Aboriginal law

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

  • 8/8/2019 Aboriginal law

    1/5

    Aboriginal People

    28.1- Federal Legislative Power

    s 91(24)-of the Constitutional Act 1867 confers power upon the federal Parliament the power to make law in relation to Indians, and lands

    reserved for the Indians.

    main reason for s92(24)- there was a concern for the aboriginal people against the local settlers, whose interest lay in an absence orestrictions on the expansion of European settlement.

    second reason- was probably a desire to maintain uniform national policies respecting the Indians.The Royal Proclamation 1763- had established that treaty making with the Indians was the sole responsibility of the Imperial Crown in right of the

    United Kingdom. After confederation, the federal government was the natural successor to that responsibility.

    s 91(24) has 2 heads of powers :

    1. A power over Indians (reserved for only Indians where they reside on, or have any connection with, lands reserved for Indians.) seebelow for details

    2. And a power over lands reserved for Indians (maybe exercised in respect of Indians and Non Indians so long as the law is related tolands reserved for the Indians.)

    Indians

    Who is an Indian? In Canada is used to mean the aboriginal peoples who have been living there long before European contact.

    The Federal Indian Act - defines the term Indian /establishes a register to record names/ and persons within this statutory definition are known as

    Status Indians. They can enjoy the right to live on Indian reserves.

    Not Indians some persons with Indian Blood and Culture-who are outside the definition. These are non-status Indians. The Metis People

    (French/Indian) outside reserve system most likely Indians Under s 91(24) & The Inuit or Eskimo people- are outside reserve system but held to

    be Indians within the meaning ofs91(24)

    Metis and Inuit are not governed by the Indian Act.

    What kinds of laws may be made in relation to Indians?- the federal government has taken a broad view that it may legislate for Indians on

    matters which otherwise lie outside its legislative competence and which it could not legislate for non-Indians. (Indian Act- provisions that govern

    succession to the property of deceased Indians, administration of property of mentally incompetent Indians and infant Indians.)

    Whether these provisions are valid? This is of course a question of characterization: are they in pith and substance in relations to Indians? Lysyk-

    doubts as to the validity of the Indian Acts forays into the law of property.

    Lands reserved for Indians- obviously includes lands set aside as Indian reserves in various ways. It also Includes huge area of land recognized

    by the Royal Proclamation 1763. This is all land within the territory covered by the proclamation that was in possession of the Indians and that had

    not been covered by the crown. Delgamuukw v B.C. (1997)- the SCC went even further holding the phrase extends to all lands held pursuant to

    aboriginal title. For that reason, only the federal Parliament had the power to extinguish aboriginal title.

    St Catherines Milling and Lumber Co v the Queen (1889) - The title of the provincial crown is subject to the aboriginal rights of the Indians and

    of those rights along with other matters pertaining to the control and administration of the reserves are subject to the legislative authority of the

    federal government.

    Discrimination/Offence-with the Canadian Bill of Rights? The CBOR applies only to federal laws. s. 1(b) a guarantee of equality before the law

    and specifically forbids discrimination by reason of race The federal Indian Act appears to offend the guarantee of equality in the Canadian Bill

    of Rights. In the first branch ofs91 (24), it clearly uses the term Indian and employs a racial classification in order to be constitutional.

    R v Drybones (1969)- use of the racial classification Indian in s94 of the Indian Act(which made it an offence for an Indian to be intoxicated on a

    reserve) violated the equality guarantee in the Canadian Bill of Rights. However, it appears the special regime of law for Indians is not threatened by

    this decision.

    Discrimination/Offence-with the Charter of Right s15 - s 15 also contains an equality assurance. The Indian act has not been challenged under s

    15 by reason of its own use of the Indian classification. A challenge would most likely be unsuccessful because of the Constitutions various

    recognitions of various Indian special status.

  • 8/8/2019 Aboriginal law

    2/5

    Corbiere v Canada (1999)- the SCC struck down a provision of the Indian Act that made residence on the reserve a requirement forvoting in band elections. Held: That the distinction between Indians who lived on the reserve( an could vote) and Indians who lived off the

    reserve was a breach of s 15.

    Lovelace v Ontario ( 2000)The SCC rejected a challenge to the distinction of the Casino Rama gambling profits that was limited tocommunities registered as bands under the Indian Act. The court held that the exclusion of non status bands from the distribution of the

    profits was not a breach of s15.

    Treaties / s35 of theConstitution Act 1982 now gives the constitutional protection to rights created by treaties entered into with Indian tribes or

    bands and perhaps to rights created by provisions in international treaties. S35 operates as a limitation on the powers of the federal government as

    well as a provincial legislatures.

    Hogg 28.2 Provincial Legislative Power

    Application of provincial law-general rule is that provincial laws apply to Indians and lands reserved for the Indians. There 5 exceptions to thi

    rule! See below

    R v Hill (1907)- that a provincial law confining the practice of medicine to qualified physicians applied to Indians: an Indian was convictedof the offence of the unauthorized practice of medicine. ( no on reserve but it didnt matter)

    Four B Manufacturing v United Garment Workers( 1979) that provincial labour law applied to shoe manufacturing business which waslocated on a reserve, which was owed ( through a corporation) by Indians, which employed mainly Indians and which had been funded by

    the Department of Indian Affairs.

    R v Francis- (1988)- provincial traffic laws applied to an Indian who had been driving a vehicle on a reserve.Provincial vs Federal

    The Four B and Francis cases definitely rejected the theory that Indian reserves are federal enclaves from which provincial laws areexcluded.

    Paul v British Colombia (2003)- the court held the BC Forest Practices Act applied to an Indian who had been cutting timber in breach ofa prohibition in the Act.

    Exceptions

    A. Singling OutA provincial law that singles out Indians or Indian reserves for special treatment would run the risk of being classified as alaw in relation to Indians or Indian reserves and if so classified, the law would be invalid. R v Sutherland [1980]

    B. Indianness - basically anything that affects status or capacity- Kruger and Manuel v The Queen [1978]C. paramouncty- If a provincial law is inconsistent with a provision of the Indian act (or any other federal law) the provincial law is

    rendered inoperative by the doctrine of federal paramountcy.

    D. Natural Resource Agreement- Provincial laws cannot deprive Indians the right to take game and fish for food. The NRA is part of theConstitution of Canada.

    E. section 35 has protected treaty rights.s 88 Of the Indian Act

    s88 makes it clear that provincial laws of general application apply to Indians. It makes no comment on lands reserved for Indians butthere is no doubt that the section extends to Indians on reserves.

    Laws of general application- the phrase excludes provincial laws that single out Indians for special treatment.

    Aboriginal Rights 28.5

    Recognition of Aboriginal Rights

    Hogg 28.5 (a)- The effect ofGuerin and Sparrow is to confirm that aboriginal rights do exist at common law and they are enforceable at the suit oaboriginal peoples.

    Hogg 28.5 (a) Sparrow- decides as well that aboriginal rights including fiduciary duty are now constitutionally guaranteed through s35 of the

    Constitutional Act 1982

    Calder Case (1973)-six of the seven judges held that the Nishga people of BC possessed aboriginal rights to their lands that had survivedEuropean settlement.

    Guerin v The Queen (1984) Aboriginal rights that have not been extinguished are recognized by the common law and are enforceableby the courts. The majority of the SCC recognized that the aboriginal title of Musqueam Indian Band to land in BC

    Dickson- a legal right derived from the Indians historic occupation and possession of their tribal lands.

  • 8/8/2019 Aboriginal law

    3/5

    Held: The aboriginal title to the land gave rise to a fiduciary duty on the part of the crown to deal with the land for the benefit of the surrendering

    Indians.

    Held- This fiduciary duty had been broken and awarded damages to the Band. (this did not depend on s 35 of the Act)

    R v Sparrow ( 1990) The SCC unanimously recognized the aboriginal right of a member of the Musqueam Indian Band to fish forsalmon in the Fraser River. Where his ancestors had fished from time immemorial

    The defendant had been charged with the violation of the federal Fisheries Act and because the charge related to facts occurring after 1982 he wa

    able to invoke the s35 of the Constitution Act 1982.Held- That s35 did provide constitutional protection for the aboriginal right and laid down principles that govern s35.

    The court had also enlarged the fiduciary duty the Government has the responsibility to act in a fiduciary capacity.

    Definition of Aboriginal Rights

    Hogg 28.5 (d)- Guerin and Sparrow cases had recognized aboriginal rights.

    R v Van der Peet (1996) the SCC had went further and defined aboriginal rights. R v Van der Peet ( 1996) as per Larmer C.J.- Aboriginal rights are rights held by aboriginal peoples, not by virtue of Crown grant

    legislation or treaty but by reason of the fact that aboriginal peoples were once independent, self governing entities in possession of most

    of the lands now making up Canada.

    R v Van der peet ( 1996)Legal Testused to identify an existing aboriginal right within the meaning of s35 of the Constitutional Act 1982.

    Legal Test In order to be an aboriginal right an activity must be an element of a practice, custom or tradition integral to the distinctive culture of the

    aboriginal group asserting the right

    In order for the practice to be integral, the practice must be of central significance to the aboriginal society: it must be a definingcharacteristic of the society, one of the things that made the culture of the society distinctive.

    The practice must have been developed before contact that is, before the arrival of Europeans in North America. (2 dissenting judgefelt the requirement unduly difficult to prove)

    The practice can evolve over the years as the result of contact- ( ie bone hook-metal hook & bow and arrow- gun) but Do not qualifycontemporary practices that developed solely as a response to European influences do not qualify.

    Facts Van der Peet-defendant had been convicted of catching and selling fish that she had caught under the authority of a Indian food-fishlicense. The court held that fishing for food was part of the Sto:lo society as well with the exchange of fish, but selling the fish was not an

    integral part of the Stolo culture.

    Similar cases-

    R v. NTC Smokehouse rights not established The practice of of exchanging fish was not sufficiently central to the aboriginal culture toqualify as an aboriginal right .

    R v. Gladstone [1996]- rights established the court held that the claimed aboriginal right which was to sell hearing spawn on kelp wasestablished and was a central and defining feature of Heilstuk society.

    Metis Rights-Legal test changed

    R v Powely ( 2003)-Metis claimants of aboriginal rights, the focus on European contact had to be moved forward, not to the time ofEuropean sovereignty, but to the time of effective European control.The same Van der Peet definition was used to be used toidentify Metis rights.

    Aboriginal Self Government Hogg 28.5 (c)

    B. Slatttery- The aboriginal right of self government must exist because aboriginal people were living in self government communities before the

    arrival of Europeans.

    R v Pamajewon (1996) rejected a claim by the Shawanaga and Eagle Lake First nations to conduct high stakes gambling on their reserves. gambling operations were conducted pursuant to a law enacted by the band council. It was not a by-law of the Indian Act. They were

    charged with a gaming offence under the Indian Act. Larmer CJ characterized the claimed right as a right to participate in and regulate

  • 8/8/2019 Aboriginal law

    4/5

    gambling activities on their respective reserve lands. Evidence showed- that they gambled before the arrival of Europeans, it was smal

    scaled and informal and was never part of the means by which the communities were sustained.

    Court was concerned with- the ability of aboriginal people to immunize themselves from the rules of the Criminal Code was a majorconcern for the courts.

    R v Pamajewon (1996)- the aboriginal right to self government extends only to activities that took place before European contact and onlythose activities that were an integral part of the aboriginal society.

    Proposed s35.1- Charlottetown Accord wanted to give meaning to self governing in a modern context.

    Question- if the federal or provincial laws apply in the face of an inconsistent aboriginal law is a separate question from the extent of thepower of self government.If the Criminal code in Pamajewon would have to yield to aboriginal law then a question ofparamountcy

    would have arisen and should be resolved by the Sparrow test.

    Potential QuestionDoes the provision of the Criminal Code satisfy theSparrow test of justification?

    Delgamuukw v B.C. (1997)- proceedings for a declaration that they had aboriginal title and self government right over a territory innorthern B.C. The SCC did not grant the declaration sought and ordered a new trial. Larmer CJ did provide extensive reasons as to the

    nature of aboriginal title.

    2 things that was said about aboriginal title and self governance is 1) land held under held under aboriginal title is held communally &2) aboriginal title encompasses the right to choose to what uses land can be put

    Hogg 28.5 (d) Aboriginal Title

    Aboriginal Title- is the right to the exclusive occupation of land, which permits the aboriginal owners to use the land in a variety ofpurposes. It would obviously permit the owners to hunt fish and harvest their lands .However, rights to particular activities such as hunting

    fishing and harvesting may also exist on land to which the aboriginal people do not have title to. ( Fishing- R v Adams [1996])

    Delgamuukw v British Columbia (1997) proceedings for a declaration that they had aboriginal title and self government right over aterritory in northern B.C. The SCC did not grant the declaration sought and ordered a new trial. Larmer CJ did provide extensive reasons

    as to the nature of aboriginal title.

    2 things that was said about aboriginal title and self governance is 1) land held under held under aboriginal title is held communally &2) aboriginal title encompasses the right to choose to what uses land can be put

    The point of time atwhich aboriginal occupation of the land must be proved in order to make out aboriginal title is prior to sovereigntynot prior to contact

    5 Differences between aboriginal title vs non-aboriginal title

    1. Source of aboriginal title- derives from pre sovereignty occupation rather than post sovereignty grant from the crown.2. the range of uses to which aboriginal title land may be put.3. Aboriginal title is inalienable, except to the Crown. The Crown has to act as an immediatry between the aboriginal owners and third parties

    To pass to third parties, the aboriginals must surrender the land to Crown.

    4. Aboriginal title can only be held communally.5. Aboriginal title is constitutionally protected.

    Extinguishments of Aboriginal Rights

    This can occur in 2 ways

    1) by surrender (must be voluntary and to the Crown) R v Howard [1994] 2) by constitutional amendment R v Horseman [1990]

    Definition of Treaty Hogg 28.6 (c) has been described as unique or sui generis. It not subject or to the rules of international law and is not a

    treaty at international law. It is not a contract and not subject to rules of contract law. It is an agreement between the Crown and aboriginal nation

    with the following characteristics.

    1. Parties-Crown on one side, aboriginals on the other.2. Agency- the signatories on the treaty must have the authority to bind their principles, namely the Crown and the aboriginal nation. 3. Intention to create legal relations: the parties must intend to create legally binding obligations.4. Consideration- the obligations must be assumed by both sides, so that the agreement is a bargain .5. Formality: there must be a certain measure of solemnity.

  • 8/8/2019 Aboriginal law

    5/5

    2 leading cases about treaties are:Both cases were applying s88 of the Indian Act not s35 of the Constitution Act 1982-(safe to say word treaty is similar. )

    R v Sioui (1990)-short document signed in 1760 which certified that the Chief of Huron Indians had come in the name of his nationthe free exercise of their religion, customs and liberty. The SCC held this to be a valid treaty by virtue of s 88 of the Indian Act.

    Simon v the Queen (1985)-Held to be a valid treaty to except the Micmac defendant from the game laws of Nova Scotia. Principle of interpretation- that treaties and statues reacting to Indians should be liberally construed and doubtful expressions resolved in

    favour of the Indians. Sim

    on v The Queen [1985]

    Extinguishments of Aboriginal Treaty Rights

    This can occur in 2 ways

    1) by surrender(must be voluntary and to the Crown) R v Howard [1994]

    2) by constitutional amendment R v Horseman [1990