Episode 4: R. v. R. A
R.A. v. His Majesty the King
The central issue in this case is whether or not the appellant committed an assault in 1978, under s. 244 of the Criminal Code as it then was. R.A. had confessed to police that when he was babysitting the complainant, who was 5 years old at the time, he was caught masturbating by her as she stood in the doorway of the bathroom. He asked the complainant if she wanted to lick his penis by telling the complainant it was ice cream and she did so for a mere moment. After this brief encounter, R.A. told police he asked the complainant to leave and to not tell anyone— he then threw up in the toilet realizing what he had done. He was charged with committing an indecent assault on the complainant, contrary to s. 149 of the Criminal Code that was in force at that time.
The provincial court judge acquitted the accused on the basis that an assault, under then s. 244 of the Criminal Code, had not been made out because, as required by the section, there had been no direct, intentional application of force to the complainant and no attempt or threat by an act or gesture to apply force to the complainant.
The British Columbia Court of Appeal unanimously set aside the acquittal, and found that any contact between a child and an adult that is made in a circumstance of a sexual nature satisfies the requirements for a finding of guilt. The matter was sent back to the provincial court for sentencing. The central issue that remains for the appellant R.A. is whether his admitted contact with the complainant meets the definition of s. 244.
At that time, s. 244 read:
244. A person commits an assault when
(a) without the consent of another person or with consent, where it is obtained by fraud, he applies force intentionally to the person of the other, directly or indirectly;
(b) he attempts or threatens, by an act or gesture, to apply force to the person of the other, if he has or causes the other to believe upon reasonable grounds that he has present ability to effect his purpose; …

