Docket: T-799-15
Citation:
2016 FC 296
[UNREVISED ENGLISH CERTIFIED TRANSLATION]
Ottawa, Ontario, March 9, 2016
PRESENT: Madam Prothonotary Mireille Tabib
BETWEEN:
|
DOMINIQUE CÔTÉ
|
Applicant
|
and
|
HER MAJESTY THE
QUEEN AND ATTORNEY GENERAL OF CANADA
|
Respondent
|
ORDER AND REASONS
[1]
In a highly complex statement, the applicant,
who describes herself as a “non‑status Indian and Chief of the Antaya
Abenakis Algonquian Nation and the Antaya Aboriginal Community,” makes numerous
claims on her own behalf and that of the members of the group she represents
concerning recognition of their status, their ancestral rights and treaty
rights and various payments in the form of royalties, contributions, salaries
and legal fees, as well as compensatory, punitive and exemplary damages.
[2]
The respondents have brought a motion to strike
out this statement chiefly on the ground that the matter is beyond the Court’s
jurisdiction and, subsidiarily, due to lack of sufficient factual basis to
support its conclusions and the theoretical nature of the declarations sought.
[3]
At the hearing, the solicitor for the
respondents recognized from the outset the monumental effort that went into
preparing the application. He stated further that the issue raised in the
present matter is not whether the applicant or the group she represents has
valid rights to assert, but whether the Federal Court has jurisdiction to hear
the case and provide remedies and, presuming even its partial jurisdiction in
this regard, whether their factual basis is sufficiently substantiated in the
statement to allow for discussion thereof.
[4]
Although the respondents’ written motion record
raises the applicant’s lack of standing as an additional ground to strike out,
this ground was not addressed at the hearing.
[5]
The statement is 22 pages long and has more
than 63 numbered paragraphs. The list of reparations sought is nearly five pages
in length.
[6]
To facilitate understanding of this application,
its contents might be divided among the following categories:
A.
Declarations and remedies relating to
recognition of the identity and status of the applicant and the members of her
group as Aboriginals within the meaning of constitutional law and as Abenakis
and/or status Indians under the Indian Act.
B.
Declarations and remedies relating to the
recognition and status of the Antaya Abenakis First Nation as an Aboriginal
people or First Nation within the meaning of constitutional law and as a band
officially recognized and funded under the Indian Act.
C.
Declarations to the effect that the Antaya
Nation, including its members and the applicant, have certain ancestral rights
and treaty rights, including declarations and remedies in respect of the
territories and specific rights in question.
D.
Declaration and order to pay various amounts in the
form of punitive, exemplary and other damages for harm caused by inaction of
the government and the violation of ancestral and treaty rights.
E.
Ancillary declarations and orders to pay various
amounts in the form of funding, salaries, fees and representation expenses and
provision for litigation costs.
I.
Jurisdiction
[7]
Unlike the provincial superior courts, such as
the Superior Court of Québec, which have original, general and inherent
jurisdiction, the Federal Court is a court of statutory jurisdiction created by
Parliament under section 101 of the Constitution Act, 1867. Whereas
the superior courts of the provinces are presumed to have jurisdiction over
their territory except as otherwise expressly withdrawn under law, the Federal
Court has no jurisdiction or authority except as otherwise expressly assigned
to it under federal law (Ordon Estate v. Grail, [1998] 3 S.C.R. 437,
at page 474; Roberts v. Canada, [1989] 1 S.C.R. 322,
at page 331). The fact that the application is made against Her Majesty
the Queen in Right of Canada and concerns the federal government’s jurisdiction
over Aboriginal issues does not automatically give the Federal Court
jurisdiction.
[8]
Moreover, even if the Federal Court may have
jurisdiction over a portion of a dispute brought before it, case law states
clearly that the Court shall decline to exercise this jurisdiction where the
law imposes an adequate administrative procedure not yet exercised or where
another court of competent jurisdiction may more adequately determine the true
essence of the dispute.
A.
Remedies relating to Aboriginal or Indian status
[9]
The statement seeks multiple remedies relating
to the individual rights of the applicant and the members of her group to
recognition as Aboriginals within the meaning of constitutional law and to have
their names entered in the Indian Register under the Indian Act, RSC 1985,
c. I‑5. The reparations sought include highly general declarations
as to the “Abenakis origin” of the applicant and the other members of the group
and their identity as Abenakis under constitutional law as well as more
specific reparations pursuant to the rights set out in the Indian Act,
such as the rights to have their name added to the Indian Register, to be
issued a status card and to enjoy the other rights granted under the Act.
[10]
At the hearing, the applicant acknowledged that
no specific rights resulted from recognition of a person’s “Aboriginal”
identity and that in this regard, her seeking a declaration is more a part of
an overall effort to achieve recognition of the ancestral and treaty rights of
the Antaya Nation and the band’s rights to be recognized and registered under
the Indian Act. The ancestral and treaty rights guaranteed under
the Constitution Act, 1982 are those of “aboriginal peoples,”
while the Indian Act confers rights upon Indian “bands.” However,
until the applicant’s group is recognized as an Aboriginal people or an Indian
band, neither the group nor its members can gain recognition of these rights.
Meanwhile, the terms “Aboriginal people” and “band” presuppose the existence
and formation of a community of individuals who are recognized or recognizable
as “Aboriginals,” hence the utility of the declarations sought concerning the “Aboriginal”
identities of the applicant and those she represents.
[11]
The preceding makes clear that the general
declarations sought by the applicant concerning her “Aboriginal” identity and
that of the members of her group have an intent only within the context of her
seeking recognition of the group as a band under the Indian Act or
recognition of ancestral or treaty rights. If the Federal Court had
jurisdiction to hear her applications, the fact that her action includes
applications for more general declarations not carrying any specific rights
would not pose a problem or provide any reason to strike them out. However,
since the Court does not have jurisdiction to hear these applications, as
discussed below, the applications for general declarations of Aboriginal status
are purely academic. The sound administration of justice requires the striking
out of applications of solely academic or theoretical interest that cannot
truly serve in resolving a genuine problem.
[12]
With respect to the remedies relating
specifically to the individual rights conferred by the Indian Act,
these are all based on the right claimed to be entered in the Indian Register.
Now, as indicated by the respondents in their written representations, the Indian Act
confers the power to enter a person’s name in the register upon the Indian
Registrar. According to the applicant’s statement, she has made an application
in this regard on multiple occasions unsuccessfully. The Indian Act
prescribes a specific procedure for contesting decisions of the Registrar
concerning inclusion in the Register. This procedure first requires making a “protest”
to the Registrar followed by an appeal to the Superior Court of Québec
(subsection 5(3) and sections 14.2 and 14.3 of the Indian Act).
The statement does not indicate clearly whether the applicant has already made
use of this dispute mechanism. Regardless, and as determined previously by this
Court in Callihoo v. Canada, 2004 FC 1312, at
paragraphs 11 to 17, affirmed in 2008 FCA 368, the very
existence of this mechanism excludes the jurisdiction of the Federal Court. In
the circumstances, the Federal Court manifestly does not have jurisdiction with
respect to the applications for reparations concerning the claimed right to be
entered in the Indian Register. Insofar as the Court cannot rule on the rights
of the applicant or the other members of her group to be entered in the
Register, reparations concerning recognition or declaration of any other rights
arising from that act are bound to fail and must also be struck out.
B.
Remedies relating to nation or band status
[13]
In her statement, as the applicant seeks
concerning her individual status, she also seeks highly general declarations
concerning the status of the group she represents as an Aboriginal people or
First Nation under constitutional law as well as more specific declarations of
rights conferred upon Indian bands by the Indian Act.
[14]
The reasoning applied above to remedies relating
to individual status is equally applicable to remedies relating to the status
of the group: general declarations serve only within the context of seeking
overall and definitive recognition of ancestral and treaty rights or
recognition of the band under the Indian Act. In light of the
conclusion set out later herein to the effect that the Court has no
jurisdiction over these ultimate issues, the general declarations sought are of
solely academic interest and shall consequently be struck out.
[15]
With regard to recognition of the band under the
Indian Act, that Act confers the power to constitute new bands if
requested to do so upon the Minister of Indigenous and Northern Affairs
(subsection 17(1)). The respondents submit that this power is exercised
entirely at the Minister’s prerogative and is not justiciable before the
Federal Court or any other court. The Court does not find the issue to be as
clear and manifest as does the applicant. The Court does not exclude the
possibility that it may have jurisdiction under section 18 of the Federal
Courts Act to conduct a judicial review of the Minister’s refusal to
constitute a new band if requested to do so. Manifestly, however, in the
absence of an existing decision from the Minister, the Court may not substitute
itself for the Minister in a proceeding and declare the right of a new band to
be constituted. This power to recognize a new band is assigned to the Minister,
not the Federal Court, and the Court cannot acquire a jurisdiction that has not
been specifically assigned to it.
[16]
The statement also seeks a series of orders to
pay amounts to which the band could have or would have had right if it had
official recognition as a band, including contributions, band council funding,
salaries and administration fees, etc. These applications presuppose
recognition of the band under the Indian Act, which is outside of
the Federal Court’s responsibility. These applications are consequently bound
to fail. Moreover, although the amounts sought are in many cases exact, the
statement is devoid of any allegations of fact that it may be necessary to
produce in order to establish the right to these amounts, presuming once again
that the band were officially recognized under the Act. To cite just one
example, the statement seeks payment of salaries to the band council as far
back as its first application for registration but contains no allegations as
to the actual constitution of a band council or the council’s performance of
the roles for which salaries could or should have been paid. Statements not
containing adequate allegations of fact to justify the remedies sought are
bound to fail and must be struck out.
C.
Remedies relating to ancestral and treaty rights
[17]
The true essence of the applicant’s action is to
seek recognition of the collective rights of the Antaya Nation to ancestral
rights and interests concerning a specific tract of land, Mechatigan or
Sartigan, located in the ChaudièreAppalaches region of Quebec, and to rights
under treaties including the Treaty of Swegatchy of August 1760. Now,
although the purpose of such recourse is in part to seek reparations from the
federal government and the jurisdiction of the Federal Court may consequently
appear to be engaged pursuant to section 17 of the Federal Courts Act,
this recourse may not be determined without directly affecting the property
rights, resources, interests and jurisdiction of the Province of Quebec in
relation to its territory. The Federal Court jurisprudence is clear and well
established in this regard: the Federal Court has no jurisdiction to make any
order whatsoever against a province even in a matter that would otherwise fall
exclusively within federal jurisdiction (Canada v. Toney, 2012 FCA 167).
The Federal Court and the Federal Court of Appeal have recognized expressly, in
multiple proceedings in which Indian bands have requested recognition of
ancestral or territorial rights, that they did not have jurisdiction to declare
such rights: Conne River Indian Band v. Canada (FCA), [1983] F.C.J. No. 531,
49 NR 198, affirmed in [1986] 2 S.C.R. 145, Vollant v. Canada,
2009 FCA 185 and Innu of Uashat mak Manu‑Utenam v. Canada,
2015 FC 687. In the latter two cases, having recognized its lack
of jurisdiction and the fact that the applications could be struck out on that
ground, the Court debated whether it was preferable to strike out the
applications without possibility of amendment or to suspend them so that they
might be argued before the provincial court having jurisdiction. In the
circumstances of the present matter, where no other applications are currently
pending before the Superior Court of Québec and the statement is weighed down
with numerous additional applications that are bound to fail, suspending the
action is not in the interest of justice. It is also important to note that
striking out the application does not determine the merit of the rights sought
by the applicant or the band and consequently will not extinguish or interfere
with these rights should the application be brought before the appropriate
tribunal.
D.
Compensatory, punitive and exemplary damages
[18]
The statement seeks that the respondents be
ordered to pay damages for the harm allegedly caused to the applicant as well as
to her family, the members of her Nation and the members of the Nation’s band
council. These amounts allegedly correspond to royalties the band would have
received as a First Nation plus compensation for financial, emotional and
psychological harm and inconvenience. The cause of this harm is identified
summarily as the government’s inaction toward the applicant, the damages
incurred as a result of previous logging and mining activities on the Nation’s
land, the violation of ancestral and treaty rights, the violation of rights
recognized in the Quebec Charter of Human Rights and Freedoms and the Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms among other documents, the violation of
identity rights and deprivation of the applicant’s culture, traditions and
origin as well as the government’s failure to fulfil its fiduciary obligation
to Aboriginal peoples. The statement also seeks an order to pay exemplary and
punitive damages.
[19]
However extensive and complex the statement may
be with respect to the legal and historical merit of the claims of the
applicant and her Nation to their Aboriginal and band status, it is lacking in
terms of substantial material facts to support the payment orders sought. Even
if the rights of the applicant or her Nation to legal status or ancestral or
treaty rights were ultimately recognized, this would not necessarily give rise
to financial compensation. Crown liability depends on the existence of a fault
(Crown Liability and Proceedings Act, RSC 1985, c. C‑50),
a contractual obligation or some other legislative provision. No facts are
alleged in sufficient specificity to demonstrate the existence of a fault
giving rise to the liability of the respondents or of other facts giving rise
to a right to compensation. No facts are alleged to justify the amount of
damages sought. This is not to say that the general circumstances discussed in
the statement could not give rise to compensation. However, the capacity of a
respondent to defend itself against a claim and of the Court to hear and settle
a matter fairly and effectively depends upon the orderly and complete
presentation of specific facts giving rise to the reparations sought. As
indicated by the respondents in their written representations, the complexity
of the issues raised by the applicant does not exempt her from her obligation
to allege all material facts to support the remedies identified.
[20]
An application failing to allege the necessary
facts to establish the right sought must be struck out, but in doing so, the
Court may allow the possibility for amendment to address shortcomings. The
appropriate remedy in the circumstances is not to strike out with permission to
amend. Despite the lack of sufficient factual information, the financial
reparations outlined in the application are clearly linked closely to and, in
fact, based entirely on the recognition of status and the presumed existence of
ancestral and treaty rights sought by the applicant. As stated, the Court does
not have jurisdiction with respect to establishing the rights on which the applications
for financial reparation are based. Under the guise of the very broad
applications in the statement, there were some other monetary claims concerning
which the Court may have jurisdiction; however, extracting them from the mass
of allegations to be struck out would require rewriting the statement to the
point of making it unrecognizable. Nothing of the original statement would
remain to justify continuing this proceeding. Once again, striking out does not
affect the determination of substantive rights. To the extent that the
statement included applications for reparation that may reasonably be tried
independently of the claims of ancestral rights, the applicant is free to seek
their recognition in another action of more limited scope.
E.
Ancillary reparations
[21]
The statement sets out a series of remedies that
may be deemed ancillary to the application itself, including applications to
recognize the applicant’s mandate to represent the band, applications for
funding to maintain and present the present action, reimbursement of fees and
costs incurred in relation to the present action, legal costs, judicial and
extrajudicial costs, exemption from costs, etc. In light of the striking out of
the statement, these ancillary applications become moot and shall also be
struck out.