Wilfrid Emmett Doyle


Wilfrid Emmett Doyle was a Canadian prelate of the Roman Catholic Church. He served as Bishop of Nelson from 1958 to 1989.

Biography

Doyle was born in Calgary, Alberta, as one of twelve children; his ancestors had immigrated to Canada from County Wexford in Ireland. He attended Sacred Heart School and St. Joseph's High School in Edmonton, and the University of Alberta, from where he obtained his Bachelor of Arts degree in 1935. He also studied theology at St. Joseph's Seminary in Edmonton. Doyle was ordained to the priesthood by Archbishop John MacDonald on June 5, 1938, and continued his studies at St. Paul's University Seminary in Ottawa, earning his doctorate in canon law in 1949. He later became chancellor of the Archdiocese of Edmonton.
On November 9, 1958, Doyle was appointed the third Bishop of Nelson, British Columbia, by Pope John XXIII. Doyle received his episcopal consecration on the following December 3 from Archbishop Giovanni Panico, with Archbishop Michael O'Neill and Bishop Francis Allen serving as co-consecrators.
A leading figure in Canadian catechetics, he taught the Come to the Father catechetical series and was named head of the Canadian Bishops' Office for Religious Education when the series was expanded; he later stated, "My spiritual life began when I started teaching the Come to the Father series". Doyle also served as national director of the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine, President of the then Office for Religious Education, director of the National Office of Religious Education, and Chairman of the Episcopal Commission for Religious Education.
He attended the Second Vatican Council from 1962 to 1965. In 1976, he appointed Sr. Katherine Meagher as the chancellor of his diocese, making her the first woman to hold that post in Canada.

Sexual Abuse Scandals

Doyle was Bishop during a string of sexual abuse scandals in the diocese that started before he took office and lasted until at least 1992, three years after he retired. At least seven priests were charged with sexual abuse of minors during his tenure in office including:
"At the hearing, the appellant felt that he was the only victim of this ordeal and failed to take any responsibility for any of his criminal convictions. The panel is profoundly astounded and dismayed by the appellant's insistence that he is not guilty of any of his convictions which indicates that there has been little or no rehabilitation. With little if any genuine remorse and no acceptance of responsibility for his offences, the panel finds that the appellant does pose a risk of re-offending."

In 2004, the Supreme Court of Canada held that a bishop/diocese could be held vicariously liable for the sexual misdeeds of priests in the case of John Doe v. Bennett. Until that time, the Church had argued that a priest was not an "employee" of a diocese and therefore the bishop was not his employer and not vicariously liable. The court said that there the five elements necessary to establish vicarious liability exist in a sexual abuse situation involving a priest:
1. The relationship between the diocesan enterprise and the priest is sufficiently close.
2. There is a connection between the employer-created or enhanced risk and the wrong complained of.
3. The bishop provides the priest with the opportunity to abuse his power.
4. The priest's wrongful acts are strongly related to the psychological intimacy inherent in his role as priest.
5. The bishop confers an enormous degree of power on the priest relative to his victims.

Retirement

He later retired as Bishop on November 6, 1989, after nearly thirty-one years of service. Doyle then did work in the Diocese of Kamloops before moving in 2001 to St. Elizabeth Seton House of Prayer in Kelowna, which he had established during his tenure as Bishop and where he and others were later forced to evacuate when forest fires threatened to consume the residence.
Doyle died in his sleep in Kelowna, at age 90. He is buried in Nelson.