Docket: T-1946-10
Citation: 2012 FC 204
Ottawa, Ontario, February 10,
2012
PRESENT: The Honourable Madam Justice Mactavish
BETWEEN:
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SAMBAA K'E DENE BAND and
NAHANNI BUTTE DENE BAND
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Applicants
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and
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JOHN DUNCAN, MINISTER OF
INDIAN AFFAIRS AND NORTHERN
DEVELOPMENT, GOVERNMENT OF THE NORTHWEST
TERRITORIES, and
ACHO DENE KOE FIRST NATION
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Respondents
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND
JUDGMENT
[1]
The
Sambaa K’e Dene Band [“SKDB”], the Nahanni Butte Dene Band [“NBDB”] and the
Acho Dene Koe First Nation [“ADKFN”] have overlapping claims to land in the
south-western corner of the Northwest Territories [“NWT”].
[2]
The
SKDB and NBDB seek judicial review of a decision of the Minister of Indian
Affairs and Northern Development [“Canada” or “the Minister”] postponing
consultations with them until such time as an agreement in principle is reached
with the ADKFN in relation to the ongoing comprehensive land claims
negotiations between Canada and the ADKFN. The SKDB and the NBDB have
also named the Government of the Northwest Territories [“GNWT”] and
the ADKFN as respondents in this application.
[3]
The
SKDB and NBDB say that by delaying consultation with them until after an agreement
in principle is entered into between Canada and the ADKFN, Canada has failed
to comply with its legal and constitutional duty to consult with and properly
accommodate the SKDB and the NBDB
[4]
For
the reasons that follow, I have concluded that Canada had a duty
to consult with the SKDB and the NBDB in a timely and meaningful fashion, and
that it has breached that duty. As a consequence, the application for judicial
review will be granted.
The Relationship between the SKDB, NBDB
and ADKFN
[5]
The members of
the SKDB, NBDB and ADKFN are Aboriginal peoples within the meaning of section
35(1) of the Constitution Act, 1982, being Schedule B to the Canada Act
1982 (UK), 1982, c. 11, and all are parties to Treaty 11, which was signed on
June 27, 1921.
[6]
Treaty
11 purported to surrender vast tracts of Aboriginal lands to the Crown. These
lands are described generally in the Report of the Commissioner accompanying
the Treaty as being “north of the 60th parallel, along the Mackenzie
river and the Arctic ocean”.
[7]
In
exchange for this surrender, the Crown made a number of commitments to the Aboriginal
peoples. In particular, the Crown undertook to set aside a specific quantum of
reserve lands. According to the Report of the Commissioner, when the Aboriginal
peoples expressed the concern that they would be confined to the reserves, they
were assured that the reserve lands were to be “of their own choosing, for
their own use”, and that they would be free to come and go at will. However,
the promised reserves were never established.
[8]
Treaty
11 further provided for the preservation of the right of the Aboriginal peoples
to trap, hunt and fish within the Treaty boundaries. The parties agree that the
SKDB and NBDB continue to enjoy these Treaty rights. There is, however, a
disagreement between the First Nations and Canada as to whether
Treaty 11 extinguished Aboriginal title to the lands in question, and as to the
effect of the Treaty on other Aboriginal rights such as governance.
[9]
The
SKDB, NBDB and ADKFN all continue to assert Aboriginal title over their
respective traditional lands, whereas Canada’s position is that
Treaty 11 extinguished the First Nations’ Aboriginal title.
[10]
The
SKDB, NBDB and ADKFN each have traditional lands in the south-western corner of
the NWT, a region known as “the Dehcho” (previously known as the “Deh Cho”).
However, two-thirds of the lands claimed by the ADKFN as their traditional
lands are located in the Yukon and British Columbia, whereas the
majority of the lands claimed by the SKDB and the NBDB are located in the NWT.
[11]
There
is also a dispute between the ADKFN on the one hand, and the SKDB and the NBDB
on the other, as to the boundaries of each of their traditional lands, and
whether each First Nation enjoyed exclusive use of these lands.
The Comprehensive Land Claims Process
[12]
Once
Canada agrees to
negotiate a comprehensive land claim asserted by an Aboriginal people, the
process begins with the parties signing a “framework agreement” which
delineates the process to be followed in the negotiations.
[13]
Assuming
that the initial negotiations reveal sufficient common ground, the parties will
then sign an “agreement in principle” outlining the essential points of
agreement. An agreement in principle is not legally binding, and terms in an
agreement in principle can be the subject of further negotiation.
[14]
Once
agreement is reached on all of the outstanding issues, a final agreement is
prepared, which may include agreements with respect to matters such as land
ownership, financial benefits, governance issues and land overlaps. Should the
final agreement be ratified by all of the parties, it becomes constitutionally
protected, and is recognized as a Treaty under section 35 of the Constitution
Act, 1982.
The Dehcho Process
[15]
The
Dehcho First Nations filed a comprehensive land claim which was accepted for negotiation by Canada in 1998. The
SKDB, NBDB and ADKFN were all part of this process.
[16]
In
or about 1999, Canada entered into comprehensive land claims settlement
negotiations with the Dehcho Tribal Council, in accordance with the provisions
of the “Deh Cho Framework Agreement”. These negotiations are ongoing, and are
known as the “Dehcho Process”. The Dehcho Process relates only to lands in the
NWT.
[17]
Because the ADKFN claimed
that two-thirds of its traditional territory was outside of the NWT, it had
originally requested that Canada establish a separate comprehensive land
claims process to cover lands claimed by it in the NWT, Yukon and British
Columbia.
In a March, 1999, response, Canada advised the ADKFN that it was not willing to undertake
community-by-community negotiations. Consequently, while the ADKFN initially
participated in the Dehcho Process, it did, however, reiterate its concerns from
time to time with respect to the inability of the Dehcho Process to resolve all
of its outstanding issues.
[18]
Amongst other
things, the Deh Cho Framework Agreement provided that the Dehcho Process
negotiations would not be confidential. It also identified the reaching of an
agreement with respect to the use, management and conservation of land, water
and other resources as one of its objectives.
[19]
The
Deh Cho Framework Agreement further committed the parties to “explore options
and identify processes for addressing transboundary issues in respect of the Dehcho
territory located outside the Northwest Territories”.
[20]
The
Dehcho Process is coordinated by the Dehcho First Nations [“DFN”], through the Dehcho
Tribal Council. The SKDB, NBDB and ADKFN are all part of the Dehcho Tribal
Council, along with other First Nations in the Dehcho region. However, each
retained its status as an independent First Nation, with its own Aboriginal and
Treaty rights within its respective traditional use area.
[21]
The
Dehcho Process negotiations are ongoing, and no agreement in principle has as
yet been reached.
[22]
In
addition to the longstanding boundary disputes between the SKDB and the ADKFN,
and between the ADKFN and the NBDB, there have also been disagreements between
the three First Nations with respect to oil and gas development in the region.
The ADKFN has been more interested in pursuing the development of oil and gas
resources than have the SKDB and the NBDB. Indeed, the SKDB is on record as
having stated that it would prefer to wait until the outstanding land claims
have been resolved before pursuing the development of oil and gas reserves.
[23]
While
the SKDB and the NBDB have sought to have portions of the lands subject to
overlapping claims designated as Protected Areas within the Dehcho process,
ADKFN has sought to open up this land for oil and gas exploration.
[24]
A
proposal by Canada in 1999 to
mediate the boundary disputes between the First Nations did not proceed. Two
years later, as part of the Dehcho Process, the Dehcho First Nations passed a
motion requiring that there be boundary agreements between the SKDB, the NBDB
and the ADKFN.
[25]
While
the land claims themselves remain outstanding, a number of agreements have been
reached through the Dehcho Process. These include an “Interim Measures
Agreement” entered into in 2001 between the Dehcho First Nations, Canada and the
GNWT. Amongst other things, this Agreement clarified the role of the Dehcho
First Nations in resource management decisions while negotiations are in
progress. The Agreement also provides guidance to stakeholders until a final
agreement is in place.
[26]
The
Dehcho Land Use Planning Committee [“DCLUPC”] was also established in 2001. Canada is a member
of this Committee, which regulates conservation, development and utilization of
the land, waters and other resources in the region.
[27]
The
DCLUPC developed maps for land use planning purposes, which attempted to show
the boundaries between the traditional lands of the SKDB, the NBDB and the
ADKFN. Correspondence was exchanged during this process, in which the SKDB and
the NBDB identified each of their respective primary and traditional land use
areas.
[28]
An
Interim Resource Development Agreement was entered into in October of 2003,
which was designed to encourage oil and gas development in the Dehcho region in
a way that allowed the Dehcho First Nations to benefit directly from resource
development in advance of a final agreement.
[29]
In
2005 and 2006, the SKDB, NBDB and ADKFN were in correspondence with the DCLUPC
with respect to the boundaries between the lands of the SKDB, the ADKFN and the
NBDB, for land use zoning purposes. In addition to recording the areas of
disagreement between the First Nations, the correspondence from the SKDB and
the NBDB also identified primary land use areas which fell squarely within the
Settlement Area now being asserted by the ADKFN.
[30]
In
2006, some of the primary land use areas claimed by the SKDB and the NBDB were
accepted by the DCLUPC. This was reflected in the final draft Dehcho Land Use
Planning zoning map, which was subsequently approved by the Dehcho First
Nations.
The ADKFN Land Claims Process
[31]
While
Canada was initially unwilling to undertake community-by-community negotiations
in relation to the land claims of individual First Nations within the Northwest Territories, this position appears
to have changed sometime in 2007 or 2008, when Canada and the GNWT agreed to enter into
community-based land claims discussions directly with the ADKFN. As was noted
earlier, the ADKFN
had felt for some time that its interests were not being adequately represented
through the Dehcho Process, in part because of its extensive claims to lands
outside the NWT.
[32]
On
July 14, 2008, the ADKFN signed its own framework agreement with Canada and the GNWT
[“the ADKFN Framework Agreement”] in an effort to achieve its own comprehensive
land claims agreement. The recitals to the ADKFN Framework Agreement provide
that the parties to the Agreement intend to negotiate a comprehensive land
claim to define and provide clarity to certain asserted lands, resources and
governance rights of the ADKFN within the NWT.
[33]
The
ADKFN Framework Agreement outlines the objectives and timetables for the
parties’ negotiations, the subject matters of those negotiations, and the
approvals process for an eventual agreement in principle and final agreement.
[34]
One
of the issues identified in the ADKFN Framework Agreement as a “matter for
negotiation” is the issue of “settlement area, land selection and tenure of
Settlement Lands”. Section 12 of the ADKFN Framework Agreement provides that
“[p]rior to concluding the Phase I Final Agreement, the Parties will finalize
the Settlement Area taking into account any agreement concluded to resolve any
overlap issues [in the NWT] between the Acho Dene Koe First Nation and any Aboriginal
group”.
[35]
Section
4.3 of the ADKFN Framework Agreement further provides that “Canada and the GNWT
will offer and the Acho Dene Koe First Nation will accept a settlement offer
based on their proportionate share of the offer made to the Dehcho First
Nations through the Dehcho Process”.
[36]
The
ADKFN Framework Agreement
relates to lands described as “the ADKFN Asserted Territory” which are identified on a map appended to the
Agreement. Although lands in the Yukon and British Columbia are identified as ADKFN
traditional territory on this map, the ADKFN Framework
Agreement
makes it clear that it is only the lands claimed by the ADKFN in the NWT that
are the subject of the negotiations under the Agreement. These
lands include areas claimed as primary use areas by the SKDB and the NBDB –
lands which had been accepted as their primary use areas by the DCLUPC (of
which Canada was a
member) in 2006.
[37]
Section
8 of the ADKFN Framework Agreement stipulates that negotiations under the
Agreement are to be confidential. The ADKFN has, however, released the contents
of the agreement to the public.
[38]
Canada did not
notify or consult with the SKDB and the NBDB prior to entering into the ADKFN
Framework Agreement.
The Overlap Negotiations
[39]
Canada has long
been aware of the overlapping claims to land in the Dehcho region of the NWT. Canada’s policy has
been that overlap issues should be resolved internally between the affected
First Nations, wherever possible.
[40]
To
this end, Canada has
encouraged the Dehcho First Nations, including the SKDB, NBDB and ADKFN, to
resolve their boundary and overlap issues between themselves. The SKDB and the
NBDB agree that this would be the most desirable way of resolving overlap
issues.
[41]
In
an effort to assist the First Nations in resolving their overlap issues, Canada provided
funding for negotiations between the three First Nations. Between 2008 and 2011,
the SKDB and the NBDB were provided with $435,000 by Canada to support
them in resolving the boundary issues. This money was used by the SKDB and NBDB
to conduct research, to compile relevant documents, to hold community meetings,
and to prepare for and attend meetings with the ADKFN.
[42]
In
July of 2008, Canada appointed
Mr. Bob Overvold to act as the Minister’s Special Representative, to explore
options for resolving overlapping interests in the Dehcho region generally. Although
part of Mr. Overvold’s mandate required him to engage in discussions with
Aboriginal groups regarding their interests in overlap areas, he had no mandate
to engage in consultation on issues arising from the land claims negotiations
processes.
[43]
An
information sheet provided to the SKDB and NBDB by Mr. Overvold outlines Canada’s approach
to First Nation overlap issues, stating that overlap issues “should be dealt
with early and throughout the negotiation process”.
[44]
Mr.
Overvold was invited to one meeting by the SKDB and NBDB. He also assembled
information regarding the overlap concerns of the various First Nations and
prepared a report and recommendations for the Minister. Amongst other things, his
report questioned Canada’s current policy regarding consultation in relation to
overlap issues, suggesting that Canada may want to “look for
opportunities to begin overlap discussions, if not necessarily consultation,
earlier”.
[45]
A
number of meetings were held between the three First Nations, but by June of
2010, the negotiations had broken down. Particular points of contention arose
from the groups’ divergent views as to the issues and different visions for the
process to follow in resolving them.
[46]
By
way of example, the ADKFN wanted a peace treaty, whereas the SKDB and the NBDB
wanted an overlap and boundary agreement. The SKDB and the NBDB insisted on a
meeting with elders and harvesters in order to establish historical and
contemporary land use, while the ADKFN objected to such an approach. The ADKFN
wanted to negotiate a comprehensive land claims treaty jointly with the SKDB
and NBDB, whereas the SKDB and NBDB preferred to remain part of the Dehcho
process.
[47]
After
the breakdown of the overlap negotiations, the SKDB and NBDB then contacted Mr.
Overvold, explaining the situation to him, and advising that the SKDB and NBDB
expected direct consultations with Canada to commence.
Notice Provided to Canada of the SKDB and
NBDB’s Concerns
[48]
In
July of 2008, the SKDB notified Canada that a portion of the
land identified as the ADKFN’s asserted territory in the ADKFN Framework
Agreement was the SKDB’s “primary land use area”. The SKDB advised Canada that “any
proposed development or assignment of lands within this area requires
consultation with and approval of the [SKDB]”.
[49]
The
NBDB also wrote to Canada that same month, advising that the map appended
to the ADKFN Framework Agreement indicating the ADKFN’s asserted territory
included a portion of the NBDB’s traditional territory. The NBDB also advised Canada that any
proposed development or assignment of this area required consultation with and
approval of the NBDB.
[50]
The
SKDB and the NBDB also provided Canada with substantial
documentation supporting their claims to the lands in question, including a map
showing the extent of the overlapping claims, land use data, archaeological
reports, traditional place names maps, and traditional use studies.
[51]
Peter
Redvers was the Negotiation Facilitator for the joint SKDB/NBDB negotiation
team. In November of 2009, Mr. Redvers came into possession of a brochure prepared
by Canada entitled
“Acho Dene Koe First Nation and Fort Liard Métis Community-based Land, Resource
and Governance Negotiations, Agreement-in-Principle Negotiations and the Land
Selection Process”.
[52]
Under
the heading “Federal Offer”, the document stated that the ADKFN “would be able
to select a total of 6,474 square kilometres of land within the NWT, for which
it would own both the surface and sub-surface rights” [the “ADKFN Land
Quantum”].
[53]
According
to Mr. Redvers’ affidavit, the SKDB and the NBDB have calculated that there are
only 6,064 square kilometres of land in the south-west corner of the NWT that
are outside of the SKDB and NBDB primary land use areas. Moreover, the surface
and sub-surface rights to some of this land is currently in the hands of third
parties. As a result, there is not enough land available to satisfy the ADKFN
Land Quantum without infringing on the SKDB and NBDB’s primary land use areas,
thus infringing their Aboriginal and Treaty rights.
[54]
In
November of 2009, counsel to the SKDB and the NBDB wrote to the Honourable
Chuck Strahl, the then-Minister of Indian and Northern Affairs, formally
advising him that the SKDB and the NBDB were of the view that the ADKFN
Framework Agreement contemplated an “inevitable infringement” of their Treaty
11 and Aboriginal rights. As a consequence, the SKDB and NBDB were seeking immediate
formal, direct and deep consultations with Canada.
[55]
Canada responded to
the SKDB and NBDB by way of letter dated December 21, 2009 from Pamela McCurry,
the Senior Assistant Deputy Minister for Policy and Strategic Direction. The
letter stated that the settlement area for the ADKFN would not be finalized
until the final agreement phase. Ms. McCurry further stated that “the
Government of Canada feels that
it would be premature to enter into consultation until the outcome of these
overlap discussions [with the ADKFN] is known” [my emphasis].
[56]
In
March of 2010, the SKDB and NBDB obtained a copy of a map that had been
prepared by Canada which
indicated the ADKFN’s asserted territory, which territory was now being called
the “ADK Settlement Area”. The SKDB and the NBDB immediately contacted Canada, advising
that the description in the map was “inaccurate and misleading and also
prejudices current [boundary] negotiations”.
[57]
According
to the SKDB and NBDB, the ADKFN effectively terminated the overlap negotiations
in a letter dated June 24, 2010, wherein ADKFN Chief Kotchea asserted that,
based on the ADKFN’s Traditional Use Study, the “ADK [is] the sole owner and
user of lands that you [SKDB and NBDB] assert you have interests in”.
[58]
On
May 21, 2011, the SKDB and NBDB wrote to the Minister himself, affirming their
longstanding concern that negotiations carried out under the ADKFN Framework
Agreement would inevitably lead to an infringement of their rights. They observed
that Canada’s response
to date had been to refer them to direct negotiations with the ADKFN in order
to resolve the overlap and boundary issues. The SKDB and NBDB advised the
Minister of the difficulties that they had encountered in these discussions, noting
that the overlap negotiations did not relieve Canada of its duty
to consult with them.
[59]
The
SKDB and the NBDB advised the Minister that they had been told that the ADKFN
and Canada were close
to reaching an agreement in principle which was to include a draft settlement
map encompassing primary traditional lands of the SKDB and NBDB. Given their
belief that this agreement would have a direct impact on their Aboriginal and
Treaty rights, the SKDB and the NBDB renewed their request for the
establishment of “a direct and formal consultation process between Canada and the
SKDB-NBDB in the immediate future”.
[60]
Receiving
no response to their request for consultation, apart from a verbal confirmation
of the receipt of their letter, the SKDB and NBDB renewed their efforts to be
consulted. Counsel for the SKDB and NBDB wrote to Minister Duncan personally on
August 30, 2011, stating that his letter “serve[d] as a final request of the
SKDB and NBDB for Canada to fulfill its duty to consult and engage in
immediate, meaningful and substantive consultations with the SKDB and the NBDB
as to the potential infringements of the Treaty rights and the Aboriginal
rights of the SKDB and NBDB concerning the ADKFN overlap”.
[61]
Counsel
further asked Canada to commit
that it would not enter into any further agreements with the ADKFN until such
time as consultations with the SKDB and NBDB were concluded, as any future
agreement between Canada and the ADKFN “may eliminate consultation
options and thereby prejudice the SKDB and the NBDB”.
The Decision under Review
[62]
In
a letter dated October 25, 2010, Minister Duncan responded to the SKDB and
NBDB’s May 21, 2010 correspondence. The Minister stated:
I can assure you that the [SKDB] and the
[NBDB] will be consulted. In order for such consultations to be meaningful and
productive, however, they usually occur after the signing of an
agreement-in-principle and no agreement-in-principle with the [ADKFN] has yet
been signed.
[63]
The
Minister went on to explain that:
This is done for a number of reasons.
First, the parameters of the draft agreement-in-principle are still under
negotiations and are undefined. Second, defining the geographic scope of the
settlement areas or of settlement lands is not required at the
agreement-in-principle stage. This process will be done during final agreement
negotiations. Third, the confidentiality of our negotiation processes prevents
the sharing of draft agreements-in-principle. They become public documents upon
signature by the parties.
[64]
The
Minister observed that agreements in principle are not legally binding, and
that Canada would
therefore be able to consider and address, “where warranted”, the claims and
interests of other Aboriginal groups expressed through consultations occurring
at that time. The Minister also noted that provisions are included in
agreements in principle and final agreements that are intended to ensure that
the Aboriginal and Treaty rights of other Aboriginal peoples are not affected
by the agreements.
[65]
The
Minister concluded his letter by encouraging the SKDB and NBDB to continue to
try to resolve the overlap issues through negotiations with the ADKFN,
characterizing this as “the best way forward”.
[66]
It
is this decision that underlies this application for judicial review.
The SKDB and NBDB’s Application for
Judicial Review
[67]
The
SKDB and the NBDB say that by delaying consultation with them until after an
agreement in principle is entered into by Canada and the ADKFN, Canada has failed
to comply with its legal and constitutional duty to consult with and properly
accommodate the SKDB and NBDB.
[68]
The
applicants seek the following remedies:
1. A declaration
that Canada owes the SKDB and NBDB a legal and constitutional duty to
adequately consult with them in a timely manner as to the subjects of the land
claim with ADKFN that would affect or potentially affect the Aboriginal and Treaty
rights of the SKDB and NBDB, including the determination of lands and resources
forming the settlement area or settlement lands of the ADKFN’s land claim, the
use of such lands and resources, and the regulation or management of such lands
and resources;
2. A declaration
that the Minister’s decision to postpone consultation until after an AIP is
signed with the ADKFN does not meet, fulfill or discharge the legal and
constitutional duty of Canada as described above;
3. An order
setting aside the Minister’s decision postponing the initiation and engagement
in substantive consultations with the SKDB and NBDB;
4. An order
directing the Minister to promptly initiate and engage in deep, meaningful and
adequate consultation with the SKDB and NBDB with the intention of developing
workable accommodation measures to address their concerns about the
determination of lands and resources forming the settlement area or settlement
lands of the ADKFN’s land claim, and the regulation or management of such lands
and resources, in such a manner consistent with the reasons for judgment of
this Court and subject to the following terms:
a.
The
terms of consultation are as determined by agreement between the Minister and
the SKDB and NBDB, and in the event of failure to agree to such terms of
consultation, either party can apply to this Court to establish them; and
b.
Any
of the parties is at liberty to reapply to this Court for such further additional
relief as is required to advance and conclude the consultations;
5. An order
prohibiting the Minister from negotiating further any term or condition under
the ADKFN Framework Agreement that would reasonably affect the SKDB or the NBDB
and from engaging in interim land withdrawals pursuant to such negotiations,
pending conclusion of adequate consultation with the SKDB and NBDB; and
6. Its costs of this application on
a solicitor-client basis.
The Issues
[69]
Certain
matters are not in dispute in this case. In particular, Canada concedes that:
1.
The SKDB
and NBDB enjoy the right to hunt, trap and fish throughout much of the area covered by
Treaty 11;
2.
The SKDB and NBDB have Treaty rights in
relation to lands within the
ADKFN Asserted Territory;
3.
Canada is considering changes to
the Treaty regime;
4.
The SKDB and NBDB also claim to have Aboriginal
rights to title to the land itself that are independent of their Treaty rights;
5.
Canada has a duty to consult with,
and if necessary, accommodate the
SKDB and NBDB; and
6.
Canada’s duty to consult with the SKDB and NBDB has been triggered by the
negotiation of the
ADKFN Framework Agreement.
[70]
While
there is no issue with respect to the existence of the duty to consult, what is
in dispute in this case is the timing, scope and content of that duty.
[71]
The
first question to be addressed is the standard of review to be applied to the
Minister’s decision with respect to the timing, scope and content of its
consultations with the SKDB and NBDB.
Standard of Review
[72]
In Haida Nation v. British
Columbia (Minister of Forests), 2004 SCC 73, [2004] 3
S.C.R. 511 at paras. 61-63 [Haida Nation], the Supreme Court of
Canada established the standard of review to be applied to Crown decisions
relating to the duty to consult.
[73]
Haida
Nation
teaches that on
questions of law, the decision-maker must generally be correct, whereas a
reviewing Court may owe a degree of deference to the decision-maker on
questions of fact or mixed fact and law: above at para. 61.
[74]
As
noted in the preceding section of these reasons, the Crown concedes that it has
a duty to consult with the SKDB and NBDB in this case. Insofar as the
Minister’s determination of the extent of that duty is concerned, the Supreme
Court stated in Haida Nation that the “extent of the duty to consult or
accommodate is a legal question in the sense that it defines a legal duty.
However, it is typically premised on an assessment of the facts. It follows
that a degree of deference to the findings of fact of the initial adjudicator
may be appropriate”: above at para. 61.
[75]
The
Court further noted that “[t]he need for deference and its degree will depend
on the nature of the question the tribunal was addressing and the extent to
which the facts were within the expertise of the tribunal”. The Court
recognized that “[a]bsent error on legal issues, the tribunal may be in a
better position to evaluate the issue than the reviewing court, and some degree
of deference may be required”. In such cases, “the standard of review is
likely to be reasonableness”: all quotes from Haida Nation, above at para. 61.
[76]
Where
“the issue is one of pure law, and can be isolated from the issues of fact, the
standard is correctness”. However, where the factual and legal issues are inextricably
entwined, the standard will likely be reasonableness: Haida Nation, above at para. 61.
[77]
Insofar
as the consultation process is concerned, the Supreme Court held in Haida Nation that “the process itself
would likely fall to be examined on a standard of reasonableness”. Moreover,
“[p]erfect satisfaction” is not required. According to the Supreme Court,
“[t]he government is required to make reasonable efforts to inform and
consult”. As long as “every reasonable effort is made to inform and to consult,
such efforts would suffice”: all quotes from Haida Nation above at para. 62.
[78]
Finally,
the Supreme Court stated in Haida Nation that “[s]hould the
government misconceive the seriousness of the claim or impact of the
infringement, this question of law would likely be judged by correctness”.
However, if the government is correct on these matters and acts on the
appropriate standard “the decision will be set aside only if the government’s
process is unreasonable”. The focus should not be on the outcome, but rather on
the process of consultation and accommodation: both quotes from Haida Nation, above at para. 63.
[79]
It
should be noted that Haida Nation was decided before the Supreme Court’s
decision in Dunsmuir v. New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9, [2008] 1
S.C.R. 190.
However, in Ahousaht Indian Band v. Canada (Minister
of Fisheries and Oceans), 2008 FCA 212, 297 D.L.R. (4th) 722 at para. 34,
the Federal Court of Appeal confirmed that Dunsmuir did not change the applicable standard of
review in relation to decisions regarding the duty to consult. See also Rio
Tinto Alcan Inc. v. Carrier Sekani Tribal Council, 2010 SCC 43, [2010] 2
S.C.R. 650,
at para. 74.
The Source and Function of the Duty to Consult and
Accommodate
[80]
In
order to put the issues raised by this application into context, it is helpful
to start by considering the law relating to the source and function of the duty
to consult and accommodate.
[81]
As
the Supreme Court of Canada observed in Mikisew Cree First Nation v. Canada (Minister of Canadian Heritage), 2005 SCC
69, [2005] 3 S.C.R. 388 at para. 1, the management of the relationships between
Canada’s Aboriginal
and non-Aboriginal peoples “takes place in the shadow of a long history of
grievances and misunderstanding”. The Court noted that the “multitude of smaller
grievances created by the indifference of some government officials to Aboriginal
people's concerns, and the lack of respect inherent in that indifference has
been as destructive of the process of reconciliation as some of the larger and
more explosive controversies”: at para. 1.
[82]
It was in this context that the Supreme Court stated that “the
fundamental objective of the modern law of Aboriginal and Treaty rights is the
reconciliation of Aboriginal peoples and non-Aboriginal peoples and their
respective claims, interests and ambitions”: Mikisew, above at para. 1.
[83]
The duty to consult and, if indicated, to accommodate, is grounded
in the honour of the Crown. In order to act honourably, the Crown cannot
“cavalierly run roughshod over Aboriginal interests where claims affecting
these interests are being seriously pursued in the process of treaty
negotiation and proof”: Haida Nation, above at para.
27. Instead, the Crown must respect these potential, but as yet unproven,
interests.
[84]
While
Haida Nation involved Aboriginal rights rather than Treaty
rights, subsequent jurisprudence has confirmed that
the same principles apply in treaty cases: see, for example, Mikisew,
above at para. 34, and Ka'a'Gee Tu First Nation v. Canada (Attorney General), 2007 FC 763, 315
F.T.R. 178 at para. 96.
[85]
The duty to consult has both a legal and a constitutional
character: Rio Tinto, above at para. 34, and R. v. Kapp, 2008 SCC
41, [2008] 2 S.C.R. 483 at para. 6. It is, moreover, “a corollary of the
Crown's obligation to achieve the just settlement of Aboriginal claims through
the treaty process”: Rio Tinto, above at para. 32, citing Haida Nation at para. 20.
[86]
As the Supreme Court observed in Rio Tinto, “[w]hile the
treaty claims process is ongoing, there is an implied duty to consult with the Aboriginal
claimants on matters that may adversely affect their Treaty and Aboriginal
rights, and to accommodate those interests in the spirit of reconciliation”: Rio Tinto,
above at para. 32, citing Haida Nation at para. 20. The
duty to consult requires that the Crown take contested or established Aboriginal
rights into account before making a decision that
may have an adverse impact on them: Rio Tinto, above at para. 35.
[87]
The
Supreme Court explained that the duty to consult “derives from the need to
protect Aboriginal interests while land and resource claims are ongoing or when
the proposed action may impinge on an Aboriginal right”: Rio Tinto, above at para. 33. In the absence of such a duty, Aboriginal groups would have to commence litigation and
seek injunctive relief in order to stop the threatening activity, a process
that has often met with obstacles.
[88]
The
duty to consult is primarily a procedural right: Mikisew, above at para. 33. It is not based on the
common law duty of fairness, however. Rather, it is a duty based on “a process
of fair dealing and reconciliation that begins with the assertion of
sovereignty and continues beyond formal claims resolution”: Haida Nation, above at para. 32.
[89]
While
primarily procedural in nature, the duty to consult also has a substantive
dimension. The duty “is not fulfilled simply by providing a process within
which to exchange and discuss information”: Wii'litswx v. British Columbia (Minister of Forests), 2008 BCSC 1139, [2008]
4 C.N.L.R. 315 at para. 178. Rather, consultation must be meaningful and
conducted in good faith “with the intention of substantially addressing the
concerns of the Aboriginal peoples whose lands are at issue”: Delgamuukw v.
British Columbia, [1997] 3 S.C.R. 1010, [1997] S.C.J. No. 108 at
para. 168; see also Arthur Pape, “The Duty to Consult and Accommodate: A
Judicial Innovation Intended to Promote Reconciliation” in Aboriginal Law
since Delgamuukw, ed. Maria Morellato (Aurora, ON: Cartwright Group Ltd., 2009) at 317.
[90]
As
long as the consultation is meaningful, there is no obligation on the Crown to reach an agreement. Rather,
accommodation requires that “Aboriginal concerns be balanced reasonably with
the potential impact of the particular decision on those concerns and with
competing societal concerns. Compromise is inherent to the reconciliation
process”: Taku River Tlingit First Nation v. British Columbia (Project Assessment
Director),
2004 SCC 74, [2004] 3 S.C.R. 550 at para. 2.
[91]
However,
“where there is a strong Aboriginal claim that may be significantly and
adversely affected by the proposed Crown action, meaningful consultation may
require the Crown to modify its proposed course to avoid or minimize
infringement of Aboriginal interests pending their final resolution”: Wii’litswx,
above at para. 178. See also Haida Nation, above at paras. 41-42, 45-50;
Taku River, above at para. 29; Mikisew, above at para. 54.
[92]
With
this understanding of the source and function of the duty to consult and
accommodate, I turn next to consider when it is that the duty to consult will
arise.
When Does the Duty to Consult and Accommodate
Arise?
[93]
Canada is required to consult with its Aboriginal peoples where it “has
knowledge, real or constructive, of the potential existence of the Aboriginal
right or title and contemplates conduct that might adversely affect it”: see Haida Nation, above at para. 35.
[94]
The knowledge threshold that must be met to trigger the duty to
consult and accommodate is not high: see Mikisew, above at para. 55.
Indeed, knowledge of a credible but unproven claim is sufficient to trigger the
duty: Haida Nation, above at para. 37. The Crown will
always have knowledge of Treaty rights, as a Treaty party: Mikisew,
above at para. 34.
[95]
Although
it is essential that the Aboriginal people establish the existence of a
potential claim, proof that the claim will succeed is not required: see Rio
Tinto, above at para. 40.
[96]
While the threshold for triggering a duty to consult is relatively
low, the content of the duty to consult will vary with the circumstances. One
relevant consideration is the strength of the claim. A weak claim may only
require the giving of notice whereas a stronger claim may attract more onerous
obligations on the part of the Crown: see Haida Nation, above at para.
37. The content of the duty to consult in the circumstances of this case will
be discussed in greater detail later in these reasons.
a) The Nature of
the Claims in Question and the Crown’s Knowledge of the Claims
[97]
The SKDB and NBDB claim to have both Aboriginal and Treaty
rights in relation to the lands claimed by them. As the Supreme Court of Canada
noted in R.
v. Badger,
[1996] 1 S.C.R. 771, [1996] S.C.J. No. 39, Aboriginal and Treaty rights “differ in
both origin and structure”. Aboriginal rights “flow from the customs and
traditions of the native peoples” and “embody the right of native people to
continue living as their forefathers lived”. In contrast, Treaty rights “are
those contained in official agreements between the Crown and the native
peoples”: all quotes from para. 76.
[98]
There is no issue in this case as to the existence of the SKDB and
NBDB’s Treaty rights. As was noted earlier, the Crown accepts that the SKDB and NBDB
have ongoing rights under Treaty 11 to hunt, fish and trap within the lands claimed by the ADKFN as
its exclusive territory.
[99]
Canada also does not dispute that it has knowledge sufficient to trigger
a duty to consult with the SKDB and NBDB in relation to these Treaty rights. Canada maintains, however,
that this consultation should not occur until after Canada has reached an
agreement in principle with the ADKFN.
[100] Canada does not
concede that the SKDB and NBDB have Aboriginal rights to the land itself. While
Canada disputes
the well-foundedness of these claims, it clearly has knowledge of them by
virtue of its participation in land claims negotiations with SKDB and NBDB in Dehcho
Process.
[101] I am
therefore satisfied that the Crown has sufficient knowledge to trigger a duty
of consult in relation to both the Treaty rights and the Aboriginal claims
(including rights to the land) asserted by the SKDB and NBDB.
b) The Government Action that may
Affect the Asserted Rights
[102] In order for the duty to
consult to be triggered, there must also be a Crown decision or proposed
government action that may affect the rights in question: Rio Tinto,
above at paras. 41 and 45. It is not necessary that this decision or
proposed action have an immediate impact on the lands or resources in
question. A potential adverse impact will suffice. As a consequence, the duty
to consult extends to “‘strategic, higher-level decisions’ that may have an
impact on Aboriginal claims and rights”: Rio Tinto, above at
para. 44.
[103] Canada concedes that the
conclusion of the ADKFN Framework Agreement and the commencement of
negotiations with the ADKFN with respect to its comprehensive land claim may
ultimately affect the SKDB and NBDB’s Treaty rights. However, it says that any
agreement in principle it may enter into with the ADKFN will have no impact on
any potential or existing Aboriginal or Treaty rights of either the SKDB or the
NBDB. As a consequence, the “seriousness of the impact” part of the Haida
Nation test points to the low end of the consultation spectrum at this
stage in the process.
[104] Given Canada’s concession that its
actions may affect the asserted rights of the SKDB and NBDB, I am satisfied
that this part of the Haida Nation test has been satisfied. I will
address Canada’s arguments as to the
content of the duty it owes to the SKDB and NBDB and when consultation should
take place further on in these reasons.
c) The Adverse
Effect of the Proposed Crown Conduct on the Aboriginal Claim or Right
[105]
The third element that is required to give rise to the duty to
consult is the potential effect of the proposed Crown conduct on the Aboriginal
claim or Treaty right.
[106] As the
Supreme Court of Canada observed at paragraph 45 of Rio Tinto, above, what
must be established this stage of the analysis is “the possibility that
the Crown conduct may affect the Aboriginal claim or right” [my emphasis]. A
claimant must show “a causal relationship between the proposed government
conduct or decision and a potential for adverse impacts on pending Aboriginal
claims or rights”.
[107] The Court
went on in Rio Tinto to observe that “a generous, purposive approach to
this element is in order, given that the doctrine’s purpose … is ‘to recognize
that actions affecting unproven Aboriginal title or rights or Treaty rights can
have irreversible effects that are not in keeping with the honour of the
Crown’…”: above at para. 46, citing Dwight G. Newman, The Duty to Consult:
New Relationships with Aboriginal Peoples (Saskatoon: Purich
Publishing, 2009) at 30.
[108] Mere
speculative impact is not enough. There must an “appreciable adverse effect on
the First Nations' ability to exercise their Aboriginal right” and the adverse
effect “must be on the future exercise of the right itself; an adverse effect
on a First Nation's future negotiating position does not suffice”: Rio Tinto,
above at para. 46.
[109] Adverse impacts can
extend to any effect that may prejudice a pending Aboriginal claim or right.
Moreover, “high-level management decisions or
structural changes to the resource's management may also adversely affect Aboriginal
claims or rights even if these decisions have no ‘immediate impact on the lands
and resources’”. The reason for this is that “such structural changes may set
the stage for further decisions that will have a direct
adverse impact on land and resources”: all quotes from Rio Tinto, above at
para. 47 [emphasis in the original].
[110] Canada accepts that the
conclusion of the ADKFN Framework Agreement and the commencement of comprehensive
land claim negotiations with the ADKFN may ultimately affect the SKDB and
NBDB’s Treaty rights, although it submits that the seriousness of that impact
is speculative at this stage.
[111] As will be explained
below, I am not persuaded that the seriousness of that impact is speculative in
light of decisions that have already been made by Canada in the context of its
negotiations with the ADKFN - decisions that were made without any consultation
with the SKDB and NBDB.
[112] The seriousness of the
potential impact on the rights of the SKDB and NBDB is a matter that may be
addressed in determining the content of the consultation required at this stage
of the process. However, Canada’s concession regarding the potential impact that the ADKFN
Framework Agreement and the negotiations with the ADKFN may ultimately have on
the SKDB and NBDB’s Treaty rights is sufficient to satisfy the third element of
the Haida Nation test and to give rise to the duty to consult on the
Crown.
What is the Scope of the Duty to Consult at this Stage in
the Process?
[113]
The Supreme Court held in Haida Nation, above at para. 39,
that the scope of the duty to consult is proportionate to a preliminary
assessment of the strength of the case supporting the existence of the right or
title, and to the seriousness of the potentially adverse effect upon the right
or title claimed.
[114] That is, the
degree of impact on the rights asserted will dictate the degree of consultation
that is required in a specific case: Mikisew, above at paras. 34,
55 and 62-3. The more serious the potential impact on asserted Aboriginal or Treaty
rights, the deeper the level of consultation that will be required.
[115] The level of
consultation required will vary from case to case, depending upon what is
required by the honour of the Crown in a given set of circumstances: Haida
Nation, above at para. 43. See also Rio Tinto, above at para.
36; Taku River, above at para. 32; Tsuu T'ina Nation v. Alberta (Minister
of Environment), [2010] 2 C.N.L.R. 316, [2010] A.J. No. 479 (Q.L.) (Alta. C.A.) at para. 71, and Ahousaht, above at
para. 39.
[116] Where, for
example, the claims are weak, the Aboriginal right is limited, or the potential
for infringement is minor, the only duty on the Crown may be to give notice, to
disclose information, and to discuss any issues raised in response to the
notice: Haida Nation, above at para. 43.
[117] In contrast,
where a strong prima facie case for the claim has been established, the
right and potential infringement is of high significance to the Aboriginal
peoples, and the risk of non-compensable damage is high, “deep consultation”
aimed at finding a satisfactory interim solution, may be required: Haida Nation,
above at para. 44.
[118] While the
precise requirements of the consultative process will vary with the
circumstances, the consultation required in relation to claims lying at the
stronger end of the spectrum may demand the opportunity for the claimants to
make submissions, to participate in the decision-making process, and to receive
written reasons which demonstrate that their concerns were considered and which
reveal the impact those concerns had on the decision: Haida Nation,
above at para. 44.
[119] Other cases
may fall between these two ends of the spectrum. Each case has to be examined
individually in order to ascertain the content of the duty to consult in a
particular set of circumstances. Moreover, the situation may have to be
re-evaluated from time to time, as the level of consultation required may
change as the process goes on and new information comes to light: Haida Nation,
above at para. 45.
[120] I will first
examine the strength of the Aboriginal and Treaty claims asserted by the SKDB
and NBDB, and will then consider the seriousness of the potential infringement
of those claims, in order to assess the scope and content of the duty to
consult owed by Canada to the SKDB and NBDB at the pre-agreement in principle stage.
a) The Prima Facie Strength of the
Asserted Claims or Rights
[121] There is no issue in
this case as to the strength of the SKDB and NBDB’s claim to Treaty rights. The Crown accepts that
the SKDB
and NBDB have ongoing rights under Treaty 11 to hunt, fish and trap within the
lands
claimed by the ADKFN as its exclusive territory.
[122] Insofar as the SKDB and
NBDB’s claims to Aboriginal title are concerned, Canada does not concede that they have Aboriginal
rights in relation to the land itself. However, it does not appear from the
record before me that Canada has as yet carried out
any meaningful evaluation of the strength of the SKDB and NBDB’s claims to
Aboriginal rights with respect to the lands in issue. Consequently, there is no
factual assessment of the strength of the applicants’ Aboriginal rights to
which the Court owes deference.
[123] Relying on the decision
of the British Columbia Supreme Court in Cook v. Canada (Minister
of Aboriginal Relations and Reconciliation), 2007 BCSC 1722, 80
B.C.L.R. (4th) 138,
Canada submits instead that the record before the Court is insufficient to
allow for an assessment of the strength of the SKDB and NBDB’s asserted Aboriginal
rights or title at this stage of the process.
[124] Canada also
contends that because the SKDB and NBDB’s Treaty rights have been established, it is not
necessary for the Court to assess the strength of the SKDB and NBDB’s asserted Aboriginal
rights. Rather, Canada submits that in order to determine the content of the
Crown's duty to consult, the Court’s focus should be on the degree to which the
conduct contemplated by the Crown would adversely affect the rights of the SKDB
and NBDB to
hunt, fish and trap over the disputed lands.
[125] However, the nature and extent of
the duty to consult is proportional to the nature and extent of the interest
potentially affected. The duty is greater “where a foundational right is being
extinguished than where regulations touch on rights that are admittedly subject
to regulation”: see R. v. Lefthand, 2007 ABCA 206, 77 Alta. L.R. (4th)
203 at para. 35.
[126] An Aboriginal claim to
land is clearly a “foundational right”. Indeed, the “most central interest” of
Canada’s Aboriginal peoples is their interest in their lands: see Nunavik Inuit v. Canada (Minister of Canadian
Heritage),
[1999] 1 F.C. 38, [1998] F.C.J. No. 1114 (QL) at para. 103, citing Delgamuukw
v. British
Columbia,
[1997] 3 S.C.R. 1010, [1997] S.C.J. No. 108 (QL).
[127] As a consequence, the
SKDB and NBDB’s claims
to Aboriginal rights in the land may have a bearing on the scope and content of
the Crown's duty to consult in this case. It is therefore necessary to consider
the evidence regarding the strength of the SKDB and NBDB’s claims to Aboriginal
rights before turning to consider the seriousness of the potential adverse
effect upon the rights claimed.
[128] A court’s assessment of
the duty to consult and accommodate prior to proof of an Aboriginal right does
not amount to a prior determination of the Aboriginal claim on its merits;
rather, courts are able to “differentiat[e] between tenuous claims, claims
possessing a strong prima facie case, and established claims”, even in
the absence of a complete ethno-historical evidentiary record: Haida Nation,
above at paras. 37 and 66.
[129] Indeed, in Beckman v. Little
Salmon/Carmacks First Nation, 2010 SCC 53, [2010] 3 S.C.R. 103 at para.
47, Justice Binnie confirmed that an application for judicial review was an
appropriate procedure through which to assess the scope and adequacy of
consultation. In both Haida Nation and Little Salmon, lower
courts assessed the prima facie strength of Aboriginal claims based upon
affidavit evidence.
[130] In the Cook case
relied upon by the Crown, the Court was faced with conflicting affidavits, and
the applicants were unable to articulate a precise infringement of their
interests. Contrary to what the Minister suggests, the Court in Cook did
not decline to assess the strength of the claims, concluding instead that on
the basis of the evidentiary record before it, the applicants had established
only a “credible claim”: see para. 151.
[131] The SKDB and
the NBDB assert that in entering into Treaty 11, they did not surrender their Aboriginal
rights with respect to the disputed lands, whereas I understand the Crown to
argue that these Aboriginal rights were extinguished by the Treaty. The Crown
acknowledges, however, that it never fulfilled a significant component of
Treaty 11, namely its obligation to set aside reserve lands for the benefit of the First Nations.
[132] The legal
consequences of the Crown’s failure to fulfill a fundamental commitment in the
Treaty in relation to the SKDB and NBDB’s asserted Aboriginal title remain to
be determined on a more complete record through the land claims process.
However, it is appropriate for the purposes of this application to consider
these underlying circumstances as material factors in assessing the strength of
the applicants’ asserted Aboriginal claims: see Ka'a'Gee Tu
First Nation, above at para. 105.
[133] Moreover, Canada has, since
1998, been involved in negotiations with the SKDB and NBDB regarding their
claims to Aboriginal title through the Dehcho process. While not a
determinative factor, the Crown's participation in the land claims process is a
factor that may inform the Court in assessing the strength of the SKDB and
NBDB’s asserted claims: see Ka'a'Gee Tu First Nation, above at
para. 104.
[134] Through the Dehcho
process, the SKDB and NBDB have provided Canada with
considerable evidence in support of their historical claims to the lands in the
overlap area, including, amongst other things, traditional use studies, traditional
place name maps, and reports of archaeological studies. I do not understand the
ADKFN to have provided Canada with similar evidence as of yet. We do know that as of March 15,
2010, the ADKFN had not yet completed their traditional land use study. In any
event, there is little evidence regarding the strength of the ADKFN’s competing
claims in the record before me.
[135] The SKDB and
NBDB also rely on a statement made during the cross-examination of Janet Pound,
a Chief Land Negotiator at the Department of Indian Affairs and Northern
Development, as an admission regarding the strength of their Aboriginal claims.
Counsel to the SKDB and NBDB asked Ms. Pound: “Now, is it agreed that
Canada accepts the claims of Sambaa K’E and Nahanni Butte regarding overlap,
that they are substantial claims and they are with merit?” to which Ms. Pound
responded “I think so”.
[136] In fairness,
regard must be had to the entirety of Ms. Pound’s answer. She went on to state:
“I think any time the Aboriginal groups are asserting something, they are their
assertions, right? We have got to respect their assertions. We don’t always –
everything you do in agreements doesn’t necessarily always match with that they
are asserting, but obviously we’re respecting the assertions that are made.” I agree with
Canada that when
Ms. Pound’s answer is read in its entirety, it is not an admission that the
SKDB and NBDB’s Aboriginal claims are meritorious.
[137] While it is
not easy to quantify the strength of the SKDB and NBDB’s claims to Aboriginal
title at this stage of the process, I am nevertheless satisfied that the claims
raise a reasonably strong prima facie case. This finding is based upon a
review of the record, the nature of the asserted claims, the language of Treaty
11, the Crown’s breach of one of its fundamental obligations under Treaty 11,
the paucity of evidence with respect to the strength of the ADKFN’s claims to
the disputed territory, and the Crown’s commitment to the comprehensive land
claims process.
[138] I note that
my conclusion in this regard with respect to the potential significance of the
Crown’s breach of its obligations under Treaty 11 is consistent with the
finding of this Court in relation to the Aboriginal rights asserted in another
Treaty 11 case: see Ka'a'Gee Tu First Nation, above at para. 107.
[139] The fact
that the SKDB and NBDB have established a reasonably strong prima facie case
based upon their asserted Aboriginal rights to the land in question serves to
elevate the content
of the Crown’s duty to consult from what would otherwise have been the case had
the duty been based exclusively on the SKDB and NBDB’s claims to Treaty rights
to hunt, fish and trap.
[140] With this understanding
of the strength of the SKDB and NBDB’s Aboriginal and Treaty claims, I will
next consider the seriousness of the potential infringement that the ADKFN
negotiations and an eventual agreement in principle may have for these claims.
b) The Seriousness of the Potential Infringement of the
Asserted Aboriginal and Treaty Rights
[141]
There
is no dispute that the negotiation of the ADKFN Framework Agreement has
triggered a duty on the part of Canada to consult with the
SKDB and NBDB. The issue is the extent and depth of the consultations that are
required at this stage of the process.
[142] Canada
submits that we cannot know at this stage of the process what impact its
negotiations with the ADKFN will have for the SKDB and NBDB, with the result
that it is impossible to assess the seriousness of the potential infringement
of the SKDB and NBDB’s asserted Aboriginal and Treaty rights. The result of this is that Canada’s duty to consult with
the SKDB and NBDB at this point is at the lower end of the consultation
spectrum and is limited to notice, disclosure or discussion.
[143] Canada points out that an
agreement in principle is not a binding “decision”. It does not grant any
rights to the signatories, nor does it take away rights from other non-signatory
First Nations. According to Canada, an agreement in principle is “merely an interim
negotiating position subject to change”.
[144] Consequently, Canada says that it would be
premature for it to engage in deep consultation with the SKDB and NBDB at this
stage of the process. Because it will not be possible to know the particulars
of the contemplated Crown conduct and the seriousness of any impact on the
rights of the SKDB and NBDB until such time as Canada has entered into an
agreement in principle with the ADKFN, consultation with the SKDB and NBDB
should not take place until then.
[145] I note, however, that Canada’s position as to when
consultation with the SKDB and NBDB should occur has not been consistent, and that
previous representations made by Canada in this regard do not appear to have been
respected.
[146] It will be recalled that
in her December 21, 2009 letter to counsel for the SKDB and NBDB, the Senior
Assistant Deputy Minister for Policy and Strategic Direction advised the SKDB
and NBDB it would be premature for Canada to enter into consultations with them
until the outcome of the overlap discussions between the ADKFN and the SKDB
and NBDB was known. It would have been entirely reasonable for the SKDB and
NBDB to understand this statement to mean that Canada would consult
with them once the outcome of the overlap negotiations was known.
[147] By June of 2010, Canada was aware that the
overlap discussions had failed. It did not, however, initiate any form of
consultation with the SKDB and NBDB at that time. Instead, Canada’s position
as to when consultation with the SKDB and NBDB should take place seemed to
change after the overlap negotiations broke down. This change in position is
reflected in the Minister’s October 25, 2010 letter, which advised the SKDB and
NBDB that
consultation would now not occur until after Canada reached an agreement in
principle with the ADKFN.
[148] Canada’s position
at the hearing of this application was generally consistent with the position
taken by the Minister in his October 25, 2010 letter: that is, that
consultation should take place after the signing of an agreement in principle
with the ADKFN. However, counsel for Canada also stated that “the
decision to send [the Final Agreement] to Parliament is where the duty to
consult arises”.
[149] Given that
the decision under review commits to consultations taking place after the
signing of an agreement in principle between Canada and the ADKFN, and that
most of Canada’s submissions focused on the conclusion of an agreement in principle with
the ADKFN
as being the point at which it was required to consult with the SKDB and NBDB, I will take that to
be its real position.
[150] As an agreement in principle merely
represents an interim negotiating position which is subject to change, Canada says that the
SKDB and NBDB’s argument that positions will become entrenched once an agreement in principle is concluded
is without merit. In support of this contention, Canada relies on several pre-Haida
Nation decisions, including Paul v. Canada, 2002 FCT 615, 219 F.T.R.
275 at para. 108, and Pacific Fishermen’s Defence Alliance v. Canada,
[1988] 1 F.C. 498, [1987] F.C.J. No. 1146 at paras. 8 and 13.
[151] Canada further
submits that to consult in this context would be meaningless: citing Cook,
above at paras. 175-77. According to Canada, it would be unproductive and
premature for it to engage in further consultation with the SKDB and NBDB prior
to an agreement in principle having been reached with the ADKFN because the
extent of any impact on the SKDB and NBDB’s rights would be speculative: Tsuu
T'ina, above at para. 85.
[152] By way of
example, Canada says that
the process for negotiating land selection will not begin until after an
agreement
in principle
is concluded. It is thus impossible to know the particulars of contemplated
Crown conduct, or to assess its impact on third party rights prior to
concluding the agreement
in principle with the ADKFN: Kruger Inc. c. Premiere Nation des
Betsiamites, 2006 QCCA 569, 149 A.C.W.S. (3d) 864 at paras. 12-13.
[153] Canada also points out that
land claims treaties typically contain non-derogation clauses that protect the
rights of other Aboriginal groups in a settlement area, and that any final agreement
entered into with the ADKFN will contain such a provision. As a consequence, even
a final agreement between the ADKFN and Canada would have no immediate impact on the Aboriginal
and Treaty rights of either the SKDB or the NBDB.
[154] In support of this
contention, Canada relies on the decision
of the British Columbia Supreme Court in Cook, above,
which, like this case, involved overlapping land claims by several First
Nations. The Court concluded that deep consultation and accommodation with the
petitioners in that case was not required by Canada until after
a final agreement was signed between it and the third-party First Nation.
[155] In coming to
this conclusion, the Court in Cook relied heavily on the presence of the
non-derogation clause in the final agreement, stating that:
186 … I do not find there is persuasive
evidence that the [Final
Agreement] causes
irreparable harm to the petitioners, and, more importantly, I am satisfied that
there is time for the petitioners, British Columbia and Canada to engage in
consultation before the [Final
Agreement] is implemented
[…] In that consultation process, the petitioners will be able identify, with
the clarity that they have so far been unable to articulate, any infringement
on their title and rights claims. It is not for this Court, on the type of
conflicting evidence tendered here, to draw those conclusions for them. The
other factor of importance is that the non-derogation clause confirms that [Final Agreement] does not affect the Aboriginal rights or
title of any other Aboriginal group.
[156] Canada also relies on Benoanie v. Canada (Minister of
Indian and Northern Affairs), [1993] 2 C.N.L.R. 97 (T.D.); Tsehaht
First Nation v. Huu-ay-aht First Nation, 2007 BCSC 1141, 160 A.C.W.S. (3d)
341 at para. 25; Paul, above; and Tremblay v. Pessamit First Nation,
2008 QCCS 1536, [2008] 4 C.N.L.R. 240), to the same effect.
[157] Moreover, Canada points out
that Aboriginal rights either exist or they do not exist. They are not
created by agreements, treaties or the law, and have constitutional protection
under section 35 of the Constitution Act, 1982. As a consequence, Aboriginal
rights cannot be extinguished by government action: Tremblay, above at
paras. 59-60.
[158] As a result, Canada
submits that the duty to consult owed by it to the SKDB and NBDB during the
pre-agreement
in principle phase
is at the low end of the spectrum, and should be limited to notice, disclosure
or discussion: Haida Nation, above at para. 43; Mikisew, above at
para. 64.
[159] I would
start my analysis by observing that what Haida Nation actually
says is required at the lower end of the consultation spectrum “may be to
give notice, disclose information, and discuss any issues raised in response
to the notice”: at para. 43 [my emphasis].
[160] Citing T.
Isaac and A. Knox, “The Crown's Duty to Consult Aboriginal People” (2003), 41
Alta. L. Rev. 49 at 61, the Court goes on in Haida Nation to observe
that “‘consultation’ in its least technical definition is talking together
for mutual understanding’”: at para. 43 [my emphasis].
[161] Similarly,
in Mikisew, where the Crown’s duty to consult was
found to lie at the lower end of the spectrum, it was nevertheless required to
“engage directly” with the Mikisew. This “engagement” required the Crown to
“solicit and to listen carefully to the Mikisew concerns, and to attempt to
minimize adverse impacts on the Mikisew hunting, fishing and trapping rights”: above
at para. 64.
[162] Canada concedes that it has
not, as yet, had any direct discussions with the SKDB and NBDB with
respect to their concerns, notwithstanding the two First Nations’ repeated
requests for consultation. As will be explained later in these reasons, I am
satisfied that Canada has not satisfied the
duty on it to consult with the SKDB and NBDB, even if that duty were only at
the lower end of the spectrum.
[163] Moreover, and in any
event, I am satisfied that the particular facts of this case are such that Canada has a present
obligation to consult somewhat more deeply with the SKDB and NBDB.
[164] I would start by noting
that the duty to consult extends to strategic, higher level decisions that may
have an impact on Aboriginal claims and rights, even if that impact on the
disputed lands or resources may not be immediate: Rio Tinto, above at
para. 44.
[165] If it is to be
meaningful, consultation cannot be postponed until the last and final point in
a series of decisions. Once important preliminary decisions have been made
there may well be “a clear momentum” to move forward with a particular course
of action: see Squamish Indian Band v. British
Columbia (Minister of Sustainable Resource Management), 2004 BCSC
1320, 34 B.C.L.R. (4th) 280 at para. 75. Such a momentum may develop even if
the preliminary
decisions are not legally binding on the parties.
[166] Indeed, the case law
shows that the non-binding nature of preliminary decisions does not necessarily
mean that there can be no duty to consult. For example, in Dene Tha' First
Nation v. Canada (Minister of Environment), 2006 FC 1354, 303 F.T.R. 106,
negotiations leading to a non-binding Cooperation Plan nonetheless
triggered a duty to consult that fell at the high end of the consultation spectrum.
[167] Justice Phelan described
the Cooperation Plan as “a complex agreement for a specified course of action,
a road map, which intended to do something. It intended to set up the
blue print from which all ensuing regulatory and environmental review processes
would flow. It is an essential feature of the construction of [the project in
issue]”: Dene Tha' First Nation, above at para. 100. Justice
Phelan further noted that “the Cooperation Plan, although not written in
mandatory language, functioned as a blueprint for the entire project”: above
at para. 107.
[168] Justice Phelan concluded
that the Cooperation Plan was “a form of ‘strategic planning’”: at para. 108.
By itself it conferred no rights, but it set up the means by which a whole
process would be managed and was a process through which the rights of the Aboriginal
peoples would be affected. As a consequence, Justice Phelan was satisfied that
the Cooperation Plan established a process by which
the rights of the Dene Tha’ would be affected: above at para. 108.
[169] I recognize
that for the duty to consult to be engaged, there must be an appreciable
adverse effect on the First Nations’ ability to exercise their Aboriginal or
Treaty rights, and that merely speculative impacts will not suffice. I further
recognize that the adverse effect must be on the future exercise of the rights
themselves, and that an adverse effect on a First Nation’s future negotiating
position will not suffice: Rio Tinto, above at para. 46.
[170] In this case,
however, decisions have already been made by Canada, without consultation
with either the SKDB or the NBDB, which will likely have a significant impact on
each of their Treaty rights and Aboriginal claims.
[171] One of these is the
decision to limit the ADKFN’s land claim to territory within the NWT. This
decision is highly significant, considering that two-thirds of the ADKFN’s
asserted traditional territory lies outside of the NWT.
[172] Similarly, the March,
2009, offer made by Canada to the ADKFN, will, in all
likelihood, have a negative effect on the SKDB and NBDB’s own land claims. This
offer would
allow the ADKFN to select a total of 6,474 square kilometres of land within
the NWT in satisfaction of its land claim.
[173] Canada’s offer has
been accepted by the ADKFN as a basis for the negotiation of an agreement in
principle, which agreement will address the issue of land quantum. Given the
dynamics of the negotiating process, it is hard to imagine that the agreement
in principle will be less generous to the ADKFN than Canada’s initial
offer.
[174] There are,
however, only 6,064 square kilometres of land in the south-west corner of the
NWT that are outside of the SKDB and NBDB primary land use areas and are
available to satisfy the ADKFN’s claims. As a result, the acceptance by the
ADKFN of Canada’s offer will inevitably result in an encroachment on the SKDB
and NBDB’s claimed territory.
[175] This problem
is compounded by the fact that the surface and sub-surface rights to some of
the available land is currently in the hands of third parties. As a result,
there is simply not enough land available in the NWT to satisfy the ADKFN’s
claims and Canada’s offer without
encroaching on the primary land use areas claimed by the SKDB and NBDB, and
thus infringing their Aboriginal and Treaty rights. This impact is not
speculative.
[176] Moreover, Canada and the
ADKFN have also already agreed, as part of the ADKFN Framework Agreement, not
to create a new regulatory and land management regime for the lands in issue,
but rather to adopt the regime currently operating under the Mackenzie
Valley Resource Management Act. The SKDB and NBDB assert that the MVRMA resource
management regime is inconsistent with the land management process advanced
through the Dehcho process, namely collective co-management through a single
management authority.
[177] While the
adverse impact of the adoption by the ADKFN of the MVRMA resource
management regime in relation to lands potentially falling within the SKDB and
NBDB’s primary land use areas may not be immediately felt by the SKDB and NBDB,
courts have held that the potential for infringement need not be immediate: Rio
Tinto, above at paras. 44, 47 and 54. The potential infringement of
asserted Aboriginal governance rights resulting from the application of the MVRMA
to the disputed lands is prospective, but nevertheless serious.
[178] Finally, the March, 2009, offer
made by Canada to the ADKFN has also had
immediate consequences for the SKDB and NBDB as it resulted in Canada
proportionately reducing the offer that it made to the Dehcho First Nations,
including the SKDB and NBDB.
[179] This clear
potential for infringement distinguishes this case from the Cook case
relied upon by the Crown. In that case, there was an absence of any obvious
infringement: see Cook, above at para. 179.
[180] Moreover, Cook
did not involve a situation in which overlap negotiations had broken down; none
had yet been attempted: see paras. 115-18. The Court thus found that even if
the applicant First Nations were later able to identify an infringement of
their claims, several possibilities for accommodation remained available: at
paras. 190-91.
[181] Even in these
circumstances, the Court nonetheless acknowledged that the Crown had a duty to
consult with the Aboriginal applicants at the agreement in principle stage,
although it found that, in light of the absence of any infringement, the duty
at that stage lay at the low end of the spectrum: Cook, above at
paras. 179, 192.
[182] In contrast,
the contemplated Crown action here potentially puts current claims by and the rights
of the SKDB and NBDB in jeopardy: Rio Tinto, above at para. 49.
Moreover, the threat to the rights of the SKDB and NBDB is real, and not merely
hypothetical, surmised or imagined: see Pacific Fishermen’s
Defence Alliance, above at para. 8.
[183] I acknowledge that a
non-derogation clause in a final agreement between Canada and the ADKFN will
offer the SKDB and NBDB some measure of protection. Nevertheless, the prospect
of reconciliation between the Crown and the SKDB and NBDB will inevitably be undermined
if meaningful discussions with Canada only start after it has reached an agreement in principle with
the ADKFN. Indeed, counsel for the Crown himself acknowledged this reality at
the hearing.
[184] Relying on the decision
in Cook, Canada also argues that if it were required to enter into
consultation with the SKDB and NBDB at this point in the process, it would then
have to “ping-pong” back and forth between the SKDB and NBDB on the one hand,
and the ADKFN on the other. When I suggested to counsel that this would have to
occur in any negotiations taking place after the conclusion of an
agreement in principle with the ADKFN, counsel agreed that this was indeed that
case. He noted, however, that Canada would be able to enter into negotiations with the SKDB and
NBDB “armed with an agreement in principle”. This is, of course, precisely
what the SKDB and NBDB are concerned about.
[185] While it is clear from Rio
Tinto that an adverse effect on a First Nation’s future negotiating
position will not be sufficient, by itself, to affect the duty to consult, the
inevitable impact that the conclusion of an agreement in principle between
Canada and the ADKFN will have on ongoing negotiations within the Dehcho Process
is just one of many circumstances at play in this case.
[186] Moreover, the
law is clear that “[t]he
Crown cannot run roughshod over one group’s potential and claimed Aboriginal
rights in favour of reaching a treaty with another”: see Cook, above at
para 162; Haida Nation, above at para. 27.
[187] Canada insists that “there
is nothing lost by waiting until after the AIP to engage in further
consultation with the applicants”: see Canada’s memorandum of fact and law at para 89. I do
not agree. Proceeding with negotiations with the ADKFN and excluding the
applicants from any direct discussions despite their repeated entreaties to be
consulted does little to promote reconciliation between Canada and the
SKDB and NBDB, and may very well have the opposite effect.
[188] The undermining of the
reconciliation process is further compounded in this case by Canada having “moved the
goalposts” in relation to the consultation process. While initially
representing to the SKDB and NBDB that consultation would take place after the
outcome of the overlap discussions was known, no such consultation in fact took
place. When the SKDB and NBDB quite reasonably pushed for consultation after
the breakdown of the overlap negotiations, they were once again put off, with
the Minister now informing them that consultation would only occur after the
conclusion of an agreement in principle between Canada and the ADKFN. With respect, this shifting
position does nothing to promote the process of
reconciliation and could only serve to further alienate the SKDB and NBDB.
[189] Canada also argues that it cannot
engage directly with the SKDB and NBDB until such time as it has an agreement
in principle with the ADKFN as it cannot know what to discuss with the SKDB and
NBDB. This of course begs the question of how it is that Canada can engage
directly with the ADKFN, if it has not entered into an agreement in principle
with the SKDB and NBDB?
[190] It was
argued in Haida Nation that the Crown could not know that rights exist
before Aboriginal claims are resolved, and thus it could have no duty to
consult with or accommodate First Nations. While recognizing that this
difficulty should not be minimized, the Supreme Court nevertheless held that
“it will frequently be possible to reach an idea of the asserted rights and of
their strength sufficient to trigger an obligation to consult and accommodate,
short of final judicial determination or settlement”: above at para. 36.
[191] In order to
facilitate this determination, the Supreme Court held that claimants should
clearly outline their claims, “focussing on the scope and nature of the Aboriginal
rights they assert and on the alleged infringements”: Haida Nation, above
at para. 36.
[192] While these comments
were made in a slightly different context, the same point may be made here.
[193] The SKDB and NBDB have
provided Canada with a great deal of
historical and other material supporting their respective claims and have
clearly articulated these claims. Indeed, Canada has not suggested that it does not understand
the nature or scope of the claims being asserted by the SKDB and NBDB. This
further distinguishes this case from the Cook case relied upon by the
Crown, where one of the reasons cited by the Court for finding that
consultation could be deferred in that case until after the signing of an
agreement in principle with another First Nation was the inability of the
petitioner First Nations to clearly articulate any infringement on their title
and rights claims: Cook, above at para. 186.
[194] Perhaps because of the
fact that the negotiations between the ADKFN and the Crown are confidential, little
information has been provided to the Court as to the strength of the ADKFN’s
claims. However, it appears from the material filed in relation to this
application that the SKDB and NBDB have provided Canada with substantial information regarding
their own claims. There is thus ample basis for discussion.
[195] Canada has also argued that
because the ADKFN process is confidential, it cannot consult with the SKDB and
NBDB at this stage in the process. I do not accept this argument.
[196] While the ADKFN
Framework Agreement contemplates that the agreement in principle will be made
public, Canada has clearly stated that
the
process for negotiating land selection will not begin until after an agreement in principle is concluded.
Those negotiations between the ADKFN and Canada will
themselves be confidential.
[197] To the extent
that Canada’s concern is the confidentiality of its negotiations with the
ADKFN, I asked Crown counsel how Canada would be in any better position to consult
with the SKDB and NBDB with respect to land selection issues after the
conclusion of an agreement in principle with the ADKFN, given that the
post-agreement in principle negotiations with the ADKFN would still be
confidential. Counsel was unable to provide a satisfactory answer, other than
to say “that’s a bit of a difficult one”.
Canada has not Discharged
its Duty to Consult
[198] Perfect satisfaction of
the duty to consult is not required. As long as the Crown “makes reasonable
efforts to inform and consult the First Nations which might be affected by the
Minister's intended course of action, this will normally suffice to discharge
the duty”: Ahousaht, above at para. 38.
[199] In all
cases, the fundamental question is what is necessary to maintain the honour of
the Crown and to effect reconciliation between the Crown and the Aboriginal
peoples with respect to the interests at stake: Haida Nation, above at
para. 45.
[200] The honour
of the Crown also mandates that it balance societal and Aboriginal interests in
making decisions that may affect Aboriginal claims: Haida Nation, above
at para. 45.
[201] Canada says that it has
provided the SKDB and NBDB with notice of the ADKFN land claims process and
subjects for negotiation. It has appointed a Ministerial Special Representative
and supported negotiations between the First Nations with respect to overlap
issues in an attempt to minimize the impact on the SKDB and NBDB’s rights. It
has also received information from the SKDB and NBDB in support of their
claims, and has promised to engage in deeper consultation prior to land
selection by the ADKFN in the post-agreement in principle phase of its
negotiations with the ADKFN, and to include a non-derogation clause in an ADKFN
Final Agreement.
[202] However, Ms. Pound
acknowledged in her cross-examination that Canada has not, as yet, “formally engaged with
[the SKDB and NBDB] on consultation”. Indeed, Canada concedes that it has not, to this point,
engaged in any direct discussions with the SKDB and NBDB with respect to
their concerns. This lack of consultation is also reflected in the Ministerial
letter that underlies this application for judicial review, which assures the
SKDB and NBDB that consultation will occur in the future, but not until an
agreement in principle is signed with the ADKFN.
[203] At the same time, Canada asserts that it has
demonstrated an ongoing intention to address the SKDB and NBDB’s concerns
through meaningful consultation after signing an agreement in principle with
the ADKFN, thereby discharging its pre-agreement in principle duty to consult.
[204] I agree with Canada that it was
both reasonable and appropriate for it to encourage the ADKFN, the SKDB and the
NBDB to endeavour to resolve their competing claims between themselves, and to
facilitate those discussions. Indeed, encouraging overlapping claims to be
worked out on a consensual basis is respectful of the First Nations involved.
However, the fostering of overlap negotiations cannot, in my view, serve as a
substitute for direct consultations by Canada with the
affected First Nations.
[205]
Different
levels of consultation may be required at different stages of the process: see Cook
above at para. 197. The particular circumstances of this case, including the
strength of the applicants’ Aboriginal claims and their acknowledged Treaty
rights, the actions proposed by Canada and the potential impact of those
actions on the claims and rights of the SKDB and NBDB, the decisions already
made in relation to the ADKFN’s claims, and the representation made by Canada
as to when consultation with the SKDB and NBDB would take place, are such that
the honour of the Crown requires that it engage directly with the SKDB and NBDB
prior to concluding an agreement in principle with the ADKFN.
Conclusion
[206]
For
the reasons given, I am satisfied that the Minister’s decision to delay
consultation with the SKDB and NBDB until after the conclusion of an agreement
in principle with the ADKFN was not reasonable, and the process followed was incompatible
with the honour of the Crown: see Mikisew, above at para. 59.
[207] While deeper
consultation will be required after the conclusion of an agreement in principle
with the ADKFN, Canada has a duty to consult with the SKDB and NBDB at this stage of the
process by engaging in immediate and substantive discussions directly with them
with respect to the potential infringements of their Aboriginal and Treaty
rights in relation to lands subject to overlapping claims by the ADKFN.
Remedy
[208] Although the Government
of the NWT and the ADKFN have been named as respondents in this application,
the decision under review in this case is an October 25, 2010 decision by the
Minister of Indian Affairs and Northern Development postponing consultation
with the SKDB and NBDB until after the conclusion of an agreement in principle
between Canada and the ADKFN. Consequently, the remedy provided by the Court
should be addressed solely to Canada. This is consistent with the relief requested in the SKDB
and NBDB’s Notice of Application.
[209] For the reasons given,
this Court declares that Canada has breached its duty to consult with the SKDB
and NBDB, with the result that the Minister’s October 25, 2010 decision to postpone
consultation with the SKDB and NBDB is set aside.
[210] Canada has a
legal and constitutional duty to engage in immediate and substantive discussions
directly with the SKDB and NBDB with respect to the subjects of the land claim
with ADKFN that would affect or potentially affect the asserted Aboriginal and Treaty
rights of the SKDB and NBDB, including the determination of lands and resources
forming the settlement area or settlement lands of ADKFN’s land claim, the use
of such lands and resources, and the regulation or management of such lands and
resources.
[211] Canada shall not enter into an
agreement in principle with the ADKFN in relation to its pending land claim
until such time as the consultations with the SKDB and NBDB referred to in the
previous paragraph have been carried out.
[212] This Court further
declares that upon the conclusion of an agreement in principle with the ADKFN,
Canada will have a duty to engage in deep, meaningful and adequate
consultation with the SKDB and NBDB in order to develop workable accommodation
measures to address their concerns with respect to the determination of lands
and resources forming the settlement area or settlement lands of ADKFN’s land
claim, and the regulation or management of such lands and resources. This
process is to be conducted with the aim of reconciling outstanding differences
between the parties, in a manner that is consistent with the honour of the
Crown and the principles articulated by the Supreme Court of Canada in Haida
Nation and Taku River.
[213] The SKDB and
NBDB are entitled to their costs of this matter. I am not persuaded that the
circumstances of this case justify an award of solicitor and client costs. As
agreed by the parties, the SKDB and NBDB’s costs are fixed in the amount of
$15,000.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT DECLARES,
ORDERS AND ADJUDGES that:
1. Canada has breached
its duty to consult with the SKDB and NBDB;
2. This application for
judicial review is allowed and the October 25, 2010 decision by the Minister of
Indian Affairs and Northern Development postponing consultation with the SKDB
and NBDB until after the conclusion of an agreement in principle between Canada and the ADKFN is set
aside;
3. Canada shall engage in immediate
and substantive discussions directly with the SKDB and NBDB with respect to the
subjects of the land claim with ADKFN that would affect or potentially affect
the asserted Aboriginal and Treaty rights of the SKDB and NBDB, including the
determination of lands and resources forming the settlement area or settlement
lands of ADKFN’s land claim, the use of such lands and resources, and the
regulation or management of such lands and resources;
4. Canada is prohibited
from entering into an agreement in principle with the ADKFN in relation to its
pending land claim until such time as the consultations with the SKDB and NBDB
referred to in the paragraph 3 of this Order have been carried out;
5. Upon the conclusion of
an agreement in principle with the ADKFN, Canada shall engage in deep,
meaningful and adequate consultation with the SKDB and NBDB in order to develop
workable accommodation measures to address their concerns about the
determination of lands and resources forming the settlement area or settlement
lands of ADKFN’s land claim, and the regulation or management of such lands and
resources. This process is to be conducted with the aim of reconciling
outstanding differences between the parties, in a manner that is consistent
with the honour of the Crown and the principles articulated by the Supreme
Court of Canada in Haida Nation and Taku River; and
6. The SKDB and
NBDB shall have their costs of this matter, fixed in the amount of $15,000.
“Anne
Mactavish”