HomeMy WebLinkAbout1984-1610.Khan.89-05-041610/84
Between:
Before:
IN THE MATTER OF AN ARBITRATION
Under
TEE CROWN EMPLOYEES COLLECTIVE BARGAINING ACT
Before
THE GRIEVANCE SETTLEMENT BOARD
OPSEU (Khan)
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The Crown in Right of Ontario _ ~ (Ministry of the Attorney General)
Grievor
E"'P lloyer
K.P. Swan - Vice-Chairperson
W. Walsh - Member
W. Lobraico - Member
APPEARING FOR D.I. Bloom
TEE GRIEVOR: R. Stoykewych
Counsel Cavallusso, Hayes & Lennon
Barristers &'SOliCitOrs
APPEARING FOR J. zarudny
THE EMPLOYER: Co,unsel ~_ Ministry of the Attorney General ,..
BEARING: Sept. 4, Oct. 6, 10, 20, Dec. 11, 12, 15 1986 c Jan 7, Feb. 17, 24, March 12,,13, June 12, 15, 3uly 8, 9, 16, 17, 27, Sept. 21, 22, 25, Oct. 26, Nov. 27, Dec. 10, 18, 1987; Feb. 23, 24, 25, 26,
March 22, 23, 1988.
DECISION
Hearings in this matter began on September 4, 1986, and
continued through more than 30 days of evidence and argument to
March 23, 1988. At the outset of the hearings, both parties were
agreed that the board's jurisdiction to hear and determine this
matter was not at issue.
This arbitration relates to the discharge of Ms. Sandra
Khan on January 11, 1985. Ms. Khan had previously been suspended
with pay from August 24, 1984, pending a further investigation by
the Employer of her case. The allegations against her are set
out in a number of different documents, but amount to a number of
accusations of theft, further. accusations of mishandling of
funds, and alternative accusations of negligence in the perfor-
mance of her duties.
We begin by observing that a case of this length is
extremely difficult to synthesize into a written award. There
are a number of substantial factual and legal issues to be
resolved, each of which is central to the disposition of the
matter before us. There were also, we feel obliged to observe, a
number of blind alleys in the evidence, and a large number of
procedural rulings which we were required to make from. time to
time. In the interests of maintaining some control over this
award, we have limited ourselves to those findings of fact and
law which we consider to be essential to our decision. Reasons
for a number of interlocutory decisions were given orally in the
course of the hearing, and we have only reproduced here those
which lea'd directly to the outcome. If either counsel requires
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written reasons for any other interlocutory findings, a written
request with notice to the other party will be sufficient to have
us render such reasons.
We propose to begin with a chronological overview of
the events in question, to provide' context for our specific
findings to .be set out in greater detail below. We shall then
detail the issues which arise between the parties, each of which
requires a number of findings of fact and determinations of law.
We shall then proceed to set out those findings on each of the
issues, from which findings the result of this case will nec-
essarily emerge.
.._..,~_
1. CHRONOLOGICAL OVERVIEW
All of the material events in this arbitration involve .
the employment of Ms. Sandra Khan in the Office of the Public
Trustee in Toronto. The Public Trustee is a ,corporation sole,
and the incumbent is appointed by the Lieutenant ,Governor in
Council pursuant to the Public Trustee Act. The Public Trustee
has duties to perform under that legislation, as well as under
the Crown Administration of Estates Act, the Charities Accounting
Act, and any other duties assigned by the Lieutenant Governor in
Council from time to time. In general, those duties involve the
probate and administration of the estates of deceased persons who
have not appointed someone else so to act, and the administration
of the estates of living persons who are, for one reason or
another, disabled from seeing to their own affairs; such persons
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include infants, persons found mentally incompetent, and persons
who voluntarily assign their estates to the Public Trustee for
management. The office also has responsibility for administering
new charitable trusts and reviewing the operation of other
established charities, and in respect of the winding up of
corporations.
For the purposes of this arbitration, the important
functions are those performed in relation to the receipt,
realization, recording, investment and disbursement of property,
whether in the form of cash, securities or personal property,'
received in trust for V'clients" of the Public Trustee.
The grievor, Sandra Khan, was employed at all material
times in-those operations in the Public Trustee's office. She is
a native of Trinidad, has lived in Canada since 1972, and has
been a Canadian citizen since 1978. She completed a secondary
school education in Trinidad, and following her arrival in Canada
studied bookkeeping, business machines, accounting, English and
mathematics at George Brown College and Ryerson Polytechnical
Institute, from which she received a certificate in business
education. She began in the Public Trustee's .office as a
._. bookkeeping machine operator in 1975, and worked from time to
time as "Cash Cashier" as a -replacement for employees on mater-
nity leave prior to becoming permanent. Cash Cashier in 1979.
From then~ until her discharge, she worked either as Cash Cashier
or, on a replacement basis, as "Securities Cashier".
The two cashiers work in adjoining t'cages". The cages
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front on a reception area to which the public has access, and
sliding glass partitions are provided to permit the cashiers to
deal face to face with the public or with members of the Public
Trustee's staff as required. The cages back onto an office area
where a number of other employees have desks. Access to the
cages is provided by locking doors leading from the office area;
the sliding windows into the reception area do not provide
access, except possibly for an arm and hand, into the cages. The
cages are open at the top, but a wooden partition topped by a
glass panel surrounds both cages and separates them from each
other. A tall person could reach over this partition, but would
have to do so in full view of anyone in the office at the time.
As the job titles imply, the Cash Cashier is respon-
sible for receiving and accounting for cash which is delivered to
the Public Trustee. This cash comes from a variety of sources,
as will be seen, and the handling required by the procedures then
in place differed somewhat depending upon the source and the
circumstance of the payment of the cash to the Public Trustee.
In general, our concern is with the operation of the cash cage,
including the payment in of cash; the accounting for it upon
receipt, the storage of cash while in the custody of the Cash
Cashier, and the deposit of cash in the unsegregated trust
accounts maintained by the Public Trustee. In addition, the Cash
Cashier deals with the receipt, processing and deposit of other
negotiable documents, such as cheques, bonds and bond coupons.
The responsibility for securities is shared with the Securities
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Cashier, who also deals with a wider range of less liquid
securities, as well as some items of personal property. While
there is some dispute as to the precise. implications of the
relationship, it appears that the Securities Cashier was the more
senior of the two cashiers, and that the Cash Cashier was
generally expected to respond to directions received from the
Securities Cashier on matters such as organization of work,
relief and assistance of one cashier by the other.
At all material times, the Securities Cashier was Ms.
Anna Mores. Ms. Mores was appointed in a competition in 1982, in
which the grievor was also a candidate. She had previously
worked from time to time as a Cash Cashier,:and in other jobs in
the Public Trustee's office. Her hours of work were from 7:30
a.m. to 3:30 p.m., while the griever's hours were from 9:00 a.m.
t.0 5:00 p.m. As a result, the practice was that, in normal
circumstances, the Securities Cashier would open up both cages in Y
the morning, placing cash boxes and documents in both cages after
receiving them, with the assistance of a custodian, from the main
vault. The Cash cashier would reverse this process at night,
closing both cages and removing cash boxes and documents to be
placed in the vault overnight. When either cashier was absent
from her cage, the other cashier would receive securities or
cash, as the case may be, for the other and turn it over upon her
arrival or return. As will be seen, the procedure for handling
by one cashier of receipts for the other was totally devoid of
any safeguards, and therefore dependent upon trust and the
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integrity of both cashiers.
In addition to these two employees, two others, Ms.
Marcia Brown and Mr. Randolph Firebrace, also acted as required
during the material period as Cash Cashier. This involved
replacing the grievor when she was absent on any occasion, or
when she was required to act as Securities Cashier because of the
absence of Ms. Mores. Once again, as we will see, the procedures
for safeguarding cash being held by the Cash Cashier were
rudimentary at best, and this system of relief for backup
cash.iers also depended heavily upon trust and the integrity. of
the people involved.
Unfortunately, in circumstances which could only
involve a breakdown in the integrity of one or, less probably,
more of these persons, or less probably still of some uniden-
tified employee of the Public Trustee's Office, irregularities
occurred in the handling of cash in the last months of 1983 and
the beginning of 1984. During the months of August and September
1983, there were suspicious delays between the apparent time of
receipt of certain cash amounts in the cash cage and the deposit
of those amounts in the,bank. On six other occasions, beginning
on September 26, 1983 and ending on March 9, 1984, sums of cash
apparently received in the cash cage were never deposited, and
have never been traced. The total amount involved is $2,679.35,
and the only reasonable inference is that this amount of money
was stolen from the Public Trustee.
At the time of the thefts, and the apparent delayed
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deposits, the events went unnoticed. On April 12, 1984, however,
the disappearance of a sum of $856.00 in 'cash, paid in on
February 20, 1984 to the grievor for an automobile sold by the
Public Trustee on behalf of a client's estate, was discovered by
a trust officer who had been planning to use those funds to meet
certain obligations of the' estate. This led to accounting
inquiries and a physical search for the funds, but they were not
found either as cash or as an entry in any of the Public Trus-
tee's accounts. The grievor herself was_approached, but she was
unable to offer any explanation.
When it appeared that certain documentation for the
cash had also disappeared, the search for the missing funds was
broadened. Ms. Margaret Thompson, Internal Auditor in'the Public
Trustee's Office, reviewed transactions in the Cash Cashier's
cage over an extended period, and discovered that there were in
fact six losses, each involving cash received at ~the cages which
ultimately disappeared, without arriving in any of the Public
Trustee's accounts. As will be seen, the grievor was connected
in some way to ,each of these amounts of money, or at least had
access to them at some point.. As will be-seen, however, so did
at least one of the other three individuals mentioned above. Ms.
Thompson's investigation also revealed the "late deposits", as we.
shall call them for ease of reference, subject to further
analysis below as .to what they actually reveal. Her evidence was
that the. grievor, confronted with these findings in late May
1984, wasunable to provide any explanation.
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Meanwhile, the loss of the original $856.00 and the
subsequent discoveries were reported to the Public Trustee, Mr.
Albert McComiskey. The record indicates that Mr. McComiskey was
becoming more and more concerned about the original loss as time
went by, particularly because he was unable to get a reasonable
explanation from any of the employees involved, whether directly
or peripherally. Moreover, he discovered in the course of his
own investigation serious shortcomings in the cash accounting
procedures, to which we shall have greater reference below, which
had permitted cash to be removed without immediate discovery and,
indeed, with the possibility that it might not be discovered at
all but for a chance occurrence such as that which brought the
missing $856.00 to light.
As a consequence, Mr. Mccomiskey met with the grievor
on May 16, 1984, at which time they discussed the .missing
$856.00. There was some dispute between them, in subsequent
correspondence, as to exactly what was said at that meeting; that
dispute continued until the time of the hearing: In any case,
the other discrepancies were now :coming to light, and. the
investigation by Ms. Thompson was continuing.
Ms. Thompson ultimately requested the assistance of the
Audit Services Branch of the Ministry of the .Attorney General,
the Ministry which supervises the Public Trustee's Office. An ~-.
extensive report dated July 25, 1984 was provided to the Public
Trustee, detailing the shortcomings in the cash control sy.stem
and making 'certain recommendations for improvement.
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On July 26, 1984, Mr. McComiskey wrote a formal letter
to the grievor demanding an explanation for the discrepancies
relating to the six losses and the late deposits. He proposed a
meeting at which the grievor would be entitled to be accompanied
by her Union representative.
That meeting apparently took place on August 8, 1984,
but led to no successful resolution of Mr. McComiskey's concerns.
On August 9, therefore, he reported the matter to the Metropoli-
tan Toronto Police, and two detectives from the Investigation
Office of 52 Division attended at the Public Trustee's Office on
August 17. Following interviews with Ms. Thompson and other
management employees, the detectives concluded that the best
course of action would be to arrange polygraph tests of the
employees upon whom suspicion had fallen, and in particular the
grievor. The grievor agreed to undergo such a test, and she was
taken the same afternoon to the Metropolitan Toronto Police
Polygraph Unit, where Sergeant Nelson Scharger, ~a qualified
polygraph operator, administered a test.
As will be seen, the grievor "failed" the polygraph
test, in the sense that Sergeant Scharger concluded, based upon
his training and experience, that the results of the test
indicated that she was deceptive about her answers denying
responsibility for the missing~ sums of money. .He then engaged in
a "post-test interview", a form of interrogation, the outcome of
which was that the grievor made certain statements to him and to
another police officer, first orally and then in writing, which
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amounted to an alleged "confession". In the result, the grievor
was arrested and charged with theft. She was released on her own
recognizance the same evening. When news of the criminal charges
reached the Public Trustee, the grievor was suspended from
employment with pay by letter dated August 22, 1984, pending
further investigation.
A preliminary inquiry commenced during the autumn of
1984, during the course of which evidence relating. to the
confession was heard. The result was an indictment, preferred by
the Crown at the opening of the trial on April 14, 1986, for
theft, to which the grievor pleaded not guilty. The trial was by
judge and jury, and in the course of the -trial the confession
evidence was again offered. It was ruled inadmissible on voir
dire, apparently with the acquiescence of the Crown. The
polygraph evidence was not tendered either at the preliminary
inquiry or at the trial.
On. April 28, 1986, the. jury returned a verdict of
guilty. The grievor wasremanded to May 15, 1986 for sentencing,
at which time the presiding judge, Whealy, D.C.J., entered an
absolute discharge, after a very ~strong statement of his dis-
agreement with the jury verdict.
The grievor appealed against the conviction, and the
Crown appealed against sentence. During the course of the
hearing before us, the matter came before the Ontario Court of
Aweal, and the conviction was quashed and an acquittal entered.
The appeal against sentence, of course, was dismissed.
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In the meantime, as we have observed, a decision was
taken by the Ministry, pursuant to the Public Service Act, to
dismiss the grievor. This was done effective January 11, 1985,
thus terminating the series of suspensions with pay which began
August 24, 1984. The decision to discharge was certainly
informed by the various investigations conducted, and the
evidence which had been presented at the preliminary inquiry, but
it is clear that the discharge was independent of the criminal
prosecution, since it long predated the griever's conviction.
The reasons for the discharge are set out in the letter of
dismissal are as follows:
Mr. McComiskeyfs recommendation is based on a review of certain incidents, concerning
missing monies, which occurred in the Public
Trustee's Office and which involved you over
the~period from September of 1983 to March of
1984 inclusive, the details of which have
been discussed with you.
2. THE ISSUES
While this case includes a myriad of sub-issues, as
will be seen, the major matters to be considered are only three
in number:
1.
2.
Does the evidence relating to the events in the Public
Trustee's Office meet the onus of proof on the Employer
to make out the allegations against the grievor upon
which the discharge was based?
Is the evidence of the result of the polygraph test
admissible in ~these..proceedings, and if so what weight
3.
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is to be placed upon it?
Is the evidence relating to confession admissible in
these proceedings, and if so what weight is to be.
placed upon it?
It will be observed that each of these issues requires
somewhat different analysis. The evidence regarding the events
at the Public Trustee's Office during the relevant period is
essentially circumstantial evidence; there is no direct evidence
of the grievor either taking or being wrongfully in possession of
a particular sum of money at any material time. It is therefore
necessary to sort through many days of testimony on the cir-
cumstantial issues.~~'to decide whether or not the evidence is
sufficient to meet the standard of proof.
On the other hand, -the two other issues really involve ,*;*q.., ,,
what'might be called direct evidence, rather than circumstantial
evidence. If we find that the polygraph evidence is admi,ssible,
and that it is probative, then we must find that the grievor was
lying when she denied having.taken the money in the course of the
polygraph test. Those same denials in evidence before us must
also be lies, and we- would have‘to conclude that the entirety of
her evidence is in serious question. Taken at its highest,
therefore, the polygraph evidence would almost of itself
establish the griever's guilt. The Employer argues, in addition,
that .polygraph evidence may be placed on the scales to bolster
the circumstantial evidence, since even if it is not absolutely '.
determinative of truth or falsehood, it enhances the probability
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that the grievor took the money. We shall return to these
arguments at great length below.
Similarly, if we accept that the confession evidence is
admissible and trustworthy, it may also be used either as a
conclusive determination of guilt, or simply as a makeweight to
bolster the case based on circumstantial evidence. These
matters, too, will occupy some length below.
3. THE CIRCUMSTANTIAL EVIDENCE
In the course of the hearing, we heard a great deal of
evidence about the genera.I';operation of the cash and securities
cages, and more particularly about how ~those.cages were operated,
and by whom, at the material times. For our purposes, it is ,.
sufficient to focus on the ~kinds of transactions involved, and
the way in which they would normally be carried out, and what
appears actually to have happened on each of the occasions when
cash disappeared.
We begin with a more detailed description of the
process by which cash was dealt with in the cages. By way of
prologue, we think it is fair to say that there were serious
deficiencies in the cash handling procedures in place at the
time, deficiencies attested to by several witness, and detailed
in reports by the internal auditor and the Ministry's auditors.
Not all of those deficiencies have a direct bearing on the case,
but some of them certainly do affect the degree to which the
circumstantial evidence points to the likely perpetrator of the
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thefts. Counsel for the Employer,pointed out tom us on a number
of occasions that the cash handling system was not on trial, but
rather that the grievor was. In general, we acknowledge ~that
proposition to be correct, but it is equally important to
recognize that the deficiencies in the system contributed
directly to the uncertainty in the circumstantial evidence.
Whether they also contributed to the theft as well, by providing .r.
the perpetrator with a golden opportunity to steal, is im-
material. Only in that limited sense, therefore, it is correct
to say that the system is noton trial.
As we have already observed, the Securities Cashier and
the Cash Cashier worked in adjoining cages.. In many other ways,
as well, their functions were integrated. In fact, for virtually
all of the transactions here at issue, both cashiers would
'~ potentially be involved, along with certain other actors. Among
othercritical interactions is the mechanism by which one cashier
~.. came ea~rly and opened both cages; and the&her stayed late and
closed both. For about 14 hours each day, each had full access
to the.cash box and .records of the other, no matter how carefully
theses assets were secured all night. Moreover, the keys to the
two cash boxes and to the two cages were common, so that full
access could be achieved without giving any unduly suspicious
appearance.
The typical cash tran~saction at the cash cage would
arise when the Public Trustee assumed responsibility for the
administration of a new estate. Whether this estate arose from
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death, a finding of mental incompetency, or otherwise, a file
would be opened upon assumption of responsibility by the Public
Trustee, and that file would be referred to an estate officer,
who would plan for the acquisition of the assets of the estate,
and would carry out such liquidation of those assets as appeared
appropriate. The estates officer would invest and account for
the funds, make all required payments during the period of the
administration, and would make.arrangements for the distribution
of the estate.at the appropriate time. The estate officers work
in the Office of the Public Trustee, and where there is a
necessity to secure assets in other physical locations, an
investigator would be assigned to perform such outside workas
would be required.
In the typical transaction, an investigator would
attend at the residence of the "client" and perhaps also at
places of business and financial institutions, and take physical
control of such assets as were susceptible of such treatment.
For example, an investigator might find, upon searching a
residence, amounts of cash in Canadian or foreign funds, negoti-
able securities such as bonds or share certificates, small items
of personal property of significant value such as jewellery, and
other assets less attractive and portable, such as furniture,
clothing and automobile,si The investigator would list all
property physically taken into possession on a document called a
Survey of Assets Received. This form is in guadruplicate, and
forms are mechanically numbered to permit them to be accounted
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for.
In the typical transaction, the investigator would
return to the Public Trustee's Office with the Survey of Assets
form and the assets listed thereon. Assets in the form of cash
would be given to the Cash Cashier, who would initial the Survey
of Assets form to indicate receipt. Securities and jewellery
would be given to the Securities Cashier, who would also initial
' to indicate receipt on the Survey of Assets form. Other assets
would be accounted for by other persons and in ways not here
relevant.
The second type of: cash transaction relevant to these
proceedings would occur when a physical.asset, here an automo-
bile, was sold by an estate officer on behalf of the Public
Trustee in order to realize its value for the estate. The
purchaser of ~such an asset, if it. wer,e to be paid~.for in cash,
would attend at the cash cage and tender the purchase priceyand
applicable sales tax, for which the Cash Cashier would prepare a
receipt, again on an official form, this time in triplicate, also
numbered ,serially.
Cash amounts received in either of these two kinds of
.transactions would be secured by the Cash Cashier in a cash box
kept in a cash drawer inside the cage. In addition to such
amounts, this box would also contain. a petty cash float in the
amount of $150.00, which the Cash Cashier was responsible to
account for and to disburse as required for authorized purposes.
While these cash transactions occurred on a regular
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basis, they were far from the most important aspect of the Cash
Cashier's job. The biggest part of the job involved dealing with
negotiable . Instruments and securities, carrying out banking
functions each day largely involved with those documents, and
only incidentally dealing with cash transactions at the same
time.
The Public Trustee maintains "mixed trust accounts" at
certain financial institutions. Not unlike a lawyer's trust
account, these contain money belonging to a large number of
clients, but the amounts on deposit for each client are in no way
differentiated from the point of view of the financial institu-
tion. The trust accounting system, which is computerized,
therefore requires another set of documentation to ensure ~that,
once funds are deposited, they ares shown to the credit of the
appropriate client in the trust accounts. The document used to
accomplish this is called a Trust Entry, a document prepared in
duplicate on a serially numbered form. Trust Entries would in
general be prepared for every deposit to ensure that once funds
are placed into the mixed trust accounts they are credited to the
appropriate client.
On the other hand, Trust Entries are replaced for
certain purposes by other documents. A large volume of cheques
is received daily by mail from vari-ous sources to the credit of
individual estates, and these are gathered -into *'batches" for
processing. Each batch has a multiple trust entry prepared in
the data entry area. The effect of doing this is to enter the
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amounts of the chegues immediately to the credit of individual
clients, and it therefore becomes essential that the batches are
processed and deposited on the same day as they are prepared,
since failure to do so would make it impossible to balance the
trust accounts with the bank balances.
For most other transactions, the Trust Entry is
prepared for each individual amount or instrument prior to its
being delivered to the cashier. For example, cash amounts
: received from the investigators are supported by Trust Entries,
and the Cash Cashier indicates the Trust Entry number on the
Survey of Assets forms at the, same time as the amounts' are
receipted on the form by the cashier's initials. At all material
times, both copies of the TrustEntry were given to the cashier,
so the Survey of Assets form, after it was initialled, remained
the only independent evidence of the receipted funds by the I
cashier until the 'Trust Entry was sent tog data processing for
credit to the individual estate. Where, however, funds were paid
over the counter in respect of the sale of an asset, no Trust
Entry was created until the copies of the receipt were sent to
the estate officer. At that time, the estate officer prepared
the~Trust Entry and returned :it to the cashier. Only then could
the cashier deposit the funds into the mixed trust account, and
the Trust Entry would be sent on to data processing. In the
meantime, the Cash Cashier was in possession of both copies of
the Trust Entry, and the copies of the receipt senton remained
the only independent evidence of the receipt of the money by the
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cashier.
In general, funds received by the cashier were to be
deposited on the day of receipt. There were, however, a number
of important exceptions to that rule, and there is at least a
strong inference from the evidence that the rule was not always
obeyed, even apart from the permissible exceptions. Obviously,
funds received for the sale of an asset would have to be held
until a Trust Entry form was prepared and returned, a process
which could, .'. the evidence suggests, take several days. In
addition, some amounts would not be deposited because they
consisted in whole or in part of mutilated cash which would have
to be validated, sometimes requiring the -intervention of the
local office of the Bank of Canada. Other amounts might be
delayed because they were in coin, which would have to be
amalgamated into appropriate denominations and amounts and rolled
before deposit would be accepted. Finally, 'some amounts might be
received after the deposit documents had been closed for the day,
or even after the deposits had actually been made. If these were
not subject to any other delaying factor, they would normally be
deposited on the following banking day. :
As we have observed,.there might be reasons even apart
from these official exceptions. not to insist on the strict
application of the rule that cash would be deposited on the date
of receipt. There could be a number of explanations for such
forbearance, all more or less acceptable, depending upon the cir-
cumstances. The most important task each day for the Cash .
-. - 20 -
Cashier was to deal with the batches of chegues, since those were
already entered in the trust account and had to be deposited that
day if the account were to be successfully reconciled to the bank
balance. If there were an unusually large number of batches to
be processed,. or if there were other work of an extraordinary
nature to be performed, or if the Cash Cashier were absent and
the work was being performed on a relief basis, or if the
.Securities Cashier were absent and the Cash Cashier were perform-
ing that role with or without the assistance of a relief cashier
in the cash function, it seems doubtful that anyone would have
complained if cash received one day was not immediately deppsit-
ed.
There was thus always the possibility that amounts of
cash which had been received on the day or on an earlier day
would be kept overnight in the cash box in addition to the petty
cash float. Remarkably in these circumstances, there was no book
of original entry of cash receipts to indicate .clearly at any
given time how much cash should be in the cash box. A document
called a Blotter was prepared daily to indicate amounts deposited
in the bank account, and that would in general identify cash ..
amounts which had been both received and deposited, including
reference to the Trust Entry nunber.~ That document would also
indicate the amount to be found in the petty cash float. Nowhere
on the document, however, is there any indication of cash amounts
received but not deposited and held overnight in the cash box.
Since such amounts would almost invariably be clipped to the
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Trust Entry applicable to them, both copies of which would be in
the hands of the Cash Cashier, only the other copies of the
Survey of Assets form, or the Receipt form, depending on how the
money cane into the possession of the cashier, which were kept in
different'places and not easily consulted, could be relied upon
to reconstruct what should have been in the cash box at any given
time.
~~ To compound this difficulty, the responsibility for the
contents of the cash box, and for ensuring that cash deposits
were made in a timely fashion, was shared among three people
lduring the relevant period, and ,a fourth had ongoing and regular
access to'-the contents of the. cash box. ': Similarly, the two
cashiers covered for each other during short absences from the
I~ cages, and there was a regular practice of the Securities .Cashier
accepting cash amounts on behalf of the Cash.Cashier. When this
occurred, the Securities Cashier would initial on the Survey of
Assets form, and the expectation was that the money would be
handed to the Cash Cashier at the first opportunity along with
the Trust Entry for deposit. There was, however, no procedure
for accounting for such suns as between the two cashiers, and the
Cash Cashier therefore did not sign in any way to indicate
receipt of funds from the Securities Cashier. It thus would be
impossible for the Securities Cashier to prove that she had given
funds to the Cash Cashier, or for the Cash Cashier to prove that
she had not received funds from the Securities Cashier.
Even past this initial stage, the sloppiness - we do
.;:;..
- 22 -
not think there is any other word - of the cash accounting
system could significantly blur responsibility for any particular
sum. Throughout the material period, there were two alternate
Cash Cashiers, and the grievor acted as alternate Securities
Cashier. If, therefore, either of the two cashiers was absent,
or if the Securities Cashier was unduly busy and required
assistance from the grievor, one or the other, or possibly even
both of the other cashiers would be required to go into the cash
cage on that. day. It is sometimes possible to know, from
objective evidence, when this. occurred: for example, occasionally
the blotters will be prepared, in whole or in part, in the
handwriting of someone other than the grievor, or attendance
records will show the absence of one or another of the regular
cashiers, from which certain inferences can be drawn.
But there is virtually no way to be certain, on any
particular day,' that some person other than the grievor was not
in' the cash cage with an-apparent justification to be there. We
obs~erve that, while there were suggestions in the evidence that
access would be relatively easy for persons with no apparent
justification to be in the cage, this strikes us as being a very
unlikely possibility. For our purposes, it is sufficient to
consider the access of persons to the missing amounts of cash who
would beg able to advance a plausible justification for handling
that cash. In all cases, a replacement cashier would' take over
the cash box and would leave it to be returned to the regular
cashier, with no independent check of its contents and no
.-..- .
- 23 -
formalities connected with the transfer of responsibility.
When the ready access of so many people to these
amounts of cash is combined with the absence of any day-to-day
accounting of amounts which night remain in the cash box over-
night apart from the petty cash float, the problem of actually
tracing the whereabouts of any particular sum of cash is exacer-
bated. If one cashier received such a sum one day in circunstan-
ces requiring it to be kept over one night or more, but was not
in the cash cage on the following day, it would be .possible
either for that cashier to abstract the money without the
replacement cashier the following day being aware that it was
missing, or for the replacement cashier the- following day to
abstract the sum of money without the regular cashier; upon
return, becoming aware-that the money had been stolen rather than
~ deposited in the usual .course in the previous day. As long as
the Trust. Entry was taken along with the money, the trust account
balance would be reconciled with .the bank balance, and the
disappearance of the sum would only be noticed,.if someone were to
take a special interest in its whereabouts.
Based on these general~observations of practice in the
cages, we turn to the evidence relating to the six sums which
were stolen. In ~every case, while the evidence is relatively
clear as to what occurred, there is room for some dispute, and
also a need for some inferences to be drawn. What we set out
below are our findings of fact inrespect,of each of the transac-
tions.
- 24 -
A. Transaction No. 1. Seotenber 26, 1983
On September 26, 1983, the sum of $251.91 was brought
to the cages by an investigator. The Survey of Assets form was
initialled by Ms. Anna Mores, who was the Securities Cashier that
day. Both the -money and the associated Trust Entry have disap-
peared, and consequently were not deposited in the bank,. nor::,do.
they appear on any teller's blotter.'
Attendance records indicate that the grievor wasabsent
for part of the day on September 26, .but there is no objective
evidence to indicate whetlfer she was replaced in the cash cage by
Mr. Firebrace/ who was at the~time the back-up cashier. It is .a
reasonable inference, however, that Ms. Marcia Brown, who was
then being trained as replacement cashier, would have been in the
cage on September 26. She certainly was in the cage on September
27, because her writing appears on the blotter for that day. ~
None of the four people likely to have had access to
this money has any specific recall of this event, a difficulty
which is common to all of the losses. The objective evidence
~~~ only tells us that Ms. Mores received the money, and that if she
passed it on to the cash cage the grievor is only one of three
people who might have been present, and through whose hands it
might well have passed.
B. Transaction No. 2. Januarv 12, 1984 '.
Shortly after the initial loss transaction, Ms. Mores
- 25 -
was absent from the securities cage for a substantial period
replacing another employee on pregnancy leave. During that'tine,
the grievor became acting Securities Cashier, and .,Ms. Brown
became acting Cash Cashier. Mr. Firebrace continued as the only
back-up cashier. This was the state of work assignments on
January 12, 1984.
On that day, an investigator brought the sun of
$400.00, along with a number of securities, to the securities
cage. The grievorinitialled for both the cash and the securi-
ties, and the most reasonable inference is that Ms. Brown was not
in her cage at the time. She was at work that day,. however, and
completed the blotter on January 12, as well as on January 13.
There is no indication that Mr. Firebrace was in the cage on
either of these days, but-:-as we shave already observed it is
impossible to say that he was not. At this tine, as we have
observed, Ms. Mores was performing another assignment some
distance away in the office. Remarkably, however, there exists
independent evidence.to show that Ms. Mores was in the securities
cage on January 13 to assist Ms. Brown in preparing a securities
receipt. This evidence cane to light some tine after the
criminal trial, when Ms. Brown recalled that Ms. Mores had given
her such assistance on at least one occasion. A search through
the receipts made it possible-%to verify that the occasion was
January 13. Ms. ~.Brown insists that Ms. Mores was' under her
surveillance, and vice versa at , all tines when they were
together in the securities cage, in the griever's obvious
- 26 -
absence, that day. We only observe that this constitutes
remarkably clear recollection of an event which neither recalled
at all for nearly two years after it took place.
Therefore, if the grievor passed the money on to the
cash cage, it would have been in the possession of Ms. Brown, and
there is at least some chance that either Mr. Firebrace or Ms.
Mores could have had access to the sun of money as well. If she
had not passe.d ,it on, access would depend on it being found in
the securities cage. There is evidence that, although the
practice would not have been officially condoned, cash was
occasionally left in view on the. counters of the'cages.
C. Transaction No. 3, Februarv 24, 1984
At the time of the third loss, Ms. Mores was back to
her usual assignment as Securities Cashier, and the grievor was
again the Cash~ Cashier. On February.24, however, neither Ms.
Mores nor Ms. Brown, who was now not employed as a cashier, was
at work. The grievor therefore appears to have been responsible
for both the securities cage and the cash cage, since she was the
only back-up Securities Cashier, and Mr. Firebrace, who was the
back-up Cash Cashier, does not appear to have completed the
blotter that day, which is in the grievor's handwriting.
At some unknown tine during the day;‘ an investigator
brought the sum of $499.00 in Canadian cash, $100.00 in U.S.
currency, and a number of securities, all of which were signed
for by the grievor. The Survey of Assets form indicates, as was
- 27 -
the.usual practice, that separate trust entries were prepared for
the Canadian and U.S. amounts. The U.S. cash was deposited that
day, but the Canadian cash was not deposited then or any other
tine.
The next working day was February 27. That day Ms.
Mores was back as Securities Cashier, and the grievor was thus
presumably back. as Cash Cashier. The blotter that day, however,
indicates that Mr. Firebrace was in the cage since his writing
appears on it. me can only speculate on why he night have been
there, but it would likely be either because the grievor was
absent from the l'cage for sone.reason, or. because she required
extra help to catch up from the difficulties of staffing both
cages on February ~24. It is also a possibility that she Gas'
asked to help Ms. Mores in the securities cage, a factor which is
in some dispute between Ms. Mores and the grievor, and which
becomes important to another aspect of this case with which we
shall deal below.
In any case, the sun of $499.00, if it was passed on to
the cash cage by the grievor'at all, could have passed through
the hands of Mr. Firebrace, and indeed would,have been'accessible
to Ms. Mores, who almost certainly, following the usual practice,
would have opened up both cages in the morning prior to the
griever's arrival at work, and would have had access to both cash
boxes during that period of time.
It is less clear whether Ms. Brown would have had '.
access to the money on this occasion. She denies that she was
- 28 -
ever in the cash cage after the end of her temporary assignment
on February 11, 1984, but the grievor testifies that she did
return to the cage after that, and that she found her in the cash
cage one morning rolling coins. In addition, a memorandum
prepared by Mr. McConiskey relating to the investigation of the
fourth loss transaction, which occurred on February 28, 1984,
suggests that keys to the cash box were, on some unidentified
occasions, given to Ms. -Brown in the absence of'Ms.'Mores. There .~
is'also the observation that "staff are permitted to enter the
cage who should not be there at all"; although no particular
staff member is identified in, this context, Mr. McConiskey
testified that he was referring to contemporaneous reports about
Ms. Brown,~ among others.
D. Transaction No. 4, Februarv 28, 1984
On February 20; 1984, the "griever received the sum of
$856.00 fin connection with the sale of an automobile. Following
the usual practice, the grievor prepared a receipt, and would
likely have placed the cash and the copy of the receipt in her
cash box, since no Trust Entry had yet-been prepared. A notation .,
on the receipt indicates that the Trust Entry was received on _.:
February 28, 1984. Since the grievor made the notation at that
time, it is likely that she would have had both the cash and the
receipt in her hands, and that she would have attached the Trust
Entry to it. Since it was not deposited ,on that days, the
inference is that it would have been kept in the cash box
- 29 -
overnight, unless of course the grievor herself stole it im-
mediately after acknowledging on the receipt that she had
received the TrustEntry.
On February 29, the grievor was unable to make it to
work because of a snow storm. Ms. Mores was at work, and in the
ordinary course of events would have opened up both cages in the
morning, and thus would have had access to the cash box at least
for a short time early in the day. Mr. Firebrace prepared the
teller's blotter on that date, and therefore he also would have
had access to the cash box. The grievor returned to work on
March 1, and prepared the teller's blotter for that day, which
indicates that there were no cash deposits-at all, but that it
was a fairly busy day, as was March 2. On March 5 and 6, the ;~.T-
next work days, Mr. Firebrace's writing appears onthe teller's
blotter on both days, although the grievor was at work. Once
again, precisely why Mr. Firebrace would have been there is not
clear, although one possible inference is that Ms. Mores had
required the griever's assistance in the securities cage. The
possible access oft Ms. Brown to this sum of money rests on
exactly the same considerations discussed above in relation to
the previous loss transaction on February 24.
E. Transaction No. 5, March 0. 1984 .~.
On March 8, 1984 an investigator brought the sun of
$422.44~Canadian and $4.00 U.S. .to the cash cage. These were the
only two items shown on the Survey of Assets form. Both amounts
- 30 -
I were signed for by the grievor on that day, each supported by a
separate Trust Entry. The blotter does not indicate any cash
deposits on that day, and the following day, March 9, only a few
small cash deposits were made. On both of these days, the
grievor was acting as Cash Cashier and Ms. Mores was acting as
the Securities Cashier. The following Monday, March ~12, was an
extremely busy day, and no cash deposits were made at -all. The
13th, although less busy, also did not include any cash deposits;
on that day, however, Ms. Mores left at noon for vacation, and
the grievor therefore took over both cages for the remainder of
: the day. Mr. Firebrace was the :back-up cashier, and would~ likely
have been in the cages during any absences of the grievor in the
afternoon, who at the very least had to go to'the bank during
that period. There is, however, no objective proof of Mr. ,,
Firebrace's presence there on that day. : On the next two days,
March 13 and 14, however, he was acting as Cash Cashier and
prepared the.blotters on each of the two days. On the 13th, he
deposited~ the $4.00 U.S. which had been received along with the
missing $422.44 Canadian: the latter amount was never deposited
and the Trust Entry.is-missing.
If the missing amount were left, -for whatever reason,
in the cash drawer over at least one night, Ms. Mores would have
had ready access to it. If its stayed in over the weekend, it
. night have been ignored in favour of the very heavy volume of
batches which had to be processed on the Monday and Tuesday. If
so, then Mr. Firebrace would clearly have had access to it,
- 31 -
particularly since he was the one who deposited the $4.00 U.S.
received along with the missing amount in Canadian funds. Ms.
Brown's access depends upon the possibility of her presence in
the cages after February 11, an issue which we have dealt with
above.
F. Transaction No. 6. March 9, 1984
In the same time frame, on'March 9 an investigator
brought the sun of $250.00, along with a single chegue, to the
cages. The grievor, who was Cash Cashier at that tine, signed
for the cash. That money was 'never deposited, and the Trust
Entry is missing. All of the other circumstances relating to
this loss are identical to those relating to transaction No. 5.
* * *
At this juncture., it is appropriate to review certain
general impressions that cone from the evidence relating to all
six of these incidents. First, while there is no direct evidence
on the point, there is no reason to be suspicious simply because
the- amounts of money concerned were not deposited on the day in
which they were received, even in those cases where it is clear
that the Cash Cashier had possession of the amounts on the date
on which they were signed for. In no case is it possible to know -..
the tine of day at which the sums were received, and it seems to
have been a common practice'riot to deposit amounts received after
the deposit slips'had been filled out for the day. While it
- 32 -
would be perfectly possible to prepare a new deposit slip up to
the time of leaving for the bank, the later the money was
received, the more difficulty would be involved in reopening the
blotter and re-balancing the deposit. There were also deadlines
imposed by the need to deliver Trust Entries for funds to be
deposited to data processing in time for them to be proce,ssed
that day; the deadline, apparently flexible, was around 2:00 p.m.
Once the cash cashier had actually left for the bank, it would be
too late, so by 3:00, or 3:30 at the latest each da'y, any further
amounts of cash received would be held over at least one night.
It will be obvious from our discussion of access above that
holding the cash overnight in the cash box autonaticaliy gave
access toI:it to persons other than the grievor in every case.
Only for the last two transactions is it necessary for the cash
to remain more than one night in the cash box to broaden the
access beyond. one single additional person, and because of the
surrounding evidence about access to the cages by persons not
directly authorized to be there, broader access night conceivably
have been available even in those cases after only one night.
The second'factor to consider is whether the grievor,
at least on those occasions when she was the Cash Cashier and the
money had clearly fallen into her hands, should have noticed if
the amounts of cash supposedly put in the cash box had~disap-
peared. .As we have already observed, there was no journal or
book of original entry in which cash amounts received are
recorded. The' blotter for each day records amounts deposited,
- 33 -
but not amounts received unless they are taken to the bank that
day. While it would be possible for the grievor to have checked
back to see what had happened to amounts which she received, she
would have to rely entirely on her own memory, and while cash
receipts were not a large volume of the cash cashier's business,
they were not unusual either.. The griever's evidence is that she
simply did not concern herself about such matters, relying~ upon
the presence of the cash and Trust Entries in the cash box to
remind her that ,there was cash to be deposited. Particularly on
occasions when another cashier filled out the blotter in her
absence, she would take no steps to check that cashier's work,
relying instead upon that person to do what was required to be
done. While this testimony by the grievor cannot exculpate her,
neither does it inculpate her in anyway. It seems to us 7
perfectly plausible that someone might act exactly this way, and
in the absence of any control in the system to point out the
losses, might well simply never have,missed money if it ~was
abstracted by someone else.
The final factor to be observed about this evidence is
that it is inconclusive. At its stronges't, it makes the grievor
a suspect, perhaps even the prime suspect. But it simply lacks
the cogency required to prove the Employer's allegation that she
took all six of ,these amounts of money. As a consequence, we
must next proceed to review the attempts made by the Employer in
the course of the hearing to broaden the base of circumstantial
evidence upon which this matter was to be decided.
- 34 -
The first body of evidence to be considered is of a
number of alleged "late deposits" of sums of money received in
the cash cage prior to the first loss. The Union objected to
this evidence on the basis that it was not a part of the
Employer's case against the grievor as set out in the original
discharge letter, and that it was not included in the particulars
provided by the .Employer by letter dated June 5, 1986. The
Employer argued that, while it was relying only on the six loss
incidents, the late deposits would show a pattern .ultimately
leading to the first actual loss, and that such evidence would be ..
relevant to motive and opportunity. We ultimately agreed to hear
this evidence, not as similar factevidence but as a part of a '.
pattern, with its relevance and weight to be determined later.
x .,While there are technical reasons of some validity to :
exclude this evidence altogether, given the failure of the : .~. Employer to rely upon these incrdents at all in the discharge
letter, we think that in the circumstances the better way'to deal
.i ,..,. with this evidence is to review it on its merits, .and to demon- ,:..
strate the weight which ought to be placed upon it as a part of
the circumstantial evidence.
The Employer identified 12 occasions during August and
September-1983 on which sums of money were deposited much later
than they were signed for at the cages. Seven of these amounts,
however, were signed for by Ms.'~Mores, indicating that they were
received at a time when the grievor was not.present in the cash
cage. Ms. Mores testified that she would have handed these
- 35 -
amounts over immediately, but the system in effect makes it
impossible to test this assertion with any objective evidence.
As to these seven amounts, the best that can be said is that the
evidence is e&vocal as to who might have been responsible for
the delays.
As to the other amounts, two of them appear to have
involved substantial amounts of coinage. One was an amount' of
$65.36 all in coins, while another included $16.42 as's part of a
larger amount .in mixed bills and coins. Because of the Trust
Entry system, an amount to be credited to one estate had to be
deposited all at the same time; because to do otherwise would
make it 'impossible to reconcile .the bank balance with the trust
account totals.~ All witnesses agreed that the deposit of coins
would take rather more time than'a deposit of bills, because.of
the necessity to count out and roll coins before deposit. While
these delays would not appear to be entirely justified merely by
the length of time required to count and roll coins.; they must be
seen in the context of the other regurrements of the job, Andy in
particular the necessity to process batches for deposit by the
closing times each day. The most that can be said is that these
late deposits may be susceptible of a perfectly innocent explana-
tion.
The other three late deposits involved a delay from
August 15 to August 23 of an amount .;of $20.00 which had been
received by the grievor, a delay in the deposit of $719.00 from
September 6 to September 16, and a delay of a deposit of $253.00 ., "
- 36 -
from September 16 to September 29. The only explanation which
the grievor is able to advance for these delays, which she simply
does not recall, is that this was an exceptionally busy period
for her.
We heard evidence about the grievor being trained by
Ms. Mores to take over as Securities Cashier, the grievor
training Ms. Brown to take over the duties of Cash Cashier, and
possibly a brief attempt to train another employee to take over
as Cash Cashier earlier in September. In addition, we heard
evidence from the grievor that she was extensively involved in
assisting Ms. Mores with the work in the'securities cage during
this period, particularly in relation to' processing Canada
Savings Bonds for redemption. We should. observe that, the
Employer went to extraordinary lengths to attempt to refute the
griever's impression that this was a very busy time for her. In
our view of the evidence as a whole,* these attempts~ simply
collapsed under their own weight. While the evidence is not
totally conclusive, we think it is far more supportive of the
grievor's assertion that she was extremely 'busy assisting Ms.
Mores than, for example, it is supportive of Ms. Mores' denials
that the grievor spent much time assisting her at all. We should
observe that the activity level, which we consider to have been
demonstrated on the totality of the evidence, would not 80justifyt'
all of the late deposits, in the sense that it would show that
the grievor was entirely blameless for the delays. But taken as
a whole, the evidence makes it perfectly plausible that the
- 37 -
delays were a result of a failure to get around to doing the work
which had to be done in the cash cage as quickly as possible, .
rather than convincing proof of dishonesty as the Employer
argued.
We shall deal below with the Employer's assertion that
the grievor's discharge should be upheld on the basis of negli-
gence, as opposed to theft. For the moment, however, we think it
is at least a believable explanation of the late deposits that ~.
the'heavy workload in both the securities cage and the cash cage
contributed to delays which were out of the ordinary, but
explicable either by the circumstances, or by the circumstances
coupled with a .desultory attitude toward getting her work done on
the grievor's part.
The final branch of the circumstantial evidence
comprises a number of attempts by.the Employer..to demonstrate, .
from several sources, that the grievor was predisposed to
dishonesty, and that she had a particularly pressing need for
money during the material period that could have driven her to
I steal from her employer; We accepted this evJ.dence from the
Employer on the basis that we would deal with its admissibility
and,weight in this award.
Certain of the evidence constitutes a repetition by co-
workers of statements allegedly made by the grievor to them on
unrelated matters. These statements are alleged to show a
general propensity toward dishonesty, which the Employer asserts
bolsters the circumstantial case. ..~
- 38 -
We will not go deeply into this evidence, most of which
is little more than gossip. It is probably not admissible in any
case, since if it is probative of anything it is character
evidence only, which is generally inadmissible where tendered in
proof of a fact in issue: see Sopinka and Lederman, The Law of
Evidence in Civil Cases, pp. 287-293. In any case, it simply is
not probative of any predisposition on the part of the grievor to
commit theft, even if it is taken at its face value.
Some of this same evidence, as well as certain answers-
eliciged from the grievor in cross-examination, was asserted by
the Employer to demonstrate the grievor's impecuniosity at the
material time, thus providing, in the Employer's assertion,
motive for theft. Evidence of motive may well be admissible in
certain cases, but we observe that evidence of impecuniosity to
prove-a fact at issue, in the particular case procuring a loan,
has been called "one of the most unusual. and doubtful.cases" for
the admission of circumstantial evidence in Sopinka and Lederman;
sunra, p. 35. We have serious doubts whether evidence of
finanzial need can ever constitute circumstantial 'evidence of
theft, but even if this evidence is to be placed on the balance
along with all of the other circumstances, it isnot conclusive
of anything.
First;"'the evidence does not demonstrate anything more
than. relatively- minor, relatively short-term difficulties. in
making ends meet, a state of affairs which most people suffer
from time to time, and probably everyone suffers at least once.
- 39 -
Second, the grievor was not the only employee with access to the
money who was facing fin.ancial difficulties at the time: indeed
the evidence indicates that one other employee seems to have been
in more serious financial difficulty.
In this context, we should observe that the Employer
sought a subpoena duces tecum to compel the grievor to-.-produce
all of her banking records and all of her credit card records for
the material period for inspection by the Employer. The Union
objected to this subpoena on the basis that the evidence, if any,
would be irrelevant, and that the Employer was simply engaged in
a fishing expedition to attempt .to find. some concrete link
between the missing funds- and the griever. -Upon considering the
authorities referred to by the parties, we ruled that the
subpoena would not issue. While we 'recognize, as a number of
arbitrators -have stated, that there is an element of discovery
available through the use of a subpoena duces tecum - -, arbitrators
have also been very concerned to ensure that the subpoena does
not constitute 'Ia licence to engage in a fishing expedition": Re
Bell Canada and Communications Workers of Canada (1980), 25
L.A.C. (2d) 200 (M. Picher); Re Toronto Star and Southern Ontario
Newspaper Guild .(1983),.11 L.A.C. (3d) 249 (Swan). .
In our view, the subpoena sought here would go beyond a
fishing expedition, and would constitute a search warrant. The
only outcomes of such an exercise which could constitute proof of
any of the matters at issue before us would be something along
the lines of a deposit to the griever's personal bank account of
~.. - 40 -
a sum of money corresponding to one of the missing'sums on a date
shortly after the money disappeared. The inherent probabilities
of such a finding are so minuscule and the necessary invasion of
the grievor's privacy so extensive, that we think that the
issuance of a subpoena would be clearly wrong.
The only likely support for the Employer's case to be
gleaned from such a search, if indeed any support were found,
would be to bolster the evidence of impecuniosity.;' As we have
already observed, we have serious doubts that evidence oft
impecuniosity can constitute circumstantial evidence of theft.
Even if such evidence were admissible, however, the use of this
subpoena to garner further evidence would atmost be a makeweight
and could not be justified on the basis of the balance described
above. ~_,
The final additional evidence of circumstantial
evidence comes from an employee named Helen Page, whose sole
connection with these events occurred when she was trained by the ,.> :-;.~
grievor in March 1984 to work in the cash cage; Ms. Page
attributes to the‘grievor a statement to the effect that borrow-
ing from the petty cash fund was acceptable, and that she had
done so herself. This statement was introduced in a voir dire - -I
it being received subject to an objection by the Union that it
did not constitute proper reply evidence.
For a number of reasons, we do not find it necessary to
go deeply into the question of what constitutes proper reply, and
when a party may be permitted to reopen its case to introduce
- 41 -
evidence coming to light subsequent to the close of its evidence.
The much stronger case for the admissibility of this evidence is
section 21 of the Ontario Evidence Act, which is as follows:,
If -a witness upon cross-examination as to a
former statement made by him relative to the
matter in question and inconsistent with his
present testimony does not distinctly admit
that he did make such a statement, proof may
be given that he did in fact make it, but
before such proof is given the circumstances
of the supposed statement sufficient to
designate the particular occasion shall be . mentioned to the witness, and he shall be
asked whether or not he did make such
statement.
The extent to which this section assists the Employer depends
upon a review of the way in which matters relating to Ms. Page
were put into evidence.
The first substantive reference to Ms. Page was in the
.evidence of Mr. McComiskey, who was the Employer's final witness.
In a memo written by him to file dated August 8, 1984, he
recounts his discussion with the grievor relating to the late
deposits. The following paragraphs are included:
It was pointed.dut to Mrs. Khan that in some
instances deposits had been made on pay days.
She. did not indicate there was any sig-
nificance to that although she asked if I
were asking if she had borrowed money from
cash. I did then ask her about that and she
denied that she had ever borrowed money from
cash.
'-'~p""did ask' her if she had ever loaned any
other employees money out of cash and she
denied that although she did say that she had
cashed chegues for employees in small amounts
and indicated that two employees, one of them
- 42 -
being [omitted] borrowed money at noon hour
but gave it back to her after lunch. On the
previous day, that is on August 7, when I was
signing securities for Anna Mores, she [apparently Anna Mores] did advise me that an
employee had recently come to Helen [Page] in
the cage to borrow money and when Helen
refused that employee said that Sandra Khan
had done it in the past.
Ms. Mores, who is stated to have been involved in this
discussion, was not asked about this incidents at all. Mr.
McComiskey was only asked to confirm that this constituted his
note to file at the time. The question of the involvementof
Helen Page, or knowledge she might have of these incidents, did
not ~appear to concern either party ~during the Employer's evi-
dence.
In the course of the cross-examination of the grievor,
however, counsel for the Employer asked her if she had ever
borrowed money from Public Trustee funds, which she denied. She
also denied any statements to Helen Page to the effect that she
borr.owed money from petty cash. Certain specific statements were
then put to her, each of which she denied. Those statements were
essentially the statements to which Helen Page subsequently
testified, except that the statement put to the grievor was to
the effect that she had borrowed money "all the time", while%%.
Page only testified that the grievor had sa~id that she "had done
it".
As we have already observed, the central issue related
to this alleged exchange isthe credibility of the grievor. Even
if we believe that she said precisely what MS: Page testified
- 43 -
that she said, that would not be proof that she had ever borrowed
money from the Public Trustee's funds, let alone proof that she
stole money. The issue; therefore, is whether we accept that Ms.
Page's evidence has the effect of diminishing the grievor's
credibility in some significant way. ~,..C.,
Ms. Page testified that she spoke to both Anna Mores
and Margaret Thompson about this statement by the grievor, during
the period of time when the investigation into the missing funds
was taking place. Neither of these witnesses was ever aske~d to
confirm this matter, apparently because Ms. Page did not tell
counsel for the Employer about this exchange until some time in
the middle of the cross-examination of the grievor. Ms. Page did
not testify at either the preliminary inquiry or the criminal
trial, and -apparently had not repeated this comment to anyone
from some time early in 1984 until October 1987, when she spoke
to counsel for the Employer.
If the statement were~ indeed in as categorical a form
as Ms. Page said it was, and if indeed she put it to Ms. Mores
and to Ms. Thompson in roughly the same form, it is surprising
that the incident had never surfaced before. Obviously, the
Employer's failure to ask Ms. Thompson or Ms. Mores about Ms.
Page's comments can be explained away by the fact that the
answers to any such guestions would be, coming from them, only
hearsay, and so might.never have been explored in the course of
interviewing them.
What is surprising, however, is that nothing of this
.!. 3
:::
:.
- 44 -
emerges from Mr. McComiskey's files, which include correspondence
to and from him and a number of his supervisors, including Ms.
Thompson, and his own notes to file encompassing conversations
with a number of people. It seems obvious thatno such statement
by the grievor to Ms. Page was ever brought to his attention, or
it would have been included in his file somewhere, at the very
least in his file memorandum of August 8, 1984 whenhe discusses
related issues.~ It is surprising, for example, that when Anna
Mores told Mr. McComiskey on August. 7 about the employee who had
attempted to borrow money from Ms. Page, and who said thatthe
grievor had loaned money in the past, she would not have men-
tioned the far more damning stateme,nt, relayed to her by Ms.
Page, that tended to show that the grievor had borrowed money for
herself, and had encouraged Ms. Page to do the same thing.
We raise these. points not to attempt to demonstrate
that Ms. Page is lying, because we cannot conceive of any reason
why .she would do such a.thing. On the other hand, when this
matter of credibility is dealt with entirely apart from the rest
of the evidence in this case, it will be obvious that the
surrounding circumstances would makes it extremely difficult to
conclude that the grievor was lying in her denial of the state-
ment in the form it was put to her. A great deal had happened
between the time at which the statement wasallegedly made, and
the time at which the grievor was questioned about it and,
shortly after, Ms. Page testified about it. There is an in-
ference that the petty cash float was not controlled as strictly
- 45 -
as the Employer might now like, specifically to the effect that
the grievor had cashed chegues for employees in small amounts
from that fund, and had occasionally given very short term loans
to other employees. This matter was not explored in great depth,
but it is indicative of a general easy-going attitude toward the
operation of the cash cage which is consistent with everything we
have heard about the lack of effective controls in its operation.~
.In the result, we.think it is fair to conclude that
this episode, when taken into account along with all of the other
evidence which is before us, really adds very little either to
the ma'in facts at issue in this case relating to the grievor's
guilt or innocence, or to the collateral matter of the grievor's
credibility as to a conversation which Ms. Page recalls in one
way, but which might in fact have been misunderstood by her, and
which certainly did not achieve anything of the notoriety that
one would have expected once it was reported, -as Ms. Page says it
was, to the Internal Auditor and Ms. Mores.
This concludes a review'of the circumstantial evidence,
to the extent we think that it i,s sufficiently important to merit
close scrutiny. As we have observed, the evidence led us down a
number of~blind alleys, particularly as the Employer attempted to
close off every possibility that,there might be an explanation
for what occurred that was consistent with some other conclusion
than that the grievor stole the money. We have attempted to take-
all of this into account, but we have not found it necessary here
to repeat every single aspect of the evidence.~~O
- 46 -
We turn, therefore, to a characterization of this
evidence. To begin with, we observe that the onus of proof in
this matter is squarely on the Employer, and that the standard of
proof to be met, where the alleged misconduct is criminal in
nature, is that there must be clear and convincing proof ap-
propriate to the seriousness of the conduct alleged. While it is
.~. clear that the proof must be only on a balance of probabilities,
and not on the basis of proof beyond a reasonable doubt, the
jurisprudence of courts of civil jurisdiction, arbitrators in the
private sector, and the Grievance Settlement Board are all to'the
effect that an allegation of criminal conduct must be made out on
the basis of clear and convincing proof: see Dacait, 531/85, the
reasoning of which we adopt in this case.
The fact that the only ev$den~ce here being considered
is circumstantial evidence does. not make it impossible for the
Employer to meet this standard of proof. There are no special
rules in relation to circumstantial evidence in -civil cases, as
there are in criminal cases, and we are entitled to draw such
inferences from the evidence as appear to us to be reasonable and
appropriate, and to act upon the balance of probabilities based
upon all of the circumstan,ces.
On the other hand, when circumstantial evidence is
tested against' the "clear and convincing" standard, it will be
obvious that, like 'all other evidence, it will be tested more
carefully than might be the case where less serious allegations
are at issue. In Erwin -, 1377/86,, the Grievance Settlement Board
- 47 -
dealt with the issue as follows, beginning at page 9:
The weighing of circumstantial evidence
is thus largely a process of excluding
alternative possibilities. In so doing we
have to take notice of what is humanly
possible in the circumstances. We cannot
cast an onus upon the Grievor~ to prove to us
that there are alternatives, although he
would certainly help his own cause with every
plausible alternative he proposed. Rather,
the onus is still on the Employer to prove by
clear and convincing 'evidence that there are
no such alternatives.
We were referred to several cases which
deal with circumstantial evidence. In the
case of Sunnvbrook .Hosoital and Sunnvbrook
Hospital Emplovees Union, LOCal 777 (Gastis),
27th of June, 1986,' an unreported award of
arbitrator Michel Picher, he writes at page
17:
"In the Arbitrator's view, where
the evidence is principally circumstantial, it must be deter-
mined whether, in balancing the
probabilities, there are other
reasonable explanations equally
probable or more probable than the
proposition which is advanced by
the party that bears the burden of
proof. If there are no reasonable
alternative possibilities of equal
or greater probability, it may be
concluded, as a matter of evidence,
that the allegation advanced is
established on the balance of
probabilities."
While we agree with the statement of>Mr.
Picher in the above case, we would add the
caveat that in a case involving an allegation
of dishonesty we must, in the final analysis,
still be convinced by a- degree of,proof that
meets the high standard commensurate with the
gravity of the allegation.
We are, in general, in agreement with these proposi-
- 48 -
tions, although we think it is important to observe that the
statement of the proper approach in the Sunnvbrook HOSDital case
is susceptible of misunderstanding. In our view, it would not be
correct to decide a case based on circumstantial .evidence on the
basis merely that the allegation sought to be proved is the most
attractive among a number of possible alternatives. Itmay be
that the evidence suggests so many possibilities that no single
one of them, even the most appealing, can rise to the standard of
clear and convincing proof of the allegation.
Put in the terms of the present case, it is not enough
simply to find that the grievor is the most probable suspect
among all of the people who had access to these. funds. What is
required is. that we find that it is more probable than not, on
the basis of clear and convincing proof, that the grievor did
what she was alleged to have done, and stole the money here at
issue.
In our view, once the test is properly stated, it- is
obvious that the Employer's case, to the extent that it is based
upon the circumstantial evidence, must fail. We come to this
conclusion on the basis. of our review of the evidence above,
which demonstrates that there are simply too many plausible
alternative explanations to find that the Employer has made out
its case. While this is our own decision based upon the evidence
before us, we observe that the Internal Auditor, the Public
Trustee, the Ministry auditors, the police and, except for a~jury
verdict which was set aside in circumstances already described,
- 49 -
the courts have all come to a similar conclusion on the weight of
circumstantial evidence in this case.
It is not enough for the Employer to succeed for it to-
identify the grievor as the prime suspect; since it cannot go the
further step to show that the grievor, on clear and convincing
evidence, more probably than not stole this money, its case must
fail unless either the polygraph evidence or the confession
evidence, neither' of which has been considered in a final way in ._..
any earlier proceedings, leads us to a different conclusion. We
therefore turn to those issues.
4. THE POLYGRAPH EVIDENCE
Courts and tribunals in several Canadian jurisdictions
,.... have dealt with the admissibility of polygraph evidence, and the
weight to be placed upon the opinion of polygraph operators, in a
number of different contexts. It appears, however, that we have
had the most domplete exposition of all of the various issues
arising from this kind of evidence of all of these tribunals. We
shall therefore review these submissions in some detail, and hope
that we can make some contribution to the continuing debate as to i
the scientific, legal and policy considerations which underlie
the use of polygraph evidence before courts and tribunals in this
country, and especially before arbitrators.
We begin-with a description of the polygraph test as it
.- is generally used, and more particularly as it was used by the
Polygraph Unit of the Metropolitan Toronto Police in this
- 50 -
specific case.
The polygraph itself is an electro-mechan ical dev ‘Ice
designed to monitor a number of physiological variables. The
variables are measured on a continuous basis by a tracing on a
moving graph paper. The Metropolitan Toronto Police apparatus
tracks three variables. A sensor placed around the upper chest
of the subject measures upper respiration. Galvanic skin
response is measured by sensors placed on the hands to detect
differences in sweat gland activity. Blood pressure is also
monitored by a cuff placed on the upper arm. During the course
of the test, the examiner provides..a number of stimuli to the
subject in the nature of questions, to which we shall return
below. The timing of each question is marked mechanically on the
graph, so that the examiner can subsequently assess the changes,
if any, in the various physiological responses connected with
each question. In general, it is not the amplitude of these
responses which is of interest, but rather changes in the values
connected with certain questions in comparison with others. The
theory of the polygraph is that'the measurement of physiological
responses to psychological stimuli in the form of questions can
indicate the psychological reaction of the subject in relation, to
.. the questions.
Obviously, for the polygraph to constitute a "lie
detectorl', and thus to have some usefulness in law enforcement,
it is necessary to find some link between the physiological
responses of the subject and a deceptive answer to a question
- 51 -
relevant to the investigation. The major obstacle to this
exercise is the fact, admitted by all scientific opinion, that
there is no clearly identifiable physiological response for
deception. While the polygraph clearly shows even the most
minute variation in the physiological responses, it is impossible
to distinguish among the psychological reactions to a particular
question which might have caused that variation.
For example, a subject who reacts very strongly to-
answering a particular question might be reacting out of fear,
elation, anger, relief, or some mixture of these and other
psychological responses. There, is no method now available to
demonstrate that the cause.of a particular physiological reaction
is an attempt to deceive. This incontrovertible, and so far
unavoidable, fact led to the discrediting :Ff the polygraph as a
scientific test of deception for many decades.
In an attempt to improve the reliability of the
polygraph, there have been several attempts to develop mechanisms
for channeling the stimuli to be applied with a view to improving
the value of the measured responses. ~.In 1947, a John Reid
developed a method called the "control question technique", which
in refined form is the method most widely used today, and which
was used in this particular instance. The theory of this
technique is to attempt to measure physiological responses to
questions relevant to the investigation against physiological
responses to questions that are designed to induce deceptive
answers. Thus, the response to the relevant question can be
- 52 -
compared directly to a response that, if the theory works,
clearly demonstrates deception.
The technique depends upon the skill of the examiner in
,formulating questions, in the course of a pre-test interview with
the subject, which are calculated to lead the subject to give a
false answer. The idea is to induce the subject to answer, in
the negative, a question asking about generalized dishonest or
reprehensible behaviour in the past, unconnected with the
incidents relevant to the investigation. For example, a subject ..~
might be asked if he or she had ever done anything dishonest
prior to the time when the relevant events occurred. The.theory
is that everyone has done someth$ng'dishonest, and therefore no
one could answer the question honestly in the negative. -Subjects
who attempt to answer the gues,tion in the affirmat;~,ve are
dissuaded from doing so by encouraging them to reveal the nature
of the dishonesty, and then to exclude the revelations by
formulating the question "Apart from what you have told me. . .'I.
The examiner's purpose is to continue to~exclude all revelations
until the subject finally gives a negative answer. Since the
'. theory is that no one could ever give a negative answer, and
,-everyone'-must be hiding something further, the answers to those ,I'
questions will provide a "control", 'in the sense that they will
show the subject's physiological reactions to an act of decep-
tion.
The pre-test interview has, in fact, a number of
other purposes besides the formu;ation of the control questions.
- 53 -
Part of the exercise is designed to assess the subject's suita-
bility for a polygraph examination, by excluding such factors as
mental illness, influence of prescription or non-prescription
drugs, or any unwillingness to cooperate. The interview is also
designed to condition the subject to an acceptance of the
validity of the polygraph test. Information about the test will
be supplied by the examiner, in the>case of the Metropolitan
Toronto Police Polygraph Unit in the form of a small booklet
which the subject is asked~to read.
It is an undenied purpose of the pre-test interview to
condition the subject to a belief as near absolute as possible in
the efficacy of the polygraph in detecting deception, apparently
on the theory that this will enhance the reactions to deceptive
answers and make them stand out more clearly, whether those
deceptive answers are given to relevant questions or control
questions. To further enhance this, conditioning, and also to
ensure that the polygraph is working properly and that the
subject is giving usable readings, a "double verification test"
is carried out, in which the subject is asked to choose a number
from~ a set of numbered cards, and then to give a negative answer
when each number is read out. The examiner then catches the
subject in a lie'by identifying the number which the subject has
chosen, and the subject is thereby convinced of the accuracy of .I,
the machine.
In ~fact, this is a trick. Even if one accepts the
accuracy of the control question technique, this approach would
- 54 -
be unlikely to identify accurately the false answer because there
is no control question against which the deception related to the
number can be measured. In addition, a. lie about a number,
particularly a lie deliberately told at the examiner's request,
is unlikely to evoke much of an emotional reaction in anyone.
Therefore, by a system of marked cards or something of that
nature, the examiner knows which number has been selected, and
deceives the subject into thinking that ~the polygraph has
revealed the lie.
In the standard test, the subject is asked questions of
three kinds: relevant questions, which deal directly with the
matter under investigation: irrelevant questions, which may have
to do with the weather, geography or the subject's family, and
control questions which have been produced by the process set out
. ..* JO_ .above. -There may be hybrid, or "quasi-relevant" questions, as
well. The subject is asked these questions three times, with the
order of asking them varied in accordance with a pre-set,.fo,rmula
so that each control question may be compared with a different
relevant question in each test.
The graphs of the physiological responses thus produced
are then assessed in accordance with a predetermined scoring
system which measures the difference between the reaction ~to each
relevant guestion and the associated control question. The
irrelevant questions are not scored, and really have nothing to
do with the test at all.
All of the answers to the scored questions will, of
- 55 -
course, be in the negative. As to the control questions, a
negative answer has already been preconditioned by the way in
which the questions are formulated. As to the relevant gues-
tions., an affirmative answer would be tantamount to a confession,
which would thus render scoring of the test unnecessary.
Presumptively;~~ therefore, all of these answers will be negative
too. The scoring is based on the premise that innocent people
will have a less marked reaction to the relevant questions, to
which they can be truthful, than to the control questions, to
which they cannot. Guilty people will have a more marked
reaction to the relevant questions, since they cannot be truthful
to any question, but the relevant questions will be of far more
significance because of their relationship to then investigation.
The sign of the score assigned (positive or negative) therefore
depends on whether the reaction is greater -to the control
question or to.the relevant question; a- negative sign indicates a
greater reactionto the relevant question, and therefore is con-
sidered to show deception. The value of the score, which can be
from one to three, measures-the ratio of the differing reactions
to' the questions. A "0" score indicates identical reactions to
both questions.
The scores for each pair of questions are then 'added
together. There are three pairs of questions per test, three
physiological measurements are.taken, and three tests are run, SO
the scores could theoretically be as high as 81; with either a
positive or a negative sign. A score between -5 and +5 iS
- 56. -
considered to be indeterminate. A score. of -6 or lower is
considered to be a clear indication that the answers to relevant
is questions were deceptive, while a score of +6 or higher
considered to demonstrate truthfulness.
The usual procedure is for all of the tests, includ ing
the number test which is designed to trick the subject 'into a
heightened respect for the accuracy of the polygraph, to be run
consecutiv~ely. When all are completed, the examiner ret~ires from
the polygraph room and scores the test. After scoring, the usual
practice is to return to the subject and reveal the result of the
test in a post-test interview. If the test ,does not demonstrate
deception, this interview is normally quite short. If it does
demonstrate deception, it is customary for the post-test inter-
view to take on the nature of an interrogation with a view to
eliciting a confession. In fact; confessions during post-test
interviews where a result indicating deception has been found are
very common, and it is probably fair to say that the quest for a
confession in the post-test interview is one of the primary
purposes for using the polygraph test in police investigations.
We shall return below to a more critical examination of this
.,~
practice in general, and of the way in which it was conducted in
this case,. -First, however, we shall concentrate on the examina-
tion itself.
The polygraph test in this particular case was admini-
stered by Sergeant Nelson Scharger, who has been with the
Metropolita~n Toronto Police Polygraph Unit since 1983. His
- 57 -
training in polygraphy techniques began with a 15 week'course at
the Canadian Police College, followed by two weeks field training
with an experienced examiner. He then did polygraph tests for
Metropolitan Toronto Police, submitting the first five, and five
out of the next 25 tests to the Canadian Police College- for
quality control. After satisfactory completion of these require-
ments, he was certified as a polygrapher. His previous ex-
perience with the Metropolitan Toronto Police, which began
October 1963, included far'more than the prerequisite five years
of investigative experience.
Since certification, he has attended a further two week
in-service advanced seminar at the Canadian Police College, and
has twice assisted in training new polygraphers. He is a member
. . . and.director of the Canadian Association of Police Polygraphists
and a member of the American Polygraph Association.
His involvement with this case took place on August 17,
1984, _when the grievor was brought to the Polygraph Unit by
Sergeant James Hughes to keep an appointment made earlier in the
day. Sergeant Hughes was one of the investigating officers who _.,:. .
attended at the Public Trustee's office that morning to interview
various people, including the grievor, Sergeant Hughes asked the
grievor if she would be willing to undergo a polygraph test, and
his evidence is that she agreed without hesitation to do so. The
evidence is somewhat equivocal as to whether all of the persons
$10 might have had access to the money were also asked to undergo
a polygraph test. In any case, as it transpired, no one else
- 58 -
except the grievor was tested.
The evidence indicates that the grievor arrived at the
Polygraph Unit at 1:53 p.m. on August 17. She was introduced to
Sergeant Scharger, and it seems likely that he was given to
believe by Sergeant Hughes that she was the prime suspect in
relation to these thefts. From that point on, the grievor was
alone with Sergeant Scharger in the polygraph room in relatively
restricted physical surroundings. After a .few brief
preliminaries, she was given a copy of the Metropolitan Toronto
Police publication entitled "Your Rights:When Asked to Take a
Polygraph Examination", and was left to.read it. This booklet,
which is mostly in question and answer. form, is obviously
designed to allay any concerns the subject might have about
VVfailing".the test when telling .the truth, and at the same time
to convince the subject that any deception will be. detected.
Without going into detail, this document includes a number of
half truths, and at least one or two statements which are.
demonstrably false. .' In particular, the booklet includes the..
following statement:
We know of no verified instance ,of a com-
petent polygraphist reporting, a truthful
person as untruthful. It can happen, however, that an untruthful person is
reported to be truthful, but even this occurs
rarely (about once out of 100 cases). ,_
As will be seen below, this statement about the
accuracy of the polygraph is not accepted'by even its-most ardent
supporters. We make no moral judgment on this document; obvious-
- 59 -
ly the form of the document is designed to achieve a purpose and
to prepare the subject psychologically for the test. We make
these observations only to give some indication of what the
griever's state of mind might have been during and after the
polygraph examination.
Shortly after leaving her to read the booklet, Sergeant
Scharger returned to the polygraph room and hadda~ brief discus-
sion about the investigation and her willingness to take the
polygraph test. He then began to fill out a standard polygraph
procedure form which required him to read the'customary warning
from his warrant card, and to ask her if she understood.. She
indicated that she did, and was asked to sign a consent form in
the following terms:
.I, Sandra Khan -I do hereby voluntarily,
without threats, promises of immunity or
'reward and without duress, coercion or force,
_ agree to take a polygraph (lie detector)
examination, to be given to me by a member of
the Metropolitan Toronto Police Force. I
fully realize that I am not obliged to say
anything and thatanything I say may be given
in evidence.
The grievor signed this form at 2:04 ,p.m., and her
signature was witnessed by Sergeant Scharger, who added a
quotation from the grievor, "Irm here. on my own will", beneath
his signature. The timing of this document gives some indication
,as to the amount of time given to the grievor to reflect on the
information booklet which she was asked to read. .:.
The wrest of the form is used to assist the polygrapher
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in preparing control questions and the relevant questions, and in
gathering further details about the matter to be investigated.
This document, and another document entitled "Polygraph Back-
ground Information", asks a number of quite personal questions,
including questions relating to medical history, .medications
. being taken, pregnancy and menstruation. The Polygraph Back-
ground Information form indicates that it was started at 2:05
p.m., and completed at 2:25 p.m.
At this point, using a form entitled "Modified Zone
* Comparison Questions Wordings", Sergeant Scharger prepared the 10
questions to be asked on the test. The test form provides for a
question confirming the subject's name, and then includes three
irrelevant questions. There~ are spaces for three relevant
questions, but in fact Sergeant Scharger only asked one question
three times, posed in slightly differing ways, whether between
September 1983 and March 1984 the subject stole any of the
missing money. The control questions were: "Not connected with
this ,case, do you remember ever stealing anything?", "Besides
what you have told me, not connected with this case, do you
remember ever cheating anyone out of anything?", and "Not con-
nected with this case, do you remember ever doing anything you
were ashamed of?:' The somewhat different form of the second
question is apparently because, in the course of discussion, the
grievor admitted to a concern not here relevant.
It should be observed that there is no record of how
these questions were actually compiled; and Sergeant Scharger.'s
- 61 -
evidence was couched in the form of what he would have done,
rather than what he actually did do in these circumstances. In
any case, he was able to negotiate with the grievor three control
questions to which she would answer in the negative, and he thus
had all of the questions which he needed to complete the.test.
Following this exercise,: he returned to the polygraph
room, connected the sensors to. the grievor's body,, proceeded
through the' number test already referred to, and then went
directly on to the three formal tests. During the first of these
tests, there was some difficulty With the galvanic skin reaction
sensor, but the other indicators appeared to be working properly.
Sergeant Scharger made some adjustments between the first and
second test, and readings were obtained from all three sensors
for the second and third tests.
Following the test, Sergeant Scharger took the graph
with him outside the test room, leaving the grievor connected to
the machine.. He scored the test and got a final score of -11,
which fit clearly into the defined deceptive range. He concluded
that the ,grievor was deceptive, and returned to the room to
inform her of his findings. At that point he disconnected her,
and the post-test interview began, a matter to which we shall
return in more detail below.
In his evidence before us, Sergeant Scharger gave his
opinion that the grievor was deceptive in her answers to the
relevant questions asked to her on August 17, 1984. The Employer
seeks to put this opinion into evidence as the expert opinion of
. . .
- 62 -
a skilled polygrapher. It will be obvious that, if this evidence
is both admissible and reliable, the grievor must also have been
deceptive when she gave negative answers to essentially the same
questions before us, from which one can only conclude that she
did indeed take the money. It therefore becomes of central
importance in this case to assess the extent to which polygraph
evidence is admissible before us, and the extent to which we can
reasonably place reliance on Sergeant Scharger's opinion as to
the truthfulness of the grievor's answers on August 17, 1984 and,
by extension, in evidence before us. We therefore turn to a
detailed consideration of those issues.
The Union's first objection to the polygraph evidence
is .that it is, as a matter of law, not admissible in judicial or
quasi-judicial proceedings in Canada. While there has been a
substantial amount written on this issue in lower courts, the
most significant decision is the recent :judgment of the Supreme
Court of Canada in R. v. Beland and Phillips, (1987) 78 N.R. 263.
In that case, the court upheld its previous decision in Phillion
V. R. [i978] 1 S.C.R. 18, 14 N.R. 371. Phillion had~ been decided
on the basis that a statement by an accused to a polygraph
operator asserting his innocence and bolstered by the polygraph'
operator's expert opinion that the statement was truthful would
offend against the hearsay rule, since the accused had not
testified himself. In Beland and Phillips, both accused had
testified at trial, and the polygraph evidence was sought to be
introduced to bolster the credibility of the denial given in
- 63 -
evidence by the accused.
When the matter came before the Supreme Court, the
majority found four reasons to reject it as inadmissible. The
first three reasons, because of the dynam$s of the particular
case, are not really relevant to the way in which the present
matter comes before us. The fourth ground, however, is directly
relevant, and must be explored in greater detail.
The majority determined that to permit this evidence to
be called would be an improper use of expert evidence.
court's analysis is as follows:
Expert Evidence
Cl51 It was also argued .that the polygraph
evidence was receivable as expert evidence.
The polygraph operator, as an expert, was trained and qualified to give his opinion as
to the veracity of the witness, based solely .~on his interpretation of the significance of
the responses made by the witness to the
questions put on the examination.
[161 The role of the expert witness was
defined in this Court in R. v. Abbey, [1982]
2 S.C.R. 24; 43 N.R. 30. Speaking for the
Court, Dickson J., (as he then was) said, at
p. 42 S.C.R.:
The
With respect to matters calling
for special knowledge, an expert in
the field may draw inferences and
state his opinion. An expert's
function is precisely this: To
provide the judge and jury with a
ready-made inference which the
judge and jury, due. to the techni-
cal nature of the facts, are unable
to formulate. 'An expert's opinion
is admissible to furnish the. Court
with scientific information which
is likely to be outside the
experience and knowledge of.a judge
- 64 -
or jury. If on the proven facts a
judge or jury 'can form their own
conclusions without help, then the
opinion of the expert is unneces-
sary' (Turner (1974), 60 Crim. App.
R. 80, at p. 83, per Lawton, L.J.)"
It was said in David v. Maaistrate of the
Citv of Edinburah; [1953] S.C. 34, at p. 40,
by Lord Cooper:
"Their duty is 'to furnish the Judge
or jury withy the necessary scien-
tific criteria for testing the
accuracy of their conclusions, so
as to enable the Judge or jury to
form their own independent judgment
by the application of these
criteria to the facts proved in
evidence."
The function of the expert witness is to
provide for the jury or other-trier of fact
an expert's opinion as to. the significance
of, or the inference which may be drawn from
proved facts in a field in which the expert
witness possesses special knowledge and
experience going beyond that of the trier of
fact. The expert witness is permitted to
give such opinions for the assistance of the
jury. Where the question is done which falls
within the knowledge and experience of the
triers of fact, there is no need for expert
evidence and an opinion will not be received.
Cl71 Here, the sole issue upon which the
polygraph evidence is adduced is the credi-
bility of the accused, an issue well within
the experience of judges and juries and one
in which no expert evidence is required. It
is a basic tenet of our legal system that
judges and juries are capable of assessing
credibility and reliability of evidence.
This question has been the subject of a
comment by Michael Abbe11 in Polygraph
Evidence: The Case Asainst Admissibilitv in
Federal Criminal Trials (1977), 15 Am. Crim.
L. Rev. 29, who said, at p. 55:
"Witness or defendant veracity has
seldom been viewed a technical
issues on which 'untrained' laymen
- 65 -
are unqualified to reach intel-
ligent determinations after being
exposed to all of the evidence in a
case. Indeed, it has been the
traditional function of jurors in
our system to apply their own daily
experiences to the .testimony and
the other evidence presented to
them to determine which witnesses
are truthful. It is the jurors'
own 'expertise' in conducting their
personal and business affairs which
our judicial system has long
regarded as making them specially
qualified to make this determina-
tion;
I adopt these words, and I am therefore of
the view that polygraph evidence aimed at
supporting the credibility of the accused is
not receivable as evidence in Canada.
1181 In conclusion, it is my opinion, based
upon a consideration of rules of evidence
long established and applied in our courts,
that the polygraph has no place in the judicial~ process where it is employed as a
tool to determine or to test the credibility
of witnesses. It is frequently argued that
the polygraph represents an application of
modern scientific knowledge and experience to
the task of determining the veracity of human
utterances. It is said that the courts
should welcome this device and not. cling to
the imperfect methods of the past in such an
important task. This argument has a super-
ficial appeal but, in my view,. it cannot
prevail in the face of the realities of court
procedures.
Cl9 1 I- would say at once that this view is
not based on a fear of,,the inaccuracies of
the polygraph. On that question we were not
supplied with sufficient evidence to reach a
conclusion. However, it, may be said that
even the finding of a significant percentage-:
of error in its results would not, by itself,
be sufficient ground to exclude it as an
instrument 'for use in the, courts. Error is
inherent in human affairs, scientific or
unscientific. It exists within our es-
tablished court procedures and must always be
- 66 -
guarded against. The compelling reason, in
my view, for the exclusion of the evidence of
polygraph results in judicial proceedings is
two-fold. First, the admission of polygraph evidence would run counter to the well
established rules of evidence which have been
referred to. Second, while there is no
reason why the rules of evidence should not
be modified where improvement will result, it
is my view that the admission of polygraph
evidence will serve no purpose which is not
already served. It will disrupt proceedings,
cause delays, and lead to numerous complica-
tions which will result in no greater degree
of certainty in the process than that which
already exists.
[201 Since litigation replaced trial by
combat, the determination of fact, including
the veracity of parties and their witnesses,
has been the duty of judges or juries upon an
evaluation of the statements of witnesses.
This approach has led to the development of a
body of rules relating to the giving and
reception of evidence and we have developed
methods which have served well and have gained a wide measure of approval. They have facilitated the orderly conduct of judicial
proceedings and are designed to keep the
focus of the proceedings on the principal
issue, in a criminal case, the guilt or
innocence of the accused. What would be
served .by the introduction of evidence of
polygraph readings into the judicial process?
To begin with, it must be. remembered that
however scientific it may be; its use in
court depends on the human interventionof
the operator. Whatever results are recorded
by the polygraph instrument, their nature and
significance reach the trier of fact through
the mouth of the operator. Human falsibility
is therefore present as before, but now it
may be said to be fortified with the mystique
of science. Then, it may be asked, what does
it do? It provides evidence on the issue of .-..
the' credibility of a witness. This has always been a collateral issue and one to be
decided by the trier of fact. Is the trier
of fact assisted by hearing, firstly from
witness ttB88, a polygraph operator, that "A" wasp probably truthful? What would the result
be, one may ask, if the polygraph operator
- 67 -
concluded from his test that witness rrA1' was
lying? Would such evidence be admissible,
could it be excluded by witness "A", could it
be introduced by the Crown? These are
serious questions and they lead to others.
Would it be open to the opponent of the
person relying upon the polygraph to have a
second polygraph examination taken for his.
purposes? If the results differed, which
would prevail, and what right would there be
for compelling the production of polygraph
evidence in the possession of--.a reluctant
party? It is this fear of turmoil in the
courts which leads.'me to reject the poly-
graph. Like Porter, C.J.O., in Kvselka, I
would not wish to see a return to the.method
of prenorman trials where parties relied
heavily on oath-helpers who swore to. the.ir
veracity. For a description of the role of
the oath-helper in early times, see'.
Holdsworth, A Historv. of Enalish Law (7th Ed.
1956), vol. 1, at pp. 305-308, and Walsh,
Outline of the History of Enslish and'~
American Law (N.Y. Univ. Press 1926) at pp.
90-100 (footnote II). I would seek to ~._ preserve the principle that in the resolution . of disputes in litigation, issues of credi-
ability will be decided by human triers of
fact, using their experience of human ,affairs
and basing~ judgment upon their assessment of.
the witness and on consideration of how an
individual's evidence fits into the general
picture revealed on a consideration of the
whole of the case.
One of the two judges who did not concur in the entirety of the
majority decision adopted "human fallibility in assessing the
proper weight to be given to evidence cloaked under the mystique
of science, and the Inadvisability of expending time on col-
lateral issuesl! as the sole basis of joining in the result, and
thus joined in the part of the decision relevant to the proceed-
ings before us. Wilson, J. dissented, on the basis that the
evidence did not offend any of the exclusionary rules, and ought
- 68 -
therefore to be admitted, subject to the traditional tests of
relevancy and helpfulness.
It will be observed that even these observations do not
fit precisely the situation before us. All of the reported
Canadian criminal cases are "defence polygraphI* problems, and it
seems. to be almost universal practice not to call polygraph
evidence for the prosecution in Canada. Our problem is dif-
ferent. This is a case where the polygraph evidence is designed
to impeach the credibility'of the grievor and, in effect, to tip
the balance of a marginal case based on circumstantial evidence.
Nevertheless, the decision of the court on the "expert evidence"
ground is very broadly stated, and stated in. terms of policy that
-simply cannot be ignored. It is of interest that the court does
not rely upon a fear of the inaccuracies of the polygraph, but
rather relies upon a central issue of process, ,that polygraph
evidence will serve no purpose which has not been already served,
and that the putative value of polygraph evidence would be far
outweighed by its prejudicial effect before juries, and its
considerable complication of the judicial process.
We are aware that our jurisdiction is broader than that .~ ,.,. .::
of the courts bound by the decision of the Supreme Court of
Canada, in that we have jurisdiction to receive evidence whether
or not it is inadmissible in court. On the other hand, what the
Supreme Court seems to have decided is that polygraph evidence,
even if admitted, would be of questionable cogency. We would
therefore be extremely reluctant to rely upon this evidence on
- 69 -
the basis that it has been found, as a matter of principle, to be
inadmissible by the court of last resort of this jurisdiction.
We shall turn subsequently to our assessment of the
value which the polygraph evidence might offer to a decision
maker. Before doing so, however, we think it is essential to
record our entire concurrence in the concerns expressed by the
Supreme Court of Canada that polygraph evidence will "disrupt
proceedings, cause delays, and lead to numerous complications".
In the case before us, it was necessary to call not only the
polygrapher who had performed the examination, but also.~an expert
witness to support the Employer!s case, and an expert witness to
support the Union's case. While some of the Employer's expert
evidence~~was aimed at more general questions of the accuracy of
polygraph evidence, a significant amount of it was directed to
the questions of whether this polygraph, examination had been
properly. carried out in accordance with e,$ablished procedures,
and whether the determination of deception was based on an
accurate reading of the charts.
.J.he Employer therefore produced an expert to testify
that the grievor was deceptive, and another expert to, testify
that the first expert was gua.lified to offer such opinion
evidence,~ had been trained in accordance with accepted practices,
had conducted the test in accordance with generally accepted
methods, and had come to a correct conclusio-n from the readings
obtained. Although the Union chose not to attack the evidence on
these 'technical grounds, another party might, in an appropriate
- 70 -
case, decide to do exactly that. As .will be seen, there is scope
for a great deal of judgment in administering a polygraph test,
and in scoring the results obtained. There is also a significant
degree of distrust of many polygraph training.programs, although
not of the one involved here, and there will obviously always be
a significant question of the competence of any particular poly-
graph operator.
As the Supreme Court of Canada observes, thi.s is an
enormous complication in the judicial process. Before us,
evidence took days, even without a significant challenge to
polygraph t&t on a technical basis. As a matter of pol
the
icy,
the
before embarking on such an exercise, one would want to be
assured of some significant contribution to the fact finding
process. We shall discuss below our view of the magnitude of
that contribution, but at this stage we wish to observe that, if
such a dramatic change is to be made in the way in which credi-
bility is to be assessed'in our courts and tribunals, it ought to
be done in an authoritative and universal way; so that the
question of accuracy and admissibility does not have to be
'. litigated in every single case, and so that the qualifications
required to render someone an expert in polygraphy can be firmly
established in a way thatwill command general acceptance. This
might be done by statutory intervention through the legislative
process, or' following a Royal Commission report, or possibly by
an authoritative decision of the Supreme Court of Canada in a
case where. the relative usefulness of polygraph evidence can
- 71 -
properly be weighed against the disruption to be caused.
Without such an authoritative 'signal of a' change of
direction in our law, however, we would be entirely content to
deal with the polygraph evidence in this case on the basis of the
important issues of principle relied upon by the Supreme Court of
Canada, and we would exercise our statutory discretion to accept
or reject such evidence in favour of rejection. Because of the
significance of the arguments made in this case, however, and the
fact that we received a full exposition of a number of other
important issues, we shall proceed to deal with those matters as
well.
We observe that, prior to the decision of the Supreme
Court in Beland and Phillios, there had been a number of-observa-
tions by tribunals in the labour relations area to essentially :
the same effect as the majority of the Supreme Court of Canada.
on policy grounds, stated in even stronger terms in respect of
labour relations hearings than by the Supreme Court, arbitrators
and labour relations boards have been most reluctant to embark
upon the road to institutionalized use of the polygraph. One of
the earliest decision was that of this Board in Re Adams and -..'
Ministrv of Correctional Services (1978) 140/77, where the Board
dealt with the matter partly on the basis of perceived un-
reliability, and partly on the basis of labour relations policy
issues. In a similar vein is Re Xinaswav TranSDOrtS Ltd. and
Teamsters Union, Local 938 (1983~), 10 L.A.C. (3d) 440 (Brandt),
which proceeds largely on the basis of a comparis~on of the
- 72 -
advantage to be expected from the polygraph evidence weighed
against the enormous increases in cost and complexity.
A further decision along the same lines is Olvmoia &
York Develowments Limited (1986), 11 C.L.R.B.R. (N.S.) 412
'(O.L.R.B.), in which the Ontario Labour Relations Board con-
sidered these issues inrelation'not only to the two cases cited
immediately above, but also in relation to the Employment
Standards Act, R.S.O. 1980, c. 137, ss. 39a - 39d, and concluded
that the discretion given to that board to accept evidence
whether or not admissible in a court of law, materially identical
to our discretion, should be exercised against the admission of ..~
polygraph evidence. While the Employment Standards Act provi-
sions diddnot apply directly to the circumstances in which
polygraph evidence was sought to be introduced,in that case, as
they do not in the case before us, the Board nevertheless feared
the "unintended and undesirable erosion of the .protection given
by statute to employees from polygraph testing". Specifically,.
the Board was concerned that the introduction of polygraph
evidence into the proceedings of the Labour Relations Board would
put significant and irresistible pressures on employees contest-
~,ing.matters.before the Board to submit to polygraph testing under
the pressure of being at a disadvantage in critical litigation
against parties who had undergone such testing for the purposes
of that litigation. Again, the Bo~ard balanced the overriding
benefit to be expected against the danger to the existing process . .
if polygraph evidence were to be admitted, and concluded that
- 73 -
whatever benefit there might be would not be worth it. To a
similar effect, in somewhat different circumstances, is a U.S.
arbitration award, ,Re Kisco Comvanv Inc. (1980) 75 L.A. 574
(Stix).
This is not to say that the jurisprudence has been
uniformly against reliance on polygraph evidence. In addition to
a number of cases,.both in this country and'in the United States,
where the evidence~appears to have been admitted without any real
critical discussion either of its propriety or its value, there
are two Canadian cases which require closer scrutiny. The first
of these is Re Cornoration of the Reoional Municioalitv of
Haldimand-Norfolk (Grandview Lodse) and Health. Office and
Professional Emolovees, Local 206 (1985), 20 L.A.C. (3d) 131
(Samuels), which constitutes the first interim decision relating
to the admissibility of p,ooygraph evidence in that case: the
second interim decision is found under the same style of cause at
(1985) I 22 L.A.C. (3d) 123. These decisions were based on an
analysis of the admissibility question which has, of course, been
cast into considerable doubt by the decision of the Supreme Court
of Canada in Beland and Phillius, m. More to the point,
however, the arbitration board appears to have proceeded on the
basis that the polygraph evidence was relevant, and. could be of
some use, and therefore ought to be received and assessed just
like any other piece of evidence for its cogency and weight. The
majority award appears to come to the conclusion that,. because
the polygraph evidence may be of some assistance, the other
policy concerns raised i
above should simply be ]
polygraph evidence can be
We regret that 1
board in the Haldimand-No:
exercise inherent in the ]
majority of that board 1
shaped to some extent b)
Ca.nada in Beland and Phil
Ontario Labour Relations
to the point, however, w
how the balance ought to 1
and the complexities 0:
influenced by our view of
turn below.
It is signific
Norfolk case, the major
judgments about the value
are open to persuasion
difficulties in its use.
doing nothing more than
hearing before us, in PI
evidence on this issue,
admissibility and weight.
Norfolk case can be ascril
Virtually the :
- 74 -
the cases to which we have referred
aced on hold until the value of the
.etermined.
do not agree with the position of the
0 case on the issue,of the balancing
mlicy issue. With great respect to the
recognize that our approach may be
the decision of-the Supreme Court of
iDS‘ as well as by the decision of the
oard in Olvmvia & York. Perhaps more
readily acknowledge .that our view of
struck, between the value of the test
relying upon it, is significantly
he value of such evidence, to which we
nt that; throughout the Haldimand-
ty insist that they. are making no
of polygraph evidence whatsoever, but
that its value might overweigh the -'~
In many ways, the majority award is
re did, orally in the course. of the
mitting the parties to put in their
subject to this determination of its
We do not think that the Haldimand-
d any greater meaning that this.--
me observation can be made about @
- 75 -
Workers' Comnensation Board and Workers' Comoensation Board
Emolovees' Union (1986), 25 L.A.C. (3d) 53 (Fraser), a decision
which is based on a fact situation parallel to that before us.
The grievor in that case had been discharged for an alleged
theft! and the employer sought to rely upon polygraph evidence
produced during a police investigation of the theft.' The
majority of the board of: arbitration agreed to receive this
evidence for reasons which rely heavily upon the first interim
decision in the Haldimand-Norfolk case, and which therefore
suffer, in our view, from the same difficulty in relation to the
Supreme Court of Canada's decision in Beland and Phillios,
although that board did have the opportunity to consider, and
reject, the view of the Ontario Labour Relations Board in the
Olvmuia & York case.
_L. i . . . Once again, however, the decision does no more than to
permit the employer in that case to attempt to convince the board
that the polygraph evidence is of value, ,and should be taken into
account in assessing the central issue of the credibility of the
grievor. The additional -evidence received by us in the present
case puts us at a stage considerably beyond the determination of
the boards of arbitration in both of these cases.
We therefore turn, finally, to 'our assessment of the
scientific evidence placed before us by the parties as to the
reliability of polygraph evidence in general, and the evidence of
Sergeant Scharger in relation to this polygraph examination in
particular. TheEmployer called as its expert witness Dr. David
- 76 -
Raskin, Professor of Psychology at the University of Utah. There
is little doubt that Dr. Raskin is the leading.expert on poly-
graphs , in which he is involved on many levels from experimental
research into the accuracy of polygraph testing to actual
administration of polygraph tests. He is also a consultant for a
large number of institutional users of polygraphy, in the United
States and around the world, and is involved on a consulting and
teaching basis in a number of training programs, including that
at the Canadian Police College where Sergeant Scharger received
his training. We have summarized a substantial amount of Dr.
Raskinjs evidence above in our discussion of how polygraph
examinations work, and we are indebted to him for his careful,
thorough and frank appraisal of the current ,state of sckentific
knowledge about the accuracy of polygraph tests.
The second aspect of Dr. Raskin's. evidence was his
assessment of Sergeant Scharger's test in this particular case.
He spoke with high approval of the training program at the
Canadian Police College; to which he consults on a regular basis,
and was therefore prepared to vouch for the quality of the
training which Sergeant Scharger had received. He indicated that
the Canadian Police College course is of a very high order, and
that results produced by its graduates thus do not suffer from
the considerable difficulties that are often encountered when
polygraph testing is done by unskilled and badly trained opera-
tors.
He also testified that, in his opinion, the test which
- 77 -
Sergeant Scharger used was the most effective form of polygraph
examination available, one which he uses regularly in his
research and consulting, and that, to the extent that he was able
to assess such matters from the paper record ,and Sergeant
Scharger's own testimony, he was satisfied that the test had been
carried out in accordance with proper procedures.
Finally, he testified that his evaluation of the charts
produced during the grievor's examination, which he did "blind",
not~knowing how Sergeant Scharger had scored the test, indicated
that Sergeant Scharger's scoring was accurate, and that it
compared favourably to his, own scoring, and to a scoring done by
a computer-based system developed under his supervision at the
University of Utah. He also testified that the difficulties
encountered with the galvanic skin response in the first test did
not, in this particular case, make any difference~to the relia-
bility of the results.
We accept all of this evidence without reservation, and
we observe that the Union essentially did the same, since it made
no real effort, apart from careful testing on cross-examination,
to challenge the result of the test on technical grounds. The
real dispute between the parties is at a much more fundamental
level, since the Unions argues that polygraph tests are inherently
unreliable, and ~therefore should not be given any weight. in
judicial or quasi-judicial proceedings.
The scientific literature reveals that there has been
an ongoing debate in the scientific community 'about the validity
- 7% -
and accuracy of polygraph testing. Dr. Raskin has been, we think
it is fair to say, the most prominent proponent of polygraph
tests as a valid tool for detecting deception. The most promi-
nent opponent of the tests has been Dr. David Lykken, of the
University of Minnesota. More recently, Dr. John Furedy,
Professor-of Psychology at the University of Toronto, has emerged
as another prominent critic of the accuracy of the test, certain- . .
ly the most active researcher in this area in Canada. Dr. Lykken
did not testify before us, although we were provided with a
number of his writings. Dr. Furedy was the Union's expert
witness in these hearings.
We should observe that we were impressed by the
frankness and integrity of both '~of the expert witnesses who
appeared before us, and while they differ significantly from'each
other, we acknowledge that they hold their differing opinions
honestly, and that their disagreement is measured and respectful.
We begin with an analysis of the two positions as presented to us
at the hearing.
Dr. Raskin's.,research, and his analysis of the research.
of others, may be found described in D.C. Raskin, "The Polygraph
in 1986: Scientific, Professional and Legal Issues Surrounding
Application and Acceptance of Polygraph Evidence", Utah Law
Review (1986) No. 1, p. 29ff. Dr.~Raskin reviews the research to
that date in his article, and reaches a number of conclusions
which he repeated, with some.elaboration based on subsequent
research, in his evidence before us. Based on the results oft
.~
..I
- 79 -
five "laboratory mock crime experiments 'I between 1978 and 1982,
all but one of which was performed under his own direction, he
concluded that "a combined accuracy of decisions was 95%". This
percentage figure, however, requires some elaboration. First,
inconclusive results, which make up about 8% of the total of all
of these tests,. are counted as correct for the ~purpose of the
accuracy calculation. Second, the majority of errors are "false
positive", diagnosing deception in subjects 'who were actually
truthful, which outnumbered "false negative" results by a ratio
of between 2 to 1 and 3~to 1. Based on this study, Dr. Raskin
was prepared to conclude- that,. on all of his experience, the
polygraph was on average 90% accurate in -detecting. deception,
although there was a tendency for considerably more "false
positive" results than "false negative" results.
[For -the purposes of clarity, we shall use the therms
"false deceptive" to describe a result that wrongly shows .a
truthful person to be deceptive: and "false truthful" for the
opposite. The terms used in the literature are confusing,
particularly since a negative sign on a test score indicates
deception.]
It must be observed that the accuracy figures discussed
here are based 'on those laboratory studies which Dr. Raskin was
prepared to accept as properly carried out. As we have noted, he
was one of the investigators, presumably the principal inves-
tigator, in four of the five studies which he. accepts. Indeed;
the thrust of Dr. Raskin's research and writings is that poly-
- 80 -
graph testing, as practiced particularly in the United States, is
extremely inaccurate because of poor technique and poor training,
but can be made much more accurate through careful attention to
the procedural improvements which he has promoted for many years.
Other researchers have~.not achieved nearly the accuracy
rates that he has achieved in laboratory tests. Eventhe one
other study which he accepts; that performed by Dawson in 1980 _j
(see Dawson, "Physiological Detection of Deception: Measurement
of Responses to Questions and Answers During Countermeasure
Maneuvers, 17 Psvchoohvsiolosy 8 (1980)) reported a 17% false
deceptive rate among innocent, subjects. Studies by other
researchers, which for one reason or another have been rejected
by Dr. Raskin as untrustworthy, have found even higher false
deceptive rates.
Moreover, all of the accepted results are based upon
laboratory simulation of crimes. Subjects are instructed whether
to commit the mock crime or not, and are then offered a reward,
usually a monetary bonus, if ,they can obtain a truthful test
outcome on polygraph examination. Dr. Raskin's 1986 article
makes the following observation, at p. 42:
These error rates indicate the limita-
tions of the control question technique, even
when it is Derformed under carefullv con-
trolled conditions bv hiqhlv . skrlled ex-
aminers with extensive vsvcholoaical traininq
exvertise.
Because laboratorv simulations are not
real life situations, esoeciallv in terms of
the nesative conseauences of failins the test
and the rewards of nassino the test, addi-
- 81 -
tional studies are required to estimate the
accuracy of polygraph examinations conducted
in actual criminal investigations. [Emphasis
added.]
_
Unfortunately, there is not yet a satisfactory body of
evidence based on field studies of the accuracy of polygraph
testing. Any number of factors confound the researcher in this
area, in particular the difficulty in finding acceptable criteria
for -innocence and guilt. Obviously judicial outcomes are not
sufficient, since the degree to which they may depart from actual
guilt or innocence is difficult to measure. Some of the mechani-
sms attempted have been to compare polygraph results with the
opinions of panels of experienced attorneys and judges who have
reviewed the complete case. A 198; study by the Office of
Technology Assessment of the U.S. Congress purported to qualify
10 field studies as meeting minimal scientific criteria for
adequate methodology, but Dr. Raskinrejects many of these as not
meeting his standards of methodology. His views on field studies
in 1986 may be summarized in his own words, at p. 46:
If one accepts only those studies that used
criminal suspects, experienced polygraph
examiners and normal procedures for evalua-
ting polygraph charts, then the accuracy of
decisions in field studies is approximately
90% for guilty and innocent subjects.
Nevertheless, problems and questions .concern-
inq all field studies remain. More research
is needed to obtain definitive answers about
accii'racy based on field data.
Against Dr. Raskin's sanguine views on the accuracy of
the polygraph, we must set Dr. Furedy's reservations. Dr. Furedy
- a2 -
has been at the University of Toronto since 1967, where one focus
of his work has been psychophysiology, the study of psychological
processes using physiological measures. His impressive academic
credentials include publications relating to experimental work in
several areas of psychophysiology, including applications of the
principles of this science to both biofeedback techniques and
Polywaphy. His particular interest in 'the nature of scientific
controversy led him to take special note of the high profile
dispute between Dr. Raskin'and Dr. Lykken about the accuracy of
polygraph examinations. As a consequence, he has been engaged in
the 1980.% with the merits of this controversy, and has come to
the conclusion that Dr. Lykken is closer tp the truth than Dr.
Raskin. His views on the controversy are set out most fully in
Furedy and Heselgrave, "The Forensic Use of the Polygraph: A
Psychophysiological Analysis of Current Trends and Future
Prospects", to Abe published in Jennings _et al. Advances in
Psvchoohvsioloqy, Volume 3, an advance copy of which was provided i
to us in evidence. The essence of his argument is' that the
polygraph test, even when carried out in accordance with accepted
standards and by qualified op&%tors, has the possibility of a
high order of error. He reasons that the control question
technique relies- on a non-standardized procedure, and thus is
simply not susceptible of scientifically-based analysis and- 1.
validation.
There are really two aspects to these concerns. The
first is that the so-called control question is not a control in
.~
'..
- 83 -
the normal scientific sense of the term. There is no basis to
assume that the reaction identified as deception will in fact be
the same, in the sense that it is identifying identical psycholo-
gical reactions, to the control questions and to the relevant
questions. The control questions may be evoking deception in the
subjects, or they may not; the difficulty is that it is absolute-
ly impossible to know what it is that the reaction to the control
guestions, is measuring. L, . ..I. :' :
The second difficulty is that the control question
technique relies upon a "control" which is not standardized in
any real sense. It is, at best, ,worked out between the examiner
and the subject, and is therefore a function of the skill of the
examiner, and the rapport between the examiner and the subject.
In Dr. Furedy's view, it is simply impossible to make a meaning-
ful comparison of the response to a relevant question with that
.to a control question, 'when the factors which affect the useful-
ness of that question are so unquantifiable and uncontrollable.
Dr. Furedy essentially dismisses all laboratory experi-
ments on the accuracy of polygraphs as being irrelevant to the
accuracy of the test as used in actual criminal investigations.
The motivation of the subjects is very different, there is no
element of moral guilt, and there is no fear either of discovery
or of false accusation. He is of the view that the only relevant
studies are field studies, of which he was prepared to accept
three as demonstrative of the likely accuracy of the control
question technique. According to those .studies, it is entirely
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possible for error rates to range as high as 508, and while he is
prepared to concede that the polygraph produces results that'are
better than chance in the hands of an experienced polygrapher, he
is not prepared to admit to any more enhanced accuracy rate than
that.
We should observe that Dr. Raskin had already rejected
two of these studies in his own evidence as being based on
questionable methodology. The one experiment which both Dr.
Raskin and Dr. Furedy appear to accept as valid is described in
Ginton et al.,' "A Method for Evaluating the Use of the Polygraph
in a Real-Life Situation", (1982) I Journal of ADDlied Psvcholoay i..~
67, 131-137. This experiment is a hybrid between laboratory and
field testing. Subjects were Israeli police officers on a
course, who were given a test as a part of the course which
provided an opportunity to cheat. The test also provided,
however, an absolute indication of whether the subject had
cheated or not. Seven of the 21 subjects in fact cheated. ,:-
Sometime later, the subjects were told that some of.
them were suspected of cheating, and were offered the opportunity
to take a polygraph test. It was made clear that their future
careers in the police might depend on the outcome of such a test.
After refusals and outright confessions, 15 subjects were tested,
of whom two had'actually cheated. A number of steps~ were taken
in the methodology to ensure that the polygraph. charts were
evaluated blindly and free of any inherent bias.
Leaving aside the ethical concerns of an experiment.of
- a5 -
this kind, which obviously concerned the experimenters, the data
are susceptible of a range of interpretations. The experimenters
expressed concern about the original group of polygraphers, on
the basis that they knew in advance that their judgments would
have no adverse consequences for the subjects, but could have
significant consequences for their own reputations as poly- . . . ~"
graphers. Nevertheless, this group did not achieve an impressive
accuracy rate. A second group of polygraphers, who scored the
tests again some months later, "must be treated with great
caution". This group included five of the original polygraphers,
plus three more, and the experimenters were concerned that some
feedback or discussion may have assisted them in enhancing their
. accuracy rate the second time around.
In any case, even the seclnd set of chart evaluations
demonstrate a significant false deceptive outcome. Every one of
the second, more accurate group of polygraphers found at 'least
one innocent subject to be deceptive, and two found four out of
13 to be deceptive using a "global evaluation", involving the
whole chart. While.the use of the "field scoring technique", the
method advocated by Dr. Raskin and used by Sergeant Scharger,
increased the number of inconclusive results dramatically, it
"did not improve the accuracy of the polygraphers in the present
study". The overall false deceptive rate was 17%, considerably
higher than Dr. Raskin's estimate of false deceptive rates based
on laboratory experiments.
We are aware of only one other proceeding in which
- 86 -
evidence of reliability has been tested through examination and
cross-examination of expert witnesses. That proceeding was a
voir dire in Her Maiestv the Oueen v. John Doe (2), an unreported
decision of Judge S.R. Kurisko of the Ontario District Court.
The proceedings took place in Thunder Bay, Ontario in the context
of a trial on two charges of indecent assault and one charge of
sexual assault against the father of,~a 12 year old complainant.
The polygraph examination was a defence polygraph which, presuma-
bly, would have supported the accused's exculpatory testimony.
Judge Kurisko concluded that the polygraph evidence. was admis-
sible. To that extent, therefore, his ruling is directly~
overruled by the Supreme Court of Canada in.Beland and PhilliDS.
Judge Kurisko had available to him as expert witnesses
Dr. Ben Silverberg,.the polyqrapher who did the test sought to be
admitted, Dr. Raskin and Dr. Lykken. We begin by admitting
unreservedly that Jud,ge Kurisko's analysis of the literature and
the issues is thorough, scholarly and most impressive. We have
not pretended in this opinion to anything like the same degree of
scholarly analysis, simply because to do so would be to reproduce
the work of Judge Kurisko. Nevertheless, we hope that we have
given the material before us at least 'the same anxious a&
careful consideration which was obviously given by Judge Kurisko..
Unfortunately, however, we have come to a different conclusion on
the question of the accuracy of polygraph evidence from that
arrived at by"the learned Judge.
Judge Kurisko made a finding of fact in two parts,
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which he calls the "validity fact":
(Part 1) Inferences about truth and decep- tion accurate to a significantly high degree
of probability can be made from an objective
evaluation of the physiological responses
shown on the charts obtained during a
polygraph examination employing the Control
Question Technique in relation to a-~specific-
incident criminal investigation. ~.
(Part 2) When such objective evaluation is
performed by examiners trained in the numeri-
cal system of evaluation used at the Univer-
sity of Utah the rate for interraterreliabil-
ity is extremely high (not less than 90%).
The issue of interraterreliability is one not rea ,llY
of much disputed before us. It is a measurement of the ability
properly trained polygraphers to reach the same conclusion as to
the appropriate score to be applied-to a particular test chart.
We understood both Dr. Raskin, and Dr. Furedy to accept a high "
interraterreliability factor, although such a finding is wholly
irrelevant to Dr. Furedy's view of the accuracy of the polygraph.
As to the first part of the validity fact, our discus-
sion of the scientific evidence above will indicate quite clearly
that what constitutes a "significantly high degree of probabili-
ty" is not a matter free of dispute. To begin with, our review
of the evidence would indicate that a determination of the kind
made by Judge Kurisko can only be. made on -the basis of the
laboratory experiments, whose relevance is open to considerable
question, and upon field studies, most of which use questionable
methodology..
In cross-examination before Judge Kurisko, Dr. Raskin
- 88 -
apparently was prepared to concede that some 15% of innocent
people would fail the test, even if properly done according to
his standards. This is a higher failure rate than Dr. Raskin
admitted before us, and nothing in his evidence explains why he
has altered his view in the interim. Before Judge Kurisko, Dr.
Raskin apparently presented a revised calculation based on field
stud& meeting his criteria for acceptable methodology which
showed a false deceptive. rate of 10%. This appears to be the
figure accepted by Judge Kurisko.
There his another factor to be considered, and that is
related to the dynamics of,,the question before Judge Kurisko. He
was, dealing with a subject who claimed to be innocent, and who
wished to introduce a polygraph test lVproving'S that proposition.
We are dealing with a subject who claims to be innocent, but who
faces a polygraph test which proclaims her to be deceptive. The
high false deceptive rate had no effect on the case before Judge
Kurisko, since he was abler to rely upon the relatively lower
false truthful rate. ~11 of the evidence, even if it is accepted
at face value, suggests that the test is much mores likely to Abe
wrong in the case of our qrievor than in the case of Judge
Kurisko's accused, assuming for the sake of argument that they
'are in fact both innocent. In other words, the danger that.the
polygraph test will put a false light on the innocence which they
claim is much higher for our grievor, and the consequences "of
accepting an incorrect polygraph test are much more serious.
In our view, however, the real issue is not tne
- 89 -
absolute failure rate of polygraph tests, even if we accept that
it is only in the range shown by the. labora~tory experiments and
the most optimistic of the field tests, but rather isrelated to
the guest$on of the relevance of a disputed scientific technique
to a fact finding process of the present kind. That issue
requires us to go considerably beyond the considerations dealt
with by Judge Kurisko.
Although, as will be seen from our discussion above, we
have serious doubts about the evidence on which the assessment of
accuracy of polygraph tests is based, we shall deal with these
further factors on, the basis that the accuracy of the test,
properly performed by a skilled and experienced examiner, is such
that about 15 out of every 100 innocent subjects tested will
falsely be shown deceptive. ~.We~ do not think that this is an
unreasonable conclusion to reach if we .,accept the available
evidence as valid and persuasive: we observe only that we would
have some difficulty, having regard to Dr. Furedy's reservations,
in making such a finding. But that would still mean that the
average properly train~ed, experienced and skilled polygrapher
would wrongly find one out of every seven innocent people to be
deceptive, and inferentially guilty.
We stress~ that, on the most favourable view of the
evidence on accuracy, this is only an average. Even if inter-
raterreliability can-achieve a very high level, there must still
be considerable variation in the abilities of polygraphers over
the entirety of the test, including the pre-test interview and
- 90 -
the formulation of the control and relevant guest
Raskin, when asked what happens in the pre-test
ions,
inter-v ,iew,
Dr.
prefaced his long list of matters to be covered with the words "A
lot! " The pre-test is a very important part of the exercise, and
both Dr. Raskin and Dr. Furedy, commenting as experts in psychol-
OgY, identified a number of ways in which the conduct of the prei
test could affect the accuracy of the test results. ._
We must therefore consider not the success rate of the
average polygrapher, but the success rate of Sergeant Scharger,
and at that point we run up against a brick wall. No validity
study has ever been done on Sergeant Scharger, nor is it likely
that one could be, nor would it be possible to submit every
polygrapher to a personal validity study in order to assess that
person's ability to detect deception. 'The fact is that we simply
canno~t know how good Sergeant Scharger is. Even though he .~~
attended a highly praised polygraphy course, it is a commonplace
that 50% of all polygraphers graduate in the bottom half of their
class. He is convinced that his tests are accurate, and Dr.
Raskin testified that he could see nothing in the material'before
him to indicate that this particular test was flawed, but this ..+-.' . .
does not go very far to satis.fy our concern that we simply cannot
know how good he is as a polygrapher., and therefore whether his
own success rate would tend toward the average, or be sig-
nificantly better or worse than the average. That individual
polygraphers can -vary in skill, incidentally, is. amply shown. by
an examination of almost all the studies, whether in the lab.ora-
- 91 -
tory or in the field.
Second, we cannot know anything about Sergeant
SchargerIs performance on the particular occasion when he tested
the grievor. We do not know whether it was one of his good days,
or one of his bad days; what we do know is ~that almost everyone
varies in ability in their chosen profession from day to day.
Much more important, we cannot know anything about how he
interacted with the grievor. This is a very complex mix of
psychological and interpersonal reactions,~ encompassing not only
Sergeant Scharger's abilities as an examiner, and the griever's
own susceptibility to polygraphy, but the interaction of those
two things, and their affect on the griever's physiological
responses.
In this regard, we observe that the griever in her
evidence spoke about her feelings, her concerns and her nervous-
ness. None of this, of course, is of any relevance. The grievor
cannot know how those psychological states can affect her
physiological reactions, and neither can we, and neither, except
on the basis of probabilities,. can Sergeant Scharger or Dr.
Raskin. Nevertheless, what the Employer asks us to do is to ~....
assume that this particular polygraph test will tend to the .
average ~accuracy, and act upon it on that basis. .We simply .'
cannot know that, and therefore cannot use this test unless we
can validly rely upon statistical probability.
As every school child learns ? but gamblers regularly
forget, probability has an independent effect on each repetition
- 92 -
of an experiment. Flipping a coin to "heads" ten times in a row
does not improve the chances of flipping a "tail" on the eleventh
chance, so even if this particular test tended to the average
estimate of accuracy, and even if the average estimate of
accuracy is valid, those averages give us no real,.assurance that
the grievor's deceptive score is a false deceptive.
Dr. Raskin very honestly said that he would feel very
uncomfortable relying on a polygraph alone, and that he would
only use it as a piece of evidence to be considered along with
all the other evidence available. As an investigative tool, the
polygraph can reasonably be used, this way. But the dynamics of
this case are that there is circumstantial -evidence which is at
best evenly balanced against the grievor. If we use the poly-
graph as a tie-breaker, and say that the test is more likely
accurate than not, then ultimately the polygraph has decided this
issue all by itself. It is one thing to assert that one is 85%
confident of the accuracy of the test; it is quite another thing
to say that one's confidence should' then be used to decide
someone's future.
In this regard, certain considerations raised by Dr.
Raskin in his. 1986 article about the effect of base rates on
statistical-accuracy may be considered. The base rate is the
prevalence of a particular state orcondition .in the population
of individuals being tested for the presence or absence of that
condition. In the case of a polygraph test, the applicable base
rate is the percentage of those tested for deception who are.in
- 93 -
fact actually deceptive. Confidence in positive and negative
test outcomes will be altered by the base rate. Dr. Raskin
explains it best, at page 55:
To illustrate how the base rate affects
the interpretation of a test outcome,
consider a hypothetical test that is 95%
accurate in detecting cancer. Confidence in positive and negative test outcomes is 95%
only when exactly half of the people given
the test actually have cancer. When the rate
of cancer in people who take the test departs
from 50%, confidence in test outcomes is no
longer 95%. Assume that only 10% of the
people who take the test actually shave
cancer. When the test outcome is negative
(indicates no cancer), we can be almost
certain (9,9% confidence) that a person doez'
not have cancer. However, only 68% of those
who obtain a positive test outcome will
actually have cancer. That is a false
positive rate of 32% and many people 'would
undergo unnecessary, costly and life- threatening treatments on the basis of the
test. 'On the other hand, consider a situa-
tion in which the test is administered only
to those people who had already been given
examinations that indicated a 90% likelihood
that cancer was present. When the test
outcome is positive, we would be virtually
certain that a person has cancer.. However,
with a base rate of 90% cancer among those
tested, only 68% of those who obtain negative
results will be free of cancer. fin other
words, 32% of those whom the test indicates
are free of cancer actually will have cancer
and will not receive-the necessary treatment.
On page 57, Dr. Raskin comments on some practical
applications of this phenomenon:
The figures in Table 2 indicate th:at,
regardless of which set of estimates of
polygraph accuracy one adopts, confidence iri
a deceptive outcomes is very high when the
base rate of guilt in the population of
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subjects tested is very high. However, under those circumstances, the confidence in a
truthful outcome is only moderate or low.
Conversely, if only a small proportion of the
population tested is guilty, confidence in a
truthful outcome is very high but the confidence in a deceptive outcome is only
moderate or low. The various base rates and
the corresponding confidence in outcomes are
related to the situations in which the polygraph might be applied.
Consider a situation in which a number
of people are tested and one of them is
guilty. That situation:;~might occur in a
commercial setting in which many employees
had access to an area from which a large
amount of cash .disappeared and the employer
required all of the employees to submit to
polygraph tests. A similar situation might
occur when the government investigates a leak
of sensitive information to the press.
Assume that ten people are tested and only
one is guilty, a base rate of 10%. We would
have almost complete confidence in the
truthfulness of those who passed the test, and the guilty person would be among those
who failed the test. It would be very risky
to terminate employment or take other actions
against a person who failed a polygraph test
under those circumstances, especially'if the
polygraph testing had been stopped after the
first deceptive result was obtained. AnY action based on the test results would have
at least a 50% risk of being wrong. The
damage to the innocent individual and the
possible litigation could be very costly.
‘.
It will be clear that'the situation that Dr. Raskin
describes is very similar to what occurred in this case, except
that the polygraph testing was stopped after only one of the four
people who "had access to an area from which a large amount of
--&&cash disappeared" had been tested. Had they all been tested, the
base rate of guilt in the population could have been assumed,
based.upon, the evidence which we have discussed above, to be 25%:
- 95 -
Even had the entire group been tested, the confidence we could
have in a finding of deception would be lowered significantly
from the estimated' accuracy of the test. Nevertheless, it would
have told us rather more than what a single test of the grievor
alone can tell us. To ask us to ascribe to the test performed on
the grievor the theoretical accuracy of the polygraph is to
assume that the base rate issue ~should be ignored for this
particular test. Not much was made of-.this by either side in
argument, and we do not propose to rely upon it very heavily, but
we are struck by the similarity between Dr. Raskin's example and
the case before us.
Before leaving the polygraph, we observe' that the
Employer suggested that the fact that all four employees had
agreed to take the test bolstered the credibility of the other
three employees, and thus inferentially reduced the griever's
credibility. We observe that the evidence is not perfectly clear
that all others were asked to take the test and actually agreed,
but even assuming, that was the case, we observe that only the
grievor actually went and did it, although she was only one of a
number of people under suspicion, and there is nothing in the
evidence to suggest that she was coerced into taking the test by
any other pressures. Since the others were not actually required
to sit down and take the test, we cannot be sure that they would
have gone through with it. In the Ginton et al. ~study, for
example, one guilty subject did not show up for the test, another
guilty sub j ect refused to take it, and three other guilty
- 96 -
subjects confessed before 'actually taking the test. We are of
the view that nothing can be assumed from the fact that the other
three employees agreed, if indeed they did agree, to take a
polygraph.
The conclusion which we come to from all of this is
that whatever confidence one might have in the skill and ex-
perience of the polygrapher, and the theoretical accuracy of the
~.test as a tool for investigation purposes, it would be dangerous
and improper to use it as a tie-breaker in difficult cases where
it amounts, because of the absence of any .~other conclusive
evidence, to the effective proof of guilt. On the other hand,
where the test amounts to only one piece of evidence to be
weighed along with the others, rather than the conclusive and
tie-breaking evidence, it would be outrageously expensive for the
little additional valie it would have.
As a conseqnence, we have come to the conclusion with
great respect that the Supreme C~ourt of Canada was right; and
that a careful examination of the evidence as to the accuracy of
the polygraph test, as well as a review of what has occurred in
this case and in the John,Doe case, indicates that as a matter of
policy polygraph evidence should not be permitted. Where the
test will amount to the tie-breaker in hard cases, it is not safe
or just to rely upon it. Where it is simply one piece of
evidence to be considered, its probative value is far outweighed
by the expense and, inconvenience involved in assessing it
properly.
- 97 -
With his customary clarity, Arbitrator Kevin Burkett
has put the matter as well as it can be put in Re Canada Post and
Canadian Union of Postal Workers (1983), 8 L.A.C. (3d) 60, at
page 69:
Notwithstanding the potential for. error,
however, polygraph evidence, if relied upon
at all, will "typically have controlling
weight in the arbitrator's resolution -of
credibilityl' [the quotation is from Re Xisco
co. Inc., supra] . When reference is had to
the potential for error and to the probable
effect where the issue before the trier of
fact is one of credibility, it is. not
surprising that the courts, with few excep-
tions, have refused to admit polygraphs.
Where the opinion of ~a qualified polygraph
examiner as to the truthfulness of a witness
where credibility is in dispute, carries with
it a significant risk of error (even when
based on a properly conduct~ed polygraph
examination), and where the opinion, which goes to the very issue in dispute, is likely
to haves l'controlling weight", the risk of
causing an injustice by relying on the
polygraph evidence is such that it should not
be given any weight;
The other aspect of the policy determination is the-:
question of the balance of cost and complexity against probative
value. On this point, there is only anecdotal evidence, but the
experience of Judge Kurisko is instructive. After lengthy
hearings and, if our experience is any yardstick, much lengthier
agonized consideration of the evidence and arguments, culminating
in a scholarly and lengthy judgment, Judge Kurisko ultimately
gave the polygraph test non weight whatsoever because of ,his
concern that the griever's memory of the alleged incident might
have been affected by a number of factors, including the use of
- 98 -
prescription drugs. The accused was acquitted, but the polygraph
evidence had absolutely no effect in bringing about that result.
We are therefore persuaded that, even if polygraph
evidence is admissible, and even if properly performed polygraph
tests can achieve the accuracy rates claimed for them by their
proponents, and even if this particular test can validly be
assumed to have been properly performed, we should give the
results no weight.
5. THE CONFESSION EVIDENCE 'Y.
Immediately following ,the polygraph test, which ended
at 3~27 p.m., Sergeant Scharger left the polygraph room to score
the test. The grievor remained connected to the polygraph
machine during his absence, which lasted unti.1 3:52 p.m. At that
time, he returned to the polygraph room and began the post-test
interview. There appears to have been no announcement that a
different phase of the polygraph examination had been reached;
Sergeant Scharger simply informed her that she had not told the
truth to some of the questions .on the test, and began what
..appears, so far as we are qualified to tell, to have been a very
skilled interrogation. He took notes during the interview, and
the next day he expanded those notes to clarify some of the more
,,cryptic references. The expanded notes were subsequently typed,
and were included as a part of a "will say'* statement for the
criminal prosecution which, after the end of the interview,
Sergeant Scharger anticipated would be proceeding.
.:, I
.:
&-:;
- 99 -.
There is some dispute between the grievor and Sergeant
Scharger about exactly what took place in the interview, in
particular about the tone which he adopted in dealing with her.
She testified that he appeared to lose his temper on a couple of
occasions and raised his voice at her: he denies this. He quite
frankly admits, however, that he Chad changed hats when he
returned to the interview room, and that he was now in the role L*.;,,
of the police officer who was satisfied that the grievor was
guilty, rather than in the.role of the test administrator who was
neutral and open-minded. Indeed, his conviction of her guilt
comes through very clearly in his own notes, and we have no doubt
that he managed to convey it to the grievor in no uncertain
terms.
The*pbst-test interview was not recorded except in the
form of note,s taken by ~Sergeant Scha~rger as he asked the ques-
tions and listened to the answers. Sergeant Scharger testified
that, as a matter of practice, post-test interviews are not ..j,l
recorded in any way.
The difficulty is that Sergeant Scharger's notes of
what occurred are nothing like a verbatim account. Arbitrators,
like police officers, are skilled note-takers, and we think we
can reasonably take notice that the notes Sergeant Scharger
produced could not possibly be a complete and verbatim record of
what occurred, nor do we understand him to testify that it was
anything more than his best recollection of what he thought were
the salient features of the interview. His expanded notes,
- 100 -
moreover, were a reconstruction made on the next working day,
which was in fact the Monday following a weekend, the polygraph
test having taken place on a Friday. Finally, Sergeant
Scharger's notes can be read, in an ordinary conversational tone,
in about 10 minutes, while his time notations on those notes
indicate that the actual elapsed time was from 3:52 p.m. to 4:55
p.m., with one brief interlude when the grievor telephoned her
husband to change the arrangements for her transportationhome.
The notes are therefore, even allowing for expansion for a few
remarks of his own which Sergeant Scharger identifies with a
briefs reference, unlikely to give any more than a superficial i:
flavour of what occurred.
We do not propose to quote the entirety of Sergeant
Scharger's reconstructed version of the interview. There are,
however, a few comments which Sergeant Scharger attributes to
himself which are of some interest. One feature of the interview
is that he refers tom the grievor throughout by her first name,
and makes extensive references to her family, references which
certainly came from the information form which he filled out with
her during the pre-test interview, since he had no other oppor- :r
tunity to learn this information. This discussion of her family
was obviously calculated to cause her considerable concern about
the difficulty she would be in, and the reaction of those close
to her, if she were charged with theft.
The following questions are also ~of some interest [in
all subsequent quotations, spelling is corrected but syntax is as
- 101 -
in the original]:
"I have to look at this Sandra either you are
an out and out thief and stole that money or
you made a small mistake."
. . .
"Do you know when somebody does something,
intentions are an important thing."
. . .
"We all make mistakes, that's' why they put
erasers on pencils."
"Admitting it, that's what makes us men. or
women and different from kids, being able to
accept responsibility., If you have a car
accident you don't get in your car and run
away, you admit your fault and say you are
sorry. 'I
. . .
"YOU cbuld do it in different ways. You can go to him and tell him, you can tell me and I
can go out and speak to the investigator and
tell them how you made this small mistake."
. . .
"This could be cleared up with a simple
explanation. You may not understand my
intentions as to why I’m talki.ng to you."
. . .
"Sandra you can straighten this out whichever
way you want. You can go land speak to your
boss and do itthat way if you want. If you want to tell me how you. made this small
mistake I'll tell the investigator, or call
your-boss here and you can talk to him."
. . .
"If you ran into the side of a car you'd have
no trouble admitting that. You had a small accident where you borrowed something and
- 102 -
didn't put it back."
. . .
At some stage following the griever's brief telephone
call to her husband, Sergeant Scharger appears, on his version of
events, to have got her attention with something that he said.
It is not precisely~ clear from his own notes why her attention
was captured, but in any case the following exchange occurred:
A.
Q.
A.
Q.
Q.
A.
Q.
A.
Q.
I'm listening.
You want to decide if your attitude is going
to be catch'me if you can.
Can I think about it and talk to my boss on
Monday.
That's not going to clear it up. This has
been going on a long time. What would you
like to do.
I'd like to think about it.
You've had lots of time to think about it.
You mean that I should just come out and say
that I took it.
Why not.
I haven't taken it.
There is no doubt that you have taken it and
you know once a person loses their self-
respect they've lost everything. People can
understand.people doing things out of love if
they can't they are not human.
I'm not going to admit I took that money but
if I have to pay it back I will. How much
does it add up to, 1,don't remember. They
can cut my salary back.
I'll tell you, two thousand six.hundred and
seventy-nine dollars and thirty five cents
-'for the total of the six.
A.
Q.
A.
Q.
A.
Q.
A.
Q.
.A.
Q.
A.
Q.
A.
Q.
A.
Q.
A.
Q.
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If I decide to pay it back they can take it
off my salary.
You can discuss that with your boss.
Okay.
What I don't understand is why you want to
pay it back.
To clear myself.
Why don'.t you go one step farther and explain
how you'can to taking it. That would explain
the whole thing-~ You would be bring suspi-
cion on other people. This just doesn't
affect you. You have to be fair.
Okay I'll pay the money back.
Sure why did you take the money in the first
place.
I signed for it.
You'&agreeing to.pay it back but you can't
go one step further and admit you small
mistake. You needed the money.
I'm responsible for that money right, so,I'm
going to pay it back.
Why did you take it, did you take some and
wanted to put it.back, and didn't have the
money,
I don't know where that money went.
You don. Sandra,, think of your mother, what
would she want you to do. Was it Chargex was
it the loan on the house. Did you buy
something for the children?
My children don't have too much.
What do you want to do.
What do you want me to do.
Tell me the truth why it happened and how it got out of hand-. We're like kids, we find.it
A.
Q.
A.
Q.
A.
Q.
A.
Q.
A.
Q.
A.
Q.
A.
Q.
A.
Q.
A.
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really hard to admit things to other people.
I could lose my job.
It's possible, I don't know. I don't really
care what you spent the money on, whether it
was for bills or not. r
I told you I was going to pay it back. If I say I took it what reason would I give.
That's up to you, I'm not going to put words
in your mouth. How about the truth.
So should I admit to you. . ..-
If you want to, what do you want to tell me.
Okay I admit I took it.
Did you take the money each one of these
times.
What do you mean each of.these times.
On six different occasions. The first on
September 26, two hundred and fifty-one
dollars and twenty one cents.
1'11 admit to all of them.
You took the first one in September what did
you do with the money..
I took it I told you I used, I didn't bank
it. The only thing I work for is expenses.
Did you take any of this money to pay back
any of the money you took.
No I just took it for expenses, I couldn't
put it back.
Sandra this one late deposit did you take the
money and put it back.
No these late deposits were just laying in my.
cash box. He said these were pay days, I
check, they're not pay days only one or two.
I think the twenty fifth. Where was I going
to get all that money to put back. I only
clear five something. '.
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Q. Do you want me to call Sergeant Hughes and we
will tell him what we talked about that you
took the money each time and used it for
expenses.
A. Yeah thatIs what I'm admitting to.
At this point, Sergeant Scharger left the room, and
called Sergeant Hughes. Shortly after, he returned to the room
with Sergeant Hughes, and the following exchange, according to
Sergeant Scharger's note, took place:
Q. We finished to test and Sandra didn't pass,
and we have been talking. She stated that she took the money to pay expenses and wants
to pay it back.
A. Yeah that's right I admit I took the money.
Sgt. Hughes You pay some expenses with this money.
A. Yeah that's what I do with all my money.
At that point, all three left the polygraph room and
went into the main office. There, Sergeant Hughes arrested the
grievor and cautioned her on a charge of theft over $200.00 using
the standard caution from the front of his memo book. He used
the standard primary caution which includes the usual "You are
not.obliged to say anything unless you wish to do so but whatever
you say may be given in evidence". He also added the secondary
caution:
If you have spoken to any police officer or
to anyone with authority or if any such person has spoken to you in connection with
this case, .I want it clearly understood that
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I do not want it to influence you in making a
statement.
Sergeant Hughes testified that the grievor answered in the
affirmative when he asked her if she understood.
Sergeant Hughes then drove the grievor to 52 Division,
which required driving a moderate distance through rush hour
traffic. They arrived at about 5:25 p.m. Although he told the
grievor not to speak about the case during the drive, he tes;
>. tified that she told him that she was sorry that she had taken
the money, that she didn't know why she had taken it, and that
she had worked at the Public Trustee's Office for so many years.
She then asked if Sergeant Hughes thought.she would be fired.
Sergeant Hughes testified that he said nothing to the assertions,
but answered to the question that he di&nJt know. After they
arrived at 52 Division, Sergeant Hughes procured a witness, a
Sergeant O'Shea, and took a statement on a standard Metropolitan
Toronto Police statement form. This form includes the primary
cautions at the top. The typed statement then reads as follows:
Q. Do you understand the charge?
A. Yes. . .
Q. -. Do you understand the,~ caution I have just
read to you? You do not have to say anything
at all to me if you don't want to and it will
have no effect on any decision made by anyone
dealing with you and furthermore you have
nothing to fear by not saying anything. It
is your right not to say anything if you do
not wish to speak to-me about the,charge?
A. Yes.
- I.07 -
Q.
A.
Q:
A.
Q.
A.
Q-
A.
Q.
A.
Q.
A.
Q.
As I
that
said before it is my duty to inform you
you have the right to 'retain and instruct counsel without delay.
understand? DO you
Yes.
In September of 1983 and' five times in 1984
money was stolen from the cash cage of the
public trustee at 145 King Street West-~ that
was to be deposited in Trust accounts. What
if anything can you tell me about this
matter?
I signed for the cash then I took in like I
say I put it in my box right and then I'm
supposed to deposit it right O.K. like I
admit it I took it. All I do is pay bills I
didn't go on a trip or anything you know.
Do you know what bills you paid?
It would be you-know I .don't know which one
my usual house bills most of my bi~lls is
charge cards.
Do you know how much money you took in total?
NO like he was telling me he said two
thousand something.
Do you remember the exact dates you took
money?
I don't remember any dates.
Do you wish to tell me if 'any other person
knew what was going on? ,..
No, no.
Please read this statement aloud SIGN ONLY IF
YOU WISH TO SIGN?
Sergeant Hughes testified that the grievor read part of
the statement aloud and then went through it again with him and
she read part and he read some of it along with her. There were
typing corrections here and there throughout the text, and the
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grievor initialled them. Under the text on each of the two pages
of the statement Sergeant O%hea signed. On the front page the
grievor signed at the very bottom of the page, with four blank
lines in between. On the second page she signed immediately
after the statement. On both pages diagonal lines are drawn
underneath the typed text, presumably to prevent any additions.
Sergeant Hughes says that the grievor added those lines; the
grievor says that Sergeant Hughes put them in, and that she did
not even know the purpose of the lines. While there was an
attempt to shake her on cross-examination-on this latter point by
reference to similar lines on the Survey' of Assets forms which
she dealt with regularly, we observe that there is no suggestion
that the grievor herself ever drew such lines on Survey of Assets
forms, and that the kind of line drawn, a large "Z", is quite.
different from the diagonal scratches on the statement form. The
Employer asserted that this. issue was a strong indication of a
lack of credibility on the' qrievor's part: we think that it is,
wholly insignificant. _~,
The grievor was subsequently released on her own
recognizance. It appears that very shortly after, possibly the
1 next day, 'she consulted counsel. She says that she immediately
told counsel that she had~not intended to admit to theft, but
only to responsibility for the loss of the money, with an
undertaking to repay it. She denies having told either Sergeant
Scharq.er or Serqea,nt Hughes that she took the money, and further
denies'sayinq anything about the case to Sergeant Hughes in the
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police car on the way to 52 Division.
The grievor also says that she did not realize that she
was being charged when she talked to Sergeant Hughes at the
polygraph unit. She says she did not fully realize it until
Sergeant Hughes began filling out the statement form at 52
Division. She says that the wording of the form was Sergeant
Hughes', that she declined to admit taking the money when he
typed out the form with that admission in it, and at that point
he told her not to start that, that he had had a long day and
wanted to get home. She says ultimately she signed the form
because she felt threatened and was frightened and wanted to get $,.
out.
It appears obvious from the record that the grievor
must have taken the position very shortly afterward that the
statement-.was false, and she has persisted in that position
through a preliminary inquiry, a jury trial and many days of
--examination and cross-examination before us.
Sergeant Hughes denies the qrievor's version of what
happened at 52 Division.. Sergeant O'Shea was not called to give
evidences about these events.
Based upon these facts, the Union argues that the
inculpatory statements allegedly made by the grievor have not
been established by clear and convincing proof, and that even if
they had been, they are inadmissible on the basis that they were
not voluntary. Finally, the Union argues that we should in any
case exclude this evidence on the basis of section 24(2) of the
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Charter of Rights and Freedoms. Despite the temptation to
consider the interesting arguments raised about the Charter, we
have decided not to deal with that issue. As will be seen, the
findings which we have made on the other two issues do not
require us to deal with the Charter argument.
We should observe at the outset of our consideration of
the other two issues that the question of admissibility before
this Board is not really the same as ~before the criminal courts,
and we have some doubt as to the direct applicability of the
criminal evidence rules in this regard. We are entitled to
accept evidence whether. or not admissible in court, and in any
case the rule of civil evidence as to the admissibility of
admissions made by a party is simply that they are admissible, to
be considered for what they are worth as evidende aqainst~ the
party. Any difficulties in the way in which a statement' is
taken, such as a lack of voluntariness, are said to go only to
weight, rather than to admissibility: see Sovinka and Ledennan,
m, at page 139ff and Brown and Beatty, Canadian Labour
Arbitration (3rd Ed.), page 3-37.
What faces us here is a statement which the grievor is
alleged to have made to Sergeant Scharger, which she denies
making in the form in which.,he says it was made,' and which was
made in circumstances which give rise to a number of the concerns
which have exercised the criminal. courts when considering
voluntariness of confessions.
It must be stated, ,first of all, that even on Sergeant
- 111 -
Scharqer's own notes of what occurred in the post-test interview,
it is possible to draw the inference that the qrievor did not
intend to confess to' stealing the money, but only to respon-
sibility for its loss. While he does put in her mouth an
admission that she "took" the money, and that she spent it for . ...L~-
certain purposes, his version of what she said, taken as a whole,
certainly leaves open the possibility that he is mistaken about
what she said, or that she used the words which he put in her
mouth without intending to broaden her .admission of respon-
sibility to a confession of theft.
We must also observe that, even upon Sergeant
Scharqer's own version of events, it is possible to conclude that
the grievor's statement was not voluntary, in the sense that it
was procured by a hope or promise tendered by a person in
authority, in this case a promise that somehow things would be
all right if she only admitted to taking the money. In this
regard,. we observe that it is snot necessary for us to find
improper conduct on the part of Sergeant Scharger. What is
really important is the perception of the grievor as to what
would be the effect of "coming clean". On the entirety of
~Sergeant Scharger's version, it is quite easy to see that she
might have concluded that admitting responsibility ~for the
"mistake", and making arrangements to repay the money lost, might
avoid criminal charges and permit her to keep her job.
What happened at the interview must also be seen in the
light of her earlier interaction, with the Employer, including a
112 -
discussion at one point with Mr. McComiskey in which there was
some discussion about the possibility of repaying the money. Mr.
McComiskey and the qrievor were at odds about exactly what was
said on that occasion. The qrievor herself, on the day after the
interview, put her understanding in writing, and. rejected the
possibility of paying back the money on the basis that it would
constitute an admission of quilt.
That an improper inducement is a possible inference
from Sergeant Scharqer's notes seems to have been the conclusion .~,_ +_.: ., :
reached by the judge at the criminal trial, and apparently
accepted, according to the transcript, by Crown counsel. This of
course does not relieve us from making .our own independent
judgment, but it does reinforce us in coming to the conclusion
which we have reached.
There are, however, some other considerations before
us. It is not entirely clear whether these matters emerged
during the..voir dire involving Sergeant Scharqerls evidence at
the criminal trial. These'factors .relate to the theory that the
polygraph test is used in this country, where it is essentially
inadmissible as evidence itself in criminal trials, as a confes-
sion-inducing mechanism designed to assist the police in persuad-
ing a suspect to incriminate him or herself. The most prominent
academic proponent of this theory is Professor Furedy, who has
postulated that there are a number of factors in the way in which
the polygraph ,test is designed and administered by Canad'ian
.police forces which lead directly to the conclusion that the
- 113 -
deception-detecting function of the polygraph examination is
deliberately subordinated to the confession-inducing function,
since the outcomes of polygraph tests are essentially not
admissible in Canadian courts, while confessions, subject to
strict controls, are admissible. Professor Furedy's main
contributions to this analysis dare Furedy and Liss, "Countering
Confessions Induced by the Polygraph: Of Confessionals and
Psychological Rubber Hoses" (1986), 29 Criminal Law Quarterlv 91
- 114; Furedy, "Credulous v. Critical Police Use of Polygraph in
Criminal.~ Investigations" (1985) 27 Canadian Journal of Criminol-
Qgy 491 -- 495; and Furedy, "Some Post-Phillionic Flight off ~....
Polyqraphic Fancy" (1984) 6 Criminal Lawyers Association Newslet-
ter. The first cited article is the most complete, although it
also causes us some difficulty in that Mr. Liss was the qrievor's
counsel in the criminal trial, and Dr. Furedy was his expert
advisor on polyqraphy, and the article relies heavily upon three
Ontario cases involving polygraph evidence, one of which was the
griever's criminal trial. There are a number of assertions in
this article which were not in evidence before us, and as a
consequence we prefer to rely upon Dr. Furedy's evidence at the
hearing rather than upon this article. Others not in our
delicate position, will, however, find this a very helpful review
of the psychological-pressures on someone iho has just been found
deceptive in a polygraph examination.
We may, however, summarize those pressures here from
Dr. Furedy's evidence before us: He observed that the essence of
.,.
- 114 -
the police use of polygraphy in Canada is to obtain a confession
following a deceptive result, and that a number of factors,
including the very detailed questionnaire administered prior to
the test, which provides the examiner with ample material for
interrogation, along with physical circumstances surrounding the
application of the test that are calculated to increase the
unease of the subject, will render the subject much more suscep-
tible to interrogation. The emphasis on the infallibility ofthe
test, which as we have already indicated is clearly misleading,
also has the effect of producing in a subject found to be
deceptive a feeling of helplessness. A subject like the grievor,
already clearly under suspicion by her supervisors and by the
police, finds herself in a position where a supposedly infallible
and objective test has found her to be a liar on the central
issue of then suspicion. That hopelessness, in Dr. Furedy's
hypothesis, adds to the pressure on the subject to confess, even
to confess falsely, if only to make the process of investigation
and accusation come to any end. of special importance, in'this
regard, is the deliberate failure to inform the subject that the
polygraph evidence cannot, be used in evidence in a criminal
prosecution. Indeed, from all of the material used, quite the
_ opposite impression is left. The subject who has "failed"~ the
test is undoubtedly made to feel that conviction is certain.
Dr. Furedy also pointed to a number of specific aspects
of this particular post-test interview, all of which emerge from
Sergeant Scharqer‘s own notes of that interview, which could
- 115 -
operate to heighten the anxiety of the grievor, prey upon her
sense of responsibility for the losses, and increase her desire
to bring the entire matter to an end.
In his own evidence, Sergeant Scharger quite frankly
agreed with the proposition that the post-testy interview was a
significant part of the polygraph examination where the test
showed deception, and that his training included aspects of how
to prepare for and conduct such a post-test examination. While
he certainly did not agree to the inferences that Dr. Furedy
drew, his evidence lends some weight to the view that the
pressures placed on a polygraphsubject are deliberately heiqht-
ened -for the purposes of extracting a confession if the test
shows deception.
Dr. Raskin, as well, generally supported the proposi-
tion that the 'post-test interview was an ~essential .part of the ~.
process where deception is indicated, and he testified that the
confession rate following a finding of deception is very high,
although he qualified that with'the observation that confession
rates in criminal investigations are always at a relatively high
level.
One does not have to accept all of the arguments raised
by Professor Furedy and Mr. Liss in what is, quite clearly, a
textbook for defence lawyers rather than a solemn scientific
treatise, to come to the conclusion that the critical faculties
of a decision-maker must. be sharpened when dealing with a
confession induced. following a polygraph examination, even beyond
- 116 -
what is the case when a confession arises out of ordinary
interrogation by the police. Moreover, a number of courts have
indicated a concern about the extent to which confessions
obtained after a finding of deception can be considered to be
voluntary: see R. v. Stuart Terry, unreported, Manitoba Provin-
cial Court, Dubienski, P.C.J., May 2, 1986, Peoole v. Leonard,
397 NYS.2d 386 (1977), R. v. Fowler, (1980) 23 Nfld. & P.E;I R.
255 (Nfld .* C.A.), R. v. Romansky (1981), 6 Man. R. (2d) 408
(Manitoba.County Court), Peoole v. Zimmer 329 NYS.Zd 17 (1972).
In the result, our reluctance to give significant
weight to the qrievor's oral statements which are, on all of the
evidence, both ambiguous and of doubtful voluntariness, is
heightened by the way in which they were obtained following the
~polyqraph test, as it is more particularly described above. We
would therefore not.rely upon the oral "confession" and find it
essentially equivocal in light of the grievor's immediate
retraction and subsequent denial.
We turn, finally, to the written statement which the
qrievor. gave .to Sergeant Hughes, which is coupled with his
evidence about a statement which she gave to him in the police
car on the way from the Polygraph Unit to 52 Division. The
statement in the police car was, unfortunately, never recorded in
Sergeant Hughes' notes. Whateverwas said must have been said
while Sergeant Hughes was driving, and while. his attention was
thereby somewhat distracted. It was never written down. He
therefore did,not have his notes to rely upon, and as almost any
- 117 -
casual obsenrer of police practice will know, it is very unusual
for a police officer to testify without his notes, given the
number of events which an officer might be required to testify
about in any given day or week. This necessity to be prepared to
testify is heightened in the case of a criminal investigator like
Sergeant Hughes.
Next, Serqeant~..~ :..,: pughes testified about the events
surrounding his taking of the written statement from the qrievor
at 52 Division. These events were recorded in his notes, and he
used those notes to refresh his memory at the preliminary
inquiry, which took place in .the autumn of 1984. When he
testified before us, three years later, he. had misplaced those
notes and therefore testified based upon his memory, which he had
refreshed with the transcript of the preliminary inquiry. The
Union demanded production of the notes; they were not forth-
coming. We do not propose to review here the technical issues
relating to the right of a police officer to testify in criminal
cases without his. notes. We simply observe that the usually
heightened reliability of a police officer who testifies with-:.
carefully prepared notes is significantly undermined when those
notes are .not available. The ability of the Union to cross-
examine is significantly reduced, and testimony .~~relyinq u@on;~
secondary sources is simply not as good.
Finally, we ObSSNe that on purely objective grounds,
the wording of the statement taken by Sergeant Hughes lends at
least some support to the qrievor's evidence that she was just
I-
118 -
trying to get it over with.and to go home. There is a sense of
exasperation and resignation even in the words which Sergeant
Hughes wrote down for her to sign, and we have the sense that the
entire statement is at least consistent with the griever's
characterization of what happened.
Finally, there is the question of .'VtaintingB' of the
written statement to Sergeant Hughes by the factors rendering the
oral statements to Sergeant Scharqer of limited probative value.
The case law in the criminal jurisprudence on this issue is
remarkable sparse. In R. v. Cvbulski (1974) 19 C.C.C. (2d) 560,
the Manitoba Court of Appeal ObseNed, in circumstances quite
different from those before us, that:
When an accused's statement has been preceded
by statements made in earlier interviews, it
is always a question for the appreciation of -"~~'
t.he trial, Judge 'whether the final statement
is so bound up with the earlier ones that it
cannot be given effect to on its own. Each
case will depend upon its particular facts.
One relevant circumstance will assuredly be
the time-gap between the earlier and the :.~~.
later utterances. The challenged statement
coming hard upon a statement made in an
earlier interview may not qualify for
separate treatme,nt as readily as one that
comes after a longer interval.
In R. v. Hobbins (1980) 54 C.C.C.. (2d) 353, similar
observations, again in a case not much like the present;are made
by the Ontario Court of Appeal.
While these case,s are useful only in a negative sense,
it is clear that in the case before us the written statement was
taken almost immediately 'after the oral statements to Sergeant
- 119 -
Scharger, which we have found to be unreliable. It followed the
laying of criminal charges, which may have seemed to the grievor
to be a betrayal of what she thought to be the purpose of her
taking responsibility for the losses, OX which may have increased
her anxiety level even beyond what might have been the case in
the polygraph post-test interview. Without relying on the
technicalities of the "tainting" doctrine, as poorly elaborated
as it is, we are not satisfied that the written. statement given
to Sergeant Hughes is any more reliable, in all of the cir-
cumstances, than the oral statements made to Sergeant Scharqer
and, to the extent that we can ,,have any faith in their content,
statements in the police car to Sergeant Hughes.
The fact that a confession 'has been made by a suspect
is always a matter of considerable concern. The usual reaction
of ordinary persons is that no one would confess .a crime who did
not do it, but the totality of legal literature and jurisprudence
indicates that people do indeed confess to things that they have
.*:.-
not done, and people do, indeed make false statements. The
inducing factor .is virtually always the influence upon those
people, sometimes by circumstances, sometimes by aspects of their
own psychology, sometimes by pressures placed uponthem, inadver-
tent1.y or advertently, by the interrogators. We cannot, of
course, conclude on the basis of the evidence before us that the
grievor made a false statement to the police. We can, however,
conclude that the reliabil,jty of the statement which she made is
not sufficient for us to accept it as any more probative of the
- 120 -
issues before us than the other pieces'of evidence which we have
considered.
6. CONCLUSION
There are two observations which we think it is
appropriate to make about the exercise upon which we have
embarked in this case. The first has to do with the nature of
scientific controversy, and the interaction of adjudicative
processes with such controversy. The second has to do with the
purpose and function of the burden of proof in civil as well as
in criminal"-cases:
Scientific controversy is very different from simple
disputes of fact. Courts and tribunals are used to dealing with
the latter: they are becoming more used to dealing with the
former, but rarely in the theoretical and detached form in which
this controversy came before us. Assuming-that the controversy
is real, and that both sides of the debate are acting honourably
and rationally, adjudication is a very poor mechanism for
deciding whether one side or the other of the controversy is
-correct. All of the usual tools of adjudication are largely
useless when two scholars put forward competing opinions on a
body of theory, experimentation and data which is in a state of
flux. Far too often, the temptation is to conclude that one side
or the other must win, and therefore to "accept" one body of
expert evidence over the other. This requires lVbelieving" one
expert witness, and "disbelieving" the other:
- 121 -
With the greatest of respect, we think there is some
element of this misconception of how adjudication can deal with
scientific evidence in the decision of Judge Kurisko in the John
Doe case. We think it is entirely possible for adjudicators to
deal effectively with scientific controversy, but that it is
unlikely that most cases can be resolved by accepting one body of
opinion over the~other. There is likely to be truth and fallacy
on both sides of any scientific controversy, .,z since such coxi-
troversies are invariably bound up with the opinion of scholars
who are engaged in research to ascertain the "truth". Truth may
often lie in the middle of a controversy, or even off to one
side. Adjudicators should be reluctant .to assume that the
forensic processes of tribunals can elicit truth by subjecting
the cut and thrust of scientific debate to the rules of evidence
and judicial procedures. It is sometimes enough, and even
correct, simply to say that a scientific controversy is beyond
the scope of adjudication to decide. ~~
Where real disputes of fact arise, there will be cases
where it is equally not possible to come to a conclusion that can
be confidently asserted as truth. That is the case of the matter
before us. From all of the evidence, we are left with the
uncomfortable, but firmly held, opinion that we do not know what
happened to the missing money. It follows that we do not know
whether the grievor took it or not. Adjudicators rarely come to
conclusions as equivocal as this, and we do so only after an
exhaustive review of an enormous body of evidence of a number of
- 122 -
different kinds. Having done so, we think it is important to
observe that no tribunal should be reluctant to admit that it
does not know the answer, in those rare cases where that is in
fact the clear outcome of the evidence. To impose a clear answer
where one is not justified is more inimitable to the interests of
justice than, occasionally, simply to admit that the adjudicative
:. process cannot provide an answer.
In circumst&xces like this, the burden of proof exists
specifically to resolve the outcome of a case. The burden of
proof is often misused by adjudicators to avoid hard decisions, "
and we have been concerned not to fall into that trap. After
careful consideration, however, we think that the only proper
resolution that can be made of this case is to say that the
Employer has failed to meet the burden of proof upon it, which is
to show that the grievor committed the acts_alleged against her,
and to do so upon a standard of proof which requires clear and
convincing evidence of criminal conduct.
we have adverted above to the Employer's alternative
argument that the grievor was so negligent that she should be
discharged, even if she was not guilty of theft. We reject this
argument on two grounds. First, negligence was not alleged in
the original discharge letter, .'~~ nor was it alleged in the letter
of particulars provided at the request of the Union at the outset
of this hearing. To uphold the discharge on the basis of
negligence would be to permit the Employer to change the grounds
for the discharge; no authority is needed for the proposition
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that this is improper.
Second, the evidence is such that the grievor must
either have been guilty of theft, or be herself a victim of
someone who took advantage of the sloppy procedures in place at
the Public Trustee's Office. Her compliance with those procedur-
es, might well have been complacent, but has not been shown to be
negligent, given the virtual absence'of any real rules for her to
follow or standards for her to meet. If the evidence cannot
demonstrate dishonesty, it really cannot demonstrate negligence
in any significant sense either.
For all of the above reasons, therefore, the grievance
must be allowed.
7. REMEDY '. ':
The presumptive remedy in cases of unjust discharge is
reinstatement with full compensation. In this particular case,
however, there may be valid reasons why the grievor should not
return to the Public Trustee's Office. Some of those reasons
will be obvious from the exposition of the evidence above; others
would only be obvious to those of us who sat through the lengthy
hearings in this matter and heard the hostility expressed by
certain fellow employees ,to the grievor. While we do not
necessarily accept this hostility as having a rational basis, it
could certainly affect any future working relationships should
the.grievor be returned to employment in the Public Trustee's
Office.
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We therefore are content, for the moment, to order the
grievor's reinstatement in employment and 'full compensation for
all losses occasioned -by her discharge, subject to the usual
rules of the calculation of damages. The parties may wish to
consider the implications of returning the grievor to work at then
Public Trustee's Office, and may wish to find ways to accommodate
the grievor in other employment. The grievor herself may wish to
consider whether her future properly lies outside government
employment.
We think it is sufficient for the moment to order her
reinstatement with compensation, .and to leave it to the parties
to resolve whether, when, where, and in what circumstances she
should return to work. We shall, of course, remain seized to
resolve any difficulties which may arise in the course of the
implementation of this award.
. We also expressly retain jurisdiction to deal with any
issues which have not been resolved in this award, which we have
deliberately attempted to constrain in order to deal with the
issues central to the griever's discharge. We reserve jurisdic-
tion to issue, either on our own motion or at the request of
either party, supplementary awards to deal with one or more of
the collateral issues which arose during the course of this
arbitration.
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DATED AT TORONTO;Ontario this bth day of quay, 1989.
Kennkth P. Swan, Vice-Chairperson
/11(/I& I
W. Walsh, Member -- --
W. Lobraico, Member