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CHURCH LAW BULLETIN No. 5
August
23, 2004
Editor: Terrance S. Carter
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SUPREME COURT OF CANADA ADOPTS
BROAD VIEW OF RELIGIOUS FREEDOM
By Terrance S. Carter, B.A., LL.B., Trade-mark Agent
Assisted by Nancy E. Claridge, B.A., M.A., LL.B. Candidate
A. INTRODUCTION
Following on the heels of the
Federal Court of Appeal's decision in Fuaran
Foundation v. Canada Customs and Revenue Agency,
2004 FCA 181 (the "Fuaran Foundation
decision")1,
which narrowly construed the practices constituting
"advancing religion" in the charitable
sense, the Supreme Court of Canada, in a landmark
5-4 ruling in Syndicat Northcrest v. Amselem,
[2004] S.C.J. No. 46, 2004 SCC 47 (the "Amselem
decision"), has said the State cannot
regulate personal religious beliefs. In the
Amselem decision, the Court held that
when courts undertake to analyze religious doctrine
in order to determine the truth or falsity of
a contentious matter of religious law, or when
courts attempt to define the very concept of
religious obligation, "they enter forbidden
domain." This Charity Law Bulletin will
review the Court's decision and discuss some
of the implications of this case on religious
freedom in Canada.
B. FACTS OF THE CASE
The Appellants, all Orthodox Jews,
owners of condominium units in Place Northcrest,
two luxury buildings forming part of a larger
complex in Montreal, Le Sanctuaire du Mont-Royal
(the "Sanctuaire"). Under the terms
of the Sanctuaire's by-laws in the declaration
of ownership, the balconies of individual units,
although "common portions" of the
immovable, were nonetheless "reserved to
the exclusive use" of the co-owners of
the units to which they were attached.
At issue was the Appellants ability
to erect "succah" (a small enclosed
temporary hut or booth made of wood or other
material, such as fastened canvas, and open
to the heavens) on their individual balconies
during the nine-day Jewish festival of Succot
(or Sukkot - a harvest festival beginning five
days after Yom Kippur and commemorates the forty-year
period during which the Children of Israel were
in the desert and living in temporary shelters).
The Sanctuaire denied a request to erect succah,
but upon intervention by the Canadian Jewish
Congress, proposed setting up a communal succah
in the Sanctuaire's gardens. In rejecting the
compromise, the Appellants proceeded to set
up individual succah on their respective balconies.
In response, the Sanctuaire filed an application
for permanent injunction prohibiting the Appellants
from setting up succahs and, if necessary, permitting
their demolition. The application was granted
by the Superior Court and upheld on appeal.
1. Superior Court Decision
Justice Rochon, of the Quebec
Superior Court, found the declaration of co-ownership
clearly prohibited the Appellants from erecting
succahs on their balconies; that the restrictions
were "justified by the destination of the
immovable, its characteristics or its location,"
as required by art. 1056 of the Civil Code
of Quebec, S.Q. 1991, c. 64 (the "Civil
Code"), and that the restrictions had been
applied in a uniform manner. He asserted that
in order for a contractual clause to infringe
an individual's freedom of religion, "the
impugned contractual clause must, whether directly
or by adverse effect, either compel individuals
to do something contrary to their religious
beliefs or prohibit them from doing something
regarded as mandatory by their religion."
He asserted that a claimant must prove that
a practice is required by the official teachings
of the religion in order for it to be protected
as freedom of religion under the Quebec Charter
of Human Rights and Freedoms, R.S.Q., c.
C-12 (the "Quebec Charter").
It is not sufficient for a claimant to possess
a sincere belief that a particular practice
is required. In granting the permanent injunction,
Rochon held there was no religious obligation
requiring practicing Jews to erect individual
succahs, and no commandment respecting where
they must be erected.
2. Court of Appeal decision
Justice Dalphond, writing for
the majority in the Quebec Court of Appeal,
agreed with the trial judge, holding that although
the impugned provisions of the declaration of
co-ownership restrict the Appellants' rights,
prohibiting succahs on their balconies, those
restrictions were valid under art. 1056 of the
Civil Code. The impugned provisions were neutral
in application, and even with a distinction,
it would not nullify or impair the Appellants'
rights to freedom of religion amounting to discrimination,
since the Appellants were not obligated by their
religion to erect succahs on their balconies.
He further asserted that when the Appellants
signed the declaration of co-ownership, they
effectively waived their rights to freedom of
religion.
Concurring in the result, Justice
Morin of the Quebec Court of Appeal found the
trial judge had adopted an "unduly restrictive"
interpretation of freedom of religion and held
that the impugned provisions of the declaration
of co-ownership infringed the Appellants' rights
to freedom of religion. In considering the duty
to accommodate, Justice Morin applied the three-step
test set out in British Columbia (Public
Service Employee Relations Commission) v. B.C.G.S.E.U.,
[1999] 3 S.C.R. 3. He concluded that the goal
of establishing restrictions was rationally
linked to the goal of administering the building
and that restrictions had been enacted on the
basis of a bona fide belief they were
necessary to fulfil its mandate. As for undue
hardship, Justice Morin concluded that it was
the intransigent attitude adopted by the Appellants
that made any accommodation practically impossible,
and consequently discharged the respondent from
any obligation of accommodation beyond the communal
succah already proposed. As such, he concluded
the respondent would suffer undue hardship if
forced to fully accommodate the Appellants.
3. Issues before Supreme Court
of Canada
Three issues were before the Supreme
Court of Canada:
a) whether the clauses in the
by-laws of the declaration of ownership, containing
a general prohibition against decorations or
constructions on each balcony, infringed the
Appellants' freedom of religion protected under
the Quebec Charter;
b) if so, whether the refusal
by the respondent to permit the erection of
succahs was justified by its reliance on the
co-owners' rights to enjoy property under s.
6 of the Quebec Charter and their rights
to personal security under s. 1; and
c) whether the Appellants waived
their rights to freedom of religion by signing
the declaration of co-ownership.
C. FINDINGS OF THE COURT
1. Freedom of Religion and
Infringment
Writing for the majority, Chief
Justice McLachlin and Justices Major, Arbour
and Fish, Justice Iacobucci found the trial
judge and the majority of the Court of Appeal
took a "dubious, unwarranted and unduly
restrictive" view of freedom of religion.
He concluded that the basic principles underlying
freedom of religion consists of
the freedom to harbour beliefs
and undertake practices, having a nexus with
religion, in which an individual demonstrates
he or she sincerely believes or is sincerely
undertaking in order to connect with the divine
or as a function of his or her spiritual faith,
irrespective of whether a particular practice
or belief is required by official religious
dogma or in conformity with the position of
religious officials.
Objective and personal notions
of religious belief, obligation, precept, commandment,
custom or ritual are encompassed by this freedom.
Consequently, Justice Iacobucci
held that both obligatory and voluntary expressions
of faith should be protected under the Quebec
(and the Canadian) Charter. As it is
the religious or spiritual essence of an action,
not the mandatory nature of its observance,
that attracts protection, Justice Iacobucci
asserted that an inquiry into the mandatory
nature of an alleged religious practice is both
inappropriate and plagued with difficulties.
He stated, "the State is in no position
to be, nor should it become, the arbiter of
religious dogma.
Courts should avoid
judicially interpreting and thus determining,
either explicitly or implicitly, the content
of a subjective understanding of religious requirement,
[such] secular determinations
unjustifiably
entangle the court in the affairs of religion."
Justice Iacobucci explained that
those advancing a freedom of religion claim
must show the court that:
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he or she has a practice or
belief, having a nexus with religion, which
calls for a particular line of conduct, either
by being objectively or subjectively obligatory
or customary, or by, in general, subjectively
engendering a personal connection with the
divine or with the subject or object of an
individual's spiritual faith, irrespective
of whether a particular practice or belief
is required by official religious dogma or
in conformity with the position of religious
officials; and
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he or she is sincere in his
or her belief.
Only then will freedom of religion
be triggered.
Once religious freedom is triggered,
a court must ascertain whether there has been
sufficient interference with the exercise of
the implicated right so as to constitute an
infringement of freedom of religion. It will
suffice for a claimant "to show the impugned
contractual or legislative provision (or conduct)
interferes with his or her ability to act in
accordance with his or her religious beliefs
in a manner that is more than trivial or insubstantial."
[emphasis in original] In this respect, "not
every action will become summarily unassailable
and receive automatic protection under the banner
of freedom of religion." Justice Iacobucci
asserted that this reflects a broad and expansive
approach to religious freedom under both the
Quebec and Canadian Charters, and should
not be narrowly construed prematurely. Harmful
conduct or conduct interfering with the rights
of others would not automatically be protected.
The ultimate protection of any particular Charter
right must be measured in relation to other
rights and with a view to the conflict's context.
Applying these principles to the facts of the
case, Justice Iacobucci concluded that the lower
courts failed to recognize that freedom of religion
under the Quebec (and the Canadian) Charter
does not require a person to prove that his
or her religious practices are supported by
any mandatory doctrine of faith. Justice Iacobucci
wrote:
Regardless of the position taken
by religious officials and in religious texts,
provided that an individual demonstrates that
he or she sincerely believes that a certain
practice or belief is experientially religious
in nature in that it is either objectively required
by the religion, or that he or she subjectively
believes that it is required by the religion,
or that he or she sincerely believes that the
practice engenders a personal, subjective connection
to the divine or to the subject or object of
his or her spiritual faith, and as long as that
practice has a nexus with religion, it should
trigger the protection of s. 3 of the Quebec
Charter or that of s. 2(a) of the Canadian Charter,
or both, depending on the context. [emphasis
in original]
Justice Iacobucci held that the
Appellants had demonstrated a sincere belief
with respect to the need to build individual
succahs, because the alternatives of either
imposing on friends and/or family or celebrating
in a communal succah would, subjectively, lead
to extreme distress, and thus impermissibly
detract from the joyous celebration of the holiday
With respect to dwelling in a
succah, Justice Iacobucci concluded that the
burdens placed upon the Appellants by the impugned
clauses, either by imposing on others or by
forcing the holiday's celebration in a communal
succah, were substantial, representing a non-trivial
interference with their protected rights.
2. Justification for Limit
on the Exercise of Freedom of Religion
The Sanctuaire justified the blanket prohibition
claiming the erection of succahs on balconies
would interfere with the co-owners' rights to
the peaceful enjoyment of their property and
to personal security, protected under ss. 6
and 1 of the Quebec Charter, respectively.
More specifically, this prohibition served to
preserve the economic and aesthetic value of
their property. However, under the circumstances
Justice Iacobucci found the alleged intrusions
or deleterious effects on the respondent's rights
or interests were, at best, minimal and could
not be considered valid limits on the exercise
of the Appellants' religious freedom. The exercise
of this freedom, otherwise significantly impaired,
clearly outweighed the unsubstantiated concerns
of the co-owners regarding the decrease in property
value. Justice Iacobucci noted that living in
a community that attempts to maximize human
rights invariably requires openness to and recognition
of the rights of others. In this regard, labelling
an individual's steadfast adherence to his or
her religious beliefs as "intransigence"
fails to further an enlightened resolution of
the dispute before the Court.
The Sanctuaire's further justification
of the restriction - that it ensures that the
balconies remained unobstructed in the case
of emergency, thereby protecting the co-owners'
rights to personal security - was also rejected.
The Appellants' offer to erect their succahs
so as not to block doors, obstruct fire lanes,
or pose any threat to safety or security, made
such concerns unnecessary.
3. Waiver of Freedom of Religion
Justice Iacobucci rejected Justice
Dalphond's contention that the Appellants waived
their right to freedom of religion when they
signed the declaration of co-ownership. While
the respondent claimed succahs were "plainly"
and unconditionally prohibited under s. 2.6.3b)
of the declaration of co-ownership, Justice
Iacobucci found the ambiguity created by s.
9.3, which permits the covering and enclosure
of balconies with consent of the co-owners/directors,
obviated any explicit or implicit waiver claim.
Second, Justice Iacobucci held
that a waiver of any right would have to be
voluntary and freely expressed, with a clear
understanding of the consequences. In this case,
the Appellants had no choice but to sign the
declaration of co-ownership, and it would be
"insensitive and morally repugnant"
to suggest the Appellants should "move
elsewhere if they took issue with a clause restricting
their rights to religious freedom." Absent
real choice, it would be incorrect to find a
voluntary and valid waiver of rights. Further,
by signing the declaration without reading the
provisions, there was no clear understanding
of the consequences of the alleged waiver
Justice Iacobucci concluded that the waiver
of a fundamental right, like freedom of religion,
would have to be voluntary, explicit and expressed
in unequivocal terms. Not only would a general
prohibition on constructions in the declaration
of co-ownership be insufficient to ground a
waiver, but the same would apply in any document
lacking explicit reference to the affected Charter
right. In Justice Iacobucci's view, the Appellants
did not voluntarily, clearly and expressly waive
their rights to freedom of religion. Justice
Iacobucci also noted that the record showed
that some of the Appellants purchased their
units specifically for the unobstructed balconies,
so as to erect succah.
4. Conclusion and Disposition
Justice Iacobucci concluded that
the impugned provisions in the declaration of
co-ownership prohibiting constructions on the
Appellants' balconies infringed the their religious
freedoms under the Quebec Charter. The
Appellants were not held to have waived their
rights nor to implicitly agree not to erect
succahs by signing the declaration of co-ownership.
Under the circumstances, Justice Iacobucci found
the respondent's justificatory claims for this
infringement unfounded, the co-owners' personal
security concerns largely resolved and their
property interests minimally intruded upon.
The Appellants were thus legally entitled to
erect succah for a period no longer than the
holiday of Succot, on condition they conformed
with building and fire codes and, where possible,
the general aesthetics of the property.
D. DISSENTING JUDGEMENTS
The two dissenting judgments,
while based upon different arguments, took a
drastically different view of the scope of freedom
of religion.
1. Justice Bastarache's Dissent
Justice Bastarache, writing for
Justices LeBel and Deschamps, agreed that the
Court has interpreted freedom of religion as
protecting both religious beliefs, which are
considered to be highly personal and private
in nature, and consequent religious practices.
However, he asserted that "religious precepts
constitute a body of objectively identifiable
data that permit a distinction to be made between
genuine religious beliefs and personal choices
or practices that are unrelated to freedom of
conscience." A basis for objectively establishing
whether fundamental rights are violated is provided
by connecting freedom of religion to precepts.
This approach requires both a personal belief
or the adoption of a religious practice that
is supported by a personal belief, and a genuine
connection between the belief and the person's
religion.
Justice Bastarache proposed three
factors that a claimant must demonstrate if
relying on conscientious objection: (1) the
existence of a religious precept; (2) a sincere
belief that the practice dependent on the precept
is mandatory; and (3) the existence of a conflict
between the practice and the rule. Unless the
impugned provisions or standards infringe the
claimant's rights in a substantial manner, the
freedom of religion guaranteed by the two Charters
is inapplicable. According to Justice Bastarache,
"while the purpose of freedom of religion
is defined broadly, the right to freedom of
religion is restricted."
2. Justice Binnie's Dissent
Justice Binnie's reasons differed
from those of Justice Bastarache in the weight
placed on the private contract among the parties
to govern their mutual rights and obligations,
including the contractual rules contained in
the declaration of co-ownership, and the co-owners'
offer of accommodation. To Justice Binnie, there
is a vast difference between using religious
freedom as a shield against State interference,
and as a sword against co-contractors in a private
undertaking. It was for the Appellants to ensure
in advance of their unit purchase that their
particular religious beliefs could be practiced.
They chose to invest in the building, and undertook
to abide by the rules of the building. Justice
Binnie further found that the rejected accommodation
- a communal succah - was not inconsistent with
the Appellants' sense of religious obligation
in circumstances where individual succah were
simply unavailable.
E. IMPLICATIONS OF THIS CASE
In the increasingly politicized
environment concerning religious freedom, be
it questions of religion in schools or same-sex
marriage, there are several important implications
to draw from the Amselem decision in
addition to it being the first time that the
Supreme Court of Canada has given a definition
to religion.
The first is that the case is
an affirmation by the Supreme Court of Canada
of the paramountcy of religious freedom. The
decision makes clear that religious practice,
as opposed to religious belief only, must be
accommodated and that religious practice cannot
be easily trumped by matters of taste or personal
preference of others impacted by religious practice.
Second, it provides a clear test
to determine when freedom of religion is triggered:
the party advancing a freedom of religion claim
must show the court that he or she has a practice
or belief, having a nexus with religion, which
calls for a particular line of conduct, either
by being objectively or subjectively obligatory
or customary, and that belief must be sincere.
Only then will freedom of religion as a right
be recognized.
Third, the decision does away
with the obligatory/optional distinction in
the protection of religious freedom. This could
have a significant impact in other situations,
such as those where public officials deny Christians
the right to assemble for Bible study and/or
prayer because it is considered an optional
religious practice.
Fourth, it makes clear that the
State and judges must not inquire into the validity
of an individual's religious beliefs or practices,
and therefore may impact on the extent to which
CRA will consider what constitutes advancing
religion when reviewing applications for charitable
status by organizations whose activities are
believed by their members as advancing religion
but which are not necessarily mandated by the
doctrine, teaching or practice of that particular
faith.
Finally, in certain situations,
the decision enables the religious freedom protections
found in provincial and federal charters or
bill of rights to prevail over declarations
of co-ownership and similar contractual documents.
It is clear that the Amselem
decision will be a benchmark decision and will
be relied upon in the future, both with respect
to freedom of religion and what constitutes
advancing religion in Canada, as it confirms
that courts confronted by religious freedom
claims should limit the individual review to
assessing the sincerity of the claimant's belief
and refrain from adjudicating on questions of
religious doctrine or practice. The decision
also recognizes that profit and the aesthetics
of individuals affected should not trump validly
held religious beliefs and practices, regardless
of whether the claimant can demonstrate that
their beliefs are objectively recognized as
valid by other members of the same religion.
Footnotes
1
See Charity Law Bulletin No. 50, available at
www.charitylaw.ca.
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relationship by way of any information contained herein. The contents
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