Edwards
Books and Art Ltd v The Queen [1986]
2 SCR 713, 35 DLR (4th) 1
(pp. 851-863 Canadian Constitutional Law, Fourth Ed.)
(pp. 851-863 Canadian Constitutional Law, Fourth Ed.)
Ø A
number of stores in violation of the Ontario Retail Business Holidays Act brought a challenge that the Act
infringed s. 2(a) of the Charter
Ø Section
3(4) of the Act provided exemption from the closure of small retail stores
(size specific) on Sundays if they were closed on Saturdays for religious
purposes
Ø There
were some other size-related exemptions, that included employee base, which
gave retailers the ability to stay open on Sundays
Issue: Did it infringe section
2(a)? Was it justified under section 1 analysis?
Dickson CJC
Ø The
majority looked first at purpose and then effect of the legislation
Ø The
purpose was found to be secular rather than religious intent and therefore
constitutional
Ø There
was a violation of section 2(a) of the Charter
because Saturday observers suffered a financial disadvantage. Saturday
observers would have to choose between their business or faith. This violation
was found not to be trivial or insubstantial.
Section 1
Ø The
action of the legislation is aimed at the pressing and substantial concern of
protecting workers from “alienation…from his or her closest social bonds” (p.
856). Employers should not be able to use legislation to get ahead on the backs
of the employees.
Ø The
rational connection was split up into two questions:
1. Is it okay that the act only applied to the retail industry?
§
Court ruled that it was justified because the
industry presented a pressing problem that the labour force was vulnerable
2. Is the scheme of the exemptions justified?
§
The retail sector could have reforms that are
restricted to particular vulnerable groups of people; it does not have to apply
to everybody. In this case the vulnerable group was considered to be Saturday
observers.
Ø Does
it minimally impair the rights of the Saturday observers?
o
Yes it does. Because of section 3(4) of the Act, the legislature has shown that they
are exercising an effort to minimally impair these rights. The size of the
business stipulated by the legislation is not necessarily a magic number to be followed;
it is simply a legislative opinion. It is not up to the judiciary to alter
this.
Ø Proportionality
o
It was not disproportionate because the
legislature made a serious effort to accommodate the Saturday observers. Dickson
CJC considered whether there were reasonable alternatives to the scheme in
question. Other alternatives that were explored by the court did not meet the
objectives of the Act.
Ø The
violation was saved by a section 1 analysis
Beetz J (concurring)
Ø Found
no violation of section 2(a) so no section 1 analysis was necessary. The
effects on the Saturday observers were based on their own choice and not on the
part of the legislatures. The Saturday observers are down a day of business
whether or not Sunday retail is allowable.
Wilson J (in dissent)
Ø Finds
that the violation cannot be reasonably justified because you cannot give
religious freedoms to one group and not to another
Ø Size
restrictions in relation to religious freedoms should not be protected. Small
retailers are not a recognized comparator group under the Charter. Employees of small retailers should not be guaranteed rights
that those working for large retail operations do not receive. It was the effect
of the legislation that “[made] it vulnerable to attack on constitutional
grounds” (p. 861).
From Note 3 p 863
Dickson CJC’s approach to section 1
analysis in Edwards Books above
developed the Oakes test in the
minimal impairment branch to include consideration of reasonable alternatives;
an expanded reasonableness standard. Perhaps this is a foreshadowing of the
contextual approach articulated by Wilson J in Edmonton Journal
From Note 4 p 863
The Ontario Act in question in Edwards
Books above was amended in 1989 to “permit any retail store, regardless of
its size, to open on Sunday provided it was closed for religious reasons on
another day”. This amendment reflects the dissenting opinion of Wilson J in Edwards Books above.
Note 3 ** --> I think It should say that the Oakes test was developed by Dickson CJC in the proportionality branch not minimal impairment. Is that right?
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