. (M.R.), at para. 33), the majority presents a false dichotomy: either Mr. Reeves’
Ms. Gravelle waived Mr. Reeves’ constitutional protections on his behalf. I would
reject this approach. As I have described with respect to both the entry and the
seizure, the question here is not whether Mr. Reeves’ privacy interest was ever
recognized as objectively reasonable in this context — where the subject matter of the
seizure was jointly owned and used, and where the other joint owner and user
[129] First, there is no doubt that Ms. Gravelle could exercise her property
rights in the computer by taking the device to a police station and handing it to an
officer. Otherwise, as the Crown aptly suggests, victims of crime who receive
threatening text messages would be prohibited from showing those messages to the
police unless and until the police obtain a warrant. What makes this case any
whereby a joint owner/user of an object could voluntarily give the object to the police
but could not consent to an affirmative request to seize it. Delineating the boundaries
of such a distinction would be a difficult task; and in any event, it would amount to a
[130] Second, the fact that Ms. Gravelle revoked her consent for Mr. Reeves to
enter the home is again relevant in the context of the seizure: “Control, ownership,
possession, and historical use have long been considered relevant to determining
expectation of privacy, it remains the case that “[c]ontrol of access is central to the
privacy concept” (R. v. Belnavis (1996), 29 O.R. (3d) 321 (C.A.), at p. 332, aff’d
[1997] 3 S.C.R. 341). Here, since Mr. Reeves had been lawfully barred from entering
the house by Ms. Gravelle, he could no longer exercise any physical control over the
computer. With respect, the suggestion that Mr. Reeves’ lack of control resulted from
the fact that he was in police custody misses the point (majority reasons, at para. 38).
Although it is true that he was in custody at the time the computer was removed from
the home, this was not the reason he lacked control over the device. He lacked
control as a result of his own actions, which were the reason why the no-contact order
was made and, eventually, why Ms. Gravelle revoked her permission for him to
[131] Finally, there is little in the majority’s reasons that would necessarily
tether its conclusion to the fact that Mr. Reeves was a co-owner of the computer, as
opposed to a person who had simply used the computer at some point in the past. The
using the device (at para. 47), its observation that Mr. Reeves’ lack of control over the
computer was purportedly involuntary (at para. 38), and its rejection of the argument
that Ms. Gravelle’s equal and overlapping privacy interest eliminated any protection
for Mr. Reeves (at para. 41) all apply equally to any person who used the computer at
one point or another. Indeed, taken to its logical extreme, the majority’s approach
would grant s. 8 protection to any prior user of the computer who generated data on
the hard drive by browsing the Internet — no matter how extensive the use, or how
[132] None of this is to suggest that the police could search the computer
electronic data could properly be taken into account in requiring such a search to be
conducted with judicial authorization (see Vu, at para. 2). Indeed, the police in this
case did not search the hard drive’s contents until they obtained a warrant (even
though that warrant was ultimately found to be deficient). But with respect to the
police taking the physical computer into their custody, I would find no violation of
Mr. Reeves’ s. 8 rights in a context where Ms. Gravelle provided her consent.
[133] Irrespective of the fact that the police entry and seizure were, in my view,
both lawful, the application judge identified other violations of law that must factor
[134] First, the computer was held in police custody for more than four months
before a search warrant was sought and executed. Section 489.1 of the Criminal
Code requires that the seizure and detention of property by the police be reported to a
justice “as soon as is practicable”. The justice must then determine whether to return
the property to the accused. In addition, s. 490(2) of the Criminal Code provides that
seized property may not be detained for longer than three months unless the justice is
satisfied that it is still required or unless legal proceedings requiring the use of the
s. 8 Charter rights regardless of whether the initial seizure was valid (R. v. Garcia-
Machado, 2015 ONCA 569, 126 O.R. (3d) 737, at paras. 43-55). The police violated
[135] Second, the application judge concluded that there had been insufficient
grounds to grant a search warrant for the computer in the first place (para. 40). In his
view, the affidavit submitted in support of the warrant was “a goal-oriented, selective
(para. 38). In argument before the judge, Mr. Reeves emphasized a number of
motive for prejudice on the part of Ms. Gravelle’s sister, Natalie. Ultimately, the
application judge concluded that the justice of the peace who granted the warrant had
that there were reasonable and probable grounds for granting the warrant” (para. 38).
[136] In conducting a s. 24(2) analysis, the court must consider the seriousness
of the Charter-infringing state conduct, the impact of the breach on the accused’s
Charter-protected interests, and society’s interest in the adjudication of the case on its
merits (R. v. Grant, 2009 SCC 32, [2009] 2 S.C.R. 353, at para. 71).
[137] With respect to the seriousness of the state conduct and the impact of the
breaches on Mr. Reeves, I conclude that the violations described above, when
considered together, were quite serious and had a significant impact on his Charter
rights.
[138] First, the police were required to report the seizure to a justice as soon as
practicable, but they waited more than four months before doing so. The Crown
offers no explanation for this delay. With respect, I would hesitate to describe this
violation as merely technical in nature. This is not a case where the police missed a
deadline by one or two days; it is a case where a prolonged failure to abide by legal
requirements left Mr. Reeves unable to argue before a justice that the property should
be returned to him. In sum, the Charter violations arising from the breaches of
ss. 489.1 and 490(1) of the Criminal Code deprived him of his property rights without
justification and shielded the police’s detention of the computer from the scrutiny of a
justice. In light of the clear and detailed framework established by Parliament for the
seizure of property — a framework that is not at all new — these breaches were not
merely trivial (see R. v. Villaroman, 2018 ABCA 220, 363 C.C.C. (3d) 141, at
para. 22).
[139] Even if these violations were not sufficiently serious on their own to
justify excluding the evidence, the application judge also determined that the search
warrant itself was deficient. As the Court of Appeal noted, “[i]mplicit in [the
application judge’s] analysis is his conclusion that, had the relevant facts been
included and misleading statements excised, there would no longer be a reasonable
basis for issuance of the warrant” (para. 84). Indeed, the Court of Appeal upheld this
conclusion, holding that “the test to issue the warrant could not be met” in this case
(para. 95). Even though there is no evidence that the information presented to the
otherwise significant breach of s. 8. The impact of this breach on Mr. Reeves was
especially serious, as the search of the data on the computer without proper judicial
authorization — unlike the mere seizure of the physical device — gave the police
access to exceptionally private information, including web browsing history, that lies
[140] Although the third Grant factor counsels in favour of admitting the
evidence, I would conclude, on balance, that the significance of the Charter breaches,
along with their impact on Mr. Reeves, lead to the conclusion that the evidence
should be excluded.
III. Conclusion
[141] For the foregoing reasons, I agree that the evidence should be excluded,
and the appeal should be allowed on that basis. I would therefore restore the acquittal
entered at trial. However, as I have described, I disagree with the manner in which
the majority has resolved (or otherwise declined to resolve) the central legal issues in
this appeal.
Appeal allowed.
Policy and Public Interest Clinic: Presser Barristers, Toronto; Markson Law