Search and Seizure in Saskatchewan
Reviewed by the Commoner Law Editorial Team. Sourced from Canadian federal statutes and official sources. Provincial information reflects each province's own legislation and court rulings. Written in plain language for general understanding — this is educational content, not legal advice. Our editorial standards
What is this right?
Section 8 protects everyone in Canada from unreasonable search and seizure. Hunter v. Southam Inc. (1984) set the foundation: searches need prior judicial authorisation where feasible, and what triggers Charter protection is your reasonable expectation of privacy.
The default is a warrant. The exceptions are narrow — consent, search incident to lawful arrest, exigent circumstances, and the limited authority of a roadside stop. They get litigated constantly because police lean on them, and courts watch.
Three-part test: the search must be authorised by law, that law must itself be reasonable, and the search must be carried out reasonably. All three. Fail any one and the evidence may go.
Your home gets the highest protection (R. v. Feeney). Your phone sits in its own category: police can do limited searches incident to arrest under R. v. Fearon, but the device's privacy stakes are now treated seriously.
When does it apply?
The right applies to everyone in Canada.
- Triggered any time the state intrudes on your reasonable expectation of privacy.
- Covers searches of your body, clothing, bags, vehicle, home, and electronic devices.
What to Do If Police in Canada Try to Search You Without a Warrant
- Ask: "Do you have a warrant?"
- Then: "I do not consent to a search." Say it. Don't mumble it.
- If they search anyway, do not physically resist. The argument lives in court, not at the curb.
- Write everything down — time, location, what was said, who was there — as soon as you safely can. Memory fades fast.
What should you NOT do?
- Don't consent casually. "Sure" or "go ahead" reads as consent and waives the s. 8 challenge.
- Don't physically block. Lose the argument now, win it in court.
- Don't destroy or hide evidence. That's its own offence and it tanks your defence.
- Don't assume a traffic stop equals a vehicle search. It doesn't (R. v. Caslake).
How Saskatchewan differs from federal law
Protection against unreasonable search and seizure comes from section 8 of the Charter. Saskatchewan has some provincial statutes that create specific search powers.
- Police generally need a warrant to search you, your home, or your belongings. Exceptions include: search incident to a lawful arrest, consent searches, plain view seizures, and exigent circumstances.
- Under Saskatchewan's Traffic Safety Act, police can stop any vehicle to check for a valid licence, registration, insurance, and sobriety. This does not give them the right to search the vehicle or passengers without further grounds.
- Under The Alcohol and Gaming Regulation Act, 1997, inspectors have specific search powers for licensed premises.
- Saskatchewan's Seizure of Criminal Property Act, 2009 allows the provincial government to seek civil forfeiture of property used in or acquired through crime. This uses a civil standard (balance of probabilities), not the criminal standard.
- If police conduct an unlawful search, the evidence obtained may be excluded at trial under section 24(2) of the Charter.
Additional Steps in Saskatchewan
If police ask to search you or your property, you can ask: "Do you have a warrant?" and "Am I free to go?" If they proceed without a warrant and without your consent, do not physically resist — note what happened and raise it with a lawyer. Contact Legal Aid Saskatchewan at 306-933-5300 or 1-800-667-3764 if you cannot afford a lawyer.
Relevant Law: Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, s. 8; The Traffic Safety Act, SS 2004, c. T-18.1; The Seizure of Criminal Property Act, 2009, SS 2009, c. S-46.002
Common Questions
When does search and seizure apply?
The right applies to everyone in Canada.Triggered any time the state intrudes on your reasonable expectation of privacy.Covers searches of your body, clothing, bags, vehicle, home, and electronic devices.
What should I do if police in Canada want to search me or my home without a warrant?
Ask: "Do you have a warrant?"Then: "I do not consent to a search." Say it. Don't mumble it.If they search anyway, do not physically resist. The argument lives in court, not at the curb.Write everything down — time, location, what was said, who was there — as soon as you safely can. Memory fades fast.
What mistakes should I avoid with search and seizure?
Don't consent casually. "Sure" or "go ahead" reads as consent and waives the s. 8 challenge.Don't physically block. Lose the argument now, win it in court.Don't destroy or hide evidence. That's its own offence and it tanks your defence.Don't assume a traffic stop equals a vehicle search. It doesn't (R. v. Caslake).
Search and Seizure in other states
Same topic, different jurisdiction. Pick the one that applies to you.