Murray‑Hall v Quebec (Attorney General)

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Full case nameJanick Murray-Hall v Attorney General of Quebec
Citations2023 SCC 10
Docket No.39906[1]
Prior historyAPPEAL from Procureur général du Québec c. Murray-Hall, 2021 QCCA 1325 (2 September 2021) (in French), setting aside Murray Hall c. Procureure générale du Québec, 2019 QCCS 3664 (3 September 2019) (in French). Leave to appeal granted, Janick Murray-Hall v. Attorney General of Quebec, 2022 CanLII 16724 (10 March 2022). Appeal dismissed.
Murray‑Hall v Quebec (Attorney General)
Supreme Court of Canada
Hearing: September 15, 2022
Judgment: April 14, 2023
Full case nameJanick Murray-Hall v Attorney General of Quebec
Citations2023 SCC 10
Docket No.39906[1]
Prior historyAPPEAL from Procureur général du Québec c. Murray-Hall, 2021 QCCA 1325 (2 September 2021) (in French), setting aside Murray Hall c. Procureure générale du Québec, 2019 QCCS 3664 (3 September 2019) (in French). Leave to appeal granted, Janick Murray-Hall v. Attorney General of Quebec, 2022 CanLII 16724 (10 March 2022). Appeal dismissed.
RulingThe partial decriminalization of cannabis by Parliament opened the door to provincial legislative action. The regulation of cannabis use has a double aspect, since the federal criminal law power can be used to suppress some evil or injurious or undesirable effect upon the public, while provincial jurisdiction over property and civil rights and matters of a local or private nature extends to the regulating of the conditions of production, distribution and sale of the substance. The provincial Act’s public health and security objectives and its prohibitions in ss. 5 and 10 are therefore in harmony with the objectives of the federal Act, and there is no basis for finding a conflict of purposes.
Court membership
Chief Justice: Richard Wagner
Puisne Justices: Andromache Karakatsanis, Suzanne Côté, Russell Brown, Malcolm Rowe, Sheilah Martin, Nicholas Kasirer, Mahmud Jamal, Michelle O'Bonsawin
Reasons given
Unanimous reasons byWagner CJ
Brown J did not participate in the final disposition of the judgment.
Laws applied

Murray‑Hall v Quebec (Attorney General), 2023 SCC 10 is a ruling of the Supreme Court of Canada in the area of Canadian constitutional law, specifically concerning the extent of the double aspect doctrine in the federal-provincial division of powers.

Row of cannabis plants

Cannabis indica had been treated as a prohibited drug in Canada since 1923,[a] and continued to be controlled as such into the 21st century.[b]

In 2018, the Parliament of Canada passed the Cannabis Act[2] and An Act to amend the Criminal Code (offences relating to conveyances),[7] which legalized recreational cannabis use in Canada. While prohibiting the possession of cannabis plants and their cultivation for personal purposes, it exempted the possession and cultivation of no more than four plants from these prohibitions. In response, the National Assembly of Quebec passed legislation that created a provincial monopoly on the sale of cannabis, as well as prohibiting the possession of cannabis plants and their cultivation for personal purposes in a dwelling‑house.[c][d]

Murray-Hall applied to the Superior Court of Quebec for a declaration that ss. 5 and 10 of the Cannabis Regulation Act (which respectively prohibited the possession and cultivation of cannabis plants) was ultra vires provincial jurisdiction, as they fell within the federal criminal law power, or were alternatively of no effect because of federal paramountcy.[9]

The courts below

At first instance, Lavoie J held that the Quebec provisions were constitutionally invalid, because prohibition fell solely under the criminal law power, and thus the double aspect doctrine could not be engaged. The province could act to reduce the number of permissible plants to as low as one, as "[i]t is clear that, other than zero plants, the province could have legislated, either for health or for security".[10] It was not necessary to consider the alternative argument.[11]

The Quebec Court of Appeal set aside the judgment, holding that the double aspect doctrine applied, as "the two levels of government are pursuing parallel objectives within their respective fields of jurisdiction".[12] It further held that federal paramountcy did not apply, as decriminalization does not constitute authorization (which is beyond the scope of the criminal law power).[13]

At the Supreme Court

Impact and aftermath

Notes and references

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