R. v. Powley, [2003] 2 S.C.R. 207, 2003 SCC 43
Her Majesty The Queen Appellant/respondent
on cross‑appeal
v.
Steve Powley and Roddy Charles Powley Respondents/appellants
on cross‑appeal
and
Attorney General of Canada, Attorney General of Quebec,
Attorney General of New Brunswick, Attorney General of Manitoba,
Attorney General of British Columbia, Attorney General for
Saskatchewan, Attorney General of Alberta, Attorney General of Newfoundland
and Labrador, Labrador Métis Nation, a body corporate, Congress of
Aboriginal Peoples, Métis National Council (“MNC”), Métis Nation
of Ontario (“MNO”), B.C. Fisheries Survival Coalition, Aboriginal
Legal
Services of Toronto Inc. (“ALST”), Ontario Métis and Aboriginal
Association (“OMAA”), Ontario Federation of Anglers and
Hunters (“OFAH”), Métis Chief Roy E. J. DeLaRonde, on behalf
of the Red Sky Métis Independent Nation, and North Slave Métis
Alliance Interveners
Indexed as: R. v. Powley
Neutral citation: 2003 SCC 43.
File No.: 28533.
2003: March 17; 2003: September 19.
Present: McLachlin C.J. and Gonthier, Iacobucci, Major,
Bastarache, Binnie, Arbour, LeBel and Deschamps JJ.
on appeal from the court of appeal for ontario
Constitutional law — Aboriginal rights — Métis —
Two members of a Métis community near Sault Ste. Marie charged with hunting
contrary to provincial statute — Whether members of this Métis community have
constitutional aboriginal right to hunt for food in
environs of Sault Ste. Marie — If so, whether infringement justifiable —
Constitution Act, 1982, s. 35 — Game and Fish Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. G.1,
ss. 46, 47(1).
The respondents, who are members of a Métis community
near Sault Ste. Marie, were acquitted of unlawfully hunting a moose without a
hunting licence and with knowingly possessing game hunted in contravention of
ss. 46 and 47(1) of Ontario’s Game and Fish Act. The trial judge
found that the members of the Métis community in and around Sault Ste. Marie
have, under s. 35(1) of the Constitution Act, 1982 , an aboriginal
right to hunt for food that is infringed without justification by the Ontario
hunting legislation. The Superior Court of Justice and the Court of Appeal
upheld the acquittals.
Held: The appeal and
cross‑appeal should be dismissed.
The term “Métis” in s. 35 of the Constitution
Act, 1982 does not encompass all individuals with mixed Indian and European
heritage; rather, it refers to distinctive peoples who, in addition to their
mixed ancestry, developed their own customs, and recognizable group identity
separate from their Indian or Inuit and European forebears. A Métis
community is a group of Métis with a distinctive collective identity, living
together in the same geographical area and sharing a common way of life. The
purpose of s. 35 is to protect practices that were historically important
features of these distinctive communities and that persist in the present day as
integral elements of their Métis culture. In applying the Van der Peet
test to determine the Métis’ s. 35 entitlements, the pre‑contact
aspect of the test must be adjusted to take into account the post‑contact
ethnogenesis and evolution of the Métis. A pre‑control test
establishing when Europeans achieved political and legal control in an area and
focusing on the period after a particular Métis community arose and before it
came under the control of European laws and customs is necessary to accommodate
this history.
Aboriginal rights are communal, grounded in the
existence of a historic and present community, and exercisable by virtue of an
individual’s ancestrally based membership in the present community. The
aboriginal right claimed in this case is the right to hunt for food in the
environs of Sault Ste. Marie. To support a site‑specific aboriginal
rights claim, an identifiable Métis community with some degree of continuity
and stability must be established through evidence of shared customs, traditions,
and collective identity, as well as demographic evidence. The trial judge’s
findings of a historic Métis community and of a contemporary Métis community in
and around Sault Ste. Marie are supported by the record and must be upheld.
The verification of a claimant’s membership in the
relevant contemporary community is crucial, since individuals are only entitled
to exercise Métis aboriginal rights by virtue of their ancestral connection to
and current membership in a Métis community. Self‑identification,
ancestral connection, and community acceptance are factors which define Métis
identity for the purpose of claiming Métis rights under s. 35 . Absent
formal identification, courts will have to ascertain Métis identity on a case‑by‑case
basis taking into account the value of community self‑definition, the
need for the process of identification to be objectively verifiable and the
purpose of the constitutional guarantee. Here, the trial judge correctly found
that the respondents are members of the Métis community that arose and still
exists in and around Sault Ste. Marie. Residency on a reserve for a period of
time by the respondents’ ancestors did not, in the circumstances of this case,
negate their Métis identity. An individual decision by a Métis person’s
ancestors to take treaty benefits does not necessarily extinguish that person’s
claim to Métis rights, absent collective adhesion by the Métis community to the
treaty.
The view that Métis rights must find their origin in
the pre‑contact practices of their aboriginal ancestors must be
rejected. This view in effect would deny to Métis their full status as
distinctive rights‑bearing peoples whose own integral practices are
entitled to constitutional protection under s. 35(1) . The historical
record fully supports the trial judge’s finding that the period just prior to
1850 is the appropriate date for finding effective European control in the
Sault Ste. Marie area. The evidence also supports his finding that hunting for
food was integral to the Métis way of life at Sault Ste. Marie in the period
just prior to 1850. This practice has been continuous to the present.
Ontario’s lack of recognition of any Métis right to
hunt for food and the application of the challenged provisions infringes the
Métis aboriginal right and conservation concerns did not justify the
infringement. Even if the moose population in that part of Ontario were under
threat, the Métis would still be entitled to a priority allocation to satisfy
their subsistence needs. Further, the difficulty of identifying members
of the Métis community should not be exaggerated so as to defeat constitutional
rights. In the immediate future, the hunting rights of the Métis should
track those of the Ojibway in terms of restrictions for conservation purposes
and priority allocations. In the longer term, a combination of
negotiation and judicial settlement will more clearly define the contours of
the Métis right to hunt.
While the Court of Appeal had jurisdiction to issue a
stay of its decision, which has now expired, no compelling reason existed for
issuing an additional stay.
Cases Cited
Applied: R. v. Van
der Peet, [1996] 2 S.C.R. 507; referred to: R. v. Sparrow,
[1990] 1 S.C.R. 1075; Reference re Manitoba Language Rights, [1985]
1 S.C.R. 721.
Statutes and Regulations Cited
Constitution Act, 1982, s. 35 .
Game and Fish Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. G.1, ss. 46, 47(1).
Authors Cited
Canada. Royal Commission on
Aboriginal Peoples. Report of the Royal Commission on Aboriginal
Peoples: Perspectives and Realities, vol. 4. Ottawa: The Commission,
1996.
Lytwyn, Victor P.
“Historical Report on the Métis Community at Sault Ste. Marie”, March 27,
1998.
Morrison, James. “The
Robinson Treaties of 1850: A Case Study”. Study prepared by the Royal
Commission on Aboriginal Peoples.
Ontario. Ministry of Natural
Resources. Interim Enforcement Policy on Aboriginal Right to Hunt and
Fish for Food. Toronto: The Ministry, 1991.
Peterson, Jacqueline. “Many roads
to Red River: Métis genesis in the Great Lakes region, 1680‑1815”. In
Jacqueline Peterson and Jennifer S. H. Brown, eds., The New Peoples:
Being and Becoming Métis in North America. Winnipeg: University of
Manitoba Press, 1985, 37.
Ray, Arthur J. “An Economic
History of the Robinson Treaties Area Before 1860”, March 17, 1998.
APPEAL and CROSS‑APPEAL from a judgment of the
Ontario Court of Appeal (2001), 53 O.R. (3d) 35, 196 D.L.R. (4th) 221, 141 O.A.C.
121, 152 C.C.C. (3d) 97, [2001] 2 C.N.L.R. 291, 40 C.R. (5th) 221, 80 C.R.R.
(2d) 1, [2001] O.J. No. 607 (QL), affirming a decision of the Superior Court of
Justice (2000), 47 O.R. (3d) 30, [2000] 1 C.N.L.R. 233, upholding a judgment of
the Ontario Court (Provincial Division), [1999] 1 C.N.L.R. 153, 58 C.R.R. (2d)
149, [1998] O.J. No. 5310 (QL). Appeal and cross‑appeal dismissed.
Lori R. Sterling and Peter Lemmond, for the appellant/respondent on
cross‑appeal.
Jean Teillet and Arthur Pape,
for the respondents/appellants on cross‑appeal.
Ivan G. Whitehall, Q.C., Michael H. Morris and Barbara Ritzen,
for the intervener the Attorney General of Canada.
René Morin, for
the intervener the Attorney General of Quebec.
Gabriel Bourgeois,
Q.C., and Pierre Castonguay, for the intervener the
Attorney General of New Brunswick.
Deborah L. Carlson and Holly D. Penner, for the intervener the
Attorney General of Manitoba.
Darlene A. Leavitt, for
the intervener the Attorney General of British Columbia.
Written submissions only by P. Mitch McAdam,
for the intervener the Attorney General for Saskatchewan.
Margaret Unsworth and Kurt Sandstrom,
for the intervener the Attorney General of Alberta.
Donald H. Burrage, Q.C., for the intervener the Attorney General of
Newfoundland and Labrador.
D. Bruce Clarke, for the intervener the Labrador Métis Nation.
Joseph Eliot Magnet, for the intervener the Congress of Aboriginal Peoples.
Clem Chartier and Jason Madden,
for the interveners the Métis National Council and the Métis Nation of Ontario.
Written submissions only by J. Keith Lowes,
for the intervener the B.C. Fisheries Survival Coalition.
Written submissions only by Brian Eyolfson, for
the intervener the Aboriginal Legal Services of Toronto Inc.
Robert MacRae, for the
intervener the Ontario Métis and Aboriginal Association.
Written submissions only by Timothy S. B.
Danson, for the intervener the Ontario Federation of Anglers and Hunters.
Alan Pratt and Carla
M. McGrath, for the intervener the Métis Chief Roy E. J. DeLaRonde, on
behalf of the Red Sky Métis Independent Nation.
Written submissions only by Janet L. Hutchison
and Stuart C. B. Gilby, for the intervener the North Slave Métis
Alliance.
The following is the judgment delivered by
The Court —
I. Introduction
1
This case raises the issue of whether members of the Métis community in
and around Sault Ste. Marie enjoy a constitutionally protected right to hunt
for food under s. 35 of the Constitution Act, 1982 . We conclude that
they do.
2
On the morning of October 22, 1993, Steve Powley and his son, Roddy, set
out hunting. They headed north from their residence in Sault Ste. Marie, and
at about 9 a.m., they shot and killed a bull moose near Old Goulais Bay
Road.
3
Moose hunting in Ontario is subject to strict regulation. The Ministry
of Natural Resources (“MNR”) issues Outdoor Cards and validation stickers
authorizing the bearer to harvest calf moose during open season. People
wishing to harvest adult moose must enter a lottery to obtain a validation tag
authorizing them to hunt either a bull or a cow in a particular area, as
specified on the tag. The number of tags issued for a given season depends on
the calculations of MNR biologists, who estimate the current adult moose
population and the replacement rate for animals removed from the population.
The validation tag requirement and seasonal restrictions are not enforced
against Status Indians, and the MNR does not record Status Indians’ annual
harvest. (See MNR Interim Enforcement Policy on Aboriginal Right to Hunt
and Fish for Food (1991).)
4
After shooting the bull moose near Old Goulais Bay Road, Steve and Roddy
Powley transported it to their residence in Sault Ste. Marie. Neither of them
had a valid Outdoor Card, a valid hunting licence to hunt moose, or a
validation tag issued by the MNR. In lieu of these documents, Steve Powley
affixed a handwritten tag to the ear of the moose. The tag indicated the date,
time, and location of the kill, as required by the hunting regulations. It
stated that the animal was to provide meat for the winter. Steve Powley signed
the tag, and wrote his Ontario Métis and Aboriginal Association membership
number on it.
5
Later that day, two conservation officers arrived at the Powleys’
residence. The Powleys told the officers they had shot the moose. One week
later, the Powleys were charged with unlawfully hunting moose and knowingly
possessing game hunted in contravention of the Game and Fish Act, R.S.O.
1990, c. G-1. They both entered pleas of not guilty.
6
The facts are not in dispute. The Powleys freely admit that they shot,
killed, and took possession of a bull moose without a hunting licence.
However, they argue that, as Métis, they have an aboriginal right to hunt for
food in the Sault Ste. Marie area that cannot be infringed by the Ontario
government without proper justification. Because the Ontario government denies
the existence of any special Métis right to hunt for food, the Powleys argue
that subjecting them to the moose hunting provisions of the Game and Fish
Act violates their rights under s. 35(1) of the Constitution Act, 1982 ,
and cannot be justified.
7
The trial court, Superior Court, and Court of Appeal agreed with the
Powleys. They found that the members of the Métis community in and around
Sault Ste. Marie have an aboriginal right to hunt for food that is infringed
without justification by the Ontario hunting regulations. Steve and Roddy
Powley were therefore acquitted of unlawfully hunting and possessing the bull
moose. Ontario appeals from these acquittals.
8
The question before us is whether ss. 46 and 47(1) of the Game and
Fish Act, which prohibit hunting moose without a licence,
unconstitutionally infringe the respondents’ aboriginal right to hunt for food,
as recognized in s. 35(1) of the Constitution Act, 1982 .
II. Analysis
9
Section 35 of the Constitution Act, 1982 provides:
35. (1) The existing aboriginal and treaty
rights of the aboriginal peoples of Canada are hereby recognized and affirmed.
(2) In this Act, “aboriginal peoples of Canada”
includes the Indian, Inuit and Métis peoples of Canada.
10
The term “Métis” in s. 35 does not encompass all individuals with mixed
Indian and European heritage; rather, it refers to distinctive peoples who, in
addition to their mixed ancestry, developed their own customs, way of life, and
recognizable group identity separate from their Indian or Inuit and European
forebears. Métis communities evolved and flourished prior to the entrenchment
of European control, when the influence of European settlers and political
institutions became pre-eminent. The Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples
describes this evolution as follows:
Intermarriage between First Nations and Inuit women
and European fur traders and fishermen produced children, but the birth of new
Aboriginal cultures took longer. At first, the children of mixed unions were brought
up in the traditions of their mothers or (less often) their fathers.
Gradually, however, distinct Métis cultures emerged, combining European and
First Nations or Inuit heritages in unique ways. Economics played a major role
in this process. The special qualities and skills of the Métis population made
them indispensable members of Aboriginal/non-Aboriginal economic partnerships,
and that association contributed to the shaping of their
cultures. . . . As interpreters, diplomats, guides, couriers, freighters,
traders and suppliers, the early Métis people contributed massively to European
penetration of North America.
The French referred to the fur trade Métis as coureurs
de bois (forest runners) and bois brulés (burnt-wood people) in
recognition of their wilderness occupations and their dark complexions. The
Labrador Métis (whose culture had early roots) were originally called “livyers”
or “settlers”, those who remained in the fishing settlements year-round rather
than returning periodically to Europe or Newfoundland. The Cree people
expressed the Métis character in the term Otepayemsuak, meaning the
“independent ones”.
(Report of the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples:
Perspectives and Realities, vol. 4, at pp. 199-200 (“RCAP Report”))
The Métis
developed separate and distinct identities, not reducible to the mere fact of
their mixed ancestry: “What distinguishes Métis people from everyone else is
that they associate themselves with a culture that is distinctly Métis” (RCAP
Report, vol. 4, at p. 202).
11
The Métis of Canada share the common experience of having forged a new
culture and a distinctive group identity from their Indian or Inuit and
European roots. This enables us to speak in general terms of “the Métis”.
However, particularly given the vast territory of what is now Canada, we should
not be surprised to find that different groups of Métis exhibit their own
distinctive traits and traditions. This diversity among groups of Métis may
enable us to speak of Métis “peoples”, a possibility left open by the language
of s. 35(2), which speaks of the “Indian, Inuit and Métis peoples of Canada”.
12
We would not purport to enumerate the various Métis peoples that may
exist. Because the Métis are explicitly included in s. 35 , it is only necessary
for our purposes to verify that the claimants belong to an identifiable Métis
community with a sufficient degree of continuity and stability to support a
site-specific aboriginal right. A Métis community can be defined as a group of
Métis with a distinctive collective identity, living together in the same
geographic area and sharing a common way of life. The respondents here claim
membership in the Métis community centred in and around Sault Ste. Marie. It
is not necessary for us to decide, and we did not receive submissions on,
whether this community is also a Métis “people”, or whether it forms part of a
larger Métis people that extends over a wider area such as the Upper Great
Lakes.
13
Our evaluation of the respondents’ claim takes place against this
historical and cultural backdrop. The overarching interpretive principle for
our legal analysis is a purposive reading of s. 35 . The inclusion of the Métis
in s. 35 is based on a commitment to recognizing the Métis and enhancing their
survival as distinctive communities. The purpose and the promise of s. 35 is
to protect practices that were historically important features of these
distinctive communities and that persist in the present day as integral
elements of their Métis culture.
14
For the reasons elaborated below, we uphold the basic elements of the Van
der Peet test (R. v. Van der Peet, [1996] 2 S.C.R. 507) and apply
these to the respondents’ claim. However, we modify certain elements of the
pre-contact test to reflect the distinctive history and post-contact
ethnogenesis of the Métis, and the resulting differences between Indian claims
and Métis claims.
A. The Van der Peet Test
15
The core question in Van der Peet was: “How should the aboriginal
rights recognized and affirmed by s. 35(1) of the Constitution Act, 1982 be
defined?” (para. 15, per Lamer C.J.). Lamer C.J. wrote for the
majority, at para. 31:
[W]hat s. 35(1) does is provide the constitutional framework through
which the fact that aboriginals lived on the land in distinctive societies,
with their own practices, traditions and cultures, is acknowledged and
reconciled with the sovereignty of the Crown. The substantive rights which
fall within the provision must be defined in light of this purpose; the
aboriginal rights recognized and affirmed by s. 35(1) must be directed towards
the reconciliation of the pre-existence of aboriginal societies with the
sovereignty of the Crown.
16
The emphasis on prior occupation as the primary justification for the
special protection accorded aboriginal rights led the majority in Van der
Peet to endorse a pre-contact test for identifying which customs, practices
or traditions were integral to a particular aboriginal culture, and therefore
entitled to constitutional protection. However, the majority recognized that
the pre-contact test might prove inadequate to capture the range of Métis
customs, practices or traditions that are entitled to protection, since Métis
cultures by definition post-date European contact. For this reason, Lamer C.J.
explicitly reserved the question of how to define Métis aboriginal rights for
another day. He wrote at para. 67:
[T]he history of the Métis, and the reasons underlying their inclusion
in the protection given by s. 35 , are quite distinct from those of other
aboriginal peoples in Canada. As such, the manner in which the aboriginal
rights of other aboriginal peoples are defined is not necessarily determinative
of the manner in which the aboriginal rights of the Métis are defined. At the
time when this Court is presented with a Métis claim under s. 35 it will then,
with the benefit of the arguments of counsel, a factual context and a specific
Métis claim, be able to explore the question of the purposes underlying s.
35 ’s protection of the aboriginal rights of Métis people, and answer the
question of the kinds of claims which fall within s. 35(1) ’s scope when the
claimants are Métis. The fact that, for other aboriginal peoples, the
protection granted by s. 35 goes to the practices, customs and traditions
of aboriginal peoples prior to contact, is not necessarily relevant to the
answer which will be given to that question.
17
As indicated above, the inclusion of the Métis in s. 35 is not traceable
to their pre-contact occupation of Canadian territory. The purpose of s. 35 as
it relates to the Métis is therefore different from that which relates to the
Indians or the Inuit. The constitutionally significant feature of the Métis is
their special status as peoples that emerged between first contact and the
effective imposition of European control. The inclusion of the Métis in
s. 35 represents Canada’s commitment to recognize and value the
distinctive Métis cultures, which grew up in areas not yet open to
colonization, and which the framers of the Constitution Act, 1982
recognized can only survive if the Métis are protected along with other
aboriginal communities.
18
With this in mind, we proceed to the issue of the correct test to
determine the entitlements of the Métis under s. 35 of the Constitution Act,
1982 . The appropriate test must then be applied to the findings of fact of
the trial judge. We accept Van der Peet as the template for this
discussion. However, we modify the pre-contact focus of the Van der Peet test
when the claimants are Métis to account for the important differences between
Indian and Métis claims. Section 35 requires that we recognize and protect
those customs and traditions that were historically important features of Métis
communities prior to the time of effective European control, and that persist
in the present day. This modification is required to account for the unique
post-contact emergence of Métis communities, and the post-contact foundation of
their aboriginal rights.
(1) Characterization of the Right
19
The first step is to characterize the right being claimed: Van der
Peet, supra, at para. 76. Aboriginal hunting rights, including
Métis rights, are contextual and site-specific. The respondents shot a bull
moose near Old Goulais Bay Road, in the environs of Sault Ste. Marie, within
the traditional hunting grounds of that Métis community. They made a point of
documenting that the moose was intended to provide meat for the winter. The
trial judge determined that they were hunting for food, and there is no reason
to overturn this finding. The right being claimed can therefore be
characterized as the right to hunt for food in the environs of Sault Ste.
Marie.
20
We agree with the trial judge that the periodic scarcity of moose does
not in itself undermine the respondents’ claim. The relevant right is not to
hunt moose but to hunt for food in the designated territory.
(2) Identification of the Historic
Rights-Bearing Community
21
The trial judge found that a distinctive Métis community emerged in the
Upper Great Lakes region in the mid-17th century, and peaked around 1850. We
find no reviewable error in the trial judge’s findings on this matter, which
were confirmed by the Court of Appeal. The record indicates the following: In
the mid-17th century, the Jesuits established a mission at
Sainte-Marie-du-Sault, in an area characterized by heavy competition among fur
traders. In 1750, the French established a fixed trading post on the south
bank of the Saint Mary’s River. The Sault Ste. Marie post attracted settlement
by Métis — the children of unions
between European traders and Indian women, and their descendants (A. J. Ray,
“An Economic History of the Robinson Treaties Area Before 1860” (1998) (“Ray
Report”), at p. 17). According to Dr. Ray, by the early 19th century, “[t]he
settlement at Sault Ste. Marie was one of the oldest and most important [Métis
settlements] in the upper lakes area” (Ray Report, at p. 47). The Hudson
Bay Company operated the Sault Ste. Marie’s post primarily as a depot from 1821
onwards (Ray Report, at p. 51). Although Dr. Ray characterized the Company’s
records for this post as “scanty” (Ray Report, at p. 51), he was able to piece
together a portrait of the community from existing records, including the
1824-25 and 1827-28 post journals of HBC Chief Factor Bethune, and the 1846
report of a government surveyor, Alexander Vidal (Ray Report, at pp. 52-53).
22
Dr. Ray’s report indicates that the individuals named in the post
journals “were overwhelmingly Métis”, and that Vidal’s report “provide[s] a
crude indication of the rate of growth of the community and highlights the
continuing dominance of Métis in it” (Ray Report, at p. 53). Dr. Victor P.
Lytwyn characterized the Vidal report and accompanying map as “clear evidence
of a distinct and cohesive Métis community at Sault Ste. Marie” (V. P. Lytwyn,
“Historical Report on the Métis Community at Sault Ste. Marie” (1998) (“Lytwyn
Report”), at p. 2) while Dr. Ray elaborated: “By the time of Vidal’s
visit to the Sault Ste. Marie area, the people of mixed ancestry living there
had developed a distinctive sense of identity and Indians and Whites recognized
them as being a separate people” (Ray Report, at p. 56).
23
In addition to demographic evidence, proof of shared customs,
traditions, and a collective identity is required to demonstrate the existence
of a Métis community that can support a claim to site-specific aboriginal
rights. We recognize that different groups of Métis have often lacked
political structures and have experienced shifts in their members’
self-identification. However, the existence of an identifiable Métis community
must be demonstrated with some degree of continuity and stability in order to
support a site-specific aboriginal rights claim. Here, we find no basis for
overturning the trial judge’s finding of a historic Métis community at Sault
Ste. Marie. This finding is supported by the record and must be upheld.
(3) Identification of the Contemporary
Rights-Bearing Community
24
Aboriginal rights are communal rights: They must be grounded in the
existence of a historic and present community, and they may only be exercised
by virtue of an individual’s ancestrally based membership in the present
community. The trial judge found that a Métis community has persisted in and
around Sault Ste. Marie despite its decrease in visibility after the signing of
the Robinson-Huron Treaty in 1850. While we take note of the trial judge’s
determination that the Sault Ste. Marie Métis community was to a large extent
an “invisible entity” ([1999] 1 C.N.L.R. 153, at para. 80) from the mid-19th
century to the 1970s, we do not take this to mean that the community ceased to
exist or disappeared entirely.
25
Dr. Lytwyn describes the continued existence of a Métis community in and
around Sault Ste. Marie despite the displacement of many of the community’s
members in the aftermath of the 1850 treaties:
[T]he Métis continued to live in the Sault Ste. Marie region.
Some drifted into the Indian Reserves which had been set apart by the 1850
Treaty. Others lived in areas outside of the town, or in back concessions. The
Métis continued to live in much the same manner as they had in the past —
fishing, hunting, trapping and harvesting other resources for their livelihood.
(Lytwyn Report, at p. 31 (emphasis added); see also J. Morrison, “The
Robinson Treaties of 1850: A Case Study”, at p. 201.)
26
The advent of European control over this area thus interfered with, but
did not eliminate, the Sault Ste. Marie Métis community and its traditional
practices, as evidenced by census data from the 1860s through the 1890s. Dr.
Lytwyn concluded from this census data that “[a]lthough the Métis lost much of
their traditional land base at Sault Ste. Marie, they continued to live in the
region and gain their livelihood from the resources of the land and waters”
(Lytwyn Report, at p. 32). He also noted a tendency for underreporting and
lack of information about the Métis during this period because of their
“removal to the peripheries of the town”, and “their own disinclination to be
identified as Métis” in the wake of the Riel rebellions and the turning of
Ontario public opinion against Métis rights through government actions and the
media (Lytwyn Report, at p. 33).
27
We conclude that the evidence supports the trial judge’s finding that
the community’s lack of visibility was explained and does not negate the
existence of the contemporary community. There was never a lapse; the Métis
community went underground, so to speak, but it continued. Moreover, as
indicated below, the “continuity” requirement puts the focus on the continuing
practices of members of the community, rather than more generally on the
community itself, as indicated below.
28
The trial judge’s finding of a contemporary Métis community in and
around Sault Ste. Marie is supported by the evidence and must be upheld.
(4) Verification of the Claimant’s Membership
in the Relevant Contemporary Community
29
While determining membership in the Métis community might not be as
simple as verifying membership in, for example, an Indian band, this does not
detract from the status of Métis people as full-fledged rights-bearers. As
Métis communities continue to organize themselves more formally and to assert
their constitutional rights, it is imperative that membership requirements
become more standardized so that legitimate rights-holders can be identified.
In the meantime, courts faced with Métis claims will have to ascertain Métis
identity on a case-by-case basis. The inquiry must take into account both the
value of community self-definition, and the need for the process of
identification to be objectively verifiable. In addition, the criteria for
Métis identity under s. 35 must reflect the purpose of this constitutional
guarantee: to recognize and affirm the rights of the Métis held by virtue of
their direct relationship to this country’s original inhabitants and by virtue
of the continuity between their customs and traditions and those of their Métis
predecessors. This is not an insurmountable task.
30
We emphasize that we have not been asked, and we do not purport, to set
down a comprehensive definition of who is Métis for the purpose of asserting a
claim under s. 35 . We therefore limit ourselves to indicating the important
components of a future definition, while affirming that the creation of
appropriate membership tests before disputes arise is an urgent
priority. As a general matter, we would endorse the guidelines proposed by
Vaillancourt Prov. J. and O’Neill J. in the courts below. In particular, we
would look to three broad factors as indicia of Métis identity for the purpose
of claiming Métis rights under s. 35 : self-identification, ancestral
connection, and community acceptance.
31
First, the claimant must self-identify as a member of a Métis
community. This self-identification should not be of recent vintage: While an
individual’s self-identification need not be static or monolithic, claims that
are made belatedly in order to benefit from a s. 35 right will not satisfy the
self-identification requirement.
32
Second, the claimant must present evidence of an ancestral connection
to a historic Métis community. This objective requirement ensures that
beneficiaries of s. 35 rights have a real link to the historic community
whose practices ground the right being claimed. We would not require a minimum
“blood quantum”, but we would require some proof that the claimant’s ancestors
belonged to the historic Métis community by birth, adoption, or other means.
Like the trial judge, we would abstain from further defining this requirement
in the absence of more extensive argument by the parties in a case where this
issue is determinative. In this case, the Powleys’ Métis ancestry is not
disputed.
33
Third, the claimant must demonstrate that he or she is accepted by
the modern community whose continuity with the historic community provides
the legal foundation for the right being claimed. Membership in a Métis
political organization may be relevant to the question of community
acceptance, but it is not sufficient in the absence of a contextual
understanding of the membership requirements of the organization and its role
in the Métis community. The core of community acceptance is past and ongoing
participation in a shared culture, in the customs and traditions that
constitute a Métis community’s identity and distinguish it from other groups.
This is what the community membership criterion is all about. Other indicia of
community acceptance might include evidence of participation in community
activities and testimony from other members about the claimant’s connection to
the community and its culture. The range of acceptable forms of evidence does
not attenuate the need for an objective demonstration of a solid bond of past
and present mutual identification and recognition of common belonging between
the claimant and other members of the rights-bearing community.
34
It is important to remember that, no matter how a contemporary community
defines membership, only those members with a demonstrable ancestral connection
to the historic community can claim a s. 35 right. Verifying membership is
crucial, since individuals are only entitled to exercise Métis aboriginal
rights by virtue of their ancestral connection to and current membership in a
Métis community.
35
In this case, there is no reason to overturn the trial judge’s finding
that the Powleys are members of the Métis community that arose and still exists
in and around Sault Ste. Marie. We agree with the Court of Appeal that, in the
circumstances of this case, the fact that the Powleys’ ancestors lived on an
Indian reserve for a period of time does not negate the Powleys’ Métis
identity. As the Court of Appeal indicated, “E.B. Borron, commissioned in 1891
by the province to report on annuity payments to the Métis, was of the view
that Métis who had taken treaty benefits remained Métis and he recommended that
they be removed from the treaty annuity lists” ((2001), 53 O.R. (3d) 35, at
para. 139, per Sharpe J.A.). We emphasize that the individual decision
by a Métis person’s ancestors to take treaty benefits does not necessarily extinguish
that person’s claim to Métis rights. It will depend, in part, on whether there
was a collective adhesion by the Métis community to the treaty. Based on the
record, it was open to the trial judge to conclude that the rights of the
Powleys’ ancestors did not merge into those of the Indian band.
(5) Identification of the Relevant Time Frame
36
As indicated above, the pre-contact aspect of the Van der Peet test
requires adjustment in order to take account of the post-contact ethnogenesis
of the Métis and the purpose of s. 35 in protecting the historically important
customs and traditions of these distinctive peoples. While the fact of prior
occupation grounds aboriginal rights claims for the Inuit and the Indians, the
recognition of Métis rights in s. 35 is not reducible to the Métis’ Indian
ancestry. The unique status of the Métis as an Aboriginal people with
post-contact origins requires an adaptation of the pre-contact approach to meet
the distinctive historical circumstances surrounding the evolution of Métis
communities.
37
The pre-contact test in Van der Peet is based on the
constitutional affirmation that aboriginal communities are entitled to continue
those practices, customs and traditions that are integral to their distinctive
existence or relationship to the land. By analogy, the test for Métis
practices should focus on identifying those practices, customs and traditions
that are integral to the Métis community’s distinctive existence and
relationship to the land. This unique history can most appropriately be
accommodated by a post-contact but pre-control test that identifies the time
when Europeans effectively established political and legal control in a
particular area. The focus should be on the period after a particular Métis community
arose and before it came under the effective control of European laws and
customs. This pre-control test enables us to identify those practices, customs
and traditions that predate the imposition of European laws and customs on the
Métis.
38
We reject the appellant’s argument that Métis rights must find their
origin in the pre-contact practices of the Métis’ aboriginal ancestors. This
theory in effect would deny to Métis their full status as distinctive
rights-bearing peoples whose own integral practices are entitled to
constitutional protection under s. 35(1) . The right claimed here was a
practice of both the Ojibway and the Métis. However, as long as the practice
grounding the right is distinctive and integral to the pre-control Métis
community, it will satisfy this prong of the test. This result flows from the
constitutional imperative that we recognize and affirm the aboriginal rights of
the Métis, who appeared after the time of first contact.
39
The pre-control test requires us to review the trial judge’s findings on
the imposition of European control in the Sault Ste. Marie area. Although
Europeans were clearly present in the Upper Great Lakes area from the early
days of exploration, they actually discouraged settlement of this region. J.
Peterson explains:
With the exception of Detroit, Kaskaskia and Cahokia, the French
colonial administration established no farming communities in the Great Lakes
region. After 1763, only partly in response to the regionwide resistance
movement known as Pontiac’s Rebellion, the British likewise discouraged
settlement west of Lake Ontario. Desire to keep the peace and to monopolize
the profits of the Great Lakes Indian trade were the overriding considerations
favouring this policy. To have simultaneously encouraged an influx of white
farmers would have upset both the diplomatic alliance with the native
inhabitants inherited from the French and the ratio between humans and animals
on the ground, straining the fur-bearing capacities of the region.
(J. Peterson, “Many roads to Red River: Métis genesis in the Great
Lakes region, 1680-1815”, in The New Peoples: Being and Becoming Métis in
North America (1985), 37, at p. 40)
This policy
changed in the mid-19th century, as British economic needs and plans evolved.
The British sent William B. Robinson to negotiate treaties with the Indian
tribes in the regions of Lake Huron and Lake Superior. One of his objectives
as Treaty Commissioner was to obtain land in order to allow mining, timber and
other development, including the development of a town at Sault Ste. Marie
(Lytwyn Report, supra, at p. 29).
40
The historical record indicates that the Sault Ste. Marie Métis
community thrived largely unaffected by European laws and customs until
colonial policy shifted from one of discouraging settlement to one of
negotiating treaties and encouraging settlement in the mid-19th century. The
trial judge found, and the parties agreed in their pleadings before the lower courts,
that “effective control [of the Upper Great Lakes area] passed from the
Aboriginal peoples of the area (Ojibway and Metis) to European control” in the
period between 1815 and 1850 (para. 90). The record fully supports the finding
that the period just prior to 1850 is the appropriate date for finding
effective control in this geographic area, which the Crown agreed was the
critical date in its pleadings below.
(6) Determination of Whether the Practice is
Integral to the Claimants’ Distinctive Culture
41
The practice of subsistence hunting and fishing was a constant in the
Métis community, even though the availability of particular species might have
waxed and waned. The evidence indicates that subsistence hunting was an
important aspect of Métis life and a defining feature of their special
relationship to the land (Peterson, supra, at p. 41; Lytwyn Report, supra,
at p. 6). A major part of subsistence was the practice at issue here, hunting
for food.
42
Peterson describes the Great Lakes Métis communities as follows at p.
41:
These people were neither adjunct relative-members
of tribal villages nor the standard bearers of European civilization in the
wilderness. Increasingly, they stood apart or, more precisely, in between. By
the end of the last struggle for empire in 1815, their towns, which were
visually, ethnically and culturally distinct from neighbouring Indian villages
and “white towns” along the eastern seaboard, stretched from Detroit and
Michilimackinac at the east to the Red River at the northwest.
. . .
. . . [R]esidents [of these trading communities]
. . . drew upon a local subsistence base rather than on European
imports . . . . [S]uch towns grew as a result of and
were increasingly dominated by the offspring of Canadian trade employees and
Indian women who, having reached their majority, were intermarrying among
themselves and rearing successive generations of métis. In both instances,
these communities did not represent an extension of French, and later British
colonial culture, but were rather “adaptation[s] to the Upper Great Lakes
environment.” [Emphasis added.]
43
Dr. Ray emphasized in his report that a key feature of Métis communities
was that “their members earned a substantial part of their livelihood off of
the land” (Ray Report, supra, at p. 56 (emphasis deleted)). Dr. Lytwyn
concurred: “The Métis of Sault Ste. Marie lived off the resources of the land.
They obtained their livelihood from hunting, fishing, gathering and
cultivating” (Lytwyn Report, at p. 2). He reported that “[w]hile Métis fishing
was prominent in the written accounts, hunting was also an important part of
their livelihood”, and that “[a] traditional winter hunting area for the Sault
Métis was the Goulais Bay area” (Lytwyn Report, at pp. 4-5). He elaborated at
p. 6:
In the mid-19th century, the Métis way of life incorporated many
resource harvesting activities. These activities, especially hunting and
trapping, were done within traditional territories located within the
hinterland of Sault Ste. Marie. The Métis engaged in these activities for
generations and, on the eve of the 1850 treaties, hunting, fishing, trapping
and gathering were integral activities to the Métis community at Sault Ste.
Marie.
44
This evidence supports the trial judge’s finding that hunting for food
was integral to the Métis way of life at Sault Ste. Marie in the period just
prior to 1850.
(7) Establishment of Continuity Between the
Historic Practice and the Contemporary Right Asserted
45
Although s. 35 protects “existing” rights, it is more than a mere
codification of the common law. Section 35 reflects a new promise: a
constitutional commitment to protecting practices that were historically
important features of particular aboriginal communities. A certain margin of
flexibility might be required to ensure that aboriginal practices can evolve
and develop over time, but it is not necessary to define or to rely on that
margin in this case. Hunting for food was an important feature of the Sault
Ste. Marie Métis community, and the practice has been continuous to the
present. Steve and Roddy Powley claim a Métis aboriginal right to hunt for
food. The right claimed by the Powleys falls squarely within the bounds of the
historical practice grounding the right.
(8) Determination of Whether or Not the Right
Was Extinguished
46
The doctrine of extinguishment applies equally to Métis and to First
Nations claims. There is no evidence of extinguishment here, as determined by
the trial judge. The Crown’s argument for extinguishment is based largely on
the Robinson-Huron Treaty of 1850, from which the Métis as a group were
explicitly excluded.
(9) If There Is a Right, Determination of
Whether There Is an Infringement
47
Ontario currently does not recognize any Métis right to hunt for food,
or any “special access rights to natural resources” for the Métis whatsoever
(appellant’s record, at p. 1029). This lack of recognition, and the consequent
application of the challenged provisions to the Powleys, infringe their
aboriginal right to hunt for food as a continuation of the protected historical
practices of the Sault Ste. Marie Métis community.
(10) Determination of Whether the Infringement Is Justified
48
The main justification advanced by the appellant is that of
conservation. Although conservation is clearly a very important concern, we
agree with the trial judge that the record here does not support this
justification. If the moose population in this part of Ontario were under
threat, and there was no evidence that it is, the Métis would still be
entitled to a priority allocation to satisfy their subsistence needs in accordance
with the criteria set out in R. v. Sparrow, [1990] 1 S.C.R. 1075. While
preventative measures might be required for conservation purposes in the
future, we have not been presented with evidence to support such measures
here. The Ontario authorities can make out a case for regulation of the
aboriginal right to hunt moose for food if and when the need arises. On the
available evidence and given the current licensing system, Ontario’s blanket
denial of any Métis right to hunt for food cannot be justified.
49
The appellant advances a subsidiary argument for justification based on
the alleged difficulty of identifying who is Métis. As discussed, the Métis
identity of a particular claimant should be determined on proof of
self-identification, ancestral connection, and community acceptance. The
development of a more systematic method of identifying Métis rights-holders for
the purpose of enforcing hunting regulations is an urgent priority. That said,
the difficulty of identifying members of the Métis community must not be
exaggerated as a basis for defeating their rights under the Constitution of
Canada.
50
While our finding of a Métis right to hunt for food is not
species-specific, the evidence on justification related primarily to the
Ontario moose population. The justification of other hunting regulations will
require adducing evidence relating to the particular species affected. In the
immediate future, the hunting rights of the Métis should track those of the
Ojibway in terms of restrictions for conservation purposes and priority
allocations where threatened species may be involved. In the longer term, a
combination of negotiation and judicial settlement will more clearly define the
contours of the Métis right to hunt, a right that we recognize as part of the
special aboriginal relationship to the land.
B. The Request for a Stay
51
With respect to the cross-appeal, we affirm that the Court of Appeal had
jurisdiction to issue a stay of its decision in these circumstances. This
power should continue to be used only in exceptional situations in which a
court of general jurisdiction deems that giving immediate effect to an order
will undermine the very purpose of that order or otherwise threaten the rule of
law: Reference re Manitoba Language Rights, [1985] 1 S.C.R. 721. We
note that the Powleys’ acquittal would have remained valid notwithstanding the
stay. It was, however, within the Court of Appeal’s discretion to suspend the
application of its ruling to other members of the Métis community in order to
foster cooperative solutions and ensure that the resource in question was not
depleted in the interim, thereby negating the value of the right.
52
The initial stay expired on February 23, 2002, and more than a year has
passed since that time. The Court of Appeal’s decision has been the law of
Ontario in the interim, and chaos does not appear to have ensued. We see no
compelling reason to issue an additional stay. We also note that it is
particularly important to have a clear justification for a stay where the
effect of that stay would be to suspend the recognition of a right that
provides a defence to a criminal charge, as it would here.
III. Conclusion
53
Members of the Métis community in and around Sault Ste. Marie have an
aboriginal right to hunt for food under s. 35(1) . This is determined by their
fulfillment of the requirements set out in Van der Peet, modified to fit
the distinctive purpose of s. 35 in protecting the Métis.
54
The appeal is dismissed with costs to the respondents. The cross-appeal
is dismissed.
55
The constitutional question is answered as follows:
Are ss. 46 and 47(1) of the Game and Fish Act, R.S.O. 1990, c.
G.1, as they read on October 22, 1993, of no force or effect with respect to
the respondents, being Métis, in the circumstances of this case, by reason of
their aboriginal rights under s. 35 of the Constitution Act, 1982 ?
Answer: Yes.
APPENDIX
Relevant
Constitutional and Statutory Provisions
Game and
Fish Act, R.S.O. 1990, c. G.1, ss. 46 and 47(1)
46. No person shall knowingly possess any
game hunted in contravention of this Act or the regulations.
47. (1) Except under the authority of a
licence and during such times and on such terms and conditions and in such
parts of Ontario as are prescribed in the regulations, no person shall hunt
black bear, polar bear, caribou, deer, elk or moose.
Constitution
Act, 1982
35. (1) The existing aboriginal and treaty rights of the
aboriginal peoples of Canada are hereby recognized and affirmed.
(2) In this Act, “aboriginal peoples of Canada”
includes the Indian, Inuit and Métis peoples of Canada.
Appeal dismissed with costs. Cross‑appeal dismissed.
Solicitor for the appellant/respondent on cross‑appeal:
Ministry of the Attorney General of Ontario, Toronto.
Solicitors for the respondents/appellants on cross‑appeal:
Pape & Salter, Toronto.
Solicitor for the intervener the Attorney General of Canada:
Attorney General of Canada, Ottawa.
Solicitor for the intervener the Attorney General of Quebec:
Attorney General of Quebec, Sainte‑Foy.
Solicitor for the intervener the Attorney General of New Brunswick:
Attorney General of New Brunswick, Fredericton.
Solicitor for the intervener the Attorney General of Manitoba:
Attorney General of Manitoba, Winnipeg.
Solicitor for the intervener the Attorney General of British
Columbia: Attorney General of British Columbia, Victoria.
Solicitor for the intervener the Attorney General for Saskatchewan:
Deputy Attorney General for Saskatchewan, Regina.
Solicitor for the intervener the Attorney General of Alberta:
Alberta Justice, Edmonton.
Solicitor for the intervener the Attorney General of Newfoundland
and Labrador: Attorney General of Newfoundland and Labrador, St. John’s.
Solicitors for the intervener the Labrador Métis Nation: Burchell
Green Hayman Parish, Halifax.
Solicitor for the intervener the Congress of Aboriginal Peoples:
Joseph Eliot Magnet, Ottawa.
Solicitor for the interveners the Métis National Council and Métis
Nation of Ontario: Métis National Council, Ottawa.
Solicitor for the intervener the B.C. Fisheries Survival Coalition:
J. Keith Lowes, Vancouver.
Solicitor for the intervener the Aboriginal Legal Services of
Toronto Inc.: Aboriginal Legal Services of Toronto Inc., Toronto.
Solicitor for the intervener the Ontario Métis and Aboriginal
Association: Robert MacRae, Sault Ste. Marie.
Solicitors for the intervener the Ontario Federation of Anglers and
Hunters: Danson, Recht & Voudouris, Toronto.
Solicitor for the intervener the Métis Chief Roy E. J. DeLaRonde, on
behalf of the Red Sky Métis Independent Nation: Alan Pratt, Dunrobin, Ontario.
Solicitors for the intervener the North Slave Métis Alliance:
Chamberlain Hutchison, Edmonton; Burchell Green Hayman Parish, Halifax.