R v Mohan
is a leading Supreme Court of Canada decision on the use of expert witnesses in trial testimony.
Background
Chikmaglur Mohan was a pediatrician in North Bay, Ontario. He was charged with sexual assault of four teenage patients. During his trial, the defence tried to put Dr. Hill, a psychiatrist, on the stand as an expert on sexual assault. Hill intended to testify that the perpetrator of the offence must have possessed several abnormal characteristics, which Mohan did not have. In a voir dire hearing, Hill testified that the culprit in the first three assaults was likely a pedophile, while the fourth assault would have been by a sexual psychopath. This evidence was held to be inadmissible by the judge. Mohan was eventually convicted at trial but his conviction was overturned on appeal.The issue before the Supreme Court was whether Hill's testimony could be admitted as that of an expert witness, and whether the testimony would violate the rule against character evidence.
Opinion of the Court
Justice Sopinka, for a unanimous Court, allowed the appeal and held that the evidence should be excluded.Expert evidence, stated Sopinka in the ruling, should be admitted based on four criteria:
- It must be relevant,
- it must be needed to assist the trier of fact,
- it should not trigger any exclusionary rules, and
- it must be given by a properly qualified expert.
In total, the expert evidence should be included where the probative value of the evidence outweighs any prejudicial effect it may cause.
In the current case, Sopinka found that there was insufficient evidence to suggest that there was any clear standard for determining the profile of a pedophile or psychopath. Thus, the expert evidence was not considered reliable. Furthermore, the expert's evidence was not sufficiently relevant to be of any help.