Mitchell v. M.N.R., [2001] 1 S.C.R.
911, 2001 SCC 33
Minister of National Revenue Appellant
v.
Grand Chief Michael Mitchell
also known as Kanentakeron Respondent
and
The Attorney General of Quebec,
the Attorney General for New Brunswick,
the Attorney General of Manitoba,
the Attorney General of British Columbia,
the Mohawk Council of Kahnawake,
the Assembly of First Nations and
the Union of New Brunswick
Indians Interveners
Indexed as: Mitchell v. M.N.R.
Neutral citation: 2001 SCC 33.
File No.: 27066.
2000: June 16; 2001: May 24.
Present: McLachlin C.J. and Gonthier, Iacobucci,
Major, Binnie, Arbour and LeBel JJ.
on appeal from the federal court of appeal
Constitutional law – Aboriginal rights – Right to
bring goods across St. Lawrence River for purposes of trade – Whether Mohawks
of Akwesasne have right to bring goods into Canada from U.S. for trading
purposes without paying customs duties -- Whether claimed right incompatible
with Canadian sovereignty – Constitution Act, 1982, s. 35(1) .
Evidence -- Aboriginal rights – Evidence to be
adduced to establish aboriginal right – Assessment of evidence in aboriginal
claims.
The respondent is a Mohawk of Akwesasne and a
descendant of the Mohawk nation, one of the polities of the Iroquois
Confederacy prior to the arrival of Europeans. In 1988, the respondent crossed
the international border bearing goods purchased in the United States. He
declared the goods to Canadian customs agents but asserted that aboriginal and
treaty rights exempted him from paying duty. He was permitted to continue into
Canada but advised he would be charged duty. The goods except some motor oil
were presented to the Mohawk community of Tyendinaga as gifts. The oil was
taken to a store in Akwesasne for resale to members of that community. The
respondent was served with a claim for unpaid duty and sought declaratory
relief. The Federal Court, Trial Division held that the respondent had an aboriginal
right to cross the border freely without having to pay customs duties on goods
destined for personal and community use as well as for noncommercial scale
trade with other First Nations. The Federal Court of Appeal affirmed an
aboriginal right to bring goods into Canada duty-free, subject to limitations
based on the evidence of the traditional range of Mohawk trading.
Held: The appeal should
be allowed. The claimed aboriginal right has not been established. The
respondent must pay duty on the goods imported into Canada.
Per McLachlin C.J. and
Gonthier, Iacobucci, Arbour and LeBel JJ.: Under English colonial law, the pre-existing laws and interests of aboriginal societies
were absorbed into the common law as rights upon the Crown’s assertion of sovereignty unless these rights were
surrendered, extinguished or inconsistent with Crown sovereignty. The enactment
of s. 35(1) of the Constitution Act, 1982 accorded constitutional status
to existing aboriginal and treaty rights, including the aboriginal rights
recognized at common law. However, the government
retained the jurisdiction to limit aboriginal rights for justifiable reasons in
the pursuit of substantial and compelling public objectives. The test to establish an aboriginal right
focuses on the integral, defining features of the relevant aboriginal society
before the Crown’s assertion of sovereignty. A claimant must prove that a
modern practice, custom or tradition has a reasonable degree of continuity with
a practice, tradition or custom that was in existence prior to contact with the
Europeans. The practice, tradition or custom must have been integral to the
distinctive culture of the aboriginal people in the sense that it distinguished
or characterized their traditional culture and lay at the core of the
aboriginal people’s identity.
The initial step is to ascertain
the true nature of the claimed right, without assessing its merits or
artificially broadening or narrowing the right. This requires examining (1)
the nature of the action which the applicant is claiming was done pursuant to
an aboriginal right; (2) the nature of the governmental legislation or action alleged
to infringe the right, i.e. the conflict between the claim and the
limitation; and (3) the ancestral traditions
and practices relied upon to establish the right. An application of these
factors in this case suggests that the claimed right is properly characterized
as the right to bring goods across the Canada-United States boundary at the St.
Lawrence River for purposes of trade. The claim is for a right to trade simpliciter
and necessarily entails a mobility right because the right to bring goods
across the St. Lawrence River for purposes of trade involves travel. The right
should not be qualified as a right to bring goods without paying duty or taxes
because such a limitation should be considered at the infringement stage.
Technically, the right should be characterized as a right to bring goods across
the St. Lawrence River as opposed to the international border, a construction
of newcomers. However, in modern terms, the river and the border are
equivalent.
Aboriginal
rights claims give rise to inherent evidentiary difficulties. However, the
rights protected under s. 35(1) should not be rendered illusory by imposing an
impossible burden of proof. The rules of evidence must therefore be applied
flexibly, in a manner commensurate with the inherent difficulties posed by
aboriginal claims. Since claimants must demonstrate features of pre-contact
society in the absence of written records, oral histories may offer otherwise
unavailable evidence of ancestral practices and aboriginal perspectives. Oral
histories are admissible as evidence where they are both useful and reasonably
reliable, subject always to the exclusionary discretion of the trial judge. In determining the usefulness and reliability
of oral histories, judges must resist facile assumptions based on Eurocentric
traditions of gathering and passing on historical facts. Here, the parties
presented evidence from historians and archeologists. The aboriginal perspective was supplied
by oral histories of elders such as the respondent. The respondent’s testimony, confirmed by archaeological and historical
evidence, was useful and the trial
judge did not err in finding the respondent’s evidence to be credible and
reliable.
There are no precise rules or
absolute principles governing the interpretation or weighing of evidence in
support of aboriginal claims. The laws of evidence must ensure that the
aboriginal perspective is given due weight but consciousness of the special
nature of aboriginal claims does not negate general principles governing
evidence. Claims must still be established on persuasive evidence demonstrating
validity on a balance of probabilities. In the present case, the evidence
indicates that the Mohawks travelled north on occasion and trade was a
distinguishing feature of their society. The evidence does not show, however,
an ancestral practice of trading north of the St. Lawrence River. Mohawk trade
at the time of contact fell predominantly along an east-west axis. The
relevant evidence supporting the claim consists of a single ceremonial knife,
treaties that make no reference to pre-existing trade, and the mere fact of
Mohawk involvement in the fur trade. While appellate courts grant considerable
deference to findings of fact made by trial judges, the finding of a
cross-border trading right in this case represents, in view of the paucity of
the evidence, a “palpable and overriding error”. Evidentiary principles must
be sensitively applied to aboriginal claims but they cannot be strained beyond
reason.
In any event, even if deference
were granted to the trial judge’s finding of pre-contact trade relations
between the Mohawks and First Nations north of the St. Lawrence River, the
evidence does not establish this northerly trade as a defining feature of the Mohawk
culture. The claimed right implicates an international boundary and,
consequently, geographical considerations are clearly relevant to the
determination of whether the trading in this case is integral to the Mohawks’
culture. Even if the trial judge’s generous interpretation of the evidence were
accepted, it discloses negligible transportation and trade of goods by the
Mohawks north of the St. Lawrence River prior to contact. This trade was not
vital to the Mohawks’ collective identity. It follows that no aboriginal right to
bring goods across the border for the purposes of trade has been established.
Since the respondent has not
proven his claim to an aboriginal right, there is no need to comment on the
extent, if any, to which colonial laws of sovereign succession are relevant to
the definition of aboriginal rights under s. 35(1) of the Constitution Act,
1982 .
Per Major and Binnie JJ.: It is agreed that even if Mohawks
did occasionally trade goods across the St. Lawrence River with First
Nations to the north prior to contact, this practice was neither a defining
feature of their culture nor vital to their collective identity. There are,
however, additional considerations for allowing the appeal. In this case, an
issue arises about the sovereignty implications of the international trading
and mobility right claimed by the respondent as a citizen of the Iroquois
Confederacy.
Akwesasne lies at the
jurisdictional epicentre of the St. Lawrence River and straddles the
Canada-United States border, as well as provincial and state borders. This
crisscrossing of borders through the Mohawk community goes beyond mere
inconvenience and constitutes a significant burden on everyday living. The
Mohawk people seek to diminish the border disruption in their lives, reunite a
divided community, and find economic advantage in the international boundary.
That economic value of their claim is created by non-aboriginal society is not
fatal to its existence. A frozen rights theory is incompatible with s. 35(1)
and aboriginal rights are capable of growth and evolution.
An aboriginal right must be
derived from pre-contact activity that was an element of a practice, custom or
tradition integral to the aboriginal community’s distinctive culture. Traditional
Mohawk homelands were in the Mohawk Valley (N.Y. State) but the Mohawks
historically travelled as far north as the St. Lawrence River valley. In that
era, the Mohawks were, and acted as, a fully autonomous people within the
Iroquois Confederacy. Territorial boundaries changed as a militarily powerful
Iroquois Confederacy spread to and along the St. Lawrence River displacing
other aboriginal inhabitants. While none of the boundaries between First Nation
Territories in pre-contact times corresponded with the present international
boundary at Akwesasne, such boundaries existed and, under traditional practices
and customs, they were respected by the Mohawks in times of peace.
Counsel for the respondent does
not dispute Canadian sovereignty. He seeks Mohawk autonomy within the broader
framework of Canadian sovereignty. The respondent's claim is not just about
physical movement of people or goods in and about Akwesasne. It is about the
Mohawks' aspiration to live as if the international boundary did not exist.
Whereas historically the Crown may
have been portrayed as an entity across the seas with which aboriginal people
could scarcely be expected to identify, this was no longer the case in 1982
when the s. 35(1) reconciliation process was established. The
Constitution was patriated and all aspects of our sovereignty became firmly
located within our borders. If the principle of “merged sovereignty”
articulated by the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples is to have any
true meaning, it must include at least the idea that aboriginal and
non-aboriginal Canadians together form a sovereign entity with a measure of
common purpose and united effort. It is this new entity, as inheritor of the
historical attributes of sovereignty, with which existing aboriginal and
treaty rights must be reconciled. The constitutional objective is
reconciliation not mutual isolation. What is significant is that the Royal
Commission itself sees aboriginal peoples as full participants with
non-aboriginal peoples in a shared Canadian sovereignty. Aboriginal peoples do
not stand in opposition to, nor are they subjugated by, Canadian sovereignty.
They are part of it.
The respondent's claim presents
two defining elements. He asserts a trading and mobility right across the
international boundary and he attaches this right to his current citizenship
not of Canada but of the Haudenosaunee (Iroquois) Confederacy with its capital
in Onondaga, New York State.
A treaty right is an affirmative
promise by the Crown which will be interpreted generously and enforced in a way
that upholds the honour of the Crown. In the case of aboriginal rights, there
is no historical event comparable to the treaty-making process in which the
Crown negotiated the right or obligation sought to be enforced. The
respondent's claim is rooted in practices which he says long preceded the
Mohawks' first contact with Europeans in 1609.
British colonial law presumed that
the Crown intended to respect aboriginal rights that were neither
unconscionable nor incompatible with the Crown’s sovereignty. Courts have
extended this recognition to practices, customs or traditions integral to the
aboriginal community’s distinctive culture. While care must be taken not to
carry forward doctrines of British colonial law into interpretations of s.
35(1) without careful reflection, s. 35(1) was not a wholesale repudiation of
the common law. The notion of incompatibility with Crown sovereignty was a
defining characteristic of sovereign succession and therefore a limitation on
the scope of aboriginal rights. For example, important as they may have been
to the Mohawk identity as a people, it could not be said that pre-contact
warrior activities gave rise under successor regimes to a legal right under s.
35(1) to engage in military adventures on Canadian territory. This concept of
sovereign incompatibility continues to be an element in the s. 35(1) analysis,
albeit a limitation that will be sparingly applied. For the most part, the
protection of practices, traditions and customs that are distinctive to
aboriginal cultures in Canada does not raise legitimate sovereignty issues at
the definitional stage.
With the creation of the
international boundary in 1783, Akwesasne became the point at which British
(and later Canadian) sovereignty came face to face with the sovereignty of the
U.S. Control over the mobility of persons and goods across a border has
always been a fundamental attribute and incident of sovereignty. States are
expected to exercise their authority over borders in the public interest. The
duty cannot be abdicated to the vagaries of an earlier regime whose sovereignty
has been eclipsed. Therefore, the international trading/mobility right claimed
by the respondent is incompatible with the historical attributes of Canadian
sovereignty. Since the claimed aboriginal right did not survive the transition
to non-Mohawk sovereignty, there was nothing in existence in 1982 to which
s. 35(1) protection of existing aboriginal rights could attach.
This conclusion is not at odds
with the purpose of s. 35(1) to bring about a reconciliation of the interests
of aboriginal peoples with Canadian sovereignty. Aboriginal people are part of
Canadian sovereignty and the accommodation of their rights is not a zero-sum
relationship between minority rights and citizenship. Affirmation of the
sovereign interest of Canadians as a whole, including aboriginal peoples,
should not in this case be seen as a loss of legitimate constitutional space
for aboriginal peoples. To extend constitutional protection to the
respondent's claim would overshoot the purpose of s. 35(1) . In terms of
sovereign incompatibility, the respondent’s claim relates to national interests
that all of us have in common rather than to distinctive interests that for
some purposes differentiate an aboriginal community. Reconciliation of these
interests in this particular case favours an affirmation of our collective
sovereignty. This conclusion neither forecloses nor endorses any position on
the compatibility or incompatibility of internal self-governing institutions of
First Nations with Crown sovereignty, either past or present.
Cases Cited
By McLachlin C.J.
Applied: Delgamuukw v. British Columbia, [1997] 3 S.C.R. 1010, aff’g in
part [1993] 5 W.W.R. 97; R. v. Van der Peet, [1996] 2 S.C.R. 507; R.
v. Pamajewon, [1996] 2 S.C.R. 821; referred to: R. v. Sparrow,
[1990] 1 S.C.R. 1075; Guerin v. The Queen, [1984] 2 S.C.R. 335; Calder
v. Attorney-General of British Columbia, [1973] S.C.R. 313; Mabo v.
Queensland (1992), 175 C.L.R. 1; St. Catherine’s Milling and Lumber Co.
v. The Queen (1888), 14 App. Cas. 46; R. v. Gladstone, [1996] 2
S.C.R. 723; Watt v. Liebelt, [1999] 2 F.C. 455; R. v. Campbell
(2000), 6 Imm. L.R. (3d) 1; R. v. Côté, [1996] 3 S.C.R. 139; R. v.
Adams, [1996] 3 S.C.R. 101; R. v. Nikal, [1996] 1 S.C.R. 1013; R.
v. Badger, [1996] 1 S.C.R. 771; Simon v. The Queen, [1985] 2
S.C.R. 387; R. v. Levogiannis, [1993] 4 S.C.R. 475; R. v. Marshall,
[1999] 3 S.C.R. 456; R. v. N.T.C. Smokehouse Ltd., [1996] 2 S.C.R. 672;
Inasa v. Oshodi, [1934] A.C. 99; R. v. Jacobs, [1999] 3 C.N.L.R.
239.
By Binnie J.
Applied: R. v. Sparrow, [1990] 1 S.C.R. 1075; R.
v. Van der Peet, [1996] 2 S.C.R. 507; R. v. N.T.C. Smokehouse Ltd.,
[1996] 2 S.C.R. 672; explained: Calder v. Attorney-General of British
Columbia, [1973] S.C.R. 313; distinguished: Watt v. Liebelt,
[1999] 2 F.C. 455; referred to: R. v. Gladstone, [1996] 2 S.C.R.
723; R. v. Adams, [1996] 3 S.C.R. 101; United States v. Garrow,
88 F.2d 318 (1937); R. v. Côté, [1996] 3 S.C.R. 139; Attorney General
for Canada v. Cain, [1906] A.C. 542; Worcester v. Georgia, 31 U.S.
(6 Pet.) 515 (1832); R. v. Pamajewon, [1996] 2 S.C.R. 821; Nowegijick
v. The Queen, [1983] 1 S.C.R. 29; Natural Parents v. Superintendent of
Child Welfare, [1976] 2 S.C.R. 751; Dick v. The Queen, [1985] 2
S.C.R. 309; Delgamuukw v. British Columbia, [1997] 3 S.C.R. 1010, aff’g
in part [1993] 5 W.W.R. 97; Attorney-General for Ontario v. Attorney-General
for Canada, [1912] A.C. 571; Campbell v. British Columbia (Attorney
General) (2000), 79 B.C.L.R. (3d) 122, 2000 BCSC 1123; Corbiere v.
Canada (Minister of Indian and Northern Affairs), [1999] 2 S.C.R. 203; R.
v. Taylor (1981), 62 C.C.C. (2d) 227; R. v. Badger, [1996] 1 S.C.R.
771; R. v. Marshall, [1999] 3 S.C.R. 456; Campbell v. Hall
(1774), 1 Cowp. 204, 98 E.R. 1045; Amodu Tijani v. Southern Nigeria
(Secretary), [1921] 2 A.C. 399; Oyekan v. Adele, [1957] 2 All E.R.
785; Guerin v. The Queen, [1984] 2 S.C.R. 335; Mabo v. Queensland
(1992), 175 C.L.R. 1; Wik Peoples v. Queensland (1996), 187 C.L.R. 1; R.
v. Eninew (1984), 12 C.C.C. (3d) 365; R. v. Hare (1985), 20 C.C.C.
(3d) 1; R. v. Simmons, [1988] 2 S.C.R. 495; R. v. Jacques, [1996]
3 S.C.R. 312, Almeida-Sanchez v. United States, 413 U.S. 266 (1973); United
States v. Ramsey, 431 U.S. 606 (1977); Chae Chan Ping v. United States,
130 U.S. 581 (1889); Ekiu v. United States, 142 U.S. 651 (1892); Fong
Yue Ting v. United States, 149 U.S. 698 (1893); Cherokee Nation v.
Georgia, 30 U.S. (5 Pet.) 1 (1831); United States v. Wheeler, 435
U.S. 313 (1978); Akins v. United States, 551 F.2d 1222 (1977); Johnson
v. M’Intosh, 21 U.S. (8 Wheat.) 543 (1823).
Statutes and Regulations Cited
Akwesasne
Residents Remission Order,
SOR/91-412.
Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms .
Constitution
Act, 1867, s. 91(24) .
Constitution
Act, 1982, s. 35(1) .
Convention
(No. 169) concerning Indigenous and Tribal Peoples in Independent Countries. General Conference of the International
Labour Organisation, June 27, 1989, Art. 32.
Customs Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. 1 (2nd Supp .), ss. 17 , 31 ,
131 , 153 (c), 159 .
Customs Tariff, R.S.C. 1985, c. 41 (3rd Supp.).
Draft of
the Inter-American Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. Inter-American Commission on Human Rights,
September 18, 1995, Art. 24.
Draft
United Nations declaration on the rights of indigenous peoples. Sub-Commission on Prevention of
Discrimination and Protection of Minorities, Res. 1994/45, Art. 35.
Immigration
Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. I-2.
Royal
Proclamation (1763), R.S.C.
1985, App. II, No.1.
Treaty of Paris (1763).
Treaty of Paris (1783).
Authors Cited
Barsh, Russel
L., and James Y. Henderson. “The Supreme Court’s Van der Peet Trilogy:
Naive Imperialism and Ropes of Sand” (1997), 42 McGill L.J. 993.
Blackstone,
William. Commentaries on the Laws of England, 4th ed. Oxford:
Clarendon Press, 1770.
Borrows,
John. “The Trickster: Integral to a Distinctive Culture” (1997), 8 Constitutional
Forum 27.
Borrows,
John. “Uncertain Citizens: Aboriginal Peoples and the Supreme Court” (2001),
80 Can. Bar Rev. 15.
Canada. House
of Commons. Special Committee on Indian Self-Government. Indian
Self-Government in Canada: Report of the Special Committee. Ottawa:
Queen’s Printer for Canada, 1983.
Canada.
National Film Board. Between Friends/Entre Amis. Toronto: McClelland
& Stewart, 1976.
Canada. Royal
Commission on Aboriginal Peoples. Partners in Confederation: Aboriginal
Peoples, Self‑Government, and the Constitution. Ottawa: The
Commission, 1993.
Canada. Royal
Commission on Aboriginal Peoples. Report of the Royal Commission on
Aboriginal Peoples, vol. 2, Restructuring the Relationship.
Ottawa: The Commission, 1996.
Greschner,
Donna. “Aboriginal Women, the Constitution and Criminal Justice”, [1992] U.B.C.
L. Rev. (Sp. ed.) 338.
Hogg, Peter
W., and Mary Ellen Turpel. “Implementing Aboriginal Self-Government:
Constitutional and Jurisdictional Issues” (1995), 74 Can. Bar Rev. 187.
Kymlicka,
Will, and Wayne Norman, eds. Citizenship in Diverse Societies. New
York: Oxford University Press, 2000.
Nicholson,
Norman L. The Boundaries of the Canadian Confederation. Toronto:
Macmillan of Canada, 1979.
Richter,
Daniel K. The Ordeal of the Longhouse: The Peoples of the Iroquois League
in the Era of European Colonization. Chapel Hill, N.C.: University of
North Carolina Press, 1992.
Ritchie,
William A. The Archaeology of New York State, rev. ed., Harrison,
N.Y.: Harbor Hill Books, 1980.
Slattery,
Brian. “Making Sense of Aboriginal and Treaty
Rights” (2000), 79 Can. Bar Rev. 196.
Slattery,
Brian. “Understanding Aboriginal Rights” (1987), 66 Can. Bar Rev. 727.
Sopinka, John,
and Sidney N. Lederman. The Law of Evidence in Civil Cases. Toronto:
Butterworths, 1974.
Story,
Joseph. Commentaries on the Constitution of the United States, 4th ed.,
vol. II. Boston: Little, Brown, 1873.
Vattel, Emer
de. The Law of Nations; or, Principles of the Law of Nature, Applied to
the Conduct and Affairs of Nations and Sovereigns, Book II, new edition by
Joseph Chitty. London: S. Sweet, 1834.
Woodward,
Jack. Native Law. Toronto: Carswell, 1994 (loose-leaf updated 2000,
release 2).
APPEAL from a judgment of the
Federal Court of Appeal, [1999] 1 F.C. 375, 167 D.L.R. (4th) 702, 233 N.R. 129,
[1999] 1 C.N.L.R. 112, [1998] F.C.J. No. 1513 (QL), affirming in part a
judgment of the Trial Division, [1997] 4 C.N.L.R. 103, 134 F.T.R. 1, [1997]
F.C.J. No. 882 (QL). Appeal allowed.
Graham Garton, Q.C., and Sandra Phillips, for
the appellant.
Peter W. Hutchins, Anjali Choksi, Micha J. Menczer
and Paul Williams, for the respondent.
René Morin, for the intervener the Attorney General of
Quebec.
Gabriel Bourgeois, for the intervener the Attorney General for
New Brunswick.
Kenneth J. Tyler and Robert J. C. Deane, for the
intervener the Attorney General of Manitoba.
Timothy Leadem and Kathryn Kickbush, for the intervener
the Attorney General of British Columbia.
Murray Marshall and François Dandonneau, for the
intervener the Mohawk Council of Kahnawake.
Jack R. London, Q.C., and Martin S. Minuk, for
the intervener the Assembly of First Nations.
Henry J. Bear, for the intervener the Union of New Brunswick
Indians.
The judgment of McLachlin C.J.
and Gonthier, Iacobucci, Arbour and LeBel JJ. was delivered by
The
Chief Justice --
I. Introduction
1
This case raises the issue of whether the Mohawk Canadians of Akwesasne have the right to bring goods into
Canada from the United States for collective use and trade with other First
Nations without paying customs duties. Grand Chief Michael Mitchell claims that
his people have an aboriginal right that ousts Canadian customs law. The
government replies that no such right exists, first because the evidence does
not support it and second because such a right would be fundamentally contrary
to Canadian sovereignty. At the heart of the
case lies the question of the evidence that must be adduced to establish an
aboriginal right.
2
Chief Mitchell is a Mohawk of
Akwesasne, a Mohawk community located just west of Montreal, and a descendant
of the Mohawk nation, one of the polities comprising the Iroquois Confederacy
prior to the arrival of Europeans. On March 22, 1988, Chief Mitchell
crossed the international border from the United States into Canada, arriving
at the Cornwall customs office. He brought with him some blankets, bibles,
motor oil, food, clothing, and a washing machine, all of which had been
purchased in the United States. He declared the goods to the Canadian customs
agents but asserted that he had aboriginal and treaty rights which exempted him
from paying duty on the goods. After some discussion, the customs agents
notified Chief Mitchell that he would be charged $142.88 in duty, and they
permitted him to continue into Canada. Chief Mitchell, along with other
Mohawks of Akwesasne, presented everything but the motor oil to the Mohawk
community of Tyendinaga. The gifts were intended to symbolize the renewal of the historic trading relationship
between the two communities. The oil was taken to a store in Akwesasne
territory for resale to members of that community. In September of 1989, Chief
Mitchell was served with a Notice of Ascertained Forfeiture claiming $361.64
for unpaid duty, taxes and penalties.
3
I conclude that the aboriginal right claimed has not been established.
The sparse and tenuous evidence advanced in this case to prove the existence of
pre-contact Mohawk trading north of the Canada-United States boundary simply cannot
support the claimed right. Even if deference is paid to the trial judge on
this finding, any such trade was clearly incidental, and not integral, to the
Mohawk culture. As a result, Chief Mitchell must pay duty on the goods he
imported to Canada.
II. Enactments
4
Constitution Act, 1982
35. (1) The existing aboriginal and treaty rights of the
aboriginal peoples of Canada are hereby recognized and affirmed.
Customs Act,
R.S.C. 1985, c. 1 (2nd Supp .)
17. (1) Imported goods are charged with duties thereon from the
time of importation thereof until such time as the duties are paid or the
charge is otherwise removed.
(2) Subject to this Act, the rates of duties on imported goods
shall be the rates applicable to the goods at the time they are accounted for
under subsection 32(1), (2) or (5).
(3) Whenever the importer of goods that have been released or any
person authorized pursuant to paragraph 32(6)(a) to account for goods
becomes liable under this Act to pay duties thereon, the owner of the goods at
the time of release becomes jointly and severally liable, with the importer or
person authorized, to pay the duties.
31. Subject to section 19, no goods shall be removed from a
customs office, sufferance warehouse, bonded warehouse or duty free shop by any
person other than an officer in the performance of his duties under this or any
other Act of Parliament unless the goods have been released by an officer.
153. No person shall
...
(c) wilfully, in any manner, evade or attempt to evade
compliance with any provision of this Act or evade or attempt to evade the
payment of duties under this Act.
159. Every person commits an offence who smuggles or attempts
to smuggle into Canada, whether clandestinely or not, any goods subject to
duties, or any goods the importation of which is prohibited, controlled or
regulated by or pursuant to this or any other Act of Parliament.
III. Decisions
5
At trial ((1997), 134 F.T.R. 1),
McKeown J. declared that Chief Mitchell possesses an existing aboriginal but
not a treaty right “to pass and repass freely across what is now the
Canada-United States boundary including the right to bring goods from the
United States into Canada for personal and community use without having to pay
customs duties on those goods.... The aboriginal right includes the right to
bring these goods from the United States into Canada for noncommercial scale
trade with other First Nations” (p. 75). He found that the ancestors of the Akwesasne Mohawks lived in present-day New
York State, with the Adirondack mountains representing the northern boundary of
their territory. They travelled north into what is now Canada and crossed what
is now the Canada-United States boundary, carrying with them goods for personal
and community use. Further, he concluded that
the area around Akwesasne was used by the Mohawks prior to the arrival of
Europeans for the purposes of travel, diplomacy and trade. This
history, he concluded, established an aboriginal right to bring goods across
the present border free of duty, and to trade
these goods with other First Nations.
6
McKeown J. accepted that the Mohawks, like other aboriginal societies of North America, were accustomed to the
concept of boundaries and paying for the privilege of crossing arbitrary lines
established by other peoples. However, he concluded that this did not negate a
modern right to cross such boundaries duty-free because it merely constituted
regulation of the underlying aboriginal right to bring goods across boundaries
freely. The Customs Act did not extinguish this right because it too
was merely regulatory.
7
The Federal Court of Appeal ([1999] 1 F.C. 375), per Sexton J.A.,
Isaac C.J. concurring, affirmed McKeown J.’s finding of an aboriginal right to
bring goods into Canada duty-free, subject to limitations based on the evidence
of the traditional range of Mohawk trading: the goods must have been purchased
in New York State; the goods must be
brought to a border crossing between New York and either Ontario or Quebec; and
if destined for trade, such trade must be only with other aboriginal
communities in those two provinces.
Létourneau J.A. would have further narrowed the right by excluding a separate
right of free passage across the
border, requiring Mohawks seeking to exercise the right to report at the
Cornwall customs office, and excluding a
right to bring goods into Canada for trade purposes without the payment of customs duties.
IV. Issues
8
The issue on appeal is whether Chief Mitchell has an aboriginal right
which precludes the imposition of duty under the Customs Act on certain imported goods. The issue can be
addressed in the following manner:
A.
What is the Nature of Aboriginal Rights?
B.
What is the Aboriginal Right Claimed?
C.
Has the Claimed Aboriginal Right
Been Established?
(1) Evidentiary
Concerns – Proving Aboriginal Rights
(a) Admissibility
of Evidence in Aboriginal Right Claims
(b) The Interpretation
of Evidence in Aboriginal Right Claims
(2) Does the Evidence
Show an Ancestral
Mohawk Practice of Trading North
of the St. Lawrence River?
(3) Does the Evidence
Establish that the Alleged Practice
of Trading Across the St. Lawrence
River Was Integral to Mohawk Culture and Continuous
to the Present Day?
D.
Is the Claimed Right Barred from Recognition as Inconsistent with Crown
Sovereignty?
Because I
conclude that Chief Mitchell has not established an aboriginal right, I need
not address questions of extinguishment,
infringement and justification.
V. Analysis
A. What is the Nature of Aboriginal Rights?
9
Long before Europeans explored and settled North America,
aboriginal peoples were occupying and using
most of this vast expanse of land in organized, distinctive societies with
their own social and political structures. The part of North America we now
call Canada was first settled by the French and the British who, from the first
days of exploration, claimed sovereignty over the land on behalf of their
nations. English law, which ultimately came to govern aboriginal rights,
accepted that the aboriginal peoples possessed pre-existing laws and interests,
and recognized their continuance in the absence of extinguishment, by cession,
conquest, or legislation: see, e.g., the Royal Proclamation of 1763,
R.S.C. 1985, App. II, No. 1, and R. v. Sparrow, [1990] 1 S.C.R.
1075, at p. 1103. At the same time, however, the Crown asserted that
sovereignty over the land, and ownership of its underlying title, vested in the
Crown: Sparrow, supra. With this assertion arose an obligation
to treat aboriginal peoples fairly and honourably, and to protect them from
exploitation, a duty characterized as “fiduciary” in Guerin v. The Queen, [1984]
2 S.C.R. 335.
10
Accordingly, European settlement did not terminate the interests of
aboriginal peoples arising from their historical occupation and use of the
land. To the contrary, aboriginal interests
and customary laws were presumed to survive the assertion of sovereignty, and
were absorbed into the common law as rights, unless (1) they were incompatible
with the Crown’s assertion of
sovereignty, (2) they were surrendered voluntarily via the treaty process, or
(3) the government extinguished them: see B. Slattery, “Understanding Aboriginal Rights” (1987), 66 Can. Bar Rev. 727. Barring one
of these exceptions, the practices, customs and traditions that defined the
various aboriginal societies as distinctive cultures continued as part of the
law of Canada: see Calder v. Attorney-General of British Columbia,
[1973] S.C.R. 313, and Mabo v. Queensland (1992), 175 C.L.R. 1, at p. 57
(per Brennan J.), pp. 81-82 (per Deane and Gaudron JJ.), and
pp. 182-83 (per Toohey J.).
11
The common law status of aboriginal
rights rendered them vulnerable to unilateral extinguishment, and thus they
were “dependent upon the good will of
the Sovereign”: see St. Catherine’s Milling and Lumber Co. v. The Queen (1888), 14 App. Cas. 46 (P.C.), at p. 54. This
situation changed in 1982, when Canada’s
constitution was amended to entrench existing aboriginal and treaty rights: Constitution
Act, 1982, s. 35(1) . The enactment of s. 35(1) elevated existing common
law aboriginal rights to constitutional status (although, it is important to
note, the protection offered by s. 35(1) also extends beyond the aboriginal
rights recognized at common law: Delgamuukw v. British Columbia, [1997]
3 S.C.R. 1010, at para. 136). Henceforward, aboriginal rights falling within
the constitutional protection of s. 35(1) could not be unilaterally
abrogated by the government. However, the government retained the jurisdiction to limit aboriginal rights for
justifiable reasons, in the pursuit of substantial and compelling public
objectives: see R. v. Gladstone, [1996] 2 S.C.R. 723, and Delgamuukw,
supra.
12
In the seminal cases of R. v. Van der Peet, [1996] 2 S.C.R. 507,
and Delgamuukw, supra,
this Court affirmed the foregoing principles and set out the test for
establishing an aboriginal right. Since s. 35(1) is aimed at reconciling the
prior occupation of North America by aboriginal societies with the Crown’s
assertion of sovereignty, the test for establishing an aboriginal right focuses
on identifying the integral, defining features of those societies. Stripped
to essentials, an aboriginal claimant must prove a modern practice, tradition
or custom that has a reasonable degree of continuity with the practices,
traditions or customs that existed prior to contact. The practice, custom or tradition must have been “integral to the distinctive
culture” of the aboriginal peoples, in the
sense that it distinguished or characterized their traditional culture and lay at the core of the peoples’
identity. It must be a “defining feature” of the aboriginal society, such that
the culture would be “fundamentally altered” without it. It must be a feature
of “central significance” to the peoples’ culture, one that “truly made the
society what it was” (Van der Peet, supra, at paras. 54-59
(emphasis in original)). This excludes practices, traditions and customs that
are only marginal or incidental to the aboriginal society’s cultural identity,
and emphasizes practices, traditions and customs that are vital to the life,
culture and identity of the aboriginal society in question.
13
Once an aboriginal right is established, the issue is whether the act
which gave rise to the case at bar is an expression of that right. Aboriginal rights are not frozen in their
pre-contact form: ancestral rights may find modern expression. The
question is whether the impugned act
represents the modern exercise of an ancestral
practice, custom or tradition.
B. What is the Aboriginal Right Claimed?
14
Before we can address the question of whether an aboriginal right
has been established, we must first
characterize the right claimed. The event giving rise to litigation merely
represents an alleged exercise of an underlying right; it does not, in itself,
tell us the scope of the right claimed. Therefore it is necessary to determine
the nature of the claimed right. At this initial stage of characterization,
the focus is on ascertaining the true nature of the claim, not assessing the
merits of this claim or the evidence offered in its support.
15
In Van der Peet, supra, at para. 53, the majority of this
Court provided three factors that should guide
a court’s characterization of a claimed
aboriginal right: (1) the nature of the action which the applicant is
claiming was done pursuant to an aboriginal right; (2) the nature of the governmental legislation or action alleged to infringe the right, i.e.
the conflict between the claim and the limitation; and (3) the ancestral traditions and practices relied
upon to establish the right. The right claimed must be characterized in
context and not distorted to fit the desired result. It must be neither
artificially broadened nor narrowed. An overly
narrow characterization risks the dismissal of valid claims and an
overly broad characterization risks distorting the right by neglecting the specific culture and history of the
claimant’s society: see R. v.
Pamajewon, [1996] 2 S.C.R. 821.
16
Chief Mitchell characterizes his
claim as the right to enter Canada from the United States with personal and
community goods, without paying customs or duties, and the right to trade these
goods with other First Nations. On the strength of this claimed right, he
crossed the Canada-United States boundary with personal and community goods,
the action giving rise to the case at bar. Although the motor oil was the only
item transported by Chief Mitchell that was destined for resale, it can only be
concluded that Chief Mitchell’s actions
-- and his case -- focused in fact on trade. The claimants asserted that “trade and commerce [is] central to their soul”. Witness after witness was asked to describe
historical Mohawk trading practices. Furthermore, when Chief Mitchell
exercised his alleged right, all of the goods brought into Canada were
trade-related: they were intended as gifts to seal a trade agreement with
Tyendinaga and to signify renewed trading relations, in accordance with
customary practice. Therefore the first factor, the action claimed as an
exercise of an aboriginal right, suggests that the heart of the claim is the
right to bring goods across the Canada-United States border for purposes of
trade.
17
The second factor, the nature of the conflict between the claimed right and the relevant legislation, while
more neutral, does not displace this conclusion. The law in conflict with the
alleged right is the Customs Act . It applies both to personal goods and
goods for trade.
18
The third factor to be considered in characterizing the claim is the relevant traditions and practices of
the aboriginal people in question. The ancestral aboriginal practices upon which the claimant relies provide a strong indication of the nature and
scope of the right claimed. In this case, the claimants emphasize their ancestral trading practices; indeed
these practices and the alleged limitations on them raised by the appellant, lie at the heart of the case. As noted, the claimants assert that
historically “trade and commerce [is] central to their soul”. One of the claimant’s expert witnesses testified that trade “came as easily to the Iroquois as living and breathing”. The government, while not denying that
the Mohawks traditionally traded, asserts that such
trade did not extend north into what is now Canada and that, in any event, the Mohawks traditionally accepted
the custom of paying tributes and duties to cross boundaries established by
other polities.
19
I conclude that the Van der Peet factors of the impugned action, the governmental action or
legislation with which it conflicts, and the ancestral practice relied on, all
suggest the claim here is properly characterized as the right to bring goods
across the Canada-United States boundary at the St. Lawrence River for purposes
of trade.
20
It may be tempting for a
claimant or a court to tailor the right claimed to the contours of the specific
act at issue. In this case, for example, Chief Mitchell seeks to limit the
scope of his claimed trading rights by designating specified trading partners.
Originally, he claimed the right to trade with other First Nations in Canada.
After the Federal Court of Appeal decision, he further limited his claim to
trade with First Nations in Quebec and Ontario. These self-imposed limitations
may represent part of Chief Mitchell’s
commendable strategy of negotiating with the government and minimizing the
potential effects on its border control. However, narrowing the claim cannot
narrow the aboriginal practice relied upon, which is what defines the right.
The essence of the alleged Mohawk tradition was not to bring goods across the
St. Lawrence River to trade with designated communities, but rather to simply
bring goods to trade. As a matter of necessity, pre-contact trading partners
were confined to other First Nations, but this historical fact is incidental to
the claim – the right to cross the St.
Lawrence River with goods for personal use and trade. For example, in Gladstone,
supra, the majority of this Court found an aboriginal right to engage in
the commercial trade of herring spawn, but did not then proceed to restrict the
Heiltsuk to their pre-contact First Nations trading partners. Moreover, it is
difficult to imagine how limitations on trading partners would operate in practice.
If Chief Mitchell trades goods to First Nations in Ontario and Quebec, there is
nothing to prevent them from trading the goods with anyone else in Canada,
aboriginal or not. Thus, the limitations placed on the trading right by Chief
Mitchell and the courts below artificially narrow the claimed right and would,
at any rate, prove illusory in practice.
21
The trial judge characterized
the right claimed as including a right to engage in “small, noncommercial scale trade” (p. 12). He does not make it clear what inferences
arise from this characterization, but one possible inference might be that
evidence of minimal pre-contact trade would suffice to establish the right. I
note without comment the practical difficulties inherent in defining “small, noncommercial scale trade” and the obvious fact that many small acts of trade
may add up to more major trade. For purposes of this appeal, it suffices to
note that Chief Mitchell did not seek at trial to limit his claim to
small-scale or noncommercial trade. While he did not claim a right to trade
goods brought across the border in the commercial mainstream, he did assert a
right to trade with other First Nations, without qualifying the scale of such
trade. He then called evidence emphasizing the centrality of trade to the
ancestral Mohawk way of life. Moreover, his express purpose in transporting
the goods across the border was the revival of trading relations with a
neighbouring community. In these circumstances, it seems inappropriate to
place much weight on the limitation proposed by the Federal Court, and the
claimed right is best characterized as a right to trade simpliciter.
22
In another attempt at
limitation, Chief Mitchell denies that his claim entails the right to pass
freely over the border, i.e., mobility rights. Perhaps recognizing that
mobility has become a contentious issue in recent cases (e.g., Watt v.
Liebelt, [1999] 2 F.C. 455 (C.A.); R. v. Campbell (2000), 6 Imm.
L.R. (3d) 1 (B.C.S.C.)), he answers that his claim is contingent on his
existing right to enter Canada pursuant to the Canadian Charter of Rights
and Freedoms and the Immigration Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. I-2. He does
not seek a right to enter Canada because he does not require such a right.
Again, however, narrowing the claim cannot narrow the aboriginal practice that
defines the claimed right. An aboriginal right, once established, generally
encompasses other rights necessary to its meaningful exercise. In R. v. Côté,
[1996] 3 S.C.R. 139, for example, it was held that the right to fish for food
in a specified territory necessarily encompassed a right of physical access to
that territory. The evidence in the present case showed that trade involved
travel. It follows that any finding of a trading right would also confirm a
mobility right.
23
The Attorney General of Manitoba raises two additional points about the characterization of the right.
First, he argues that the claim should not be characterized in the negative.
The original claim was to bring goods across the border “without having to pay
any duty or taxes whatsoever to any Canadian government or authority”.
Manitoba argues that the right should be characterized simply as a right to
bring goods, without qualification. I agree.
As in the fishing and hunting cases, once
an existing right is established, any restriction on that right through
the imposition of duties or taxes should be considered at the infringement
stage: see, e.g., R. v. Adams, [1996] 3 S.C.R. 101; Côté, supra;
R. v. Nikal, [1996] 1 S.C.R. 1013; Gladstone, supra; see also R. v. Badger,
[1996] 1 S.C.R. 771. The right claimed
in those cases was not the right “to fish (or hunt) without restriction”.
Similarly, here the right is not “to bring trade goods without having to pay
duty”; properly defined, the right claimed is to bring trade goods simpliciter.
24
Manitoba also argues that the right should not be construed as a
right to cross the border. Technically this argument
is correct, as the border is a construction of newcomers. Aboriginal
rights are based on aboriginal practices,
customs and traditions, not those of newcomers. This objection can be
dealt with simply: the right claimed should be to bring goods across the St.
Lawrence River (which always existed)
rather than across the border. In modern terms, the two are equivalent.
25
Properly characterized, then, the right claimed in this case is the right to bring goods across the St. Lawrence
River for the purposes of trade.
C. Has the Claimed Aboriginal Right Been
Established?
26
Van der Peet set out the test for establishing an aboriginal
right protected under s. 35(1). Briefly stated, the claimant is required to
prove: (1) the existence of the ancestral
practice, custom or tradition advanced as supporting the claimed right; (2)
that this practice, custom or tradition was “integral” to his or her
pre-contact society in the sense it marked it as distinctive; and (3)
reasonable continuity between the pre-contact practice and the contemporary
claim. I will consider each of these elements in turn. First, however, it is
necessary to consider the evidence upon which claims may be proved, and the
approach courts should adopt in interpreting such evidence.
(1) Evidentiary Concerns – Proving Aboriginal Rights
27
Aboriginal right claims give rise to unique and inherent evidentiary
difficulties. Claimants are called upon to demonstrate features of their
pre-contact society, across a gulf of centuries and without the aid of written
records. Recognizing these difficulties, this Court has cautioned that the
rights protected under s. 35(1) should not be rendered illusory by imposing an
impossible burden of proof on those claiming this protection (Simon v. The
Queen, [1985] 2 S.C.R. 387, at p. 408). Thus in Van der Peet, supra, the
majority of this Court stated that “a court
should approach the rules of evidence, and interpret the evidence that exists,
with a consciousness of the special nature of aboriginal claims, and of the
evidentiary difficulties in proving a right which originates in times where
there were no written records of the practices, customs and traditions engaged
in” (para. 68).
28
This guideline applies both to the admissibility of evidence and
weighing of aboriginal oral history (Van der Peet, supra; Delgamuukw, supra, at para.
82).
(a) Admissibility of Evidence in
Aboriginal Right Claims
29
Courts render decisions on the basis of evidence. This fundamental principle applies to aboriginal
claims as much as to any other claim. Van
der Peet and Delgamuukw affirm the continued applicability of the
rules of evidence, while cautioning that these
rules must be applied flexibly, in a
manner commensurate with the inherent difficulties posed by such claims
and the promise of reconciliation embodied in s. 35(1). This flexible
application of the rules of evidence permits,
for example, the admissibility of evidence of post-contact activities to
prove continuity with pre-contact practices, customs and traditions (Van der
Peet, supra, at para. 62) and the
meaningful consideration of various forms of oral history (Delgamuukw,
supra).
30
The flexible adaptation of traditional rules of evidence to the
challenge of doing justice in aboriginal claims is but an application of the
time-honoured principle that the rules
of evidence are not “cast in stone, nor are they enacted in a vacuum” (R. v.
Levogiannis, [1993] 4 S.C.R. 475, at p.
487). Rather, they are animated by broad, flexible principles, applied
purposively to promote truth-finding and fairness. The rules of evidence
should facilitate justice, not stand in its way. Underlying
the diverse rules on the admissibility of evidence are three simple ideas.
First, the evidence must be useful in the sense of tending to prove a fact
relevant to the issues in the case. Second, the evidence must be reasonably
reliable; unreliable evidence may hinder the search for the truth more than
help it. Third, even useful and reasonably reliable evidence may be excluded
in the discretion of the trial judge if its probative value is overshadowed by
its potential for prejudice.
31
In Delgamuukw, mindful of these principles, the majority of this
Court held that the rules of evidence must be adapted to accommodate oral
histories, but did not mandate the blanket admissibility of such evidence or
the weight it should be accorded by the trier of fact; rather, it emphasized
that admissibility must be determined on a case-by-case basis (para. 87). Oral
histories are admissible as evidence where they are both useful and reasonably
reliable, subject always to the exclusionary discretion of the trial judge.
32
Aboriginal oral histories may meet the test of usefulness on two
grounds. First, they may offer evidence of ancestral practices and their
significance that would not otherwise be available. No other means of obtaining the same evidence may exist, given the absence of contemporaneous records.
Second, oral histories may provide the aboriginal perspective on the right
claimed. Without such evidence, it might be impossible to gain a true picture
of the aboriginal practice relied on or its significance to the society in question. Determining what
practices existed, and distinguishing central,
defining features of a culture from
traits that are marginal or peripheral, is no easy task at a remove of 400
years. Cultural identity is a subjective
matter and not easily discerned: see R. L. Barsh and J. Y. Henderson, “The Supreme Court’s Van der Peet Trilogy: Naive Imperialism and Ropes of Sand” (1997), 42 McGill L.J. 993, at p. 1000, and
J. Woodward, Native Law (loose-leaf), at p. 137. Also see Sparrow, supra, at p. 1103; Delgamuukw,
supra, at paras. 82-87, and J. Borrows, “The Trickster: Integral to a Distinctive Culture” (1997), 8 Constitutional Forum 27.
33
The second factor that must be
considered in determining the admissibility of evidence in aboriginal cases is
reliability: does the witness represent a reasonably reliable source of the
particular people’s history? The trial
judge need not go so far as to find a special guarantee of reliability.
However, inquiries as to the witness’s
ability to know and testify to orally transmitted aboriginal traditions and
history may be appropriate both on the question of admissibility and the weight
to be assigned the evidence if admitted.
34
In determining the usefulness and reliability of oral histories, judges
must resist facile assumptions based on
Eurocentric traditions of gathering and passing on historical facts and
traditions. Oral histories reflect the distinctive perspectives and cultures
of the communities from which they originate and
should not be discounted simply because they do not conform to the
expectations of the non-aboriginal perspective. Thus, Delgamuukw cautions
against facilely rejecting oral histories
simply because they do not convey “historical” truth, contain elements that may
be classified as mythology, lack precise detail, embody material tangential to
the judicial process, or are confined to the community whose history is being
recounted.
35
In this case, the parties presented
evidence from historians and archaeologists. The aboriginal perspective was
supplied by oral histories of elders such as Grand Chief Mitchell. Grand Chief
Mitchell’s testimony, confirmed by
archaeological and historical evidence, was especially useful because he was
trained from an early age in the history of his community. The trial judge
found his evidence credible and relied on it. He did not err in doing so and
we may do the same.
(b) The Interpretation of Evidence
in Aboriginal Right Claims
36
The second facet of the Van der Peet approach to evidence, and
the more contentious issue in the present case, relates to the interpretation
and weighing of evidence in support of aboriginal claims once it has cleared
the threshold for admission. For the most part, the rules of evidence are
concerned with issues of admissibility and the means by which facts may be
proved. As J. Sopinka and S. N. Lederman observe, “[t]he value to be given to
such facts does not ... lend itself as readily to precise rules. Accordingly,
there are no absolute principles which govern the assessment of evidence by the
trial judge” (The Law of Evidence in Civil Cases (1974), at p. 524).
This Court has not attempted to set out “precise rules” or “absolute
principles” governing the interpretation or weighing
of evidence in aboriginal claims. This reticence is appropriate, as this
process is generally the domain of the trial judge, who is best situated to assess
the evidence as it is presented, and is consequently accorded significant
latitude in this regard. Moreover, weighing evidence is an exercise inherently
specific to the case at hand.
37
Nonetheless, the present case requires us to clarify the general principles
laid down in Van der Peet and Delgamuukw regarding the assessment
of evidence in aboriginal right claims. The requirement that courts interpret
and weigh the evidence with a consciousness of the special nature of aboriginal
claims is critical to the meaningful protection of s. 35(1) rights. As Lamer
C.J. observed in Delgamuukw, the admission of oral histories represents
a hollow recognition of the aboriginal perspective where this evidence is then
systematically and consistently undervalued or deprived of all independent
weight (para. 98). Thus, it is imperative that the laws of evidence operate to
ensure that the aboriginal perspective is “given due weight by the courts”
(para. 84).
38
Again, however, it must be emphasized that a consciousness of the
special nature of aboriginal claims does not negate the operation of general
evidentiary principles. While evidence adduced in support of aboriginal claims
must not be undervalued, neither should it be interpreted or weighed in a manner
that fundamentally contravenes the principles of evidence law, which, as they
relate to the valuing of evidence, are often synonymous with the “general
principles of common sense” (Sopinka and Lederman, supra, at p. 524).
As Lamer C.J. emphasized in Delgamuukw, supra, at para. 82:
[A]boriginal rights are truly sui generis, and demand a unique
approach to the treatment of evidence which accords due weight to the
perspective of aboriginal peoples. However, that accommodation must be done
in a manner which does not strain “the Canadian legal and constitutional
structure” [Van der Peet at para. 49]. Both the principles laid
down in Van der Peet – first, that trial courts must approach the rules
of evidence in light of the evidentiary difficulties inherent in adjudicating
aboriginal claims, and second, that trial courts must interpret that evidence
in the same spirit – must be understood against this background. [Emphasis added.]
39
There is a boundary that must not be crossed between a sensitive
application and a complete abandonment of the rules of evidence. As Binnie J.
observed in the context of treaty rights, “[g]enerous rules of interpretation
should not be confused with a vague sense of after-the-fact largesse” (R. v.
Marshall, [1999] 3 S.C.R. 456, at para. 14). In particular, the Van
der Peet approach does not operate to amplify the cogency of evidence
adduced in support of an aboriginal claim. Evidence advanced in support of
aboriginal claims, like the evidence offered in any case, can run the gamut of
cogency from the highly compelling to the highly dubious. Claims must still be
established on the basis of persuasive evidence demonstrating
their validity on the balance of probabilities. Placing “due weight” on the
aboriginal perspective, or ensuring its supporting evidence an “equal footing”
with more familiar forms of evidence, means precisely what these phrases
suggest: equal and due treatment. While the evidence presented
by aboriginal claimants should not be undervalued “simply because that evidence
does not conform precisely with the evidentiary standards that would be applied
in, for example, a private law torts case” (Van der Peet, supra,
at para. 68), neither should it be artificially strained to carry more weight
than it can reasonably support. If this is an obvious proposition, it must
nonetheless be stated.
40
With these principles in mind, I turn now to the consideration of
whether the evidence offered in the present case in fact supports an aboriginal
right to bring goods across the St. Lawrence River for the purposes of trade.
(2) Does
the Evidence Show an Ancestral Mohawk Practice of Trading North of the St.
Lawrence River?
41
While the ancestral home of the
Mohawks lay in the Mohawk Valley of present-day New York State, the evidence
establishes that, before the arrival of Europeans, they travelled north
on occasion across the St. Lawrence River.
We may assume
they travelled with goods to sustain themselves. There was also ample
evidence before McKeown J. to support his finding that trade was a central,
distinguishing feature of the Iroquois in general and the Mohawks in
particular. This evidence indicates the Mohawks were well situated for trade,
and engaged in small-scale exchange with other First Nations. A critical question in this case, however, is whether these trading practices and
northerly travel coincided prior to the
arrival of Europeans; that is, does the evidence establish an ancestral Mohawk practice of transporting goods across the St. Lawrence River for
the purposes of trade? Only if this ancestral
practice is established does it become necessary to determine whether it is an
integral feature of Mohawk culture with continuity to the present day.
42
With respect, the trial judge’s affirmative response to this question
finds virtually no support in the evidentiary record. Indeed, McKeown J.
concedes as much (at p. 44):
There is little direct evidence that the Mohawks, prior to the arrival
of the Europeans, brought goods from their homeland and traded with other First
Nations on the Canadian side of the boundary....
Nonetheless,
he goes on to state:
[H]owever, I am satisfied that Mohawk society is distinctive, that
trade was an integral part of Mohawk tradition and that the Mohawks travelled
freely across the border to expand trading territory and to obtain goods for
the purposes of trade.... I find that the plaintiff and the Mohawks of
Akwesasne have established an aboriginal right to pass and repass freely what
is now the Canada-United States boundary with goods for personal and community
use and for trade with other First Nations.
These
statements are contradictory on two levels. First, the findings in the second
statement do not lead logically to its conclusion: Mohawks travel across the
border in attempts to expand trading territory through “commercially motivated
warfare” (as it was called at trial (p. 33)) or to obtain goods for trade
elsewhere simply does not address the question of whether goods were brought
across the border for purposes of trade with First Nations to the north.
On this question, McKeown J. was quite correct to state there exists “little
direct evidence”. This leads to the second contradiction: the inconsistency
between this concession of little direct evidence and the finding of an
aboriginal right. This is not to suggest that an aboriginal claim can never be
established on the basis of minimal evidence, direct or otherwise, provided it
is sufficiently compelling and supports the conclusions reached. In this case,
however, the “little direct evidence” relied upon by the trial judge is, at
best, tenuous and scant, and is perhaps better characterized as an absence of
even minimally cogent evidence. This conclusion seems inescapable after a
review of the evidence upon which McKeown J. relied in support of his
holding. In particular, McKeown J. relied upon archaeological evidence; the
testimony of Chief Mitchell and Dr. Venables, a cultural historian; and
post-contact Mohawk involvement in treaty-making and the fur trade.
43
The archaeological evidence consisted of two works, submitted by expert
witnesses, purportedly documenting an historical north-south trade in copper
and ceremonial knives, respectively. Sexton J.A., writing for the majority of
the Federal Court of Appeal in upholding the trial judge’s finding of a
cross-border trading right, placed significant emphasis on the former. He
concluded at para. 50 that D. K. Richter’s book, The Ordeal of the
Longhouse: The Peoples of the Iroquois League in the Era of European
Colonization (1992), demonstrated
that the Iroquois living in what is now the State of New York traded in
copper which originated from the north shore of Lake Superior. Justice McKeown
recognized that this was clear archaeological evidence of North-South trade
across what is now the Canada-United States border.
44
This is, with respect, an overly generous interpretation of both the
book and the trial judgment. The book merely states that plates of worked
copper originating in the Great Lakes region were particularly prized as gifts
by the members of the Five Nations Confederacy (Richter, supra, at
p. 28). It indicates that this copper originated to the north of the
Mohawk Valley, not that the Mohawks obtained this copper through direct trading
with their northern neighbours. Indeed, Richter’s book confirms that
long-distance Mohawk trade, at least at the time of contact, fell along an
east-west axis. The Mohawks traded with the Wenros and Neutrals to the west
(in the Niagra Region, south of the Great Lakes) and the Mohicans in the east,
but not with their enemies in the disputed territory to the north. Richter
contends that warfare between the Five Nations and their northern neighbours
precluded the possibility of trade (at pp. 28-29):
The lack of any need for large-scale trade helps
explain not just the isolationism of Five Nations villages from each other and
outsiders but their wars with such sixteenth-century neighbors as the
Hurons, the Susquehannocks, the Algonquins, and the St. Lawrence Iroquoians.
Because relationships among people rested on the alliances of spiritual power
that came from reciprocity, a lack of reciprocity, as epitomized by
the absence of trading relationships, could easily lead to a presumption of
hostility. Just as a shaman or an other-than-human person could be expected to
wreak havoc when denied respect and reciprocity, so too could people of another
village with whom no exchange relationships existed. [Underlining added;
italics in original.]
45
Richter then proceeds to note that the opposite dynamic prevailed where
trading occurred between nations: reciprocal trade facilitated and signified
peaceful relations between communities. In a passage not quoted by McKeown J.,
Richter concludes that the copper plates, originating in the Great Lakes region
and prized by the Confederacy for their spiritual power, were obtained
indirectly along the east-west trade axis, not directly from the north
as implied by the trial judge and asserted by the Court of Appeal (at p. 29):
[A]mong the few neighboring peoples with whom all of the autonomous
villages of the Five Nations seem to have been regularly at peace during the period
when Europeans first arrived on the Turtle’s Back were the Neutrals and Wenros
to the west and the Mahicans and River Indians to the east. Each sat
astride routes to the sources of exotic commodities associated with spiritual
power that were not available in the homelands of the Five Nations: Great Lakes
copper and other minerals linked with spiritual power came from beyond the
country of the Neutrals and Wenros, and shell beads arrived from the coast
of Long Island Sound presumably by way of the Mahicans and River Indians.
[Emphasis added.]
46
Consequently, while Richter’s book may support the pre-contact existence
of north-south trade routes, it refutes the direct involvement of the Mohawks
in this trade. This is a significant fact, given the reliance by the trial
judge on this evidence in concluding the aboriginal right was established, and
in rejecting the testimony of the appellant’s expert witness, Dr. von Gernet,
to the effect that he had “yet to find a single archeological site anywhere in
Ontario dating to the prehistoric, the protohistoric or the early historical period
which has in any way ever been associated with the Mohawks” (p. 30).
47
The second item of archaeological evidence relates to an alleged trade
in chalcedony ceremonial knives, raised by the claimant’s expert witness, Dr.
Venables, on the basis of W. A. Ritchie’s The Archaeology of New York State
(rev. ed. 1980). Again, Ritchie describes the Iroquois trade networks as
falling “chiefly westward toward the Upper Great Lakes, where also the
strongest cultural ties are found” (p. 196 (emphasis added)). The only
evidence of northerly trade is found in a single “smoky chalcedony ceremonial
(?) knife,” from which Ritchie postulates a potential trade route “evidently to
the north in Quebec” (p. 196) established somewhere between 3000 B.C. and 300
B.C. This evidence, standing alone, can hardly be called compelling.
48
The trial judge preferred the evidence of Dr. Venables and Chief
Mitchell where it conflicted with that of Dr. von Gernet. He properly admitted
the testimony of Chief Mitchell relaying the oral history of his people,
correctly stating, in accordance with Van der Peet, that the weight he
accorded “to oral history and to documentary evidence does not depend on the
form in which the evidence was presented to the court” (p. 25). However, Chief
Mitchell did not discuss Mohawk trading activity north of the St. Lawrence
River. Referring to Akwesasne, he simply stated that “[a]ccording to our
traditions it had always been one of our areas where we did all our planting,
we did our fishing and we did our hunting”. Dr. Venables testimony was equally
limited. He referred to extensive trade between the Mohawks and their Iroquois
confederates to the west, but did not identify any direct evidence of trade to
the north. Dr. Venables cited the works by Richter and Ritchie but, as
discussed above, the latter offers only the most tenuous support for northerly
trade and the former, if anything, refutes the existence of such trade during
the time preceding contact. Dr. Venables also referred to the Historical
Atlas of Canada, but the trial judge found at p. 29 that this text “does
not demonstrate cross-border trade by the Mohawks”.
49
Finally, the trial judge relied on post-contact Mohawk activity as proof
of continuity with pre-contact practices, an adaptation of the rules of
evidence approved in Van der Peet. He found it “particularly noteworthy
that the early treaties entered into by the Mohawks and other Iroquois were
largely concerned with trade” (p. 43). None of these early treaties, however,
support a reasonable inference of pre-contact cross-river trade. For example,
the trial judge relied on a 1645 treaty between the Hurons, French and
Mohawks. The Mohawks had defeated the Hurons (allies
of the French) and now sought to restrict their trade and travel through the
peace treaty, to their own benefit. Dr. Venables interpreted the Mohawk
negotiator’s speech at the treaty conference as demonstrating the integrity of
trade to Mohawk culture. The Mohawk negotiator did not actually refer to
pre-existing trade, nor did Dr. Venables claim he had. The Mohawks had warred
against the Hurons and Algonquins for years. While the treaty might suggest
the existence of trade during the uneasy year of peace before it was broken, it
offers no evidence of pre-contact trade across the St. Lawrence River.
50
The trial judge also relied on evidence of Mohawk participation in the
Montreal-Albany fur trade as suggesting pre-contact trade along a northerly
route. He rejected the assertion that this fur trade activity arose solely in
response to the arrival of Europeans, reasoning that “it seems highly unlikely
that the Mohawks would start trading immediately upon the arrival of the
Europeans if they had not been involved in some prior trade” (p. 39). In his
view, “a north-south trade existed prior to the European presence and after the
arrival of the Europeans, the trade was expanded to include furs” (p. 37).
While this inference may indeed be drawn from the evidence, it is drawn in the
absence of any other evidence – oral or documentary, aboriginal or settler,
direct or otherwise – substantiating the existence of this pre-contact trade
route. It cannot carry much force.
51
As discussed in the previous section, claims must be proven on the basis
of cogent evidence establishing their validity on the balance of
probabilities. Sparse, doubtful and equivocal evidence cannot serve as the
foundation for a successful claim. With respect, this is exactly what has
occurred in the present case. The contradiction between McKeown J.’s statement
that little direct evidence supports a cross-river trading right and his
conclusion that such a right exists suggests the application of a very relaxed
standard of proof (or, perhaps more accurately, an unreasonably generous
weighing of tenuous evidence). The Van der Peet approach, while
mandating the equal and due treatment of evidence supporting aboriginal claims,
does not bolster or enhance the cogency of this evidence. The relevant
evidence in this case – a single knife, treaties that make no reference to
pre-existing trade, and the mere fact of Mohawk involvement in the fur trade –
can only support the conclusion reached by the trial judge if strained beyond
the weight they can reasonably hold. Such a result is not contemplated by Van
der Peet or s. 35(1). While appellate courts grant considerable deference
to findings of fact made by trial judges, I am satisfied that the findings in
the present case represent a “palpable and overriding error” warranting the
substitution of a different result (Delgamuukw, supra, at paras.
78-80). I conclude that the claimant has not established an ancestral practice
of transporting goods across the St. Lawrence River for the purposes of trade.
52
This holding should not be read as imposing upon aboriginal claimants
the “next to impossible task of producing conclusive evidence from pre-contact
times about the practices, customs and traditions of their community” (Van
der Peet, supra, at para. 62). McKeown J. correctly observed that
indisputable evidence is not required to establish an aboriginal right (p.
20). Neither must the claim be established on the basis of direct evidence of
pre-contact practices, customs and traditions, which is inevitably scarce.
Either requirement would “preclude in practice any successful claim for the
existence” of an aboriginal right (Van der Peet, supra, at para.
62). My conclusion, rather, is premised on the distinction between sensitively
applying evidentiary principles and straining these principles beyond reason.
In Adams, supra, this Court recognized a Mohawk right to fish on
the St. Lawrence River, but this was on the basis of evidence that “clearly
demonstrated” (para. 46 (emphasis added)) that fishing for subsistence in
the area constituted a significant aspect of Mohawk life at the time of
contact. Similarly, the recognition in Gladstone of an aboriginal right
to engage in the commercial trade of herring spawn was founded firmly on an
indisputable historical and anthropological record that “readily bear[s] this
out” (para. 26), complemented by written documentation by European observers of
such inter-tribal trade at the time of contact (paras. 26-27). This Court
concluded that the claimant had “provided clear evidence from which it
can be inferred that, prior to contact, Heiltsuk society was, in significant
part, based on such trade” (para. 28 (emphasis added)). Here, no such “clear
evidence” of a trading practice north of St. Lawrence River exists and no
comparable inference can be drawn.
53
In view of the paucity of evidence of Mohawk trade north of the St. Lawrence River, I need not consider the
argument that, even if it were established,
any Mohawk trading right should be characterized as inherently subject to
border controls, tolls and duties imposed by
other peoples, as recognized by ancestral aboriginal custom.
(3) Does
the Evidence Establish that the Alleged Practice of Trading Across the St.
Lawrence River Was Integral to Mohawk Culture and Continuous to the Present
Day?
54
Even if deference were granted to the trial judge’s finding of
pre-contact trade relations between the Mohawks and First Nations north of the
St. Lawrence River, the evidence does not establish this northerly trade as a
defining feature of the Mohawk culture. As
discussed earlier, the Van der Peet test identifies as aboriginal rights
only those activities that represent “an
element of a practice, custom or tradition integral to the distinctive
culture of the aboriginal group claiming the right” (para. 46 (emphasis added)). It is therefore
incumbent upon Chief Mitchell in this case to demonstrate not only that
personal and community goods were transported across the St. Lawrence River for
trade purposes prior to contact, but also that this practice is integral to the
Mohawk people.
55
The importance of trade – in and of itself – to Mohawk culture is not
determinative of the issue. It is necessary on the facts of this case to
demonstrate the integrality of this practice to the Mohawk in the specific
geographical region in which it is alleged to have been exercised (i.e.,
north of the St. Lawrence River), rather than in the abstract. This Court
has frequently considered the geographical reach of a claimed right in
assessing its centrality to the aboriginal culture claiming it. For example,
in recognizing a constitutionally protected Mohawk fishing right in Adams,
supra, the majority of this Court framed the Van der Peet test as
follows (at para. 34):
The appellant argues that the Mohawks have an aboriginal right to fish in
Lake St. Francis. In order to succeed in this argument the appellant must
demonstrate that, pursuant to the test laid out by this Court in Van der
Peet, fishing in Lake St. Francis was “an element of a practice,
custom or tradition integral to the distinctive culture” of the Mohawks.
[Emphasis added.]
The majority,
in assessing the integrality of this practice to the Mohawks in Adams,
consistently tied the claimed right to the specific area at issue – the region
of Lake St. Francis (see paras. 37 and 45). Côté, supra,
similarly emphasized that it is the exercise of the claimed right in a specific
geographical area that must be integral (paras. 41-78). In that case, the
Court stated that “[a]n aboriginal practice, custom or tradition entitled to
protection as an aboriginal right will frequently be limited to a specific
territory or location, depending on the actual pattern of exercise of such an
activity prior to contact” (para. 39).
56
Thus, geographical considerations are clearly relevant to the
determination of whether an activity is integral in at least some cases,
most notably where the activity is intrinsically linked to specific tracts of
land. However, as Lamer C.J. observed in Delgamuukw, “aboriginal
rights ... fall along a spectrum with respect to their degree of
connection with the land” (para. 138). In this regard, I note that the
relevance of geography is much clearer in hunting and fishing cases such as Adams
and Côté, which involve activities inherently tied to the land, than
it is in relation to more free-ranging rights, such as a general right to
trade, which fall on the opposite end of the spectrum. General trading rights lack an inherent connection to a specific tract
of land. Thus, geography was not a relevant factor in the aboriginal
rights trilogy of Van der Peet, supra, R. v. N.T.C. Smokehouse
Ltd., [1996] 2 S.C.R. 672, and
Gladstone, supra, all cases involving claimed rights of exchange or
trade. The claimants in these cases were only required to demonstrate the
integrality of the claimed trading practice in general, rather than in
relation to a specific region. Moreover, in Gladstone, where the
Heiltsuk successfully established an aboriginal right to engage in the
commercial trade of herring spawn on kelp, the Court did not confine the
scope of this trade to its historical reach. Such a restriction would unduly
cement the right in its pre-contact form and frustrate its modern exercise,
contrary to the principles set out in Van der Peet. Consequently,
trading rights will seldom attract geographical restrictions.
57
In the present case, however, the right to trade is only one aspect, and
perhaps a peripheral one, of the broader claim advanced by Chief Mitchell: the
right to convey goods across an international boundary for the purposes
of trade. For this reason, Chief Mitchell’s claim cannot simply be equated
with the claims in the aboriginal rights trilogy as involving a broad “right to
trade”. This distinction is manifest in the contrasting manners in which the
claimed rights are framed in these cases, pursuant to the Van der Peet factors.
58
In the present case, unlike past trading cases, all three Van der
Peet touchstones resonate with considerations of geography. The action
giving rise to the case is Chief Mitchell arriving at the Cornwall
International Bridge and claiming a right to cross this international
boundary with goods for trade. Absent a border, this case would not be
before the Court. Similarly, the government restriction alleged to infringe
the right arises from provisions of the Customs Act regulating the
importation of goods. Unlike the provisions implicated in the aboriginal
rights trilogy, the Customs Act is fundamentally concerned with the
geographical origins and destinations of goods. The ancestral practice relied
upon in support of the right, while argued broadly, also involved allegations
of an historical trade route north across the St. Lawrence River. Chief
Mitchell’s characterization of his claim, while not determinative, reflects the
undeniable geographical element of the claim: he asserts the right to enter
Canada from the United States with personal and community goods, without
paying customs and other duties, for trade with First Nations.
59
Ultimately, the characterization of the claimed right in this case, as
in Adams and Côté, imports a necessary geographical element, and
its integrality to the Mohawk culture should be assessed on this basis. By
contrast, geographical considerations were irrelevant to the framing of the
claimed trading right in the aboriginal rights trilogy, and were therefore
equally irrelevant to whether the claimed trade constituted a defining feature
of the cultures in question and the scope of the right if successfully
established. In this manner, the Van der Peet approach to
characterizing the claimed right will generally determine when – and to what
extent – geographical considerations are relevant to the claim.
60
The claimed right in the present case implicates an international
boundary and, consequently, imports a geographical element into the inquiry.
Instead of asking whether the right to trade – in the abstract – is integral to
the Mohawk people, this Court must ask whether the right to trade across the
St. Lawrence River is integral to the Mohawks. The evidence establishes
that it is not. Even if the trial judge’s generous interpretation of the
evidence were accepted, it discloses negligible transportation and trade of
goods by the Mohawks north of the St. Lawrence River prior to contact. If the
Mohawks did transport trade goods across the St. Lawrence River for trade, such
occasions were few and far between. Certainly it cannot be said that the
Mohawk culture would have been “fundamentally altered” without this trade, in
the language of Van der Peet, supra, at para. 59. It was not
vital to the Mohawks’ collective identity. It was not something that “truly made
the society what it was” (Van der Peet, at para. 55 (emphasis in
original)). Participation in northerly trade was therefore not a practice
integral to the distinctive culture of the Mohawk people. It follows that no
aboriginal right to bring goods across the border for the purposes of trade has
been established.
D.
Is the Claimed Right Barred
from Recognition as Inconsistent with Crown Sovereignty?
61
The conclusion that the right claimed is not established on the evidence
suffices to dispose of this appeal. I add a note, however, on the government’s
contention that s. 35(1) of the Constitution Act, 1982 extends
constitutional protection only to those aboriginal practices, customs and
traditions that are compatible with the historical and modern exercise of Crown
sovereignty. Pursuant to this argument, any Mohawk practice of cross-border
trade, even if established on the evidence, would be barred from recognition
under s. 35(1) as incompatible with the Crown’s sovereign interest in
regulating its borders.
62
This argument finds its source
in the doctrine of continuity, which governed
the absorption of aboriginal laws and customs into the new legal regime upon
the assertion of Crown sovereignty over the
region. As discussed above, this incorporation
of local laws and customs into the common law was subject to an
exception for those interests that were inconsistent with the sovereignty of
the new regime: see Slattery, supra, at
p. 738; see also Delgamuukw v.
British Columbia, [1993] 5 W.W.R. 97 (B.C.C.A.), at paras. 1021-24, per
Lambert J.A.; Mabo, supra, at p. 61, per Brennan J.; Inasa
v. Oshodi, [1934] A.C. 99 (P.C.); and R. v. Jacobs, [1999] 3
C.N.L.R. 239 (B.C.S.C.).
63
This Court has not expressly invoked the doctrine of “sovereign incompatibility”
in defining the rights protected under s. 35(1) . In the Van der Peet trilogy,
this Court identified the aboriginal rights protected under s. 35(1) as those
practices, customs and traditions integral to the distinctive cultures of
aboriginal societies: Van der Peet, supra,
at para. 46. Subsequent cases affirmed this approach to identifying aboriginal
rights falling within the aegis of s. 35(1) (Pamajewon, supra,
at paras. 23-25; Adams, supra, at para. 33; Côté, supra, at
para. 54; see also: Woodward, supra, at p. 75) and have affirmed the
doctrines of extinguishment, infringement and justification as the appropriate
framework for resolving conflicts between aboriginal rights and competing
claims, including claims based on Crown sovereignty.
64
The Crown now contends that “sovereign incompatibility” is an implicit
element of the Van der Peet test for identifying protected aboriginal
rights, or at least a necessary addition. In view of my conclusion that Chief
Mitchell has not established that the Mohawks traditionally transported goods
for trade across the present Canada-U.S. border,
and hence has not proven his claim to an aboriginal right, I need not consider the merits of this submission. Rather, I would
prefer to refrain from comment on the extent, if any, to which colonial laws of
sovereign succession are relevant to the definition of aboriginal rights under
s. 35(1) until such time as it is necessary for the Court to resolve this
issue.
VI. Conclusion
65
I would allow the appeal. Chief Mitchell must pay the duty
claimed by the government. I note that the government has undertaken to pay
Chief Mitchell’s costs.
The reasons of Major and Binnie JJ. were delivered by
66
Binnie J. – I have read the reasons of the Chief Justice and I concur in the
result and with her conclusion that even if Mohawks did occasionally trade
goods across the St. Lawrence River with First Nations to the north, this
practice was not on the evidence a “defining feature of the Mohawk culture”
(para. 54) or “vital to the Mohawk's collective identity” (para. 60)
in pre-contact times. There are, however, some additional considerations that have led me to conclude that the appeal must be
allowed.
67
It has been almost 30 years since this Court emphatically rejected the
argument that the mere assertion of sovereignty by the European powers in North
America was necessarily incompatible with the survival and continuation of
aboriginal rights: Calder v. Attorney-General of British Columbia,
[1973] S.C.R. 313. Because not all customs and traditions of aboriginal
First Nations are incompatible with Canadian sovereignty, however, does not
mean that none of them can be in such conflict. The Chief Justice
refrains from addressing the sovereignty issue (para. 64) but she holds,
correctly in my view, that “any finding of a trading right would also
confirm a mobility right” (para. 22 (emphasis added)). The scope
of the trading/mobility right also bothered the Federal Court of Appeal: [1999]
1 F.C. 375. Létourneau J.A. (for the entire court on this aspect)
commented at para. 18:
The respondent claims his international mobility
right as a citizen of the Mohawk nation. I would be inclined to agree
with counsel for the appellant that an aboriginal right to enter a sovereign
state that is not based on citizenship of that state cannot be reconciled with
that state's right to self-preservation by effecting an appropriate control of
its borders. [Emphasis added.]
68
The Federal Court of Appeal circumnavigated this problem by
characterizing the respondent's claim as a claim for a tax exemption, but as
the Chief Justice demonstrates (at para. 23), any such claim can only be
conceptualized as a restriction on mobility. The aboriginal claim to a trading
right must relate back to a pre-contact practice, custom or tradition.
Mobility existed in pre-contact times. Customs duties at the present
international border within Mohawk territory came along almost 180 years
later.
69
Having rejected the approach of the Federal Court of Appeal to narrow
the claimed aboriginal right to tax exemptions, however, we are left with that
court's legitimate concern about the sovereignty implications of the
international trading/mobility right claimed by the respondent, as pointed out
by Létourneau J.A., “as a citizen of the Mohawk nation” (para. 18).
Much of the debate during the 35-day trial implicated this issue, as did much
of the argument on appeal to this Court, and I therefore think it desirable to
address at least some aspects of the sovereignty controversy.
70
Counsel for the respondent does not challenge the reality of Canadian
sovereignty, but he seeks for the Mohawk people of the Iroquois Confederacy the
maximum degree of legal autonomy to which he believes they are entitled because
of their long history at Akwesasne and elsewhere in eastern North America.
This asserted autonomy, to be sure, does not presently flow from the ancient
Iroquois legal order that is said to have created it, but from the Constitution
Act, 1982 . Section 35(1) , adopted by the elected representatives of
Canadians, recognizes and affirms existing aboriginal and treaty rights. If
the respondent's claimed aboriginal right is to prevail, it does so not because
of its own inherent strength, but because the Constitution Act, 1982
brings about that result.
71
The aspect of Mohawk autonomy at issue in this case is reflected in the
declaration granted by the Trial Division of the Federal Court ((1997), 134
F.T.R. 1, at p. 4):
... that the plaintiff as a Mohawk of Akwesasne resident in Canada has
an existing aboriginal right which is constitutionally protected by ss. 35 and
52 of the Constitution Act, 1982 to pass and repass freely across what
is now the Canada-United States boundary including the right to bring
goods into Canada for personal and community use, including for trade
with other First Nations, without having to pay any duty or taxes whatsoever to
any Canadian Government or authority.... [Emphasis added.]
This is
essentially a description of a trading/mobility right of people and their goods
across the international boundary subject only to such restrictions as can be
justified by the government under the principles laid down in R. v. Sparrow,
[1990] 1 S.C.R. 1075.
72
The Crown's argument on the appeal is that such a claim goes beyond the
sort of economic or cultural activity or land-based interest that the courts
have previously recognized under s. 35(1) in such cases as R. v. Van der
Peet, [1996] 2 S.C.R. 507, R. v. Gladstone, [1996] 2 S.C.R. 723, R.
v. N.T.C. Smokehouse Ltd., [1996] 2 S.C.R. 672, and R. v. Adams,
[1996] 3 S.C.R. 101.
73
In terms of traditional aboriginal law, the issue, as I see it, is
whether trading/mobility activities asserted by the respondent not as a
Canadian citizen but as an heir of the Mohawk regime that existed prior to the
arrival of the Europeans, created a legal right to cross international
boundaries under succeeding sovereigns. This aspect of the debate, to be
clear, is not at the level of fact about the effectiveness of border
controls in the 18th century. (Nor is it about the compatibility of internal
aboriginal self-government with Canadian sovereignty.) The issue is at the
level of law about the alleged incompatibility between European (now
Canadian) sovereignty and mobility rights across non-aboriginal borders said by
the trial judge to have been acquired by the Mohawks of Akwesasne by reason of
their conduct prior to 1609.
74
In terms of post-1982 aboriginal law, consideration should be given to
whether the international trading/mobility right asserted by the respondent
would advance the objective of reconciliation of aboriginal peoples with
Canadian sovereignty which, as established by the Van der Peet trilogy,
is the purpose that lies at the heart of s. 35(1) .
75
The dispute therefore raises issues of considerable importance. I
propose to deal with the relevant points in the following order:
(1) the strategic location of the Mohawk reserve at
Akwesasne on the international boundary between Canada and the United States;
(2) the respondent's border challenge on March 22, 1988;
(3) the Mohawk strategy to turn the border burden into an
economic benefit;
(4) the basis of the respondent's aboriginal rights claims;
(5) the sovereignty objection;
(6) the effect of non-assertion of aspects of the
respondent's potential claim;
(7) the real substance of the Mohawk position;
(8) the legal basis of the respondent's claim,
including relevant distinctions between aboriginal and treaty rights;
(9) the limitation of “sovereign incompatibility”;
(10) the alleged incompatibility between the aboriginal right as
disclosed by the evidence and Canadian sovereignty;
(11) implications for internal aboriginal self-government.
76
The importance of the Crown's argument is that even if the respondent's
claim could be said to be distinctive and integral to Mohawk culture, it would
still not give rise to an aboriginal right. The Crown says it fails the basic
requirement of compatibility with the sovereignty of the legal regimes that
came afterwards. The question also arises, as noted, whether acceptance of it
would advance or undermine the s. 35(1) objective of reconciliation.
1. Strategic Location of Akwesasne
77
Akwesasne (“the place where the partridge dwells or drums”) consists of
a string of islands about 130 kilometres long that stretches from east of
Prescott, Ontario to near Valleyfield, Quebec. It is home to 12 to 13 thousand
people, approximately two-thirds of whom live in Canada. It lies at the
jurisdictional epicentre of the St. Lawrence River. Not only do the islands
straddle the Ontario-Quebec border in Canada, but they are bisected by the
international boundary that divides the St. Lawrence River. While the
respondent conceives of Akwesasne as part of the Mohawk homelands, which itself
constitutes one of the elements of the Iroquois Confederacy (“Haudenosaunee” or
“People of the Longhouse”) that formerly extended over large tracts of eastern
Canada and northern New York State, the territory of Akwesasne is also
parcelled out among five different governments in Canada, Quebec, Ontario, the
United States and New York State. Mohawk institutions are similarly divided
territorially among the Mohawk Council of Akwesasne, the St. Regis Tribal
Council and the Mohawk Nation Council of Chiefs. The resulting boundary
problems complicate the everyday existence of the Mohawks. As the respondent
stated in his evidence:
We did not ask that this International Boundary line separate our
community in half. We certainly didn't ask for the New York State border to be
placed in our territory. We certainly didn't ask that our other half be
separated by Quebec and Ontario.
It is a reality that we find ourselves in. We admit
very easily that it is a very difficult and unique situation to be in....
We wish to change that and by exercising our
aboriginal rights we have to modernize a lot of what we mean by what our rights
are and how we execute them.
78
Akwesasne people routinely pass back and forth across the international
boundary several times a day. Supplies from the mainland encounter customs
problems. In 1991, the Canadian government sought to reduce the tax burden on
residents by the Akwesasne Residents Remission Order, SOR/91-412, under
the Customs Tariff, R.S.C. 1985, c. 41 (3rd Supp.).
79
I accept that this crisscrossing of borders through the Mohawk community
goes beyond mere inconvenience and does constitute a significant burden on
everyday living. It is, of course, a burden to border communities everywhere.
Jurisdictional patchworks, and their ability to complicate one's existence, are
not special to aboriginal communities. Elsewhere in Quebec, there are similar
difficulties. In Estcourt, the international boundary runs through the
living-room of the Béchard family. In Stanhope, Quebec, the billiard room of
the Dundee Line Hotel is neatly bifurcated by the boundary with New York
State: National Film Board, Between Friends/Entre Amis (1976), at pp.
213 and 246-47.
80
Having said that, the purpose of s. 35(1) of the Constitution
Act, 1982 is to reconcile “the pre-existence of aboriginal societies with
the sovereignty of the Crown” (Van der Peet, supra, at
para. 31). In this respect, the respondent argued with some passion in
the witness box that the jurisdictional divisions carry deeper meaning for the
Mohawks of Akwesasne because they represent the intrusion of non-aboriginal
governing institutions in the everyday life of Akwesasne and their relations
with other members of the Haudenosaunee (Iroquois Confederacy). The border
complexities are a constant reminder to the Mohawks of their frustration and
inability to control the destiny of their own communities.
81
There is some international support for special recognition of the
plight of indigenous peoples in this respect. The Draft United Nations
declaration on the rights of indigenous peoples, adopted by the U.N.
Sub-Commission on Prevention of Discrimination and Protection of Minorities by
its resolution 1994/45, August 26, 1994, provides in Article 35 that:
Indigenous peoples, in particular those divided by international
borders, have the right to maintain and develop contacts, relations and
cooperation, including activities for spiritual, cultural, political, economic
and social purposes, with other peoples across borders.
82
Similarly, Convention (No. 169) concerning Indigenous and Tribal
Peoples in Independent Countries, adopted by the General Conference of the
International Labour Organisation, June 27, 1989, provides in Article 32:
Governments shall take appropriate measures, including by means of
international agreements, to facilitate contacts and co-operation between
indigenous and tribal peoples across borders, including activities in the
economic, social, cultural, spiritual and environmental fields.
83
Comparable language is found in the Draft of the Inter-American
Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, approved by the
Inter-American Commission on Human Rights on September 18, 1995, although it
also provides specifically in Article 24 that:
Nothing in this instrument shall be construed as
granting any rights to ignore boundaries between States.
84
Canada has taken various concrete steps to try to minimize the
disruption of Akwesasne created by the international boundary. These measures,
according to the respondent, fall well short of recognizing Mohawk entitlement.
2. The
Respondent's Border Challenge
85
With much publicity and notice to the Canadian government, the
respondent accompanied by Mohawk supporters performed a symbolic border
crossing on March 22, 1988. He brought with him into Canada one washing
machine, 20 Bibles, 10 blankets, used clothing, one case of lubricating motor
oil, 10 loaves of bread, two pounds of butter, four gallons of whole milk, six
bags of cookies and 12 cans of soup. The box of motor oil remained on the
Akwesasne reserve. Everything else went to another Mohawk community in Canada,
Tyendinaga, west of Kingston, Ontario, in the Bay of Quinte area.
86
The respondent submitted to the usual border procedures but refused to
pay duty. Customs officers let him enter Canada with the goods but a year
later, on September 15, 1989, he was served with a Notice of Ascertained
Forfeiture of the goods under the Customs Act and a claim of $361.64.
Having unsuccessfully challenged the decision under s. 131 of the Customs
Act , the respondent commenced the present declaratory action.
87
The respondent contended that the Mohawks of Akwesasne are entitled to
purchase goods on the U.S. side of the boundary and move those goods into
Canada without payment of customs dues or other levies, including GST, for
personal consumption, commercial trade at Akwesasne, or for trade with other
First Nations in Canada. (A claim by Akwesasne Mohawks from St. Regis to carry
goods duty free into the United States was rejected in United States v.
Garrow, 88 F.2d 318 (C.C.P.A. 1937).)
88
With respect to commercial trade at Akwesasne, the respondent's evidence
was that the case of motor oil brought across the border without payment of
duty was placed for resale in Jock's Store, a general store located on the
Canadian side of Akwesasne, but open to natives and passing non-native
motorists alike. Non-aboriginal purchasers, likely minimal in number, may
therefore obtain the benefit of duty-free prices.
89
With respect to trade off the reserve, the respondent said that the bulk
of the symbolic importation was delivered to the Tyendinaga Band which had
apparently contributed money to finance the purchases in the first place.
Further, the respondent described ongoing negotiation of “an extensive trade
and commerce agreement” between Akwesasne and the Ojibway/Cree First Nations
with whom the respondent says there was a historic trading relationship. The
respondent says the importation was at a “non-commercial level”, i.e., a
small-scale transaction typical of a barter economy. The issue of larger
“commercial scale” trade is to be addressed, it seems, by another court on
another occasion.
3. The
Mohawk Strategy to Turn the Border Burden into an Economic Benefit
90
Understandably, the respondent and the other Mohawk people are looking
for opportunities not only to diminish the border disruption in their lives,
but to reunite a community divided by boundaries that are not of Mohawk making,
and to turn the solution of these complexities to their collective economic
advantage.
91
There was likely little economic profit in moving goods from one side of
the Akwesasne community to the other prior to creation of the international
boundary in 1783, apart from meeting the needs of everyday living. There is
real profit now only because the international boundary runs through it. The
policies of the Canadian government have attributed a financial significance to
what is otherwise an arbitrary line drawn on a map.
92
It is obvious that the “collective advantage” for the Mohawk community
of duty-free imports into Canada would not be derived from a continuation of
the aboriginal way of life, but is a direct artifact of the financial and
tariff arrangements of the non-aboriginal Canadian government. While the
respondent argued that the Court need not concern itself in the appeal with
other cross-border First Nation communities in Canada, the logic of the Mohawk
position would apply equally to any First Nation with a proven history of trade
whose homeland in Canada straddles the international boundary.
93
The respondent, it should be noted, dissociates the present claim from
the smuggling problems at Akwesasne which he points out have brought much grief
to his community:
Our people in Akwesasne have shown that they are
against smuggling; they have co-operated with police, and our own Mohawk police
have made a number of drug busts. Cigarettes are perhaps the least of our
worries. Drugs, liquor, and automatic weapons, all of which are harmful to our
people, have been brought into the territory in great quantities. Our people
in our community have said that this is wrong under our laws, whether a border
exists or not. Their view is that those native people who abuse our right to
transport such property within our territory free of taxes and duties are opportunists.
They are risking injury to the rights of all our people for their own immediate
profit. Neither the community nor the Iroquois Confederacy supports
smuggling.
(Exhibit D-13. Grand Chief Michael Mitchell, “An Unbroken Assertion of
Sovereignty”, in B. Richardson, ed., Drumbeat: Anger and Renewal in
Indian Country (1989), 105, at p. 130.)
94
The Attorney General for New Brunswick argues that the claimed
aboriginal right really amounts to no more than an aboriginal cross-border link
to facilitate trade in non-aboriginal goods between non-aboriginal
communities. There was, on the evidence, nothing to prevent the Tyendinaga
Mohawks from re-selling the goods to non-natives. This concern was not
alleviated by counsel for the Assembly of First Nations who argued that
mobility rights and free movement of goods must be considered separately,
because goods could pass the boundary with or without people. The use of
Purolator and Federal Express to send goods back and forth across the border is
rather remote from the original concept of permitting the Mohawks to live “as
their forefathers had done for centuries” (Calder, supra, at p.
328, per Judson J.).
95
The modernization and increased economic value of a claim is not
necessarily fatal to its existence. Drivers of economic value are different
today than they were in the past. A “frozen rights” theory has been rejected
by the courts as incompatible with the purpose of s. 35(1) : Sparrow,
supra, at p. 1093. Aboriginal rights are capable of growth and
evolution: “s. 35(1) is a solemn commitment that must be given meaningful
content” (Sparrow, supra, at p. 1108).
4. The
Basis of the Respondent's Aboriginal Rights Claim
96
An aboriginal right must be derived from pre-contact activity that was
an element of a practice, custom or tradition integral to the aboriginal
community's distinctive culture. The first step in resolving such a claim
includes an assessment of the precise nature of the claim being made, “taking
into account such factors as the nature of the action said to have been taken
pursuant to an aboriginal right, the government regulation argued to infringe
the right, and the tradition, custom or practice relied upon to establish the
right” (Van der Peet, supra, at para. 53, and N.T.C.
Smokehouse Ltd., supra, at para. 16).
97
The Chief Justice addresses the factual evidence relevant to this
analysis in her reasons. For my purposes, however, it is necessary to enlarge
upon some of the matters that touch on the issue of sovereignty. The trial
judge has provided a meticulous and comprehensive history of the events
relevant to the appeal.
98
While the traditional Mohawk homelands were in the Mohawk Valley (near
Albany, New York State), the Mohawk people ranged throughout a territory that
reached north to the valley of the St. Lawrence River. The Chief Justice
points out that “[w]e may assume they travelled with goods to sustain
themselves” (para. 41), but points to the scarcity of the evidence that
what they carried included goods earmarked for north-south trade (para.
50-51). It is, however, accepted that the Mohawks travelled to the
St. Lawrence River valley. The trial judge found that Akwesasne itself was
probably not established as a permanent settlement until “some time between
1747 and 1755” (p. 14) apparently in conjunction with a Jesuit mission. This
was about 140 years after the Mohawk's first contact with the Europeans, which
the trial judge, at p. 16, held was 1609. The first contact, according to
the trial judge, was a battle between the French and the Mohawks on Lake
Champlain. No claim to aboriginal title is suggested by the respondent in
these proceedings, and it is clear that specific aboriginal rights can exist
independently of claims to aboriginal title (Van der Peet, supra,
at para. 74).
(i) Prior to Contact
99
Prior to European contact, the upper St. Lawrence River Valley was
“a battleground” (Adams, supra, at p. 126) between the Mohawks
coming up from the south and the Hurons and Algonquin-speaking peoples who had
earlier established themselves in the area. The trial judge quoted at
p. 21 the evidence of Dr. Alexander von Gernet, called by the Crown, who acknowledged
that:
What I can say is that in the course of their raiding expeditions along
the St. Lawrence while they were engaged in warfare with their northern
enemies, they would almost certainly have had occasion to travel along this
route, presumably stop, victualize their armies, provide their armies with food.
[Emphasis added by trial judge.]
To which the
trial judge added, at p. 35:
[W]hile one might be obliged to fish in order to victualize an army, it
is difficult to see how an army would engage in trade with their enemies while
in pursuit of them.
and further
pointed out at p. 44:
Whatever goods they obtained either by raiding or by hunting and
fishing could be freely brought back across the [then non-existent] border.
100
Territorial boundaries between the warring First Nations ebbed and
flowed. The trial judge stated at pp. 21-22 his general conclusion from
the historical evidence as follows:
Regardless of the conflicting characterization of
the Mohawks' use and control of the territory in the St. Lawrence Valley, in my
view, the Mohawks whose homelands were in the Mohawk Valley prior to the
arrival of the Europeans, regularly exploited the area in the St. Lawrence
Valley which is now part of Canadian territory. It is not clear from the
evidence whether the Mohawks consistently used the area as a hunting and
fishing territory or whether the area was mainly a battle and raiding ground
with other First Nations. However, it is clear that the territory around the
St. Lawrence River, in what is now Canada, was regularly travelled by the
Mohawks.
101
The trial judge's assessment of the nature of the Mohawk's progress
through the territory in pre-contact times was based in part on the evidence of
the respondent's expert, Professor Charles Johnston. The trial judge
reproduced the following extract from Professor Johnston's evidence (at
p. 27):
Well, let's put it this way, trading and making war came as easily to
the Iroquois as living and breathing. When they weren't making war, they were
usually engaged in trading.... War, of course, stemmed out of trade and trade
came out of war.
102
It is this evidence of pre-contact activity that defines the basis of an
aboriginal right. The picture that emerges is one of a militarily powerful
confederacy that spread to and along the St. Lawrence River Valley
displacing the earlier aboriginal inhabitants by force of arms. They traded
with their friends to the east and west of the Mohawk Valley, as the Chief
Justice acknowledges. They fought with their enemies to the north. The trial
judge cautioned at p. 35 against “concentrat[ing] too much on . . .
raiding activities”. The point, nevertheless, is that in the pre-contact era,
the Mohawks were (and acted as) a fully autonomous people within the Iroquois
Confederacy. The principle object of this litigation is to reassert that
autonomy in relation to the present international border between Canada and the
United States to the greatest extent permitted by law.
103
While none of the boundaries between First Nation Territories in
pre-contact times corresponded with the present international boundary at
Akwesasne, such boundaries existed, and the trial judge found that under
traditional practices and customs, they were respected by the Mohawks in times
of peace.
(ii) Evidence of Post-Contact Activity
104
While evidence of post-contact activity cannot enlarge the factual basis
of the aboriginal right claim, it is said to be relevant in this case because
of the alleged incompatibility of the respondent's claim with the later
assertion of non-Mohawk sovereignty.
105
Professor Charles Johnston emphasized that the arrival of the Europeans
created further turmoil (at p. 27):
The French arrested the Dutch first and then the English established
their control in the Hudson and Mohawk valleys and the French do the same thing
on the St. Lawrence. So you have these competing systems. The point is
the Mohawks are right in the middle.
106
The evidence showed that post-contact Mohawks from the Mohawk Valley
began migrating north to establish permanent communities on the
St. Lawrence River. The trial judge noted, “[t]hey massed an invasion
force in the late 1640s and early 1650s which led to the dispersion of the
aboriginal peoples of Ontario” (p. 35).
107
The Hurons and Algonquins allied themselves with the French, and most of
the Iroquois with the English. The Mohawks in the St. Lawrence River
Valley had divided loyalties. The communities closest to Montreal, at least,
came to be allies of the French. The trial judge noted that some Mohawks
“moved north because they believed that an alliance with the French was
preferable to neutrality or an alliance with the English” (p. 22). While
colonial law under the French regime treated aboriginal rights differently than
the British regime, our Court has affirmed that “the intervention of French
sovereignty [did not] negat[e] the potential existence of aboriginal rights
within the former boundaries of New France under s. 35(1) ”: (R. v. Côté,
[1996] 3 S.C.R. 139, at para. 51). The fighting between the French and
the English and their respective First Nation allies continued until the fall
of New France in 1759-60.
108
The legal effect of the resulting Treaty of Paris of 1763 was described
by the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council in Attorney General for
Canada v. Cain, [1906] A.C. 542, at pp. 545-46:
In 1763 Canada and all its dependencies, with the
sovereignty, property, and possession, and all other rights which had at any
time been held or acquired by the Crown of France, were ceded to Great
Britain: St. Catherine's Milling and Lumber Co. v. Reg. (1888),
14 App. Cas. 46, at p. 53. Upon that event the Crown of England became
possessed of all legislative and executive powers within the country so ceded
to it, and, save so far as it has since parted with these powers by
legislation, royal proclamation, or voluntary grant, it is still possessed of
them. One of the rights possessed by the supreme power in every State is the
right to refuse to permit an alien to enter that State, to annex what
conditions it pleases to the permission to enter it, and to expel or deport
from the State, at pleasure, even a friendly alien, especially if it considers
his presence in the State opposed to its peace, order, and good government, or
to its social or material interests: Vattel, Law of Nations, book 1,
s. 231; book 2, s. 125.
109
The “aliens” in the Cain case were citizens of the United
States. For our purposes, it must be kept in mind that the respondent does not
assert here mobility rights granted by France, Britain or Canada. He is, of
course, entitled to full rights as a Canadian citizen. But in this particular
case, he is not asserting those rights. He is asserting mobility rights as a
“citizen of Haudenosaunee” that are derived from Mohawk mobility that pre-dated
all of those regimes.
110
Within two decades after the fall of New France, the American Revolution
swept northwards. Troops of General George Washington on manoeuvres in New
York State “destroyed the cornfields, burnt the Longhouses and basically wiped
out as many of the Iroquois families that [sic] still existed”, thereby
reinforcing the northern migration of some of the Mohawks to British
territory. The boundary that cuts through Akwesasne did not come into
existence until the conclusion of the American War of Independence by a
subsequent Treaty of Paris in 1783.
5. The Sovereignty Objection
111
The unusual aspect of this case is that not only the value but the very purpose
of the claimed trading/mobility right depends on a boundary that is itself an
expression of non-aboriginal sovereignties on the North American continent.
112
The respondent is understandably proud of the Mohawk heritage. The
Iroquois Confederacy is thought to have been formed around 1450. The evidence
accepted by the trial judge at p. 26 was that at their height
... the Iroquois had achieved for themselves the most remarkable civil
organization in the New World excepting only Mexico and Peru.
The
respondent's 17th century ancestors were no doubt unaware that some of the
Kings in distant Europe were laying claim to sovereignty over Mohawk territory.
As Marshall C.J. of the United States Supreme Court observed in Worcester
v. Georgia, 31 U.S. (6 Pet.) 515 (1832), at p. 543:
It is difficult to comprehend the proposition, that the inhabitants of
either quarter of the globe could have rightful original claims of dominion
over the inhabitants of the other, or over the lands they occupied....
113
Nevertheless, this is what happened. From the aboriginal perspective,
moreover, those early claims to European “dominion” grew to reality in the
decades that followed. Counsel for the respondent does not dispute Canadian
sovereignty. He seeks Mohawk autonomy within the broader framework of Canadian
sovereignty.
114
The common law concept of aboriginal rights is built around the doctrine
of sovereign succession in British colonial law. The framers of the Constitution
Act, 1982 undoubtedly expected the courts to have regard in their
interpretation of s. 35(1) to the common law concept. This point was made
by McLachlin J. (as she then was) (dissenting in the result) in Van der Peet,
supra, at paras. 227 and 262:
The issue of what constitutes an aboriginal right must, in my
view, be answered by looking at what the law has historically accepted
as fundamental aboriginal rights.
...
Given the complexity and sensitivity of the issue of defining hitherto
undefined aboriginal rights, the pragmatic approach typically adopted by the
common law – reasoning from the experience of decided cases and recognized
rights – has much to recommend it. [Emphasis added.]
115
I agree. The Constitution Act, 1982 ushered in a new chapter but
it did not start a new book. Within the framework of s. 35(1) regard is to be
had to the common law (“what the law has historically accepted”) to enable a
court to determine what constitutes an aboriginal right.
116
The respondent positions his claim as follows. He makes a point of
travelling back and forth across the international border producing his
Haudenosaunee passport issued at the capital of the Mohawk Confederacy at
Onondaga, New York State. As he explained in testimony:
[The passport] is also to me an expression of recognition, not only by
my own Iroquois Confederacy and our nation's capital, Onondaga, that I carry my
own passport, but it is also [a] recognition of Canada and the United States of
who my citizenship lies with.
This evidence
with respect to the Haudenosaunee passport was said by respondent's counsel to
go “to the issue of the basis of the rights that the [respondent] is claiming
in this case”.
117
In assessing aboriginal claims, courts are required to take into account
“the perspective of the aboriginal peoples themselves” (Sparrow, supra,
at p. 1112; Van der Peet, supra, at
para. 49). From the respondent's perspective, the aboriginal right flows
from Mohawk sovereignty. In Exhibit D-13 he writes, at p. 107:
Akwesasne is a Mohawk community that has existed
from time immemorial, with its own laws and government, and we have
consistently been determined to maintain the sovereignty of our Nation.
To which he
adds at p. 135:
I think of myself as a community leader, but my national leaders are
the leaders of the Mohawk Nation. I am a citizen of Haudenosaunee; and if
anyone says I am also a Canadian citizen, the most I can agree is that we have
certain benefits in Canada, by treaty, the same benefits as we have in the
United States.
118
Fundamentally, the respondent views his aboriginal rights as a shield
against non-aboriginal laws, including what he sees as the imposition of a
border that “wasn't meant for [the] Kanienkehaka or the Mohawk Nation or any of
the Six Nations”. He thus testified at trial:
Even though my grandfather didn't speak any English
he was able to explain to me, as other elders have, that the promises made by
the English to the Haudenosaunee that they would continue to recognize our
nation as free and independent peoples. At one meeting they would recite it,
what exactly were those words and the gist that we had to understand it.
So, when our people in Akwesasne today say this
border was not intended for us, they have an understanding in historical terms
of the interpretation of those promises. In our language and the way it is
passed down, the line of what is now known as the International Border belongs
to somebody else. It wasn't meant for Kanienkehaka or the Mohawk Nation or any
of the Six Nations. We understand that much.
119
In this testimony the respondent refers to “promises made by the English
to the Haudenosaunee”, but his claim to base a trading/mobility right and tax
exemptions on an existing treaty right was rejected by the trial judge and has
not been appealed to this Court. His contention here is that whether or not
the British made a treaty promise to that effect, the Mohawks were in fact free
under the Mohawk legal regime “to pass and repass ... across what is now the
Canada-United States boundary” with goods for trade and this freedom should now
receive s. 35 protection. The claim to trade and mobility across
international boundaries as a citizen of Haudenosaunee engages the sovereignty
issue.
6. Non-Assertion of Aspects of the Respondent's Claim
120
The Trial Division declaration, as stated, recognized an aboriginal
right “to pass and repass freely across what is now the Canada-United States
boundary including the right to bring goods into Canada for personal and
community use, including for trade with other First Nations, without
having to pay any duty or taxes whatsoever to any Canadian Government or
authority” (p. 4 (emphasis added)). The word “including” was subsequently
deleted in an effort to shrink the scope of the aboriginal right asserted in this
particular proceeding and thereby to present a smaller target to the appellant's
objection. The Federal Court of Appeal added site-specific limitations to the
claimed right. In the end, the declaration issued by the Federal Court of
Appeal read as follows (at para. 56):
[T]he plaintiff as a Mohawk of Akwesasne resident in
Canada has an existing aboriginal right which is constitutionally protected by
sections 35 and 52 of the Constitution Act, 1982 , when crossing the
international border from New York to Ontario or Quebec, to bring with him to
Canada, for personal use or consumption, or for collective use or consumption
by the members of the community of Akwesasne, or for non-commercial scale trade
with First Nation communities in Ontario or Quebec, goods bought in the State
of New York without having to pay any duty or taxes to the government of
Canada.
121
In his opening address at trial, counsel for the respondent also made it
clear that no claim is made in this action to import prohibited or
controlled goods:
So that it will be perfectly clear from the outset
of the trial, my lord, Plaintiff states immediately and unequivocally that he
is not here pleading and that this case is not about any right to bring
across the Canada/U.S. border any form of firearm or any form of restricted or
prohibited drug, alcohol, plants or the like. Nor do the facts in this case
raise the issue of importation into Canada of commercial goods for the primary
purpose of competing in the commercial mainstream in Canada. Plaintiff is not,
my lord, seeking any judicial determination of that issue in this case.
[Emphasis added.]
122
When asked by the trial judge whether the claim included “commercial
trade” (as defined, e.g., in Gladstone, supra, at para. 57),
he said not “at this time”.
123
The respondent takes the position that aboriginal peoples do not have to
claim the full extent of their entitlement. He reiterated that the purpose of
s. 35 was to bring about a reconciliation between Canadian society and its
aboriginal communities (Van der Peet, supra), and characterized
the respondent’s willingness to exclude from his claim a right to bring across
the border prohibited goods (e.g., firearms and illegal drugs) and controlled
goods (e.g., alcohol, though not tobacco) as a reasonable concession in pursuit
of such a reconciliation. However, in considering whether the evidence gives
rise to the claimed right, it is necessary to look at all of the
evidence to determine whether, in its totality, it establishes not only a
pre-contact practice that was capable of being carried forward under the
new European-based legal orders but a practice that is compatible with Canadian
sovereignty.
124
The analysis of the courts below in support of the respondent’s
position, if accepted, would suggest that in future cases other Mohawks would
argue with some force that the historical practice of the free movement of
people and goods having been established in this case, any other restrictions
on the movement of goods, people and perhaps capital would have to be justified
under the Sparrow doctrine.
7. The Substance of the Claim Disclosed by the Evidence
125
For the reasons already mentioned, the respondent's claim, despite the
concessions made in argument, is not just about physical movement of people or
goods in and about Akwesasne. It is about pushing the envelope of Mohawk
autonomy within the Canadian Constitution. It is about the Mohawks' aspiration
to live as if the international boundary did not exist. Whatever financial
benefit accrues from the ability to move goods across the border without
payment of duty is clearly incidental to this larger vision.
126
It is true that in R. v. Pamajewon, [1996] 2 S.C.R. 821, the
Court warned, at para. 27, against casting the Court's aboriginal rights
inquiry “at a level of excessive generality”. Yet when the claim, as here, can
only properly be construed as an international trading and mobility right, it
has to be addressed at that level.
127
In the constitutional framework envisaged by the respondent, the claimed
aboriginal right is simply a manifestation of the more fundamental relationship
between the aboriginal and non-aboriginal people. In the Mohawk tradition this
relationship is memorialized by the “two-row” wampum, referred to by the
respondent in Exhibit D-13, at pp. 109-110, and in his trial evidence (trans.,
vol. 2, at pp. 191-92), and described in the Haudenosaunee presentation to
the Parliamentary Special Committee on Indian Self-Government in 1983 as
follows:
When the Haudenosaunee first came into contact with
the European nations, treaties of peace and friendship were made. Each was
symbolized by the Gus-Wen-Tah or Two Row Wampum. There is a bed of white
wampum which symbolizes the purity of the agreement. There are two rows of
purple, and those two rows have the spirit of your ancestors and mine. There
are three beads of wampum separating the two rows and they symbolize peace,
friendship and respect.
These two rows will symbolize
two paths or two vessels, travelling down the same river together. One, a
birch bark canoe, will be for the Indian people, their laws, their customs and
their ways. The other, a ship, will be for the white people and their laws,
their customs and their ways. We shall each travel the river together, side by
side, but in our own boat. Neither of us will try to steer the other's vessel.
(Indian Self-Government in Canada: Report of the Special Committee
(1983), back cover)
128
Thus, in the “two-row” wampum there are two parallel paths. In one path
travels the aboriginal canoe. In the other path travels the European ship.
The two vessels co-exist but they never touch. Each is the sovereign of its
own destiny.
129
The modern embodiment of the “two-row” wampum concept, modified to
reflect some of the realities of a modern state, is the idea of a “merged” or
“shared” sovereignty. “Merged sovereignty” asserts that First Nations were not
wholly subordinated to non-aboriginal sovereignty but over time became merger
partners. The final Report of the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples,
vol. 2 (Restructuring the Relationship (1996)), at p. 214, says
that “Aboriginal governments give the constitution [of Canada] its deepest and
most resilient roots in the Canadian soil.” This updated concept of Crown
sovereignty is of importance. Whereas historically the Crown may have been
portrayed as an entity across the seas with which aboriginal people could
scarcely be expected to identify, this was no longer the case in 1982 when the
s. 35(1) reconciliation process was established. The Constitution was
patriated and all aspects of our sovereignty became firmly located within our
borders. If the principle of “merged sovereignty” articulated by the Royal
Commission on Aboriginal Peoples is to have any true meaning, it must
include at least the idea that aboriginal and non-aboriginal Canadians together
form a sovereign entity with a measure of common purpose and united effort. It
is this new entity, as inheritor of the historical attributes of sovereignty,
with which existing aboriginal and treaty rights must be reconciled.
130
The final Report of the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples,
vol. 2, goes on to describe “shared” sovereignty at pp. 240-41 as
follows:
Shared sovereignty, in our view, is a hallmark of
the Canadian federation and a central feature of the three-cornered relations
that link Aboriginal governments, provincial governments and the federal
government. These governments are sovereign within their respective spheres
and hold their powers by virtue of their constitutional status rather than by
delegation. Nevertheless, many of their powers are shared in practice and may
be exercised by more than one order of government.
On this view, to return to the nautical metaphor of the “two-row”
wampum, “merged” sovereignty is envisaged as a single vessel (or ship of state)
composed of the historic elements of wood, iron and canvas. The vessel's
components pull together as a harmonious whole, but the wood remains wood, the
iron remains iron and the canvas remains canvas. Non-aboriginal leaders,
including Sir Wilfrid Laurier, have used similar metaphors. It represents, in
a phrase, partnership without assimilation.
131
The s. 35(1) issue arising out of all this is signalled in the style
of cause. The respondent sued as “GRAND CHIEF MICHAEL MITCHELL also known
as KANENTAKERON”. He lives with a foot simultaneously in two cultural
communities, each with its own framework of legal rights and
responsibilities. As Kanentakeron he describes learning from his grandfather
the spiritual practices of the People of the Longhouse, whose roots in North
America go back perhaps 10,000 years. Yet the name Michael Mitchell announces
that he is also part of modern Canada who watches television from time to time
and went to high school in Cornwall. As much as anyone else in this
country, he is a part of our collective sovereignty. He writes in Exhibit
D-13, at p. 135:
If anyone thinks that Mohawks are anti-Canadian or
American, then we kindly remind you that First Nations in North America, in
ratio to other nationalities, sent more soldiers to the First and Second World
Wars. Since we usually wound up on the front lines, many of our people didn't
make it home.
132
The dual aspect reflected in the style of cause of the respondent's
action also finds its parallel in the Court's treatment of the rights of
aboriginal peoples. What is “integral to the aboriginal community's
distinctive culture” (Van der Peet, at para. 55) is
constitutionally protected. In other respects however, the respondent
and other aboriginal people live and contribute as part of our national
diversity. So too in the Court's definition of aboriginal rights. They find
their source in an earlier age, but they have not been frozen in time. They
are, as has been said, rights not relics. They are projected into modern
Canada where they are exercised as group rights in the 21st century by modern
Canadians who wish to preserve and protect their aboriginal identity.
133
In the earlier years of the century the federal government occasionally
argued that Parliament's jurisdiction under s. 91(24) of the Constitution
Act, 1867 (“Indians, and Lands reserved for the Indians”) was plenary.
Indians were said to be federal people whose lives were wholly subject to
federal “regulation”. This was rejected by the courts, which ruled that while
an aboriginal person could be characterized as an Indian for some purposes
including language, culture and the exercise of traditional rights, he or she
does not cease thereby to be a resident of a province or territory. For other
purposes he or she must be recognized and treated as an ordinary member of
Canadian society. In a decision handed down soon after the coming into force
of the Constitution Act, 1982 , in Nowegijick v. The Queen, [1983]
1 S.C.R. 29, a tax case, Dickson J. (as he then was) wrote at p. 36, “Indians
are citizens and, in affairs of life not governed by treaties or the Indian
Act , they are subject to all of the responsibilities ... of other Canadian
citizens”. See also Natural Parents v. Superintendent of Child Welfare,
[1976] 2 S.C.R. 751, at p. 763, per Laskin C.J., and Dick v. The
Queen, [1985] 2 S.C.R. 309, at p. 326, per Beetz J. In Gladstone
(at para. 73) and again in Delgamuukw v. British Columbia, [1997] 3
S.C.R. 1010 (at para. 165), Lamer C.J. repeats that “distinctive
aboriginal societies exist within, and are a part of, a broader social,
political and economic community, over which the Crown is sovereign” (emphasis
added). The constitutional objective is reconciliation not mutual isolation.
134
The Royal Commission does not explain precisely how “shared sovereignty”
is expected to work in practice, although it recognized as a critical issue
how “60 to 80 historically based nations in Canada at present, comprising a
thousand or so local Aboriginal communities” would “interact with the
jurisdictions of the federal and provincial governments” in cases of
operational conflict (final report, vol. 2, supra, at pp. 166
and 216). It also recognized the challenge aboriginal self-government poses
to the orthodox view that constitutional powers in Canada are wholly and
exhaustively distributed between the federal and provincial governments: see,
e.g., Attorney-General for Ontario v. Attorney-General for Canada, [1912]
A.C. 571 (P.C.), at p. 581; P. W. Hogg and M. E. Turpel,
“Implementing Aboriginal Self-Government: Constitutional and Jurisdictional
Issues” (1995), 74 Can. Bar Rev. 187, at p. 192; this issue is presently
before the courts in British Columbia in Campbell v. British Columbia
(Attorney General) (2000), 79 B.C.L.R. (3d) 122, 2000 BCSC 1123. There are
significant economic and funding issues. Some aboriginal people who live off
reserves, particularly in urban areas, have serious concerns about how
self-government would affect them, as discussed in part in Corbiere v.
Canada (Minister of Indian and Northern Affairs), [1999] 2 S.C.R.
203. With these difficulties in mind perhaps, the Royal Commission considered
it to be “essential that any steps toward self-government be initiated by the
aboriginal group in question and “respond to needs identified by its members” (Partners
in Confederation: Aboriginal Peoples, Self-Government and the Constitution (1993),
at p. 41). It rejected the “one size fits all” approach to First Nations'
self-governing institutions in favour of a negotiated treaty model. The
objective, succinctly put, is to create sufficient “constitutional space for
aboriginal peoples to be aboriginal”: D. Greschner, “Aboriginal Women, the
Constitution and Criminal Justice”, [1992] U.B.C. L. Rev. (Sp. ed.) 338,
at p. 342. See also J. Borrows, “Uncertain Citizens: Aboriginal Peoples and
the Supreme Court” (2001), 80 Can. Bar Rev. 15, at p. 34. The Royal
Commission Final Report, vol. 2, states at p. 214 that:
Section 35 does not warrant a claim to unlimited governmental powers or
to complete sovereignty, such as independent states are commonly thought to
possess. As with the federal and provincial governments, Aboriginal
governments operate within a sphere of sovereignty defined by the
constitution. In short, the Aboriginal right of self-government in section
35(1) involves circumscribed rather than unlimited powers.
135
It is unnecessary, for present purposes, to come to any conclusion about
these assertions. What is significant is that the Royal Commission itself sees
aboriginal peoples as full participants with non-aboriginal peoples in a shared
Canadian sovereignty. Aboriginal peoples do not stand in opposition to, nor
are they subjugated by, Canadian sovereignty. They are part of it.
136
With this background I return to the point that the respondent does not
base his mobility rights in this test case as a Canadian citizen. His counsel
acknowledges that s. 35(1) itself does not purport to create rights. It
affirms only existing rights. The respondent's international trading
and mobility right is put forward in his evidence as a right incidental to his
status as a citizen of Haudenosaunee, with its capital at Onondaga, near
Syracuse, New York State. He explained in his testimony:
Q. You made particular reference, Chief
Mitchell, to going to Onondaga. What is the significance of Onondaga?
A. In the Iroquois world as we understand it
Onondaga is the capital of the Confederacy, much like Ottawa is the capital of
Canada, Washington is the capital of the United States, Onondaga is the capital
of the Haudenosaunee, of the Six Nations.
...
Q. Chief Mitchell, do you consider yourself a
citizen of the Confederacy?
A. I am a citizen of the Haudenosaunee, the
Iroquois Confederacy.... Each of the member nations of the Haudenosaunee if
they wish to apply for a passport they go to Onondaga. The passport that we
use to travel, we use our own Iroquois Confederacy passport.
137
The respondent's claim thus presents two defining elements. He asserts
a trading and mobility right across the international boundary and he attaches
this right to his current citizenship not of Canada but of the Haudenosaunee
Confederacy with its capital in Onondaga, New York State.
8. The
Legal Basis of the Respondent's Claim
138
The respondent initially asserted both a treaty right and an aboriginal
right but the conceptual distinction between these two sources of entitlement
is important. A treaty right is an affirmative promise by the Crown which will
be interpreted generously and enforced in a way that upholds the honour of the
Crown: R. v. Taylor (1981), 62 C.C.C. (2d) 227; R. v. Badger,
[1996] 1 S.C.R. 771; R. v. Marshall, [1999] 3 S.C.R. 456.
139
The trial court acknowledged that if duty-free provisions had been
incorporated into a treaty with the Mohawks, the promise would be enforceable
as a s. 35 treaty right. A treaty right is itself an expression of Crown
sovereignty.
140
In the case of aboriginal rights, there is no historical event
comparable to the treaty-making process in which the Crown negotiated the right
or obligation sought to be enforced. The respondent's claim is rooted in
practices which he says long preceded the Mohawks' first contact with Europeans
in 1609.
141
I return to the comment of McLachlin J., dissenting in the result,
in Van der Peet, supra, at para. 227 that “[t]he issue of
what constitutes an aboriginal right must, in my view, be answered by looking
at what the law has historically accepted as fundamental aboriginal rights”.
There was a presumption under British colonial law that the Crown intended to
respect the pre-existing customs of the inhabitants that were not deemed to be
unconscionable (e.g., Blackstone in Commentaries on the Laws of England
(4th ed. 1770), Book I, at p. 107, gave the example, now discredited, of
“infidel” laws) or incompatible with the new sovereignty: Campbell v. Hall
(1774), 1 Cowp. 204, 98 E.R. 1045 (K.B.), at pp. 1047-48; Delgamuukw v.
British Columbia, [1993] 5 W.W.R. 97 (B.C.C.A.), at paras. 1021-24. Professor
B. Slattery formulated the traditional principle as follows:
When the Crown gained sovereignty over an American territory, colonial
law dictated that the local customs of the native peoples would presumptively
continue in force and be recognizable in the courts, except insofar as they
were unconscionable or incompatible with the Crown's assertion of
sovereignty. [Emphasis added.]
(“Understanding Aboriginal Rights” (1987), 66 Can. Bar Rev. 727,
at p. 738)
142
In a more recent paper published as “Making Sense of Aboriginal and
Treaty Rights” (2000), 79 Can. Bar Rev. 196, Professor Slattery, at p.
201, largely reiterates his earlier proposition although he now substitutes the
phrase “Crown suzerainty” for “Crown sovereignty”. The substitution signals a
shift in emphasis from sovereignty over individuals to sovereignty over
“autonomous” groups, which is perhaps related to arguments in support of
aboriginal self-government.
143
Since Calder, supra, the courts have extended recognition
beyond pre-existing “rights” to practices, customs or traditions integral to
the aboriginal community's distinctive culture (Van der Peet, supra,
at para. 53). The aboriginal rights question, as McLachlin J. put
it, dissenting in the result, in Van der Peet, at
para. 248, is traditionally “what laws and customs held sway before
superimposition of European laws and customs [?]”
144
Reference has already been made to the fact that one of several sources
of the concept of aboriginal rights, now significantly modified by the more
generous principles of constitutional interpretation, is traditional British
colonial law. Many of the cases decided by the Judicial Committee of the Privy
Council were concerned with rights of property created under a former regime.
In Amodu Tijani v. Southern Nigeria (Secretary), [1921] 2 A.C. 399, at
p. 407, it was confirmed that “A mere change in sovereignty is not to be presumed
as meant to disturb rights of private owners” (emphasis added). More recently,
Lord Denning, speaking for the Privy Council in Oyekan v. Adele, [1957]
2 All E.R. 785, at p. 788, said: “In inquiring ... what rights are
recognised, there is one guiding principle. It is this: The courts will assume
that the British Crown intends that the rights of property of the inhabitants
are to be fully respected” (emphasis added). As with the modern law of
aboriginal rights, the law of sovereign succession was intended to reconcile
the interests of the local inhabitants across the empire to a change in
sovereignty.
145
The concept of a presumption was endorsed by Hall J. in Calder,
supra, at p. 402:
The appellants rely on the presumption that
the British Crown intended to respect native rights; therefore, when the Nishga
people came under British sovereignty ... they were entitled to assert, as a
legal right, their Indian title. [Emphasis added.]
146
It was subsequently affirmed that aboriginal rights could exist
independently of “aboriginal title” (Van der Peet, supra,
at para. 74; Adams, supra, at para. 26). Further, Guerin
v. The Queen, [1984] 2 S.C.R. 335, Dickson J. emphasized the “legal”
character of the resulting aboriginal right: “[i]n Calder . . . this
Court recognized aboriginal title as a legal right derived from the
Indians' historic occupation and possession of their tribal lands” (p. 376
(emphasis added)), and then went on to state the proposition that the Indians
were “the rightful occupants of the soil, with a legal as well as just claim
to retain possession of it, and to use it according to their own discretion”
(p. 378 (emphasis added; emphasis in original deleted)).
147
The High Court of Australia has reached a similar conclusion with
respect to the legal regime governing Australian aboriginal people: Mabo v.
Queensland (1992), 175 C.L.R. 1, per Brennan J., for the majority,
at pp. 55-57, and Toohey J., at p. 184. See also Wik Peoples v.
Queensland (1996), 187 C.L.R. 1.
148
I am far from suggesting that the key to s. 35(1) reconciliation is to
be found in the legal archives of the British Empire. The root of the
respondent's argument nevertheless is that the Mohawks of Akwesasne acquired
under the legal regimes of 18th century North America, a positive legal
right as a group to continue to come and go across any subsequent
international border dividing their traditional homelands with whatever goods
they wished, just as they had in pre-contact times. In other words, Mohawk autonomy
in this respect was continued but not as a mere custom or practice. It emerged
in the new European-based constitutional order as a legal trading and
mobility right. By s. 35(1) of the Constitution Act, 1982 , it
became a constitutionally protected right. That is the respondent's argument.
9. The
Limitation of “Sovereign Incompatibility”
149
Care must be taken not to carry forward doctrines of British colonial
law into the interpretation of s. 35(1) without careful reflection. In R.
v. Eninew (1984), 12 C.C.C. (3d) 365 (Sask. C.A.), and R. v. Hare (1985),
20 C.C.C. (3d) 1 (Ont. C.A.), for example, it was held by two provincial courts
of appeal that s. 35(1) “recognized and affirmed” (and thus set in
constitutional concrete) the traditional frailties of common law aboriginal
rights, including their vulnerability to unilateral extinguishment by
governments. This was rejected in Sparrow, supra, where the
Court construed s. 35(1) as affirming the promise of a new commitment by
Canadians to resolve some of the ancient grievances that have exacerbated
relations between aboriginal and non-aboriginal communities.
150
Yet the language of s. 35(1) cannot be construed as a wholesale
repudiation of the common law. The subject matter of the constitutional
provision is “existing” aboriginal and treaty rights and they are said to be
“recognized and affirmed” not wholly cut loose from either their legal or
historical origins. One of the defining characteristics of sovereign
succession and therefore a limitation on the scope of aboriginal rights, as
already discussed, was the notion of incompatibility with the new sovereignty.
Such incompatibility seems to have been accepted, for example, as a limitation
on the powers of aboriginal self-government in the 1993 working report of the
Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples, Partners in Confederation:
Aboriginal Peoples, Self-Government and the Constitution, supra,
at p. 23:
... Aboriginal nations did not lose their inherent rights when they
entered into a confederal relationship with the Crown. Rather, they retained
their ancient constitutions so far as these were not inconsistent with the
new relationship. [Emphasis added.]
151
Prior to Calder, supra, “sovereign incompatibility” was
given excessive scope. The assertion of sovereign authority was confused with
doctrines of feudal title to deny aboriginal peoples any interest at all in
their traditional lands or even in activities related to the use of those
lands. To acknowledge that the doctrine of sovereign incompatibility was
sometimes given excessive scope in the past is not to deny that it has any
scope at all, but it is a doctrine that must be applied with caution.
152
I take an illustration from the evidence in this case. The trial judge
showed that pre-contact the Mohawks, as a military force, moved under their own
command through what is now parts of southern Ontario and southern Quebec.
The evidence, taken as a whole, suggests that military values were “a defining
feature of the Mohawk [or Iroquois] culture”, to use my colleague's expression
at para. 54. Indeed, the Mohawk warrior tradition has its adherents to this
day. As previously noted, the trial judge at p. 35 thought the Mohawks'
military activities in the St. Lawrence River Valley probably got in the way of
their trading activities:
[I]t is difficult to see how an army would engage in trade with their
enemies while in pursuit of them.
153
However, important as they may have been to the Mohawk identity as a
people, it could not be said, in my view, that pre-contact warrior activities
gave rise under successor regimes to a legal right under s. 35(1) to
engage in military adventures on Canadian territory. Canadian sovereign
authority has, as one of its inherent characteristics, a monopoly on the lawful
use of military force within its territory. I do not accept that the Mohawks could
acquire under s. 35(1) a legal right to deploy a military force in what is now
Canada, as and when they choose to do so, even if the warrior tradition was to
be considered a defining feature of pre-contact Mohawk society. Section 35(1)
should not be interpreted to throw on the Crown the burden of demonstrating
subsequent extinguishment by “clear and plain” measures (Gladstone, supra,
at para. 31) of a “right” to organize a private army, or a requirement to
justify such a limitation after 1982 under the Sparrow standard. This
example, remote as it is from the particular claim advanced in this case,
usefully illustrates the principled limitation flowing from sovereign
incompatibility in the s. 35(1) analysis.
154
In my opinion, sovereign incompatibility continues to be an element in
the s. 35(1) analysis, albeit a limitation that will be sparingly applied. For
the most part, the protection of practices, traditions and customs that are
distinctive to aboriginal cultures in Canada does not raise legitimate
sovereignty issues at the definitional stage.
10. The Alleged
Incompatibility Between the Aboriginal Right Disclosed by the Evidence and
Canadian Sovereignty
155
I proceed to the next step keeping in mind that the respondent's claim
must respond not only to the historical requirements that have traditionally
preoccupied aboriginal law but also to the reconciliation objective that lies
at the heart of the purposive interpretation of s. 35(1).
156
The assertion of British sovereignty to the Akwesasne area was certainly
no later than the Treaty of Paris of 1763. Boundaries at that time were
considered to be of high importance:
The Treaty of Paris produced the greatest
rearrangement of boundaries in North America that had hitherto occurred. It is
for this reason that the war that immediately preceded it is sometimes called
the “War of the Boundary Lines”.
(N. L. Nicholson, The Boundaries of the Canadian Confederation
(1979), at p. 19)
157
Prior to the American Revolution, as evidenced by the geographic scope
of the Royal Proclamation of 1763 (reproduced in R.S.C. 1985, App. II,
No. 1), the claim of British sovereignty continued south to Florida and
westwards beyond the Great Lakes (Calder, supra, at pp.
322-23). Movement from the Mohawk Valley to Akwesasne lay wholly within the
British claim and did not cross an international boundary. The present
international boundary, as earlier mentioned, was not settled until after the
American Revolution under the subsequent Treaty of Paris of 1783.
158
The question is whether the asserted legal right to the autonomous
exercise of international trade and mobility was compatible with the new
European (now Canadian) sovereignty and the reciprocal loss (or impairment) of
Mohawk sovereignty.
159
In the resolution of this legal issue, as stated, we are addressing legal
incompatibility as opposed to factual incompatibility. The latter emerged
more slowly as assertions of sovereignty gave way to colonisation and
progressive occupation of land. From the outset, however, frontiers were a
fundamental expression or demarcation of sovereignty amongst First Nations as
well as in the European conception (Nicholson, supra, at pp. 8-9),
and indeed amongst and between Britain's North American colonies
(J. Story, Commentaries on the Constitution of the United States
(4th ed. 1873), vol. II, at pp. 463-64). Akwesasne is the point at which,
since 1783, British (and later Canadian) sovereignty came face to face with the
sovereignty of the United States.
160
Control over the mobility of persons and goods into one country is, and
always has been, a fundamental attribute of sovereignty.
It is commonly accepted that sovereign states
have the right to control both who and what enters their boundaries. For the
general welfare of the nation the state is expected to perform this role.
[Emphasis added.]
(R. v. Simmons, [1988] 2 S.C.R. 495, at p. 528, per
Dickson C.J.)
See also R.
v. Jacques, [1996] 3 S.C.R. 312, at paras. 15 and 18, per
Gonthier J.; Almeida-Sanchez v. United States, 413 U.S. 266 (1973),
at p. 279; and United States v. Ramsey, 431 U.S. 606 (1977). In other
words, not only does authority over the border exist as an incident of
sovereignty, the state is expected to exercise it in the public interest. The
duty cannot be abdicated to the vagaries of an earlier regime whose sovereignty
has been eclipsed (Cain, supra, at pp. 545-46).
161
The legal situation is further complicated by the fact, previously
mentioned, that the respondent attributes his international trading and
mobility right not to his status as a Canadian citizen but as a citizen of the
Haudenosaunee (Iroquois Confederacy) based at Onondaga, New York. Border
conditions in the modern era are vastly different from those in the 18th
century. Nevertheless, as stated, borders existed among nations, including
First Nations. They were expressions of sovereign autonomy and then, as now,
compelled observance.
162
The courts of the United States, being in this case the country of
export, also view border controls as incidental to territorial sovereignty. In
Chae Chan Ping v. United States, 130 U.S. 581 (1889), it was said by
Field J., for the United States Supreme Court, at pp. 603-4:
Jurisdiction over its own territory to that extent is an incident of
every independent nation. It is a part of its independence. If it could not
exclude aliens it would be to that extent subject to the control of another
power.
In Ekiu v.
United States, 142 U.S. 651 (1892), at p. 659, the United States Supreme
Court stated:
It is an accepted maxim of international law, that
every sovereign nation has the power, as inherent in sovereignty, and essential
to self-preservation, to forbid the entrance of foreigners within its
dominions, or to admit them only in such cases and upon such conditions as it
may see fit to prescribe.
To the same
effect is the holding of Gray J., for the court, in Fong Yue Ting v.
United States, 149 U.S. 698 (1893), at p. 707.
163
Similar views were expressed by scholars writing before the
Canada-United States border was ever established. E. de Vattel,
whose treatise The Law of Nations was first published in 1758, said
this:
The sovereign may forbid the entrance of his
territory either to foreigners in general, or in particular cases, or to
certain persons, or for certain particular purposes, according as he may think
it advantageous to the state. There is nothing in all this that does not flow
from the rights of domain and sovereignty : every one is obliged to pay
respect to the prohibition ; and whoever dares to violate it, incurs the
penalty decreed to render it effectual.
(The Law of Nations (Chitty ed. 1834), Book II, at pp. 169-70)
To the same
effect is Blackstone, supra, at p. 259:
Upon exactly the same reason stands the prerogative
of granting safe-conducts, without which by the law of nations no member of one
society has a right to intrude into another.
In my view,
therefore, the international trading/mobility right claimed by the respondent
as a citizen of the Haudenosaunee (Iroquois) Confederacy is incompatible with
the historical attributes of Canadian sovereignty.
164
The question that then arises is whether this conclusion is at odds with
the purpose of s. 35(1), i.e. the reconciliation of the interests of
aboriginal peoples with Crown sovereignty? In addressing this question it must
be remembered that aboriginal people are themselves part of Canadian
sovereignty as discussed above. I agree with Borrows, supra, at p. 40,
that accommodation of aboriginal rights should not be seen as “a
zero-sum relationship between minority rights and citizenship; as if every gain
in the direction of accommodating diversity comes at the expense of promoting
citizenship” (quoting W. Kymlicka and W. Norman, eds., Citizenship in
Diverse Societies (2000), at p. 39). On the other hand, the reverse is
also true. Affirmation of the sovereign interest of Canadians as a whole,
including aboriginal peoples, should not necessarily be seen as a loss of
sufficient “constitutional space for aboriginal peoples to be aboriginal”
(Greschner, supra, at p. 342). A finding of distinctiveness is a
judgment that to fulfill the purpose of s. 35 , a measure of constitutional
space is required to accommodate particular activities (traditions, customs or
practices) rooted in the aboriginal peoples' prior occupation of the land. In
this case, a finding against “distinctiveness” is a conclusion that the
respondent's claim does not relate to a “defining feature” that makes Mohawk
“culture what it is” (Van der Peet, at paras. 59 and 71 (emphasis in
original deleted); it is a conclusion that to extend constitutional protection
to the respondent's claim finds no support in the pre-1982 jurisprudence and
would overshoot the purpose of s. 35(1). In terms of sovereign
incompatibility, it is a conclusion that the respondent’s claim relates to
national interests that all of us have in common rather than to distinctive
interests that for some purposes differentiate an aboriginal community. In my
view, reconciliation of these interests in this particular case favours an
affirmation of our collective sovereignty.
11. Implications for Internal Aboriginal Self-Government
165
In reaching that conclusion, however, I do not wish to be taken as
either foreclosing or endorsing any position on the compatibility or
incompatibility of internal self-governing institutions of First Nations
with Crown sovereignty, either past or present. I point out in this connection
that the sovereign incompatibility principle has not prevented the United
States (albeit with its very different constitutional framework) from
continuing to recognize forms of internal aboriginal self-government
which it considers to be expressions of residual aboriginal sovereignty. The
concept of a “domestic dependent nation” was introduced by Marshall C.J.
in Cherokee Nation v. Georgia, 30 U.S. (5 Pet.) 1 (1831), at p. 17, as
follows:
... it may well be doubted whether those tribes which reside within the
acknowledged boundaries of the United States can, with strict accuracy, be
denominated foreign nations. They may, more correctly, perhaps, be denominated
domestic dependent nations.
166
More recently, in United States v. Wheeler, 435 U.S. 313 (1978),
the United States Supreme Court, per Stewart J., described the
applicable U.S. doctrine at pp. 322, 323 and 326:
The powers of Indian tribes are, in general, “inherent
powers of a limited sovereignty which has never been extinguished.” ...
Indian tribes are, of course, no longer “possessed
of the full attributes of sovereignty.” United States v. Kagama,
supra, at 381. Their incorporation within the territory of the United
States, and their acceptance of its protection, necessarily divested them of
some aspects of the sovereignty which they had previously exercised. By
specific treaty provision they yielded up other sovereign powers; by statute,
in the exercise of its plenary control, Congress has removed still others.
...
In sum, Indian tribes still possess those aspects of sovereignty not
withdrawn by treaty or statute, or by implication as a necessary result of
their dependent status.
...
The areas in which such implicit divestiture of sovereignty has
been held to have occurred are those involving the relations between an Indian
tribe and nonmembers of the tribe. Thus, Indian tribes can no longer freely
alienate to non-Indians the land they occupy. . . . They cannot enter into
direct commercial or governmental relations with foreign nations. . . . And,
as we have recently held, they cannot try nonmembers in tribal courts. . . .
These limitations rest on the fact that the
dependent status of Indian tribes within our territorial jurisdiction is necessarily
inconsistent with their freedom independently to determine their external
relations. [Underlining added.]
167
The U.S. doctrine of domestic dependent nation differs in material
respects from the proposals of our Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples. The
concepts of merged sovereignty and shared sovereignty, which are said to be
essential to the achievement of reconciliation as well as to the maintenance of
diversity, are not reflected in the American jurisprudence. Under U.S. law the
powers of a tribal government (whatever its theoretical sovereignty) can be
overridden by an ordinary law of Congress. Further, there is nothing that I am
aware of in the U.S. doctrine that extends the concept of self-government to
claims to an independent self-sustaining economic base, as contemplated by the
Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples (final report, vol. 2, supra, at
p. 2). In any event, whatever be the differences and similarities, an
international trading and mobility right, which necessarily involves “external
relations”, would appear not to be included in the attributes of a
U.S.-style “domestic dependent nation”.
168
As to the position of Mohawks in Canada seeking to trade into the United
States, see United States v. Garrow, supra, which involved “a
full-blooded Indian woman of the Canadian St. Regis Tribe of Iroquois Indians”
(p. 318) who resided in Canada near the international boundary line. She
entered the United States at the village of Hogansburg, New York, carrying 24
baskets for sale in the United States. She was charged duty under the Tariff
Act of 1930. She launched a protest, claiming that as she was an aboriginal
person she could bring the baskets into the United States free of duty under
Article III of the Jay Treaty. Her claim was rejected, the court stating at p.
324:
There being neither any treaty exemption of appellee’s goods from duty,
nor any statutory exemption thereof, it follows that they are dutiable, as
claimed by the collector.
See also Akins
v. United States, 551 F.2d 1222 (C.C.P.A. 1977).
169
I refer to the U.S. law only to alleviate any concern that addressing
aspects of the sovereignty issue in the context of a claim to an international
trading and mobility right would prejudice one way or the other a resolution of
the much larger and more complex claim of First Nations in Canada to internal
self-governing institutions. The United States has lived with internal tribal
self-government within the framework of external relations determined wholly by
the United States government without doctrinal difficulties since Johnson v.
M'Intosh, 21 U.S. (8 Wheat.) 543 (1823), was decided almost 170 years ago.
170
In this connection, the respondent also referred us to Watt v.
Liebelt, [1999] 2 F.C. 455, where the Federal Court of Appeal considered
the mobility right of an aboriginal person whose traditional territory also
straddles the Canada-U.S. border. The claimant, who was neither a Canadian
citizen nor a person registered under the Indian Act , claimed a right to
come into or remain in Canada. In considering this question, the court
commented at para. 15:
The respondent contends that the existence of a sovereign state is
inconsistent with any fetters on the power of that state to control which
non-citizens may remain in the country. Suffice it to say that while there is
ample authority in international and common law for that proposition, a
sovereign state may fetter itself as to the means by which, the circumstances
in which, and the agencies of government by which, such power of control may be
exercised. Canada has by its Constitution limited the exercise of governmental
powers which may be inherent as a sovereign state.... [S]ection 35 of the Constitution
Act, 1982 now guarantees existing Aboriginal rights not previously
extinguished, and this carries the corollary that no agency of the state can, after
1982, extinguish those rights.
171
The question under consideration here is rather different from the
question discussed in that passage. It is not about post-1982 extinguishment.
It is about the prior question of whether the claimed international trading
and mobility right could, as a matter of law, have arisen in the first place.
172
It was, of course, an expression of sovereignty in 1982 to recognize
existing aboriginal rights under s. 35(1) of the Constitution Act, 1982 .
However, if the claimed aboriginal right did not survive the transition to
non-Mohawk sovereignty, there was nothing in existence in 1982 to which
s. 35(1) protection of existing aboriginal rights could attach. It
would have been, of course, quite within the sovereign's power to confer
specific border privileges by treaty, but the respondent's claim to a treaty
right was dismissed.
173
In my respectful view the claimed aboriginal right never came into
existence and it is unnecessary to consider the Crown's argument that whatever
aboriginal rights in this respect may have existed were extinguished by border
controls enforced by Canada prior to April 17, 1982.
Conclusion
174
I would allow the appeal.
Appeal allowed.
Solicitor for the appellant: The Deputy Attorney General
of Canada, Ottawa.
Solicitors for the respondent: Hutchins, Soroka &
Dionne, Montréal.
Solicitor for the intervener the Attorney General of Quebec: The
Department of Justice, Sainte-Foy.
Solicitor for the intervener the Attorney General for New
Brunswick: The Solicitor General for the Province of New Brunswick,
Fredericton.
Solicitors for the intervener the Attorney General of Manitoba:
Borden Ladner Gervais, Vancouver.
Solicitor for the intervener the Attorney General of British
Columbia: The Attorney General of British Columbia, Victoria.
Solicitors for the intervener the Mohawk Council of Kahnawake: The
Mohawk Council of Kahnawake Legal Services, Kahnawake.
Solicitors for the intervener the Assembly of First Nations:
Pitblado Buchwald Asper, Winnipeg.
Solicitor for the intervener the Union of New Brunswick Indians:
Bear Law Office, Maliseet, New Brunswick.