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BERMUDA
1965 : 22
CANADIAN FORCES
(PRIVILEGES AND IM MUNITIES) ACT 1965
ARRANGEMENT OF
SEC TIONS
1 Interpretation
2 Jurisdiction
3 Exercise of powers by Canadian service
authori ties
4 Local courts not to try of fenders tried
by service courts
5 Evidence
6 Extension of certain rights and immunities
7 Immunity from civil claims
[22 March 1965]
[preamble and
words of enactment omitted]
Interpretation
1 In this Act unless the context
otherwise requires—
"Arrangements"
means the arrangements regarding the status of any Canadian visiting force, its
members and any dependent,
subsisting between the Governments of Canada and the
United Kingdom by virtue of an Exchange of Notes between those Governments
in London
on the 11th day of September, 1964, as amended from time to time in the manner
provided for in the Exchange of Notes;
"Canadian service
authorities" means the service authorities and service courts of Canada
that are empowered by the law
of Canada to enforce Canadian service law;
"Canadian
visiting force" means any element of the Canadian Forces present in the
territory of Bermuda;
"dependant"
means a person who is a wife, child or other relative of, and who accompanies
and is dependent for support
on, a member;
"local
court" means any court having jurisdiction in Bermuda other than a service
court or a civil or service court of
the United States of America exercising
jurisdiction under the United States Bases (Agreement) Act, 1952;
"local law"
means any provision of law;
"member"
means any officer or man of the Canadian Forces pre sent in Bermuda in
connection with official duties, and in
cludes any civilian person in the
employ of, and who accom panies, the Canadian visiting force, except civilian
employees enjoying
Bermudian Status or normally resident in Bermuda at the time
of entering the employ of the Canadian visiting force;
"service
authorities" means naval, military or air force authori ties;
"service
court" means a court established under service law;
"service
law" means the law of Canada governing all or any of the Canadian visiting
forces, a member or dependent.
Jurisdiction
2 (1) Subject
to this section, a person charged with an offence against local law shall not
be liable to be tried for that offence by
a local court if at the time when the
offence is alleged to have been committed he was a member or a dependent and—
(a) in the case of a member, the alleged offence,
if commit ted by him, arose out of and in the course of his duty as a member;
or
(b) the alleged offence is an offence against the
person, and the person or, if more than one, each of the persons in relation to
whom
it is alleged to have been committed, was at the time thereof a member or
a dependent; or
(c) the alleged offence is an offence against
property, and the whole of the property in relation to which it is
alleged
to have been committed (or, in a case where different parts of that property
were differently owned, each part of the property)
was at the time thereof the
property of the Government of Canada or a member or a dependent:
Provided that this
section shall not apply if at the time when the offence was alleged to have
been committed the alleged offender
was a per son not subject to the
jurisdiction of a service court.
(2) In relation to the trial of a member or a
dependent at the time when the offence is alleged to have been committed,
subsection (1)
shall not have effect unless it is shown that the case can be
dealt with under service law.
(3) Nothing in subsection (1)—
(a) shall prevent a person from being tried by a
local court in a case where the Attorney-General certifies, either before or in
the
course of the trial, that the Canadian service authorities have informed
him that it is not pro posed to deal with the case under
service law; or
(b) shall affect anything done or omitted in the
course of a trial unless in the course thereof objection has already been made
that
by reason of that subsection the court is not competent to deal with the
case; or
(c) shall, after the conclusion of a trial, be
treated as having affected the validity thereof if no such objection was made
in the
proceedings at any stage before the conclu sion of the trial.
(4) Nothing in this section shall be construed
as derogating from the provisions of any other provision of law respecting the
prosecu
tion of any proceedings or requiring the consent of any authority to
the prosecution thereof
Exercise of
powers by Canadian service authorities
3 (1) The
Canadian service authorities may within Bermuda exercise over any member or
dependent subject to their jurisdiction all such
powers as are exercisable by
them according to the law of Canada.
(2) Where any sentence has, whether within or
outside Bermuda, been passed by a service court upon a person who was at the
time a member
or dependent, then for the purpose of any proceedings in a local
court the said service court shall be deemed to have been properly
constituted,
and the sentence shall be deemed to be within the jurisdic tion of that service
court and in accordance with the law
of Canada and, if lawfully executed
according to the tenor of the sentence, shall be deemed to have been lawfully
executed.
(3) Notwithstanding anything in the foregoing
provisions of this section, a sentence of death passed by a service court shall
not be
car ried out in Bermuda unless under local law a sentence of death could
have been passed in a similar case.
(4) Any person who—
(a) is detained in custody in pursuance of a
sentence as re spects which subsection (2) has effect; or
(b) being subject in accordance with this section
to the ju risdiction of a service court, is detained in custody pending or
during
a trial by such service court of a charge brought against him,
shall for the purposes of any proceedings in any local court be deemed to be in legal custody.
(5) For the purpose of enabling the Canadian
service authori ties to exercise more effectively the powers referred to in
subsection
(1), a Police Officer may arrest any member or dependent whom he has
rea sonable grounds to believe to be guilty of an offence punishable
under
service law and to hand him over to the Canadian service authorities.
Local courts
not to try offenders tried by service courts
4 (1) Without
prejudice to section 2 where a person has been tried by a service court in the
exercise of the powers re ferred to in section
3(1), he shall not be tried for
the same offence by a local court.
(2) Where a person who has been convicted by a
service court in the exercise of the said powers, is convicted by a local court
for a
dif ferent offence, but it appears to the local court that the conviction
by the service court was wholly or partly in respect of
acts or omissions in re spect
of which he was convicted by the local court, the local court shall have regard
to the sentence of
the service court.
Evidence
5 (1) For the purpose of this Act a certificate
issued by or on be half of the Canadian service authorities stating that at a
time specified
in the certificate a person so specified either was or was not a
member or dependent shall in any proceedings in a local court,
be sufficient
evi dence of the fact so stated unless the contrary is proved.
(2) For the purpose of this Act a certificate
issued by or on be half of the Canadian service authorities stating as respects
a person
specified in the certificate—
(a) that on a date so specified he was sentenced by
a service court to such punishment as is specified in the certifi cate; or
(b) that he is, or was at a time so specified,
detained in custody in pursuance of a sentence passed upon him by a service
court pending
or during the trial by such ser vice court of a charge brought
against him; or
(c) that he has been tried, at a time and place
specified in the certificate, by a service court for an offence so speci fied,
shall
in any proceeding in any local court be con clusive evidence of the fact
so stated.
(3) For the purpose of section 2(2), a
certificate issued by or on behalf of the Canadian service authorities stating
in con nection
with any charge against a person of an offence against local
law, being a charge specified in the certificate, that his case can
be dealt
with under the service law, shall in any such proceedings as aforesaid be con clusive
evidence of the fact so stated.
(4) Where a person is charged with an offence
against local law and at the time when the offence was alleged to have been
committed
he was a member or dependent, a certificate issued by or on behalf of
the Canadian service authorities stating that the alleged
offence, if commit ted
by him, arose out of or in the course of his duty as a member shall in any such
proceedings as aforesaid
be sufficient evidence of the fact un less the
contrary is proved.
Extension of
certain rights and immunities
6 (1) Subject
to this Act or any Arrangements regarding the status of the Canadian Visiting
Forces between the Gov ernment of the United
Kingdom and Canada, there shall be
enjoyed by the Canadian service authorities, a member or dependant the rights,
privileges, immunities
and exemptions enjoyed respectively by the United States
Authorities, a United States employee or his dependent under the United
States
Bases (Agreement) Act, 1952 [title 7 item
4], or any other law, in relation to the following matters and subject to
the same restrictions, namely, import, export and other
duties, taxes,
licensing, registration, the carry ing and possession of arms, immigration,
payment of statutory fees, the use of
public services and facilities, the
arrest and surrender of offenders and right of audience in a local court.
(2) For the purposes of subsection (1), it
shall, prima facie, be proof of the
terms of any Arrangements to produce—
(a) a copy of the Gazette purporting to set forth
the terms thereof; or
(b) a document purporting to be printed under the
Authority of the Government of Bermuda or of the Government of the United
Kingdom
and purporting to set forth the terms thereof; or
(c) a document purporting
to set forth the terms thereof and purporting to be certified as correct by the
Deputy Governor.
Immunity from
civil claims
7 A member of the Canadian visiting
force shall not be subject to any proceeding for the enforcement of any
judgment given against
him in Bermuda in a civil cause in a matter arising out
of the performance of his official duties.
[Amended by
1970 : 109]
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