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The Defence Toolkit – July 11, 2026: The Unsavoury Witness

Posted On 11 July 2026

This week’s top three summaries: R v Drake, 2026 NSCA 48: Vetrovec #confirmation, R v VRRR, 2026 MBCA 56: human #assumptions , R v Murphy and Wright, 2026 NSCA 51: #judicial notice mistrial

R v Drake, 2026 NSCA 48

[June 17, 2026] Vetrovec: Confirmatory Evidence Requirements [Reasons by Farrar J.A. with Bourgeois and Derrick JJ.A concurring]

AUTHOR’S NOTE: Once a witness is recognized as an unsavoury witness requiring a Vetrovec warning, the central question becomes whether there is evidence capable of sufficiently confirming the reliability of the witness’s inculpatory testimony. The purpose of the confirmation requirement is not merely to show that the witness was present or that parts of the account are true. Rather, it is to provide assurance that the portions of the evidence implicating the accused can be safely relied upon.

In a jury trial, the judge must identify for the jury the evidence that may provide the necessary confirmation and explain how it bears upon the reliability of the witness’s evidence. In a judge-alone trial, the same analysis must be undertaken by the trial judge and reflected in the reasons.

This decision provides a compelling illustration of what qualifies as confirmatory evidence. The Court of Appeal emphasized that the relevant inquiry is whether the independent evidence confirms the inculpatory portions of the witness’s testimony, not merely peripheral or neutral aspects of the account. Evidence that confirms matters unrelated to the accused’s alleged involvement may enhance the witness’s general credibility, but it does not necessarily provide the assurance required by Vetrovec.

Here, there was ample evidence confirming that the witness had, in fact, witnessed a homicide. However, that was never the contentious issue. The critical question was the identity of the perpetrator. Evidence demonstrating that a homicide occurred, or that the witness was present when it occurred, did not meaningfully confirm the witness’s assertion that the accused was the killer.

The Court of Appeal’s analysis underscores an important principle: confirmatory evidence must be directed toward the material inculpatory features of the testimony. Confirmation of background facts, surrounding circumstances, or uncontested events does not satisfy the purpose of the Vetrovec doctrine if it fails to provide independent assurance of the evidence identifying the accused as the culprit.

 


Introduction

[1] Adam Drake appeals his conviction1 for the first-degree murder of Tyler Keizer on the grounds of unreasonable delay and errors he says the trial judge made in his assessment of evidence. He says the judge failed to properly address exculpatory evidence and relied on non-confirmatory evidence in accepting the testimony of Morgan Harrington, an unsavoury witness. Mr. Drake argues he is entitled to a stay for the violation of his constitutional right to a timely trial, and if not a stay, then the trial judge’s errors in dealing with the evidence warrant a new trial.

[2] ….in light of the trial judge’s errors in the assessment of Morgan Harrington’s evidence I would set aside the appellant’s conviction and order a new trial.

[3] Tyler Keizer was shot dead on November 21, 2016 in a parking lot near the halfway house where he was a resident. CCTV security footage recorded the shooting. His killer was not identifiable from the camera images and fled the scene on foot. Morgan Harrington witnessed the shooting. In January 2019 he identified the appellant as the shooter. Police had arrested Mr. Harrington on the night of the murder and subjected him to an extensive interrogation. At that time he made no mention of the appellant.

[4] Mr. Harrington was the key Crown witness at trial. He was acknowledged to be a quintessentially disreputable witness, whose evidence had to be approached with considerable caution.

[6] ….He says the trial judge accepted Morgan Harrington’s identification of him as the shooter on the basis of evidence that could not have confirmed Mr. Harrington’s truthfulness about the appellant being the shooter. He does not challenge the trial judge’s determination that the shooting of Tyler Keizer constituted first degree murder.

Morgan Harrington

[13] Mr. Harrington was a “Vetrovec” witness. A Vetrovec witness presents special dangers to the fact-finding process at trial “because of their amoral character, criminal lifestyle, past dishonesty or interest in the outcome of the trial”, they cannot be trusted to tell the truth despite having “expressly undertaken” to do so by oath or affirmation.

[14] The trial judge recognized what he was dealing with:

[12] It is clear from the video footage which the Court observed, both that captured at the scene of the murder, as well as that captured from the Salvation Army building nearby, that Morgan Harrington was an eyewitness to Mr. Keizer’s death. He was right there, standing beside the shooter. He says the shooter was Adam Drake. He was the Crown’s central witness. With that said, counsel for Mr. Drake has forcefully argued that Mr. Harrington is a career criminal, having committed a significant number of violent crimes, drug crimes, and others involving deceit and dishonesty.

[13] In fact, the Defence refers to Mr. Harrington as “the epitome of an unsavoury witness” (Defence Closing Submissions, para 10). The Crown does not take issue with this characterization, itself acknowledging that Mr. Harrington has a significant criminal past, and that he is “classically, a Vetrovec witness” (Crown Closing Submissions, para 413).

Circumstantial Evidence

[17] In addition to Mr. Harrington’s testimony, the Crown led considerable circumstantial evidence. The trial judge found the evidence confirmatory of Morgan Harrington’s identification of the appellant as Tyler Keizer’s killer. The appellant vigorously contested inculpatory inferences the Crown invited the trial judge to draw and pointed to evidence he says indicated he had nothing to do with the murder.

Issue #3 The Trial Judge Erred in the Assessment of the Vetrovec Witness’ Truthfulness and Reliability

Morgan Harrington – The Lynchpin of the Appellant’s Conviction

[131] Tyler Keizer’s murder was captured on CCTV security footage (the Norex video)from a building overlooking the parking lot where the shooting occurred. There is no dispute that Morgan Harrington knew the shooter, had been talking to him just prior to the murder and witnessed the first shot being fired through the windshield of the Durango.

[132] Morgan Harrington’s testimony was the only direct evidence that implicated the appellant. The defence argued the circumstantial evidence was open to exculpatory inferences. No forensic evidence linked the appellant to the crime scene. The trial judge noted the absence of any admissions or inculpatory statements despite intercepts and covert audio probes being installed by police in the appellant’s home and vehicle during the investigation.

[134] Morgan Harrington’s identification of the appellant as Tyler Keizer’s killer came two years after the murder. He gave a KGB statement to police investigators on January 24, 2019. The evidence filled in his circumstances between the night Tyler Keizer was shot to death on November 21, 2016 and his statement to police:

[106] Although interrogated extensively during the early morning hours of November 22, 2016, he did not tell the police the identity of the shooter. He said this was because CSC was obliged to investigate whether he had any involvement in the shooting. While they investigated, he knew he was going back to jail. While there, he would be vulnerable to retaliation not only from Mr. Drake’s friends and/or associates, but his own as well, should he cooperate. Even after that, upon his release, he, his friends, and his family members would still be at risk if he gave information to the authorities. He said that “you do not do that in gang lifestyle, it is super frowned upon. If you are cooperating, you are cooperating.”

[107] In the aftermath of his interview by the police on November 22, 2016, Mr. Harrington went to Burnside for a short period of time, then was sent to Renous penitentiary, until his release approximately seven months later. He was thereupon transferred to a halfway house in Newfoundland for the ensuing three months. He returned to Halifax in late 2017, where he resided initially at Uniacke Square. He then moved in with his girlfriend, CH, where he stayed for (roughly) the next two years.

[108] He was unemployed, and he quickly returned to the only lifestyle he had ever known. He was charged in Québec with the Excise Act offences referenced earlier. They were alleged to have occurred in May and August 2018. As has been (also) previously referenced, this was followed up by charges under the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act (“CDSA”) in December of 2018. These came about after Mr. Harrington was caught in a “bust” selling some very serious drugs, including cocaine and heroin.

[135] The trial judge referenced evidence that confirmed once Mr. Harrington came forward he received financial support through Halifax Regional Police witness support programs other than during the “gap” period that followed the first Indictment against the appellant being withdrawn. As the judge said: “a precondition to the financial support components of these documents was his agreement to testify against the accused”.

[136] The defence argued Mr. Harrington’s decision in January 2019 to give a statement to police identifying the appellant as Tyler Keizer’s killer was exclusively driven by self-interest. In final written submissions, defence counsel said: “His decision to implicate Mr. Drake was clearly an effort to throw suspicion from himself and, at the same time, reap the benefits of immunity, personal advantage, money and preservation of his life by not returning to jail”….

[137] The trial judge had no illusions about Mr. Harrington’s character and the need to take into account the potential he was incentivized to lie:

[172] At the risk of further repetition, Mr. Harrington is a career criminal, one who has committed crimes, some involving extreme violence, some involving deceit and dishonesty. His decision to testify against Mr. Drake saved him from being tried on several very serious crimes. A conviction with respect to even one of the CDSA, aggravated assault, or Excise Act charges with which he was charged would almost certainly have sent him back to prison, to serve a lengthy sentence.

[173] Once in prison, he would have been endeavoring to survive in a climate in which he was suspected (by some) not only of having been involved in Mr. Keizer’s death, but (by others) of having cooperated with the authorities in relation to it. In such an event, he would have been in danger not only from inmates whose sympathies aligned with the accused, but also from those who had formerly been, if not friends, at least associates of his own.

[174] On top of that, testifying opened up the possibility of his receipt of a financial reward of up to $150,000, which is contingent upon Mr. Drake being convicted. Finally, the fact that the police facilitated a meeting with CPS (which, unusually took place at the police station) with respect to the possibility of his receiving access with his child, must also be considered.

The Correctly Identified Legal Principles

[138] Under the heading “What is a Vetrovec witness, and what does that have to do with Morgan Harrington?” the trial judge noted the following:

• When a disreputable important witness testifies for the Crown, “it may be necessary to look for confirmation” of some of the witness’ testimony outside of the evidence they have provided.

• The most significant considerations for determining whether a Vetrovec approach is required “involve the assessment of the credibility of the witness; and the importance of the witness to the prosecution’s case”.

• An unsavoury witness may have ulterior motives for providing evidence in support of the prosecution’s case, such as diverting suspicion from themselves, gaining advantages such as immunity from prosecution for offences, or monetary gain.

[140] The trial judge clearly understood the law applicable to assessing the evidence of a Vetrovec witness. He took care to articulate it with reference to passages from the leading cases of R. v. Kehler , R. v. Khela and R. v. Seruhungo . He also found R. v. Vallee to be of assistance. His focus was on the use of confirmatory evidence where the credibility of a disreputable witness is in issue. He extracted the following principles to be applied:

• Not all evidence presented at trial is capable of confirming the testimony of an unsavoury witness. Evidence that is confirmatory must be independent of the impugned witness (Khela).

• Individual items of corroborating evidence need not implicate the accused (Vetrovec, Kehler, Khela).

• Evidence that implicates the accused does serve to accomplish the purpose of satisfying the trier of fact the impugned witness is telling the truth but it is not the only sort of evidence that will accredit the witness’ testimony (Vetrovec).

• “[W]hen looked at in the context of the case as a whole, the items of confirmatory evidence should give comfort to [the trier of fact] that the witness can be trusted in his or her assertion that the accused is the person who committed the offence” (Khela at para. 42).

• Confirmatory evidence “must be capable of restoring the trier’s faith in the relevant aspects of the witness’s account” (Khela at para. 43, emphasis in the original).

• The importance of evidence that is independent of the impugned witness “increases with the centrality of the disputed issue to the crime alleged and to the degree of dispute of the witness” (Vallee at para. 142).

• In a judge alone trial, credibility assessments are the province of the judge as the trier of fact (Vallee at para. 144).[Emphasis by PJM]

[141] The trial judge understood the unconfirmed evidence of a disreputable witness was sufficient to support a conviction for murder as long as he was satisfied the evidence was true. It is this principle the judge was referring to in paragraph 168 of his decision where he said: “It would be dangerous to convict upon unconfirmed evidence from this witness. I may (properly) do so, however, if satisfied that the evidence is true”. The trial judge had earlier emphasized what was required for conviction: he had to be satisfied of the appellant’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.

The Trial Judge’s Reliance on “Confirmatory” Evidence

[142] However, the trial judge was plainly notsatisfied to convict the appellant on Morgan Harrington’s evidence in the absence of confirmatory support for it. Morgan Harrington’s evidence was essential to proving the identity of Tyler Keizer’s killer. That is what he brought to the table. The trial judge could have simply decided on the basis of a conventional credibility analysis that he believed Mr. Harrington’s identification evidence. But he did not. Instead he fixed his credibility compass on finding independent, material evidence that supported Mr. Harrington’s truthfulness:….

[143] Having decided he had to find confirmatory evidence for Mr. Harrington’s evidence before he could rely on it, the trial judge instructed himself in accordance with the law:

[171] As a consequence, I remind myself that the independent “confirmatory evidence” which I require in this case need not (necessarily) implicate Mr. Drake. It must, however, be capable of providing comfort that Mr. Harrington was being truthful when he testified: it must have the ability to restore my faith in the relevant aspects of his testimony.(emphasis added)

[144] The trial judge was correct in his identification of the applicable law. But he fell into error when it came to identifying as confirmatory much of the evidence he relied on. Having decided he required confirmatory evidence to assess Morgan Harrington’s credibility he had to be correct in his characterization of the evidence he used. However, he found comfort in evidence that cannot be characterized as either independent or relevant. It was not evidence that could rebut the suggestion Mr. Harrington was falsely implicating the appellant. As Khela held: “not all evidence presented at trial is capable of confirming the testimony of an impugned witness”.[Emphasis by PJM]

Evidence that Was Not Confirmatory

[146] Evidence the trial judge took comfort from in concluding Mr. Harrington’s identification of the shooter could be trusted included many peripheral details, such as his testimony about his arrest in the early morning hours of November 22, 2016. This was an innocuous event documented by the police involved and IDENT photographs. Evidence of the condition of Tyler Keizer’s Dodge Durango documented by Cst. Beer’s photographs added nothing to the scale weighing Mr. Harrington’s truthfulness. It was uncontroversial that whoever shot Mr. Keizer to death did so from outside the vehicle. Furthermore, Mr. Harrington testified he fled after the first shot, a fact confirmed by the Norex CCTV footage. Mr. Harrington did not witness how the shooter executed the killing after the first shot was fired. Cst. Beer’s photographs and the Norex video told the trial judge more about where the shots were fired into the Durango than Mr. Harrington could.[Emphasis by PJM]

[147] Cst. Beer’s photographs of the bullet holes in the Durango not only did little to confirm what Mr. Harrington had said about the circumstances of the shooting, it was peripheral to whether his identification of the appellant was trustworthy.[Emphasis by PJM]

[148] The trial judge ultimately listed in what he described as a “non exhaustive (point form) summary” the independent and material confirmatory evidence he relied on in accepting the testimony of Morgan Harrington. This section of the judge’s decision was headed: A non exhaustive summary of the nexus between Morgan Harrington’s testimony and independent confirmatory or corroborative evidence.

[149] A reading of the trial judge’s decision as a whole shows the evidence he relied on, including in his non-exhaustive summary, was neutral, peripheral or lacked independence.

[150] The evidence the appellant and Donald Arsenault were friends and business partners in a cannabis dispensary was neutral. The appellant confirmed this in a Statement of Admissions dated April 19, 2024 and filed as a trial exhibit.

[151] Tyler Keizer’s conviction (proven by documentary evidence) for his role in the jail beating of Donald Arsenault and offered to verify Mr. Harrington’s testimony of this merely provided some tenuous support for the Crown’s motive theory.

[152] Records of a sea-doo rental on August 27, 2016 did no more than confirm Mr. Harrington’s testimony that the appellant took him out to sea-doo on Halifax Harbour. GPS coordinates from Mr. Harrington’s ankle bracelet (he was on parole and required to wear a monitoring device) indicated it was travelling over water at the times Mr. Harrington testified he was sea-dooing with the appellant.

[154] All the sea-doo rental evidence confirmed was Mr. Harrington’s sea-doing excursion with the appellant in August 2016 when he was released from prison. This fact was admitted by the appellant in the April 19, 2024 Statement of Admissions.

[155] GPS coordinates from the ankle bracelet recorded Mr. Harrington being on Federal Avenue where he said he met with Donald Arsenault on the sidewalk outside Mr. Arsenault’s mother’s house. Mr. Harrington testified he was there to convey Mr. Keizer’s apology for the beating, that Mr. Keizer had participated in the attack on orders from others, and now wanted to straighten his life out. According to Mr. Harrington, Donald Arsenault said he was not looking to retaliate against Mr. Keizer.

[156] Mr. Harrington’s ankle bracelet tracked a subsequent drive to his mother’s home and then to the Annex on September 8, 2016. Mr. Harrington testified that after their meeting Mr. Arsenault had driven him to his mother’s and he had then gone to the half-way house.

[157] Several details did not align neatly with Morgan Harrington’s evidence about the visit to Donald Arsenault. According to Mr. Harrington, Mr. Arsenault was not stewing over a “beef” with Mr. Keizer. Mr. Harrington testified the meeting was five to ten minutes. The ankle bracelet recorded a 32-minute visit to Federal Avenue on September 8, 2016. Notably, the trial heard evidence Donald Arsenault’s mother did not live on Federal Avenue. She lived nearby, on Romans Avenue. Notwithstanding, the trial judge found the evidence “as (overall) corroborative of Mr. Harrington’s testimony that he met with Mr. Arsenault at that time”.

[158] Phone records confirmed visits by Mr. Harrington to the appellant’s cannabis dispensary in October and November 2016. Mr. Harrington said on one of these occasions the appellant fronted him marijuana to sell. Telus records for the appellant confirmed he was out of the province for a period of time after the marijuana-fronting which is when Mr. Harrington testified he made a payment to one of the appellant’s associates rather than to the appellant personally.

[159] This “confirmatory” evidence was neutral. It was undisputed that Morgan Harrington and the appellant knew each other and were on friendly terms. There was never any issue that Morgan Harrington would recognize the appellant.

[160] A series of exhibits – taxi records, cell phone records, the Norex video, and the Salvation Army video – confirmed Mr. Harrington’s testimony that on November 21, 2016 he called a cab to pick him up at his girlfriend’s, he stopped at his mother’s on the way to the Annex, he walked east on Falkland Street toward the Annex and then was in front of the building, exchanged a “fist bump” with the shooter while on the phone, had an encounter with another man outside the Annex, and was on the phone to his girlfriend just before the shooting.

[161] All this evidence simply confirmed what Morgan Harrington testified he had done on the evening of November 21, 2016….

[162] The Salvation Army video and the Norex video simply captured images of the unidentifiable shooter and Mr. Harrington together and then the actual shooting and Mr. Harrington running away after the first shot.

[163] A still photograph taken from the Salvation Army video depicted the moment immediately after the shooting when Mr. Harrington testified, in anticipation of imminent arrest, he gave cocaine he had on him to a friend. The trial judge found it noteworthy that Mr. Harrington “volunteered that the package contained cocaine. The court would have otherwise been unaware of that fact”. This disclosure reveals nothing about Morgan Harrington’s truthfulness. It is an innocuous, irrelevant detail.

[164] The Norex video captured the shooter walking east on Falkland Street just before the shooting. Again, this evidence does not confirm Morgan Harrington’s identification of the appellant as the shooter. It merely confirms the movements of an unidentified person who moments later shot Tyler Keizer dead.

[165] The trial judge identified some evidence that could be confirmatory of the appellant’s presence at the scene as testified to by Morgan Harrington. This evidence would have to be assessed for its confirmatory strength with the non-confirmatory evidence stripped away and in the context of the evidence the defence argued was exculpatory. Certain evidence the Crown presented as confirmatory of Morgan Harrington the defence had submitted was inconsistent with the appellant being the shooter. The trial judge did not address how or whether this evidence affected his confidence in the trustworthiness of Morgan Harrington on the issue of identity.[Emphasis by PJM]

[166] The trial judge viewed the evidence I have reviewed as building a picture of trustworthiness. Evidence that is not capable of being confirmatory does not, by accumulation, create the foundation for restoring confidence in the testimony of a Vetrovec witness. Zero plus zero adds up to zero.[Emphasis by PJM]

[167] It is constructive to reiterate that it is not an error of law to accept the evidence of a Vetrovec witness without confirmatory evidence on the issue of identity. That said, the trial judge here concluded he needed to be satisfied Morgan Harrington was truthful on the factual issue in contention, that is, the issue of the identification of Tyler Keizer’s killer. He looked for evidence to restore his faith that Mr. Harrington could be trusted in his identification. The trial judge’s concern to have his faith restored was an acknowledgment that his confidence in Mr. Harrington, a “dishonest, extremely violent” man with “little to no regard for other people, of the law”, was under water. The judge explicitly required confirmatory evidence that Mr. Harrington’s identification of the appellant as the shooter rose to the level of proof beyond a reasonable doubt. Proof beyond a reasonable doubt that the appellant was the killer could only be achieved through the evidence of Morgan Harrington. The balance of the evidence led by the Crown was insufficient. Without Morgan Harrington, the Crown could not prove its case. Much of the evidence the trial judge found to be confirmatory, which he used to restore his confidence in Mr. Harrington’s truthfulness on the central issue of identity, was incapable of carrying out the role it had been assigned.[Emphasis by PJM]

[169] I would allow the appeal, set aside the appellant’s conviction and order a new trial on the charge of first degree murder.
  Derrick, J.A.

Concurred in:

Bourgeois, J.A.

R v VRRR, 2026 MBCA 56

[June 15, 2026] Assumptions about Human Behaviour: Reacting to Allegations of Sexual Abuse by a Daughter [Reasons by Karen I. Simonsen J.A. with Janice L. leMaistre and Diana M. Cameron JJ.A. concurring]

AUTHOR’S NOTE: Credibility assessments often require judges to evaluate how people reacted to stressful or unexpected events. That task, however, must be approached with caution. Assumptions about how a “normal” person would behave in extraordinary circumstances are inherently uncertain and, if unsupported by evidence or common human experience, can lead to palpable and overriding error.

Here, the trial judge reasoned that a parent who genuinely believed their child had been sexually assaulted would necessarily continue to express concern for the child’s emotional well-being. The judge treated the absence of such ongoing expressions of concern as undermining the parent’s credibility.

The Court of Appeal rejected that reasoning. Human responses to allegations of sexual assault are highly variable. Individuals process trauma, fear, guilt, and uncertainty in markedly different ways, and there is no single or expected pattern of behaviour from which credibility can reliably be inferred. A parent’s reaction may be influenced by countless personal, emotional, and situational factors, making it dangerous to draw adverse credibility conclusions from a perceived failure to behave in a particular manner.

By relying on an unsupported assumption about how a parent would necessarily respond, the trial judge substituted a stereotype of human behaviour for an evidentiary analysis. The credibility finding was therefore tainted by palpable and overriding error. The decision serves as a reminder that credibility must be assessed on the evidence itself, not on judicial expectations of how people ought to react in exceptional and emotionally charged circumstances.

 


[2] Although a number of grounds of appeal were advanced, the accused’s arguments focussed on the trial judge’s analysis of his evidence. More specifically, the accused argued that, in rejecting his testimony, the trial judge made palpable and overriding errors in his assumptions as to how a person should testify (see R v Kruk,, 2024 SCC 7 [Kruk]).

[3] At the conclusion of the hearing, we allowed the appeal, quashed the convictions and ordered a new trial with reasons to follow. These are those reasons.

[4] At the trial, the victim testified that the accused sexually assaulted her on three occasions in the family home. The accused also testified, denying all of the allegations. He indicated that he loved his daughters—the victim and his three daughters with his wife (the victim’s stepmother). He explained that the victim was very hard to manage and that he and the stepmother had taken many steps to support her and help her make good choices. It was common ground between the victim and the accused that the victim frequently argued with the accused and the stepmother over a number of matters.

[6] In applying W(D) and assessing the credibility of the accused, the trial judge noted that this was not a case where the accused “blatantly undermine[d] [his] own credibility by being evasive, or by contradicting [himself], or by taking a position that cannot be accurate” (ibid at para 63).

[8] As for the first answer, counsel for the accused at trial questioned him about the day he first learned of the allegations when an employee of Child and Family Services arrived at the family home and told him. Trial counsel asked the accused about his reaction. The accused replied:

I was surprised. I was afraid. I was worried. On that day, they asked me, do you want us to take the family away from you or do you want to move out of the house yourself? And I said I’ll leave. And I took all my things out. Clothing.

[9] In assessing the above answer, the trial judge found that “[i]t goes without saying that [the accused] was surprised, afraid and worried. However, if he was shocked, mortified and aghast by false allegations that he sexually assaulted his daughter when she was 13, he did not mention it” (ibid at para 69).[Emphasis by PJM]

[11] In assessing the above answer, the trial judge noted that the accused “asserted that he still loves the [victim], but he expressed no concerns at all about her current mental health or wellbeing” (ibid at para 70). The trial judge further stated (ibid at para 71):

If the accused honestly believed that the [victim] completely invented all of the details of the sexual assaults that she shared with the police (and later the court), what did that suggest to the accused about the [victim’s] mental and emotional wellbeing? If she simply invented everything, and stuck to that invention when talking to the police and while under oath in court, and the accused really did love her like a father, would he not have expressed at least a tiny bit of concern about her mental wellbeing?[Emphasis by PJM]

[12] The trial judge added that he “got the distinct impression that the accused was more concerned with his own inconvenience (he expressly mentioned his clothing), than with the mental and emotional wellbeing of his young daughter” (ibid at para 72).

[13] Having conducted this analysis, the trial judge rejected the accused’s evidence and determined that it did not raise a reasonable doubt as to his guilt.[13] Having conducted this analysis, the trial judge rejected the accused’s evidence and determined that it did not raise a reasonable doubt as to his guilt.

[14] As for the victim’s evidence, the trial judge rejected the defence theory that she fabricated the allegations against the accused due to animus towards him resulting from their many disagreements. The trial judge found the victim’s testimony about the sexual assaults to be “credible and . . . reliable” (ibid at para 81) and that “the details of [her] allegations bear the ring of truth” (ibid at para 82). He addressed inconsistencies in her evidence and found that “nothing in the testimony of the [victim] created any reasonable doubts about the guilt of the accused” (ibid at para 83).

[16] The standard of review on questions of law is correctness. However, at its core, this appeal does not raise an error of law as contemplated in Kruk (see para 96). Instead, the accused challenges the credibility assessment made by the trial judge in rejecting the accused’s evidence. Credibility assessments are owed significant deference on appeal and are reviewed on the standard of palpable and overriding error (see ibid at para 82).

[17] The question on this appeal is whether, in rejecting the accused’s denials, the trial judge made a palpable and overriding error by relying on a “common-sense” assumption (ibid at para 94) that is “beyond the bounds of what common sense and the judicial function support” (ibid at para 95). In Kruk at para 97, the Supreme Court of Canada explained appellate review of such assumptions as follows:

Absent an error of law, the standard of review will be palpable and overriding error. The reviewing court must first determine whether the erroneous reliance on the assumption is palpable, in that it is “plainly seen”, “plainly identified”, or “obvious” (see Housen, at paras. 5-6; R. v. Clark, 2005 SCC 2, [2005] 1 S.C.R. 6, at para. 9; Benhaim, at para. 38, citing South Yukon Forest Corp., at para. 46). Palpable errors in this context will include, for example, where the assumption in question is obviously untrue on its face, or where it is untrue or inapplicable in light of the other accepted evidence or findings of fact. Although trial judges are clearly best placed to make factual findings and assess the accuracy of generalizations, appellate courts can balance the need for deference to those findings with employing their own common sense to determine whether the presumption was clearly illogical or unwarranted so as to make out a palpable error. Appellate courts are routinely tasked with, for example, considering whether based on “logic and human experience” a particular piece of evidence was relevant or whether an accused’s after-the-fact conduct was consistent with that of a guilty person (R. v. Corbett, [1988] 1 S.C.R. 670, at p. 715; see R. v. White, 2011 SCC 13, [2011] 1 S.C.R. 433, at para. 17). In the context of factual generalizations, so long as the assessment remains focused on whether there was any palpable error, such an exercise remains an integral part of the judicial function of a reviewing court.

[emphasis in original]

[18] In our view, although the trial judge’s assessment of the first answer is not entirely clear, it would be a palpable error if he assumed that a person, when first faced with what they consider to be false allegations of a crime, would necessarily deny them.

[19] As for the second answer, the trial judge found that the accused’s focus on his own situation instead of expressing concern for the victim’s mental well-being was inconsistent with his evidence that he loved the victim and provided extensive support to her—and that this inconsistency adversely affected the accused’s credibility. In our view, this adverse credibility finding is grounded in the palpably erroneous assumption that an accused person, who loves their child, should continue to express concern for the child’s mental well-being even when facing serious allegations made by the child that the accused person says are untrue.[Emphasis by PJM]

[20] Trial judges are entitled to rely on common sense and life experience. However, human responses to serious allegations of sexual assault are highly variable. The assumption that a parent who loves their child would necessarily express ongoing concern for the child’s mental well-being in these circumstances is not, without more, a reliable benchmark for assessing credibility and falls outside the bounds of permissible common-sense reasoning.[Emphasis by PJM]

[21] At the appeal hearing, the Crown conceded that, if the trial judge made palpable errors as alleged, they were overriding. We agree. The trial judge said that he was reviewing the answers in an attempt to determine the accused’s credibility and that he “was surprised by [the accused’s] answers” (Reasons at para 69). After reviewing the answers, the trial judge stated that he rejected the accused’s denials of sexual activity with the victim and that he did not “discern anything in [the accused’s] evidence that would raise a reasonable doubt about his guilt” (ibid at para 73). The trial judge’s assessment of the accused’s evidence clearly affected the outcome of the trial.

[22] We accept that a trier of fact may reject an accused’s evidence where, having considered the totality of the evidence, they are satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt of the truth of conflicting evidence. However, in R v Berg, 2026 SCC 21, the Supreme Court cautions that a trier of fact cannot reject an accused’s account based solely on a “‘considered and reasoned’ acceptance” (at para 10) of the conflicting account of the complainant, as this raises the spectre of turning trials into credibility contests….

R v Murphy and Wright, 2026 NSCA 51

[June 24, 2026] Judicial Notice, Mistrials, and the Crown Right of Appeal [Reasons by Derrick J.A. with Wood C.J.N.S. and Farrar J.A. concurring]

AUTHOR’S NOTE: Judges must decide cases on the evidentiary record before the court. They are not entitled to supplement that record through their own independent factual research unless the information is a proper subject of judicial notice.

Judicial notice is a narrow exception to the ordinary rules of proof. It is confined to facts that are either so notorious or generally accepted that reasonable people could not dispute them, or facts capable of immediate and accurate verification by reference to sources of indisputable accuracy. Even where a fact arguably falls within those categories, fairness ordinarily requires that counsel be given an opportunity to make submissions before the judge relies upon it.

Here, the trial judge independently consulted Google Maps outside the courtroom and relied on what was observed to resolve a factual issue. That information was not part of the evidentiary record, nor was it an appropriate subject of judicial notice. By conducting independent research and relying upon its results without inviting submissions from counsel, the judge improperly supplemented the evidentiary record.

Recognizing the error, the judge declared a mistrial after having found the accused guilty. The Crown sought to appeal that decision. The Court of Appeal held, however, that no right of appeal existed. Although the trial judge may have erred procedurally, the declaration of a mistrial in these circumstances did not fall within the categories of appeal authorized by s. 676(1) of the Criminal Code. The absence of a statutory right of appeal was therefore determinative.

The decision serves as an important reminder that judges cannot fill evidentiary gaps through independent internet research and that appellate jurisdiction is entirely statutory. Even where a trial judge acknowledges and attempts to correct an error, the Crown may only appeal if Parliament has expressly conferred a right to do so.

 


Introduction

[1] This is a Crown appeal from a decision by the trial judge to declare a mistrial. The judge did so after convicting the respondents on all charges.

A Synopsis

[5] The respondents were jointly charged with numerous offences arising from a violent home invasion late at night on January 27, 2022. The Crown preferred a direct Indictment. The judge-alone trial was heard over six daysin the Nova Scotia Supreme Court by Justice John Bodurtha. The central issue was identity.

[6] The trial judge gave an oral decision, convicting the respondents. A date for sentencing was set. A few hours later, the judge brought counsel back and addressed some errors he said were in his decision. A week later the trial judge reconvened the proceedings and explained he had taken judicial notice of certain facts without seeking input from the parties. He concluded it was necessary for him to declare a mistrial.

[7] The trial judge did not invite submissions from counsel at any point following delivery of his decision to convict.

[22] In convicting the respondents of all charges the trial judge concluded the whole of the circumstantial evidence was consistent with no other inference than their guilt.

July 22, 2025 – The Trial Judge Addresses “Errors” in His Oral Decision

[26] The trial judge indicated he had called counsel back because of “an error in the oral reasons I put out this morning” that he wanted “to address quickly”. He went on to say: “None of them form part of my reasoning, but in any event I wanted to correct it so you wouldn’t be surprised when the published version came out”.

[27] The two-minute driving time and the Susan Drive Community Trail references were the trial judge’s focus. He told counsel the following:

One of the things that I wanted to correct here was, there was a note that was inadvertently read which had to reference the driving distance between 1263 Susan Drive and 1116 Susan Drive. So that will not form part of the decision.

The other bit was the name of the community trail. It will just be referenced as the trail.[Emphasis by PJM]

[28] The trial judge reiterated he wanted to correct these errors so counsel would “recognize them in the published decision”. He reemphasized the errors had no impact on his decision “in any way”.

[29] The trial judge did not ask to hear from counsel about his use of information extrinsic to the evidence heard at trial. Neither Crown nor defence counsel made any comment about the “errors” the trial judge identified.

[30] No published decision was forthcoming.

[31] The three Google Maps printouts in evidence did not show any driving time calculation and no witness had testified about driving time between the two locations—1116 Susan Drive and 1263 Susan Drive. No witness testified to a trail from the crashed Mazda through the woods to the rear of the Maplewood house where Mr. Murphy was arrested. No trail was indicated on the Google Maps printouts. The Google Maps printouts did not show any named trails. Sgt. Berube and his police dog had followed what he described as a “very narrow path” in the opposite direction from Maplewood Court. He said: “I wouldn’t consider it a trail”.

The Mistrial Decision

[32] On July 29, 2025 in a virtual hearing, the trial judge, having directed counsel to appear, disclosed he had used Google Maps to obtain the information about driving time and the named trail. Immediately after establishing counsel were present2 , he ordered a mistrial and explained:

I was compelled to bring you back after last week’s oral decision, where I spoke about in the decision errors in that decision that I wanted to correct.

Although these errors do not influence my decision, upon further reflection, the note that I read that was mistakenly included in the decision leads to the conclusion that I was taking judicial notice of Google Maps without providing the opportunity for the parties to respond.

Given that this case turned entirely on circumstantial evidence, and part of that evidence being proximity of one of the accused found in relation to the abandoned vehicle and the home invasion, I can see how the accused or a reasonably minded person would consider that they had not received a fair trial. As a result, I am ordering a mistrial.[Emphasis by PJM]

[33] The trial judge recognized the discretionary power to order a mistrial should only be exercised in exceptional circumstances and held that in his opinion, this was “one of those situations”. He cancelled the sentencing hearing date and remanded the respondentsto appear in court on August 14, 2025 to obtain new trial dates.

[34] The July 29 hearing was brief. The trial judge did not invite submissions from counsel.

The Crown’s Right to Appeal a Mistrial

[37] The respondents say the appellant has no right of appeal. In this case they are correct. I have concluded the Crown, pursuant to ss. 570(1) and 676(1)(b) of the Criminal Code has the right to appeal a trial judge’s declaration of a mistrial, however, the circumstances where that right can be exercised do not exist here.

[38] The decision of the Ontario Court of Appeal in R. v Wilson , relied on by the appellant, is persuasive in establishing the Crown’s right to appeal in certain situations. In Wilson, the court found the Attorney General may appeal against any order that in any manner refuses or fails to exercise jurisdiction on an indictment. Wilson held that failing to sentence for reasons that are legally incorrect (such as, declaring a mistrial on the basis of an error in law) constitutes a failure to exercise jurisdiction.

[39] Wilson held the Crown’s right to appeal is grounded in the combined effect of s. 676(1)(b) and s. 570(1) of the Criminal Code:

[57] The wording of s. 676(1)(b) is important. It says that the Attorney General may appeal to the Court of Appeal against an order that in any manner refuses or fails to exercise jurisdiction on an indictment. When combined with the wording of s. 570(1) which sets out the trial judge’s responsibilities after a finding of guilt, the meaning is clear.

[40] The court addressed the relevant statutory provisions:

[58] Section 570(1) provides:

If an accused who is tried under this Part is determined by a judge or provincial court judge to be guilty of an offence on acceptance of a plea of guilty or on a finding of guilt, the judge or provincial court judge, as the case may be, shall endorse the information accordingly and shall sentence the accused or otherwise deal with the accused in the manner authorized by law and, on request by the accused, the prosecutor, a peace officer or any other person, a conviction in Form 35 and a certified copy of it, or an order in Form 36 and a certified copy of it, shall be drawn up and the certified copy shall be delivered to the person making the request. [Emphasis added].

[59] Consequently, if the trial judge does not sentence the accused, the trial judge must otherwise deal with the accused in the manner authorized by law. The language must be interpreted according to what the text of the provision says. The action of the trial judge must be legally correct. Together with s. 676(1)(b), which provides an appeal against an order that in any manner refuses or fails to exercise jurisdiction on an indictment, the intent of Parliament is clear. The words must mean what the text of the provision denotes. In these circumstances, the trial judge was required to comply with s. 570(1).

[41] As Wilson held, where a trial judge does not sentence an accused, they “must otherwise deal with the accused in the manner authorized by law”. And the judge must be legally correct in what they do. In the case before us, although the trial judge had entered convictions, he decided not to sentence the respondents and instead declared a mistrial. The Crown would have been entitled to appeal that decision had it been legally wrong. However, as I discuss, the trial judge’s decision to declare a mistrial was his only alternative in the face of a breach of procedural fairness. There was legal error in this case but not in the form of the mistrial declaration.

[42] A trial judge’s decision to order a mistrial is highly discretionary. As this Court said in R. v. Melvin: “It attracts deference unless ‘the trial judge exercised this discretion unreasonably or acted on a wrong principle’ ”.[Emphasis by PJM]

[43] The trial judge’s legal error was made well before he declared a mistrial. Having accessed information that was not in evidence he did not ask the parties for submissions on the implications of him doing so.[Emphasis by PJM]

[44] The crucial error by the trial judge occurred during his deliberative process after he had heard the evidence. Before determining the Crown had met its burden to prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, the judge should have asked counsel to address his having consulted Google Maps. Both parties were denied the opportunity to weigh in on the significance, if any, of his having done so. This was the critical juncture in the process for the trial judge to have heard from the parties. The failure to afford this opportunity was a breach of procedural fairness.

[45] The next opportunity to seek the input of counsel occurred on July 22, 2025 when the judge reconvened court to address what he described as errors in his reasons. And, after that, at the time he was contemplating a mistrial. But by the time he undertook the error correction and a week later the declaration of the mistrial, the denial of procedural fairness had occurred. This inexorably led to the trial judge having no alternative but to declare a mistrial.

The Breach of Procedural Fairness

[46] The failure of the trial judge to invite submissions from the parties on his resort to information not in evidence before him was an error of law. It was a violation of the right to be heard, one of the cardinal principles of natural justice.

[47] The right to be heard—the principle of audi alteram partem—is “one of the tenets of our legal system” and a feature of procedural fairness “originally developed in the criminal law context”.

[48] Before he decided whether the Crown had proven its case, the trial judge should have specifically informed the parties he had consulted Google Maps to establish the driving time between 1116 Susan Drive and 1263 Susan Drive and had also obtained the name of a trail. The parties would then have been able to address whether this compromised trial fairness in the context of the evidence and the pivotal issue of the identity of the perpetrators of the home invasion.

[49] The trial judge’s initiative of viewing Google Maps led him to think he had found the name of a trail through the woods from the crashed Mazda to the rear of the property on Maplewood where Mr. Murphy was arrested. If an iteration of Google Maps shows a Susan Drive Community Trail somewhere in the area of Susan Drive, the judge had no basis to conclude that it runs through the woods between the dead end of Susan Drive and the Maplewood cul-de-sac. No such trail, named or otherwise, was shown on the Google Maps printouts tendered as evidence.

[50] On July 29, 2025 when explaining his decision to declare the mistrial, the trial judge referred to having taken “judicial notice of Google Maps”. Driving time according to Google Maps does not obviously qualify for judicial notice. And judicial notice of a trail that did not exist in the evidence is not judicial notice.

[51] With little exception, trial judges are bound by the facts proven at trial. They “ought not to supplement and supplant the evidentiary record except in very limited circumstances where taking judicial notice is permitted”. Trial judges should not conduct their own investigation, however modest, into the facts of a case. Where judicial notice is taken, it must be in compliance with the substantive requirements.[Emphasis by PJM]

[52] Judges may take judicial notice of facts that are either (1) so notorious or generally accepted as not to be the subject of debate among reasonable persons; or (2) capable of immediate and accurate demonstration by resort to readily accessible sources of indisputable accuracy. The threshold is strict as judicial notice dispenses with the need for proof.

[53] As noted by the Ontario Court of Appeal in R. v. J.M., the requirement for transparency adds a procedural dimension to judicial notice (or what a trial judge considers to be an instance of taking judicial notice):

[36] The issue of judicial notice most often arises when a party requests the trier of fact to take judicial notice of a fact. Other parties then may support or oppose the request. The adversarial process ensures a transparent consideration of the request.

[37] More problematic are the occasions on which judges take judicial notice without the benefit of submissions from the parties. Such conduct by a judge lacks transparency, thereby risking the perception of the fairness of the hearing. It also risks crossing the boundary separating the notorious and readily demonstrable from the disputed and controversial, again risking the perception of procedural fairness. As put by the authors of Sopinka: “Judges should not conduct their own research and come to the conclusion that facts are notorious, for, there is no opportunity for the parties to respond:” at §19.61.

[38] Where a judge, on his or her own initiative, wishes to take judicial notice of a fact or state of affairs that bears on a key issue in a proceeding, the adversarial process requires that the court ensure that the parties are given an opportunity to deal with the new information by making further submissions, oral or written, and allowing, if requested, fresh material in response: (citations omitted)

[55] And, as in this case where there is no evidence of a trail from 1263 Susan Drive to the Maplewood residence, the “fact” to which a trial judge wants to apply judicial notice may not be a “fact” at all. I decline the appellant’s invitation to find that Google Maps can be considered a “readily accessible source of indisputable accuracy”.[Emphasis by PJM]

[56] Had the trial judge, prior to determining whether the Crown had met its burden of proof, informed the parties that he had looked at Google Maps not in evidence and invited their submissions on what he had found, he would have had options for how to proceed. A mistrial at that stage was not inevitable. However, having overlooked the requirement for procedural fairness and transparency, he ultimately had no alternative but to declare a mistrial.

No Right of the Crown to Appeal in This Case

[57] The Crown’s rights of appeal are limited by s. 676 (1) of the Criminal Code. The section provides:

s.676(1) The Attorney General or counsel instructed by him for the purpose may appeal to the court of appeal

(a) against a judgment or verdict of acquittal or a verdict of not criminally responsible on account of mental disorder of a trial court in proceedings by indictment on any ground of appeal that involves a question of law alone;

(b) against an order of a superior court of criminal jurisdiction that quashes an indictment or in any manner refuses or fails to exercise jurisdiction on an indictment;

(c) against an order of a trial court that stays proceedings on an indictment or quashes an indictment; or

(d) with leave of the court of appeal or a judge thereof, against the sentence passed by a trial court in proceedings by indictment, unless that sentence is one fixed by law.

[58] This appeal fits none of the categories listed. In Wilson, the Crown’s right of appeal was anchored in the trial judge, following conviction, having declared a mistrial on legally incorrect grounds and failing to sentence the accused he had convicted or otherwise deal with him “in the manner authorized by law” as required by s. 570(1) of the Criminal Code.

[59] The Crown needed to ground its right of appeal in s. 676(1)(b). That provision is not triggered here. The trial judge did not refuse or fail to exercise jurisdiction on the Indictment. He exercised his discretion to declare a mistrial. He committed no error of law in doing so. In the circumstances of this case he was not compelled by s. 570(1) of the Criminal Code to sentence the respondents. The Crown right-of-appeal route laid out in Wilson is not applicable to this appeal.

[60] I conclude the Crown does not have a right to appeal the trial judge’s declaration of the mistrial.

Disposition

[61] I would dismiss the Crown’s appeal.

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