Date: 20091015
Docket: T-1531-09
Citation: 2009 FC 1039
Ottawa, Ontario, October 15,
2009
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Barnes
BETWEEN:
COUNCILLOR YVONNE BASIL,
FORMER COUNCILLOR MARY JUNE COUTLEE,
FORMER COUNCILLOR STUART JACKSON,
FORMER COUNCILLOR SHANNON KILROY,
FORMER COUNCILLOR LORNE SAHARA,
COUNCILLOR AARON SAM and
FORMER
COUNCILLOR CLYDE SAM
Applicants
and
THE COUNCIL OF THE LOWER
NICOLA INDIAN
BAND
Respondent
REASONS FOR ORDER AND ORDER
[1]
This
motion came before me in Vancouver on Tuesday, October 6,
2009. The Applicants are seeking an interim injunction to prevent the holding
of a by-election to fill Band Council vacancies that arose from the deemed resignations
of several councillors.
a.
Background
[2]
The
background to this dispute can be found in the decision of my colleague
Justice Danièle Tremblay-Lamer in Basil v. Lower Nicola Indian
Band, 2009 FC 741, [2009] F.C.J. No. 902 (QL), and need not be repeated
here. It is enough to point out that the conduct of several members of the
previous Band Council including three who wish to run for re-election has been
found to constitute a breach of fiduciary duty by a specially constituted council
of Elders. Those findings were upheld as reasonable by Justice Tremblay-Lamer
in the decision cited above.
II. Issue
[3]
What
is at issue in the underlying application for judicial review is whether a
subsequent Band Council Resolution dated August 13, 2009 signed by the present
Chief and two Band Councillors is ultra vires their authority insofar as
it purports to declare the ineligibility of several past members of the Band
Council from offering in the pending by-election. That decision was
subsequently endorsed by the Electoral Officer and, as things presently stand,
those persons will not be candidates for election on October 24, 2009.
III. Analysis
[4]
I
accept that the Applicants have met the threshold for raising a serious issue.
I am not satisfied, however, that they have established irreparable harm or
that the balance of convenience favours their interests.
[5]
The
only evidence before me of irreparable harm and balance of convenience is that
some of the Applicants will lose the opportunity to stand for election and the
others will lose the right to vote for them. This evidence must be weighed in
the context of a full Band election to be held in 2010 and a right of appeal from
the impugned decision to a council of Elders. In Sweetgrass First Nation v.
Gollan, 2006 FC 778, 294 F.T.R. 119, I made the point that the Court should
be cautious about treading unduly into the political affairs of a First Nations
band. These Applicants have not exhausted their internal rights to challenge
this decision through the council of Elders. While there may be some
inconvenience associated with a process of appeal that takes place after the
election, it is, nevertheless, a process that should not be usurped
collaterally by seeking an interim injunction through the Court. If an appeal
is successful the by-election can be re-held. It seems to me that the
circumstances of this case are far less compelling than those addressed by
Justice Edmond Blanchard in Gopher v. Saulteaux First Nation, 2005 FC
481, 138 A.C.W.S. (3d) 989, and where an interim injunction was similarly
refused.
IV. Conclusion
[6]
In
the result, this motion is dismissed with costs payable in the cause.
JUDGMENT
THIS COURT ORDERS that this motion is dismissed with costs payable in the cause.
“ R. L. Barnes ”
FEDERAL COURT
SOLICITORS OF RECORD
DOCKET: T-1531-09
STYLE OF CAUSE: Basil,
et al.
v.
The
Council of the Lower Nicola Indian Band
PLACE OF
HEARING: Vancouver, BC
DATE OF
HEARING: October
6, 2009
REASONS FOR ORDER
AND ORDER BY: Justice Barnes
DATED: October
15, 2009
APPEARANCES:
John M.
Drayton
250-374-3737
|
FOR THE APPLICANTS
|
Joseph C.
McArthur and
Jeffrey
Langlois
604-631-3300
|
FOR THE RESPONDENT
|
SOLICITORS
OF RECORD:
Gibraltar Law
Group
Barristers and
Solicitors
Kamloops, BC
|
FOR
THE APPLICANTS
|
Blake, Cassels
& Graydon LLP
Barristers and
Solicitors
Vancouver, BC
|
FOR THE RESPONDENT
|