Taking before justice
503 (1) Subject to the other provisions of this section, a peace officer who arrests a person with or without warrant and who has not released the person under any other provision under this Part shall, in accordance with the following paragraphs, cause the person to be taken before a justice to be dealt with according to law:
(a) if a justice is available within a period of 24 hours after the person has been arrested by the peace officer, the person shall be taken before a justice without unreasonable delay and in any event within that period; and
(b) if a justice is not available within a period of 24 hours after the person has been arrested by the peace officer, the person shall be taken before a justice as soon as possible.
Re-evaluation of detention
(1.1) At any time before the expiry of the time referred to in paragraph (1)(a) or (b), a peace officer who is satisfied that the continued detention of the person in custody for an offence that is not listed in section 469 is no longer necessary shall release the person, if
(a) the peace officer issues an appearance notice to the person; or
(b) the person gives an undertaking to the peace officer.
Person delivered or in custody
(2) Subsections (1) and (1.1) also apply to a peace officer to whom a person is delivered under subsection 494(3) or into whose custody a person is placed under subsection 163.5(3) of the Customs Act, except that the 24-hour period referred to in paragraphs (1)(a) and (b) begins after the person is delivered to the officer.
(2.1) [Repealed, 2019, c. 25, s. 217]
(2.2) [Repealed, 2019, c. 25, s. 217]
(2.3) [Repealed, 2019, c. 25, s. 217]
Remand in custody for return to jurisdiction where offence alleged to have been committed
(3) Where a person has been arrested without warrant for an indictable offence alleged to have been committed in Canada outside the territorial division where the arrest took place, the person shall, within the time prescribed in paragraph (1)(a) or (b), be taken before a justice within whose jurisdiction the person was arrested unless, where the offence was alleged to have been committed within the province in which the person was arrested, the person was taken before a justice within whose jurisdiction the offence was alleged to have been committed, and the justice within whose jurisdiction the person was arrested
(a) if the justice is not satisfied that there are reasonable grounds to believe that the person arrested is the person alleged to have committed the offence, shall release that person; or
(b) if the justice is satisfied that there are reasonable grounds to believe that the person arrested is the person alleged to have committed the offence, may
(i) remand the person to the custody of a peace officer to await execution of a warrant for his or her arrest in accordance with section 528, but if no warrant is so executed within a period of six days after the time he or she is remanded to such custody, the person in whose custody he or she then is shall release him or her, or
(ii) where the offence was alleged to have been committed within the province in which the person was arrested, order the person to be taken before a justice having jurisdiction with respect to the offence.
Interim release
(3.1) Notwithstanding paragraph (3)(b), a justice may, with the consent of the prosecutor, order that the person referred to in subsection (3), pending the execution of a warrant for the arrest of that person, be released
(a) without conditions; or
(b) on the terms of a release order containing any conditions referred to in paragraphs 515(2)(a) to (e) that the justice considers desirable and to which the prosecutor consents.
Release of person about to commit indictable offence
(4) A peace officer having the custody of a person who has been arrested without warrant as a person about to commit an indictable offence shall release that person as soon as practicable after the officer is satisfied that the continued detention of that person is no longer necessary in order to prevent that person from committing an indictable offence.
Consequences of non-release
(5) Despite subsection (4), a peace officer having the custody of a person referred to in that subsection who does not release the person before the expiry of the time prescribed in paragraph (1)(a) or (b) for taking the person before the justice shall be deemed to be acting lawfully and in the execution of the peace officer’s duty for the purposes of
(a) any proceedings under this or any other Act of Parliament; or
(b) any other proceedings, unless in those proceedings it is alleged and established by the person making the allegation that the peace officer did not comply with the requirements of subsection (4).
Annotations | French
- Section 503
- Section 503(1)(a) requires that a that a is brought before a justice “without unreasonable delay.” Paragraph (a) states that the person must be brought before a justice within 24 hours, which is the outer limit of a “reasonable period” when a justice is available within the first 24 hours after detention. An unreasonable delay can happen before the 24-hour period has expired if a justice is available and the delay is unreasonable in the circumstances: R v Koszulap, [1974] OJ No 726 at p. 202 (ON CA); R v Simpson, [1994] NJ No 69 at para 34 (NFLD CA), rev’d on other grounds [1995] 1 SCR 449 (SCC); R v Mangat, [2006] OJ No 2418, at paras 4-6, 9 (ONCA).
- In the context of large-scale criminal investigations that lead to a large number of individuals arrested at the same time, an accused must still be brought before a justice within 24 hours or at the first practicable time under section 503(1) of the Code: R v Brown, 2009 ONCA 633 at paras 7-9.