PDF version: “Safe and enjoyable and reasonable use”:  Of public space, public fighting and Edmonton’s defence of its Public Places Bylaw

Case considered: R v Keshane, 2011 ABQB 525

A recent Alberta Court of Queen’s Bench decision, R v Keshane, 2011 ABQB 525 (“Keshane“) has further refined the contentious, and important issue of how much control a municipal authority can have over shared public space. The judgment in Keshane decisively rejected a defence that the passage and application of a City of Edmonton bylaw prohibiting public fighting was beyond the power of the municipal government. In its judgment the court concluded that Edmonton’s Public Places Bylaw was a valid exercise of municipal authority because (at para 118) “in pith and substance it relates to the purpose of providing safe and enjoyable public places for the benefit of all residents of and visitors to the City…”. The court determined that as a consequence the bylaw fell within provincial authority “as either or both a matter of property and civil rights in the province under subsection 92(13) of the Constitution Act, 1867 or a matter of merely local nature under section 92(16).” The Queen’s Bench judgment overturned an earlier lower court decision R v Keshane, 2010 ABPC 275 (per Judge D.M. Groves) which reached almost exactly the opposite conclusion. The Queen’s Bench judgment is the latest in a string of recent cases in both Alberta and British Columbia in which Constitutional challenges have been launched against municipal restrictions on activities in public space.