Docket: A-11-15
Citation:
2016 FCA 133
CORAM:
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PELLETIER J.A.
NEAR J.A.
GLEASON J.A.
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BETWEEN:
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HER MAJESTY
THE QUEEN IN RIGHT OF SASKATCHEWAN AS REPRESENTED BY
THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF SASKATCHEWAN
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Appellant (Defendant)
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and
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CHIEF M. TODD
PEIGAN ON BEHALF OF HIMSELF AND ALL OTHER MEMBERS OF THE PASQUA FIRST NATION
AND THE PASQUA FIRST NATION
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Respondents (Plaintiffs)
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and
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HER MAJESTY THE
QUEEN IN RIGHT OF CANADA AS REPRESENTED BY THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF CANADA
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(Defendant)
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
NEAR AND GLEASON JJ.A.
[1]
On September 15, 1874, at Fort Qu’Appelle,
Saskatchewan, representatives of Queen Victoria and of various Cree and
Saulteaux First Nations concluded Treaty Number 4. Among the promises made in
Treaty Number 4 was the commitment by the Crown to provide the signatory First
Nations with reserve land “of sufficient area to allow
one square mile for each family of five, or in that proportion for larger or
smaller families”. This promise was not fulfilled, and there was a
shortfall in the amount of reserve land provided to Treaty Number 4 First Nations,
including the Pasqua First Nation [the PFN], whose members, as represented by
Chief Todd Peigan, are the respondents in this appeal.
[2]
In 1992, the Crown in right of Canada [Canada],
the Crown in right of Saskatchewan [Saskatchewan] and a number of First Nation
signatories to Treaty 4 (and to Treaties 6 and 10) concluded the Saskatchewan
Treaty Land Entitlement Framework Agreement among her Majesty the Queen in
Right of Canada and the Minister of Indian Affairs and Northern Development and
the Entitlement Bands and Her Majesty in Right of Saskatchewan [the Framework
Agreement].
[3]
The Framework Agreement is a
comprehensive agreement that creates a framework for the fulfillment of the
Crown’s outstanding obligations under Treaty 4 and the two other numbered
treaties. It also provides for the subsequent conclusion of similar settlement
agreements between Canada, Saskatchewan and First Nations with treaty land
entitlement claims in Saskatchewan who did not sign the Framework Agreement.
The PFN concluded such an agreement with Canada and Saskatchewan on September
30, 2008 [the PFN Settlement Agreement].
[4]
Both the Framework Agreement and the PFN
Settlement Agreement [together, the Agreements] provide that
disputes arising under them will be referred to the Federal Court for
determination. Sections 20.20 of the Framework Agreement and 20.19 of
the PFN Settlement Agreement state in relevant part that:
… in the event the parties … are unable to
agree on any matter, including a question of interpretation of any term,
covenant, condition or provision of this Agreement, the determination of any
such disagreement, and the enforcement thereof, shall be within the exclusive
jurisdiction of the Federal Court of Canada.
[5]
On June 17, 2014, the PFN commenced an action in
the Federal Court, in which it named Canada and Saskatchewan as respondents, alleging
that both Canada and Saskatchewan had violated their obligations under the PFN
Settlement Agreement and that both had also failed to discharge their
obligations to consult with the PFN regarding, in particular, the grant of a subsurface
mineral lease in September 2010 for the Legacy Mining Project.
[6]
Saskatchewan brought a motion to strike the PFN’s
action as against it, arguing that the Federal Court does not have jurisdiction
over Saskatchewan or over the subject matter of the PFN’s claim against
Saskatchewan. On January 8, 2015, Justice Boswell of the Federal Court
dismissed Saskatchewan’s motion in a short “speaking order”
in which he held that section 20.20 of the Framework Agreement was
sufficient to provide the Federal Court jurisdiction over the PFN’s claim
against Saskatchewan, principally by virtue of the provisions of paragraph
17(3)(b) of the Federal Courts Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. F-7 [the FCA].
This paragraph provides that the Federal Court has exclusive original
jurisdiction to hear and determine any question of law, fact or mixed law and
fact that the Crown and any person have agreed in writing would be determined
by the Federal Court.
[7]
Saskatchewan has appealed the Federal Court’s order
to this Court and argues that, notwithstanding the attornment clauses in sections
20.20 of the Framework Agreement and 20.19 of the PFN Settlement
Agreement, the Federal Court has no jurisdiction over Saskatchewan or over the
subject matter of the PFN’s claim as against Saskatchewan.
[8]
We disagree, and, for the reasons set out below,
believe that the Federal Court possesses jurisdiction over the portions of the
PFN’s claim that allege a breach of Saskatchewan’s obligations under the PFN
Settlement Agreement. However, the portion of the claim, as currently
pleaded, which alleges a violation by Saskatchewan of its duty to consult with
the PFN with respect to the grant of the subsurface lease for the Legacy Mining
Project fall outside the jurisdiction of the Federal Court. We would
accordingly allow this appeal in part and, making the order that the Federal
Court ought to have made, would strike the portions of the Statement of Claim
that allege that Saskatchewan breached its duty to consult with the PFN with
respect to this Project, providing the PFN with leave to amend this portion of
the claim in accordance with these Reasons. Success being divided, we would
propose that each party bear its own costs of this appeal and in the Federal
Court.
I.
Relevant Legislative Backdrop
[9]
To place the issues in this appeal in context,
it is helpful to begin by reviewing the legislative backdrop to the Framework
Agreement and PFN Settlement Agreement.
[10]
Under section 109 of the British North
America Act, 1867 (now the Constitution Act, 1867 (U.K.), 30
& 31 Vict., c. 3), the four provinces that came together to form Canada in
1867 were afforded the right to administer Crown lands and rights to natural
resources and minerals situated in the provinces. However, when Manitoba,
Alberta and Saskatchewan joined Confederation (in 1870 in the case of Manitoba
and in 1905 in the case of Alberta and Saskatchewan), the newly-created western
provinces were not granted the right to administer Crown land, nor were they
given control over natural resources in the provinces (see Manitoba Act,
1870, S.C. 1870, c. 3, s. 30; Saskatchewan Act, S.C. 1905, c. 42, s. 21;
Alberta Act, S.C. 1905, c. 3, s. 21).
[11]
In 1930, Canada and the three prairie provinces
reached a series of agreements, called the Natural Resources Transfer
Agreements [the NRTAs], which transferred to the prairie provinces control
over natural resources and provided them the right to administer Crown lands in
the province, subject to certain exceptions. One of these exceptions involves
outstanding treaty obligations to indigenous peoples. The NRTAs provide
that Manitoba, Alberta and Saskatchewan could be required to transfer unoccupied
Crown lands to Canada to satisfy outstanding treaty obligations. Paragraph 10
of the Saskatchewan NRTA provides in this regard that
Saskatchewan:
… will, from time to time, upon the request
of the Superintendent General of Indian Affairs, set aside, out of the
unoccupied Crown lands hereby transferred to its administration, such further
areas as the said Superintendent General may, in agreement with the appropriate
Minister of the Province, select as necessary to enable Canada to fulfill its
obligations under the treaties with the Indians of the Province, and such areas
shall thereafter be administered by Canada in the same way in all respects as
if they had never passed to the Province under the provisions hereof.
Similar provisions are contained in the NRTAs
applicable to Manitoba and Alberta.
[12]
Parliament and the western provincial
legislatures passed legislation to implement the NRTAs: Manitoba
Natural Resources Transfer Act, S.M. 1930, c. 30; Manitoba Natural
Resources Act, S.C. 1930, c. 29; An Act to ratify a certain Agreement
between the Government of the Dominion of Canada and the Government of the
Province of Saskatchewan, S.S. 1930, c. 87; Saskatchewan Natural
Resources Act, S.C. 1930, c. 41; Alberta Natural Resources Act, S.A.
1930, c. 21; Alberta Natural Resources Act, S.C. 1930, c. 3. Thereafter,
the British Parliament adopted the Constitution Act, 1930 (U.K.), 20-21
Geo. V, c. 26, to incorporate the NRTAs into the constitution. Section 1
of the Constitution Act, 1930 provides as follows:
The [NRTAs] are hereby confirmed and shall have the force
of law notwithstanding anything in the Constitution Act, 1867, or any
Act amending the same, or any Act of the Parliament of Canada, or in any
Order in Council or terms or conditions of union made or approved under any
such Act as aforesaid.
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Les [CTRN] sont par les présentes confirmées et auront
force de loi nonobstant tout ce qui est contenu dans la Loi constitutionnelle
de 1867, ou dans toute loi la modifiant, ou dans toute loi du Parlement du
Canada ou dans tout arrêté du Conseil ou termes ou conditions d’Union faits
ou approuvés sous l’empire d’aucune de ces lois.
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II.
The Framework Agreement and the PFN
Settlement Agreement
[13]
It was against the foregoing backdrop that the Framework
Agreement and the PFN Settlement Agreement were negotiated.
[14]
The Framework Agreement was signed in 1992
by the Prime Minister and the Minister of Indian Affairs and Northern
Development, on behalf of Canada, by the Premier and the Minister responsible
for the Indian and Métis Affairs Secretariat, for Saskatchewan, and by 23 Chiefs
of various Indian Bands with unfulfilled treaty land entitlements in Saskatchewan.
Their signatures were witnessed by the Chief of the Federation of Saskatchewan
Indian Nations and the Treaty Commissioner of Saskatchewan.
[15]
The Framework Agreement provides for the
payment of monies [referred to as “Entitlement Monies”]
by both Canada and Saskatchewan to trust funds to be set up on behalf of the
signatory Bands (Article 3). The bulk of these funds are to be used to purchase
land equivalent to the shortfall in reserve acreage owed to each Band under the
treaties their forbearers signed with the Crown (ss. 4.01(a)(i), 4.01(b)). Excess
funds may be used to purchase additional acreage or for other Band development
purposes (s. 4.01(a)(ii)).
[16]
The lands to be so purchased by the signatory
Bands need not be contiguous to an existing reserve, and, indeed, the Framework
Agreement specifically contemplates that purchased lands may be within an
existing municipality (Article 9). Section 4.05(b) of the Framework
Agreement contemplates that a Band desirous of purchasing Crown land advise
Saskatchewan (in the case of provincial Crown lands) or Canada (in the case of
federal Crown lands) of the lands it wishes to purchase, and Saskatchewan or
Canada must respond to such requests within 90 days.
[17]
The Framework Agreement provides that
sale of Crown lands following receipt of such a request is governed by the
principle of “willing seller/willing buyer” (s.
4.05(a)). Under section 4.06 of the Framework Agreement, Saskatchewan
and Canada are bound to give “favourable consideration”
to offers from the signatory Bands to purchase Crown lands. Once they have
agreed to the sale, subject to certain exceptions, Canada and Saskatchewan are
prohibited from selling the lands to third parties or granting third parties an
interest in the lands for a period of 18 months (ss. 4.05(c) and (d)).
[18]
Several exceptions to the foregoing obligations
are recognized in the Framework Agreement; these include the
designation of the lands as critical wildlife habitats under the applicable
provincial legislation, the fact that the land a Band wishes to purchase is
occupied by a third party, who has not given its consent to the sale of the
land, or the designation of lands as being subject to a “Public Purposes Plan”, in which Saskatchewan sets out
an intention to conserve or use Crown minerals located on or under the lands for
the benefit of all or a substantial portion of the people of Saskatchewan (ss.
4.07, 4.08(a), 5.04(a)(iii)). Generally speaking, where an exception pertains,
the lands need not be sold to one of the signatory Bands.
[19]
The Framework Agreement contemplates that
once a signatory Band purchases land and satisfactory arrangements have been
made for dealing with third party interests in the land (in accordance with the
detailed provisions set out in the Framework Agreement), the purchased
lands will be surrendered by the Band to Canada. The Framework Agreement
further contemplates that, subject to the provisions of the agreement, Canada
will then set apart the lands so surrendered as additional reserve lands for
the benefit of the Band [defined as an “Entitlement
Reserve” in the agreement]. Under section 11.09 of the Framework
Agreement, Saskatchewan is required to transfer to Canada all interests
Saskatchewan might have had in the land so surrendered to Canada to ensure that
the land set aside as an Entitlement Reserve is free of provincial Crown rights
or encumbrances.
[20]
Before any Entitlement Monies can be paid to a
signatory Band, section 10 of the Framework Agreement requires that the Band
ratify the Framework Agreement through the conclusion of a “Band Specific Agreement” (ss. 10.01(a), 22.01(a)). Each
Band Specific Agreement must outline, among other things, the signatory Band’s
shortfall acreage, the total amount of Entitlement Monies to be paid in trust
to the Band pursuant to the Framework Agreement and any other provisions
of specific concern having been the subject of negotiations between the Band
and Canada. To take effect, a Band Specific Agreement must be ratified by Band
Council Resolution and must subsequently be executed by Canada (ss. 10.01(a),
10.03).
[21]
Section 10.02 of the Framework Agreement provides
that other Bands may adhere to the agreement at a date subsequent to its
conclusion by the original signatories, provided they have an outstanding treaty
land entitlement under Treaties 4, 6, or 10 and provided they take the steps
outlined in the Framework Agreement, which include the conclusion of a
Band Specific Agreement in accordance with section 10.01(a).
[22]
By virtue of the entitlements provided to the
signatory Bands under the Framework Agreement, the Bands agreed in
Article 15 to release Canada from all outstanding claims related to treaty land
entitlement.
[23]
In Article 16 of the Framework Agreement,
Canada and the signatory Bands similarly released Saskatchewan from its
obligations under section 10 of the Saskatchewan NRTA, contingent in
part upon Saskatchewan’s compliance with the terms of the Framework
Agreement. The provisions of Article 16 of the Framework Agreement
are relevant to the issue of the jurisdiction of the Federal Court over the
PFN’s claim and are therefore produced in their entirety. They provide:
CANADA AND ENTITLEMENT BANDS - FINALITY OF
SETTLEMENT RESPECTING SASKATCHEWAN
16.01 FINALITY - CANADA AND SASKATCHEWAN:
(a) Canada, Saskatchewan and the Entitlement
Bands agree that the financial and other contributions to be made by
Saskatchewan pursuant to the Amended Cost Sharing Agreement and this Agreement
are a means by which Saskatchewan shall fulfil its obligations under paragraph
10 of the Natural Resources Transfer Agreement with
respect to the Treaty land entitlement of each Entitlement Band which signs a
Band Specific Agreement.
(b) Canada and Saskatchewan acknowledge that
an agreement to be entered into between Canada and Saskatchewan (as set out in
Schedule 4) provides for the release and discharge of the obligations of
Saskatchewan under paragraph 10 of the Natural Resources Transfer
Agreement and that Canada and Saskatchewan agree to recommend to
the Parliament of Canada and the Legislative Assembly of Saskatchewan,
respectively, enactment of statutes ratifying and confirming the agreement.
16.02 RELEASE BY CANADA AND ENTITLEMENT
BANDS:
(a) Canada and each of the Entitlement Bands
hereby agree that, after ratification, execution and delivery of a Band
Specific Agreement, as long as Saskatchewan is paying to Canada and the Treaty
Land Entitlement (Saskatchewan) Fund the amounts required to be paid by
Saskatchewan in respect of each of the said Entitlement Bands in accordance
with this Agreement, and Saskatchewan has not failed, in any material way, to
comply with its other obligations hereunder:
(i) the
Superintendent General of Indian Affairs shall not request Saskatchewan to set
aside any land pursuant to paragraph 10 of the Natural Resources
Transfer Agreement to fulfil Canada's obligations under the
Treaties in respect of that Entitlement Band; and
(ii) the
Entitlement Band shall not make any claim whatsoever that Saskatchewan has any
obligation to provide land pursuant to paragraph 10 of the Natural
Resources Transfer Agreement.
(b) Notwithstanding subparagraph (a), Canada
and each of the Entitlement Bands further agrees to forever release and
discharge Saskatchewan, Her heirs, servants, agents and successors from all
claims, obligations, promises, undertakings or representations made by
Saskatchewan to Canada relating to Saskatchewan's obligations to assist Canada
in fulfilling the Treaty land entitlement of such Entitlement Band, or their
predecessors in title, pursuant to paragraph 10 of the Natural
Resources Transfer Agreement from and after the earlier of:
(i) the date upon
which such Entitlement Band reaches its Shortfall Acres Acquisition Date; or
(ii) the date upon
which Saskatchewan has paid to Canada all amounts required to be paid by
Saskatchewan pursuant to this Agreement in respect of such Entitlement Band.
[Emphasis in original]
[24]
In addition to the legislation mentioned in Article
16, the Framework Agreement also contemplates the passage of other
legislation aimed at giving effect to certain provisions of the agreement. By
virtue of section 20.19(a), Saskatchewan agreed to present legislation in its
Legislative Assembly on a variety of matters, including the transfer of mineral
rights to the Entitlement Bands and the relinquishment of any residual interest
in land set apart by Canada as an Entitlement Reserve. Pursuant to section
20.19(b), Canada agreed to present legislation in Parliament pertaining to
matters including varying common law riparian rights and the creation of a
Special Purpose Account to administer the Treaty Land Entitlement Fund in which
Saskatchewan’s payments under the Framework Agreement are to be
collected [referred to as the
“Treaty Land Entitlement (Saskatchewan) Fund”].
[25]
The Framework Agreement provides that
certain types of disputes arising under it are to be referred to arbitration (Article
19) and that all other disputes are to be referred to the Federal Court, under section
20.20, cited above. It is common ground between Saskatchewan and the PFN that
the subject matter of the PFN’s claim against both Saskatchewan and Canada is
not referable to arbitration.
[26]
Finally, of note, section 21.01 of the Framework
Agreement provides that Canada, Saskatchewan and the signatory Bands “will, in good faith, employ their best efforts to fulfil the
terms of [the Framework Agreement] according to its true spirit and
intent and that they will negotiate in good faith any further [agreement(s)]
that are required in order to do so”.
[27]
In material respects, the PFN Settlement
Agreement is identical to the Framework Agreement, save that
it was negotiated and signed by the PFN, Saskatchewan and Canada several years
after the Framework Agreement was concluded. Due to its later conclusion,
the PFN Settlement Agreement makes reference to the federal Claim
Settlements (Alberta and Saskatchewan) Implementation Act, S.C. 2002, c. 3
and provides in section 20.24 that that Act applies to the PFN Settlement
Agreement and its implementation.
III.
The Legislation Passed to Give Effect to the Framework
and PFN Settlement Agreements
[28]
Both Saskatchewan and Canada passed legislation further
to the Agreements.
A.
Federal Legislation
(1)
The Saskatchewan Treaty Land Entitlement Act,
S.C. 1993, c. 11
[29]
The Saskatchewan Treaty Land Entitlement Act,
S.C. 1993, c. 11 makes provision for a bi-partite agreement between Canada and
Saskatchewan to amend the Saskatchewan NRTA and also references the Framework
Agreement and the subsequent Band Specific Agreements (like the PFN
Settlement Agreement) that the Framework Agreement contemplates.
[30]
In terms of the amendment of the Saskatchewan
NRTA, the Saskatchewan Treaty Land Entitlement Act provides in
section 3 that:
3 (1) The NRTA Amendment Agreement is hereby confirmed and shall
take effect according to its terms.
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3 (1) L’accord
modifiant la CTRN est confirmé et prend effet conformément à sa teneur.
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(2) If, either before or after the coming into force of this
subsection,
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(2) Est confirmé et prend effet conformément à sa teneur l’accord
conclu — avant ou après l’entrée en vigueur du présent article — entre le
gouvernement du Canada et celui de la Saskatchewan relativement à un accord
conclu avec une bande indienne de cette province en règlement d’une
revendication fondée sur des droits fonciers issus de traités, si les
conditions suivantes sont remplies :
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(a) an agreement is entered into with an Indian band of
Saskatchewan in settlement of a treaty land entitlement claim on the same or
substantially the same basis as the Framework Agreement, and
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a) l’accord
conclu avec la bande indienne est semblable ou identique à l’accord-cadre;
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(b) in connection with the agreement referred to in paragraph (a),
the Government of Canada and the Government of Saskatchewan enter into an
agreement in the same or substantially the same form as the NRTA Amendment
Agreement,
the agreement between the Government of Canada and the Government
of Saskatchewan referred to in paragraph (b) is hereby confirmed and shall
take effect according to its terms.
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b) l’accord
conclu par ces gouvernements est semblable ou identique à l’accord modifiant
la CTRN.
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[31]
The “NRTA Amendment
Agreement” is defined in section 2 of the federal legislation as meaning
“the agreement to vary the [NRTA] entered into between
the Government of Canada and the Government of Saskatchewan and set out in
Schedule I”.
[32]
Schedule I to the Saskatchewan Treaty Land
Entitlement Act sets out the entire NRTA Amendment Agreement. In its
introductory clauses, the NRTA Amendment Agreement recognizes the
outstanding treaty land obligations owed to several Saskatchewan First Nations,
notes Saskatchewan’s obligations in respect of them as set out in paragraph 10
of the Saskatchewan NRTA and references the conclusion of the Framework
Agreement, its provision for subsequent similar agreements and their
provision for release of Saskatchewan from its obligations under paragraph 10
of the Saskatchewan NRTA. The release language is incorporated into sections
2 and 3 of the NRTA Amendment Agreement, which provide in relevant part as
follows:
2. Canada hereby agrees that the Superintendent General of Indian
Affairs shall not request Saskatchewan to set aside any land pursuant to
paragraph 10 of the Natural Resources Transfer Agreement to fulfil
Canada’s obligations under the treaties in respect of any Entitlement
Band..., that ratifies, executes and delivers a Band Specific Agreement (or
in respect of the past, present and future members of such Indian Bands), as
long as Saskatchewan is paying to Canada and the Treaty Land Entitlement
(Saskatchewan) Fund the amounts required to be paid by Saskatchewan in
respect of each of the said Entitlement Bands in accordance with the
Framework Agreement and Saskatchewan has not failed, in any material way, to
comply with its other obligations thereunder....
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2 Le Canada convient que le surintendant général des Affaires
indiennes ne demandera pas à la Saskatchewan de mettre des terres de côté aux
termes du paragraphe 10 de la Convention sur le transfert des ressources
naturelles pour remplir les obligations incombant au Canada en vertu des
traités à l’égard […] des bandes ayant droit à des terres […], lorsqu’elles
ratifient et signent un accord particulier (ou à l’égard des membres passés,
actuels et futurs de ces bandes), pourvu que la Saskatchewan verse au Canada
et au Fonds de règlement des droits fonciers issus des traités en
Saskatchewan les montants à payer par celle-ci pour chacune de ces bandes, en
vertu de l’accord-cadre, et pourvu que la Saskatchewan se conforme pour
l’essentiel aux autres obligations que lui impose […] cet accord […].
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3. Notwithstanding section 2 hereof, Canada further agrees that it
will forever release and discharge Saskatchewan from all of its obligations
pursuant to paragraph 10 of the Natural Resources Transfer Agreement
in respect of each Entitlement Band...that has entered into a Band Specific
Agreement;
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3 Malgré l’article 2, le Canada convient en outre de libérer
définitivement la Saskatchewan de toutes les obligations que lui impose le
paragraphe 10 de la Convention sur le transfert des ressources naturelles
à l’égard de chacune des bandes ayant droit à des terres […] lorsqu’elles
concluent un accord particulier :
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(a) in the case of any Entitlement Band, from and after the
earlier of:
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a) dans le cas de l’une ou l’autre des bandes ayant droit à des
terres, à partir de la première des dates suivantes :
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(i) the date upon which such Entitlement Band reaches its
Shortfall Acres Acquisition Date; or
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(i) la date à laquelle la superficie manquante de la bande sera
acquise,
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(ii) the date upon which Saskatchewan has paid all amounts
required to be paid by Saskatchewan to Canada and the Treaty Land Entitlement
(Saskatchewan) Fund pursuant to the Framework Agreement in respect of such
Entitlement Band;...
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(ii) la date à laquelle la Saskatchewan aura payé tous les
montants qu’elle doit verser au Canada et au Fonds de règlement des droits
fonciers issus des traités en Saskatchewan, en vertu de l’accord-cadre, pour
la bande; […]
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[33]
It is common ground between the parties that Saskatchewan
and Canada signed a Memorandum of Agreement in the same or substantially the
same form as the NRTA Amendment Agreement further to the execution of the PFN
Settlement Agreement to release Saskatchewan from its obligations under the
NRTA in respect of the PFN. Such agreement falls within the purview of
paragraph 3(2)(b) of the Saskatchewan Treaty Land Entitlement Act.
[34]
Section 4 of the Saskatchewan Treaty Land
Entitlement Act provides for the creation of the Treaty Land Entitlement
(Saskatchewan) Fund, referred to in section 20.19(b)(iv) of the Framework
Agreement, and for the transfer to the Fund of the monies payable by
Saskatchewan and Canada under the Framework Agreement and subsequent
settlement agreements, like the PFN Settlement Agreement.
[35]
Section 7 of the Saskatchewan Treaty Land
Entitlement Act specifically confirms the sections in the Framework Agreement
which amend the common law as it applies to riparian rights. The Act states
that the relevant sections of the Framework Agreement “are hereby confirmed”. They are also incorporated
into Schedule II of the legislation.
(2)
The Claim Settlements (Alberta and
Saskatchewan) Implementation Act, S.C. 2002, c. 3
[36]
The federal Claim Settlements (Alberta and
Saskatchewan) Implementation Act applies to the PFN Settlement Agreement
by virtue of paragraph 3(b) of the Act, which provides for its application to
any settlement agreement that provides that it is subject to the Act. (As noted,
the PFN Settlement Agreement contains such a provision in section 20.24.)
[37]
The Claim Settlements (Alberta and
Saskatchewan) Implementation Act details the process by which lands
surrendered to Canada under the Framework Agreement or subsequent
settlement agreements are to be set apart as reserves under the Indian Act,
R.S.C. 1985, c. I-5. Of note, section 6 provides that an interest in lands
identified by an Entitlement Band, but not yet set apart as a reserve, may be conditionally
surrendered to the Crown for transfer to a third party. Subsection 6(5) further
provides that such prospective surrenders are deemed to have been made under
the Indian Act.
[38]
Section 7 of the Claim Settlements (Alberta
and Saskatchewan) Implementation Act allows Canada to grant third parties conditional
interests in the lands to be set apart as reserve lands. Pursuant to subsection
7(3) of the Act, such conditional interests are deemed to have been
granted under the Indian Act.
B.
Saskatchewan Legislation
[39]
The Saskatchewan Natural Resources Transfer
Agreement (Treaty Land Entitlement) Act, S.S. 1993, c. S-31.1
annexes the NRTA Amendment Agreement and provides in section 2 that this
agreement “is to take effect according to its terms”.
[40]
The Treaty Land Entitlement Implementation
Act, S.S. 1993, c. T-20.1 provides that Saskatchewan shall not retain any
residual interest (pertaining to minerals, waterways or land forming the bed of
a waterway) in lands set apart as reserve land pursuant to the Framework
Agreement or any subsequent Band Specific Agreements, except where
Saskatchewan specifically retains such an interest or where Canada expressly
acknowledges such a reservation.
C.
Orders-in-Council
[41]
In addition to the foregoing legislation, Orders-in-Council
were adopted by the Governor General in Council and by the Lieutenant Governor
in Council to authorize the federal and Saskatchewan representatives to sign
the Framework Agreement and the NRTA Amendment Agreement (P.C.
1992-1400, June 26, 1992, Weekly Listing of Federal Cabinet Orders in Council,
Vol. 13, No. 19; Saskatchewan Order-in-Council O.C. 797/92, September 9, 1992),
as well as the PFN Settlement Agreement and the Memorandum of
Agreement concluded between Canada and Saskatchewan attached to the PFN Settlement
Agreement (P.C. 2008-1665, September 13, 2008, Weekly Listing of Federal
Cabinet Orders in Council, Vol. 29, No. 37; Saskatchewan Order-in-Council O.C.
406/2008, June 19, 2008).
IV.
The Statement of Claim
[42]
As noted, the PFN advances two distinct types of
claims in its Statement of Claim: allegations that Canada and Saskatchewan have
breached their obligations under or in connection with the PFN Settlement
Agreement and allegations that Saskatchewan and Canada breached their
constitutional and other obligations to consult with the PFN when Saskatchewan granted
a subsurface mineral lease to a third party in connection with the Legacy
Mining Project.
[43]
The latter claim is detailed in paragraphs 41 to
56 of the Statement of Claim. In this section, the PFN pleads that the
subsurface mineral lease in question was granted in September 2010 (which
pre-dates any of the PFN’s requests under the PFN Settlement Agreement
to purchase provincial Crown lands). In this section of the Statement of Claim,
the PFN further pleads that before the mineral lease was granted, Saskatchewan and
Canada ought to have consulted with the PFN, in accordance with their
constitutional and other obligations. However, the PFN makes no allegation in
this portion of the Statement of Claim that the alleged failure to consult
violated the PFN Settlement Agreement.
[44]
In the balance of the Statement of Claim, after
setting out the background to the Agreements, the PFN asserts that
Saskatchewan and Canada breached their obligations under or in connection with
the PFN Settlement Agreement, principally by refusing on multiple occasions
to make provincial Crown lands available for sale to the PFN. More
specifically, the PFN pleads that it made several requests to Saskatchewan to
set aside provincial Crown lands for its benefit under the PFN Settlement
Agreement and that Saskatchewan refused the requests, claiming that the
requested lands had been sold, were subject to pre-existing mineral leases or had
been designated as wildlife habitat. The PFN asserts that, despite this, the
lands in question ought to have been transferred to it under the PFN
Settlement Agreement. It also asserts that by reason of these actions it
was forced to purchase lands from third parties and was unfairly and in a
discriminatory fashion required to bear sole responsibility for clearing the
third party interests from the lands purchased.
[45]
In its prayer for relief, the PFN claims several
declarations, damages, interest and costs. In many instances, its claims in
respect of the alleged breach of the PFN Settlement Agreement are
interwoven with claims based on the alleged failure to consult in breach of
fiduciary, common law or constitutional obligations that the PFN alleges are
owed to it by Saskatchewan and Canada.
V.
Jurisdiction of the Federal Court over the PFN’s
Claim
[46]
Having set out the relevant background, we turn
now to consider whether the Federal Court erred in deciding that it possesses jurisdiction
to adjudicate the PFN’s action against Saskatchewan. This is a pure question of
law and thus the Federal Court’s order is reviewable on the standard of
correctness: Canadian Forest Products Ltd. v. Canada (Attorney General),
2005 FCA 220 at para. 21, [2006] 1 F.C.R. 570; Housen v. Nikolaisen,
2002 SCC 33, [2002] 2 S.C.R. 235 at para. 8; Trainor Surveys (1974) Ltd. v.
New Brunswick, [1990] 2 F.C. 168, 1990 CarswellNat 623 at para. 10 (T.D.).
[47]
Assessment of whether the Federal Court was
correct in assuming jurisdiction to adjudicate the PFN’s action against
Saskatchewan involves consideration of two inter-related issues: first, whether
Saskatchewan can claim to be immune from suit before the Federal Court by virtue
of Crown immunity and, second, whether the Federal Court has subject matter
jurisdiction over the claims made against Saskatchewan in this action as the
Federal Court must possess both jurisdiction over the parties and subject matter
jurisdiction for a suit to proceed before it: Alberta v. Toney, 2013 FCA
217 at para. 10, 2013 CarswellNat 3339 [Toney]. The issues raised by
Saskatchewan’s motion are therefore more complex than the Federal Court appreciated
in its brief speaking order.
A.
Crown Immunity
[48]
Turning, first, to the issue of Crown immunity, the
starting point for the discussion is the recognition that, at common law, the
Crown was immune from suit before any court: Peter Hogg, Patrick Monahan
&Wade K. Wright, Liability of the Crown, 4th ed. (Toronto: Carswell,
2011) at 485.
[49]
This common law rule has been abrogated by
statute in Canada. Provincial legislation expressly provides that the Crown in
right of each province may be sued before the courts of that province, and the FCA
and the Crown Liability and Proceedings Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-50 [CLPA]
expressly make the Crown in right of Canada amenable to suit before either the
Federal Court or the superior court of the province where a cause of action
arises, except where the Federal Court has exclusive jurisdiction over the
claim (CLPA, s.21; FCA, s.17). However, none of these statutes
makes the Crown in right of a province amenable to suit before the Federal
Court (or, for that matter, before the courts of another province).
[50]
As Saskatchewan correctly notes, several cases
have held that, in light of this, the provincial Crown may not be sued in the
Federal Court due, in part, to the principle of Crown immunity. More
specifically, this Court and the Federal Court have held that subsections 17(1)
and (2) of the FCA, which provide for suits against the Crown in the
Federal Court, do not apply to the provincial Crown, because the “Crown” is defined in section 2 of the FCA as
meaning Her Majesty in Right of Canada: Vollant v. Canada, 2009 FCA 185
at para. 5, 2009 CarswellNat 1900; Shade v. The Queen, 2001 FCT 1067 at
paras. 15-21, 26, (sub nom. Blood Band v. Canada) 2001 CarswellNat 2232;
Greeley v. “Tami Joan” (The), 113 F.T.R. 66, 1996 CarswellNat 731 at
para. 18 [Greeley]; Khagee v. Canada, [1992] 3 F.C. 576, 1992
CarswellNat 131 at paras. 12, 27-28 (T.D.); Varnam v. Canada (Minister of
National Health & Welfare), [1988] 2 F.C. 454, 1988 CarswellNat 180 at
para. 14 (C.A.); Joe v. Canada, [1984] 1 C.N.L.R. 96, 1983 CarswellNat
486 at para. 4 (F.C.A.), aff’d [1986] 2 S.C.R. 145; Lubicon Lake Band v.
Canada, [1981] 2 F.C. 317, 1980 CarswellNat 15 at para. 8 (T.D.); Union
Oil Co. v. Canada, [1974] 2 F.C. 452, 1974 CarswellNat 107 at para. 17
(T.D.), aff’d [1976] 1 F.C. 74 (C.A.).
[51]
In a similar fashion, section 19 of the FCA
has been held to be insufficient to render the Crown in right of a province
amenable to suit before the Federal Court at the instance of a third party,
even in circumstances where Canada is a co-defendant and might advance a claim
against the province: Toney at para. 24; Fairford Band v. Canada (Attorney
General), [1995] 3 F.C. 165, 96 F.T.R. 172 at para. 13. (Section 19 of the FCA
allows for actions before the Federal Court between a province and Canada or
between provinces when a province has passed legislation affording the Federal Court
jurisdiction to adjudicate such claims.)
[52]
Saskatchewan argues that the foregoing
principles and authorities are equally applicable in the present case and that
it therefore cannot be named by the PFN in its action before the Federal Court.
We disagree as there is an important difference between this case and the cases
relied on by Saskatchewan. In this case, unlike those cited by Saskatchewan,
there are two agreements – the Framework Agreement and PFN
Settlement Agreement – in which Saskatchewan agreed that claims to interpret
and enforce the Framework Agreement and the PFN Settlement Agreement
will be advanced in the Federal Court.
[53]
More specifically, as already noted, Saskatchewan
agreed in section 20.19 of the PFN Settlement Agreement that “any matter, including a question of interpretation of any
term, covenant, condition or provision” of the PFN Settlement
Agreement and all matters relating to the enforcement of the agreement “shall be within the exclusive jurisdiction of the Federal
Court of Canada”. This provision must be interpreted as an agreement by
Saskatchewan to attorn to the jurisdiction of the Federal Court.
[54]
Issues similar to these were canvassed by the
Supreme Court of Canada in Bank of Montreal v. Attorney General (Quebec),
[1979] 1 S.C.R. 565, 1978 CanLII 173 [Bank of Montreal v. Quebec] where
the Supreme Court held that the Crown is bound by the contracts it concludes
and that the rights and prerogatives of the Crown cannot be invoked to limit or
alter the terms of a contract that is binding on the Crown (see 573-575).
[55]
In the Bank of Montreal v. Quebec case,
the Province of Quebec opened a bank account at the Bank of Montreal and sought
to claim from the Bank the amount of a cheque on which an endorsement had been
forged that the forger caused to be debited from the Province’s account. The Province
learned of the existence of the forgery three and a half years before it gave
the Bank notice of it. The Bank refused to reimburse the Province, relying on provisions
in the Bills of Exchange Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. B-5, which provided for a
one-year period during which notice of the forgery must be given to a bank for
the victim of the forgery to be able to recover the loss from the bank. Quebec argued
that it was immune from the relevant provisions of the Bills of Exchange Act
as the federal legislation did not provide that it was applicable to the Crown
in right of a province.
[56]
The Supreme Court disagreed and found that the
relevant provisions in the Bills of Exchange Act are implied into every
contract between a bank and an account holder. The Court determined that by
opening a bank account Quebec was bound by the provisions of the Bills of
Exchange Act and could not invoke the principle of Crown immunity to avoid
application of the express and implied terms of its contract with the Bank of
Montreal. In result, Quebec’s action against the Bank was dismissed by reason
of its non-compliance with the notice provisions in the Bills of Exchange
Act.
[57]
In a similar fashion, in this case, Saskatchewan
is bound by section 20.19 of the PFN Settlement Agreement, which is a
far clearer case of a contractual provision that operates to prevent
Saskatchewan from invoking the principle of Crown immunity.
[58]
The only way to interpret section 20.19 of the PFN
Settlement Agreement is to find that it means what it unambiguously says,
namely, that all claims for interpretation and enforcement of the PFN Settlement
Agreement are to be brought before the Federal Court.
[59]
Despite the clear wording of this provision, Saskatchewan
argues that the section should be read as meaning that only claims to enforce
the PFN Settlement Agreement against Canada are to be brought before the
Federal Court and that it is only if Canada commences a third party claim and
joins Saskatchewan that Saskatchewan could be brought before the Federal Court
in accordance with section 19 of the FCA. Saskatchewan argues that the
PFN, who were represented by counsel during the negotiation and subsequent
signing of the PFN Settlement Agreement, must have known that Saskatchewan
is not amenable to suit before the Federal Court and, therefore, that section
20.19 of the PFN Settlement Agreement is unenforceable against
Saskatchewan and that the PFN should have appreciated as much when they signed
the agreement.
[60]
This argument cannot stand for several reasons.
In the first place, it does violence to the clear wording of section 20.19 of
the PFN Settlement Agreement. As noted, the provision clearly states
that all claims to interpret and enforce the PFN Settlement Agreement
are to be brought in the Federal Court.
[61]
In the second place, Saskatchewan’s proposed
interpretation leads to an absurdity. Due to the provisions of paragraph 17(3)(b)
of the FCA, claims to interpret and enforce the PFN Settlement
Agreement against Canada must be brought in the Federal Court as the PFN
and the federal Crown have agreed in writing that they will be brought there,
and paragraph 17(3)(b) of the FCA provides the Federal Court exclusive
jurisdiction to adjudicate such claims against Canada, as Saskatchewan
concedes. If Saskatchewan’s interpretation were to be upheld, the absurd result
would follow that the PFN and every First Nation signatory to a similar treaty
land entitlement settlement agreement would need to commence two actions if it felt
that the governments were not respecting their contractual commitments: one in
the Federal Court against Canada and another in the provincial superior court
against the province. Such a result cannot ever have been intended.
[62]
Finally, the PFN argues that accepting
Saskatchewan’s interpretation would be contrary to the Honour of the Crown as
it would allow Saskatchewan to avoid the clear terms of the agreement it signed
with the PFN. In assessing this assertion, it is important to consider whether
the Framework Agreement and the PFN Settlement Agreement are the
types of agreements that contain a “certain measure of
solemnity” sufficient to engage the Honour of the Crown as contemplated
by the majority of the Supreme Court of Canada in Manitoba Metis Federation
Inc. v. Canada (Attorney General), 2013 SCC 14 at para. 71, [2013] 1 S.C.R.
623 [Manitoba Metis]. The majority in that case set out four situations
in which the Honour of the Crown has been applied:
(1) The honour of the Crown gives
rise to a fiduciary duty when the Crown assumes discretionary control over a
specific Aboriginal interest;
(2) The honour of the Crown informs
the purposive interpretation of s. 35 of the Constitution Act, 1982, and
gives rise to a duty to consult when the Crown contemplates an action that will
affect a claimed but as of yet unproven Aboriginal interest;
(3) The honour of the Crown governs
treaty-making and implementation, leading to requirements such as honourable
negotiation and the avoidance of the appearance of sharp dealing; and
(4) The honour of the Crown requires
the Crown to act in a way that accomplishes the intended purposes of treaty and
statutory grants to Aboriginal peoples.
[Manitoba Metis at para. 73;
citations omitted]
[63]
In our view, it is clear that the first three
scenarios set out in Manitoba Metis do not apply as the Framework
Agreement and the PFN Settlement Agreement do not give the Crown
discretionary control over a specific aboriginal interest, do not invoke
constitutional principles such as a purposive interpretation of section 35 of
the Constitution Act, 1982, being Schedule B to the Canada Act 1982
(UK), 1982, c. 11, and do not result from a treaty-making exercise or the
implementation of such an exercise. However, the last scenario set out in Manitoba
Metis may apply. It is important to remind ourselves of the background to
the Framework Agreement and the PFN Settlement Agreement:
•
Certain treaties were entered into between the
Crown and First Nations, (for example, Treaty 4);
•
First Nations claim that there remain
outstanding obligations under the treaties;
•
the NRTA, which is clearly a
constitutional document, provides that a province may be required to transfer
unoccupied Crown land to Canada to satisfy outstanding obligations under the
treaties; and
•
the federal and provincial Crown entered into
the Framework Agreement and the PFN Settlement Agreement in an
effort to resolve these outstanding claims and provide a detailed path forward
in order to do so.
[64]
In these circumstances, a compelling argument
may be made that the Crown must act in a way that “accomplishes
the intended purposes of treaty and statutory grants to Aboriginal peoples”
as set out in Manitoba Metis at paragraph 73. In our view, the Honour of
the Crown is engaged in this matter to the extent that the clear and
unambiguous text of the Framework Agreement and the PFN Settlement
Agreement – which were negotiated in good faith with all parties fully
represented by legal counsel – should be interpreted in a way that abides by
and respects the terms of the Agreements. Saskatchewan should not be
permitted to re-write or re-interpret the terms of the agreement set out in
section 20.19 of the PFN Settlement Agreement.
[65]
Thus, as Saskatchewan is bound by section 20.19
of the PFN Settlement Agreement, it is not immune from suit before the
Federal Court in respect of a claim to which section 20.19 of the PFN
Settlement Agreement applies.
B.
Subject Matter Jurisdiction
[66]
The foregoing determination, however, is not the
end of the inquiry as the Federal Court must also possess subject matter
jurisdiction over the PFN’s claim against Saskatchewan in order for any part of
the action to proceed against it in the Federal Court.
[67]
In ITO-International Terminal Operators Ltd.
v. Miida Electronics, [1986] 1 S.C.R. 752 at 766, 1986 CanLII 91 [ITO],
the Supreme Court of Canada confirmed a three-part test for establishing that
the Federal Court has jurisdiction over a particular matter:
1.
there must be a statutory grant of jurisdiction to
the Federal Court by the federal Parliament;
2.
there must be an existing body of federal law
which is essential to the disposition of the case and which nourishes the
statutory grant of jurisdiction; and
3.
the law on which the case is based must be “a law of Canada” as the phrase is used in section 101
of the Constitution Act, 1867.
[68]
The first part of this test requires the
presence of a federal statute, conferring jurisdiction on the Federal Court over
the subject matter of the litigation. In most instances, this jurisdiction is conferred
by the FCA. The second and the third parts of the test are directed
toward determining whether federal law plays a sufficiently important role in the
case for it to fall within the jurisdiction of the Federal Court. This is required
because the Federal Court has been established under section 101 of the Constitution
Act, 1867 to administer the laws of Canada and so can only
act in respect of such law.
[69]
In Roberts v. Canada, [1989] 1 S.C.R. 322, 1989 CanLII 122 [Roberts],
the Supreme Court of Canada noted that the second and third prongs of the ITO
test are often subsumed in the same inquiry. In that case, the Supreme Court
found that the Federal Court possessed jurisdiction over disputes in relation
to land on an Indian reserve by virtue of both the Indian Act (which
enshrines a regime for such lands) and by virtue of the common law relating to
aboriginal title, which the Supreme Court determined to be part of the federal
common law and a sufficient underpinning in and of itself to satisfy the second
and third prongs of the ITO test. Writing for the Court, Wilson J. stated
on this point (at 340):
I would conclude therefore that “laws of
Canada” are exclusively required for the disposition of this appeal, namely the
relevant provisions of the Indian Act, the act of the federal executive
pursuant to the Indian Act in setting aside the reserve in issue for the
use and occupancy of one or other of the two claimant Bands, and the common law
of aboriginal title which underlies the fiduciary obligations of the Crown to
both Bands. The remaining two elements of the test set out in ITO, supra,
are accordingly satisfied.
[70]
Similar reasoning applies in this case, and the
second and third parts of the ITO test are satisfied because the portions
of the PFN’s action seeking to have the Federal Court interpret and enforce the
PFN Settlement Agreement deal with a treaty land entitlement settlement,
which contemplates the creation of additional reserve lands for the benefit of
members of the PFN. Insofar as the PFN seeks to enforce rights to additional
reserve lands, these portions of the action concern the federal common law and are
also intimately connected with the Indian Act. Under the reasoning in Roberts,
this satisfies the second and third parts of the ITO test.
[71]
Moreover, there are additional federal statues
involved in this case which serve to further nourish any grant of jurisdiction.
In addition to the Indian Act, the Saskatchewan Treaty Land
Entitlement Act and the Claim Settlements (Alberta and Saskatchewan)
Implementation Act are also engaged in this case. This provides a further
basis for concluding that the second and third prongs of the ITO test
are satisfied in respect of the portions of the Statement of Claim that seek to
have the Federal Court interpret and enforce the PFN Settlement Agreement.
Indeed, the nexus to these statutes and the Indian Act is stronger than
the nexus to federal law established in Canadian Transit Company v. Windsor
(Corporation of the City), 2015 FCA 88, 2015 CarswellNat 4835, (leave to
appeal to SCC granted, [2015] S.C.C.A. No. 223) where the constituent statute
of the authority operating the Ambassador Bridge was found to be sufficient to
ground jurisdiction over a claim to declare a municipal by-law invalid.
[72]
We therefore conclude that the second and third
parts of the ITO test are met in this case. Saskatchewan, indeed, does
not strenuously dispute this, but instead concentrates its objection to the
Federal Court’s jurisdiction on the first step of the ITO test and
argues that there is no statutory grant of jurisdiction to the Federal Court in
this case.
[73]
There are two possible statutory grants of jurisdiction
to the Federal Court in the present matter which could be argued to meet the
first step of the ITO test, namely, either paragraph 17(3)(b) of
the FCA or the federal legislation passed to give effect to the Framework
Agreement and PFN Settlement Agreement – the Saskatchewan Treaty
Land Entitlement Act and the Claim Settlements (Alberta and
Saskatchewan) Implementation Act.
[74]
We agree with Saskatchewan that the latter two
pieces of legislation do not constitute a statutory grant of jurisdiction to
the Federal Court sufficient to meet the first step of the ITO test as
neither statute speaks to the issue.
[75]
The only possible basis for finding a grant of
jurisdiction to the Federal Court in these two statutes would be if they could
be viewed as incorporating the attornment clauses in section 20.19 of the PFN
Settlement Agreement or 20.20 of the Framework Agreement. However,
as Pelletier J. (as he then was) held in Thomas v. Peace Hills Trust Co.,
2001 FCT 443, 204 F.T.R. 274 [Peace Hills Trust], the entirety of the Framework
Agreement (and by extension the PFN Settlement Agreement) cannot be
said to be incorporated into the statutes as neither statute contains any
provision for incorporation of the entirety of the Agreements. Indeed,
as noted in Peace Hills Trust, the fact that the Saskatchewan Treaty
Land Entitlement Act specifically states that it incorporates the
provisions in the Framework Agreement dealing with riparian
rights leads to the conclusion that the rest of the agreement is not to be
viewed as being incorporated into that Act. Thus, neither the Saskatchewan
Treaty Land Entitlement Act nor the Claim Settlements (Alberta and
Saskatchewan) Implementation Act can be viewed as incorporating the
attornment clause, which is the only provision in the Agreements that
deals with the Federal Court’s jurisdiction. We thus conclude that the Saskatchewan
Treaty Land Entitlement Act and the Claim Settlements (Alberta and
Saskatchewan) Implementation Act do not satisfy the first step of the ITO
test.
[76]
Turning to the FCA, it is useful to reproduce
subsection 17(3), which provides:
17. (3) The Federal Court has exclusive original jurisdiction to
hear and determine the following matters:
|
17. (3) Elle a compétence exclusive, en première instance, pour
les questions suivantes :
|
(a) the amount to be paid if the Crown and any person have agreed
in writing that the Crown or that person shall pay an amount to be determined
by the Federal Court, the Federal Court — Trial Division or the Exchequer
Court of Canada; and
|
a) le paiement d’une somme dont le montant est à déterminer, aux
termes d’une convention écrite à laquelle la Couronne est partie, par la Cour
fédérale — ou l’ancienne Cour de l’Échiquier du Canada — ou par la Section de
première instance de la Cour fédérale;
|
(b) any question of law, fact or mixed law and fact that the Crown
and any person have agreed in writing shall be determined by the Federal
Court, the Federal Court — Trial Division or the Exchequer Court of Canada.
|
b) toute question de droit, de fait ou mixte à trancher, aux
termes d’une convention écrite à laquelle la Couronne est partie, par la Cour
fédérale — ou l’ancienne Cour de l’Échiquier du Canada — ou par la Section de
première instance de la Cour fédérale.
|
[77]
There have been relatively few cases decided
under paragraph 17(3)(b) of the FCA. It was discussed in Peace
Hills Trust, but the comments made about the paragraph in that case are
non-binding as the case involved a claim against a party who was not a signatory
to the Framework Agreement nor to any other agreement that purported to
confer jurisdiction on the Federal Court. In that case, Pelletier J. noted that
“the effect of subsection 17(3) is not to expand the
Federal Court’s jurisdiction but to oust the jurisdiction of the provincial
Superior Court” (at para. 28). With respect, we disagree as the
legislative history of the provision makes it clear that subsection 17(3) of
the FCA is attributive of jurisdiction.
[78]
In this regard, prior to February 1, 1992, the
Federal Court had exclusive jurisdiction over claims against the federal
Crown; subsections 17(1) and 17(2) of the FCA then stated:
17. (1) The Trial Division has original jurisdiction in all cases
where relief is claimed against the Crown and, except where otherwise
provided, the Trial Division has exclusive original jurisdiction
in all of those cases.
|
17. (1) La Section de première instance connaît, en première
instance, de tous les cas de demande de réparation contre la Couronne et,
sauf disposition contraire, cette compétence est exclusive.
|
(2) Without restricting the generality of subsection (1), the
Trial Division has exclusive original jurisdiction, except where
otherwise provided, in all cases in which
|
(2) La Section de première instance a notamment compétence
exclusive en première instance, sauf disposition contraire, dans les cas
de demande motivés par :
|
(a) the land, goods or money of any person is in the possession of
the Crown;
|
a) la possession par la Couronne de terres, biens ou sommes
d’argent appartenant à autrui;
|
(b) the claim arises out of a contract entered into by or on
behalf of the Crown; or
|
b) un contrat conclu par ou pour la Couronne;
|
(c) there is a claim against the Crown for injurious affection.
|
c) un trouble de jouissance dont la Couronne se rend coupable.
|
[Emphasis added]
|
[soulignements de la Cour]
|
[79]
However, the FCA then contained identical
provisions in paragraphs 17(3)(a) and (b). Indeed, what are now
paragraphs 17(3) (a) and (b) of the FCA have provided the
Federal Court with exclusive jurisdiction since the inception of the Court in
1970. The wording of subsections 17(1) and 17(2) was amended in 1990 to provide
the Federal Court with jurisdiction concurrent to that of the provincial
superior courts. However, the exclusive jurisdiction conferred by paragraph
17(3) (a) and (b) remained intact.
[80]
For paragraphs 17(3)(a) and (b) of
the FCA to have had meaning before February 1, 1992, they had to have meant
that parties could confer jurisdiction on the Court in addition to the
exclusive jurisdiction it already possessed to adjudicate claims against the federal
Crown. There is no reason to interpret the paragraphs any differently now.
[81]
We thus conclude that paragraph 17(3)(b)
of the FCA does not operate only to oust the jurisdiction of the
provincial superior courts in cases where there is concurrent jurisdiction but,
rather, must also be interpreted as both conferring jurisdiction upon the Federal
Court and ousting provincial jurisdiction in situations where the federal Crown
and the other parties to the action or application have agreed in writing that
the issue will be brought before the Federal Court for determination.
[82]
Paragraph 17(3)(a) of the FCA,
which is the parallel provision to 17(3)(b), has been applied to set
rents payable under leases involving Canada or a federal Crown agent where the parties
have agreed in writing to refer the matter to the Federal Court for
determination: Turberfield v. Canada, 2012 FCA 170, 2012 CarswellNat
2032; Certification order of January 23, 2013 rendered in Schnurr et al. v.
Canada (unreported, docket T-2193-09); Canada v. Crosson, 169 F.T.R.
218, 1999 CanLII 8350 at paras. 15, 31-33; Bosa v. Canada (Attorney General),
2013 FC 793 at para. 7, 230 A.C.W.S. (3d) 425; Irving Refining Ltd. v.
Canada (National Harbours Board), [1976] 2 F.C. 415, 1976 CarswellNat 34 at
para. 5 (T.D). We see no reason why written agreements should not be similarly
effective under paragraph 17(3)(b) of the FCA to place issues
meeting the subject matter jurisdiction of the Federal Court before the Court
for settlement.
[83]
We therefore conclude that paragraph 17(3)(b)
of the FCA is attributive of jurisdiction and meets the first
step of the ITO test in that it affords jurisdiction to the Federal
Court to hear and determine any matter of fact, law or mixed fact and law that
the federal Crown and another party have agreed in writing would be referred to
the Federal Court for determination, provided the subject matter of the
agreement also meets the second two steps of the ITO test. Thus,
to be effective in placing a matter before the Federal Court under paragraph
17(3)(b) of the FCA, an agreement must concern a law of Canada,
within the meaning of section 101 of the Constitution Act, 1867, and
there must also be a body of federal law which is essential to the disposition
of the case and which nourishes the statutory grant of jurisdiction.
[84]
As the last two steps of the ITO test are
met in this case, it follows that the attornment clause is sufficient to ground
jurisdiction in the Federal Court to interpret and enforce the PFN
Settlement Agreement.
[85]
Saskatchewan argues that paragraph 17(3)(b)
of the FCA ought not be interpreted in this way as parties cannot confer
jurisdiction on a court by agreement, relying principally on Canadian
National Railway v. Canada (Canadian Transport Commission), [1988] 2 F.C.
437, 1987 CarswellNat 226 (T.D.) [CNR] and Greeley in support of
this proposition. While we agree with Saskatchewan that parties cannot confer
jurisdiction on a court by agreement unless the court’s constituent legislation
provides otherwise, that is not what occurs when paragraph 17(3)(b) of
the FCA is successfully invoked. Rather, where paragraph 17(3)(b)
of the FCA applies, jurisdiction is grounded in the statutory provision
and not purely conferred by agreement. Moreover, the CNR and Greeley
cases are of no assistance to Saskatchewan as neither involved an agreement
with the federal Crown in which the parties agreed to submit matters to the
jurisdiction of the Federal Court. These cases are therefore readily
distinguishable.
[86]
Saskatchewan also relies on the recent decision
of this Court in Toney in support of its objection to the Federal
Court’s jurisdiction. There, the majority read section 22 of the FCA
narrowly and determined that the grant of jurisdiction in matters of navigation
and shipping “between subject and subject as well as
otherwise” did not extend to the Crown in right of a province, due to
the lack of specificity in the FCA to bind the Crown in right of a
province in matters of navigation and shipping. The Court thus found that the
principles of Crown immunity prevented section 22 from applying to the Crown in
right of Alberta. In our view, this case is likewise of no assistance to
Saskatchewan because the case did not concern paragraph 17(3)(b) of the FCA
and Alberta had not signed an attornment agreement similar to Article 20.19 of
the PFN Settlement Agreement. Toney is thus likewise readily
distinguishable.
[87]
After this case was taken under reserve, counsel
for Saskatchewan wrote to the Court to make additional submissions based on the
recent decision of the Saskatchewan Court of Appeal in Saskatchewan v.
Saskatchewan Government and General Employees Union, 2016 SKCA 56 [Saskatchewan
v. SGEU], which, he argued, stands for the proposition that negotiated
agreements cannot dictate the interpretation of a statute. We believe that
counsel ought not have made these additional submissions without permission of
the Court, but, despite this, have decided to address the substance of
counsel’s submissions.
[88]
We disagree that Saskatchewan v. SGEU stands
for the proposition advanced as the case involved the assessment of the
reasonableness of an arbitrator’s decision that declined to give effect to the
terms in a collective agreement that conflicted with statutory provisions. However,
even if Saskatchewan v. SGEU could be viewed as standing for the
proposition that negotiated agreements cannot dictate the interpretation of a
statute, such proposition is irrelevant to the present case, which turns on the
effect to be given to a negotiated attornment agreement in light of the correct
interpretation of the FCA. For the reasons set out above, we believe
that the combined effect of the attornment clause in the PFN Settlement
Agreement and paragraph 17(3)(b) of the FCA is to provide the
Federal Court with exclusive jurisdiction over the portions of the PFN’s claim
which ask the Court to interpret and enforce the PFN Settlement Agreement.
We therefore conclude that the appellant’s appeal fails with respect to the
portions of the PFN’s claim which ask the Court to interpret and enforce the PFN
Settlement Agreement.
[89]
However, the Federal Court does not possess
jurisdiction over the portion of the claim as it is currently pleaded that is
set out in paragraphs 41 to 56 of the Statement of Claim and that alleges a
breach by Saskatchewan of its duty to consult prior to awarding mineral rights
to third parties in connection with the Legacy Mining Project. This claim is
distinct from the claims that relate to the PFN Settlement Agreement,
and the attornment clause in section 20.19 of the PFN Settlement
Agreement is inapplicable to it. There is accordingly no basis for Federal
Court jurisdiction over this duty to consult claim advanced against
Saskatchewan as the latter has not attorned to the jurisdiction of the Court in
respect of it. Paragraph 17(3)(b) of the FCA is also inapplicable
to this duty to consult claim, which, as currently pleaded, arises outside the PFN
Settlement Agreement. There is thus no basis for the Federal Court’s
jurisdiction over this portion of the PFN’s claim, and under the case law
relied upon by Saskatchewan (referred to in paragraph 50, above), this portion
of the claim must be struck as the allegation made in paragraphs 41 to 56 of
the Statement of Claim are unrelated to the PFN Settlement Agreement.
VI.
Conclusion and Proposed Disposition
[90]
We would therefore strike paragraphs 41 to 56 of
the Statement of Claim, with leave to amend them to clarify how the grant of
mineral rights to third parties in connection with the Legacy Mining Project
constitutes a breach of the PFN Settlement Agreement. We would
also strike paragraph 1, with leave to amend, as the claims in the prayer for
relief that are within the Federal Court’s jurisdiction are intertwined with
those that are not. The easiest course is therefore to strike the paragraph and
provide the PFN with the opportunity to amend the prayer for relief so it seeks
the remedies flowing from the interpretation and enforcement of the PFN
Settlement Agreement against Saskatchewan and Canada and seeks the balance
of the remedies against only Canada.
[91]
We realize that the potential bifurcation of the
claim against Saskatchewan may not be the preferred manner for the PFN to
advance its various claims, but believe this is what section 20.19 of the PFN
Settlement Agreement requires. Moreover, the claims to interpret and
enforce the PFN Settlement Agreement and for breach of an unrelated duty
to consult are conceptually distinct and can therefore be litigated separately.
If this is believed to be too cumbersome, it would be open to the parties, in
accordance with section 20.11 of the PFN Settlement Agreement, to sign
an amending agreement to confer jurisdiction over the entire dispute on the
Court of Queen’s Bench in Saskatchewan.
[92]
Finally, we wish to comment on the practical
issue raised by Saskatchewan relating to the fact that other claims similar to the
PFN’s have come before the Court of Queen’s Bench in Saskatchewan, which we
have concluded does not possess jurisdiction over them: see, for example Chief
Austin Bear v. Government of Saskatchewan, 2010 SKQB 342, 2010 CarswellSask
617 [Bear 2010]; Bear v. Saskatchewan, 2012 SKQB 232, 2012
CarswellSask 398; One Arrow First Nation v. Saskatchewan, [2000] 1 C.N.L.R.
162, 1999 CanLII 12857 (SK Q.B.). It appears that the jurisdictional point was
not argued in these cases so they provide no precedent on the issue. Interestingly,
however, the Saskatchewan Court of Queen’s Bench in Bear 2010 observed
in passing that the attornment clause agreed upon in the Muskoday Settlement
Agreement, which is identical to section 20.19 of the PFN Settlement
Agreement, could be an impediment to the Muskoday First Nation’s action
before the Court of Queen’s Bench if Canada remained as a party to the action.
[93]
It may well be open to the parties in the cases
that are proceeding before the Saskatchewan courts to treat the pleadings as an
agreement to amend the attornment clause, necessitated by virtue of
circumstances, and to be an agreement within the scope of section 21.01 of the Framework
Agreement (or other like provision in a later settlement agreement, if
applicable) that was required in good faith to fulfill the spirit and intent of
the agreement. Were this possible, this other litigation could continue to
proceed before the Saskatchewan courts. That, however, is not a matter for this
Court to rule on and is rather a matter for the Saskatchewan courts to decide.
[94]
Success in this matter being divided, we would
propose that each party bear its own costs of this appeal and in the Federal
Court.
"D. G. Near"
"Mary J.L. Gleason"
PELLETIER
J.A. (Concurring Reasons)
[95]
I agree with the disposition of this appeal
proposed by my colleagues. However, I believe that there is a line of reasoning
which supports my colleagues’ conclusion as to the effect of paragraph 17(3)(b)
of the Federal Courts Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. F-7 [the FCA] but
which is also capable of supporting Federal Court jurisdiction on a stand-alone
basis if, for whatever reason, the argument as to paragraph 17(3)(b)
should be found wanting.
[96]
Like my colleagues, I agree that Saskatchewan’s
argument as to Crown immunity must fail. For the purposes of this discussion,
Crown immunity deals with whether the Crown is bound by legislation of general
application. But, in this case, the source of the Crown’s obligation is
contractual, not legislative. The Supreme Court has made it clear that Crown
immunity has no application to the Crown’s contractual obligations:
The rules respecting the liability of the
Crown therefore differ depending on whether the source of the obligation is
contractual or legislative. The Crown is bound by a contractual obligation in
the same manner as an individual, whereas as a general rule it is not bound by
an obligation resulting from the law alone unless it is mentioned in it. This
also means that subject possibly to a limited number of exceptions which would
not apply here in any event, the rights and prerogatives of the Crown cannot be
invoked to limit or alter the terms of a contract, which comprises not only
what is expressly provided in it but also everything that normally results from
it according to usage or the law.
[Bank of
Montreal v. Attorney General (Quebec), [1979] 1 S.C.R. 565 at 574, 1978
CanLII 173]
[97]
As a result, Saskatchewan cannot claim Crown
immunity in respect of its contractual obligation under the PFN Settlement
Agreement. Of course, the fact that Saskatchewan is not immune from suit
does not mean that the Federal Court therefore has jurisdiction over it.
[98]
The contractual term which gives rise to the
issue of jurisdiction is Article 20.19 of the PFN Settlement Agreement,
reproduced below for ease of reference:
Notwithstanding Article 19, save and except
for those questions to which arbitration has been agreed to in section 19.02,
in the event the parties concerned are unable to agree on any matter, including
a question of interpretation of any term, covenant, condition or provision of
this Agreement, the determination of any such disagreement and the enforcement
thereof, shall be within the exclusive jurisdiction of the Federal Court of
Canada.
Article 19 deals with arbitration and Article
19.02 identifies the matters which are to be resolved by arbitration.
[99]
It may be useful to begin with a discussion of those
matters which cannot be the subject of exclusive Federal Court jurisdiction
pursuant to Article 20.19. It can be said with some confidence that allegations
and claims for relief in the Statement of Claim which are unrelated to the
interpretation or enforcement of the PFN Settlement Agreement are
outside the scope of Article 20.19. Pasqua First Nation cannot rely on Article
20.19 to compel either Canada or Saskatchewan to litigate matters which do not
arise out of the agreement in the Federal Court.
[100] The Statement of Claim is 68 paragraphs long and, while it pleads
the terms of the PFN Settlement Agreement, it also contains some
allegations which do not appear to arise out of the agreement. Saskatchewan
says, at paragraph 20 of its memorandum of fact and law, that Pasqua First
Nation seeks “declarations of constitutional rights and
obligations that exist outside the Agreement’s terms”. Assuming Saskatchewan’s
characterization to be correct, any such claims or allegations would not be
subject to Article 20.19. My colleagues point out that the pleadings with
respect to the Legacy Mining Project fall into this category. I agree with them
and I agree with their proposed disposition of those pleadings.
[101] That said, the fact that specific allegations go beyond the scope of
Article 20.19 does not mean that the whole claim is therefore tainted. This
brings us back to the issue of whether the Federal Court has jurisdiction over
this claim, which in turn, brings us back to Article 20.19.
[102] Saskatchewan’s principal argument is that it is not bound by Article
20.19 because the Federal Court does not have jurisdiction over it in the
absence of a specific statutory grant of such jurisdiction. In making this
argument, Saskatchewan invokes the first branch of the three-part test for
Federal Court jurisdiction set out in ITO-International Terminal Operators
Ltd. v. Miida Electronics Inc., [1986] 1 S.C.R. 752 at 766, 1986 CanLII 91 [ITO]:
1. There must be a statutory grant of
jurisdiction by the federal Parliament.
2. There must be an existing body of federal law which is essential
to the disposition of the case and which nourishes the statutory grant of
jurisdiction.
3. The law on which the case is based must be “a law of Canada” as
the phrase is used in s. 101 of the Constitution Act, 1867.
[103] It is important to be clear about the defect in jurisdiction which
is being alleged. My colleagues, relying on Roberts v. Canada, [1989] 1
S.C.R. 322, 1989 CanLII 122 [Roberts]
have concluded that the second and third branches of the ITO test are
satisfied. I agree with their analysis. Furthermore, it appears to me that Roberts
is a full answer to Saskatchewan’s plea that no law of Canada underlies Pasqua
First Nation’s claim:
I would conclude
therefore that “laws of Canada” are exclusively required for the disposition of
this appeal, namely the relevant provisions of the Indian Act, the act
of the federal executive pursuant to the Indian Act in setting aside the
reserve in issue for the use and occupancy of one or other of the two claimant
Bands, and the common law of aboriginal title which underlies the fiduciary
obligations of the Crown to both Bands. The remaining two elements of the
test set out in ITO, supra, are accordingly satisfied.
[Roberts at 340; emphasis added]
[104] While the issue here is not the same as it was in Roberts, it
rests upon the same laws of Canada.
[105] That leaves the first branch of the test to be satisfied.
[106] As between the Pasqua First Nation and Canada, the statutory grant
of jurisdiction can be found in either sub-section 17(1) of the FCA since
the action is one in which “relief is claimed against
the Crown” or in paragraph 17(2)(b) as a claim arising “out of a contract entered into by or on behalf of the Crown”.
[107] As a result, the Federal Court has jurisdiction over Canada and over
the subject matter of the litigation, whether it be considered from the point
of view of substantive law, the Crown’s obligations to aboriginal peoples, or
from the point of view of the enforcement of a contract made by the Crown. On
the other hand, Saskatchewan argues that the Federal Court lacks subject matter
jurisdiction over Saskatchewan Crown lands. This, I believe, misses the point.
Saskatchewan received those lands subject to the reservation that they would be
re-conveyed to the federal Crown if they were required to satisfy the federal
Crown’s treaty obligations, a condition to which Saskatchewan agreed. This
agreement underpins Saskatchewan’s obligations under the PFN Settlement
Agreement, which obligations arise from and give effect to federal common
law and to the Indian Act relating to Indian lands, as well as to the Saskatchewan
Treaty Land Entitlement Act, S.C. 1993, c. 11 and the Claim Settlements
(Alberta and Saskatchewan) Implementation Act, S.C. 2002, c. 3. As a
result, the Federal Court has subject matter jurisdiction, as regards
Saskatchewan Crown lands, to the extent provided in the PFN Settlement
Agreement.
[108] This leaves the issue of jurisdiction over the person which, once
again, brings us back to Article 20.19. Saskatchewan refers to this provision
as an attornment clause but for private international law purposes, I believe
that it would be characterized as a choice of forum or forum selection clause.
Notwithstanding the difference in characterization, a forum selection clause
must necessarily imply that the parties will submit to, or attorn to, the
jurisdiction of the agreed-upon forum, otherwise the clause would serve no useful
purpose.
[109] Saskatchewan seeks to undo its attornment to the jurisdiction of the
Federal Court by arguing that jurisdiction cannot be created by consent. It
cites a number of cases in support of that proposition: Hupacasath First
Nation v. Canada (Minister of Foreign Affairs), 2015 FCA 4 at para. 38,
[2015] F.C.J. No. 4; Merck Frosst Canada Inc. v. Canada, [1997] 2 F.C.
561, [1997] F.C.J. No. 149 at para. 10; Armeco Construction Ltd. v. Canada,
94 F.T.R. 314, [1995] F.C.J. No. 473 (T.D.)(Q.L.), at paragraph 25, affd103
F.T.R. 240, [1995] F.C.J. No. 1561 (C.A.)(QL); Canadian National Railway Co.
v. Canada (Canadian Transport Commission), [1988] 2 F.C. 437 at 449, 1987
CarswellNat 226. To the extent that these cases stand for the proposition that
(a) an agreement among counsel as to a point of law does not bind the Court, or
(b) subject matter jurisdiction cannot be created by consent, I have no quarrel
with them. However, none of these cases stand for the proposition that
jurisdiction over the person cannot arise by agreement.
[110] The Supreme Court has held that choice of forum clauses should be
given effect, unless there is “strong cause” for
not doing so: Z.I. Pompey Industrie v. ECU-Line N.V., 2003 SCC 27,
[2003] 1 S.C.R. 450 [Z.I. Pompey]. While the issue in Z.I. Pompey
was the test to be applied with respect to an application for a stay of a
proceeding in the Federal Court on the basis that the parties had chosen
another forum in their contract (in that case, a bill of lading), the Court’s
comments with respect to choice of forum or forum selection clauses are of
general application:
Forum selection clauses are common
components of international commercial transactions, and are particularly
common in bills of lading. They have, in short, "been applied for ages in
the industry and by the courts": Décary J.A. in Jian Sheng, supra,
at para. 7. These clauses are generally to be encouraged by the courts as they
create certainty and security in transaction, derivatives of order and
fairness, which are critical components of private international law: La Forest
J. in Morguard Investments Ltd. v. De Savoye, [1990] 3 S.C.R. 1077, at
pp. 1096-97; Holt Cargo Systems Inc. v. ABC Containerline N.V. (Trustees of),
[2001] 3 S.C.R. 907, 2001 SCC 90, at paras. 71-72. … In the context of
international commerce, order and fairness have been achieved at least in part
by application of the "strong cause" test. This test rightly imposes
the burden on the plaintiff to satisfy the court that there is good reason it
should not be bound by the forum selection clause. It is essential that
courts give full weight to the desirability of holding contracting parties to
their agreements. There is no reason to consider forum selection clauses to
be non-responsibility clauses in disguise.
[Z.I. Pompey at para. 20; emphasis
added]
[111] Everything that the Supreme Court said about the need to give full
effect to forum selection clauses applies equally to the implied agreement to
attorn to the jurisdiction of the agreed-upon forum.
[112] In order to place the Supreme Court’s decision in context, it is
necessary to consider its earlier decision in Morguard Investments Ltd. v.
De Savoye, [1990] 3 S.C.R. 1077, [1990] S.C.J. No. 135 [Morguard],
in which the Court modified the principles of private international law by
articulating a principled basis for the enforcement of provincial superior
court judgments from one province to another. The Court’s reasoning rested on
considerations as to the nature of Canada as a federal state and the need for
order and fairness to ensure security of transactions:
… see Hessel E. Yntema, “The Objectives of
Private International Law” (1957), 35 Can. Bar Rev. 721, at p. 741. As is
evident throughout his article, what must underlie a modern system of private
international law are principles of order and fairness, principles that ensure
security of transactions with justice.…
… I referred earlier to the principles of
order and fairness that should obtain in this area of the law. Both order and
justice militate in favour of the security of transactions.
[Morguard at 1097, 1102]
[113] The principles of order and fairness were raised to the level of
constitutional imperatives in Hunt v. T&N plc, [1993] 4 S.C.R. 289
at para. 56, [1993] S.C.J. No. 125. I take this to mean that in the application
of principles derived from private international law in the context of the
Canadian federation, Courts should give “full faith and
credit” to the judgments of courts of other Canadian jurisdictions.
[114] Within that context, the Federal Court occupies a special position
among Canadian superior courts as a statutory court. But, as was pointed out in
Canada (Human Rights Commission) v. Canadian Liberty Net, [1998] 1
S.C.R. 626, [1998] S.C.J. No. 31 at para. 34 [Canadian Liberty Net]:
But in my view, there is nothing in this
articulation of the essentially remedial concept of inherent jurisdiction which
in any way can be used to justify a narrow, rather than a fair and liberal,
interpretation of federal statutes granting jurisdiction to the Federal Court.
The legitimate proposition that the institutional and constitutional position
of provincial superior courts warrants the grant to them of a residual
jurisdiction over all federal matters where there is a "gap" in
statutory grants of jurisdiction is entirely different from the proposition
that federal statutes should be read to find "gaps" unless the words
of the statute explicitly close them.
[115] This admonition is relevant to the search for a statutory basis for
the Federal Court’s jurisdiction against Saskatchewan. It authorizes a “fair and liberal” reading of paragraph 17(3)(b)
so that the Federal Court is enabled to assert the jurisdiction over
Saskatchewan which the latter has contractually ceded. Failing that, it
militates against a restrictive reading of the jurisprudence relating to
Federal Court jurisdiction as, for example, in the case of choice of forum
clauses or, for that matter, the ITO test itself.
[116] In this context, the Supreme Court’s decision in Z. I. Pompey
goes a long way towards resolving the issue in this matter. There, the Supreme
Court held that the Federal Court ought to have granted a stay of proceedings
pending in that court on the basis of a choice of forum clause in which the
parties agreed to litigate their differences in the courts of Antwerp. While Z.I.
Pompey was a maritime case where the Federal Court enjoys a robust
jurisdiction by virtue of section 22 of the FCA, the principles
articulated in that case are, as noted above, of general application: see, for
example, Momentous.ca Corp. v. Canadian American Association of Professional
Baseball Ltd., 2012 SCC 9 at para. 9, [2012] 1 S.C.R. 359; Microcell
Communications Inc. v. Frey, 2011 SKCA 136 at paras. 108-109, [2011] S.J.
No. 708; Expedition Helicopters Inc. v. Honeywell Inc., 2010 ONCA 351,
100 O.R. (3d) 241.
[117] The same considerations which prompted the Supreme Court in Z.I.
Pompey to hold that the Federal Court should give effect to choice of forum
clauses when those clauses favour foreign courts must surely apply when those
clauses favour the Federal Court, providing that the Federal Court has
jurisdiction over the subject matter of the dispute.
[118] It appears to me to be contrary to the principles of order and
fairness, as well as to security of transactions, to hold that the Federal
Court does not have jurisdiction over a party who has attorned to its
jurisdiction unless one can find a specific statutory grant of the power to
give effect to choice of forum clauses. My colleagues have shown that paragraph
17(3)(b) is that specific statutory grant. But even if it were to be
found that paragraph 17(3)(b) does not have the effect that my
colleagues attribute to it, I remain persuaded that once it is shown that the
Federal Court enjoys a statutory grant of jurisdiction over the subject matter,
the principles of order and fairness require that effect be given to Article
20.19 as a source of jurisdiction over the person, subject to any arguments as
to the Federal Court being forum non conveniens.
[119] These considerations should dominate any consideration of choice of
forum clauses as between provincial and federal governments and First Nations.
Where there is a basis for Federal Court jurisdiction as between a First Nation
and the federal Crown, it does not offend the established constitutional order
to give effect to a province’s voluntary undertaking to submit to the Federal
Court’s jurisdiction with respect to the interpretation and enforcement of an
agreement to which all three have subscribed. On the contrary, giving effect to
a province’s attornment to the jurisdiction of the Federal Court, is, if
nothing else, an honourable way of respecting the province’s undertaking to the
First Nation to submit to Federal Court jurisdiction, allowing the latter to
rely on the terms of such a tri-partite agreement, a form of security of
transactions. Any overreaching by the Federal Court is constrained by the terms
of the agreement and, if necessary, by the final review by the Supreme Court of
Canada, which can determine if the Federal Court has overstepped its
constitutional limitations: see Canadian Liberty Net at para. 40.
[120] I would conclude by pointing out that attornment or choice of forum
clauses in treaty land entitlement cases are always subject to challenge on
grounds of forum non conveniens if the claim advanced exceeds the
contractual framework or the pleadings raise issues which cannot be adjudicated
by the Federal Court. Given my finding that the Federal Court has jurisdiction,
it may be that any pleadings which would otherwise have supported a plea of forum
non conveniens, apart from the pleadings with respect to the Legacy Mining
Project and the prayer for relief, must now be dealt with by a motion to strike
them on the basis that they are outside the jurisdiction conferred by Article
20.19. I leave this to be dealt with when it arises.
[121] I conclude that the Federal Court can and should give effect to
Saskatchewan’s attornment to its jurisdiction with respect to the
interpretation and enforcement of the PFN Settlement Agreement. I would
therefore allow the appeal on the terms proposed by my colleagues.
"J.D. Denis Pelletier"