Compensate woman detained in Montreal handrail dispute, Supreme Court orders
OTTAWA — A Quebec police officer stepped over the line when he detained a woman for refusing to hold onto an escalator handrail, the Supreme Court of Canada said in a scathing ruling on Friday that also slammed Quebec’s lower courts.
In a unanimous ruling, the court found the woman was within her rights when she refused to obey what was an ultimately unlawful order, and that a reasonable police officer would not have considered refusing to abide by a caution-notice pictogram on the escalator to be an offence.
The ruling, written by Justice Suzanne Cote, also blasted the Societe de transport de Montreal. The transit agency “committed a fault by teaching police officers that the pictogram in question imposed an obligation to hold the handrail.”
And it took issue with earlier rulings from the Court of Quebec and Quebec Court of Appeal, which had both dismissed a lawsuit brought forward by the woman against the police officer, the STM and City of Laval.