Date: 20090930
Docket: T-139-08
Citation: 2009 FC 982
Ottawa, Ontario September 30, 2009
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Campbell
BETWEEN:
BROKENHEAD FIRST NATION, LONG
PLAIN
FIRST NATION, PEGUIS FIRST NATION, ROSEAU
RIVER ANISHINABE FIRST NATION, SAGKEENG
FIRST NATION, SANDY BAY OJIBWAY FIRST
NATION, SWAN LAKE FIRST NATION,
collectively being Signatories to Treaty
No.1
and known as
"Treaty One First Nations"
Applicants
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN, represented by
the Attorney General of Canada, The Hon. Chuck Strahl in his
capacity as Minister of Indian Affairs and
Northern Development,
The Hon. Vic Toews in his capacity as
President of Treasury Board,
The Hon. Peter MacKay in his capacity as Minister
of National Defence,
The Hon. Lawrence Cannon in his capacity
as Minister Responsible for
Canada Lands Company
Respondents
REASONS
FOR ORDER AND ORDER
[1]
The
present Application is an effort by the Applicant Manitoba First Nations to
have the Government of Canada recognize, and act upon, its Treaty obligations
to them with respect to land. In order to achieve these objectives the First
Nations must establish that: a Treaty right to land
currently exists; the right is currently in
the process of being implemented; and there are legal expectations upon Canada with respect
to the conduct of the implementation which have not been met. I find that the
First Nations are wholly successful in meeting these objectives. The following paragraphs
provide a brief summary of my reasons for arriving at this conclusion.
[2]
In
1871 the Aboriginal People of Manitoba and the Government of Canada came to a
land agreement: Treaty No. 1. Among other features, the Aboriginal People were
expected to give up title to land to make way for immigration, and in return Canada promised to
set aside a certain amount of land for their exclusive use. This promise
created a Treaty right to land. The Aboriginal People kept their side of the
bargain, but Canada did not.
This fact is the single most important feature of the contemporary land dispute
which is at the centre of the present Application.
[3]
To
properly fulfill the compensation-by-land expectation placed on Canada by the
Treaty, modern agreements have been negotiated with certain Manitoba Treaty
First Nations. The agreements provide for a process whereby First Nations may
select certain lands or purchase certain lands with funds supplied by Canada. By
agreement, lands so acquired will, in turn, be made into reserves. These
agreements are the fulfillment of the Treaty right to land and are currently
being implemented. The Supreme Court of Canada has clearly stated the tone and
terms that should govern the implementation of this Treaty process. The present
Application focuses on the legal expectations placed upon Canada to consult
with the Applicant First Nations before any of its decision-making might or
does have an adverse effect on the Treaty right to land.
[4]
The
expectation to consult concerns Canada’s decision-making with respect to the
disposition of a large and valuable tract of “surplus” land it owns in the core
of Winnipeg known as the
Kapyong Barracks. Canada has a particular obligation to consult with two
of the Applicant First Nations, Brokenhead and Peguis, because each has a right
to acquire Federal surplus land. For the reasons which follow, I find that, in
its decision-making, Canada has not met the legal expectations placed
upon it to so consult, and, as a result, I find that the decision-making with
respect to Kapyong Barracks is invalid.
I. The
Treaty Right to Land
[5]
The
following features of Treaty No. 1, signed on August 3, 1871 by the Treaty
Commissioners and the Aboriginal People concerned, state the specific and
solemn land promise that Canada is obligated to fulfill:
[2nd paragraph] Whereas
all the Indians inhabiting the said country have pursuant to an appointment
made by the said Commissioner, been convened at a meeting at the Stone Fort,
otherwise called the Lower Fort Garry, to deliberate upon certain matters of
interest to Her Most Gracious Majesty, of the one part, and to the said Indians
of the others, and whereas the said Indians have been notified and informed by
Her Majesty’s said Commissioner that it is the desire of her Majesty to open up
to settlement and immigration a tract of country bounded and described as
hereinafter mentioned, and to obtain the consent thereto of her Indian subjects
inhabiting the said tract, and to make a treaty and arrangements with them so
that there may be peace and good will between them and Her Majesty, and that
they may know and be assured of what allowance they are to count upon and
receive year by year from Her Majesty’s bounty and benevolence.
[…]
[5th paragraph]
The Chippewa and Swampy Cree Tribes of Indians and all other the [sic] Indians
inhabiting the district hereinafter described and defined do hereby cede,
release, surrender and yield up to her Majesty the Queen and successors forever
all the lands included within the following limits, […]
[6th paragraph]
[…].To have and to hold the same to Her said Majesty the Queen and Her
successors for ever; and Her Majesty the Queen hereby agrees and undertakes
to lay aside and reserve for the sole and exclusive use of the Indians the
following tracts of land, that is to say: For the use of the Indians
belonging to the band of which Henry Prince, otherwise called Mis-koo-ke-new is
the Chief, so much of land on both sides of the Red River, beginning at the
south line of St. Peter’s Parish, as will furnish one hundred and sixty
acres for each family of five, or in that proportion for larger or smaller
families; for the use of the Indians of whom Na-sha-ke-penais,
Na-na-we-nanaw, Ke-we-tayash and Wa-ko-wush are the Chiefs, so much land on the
Roseau River as will furnish one hundred and sixty acres for each family of
five, or in that proportion for larger and smaller families beginning from the
mouth of the river; and for the use of the Indians of which Ka-ke-ka-penais is
the Chief, so much land on the Winnipeg River above Fort Alexander as will
furnish one hundred and sixty acres for each family of five, or in that
proportion for larger and smaller families, beginning at a distance of a mile
or thereabout above the Fort; and for the use of the Indians of whom
Oo-za-we-kwun is the Chief, so much land on the south and east side of the
Assiniboine, about twenty miles above the Portage, as will furnish one hundred
and sixty acres for each family of five, or in that proportion for larger and
smaller families, reserving also a further tract enclosing said reserve to
comprise an equivalent to twenty-five square miles of equal breadth, to be laid
out round the reserve, it being understood, however, that if, at the date of
execution of this treaty, there are any settlers within the bounds of any lands
reserved by any band, her Majesty reserves the right to deal with such settlers
as She shall deem just, so as not to diminish the extent of land allotted to
the Indians.
[Emphasis added]
(Applicant’s Record, Vol. 1,
pp. 50 – 51)
Decades ago, Canada formally
admitted that its land promise in Treaty No. 1 was not kept. Specifically to
rectify this breach, Manitoba First Nations entered into Land Entitlement
Agreements with Canada and the Province of Manitoba.
One method of rectifying the breach set in place by the Agreements was the
provision by Canada of some $109,000,000
to be used by First Nations to purchase land to fulfill the requirements of the
per capita land promise in the Treaty. As will be fully described below, of
interest to the Applicant First Nations, and in particular to Brokenhead and
Peguis, is the purchase of surplus lands owned by Canada in Winnipeg, being the
Kapyong Barracks.
[6]
The
Applicant First Nations argue that Canada’s outstanding
obligation to fulfill its promise and the existence of the Land Entitlement Agreements
represent a current Treaty right to land:
The Applicant
First Nations do not dispute that aboriginal title was affected by Treaty 1.
The First Nations agreed to share their lands, to open them up for peaceful
immigration and settlement. This commitment has been honoured throughout the
years since the treaty was made, and has never been disputed. The Treaty
relationship is a living one which endures perpetually. It follows as a matter
of course that the Crown’s outstanding Treaty Land obligations would require
the Crown to consult with them with respect to its disposal of lands which the
Crown has declared surplus and which become available as Crown lands to
fulfill the Crown’s outstanding obligations.
(Reply of the
Applicant First Nations to the written submissions of the Respondents in
respect of questions posed by Justice Campbell, para. 23)
However, Canada argues as
follows:
Treaty No.1 extinguished Aboriginal title
to all the lands to which it relates, including the Kapyong Barracks. The
various contemporary Treaty Land Entitlement Agreements fulfill the federal
Crown’s obligations in respect of the historically unfulfilled per capita
treaty land provisions of Treaty No.1.
(Written
Submissions of the Respondents in respect of Questions posed by Justice Campbell,
para.11)
[7]
It
is agreed that the standard of review for determining whether a Treaty right to
land exists is correctness. There is no dispute that the Treaty promised
Aboriginal People that they would receive land. I find that there is no question
that this promise created a right which endures to today. That is, while
certain lands were ceded by the Treaty, nevertheless, certain lands were
promised to which the Aboriginal People had, and still have, a right. I find
that the Agreements are only a vehicle whereby Canada’s obligation to meet this
outstanding right is to be fulfilled; the obligation is not fulfilled until the
per capita obligation is, in fact, met and the right endures until that time. It
is not disputed that the Agreements have not yet resulted in the acquisition of
land to meet Canada’s per capita
promise. As a result, I find that Treaty No. 1, including the Treaty right to
land which it creates, is still very much in the implementation stage.
II. The Legal
Expectations of the Conduct of the Treaty Agreement Process
[8]
There
is a significant body of law which provides guideposts for Canada to follow in
its past and continuing relationship with the Applicant First Nations with
respect to their Treaty right to land.
[9]
Chief
Justice McLachlin in Haida Nation v. British Columbia (Minister of
Forests),
[2004] 3 S.C.R. 511, at paragraph 20, speaks to the legal expectations of
unresolved Treaty rights:
Where
treaties remain to be concluded, the honour of the Crown requires negotiations
leading to a just settlement of Aboriginal claims: R. v. Sparrow, [1990]
1 S.C.R. 1075, at pp. 1105-6. Treaties serve to reconcile pre-existing Aboriginal
sovereignty with assumed Crown sovereignty, and to define Aboriginal rights
guaranteed by s. 35 of the Constitution Act, 1982. Section 35 represents
a promise of rights recognition, and "[it] is always assumed that the
Crown intends to fulfill its promises" (Badger, supra, at para.
41). This promise is realized and sovereignty claims reconciled through the
process of honourable negotiation. It is a corollary of s. 35 that the Crown
act honourably in defining the rights it guarantees and in reconciling them
with other rights and interests. This, in turn, implies a duty to consult and,
if appropriate, accommodate.
A. The Honour of the
Crown
[10]
In
Mikisew Cree First Nation v. Canada
(Minister of Canadian Heritage), [2005] 3 S.C.R. 388, the Supreme
Court of Canada was asked to review the Crown’s duty to consult in the context
of Treaty 8 and the transfer of lands in Alberta. On this issue, at
paragraph 51, Justice
Binnie gave this direction:
The duty to consult is
grounded in the honour of the Crown, and it is not necessary for present
purposes to invoke fiduciary duties. The honour of the Crown is itself a
fundamental concept governing treaty interpretation and application that was
referred to by Gwynne J. of this Court as a treaty obligation as far
back as 1895, four years before Treaty 8 was concluded: Province of Ontario
v. Dominion of Canada (1895), 25 S.C.R. 434, at pp. 511-12 per Gwynne
J. (dissenting). While he was in the minority in his view that the treaty
obligation to pay Indian annuities imposed a trust on provincial lands, nothing
was said by the majority in that case to doubt that the honour of the Crown was
pledged to the fulfillment of its obligations to the Indians. This had been the
Crown’s policy as far back as the Royal Proclamation of 1763, and is
manifest in the promises recorded in the report of the Commissioners. The
honour of the Crown exists as a source of obligation independently of treaties
as well, of course. In Sparrow, Delgamuukw v. British Columbia [1997]
3 S.C.R. 1010, Haida Nation and Taku River, the "honour of
the Crown" was invoked as a central principle in resolving aboriginal claims
to consultation despite the absence of any treaty.
[Emphasis added]
In addition, at paragraph 33, Justice
Binnie recognizes that Treaty implementation is a process within which the
Crown is obligated to act honourably:
Both the historical
context and the inevitable tensions underlying
implementation of
Treaty 8 demand a process by which lands may be transferred from the one
category (where the First Nations retain rights to hunt, fish and trap) to the
other category (where they do not). The content of the process is dictated by
the duty of the Crown to act honourably. Although Haida Nation was not a
treaty case, McLachlin C.J. pointed out, at para. 19:
The honour
of the Crown also infuses the processes of treaty making and treaty
interpretation. In making and applying treaties, the Crown must act with
honour and integrity, avoiding even the appearance of “sharp dealing” (Badger,
at para. 41). Thus in Marshall, supra, at para. 4, the majority of this Court
supported its interpretation of a treaty by stating that “nothing less would
uphold the honour and integrity of the Crown in its dealings with the Mi’kmaq
people to secure their peace and friendship.”
[Emphasis
added]
[11]
It
is important to note that the Yukon Court of Appeal in its decision on Little
Salmon/Carmacks First Nation v. Yukon (Minister of Energy, Mines and Resources),
2008 YKCA 13, at paragraph 67 relied on Justice Binnie’s reasons to conclude
that “the honour of the Crown and a duty to consult and accommodate applies in
the interpretation of treaties and exists independent of treaties.”
B. Reconciliation
[12]
The
Treaty Commissioner for Saskatchewan sees Treaty
implementation as part of a process of reconciliation. The Commissioner’s
following comment, cited by the Applicant First Nations, is a helpful
observation in understanding the importance of a non-litigious engagement between
Aboriginal People and government when making decisions which directly affect Aboriginal
Treaty rights:
In law, as both the Haida
and Mikisew cases emphasize, reconciliation is a “process,” and that
process does not end with the making of a treaty. The process carries on
through the implementation of that treaty and is guided by a duty of honourable
dealing. The very nature of the treaties is to establish mutual rights and
obligations. Fulfilling treaties is not a one-way street. Accordingly, the
honour of Treaty First Nations is also at stake in the treaty implementation
process. As the Supreme Court of Canada has stated, “At all stages, good faith
on both sides is required.”
(“Treaty
Implementation: Fulfilling the Covenant”, Office of the Treaty Commissioner, Saskatoon, 2007, pp. 127 – 128)
(Reply of the
Applicant First Nations to the written submissions of the Respondents in
respect of questions posed by Justice Campbell, para. 35)
[13]
It
is fair to say that the negotiation of Land Entitlement Agreements under Treaty
No. 1 was a process of reconciliation between the interests and ambitions of Aboriginal
People and the Federal and Manitoba Crown. The Applicant First Nations rely on Justice
Binnie’s direction, at paragraph 1, in Mikisew Cree First Nation with
respect to this intended reconciliation in challenging Canada’s
conduct by the present Application:
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. The management of these relationships takes place in the shadow of
a long history of grievances and misunderstanding. 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.
(Reply of the Applicant First Nations to
the written submissions of the Respondents in respect of questions posed by
Justice Campbell, para. 17)
C. Duty to Consult
[14]
Chief
Justice McLachlin in Haida Nation at paragraph 35 defines the test for
when the duty to consult arises:
But, when precisely
does a duty to consult arise? The foundation of
the duty in the
Crown’s honour and the goal of reconciliation suggest that the duty arises when
the Crown has knowledge, real or constructive, of the potential existence of
the Aboriginal right or title and contemplates conduct that might adversely
affect it.
[Emphasis added]
[15]
The
Supreme Court of Canada first addressed the scope and content of consultation
in Delgamuukw v. British Columbia, [1997] 3 S.C.R. 1010 where at
paragraph 168 it stated that “consultation must be in good faith, and with the
intention of substantially addressing the concerns of aboriginal peoples whose
lands are at issue.” Subsequent jurisprudence such as Haida Nation adds
to this statement by finding that consultation might range from, at the lower
end of the spectrum, giving notice of a decision that might affect a right, to
meaningful consultation at the higher end, depending on the infringement on the
right in question.
[16]
In
Haida Nation at paragraph 46, Chief Justice McLachlin describes meaningful
consultation:
Meaningful
consultation may oblige the Crown to make changes to its proposed action based
on information obtained through consultations. The New Zealand Ministry of
Justice's Guide for Consultation with Maori (1997) provides insight (at
pp. 21 and 31):
Consultation is not just a
process of exchanging information. It also entails testing and being prepared
to amend policy proposals in the light of information received, and providing
feedback. Consultation therefore becomes a process which should ensure both
parties are better informed ... .
genuine consultation means a
process that involves:
- gathering
information to test policy proposals;
- putting
forward proposals that are not yet finalized;
- seeking
Maori opinion on those proposals;
- informing
Maori of all relevant information upon which those proposals are based;
- not
promoting but listening with an open mind to what Maori have to say;
- being
prepared to alter the original proposal;
- providing
feedback both during the consultation process and after the decision-process.
III. The Treaty
Right to Acquire Federal Surplus Land
[17]
A
central issue in the conduct of the Land Entitlement Agreement process is the
degree to which Canada has discharged its duty to consult the
Applicant First Nations in its decision-making with respect to the Kapyong
Barracks. During the course of the hearing of the present Application, Counsel
for the Applicant First Nations confirmed that, and it is agreed that, on this
distinct issue only the Brokenhead First Nation and the Peguis First Nation are
directly affected. This is so because the Land Entitlement Agreement with
respect to each provides the right to purchase “surplus” federal lands; the
Kapyong Barracks are “surplus” federal lands.
[18]
In
1998, Brokenhead First Nation became a signatory to the Manitoba Framework
Agreement on Treaty Land Entitlement (TLE Framework Agreement). Article 3.10 of
the TLE Framework Agreement describes an elaborate process by which the
Brokenhead First Nation can acquire surplus federal land; a process which might
very well be rendered impossible to follow by the implementation of government
policy as described below:
3.10 Specific Principles for the
Acquisition of Surplus Federal Land
(1)
Where the
Department of Indian Affairs and Northern Development receives notice of
Surplus Federal Land which is located in the Treaty Area of an Entitlement
First Nation identified in Schedule B, the department shall forward to that
Entitlement First Nation and to the TLE committee notice of that Surplus
Federal Land and a copy of any appraisal or an estimate of the fair market
value of that Surplus Federal Land, provided:
(a)
the Period
of Acquisition of that Entitlement First Nation has not expired; and
(b)
the
Entitlement First Nation has not Acquired its Other Land Amount as of the date
the Department of Indian Affairs and Northern Development receives notice of
the Federal
Surplus Land.
(2) An Entitlement First Nation described
in Subsection (1) may give notice in writing to Canada within 30 days of
receiving the notice referred to in Paragraph (1)(a), expressing an interest in
Acquiring the Surplus Federal Land and in that case:
(a)
the
Department of Indian Affairs and Northern Development shall take those steps as
may be required under the policy of the Treasury Board of Canada existing at
that date relating to the sale of Surplus Federal Land to express an interest
in obtaining a transfer of administration of the Surplus Federal Land for the
purpose of enabling the Entitlement First Nation to Acquire the Land;
(b)
the
Department of Indian Affairs and Northern Development shall advise the
Entitlement First Nation as to whether, in accordance with the policy referred
to in Paragraph (a), the administration of the Surplus Federal Land will be
transferred to it for that purpose; and
(c)
subject to
Subsection (5), in the event the Entitlement First Nation is advised that the
land will be transferred to the Department of Indian Affairs and Northern
Development, the Entitlement First Nation shall have 60 days to Acquire the
Surplus Federal Land or to enter into an agreement with the Department of
Indian Affairs and Northern Development pursuant to which, among other things:
i.
sufficient
funds (being not greater than the fair market value of the Surplus Federal Land
and any adjustment as between Canada and the Entitlement First Nation in
respect of Municipal and School taxes) will be provided to the Department of
Indian Affairs and Northern Development by the Entitlement First Nation to
permit that department to obtain administration of the land; and
ii.
a right to
lease the land for a sum sufficient to discharge the obligations of the
Entitlement First Nation under Paragraph (5) will be provided to the
Entitlement First Nation for the period of time between the date responsibility
for the land is transferred to the Department of Indian Affairs and Northern
Development and the date the land is set apart as Reserve for the Entitlement
First Nation.
(3) In the event more than one
Entitlement First Nation gives notice in accordance with Subsection (2), Canada
shall advise each of the Entitlement First Nations of their competing interests
and those Entitlement First Nations shall resolve those competing interests and
notify the Department of Indian Affairs and Northern Development in writing of
the resolution of those competing interest within the time limit within which
that department must proceed to express interest in obtaining that Surplus
Federal Land under the policy referred to in Paragraph (2)(a), failing which
that department shall be under no obligation to pursue obtaining the transfer
of administration of that Surplus Federal Land.
(4) In the event an Entitlement First
Nation, having been advised that the land will be transferred to the Department
of Indian Affairs and Northern Development in accordance with Paragraph (2)(c),
fails to satisfy its obligations under that Paragraph, the Department of Indian
Affairs and Northern Development will be under no further obligation to pursue
the transfer of the administration of the Surplus Federal Land.
(5) An Entitlement First Nation which is
intending to Acquire Surplus Federal Land, or any other Person intended to hold
title to the Surplus Federal Land for the benefit of the Entitlement First
Nation, shall be responsible for all costs incurred by the Department of Indian
Affairs and Northern Development with respect to the operation and maintenance
of the Surplus Federal Land and any improvements located thereon (including,
without limitation, the costs of providing heat, water, sewer and electricity
to any improvements located on the land and any amounts paid or payable for
Municipal and School Taxes) from the effective dates of transfer of
administration of the land to the Department of Indian Affairs and Northern
Development.
(6) The parties intend that, wherever
possible, title to the Surplus Federal Land should be transferred to the
Entitlement First Nation or any Person intended to hold title to the Surplus
Federal Land for the benefit of the Entitlement First Nation or be set apart as
Reserve on the effective date of transfer of administration of the land to the
Department of Indian Affairs and Northern Development.
(7) The parties recognize that in
accordance with the policy of the Treasury Board of Canada relating to the sale
of Surplus Federal Land, an expression of interest in Acquiring Surplus Federal
land by an Entitlement First Nation under Subsection (2) or the taking of steps
by the Department of Indian Affairs and Northern Development in accordance with
Paragraph (2)(a) does not provide a right or create a guarantee that the land
will be available to be Acquired by the Entitlement First Nation or that the land
if Acquired by the Entitlement First Nation or a Person on behalf of the
Entitlement First Nation will be set apart as Reserve.
(Applicant’s Record, Vol. III,
p. 892)
[19]
In
2006, the Peguis First Nation signed a Treaty Entitlement Agreement with Canada
and Manitoba. This agreement is not
associated with the TLE Framework Agreement but, nevertheless, by Article
3.04(iv)(b) of that Agreement, the Peguis First Nation is entitled to surplus
federal land in similar fashion to the Brokenhead First Nation.
[20]
However,
with respect to obligations outstanding to the Brokenhead and Peguis First
Nations under the surplus lands provisions of the Agreements as identified,
because of the release provisions of each Agreement, Canada argues that
it has none:
[…] The release provisions of the
various agreements are clear and unequivocal. To quote from the Treaty Land Entitlement
Framework Agreement as an example:
“In consideration of this Treaty Land
Entitlement Agreement, the Entitlement First Nation……does hereby:
(a)
release to
Canada all claims, rights, title and interest the Entitlement First Nation or
any Predecessor Band ever had, now has or may hereafter have by reason of or in
any way arising out of the Per Capita Provision; and
(b)
release
and forever discharge Canada, Her Servants, agents and
successors from:
i.
all
obligations imposed on, and promises and undertakings made by, Canada related to land entitlement
under the Per Capita Provision;
No duty of consultation arises out of the
Treaty Land Entitlement Agreements either. These agreements are not the
implementation of Treaty No.1; they are the end result of the implementation.
The agreements are the instruments by which one particular treaty right has
been consensually resolved through obviously extensive and exhaustive
negotiations. Once again using the Treaty Land Entitlement Framework Agreement
as a reference, the respondents draw the Court’s attention to the following
provisions:
40.01
Entire
Agreement
(2) Upon execution by Canada, Manitoba, the TLE Committee and an Entitlement
First Nation of a Treaty Entitlement Agreement, this Agreement and the Treaty
Entitlement Agreement, jointly, shall constitute the entire agreement between
the parties and the Entitlement First Nation to:
(a) the fulfillment of Canada’s obligation to lay aside and
reserve tracts of land under the Per Capita Provision for that Entitlement
First Nation or its Predecessor Band in the manner and to the extent herein
provided;
40.10 No Creation of New Treaty
Rights
This Agreement is not a treaty and does
not create any new treaty rights for any Entitlement First Nation within the
meaning of subsection 35(1) of the Constitution Act, 1982.
[Emphasis
added]
(Written
Submissions of the Respondents in respect of the Questions posed by Justice
Campbell, paras. 18-19)
[21]
Thus,
Canada makes the argument that
the release provisions effectively release it from the content of its legal obligations
to the Applicant First Nations arising from Treaty No. 1. The import of this
argument is that the First Nations signatories agreed that their historical and
legal relationship with Canada is at an end. I find
that this is not, and cannot be, a correct interpretation of the legal effect
of the Agreements.
[22]
Given
the Supreme Court of Canada’s decisions with respect to the continuing nature
of the relationship between Aboriginal People and Canada with respect to treaty
rights, and given that the Agreements are part of the implementation of a
Treaty right to land, I find that the fair and correct interpretation of the
release provisions is nothing more than a limit on Canada’s liability to
fulfill the promise breached. The practical effect of the release is that Canada is only required to
supply land and/or money to purchase land to the limit of the per capita
promise provision of the Treaty.
[23]
In
my opinion, the release does not affect Canada’s continuing obligations in the
implementation of the First Nations’ Treaty right to land, and, in particular,
it does not affect Canada’s obligation to meet
its duty to consult. The duty to consult arising from the principle
of the honour of the Crown, as well as Canada’s
constitutional and legal duty to First Nations pursuant to s. 35 of the Constitution
Act, 1982, cannot be the subject of contracting out.
[24]
Therefore,
in its dealings with the Applicant First Nations, and in particular with the
Brokenhead and Peguis First Nations, I find that Canada had a duty to consult.
IV. Government
Decision Making: The Kapyong Barracks
[25]
The
Kapyong Barracks is the Canadian Forces Base that housed the 2nd
Battalion Princess Patricia’s Canadian Light Infantry until the regiment
relocated to CFB Shilo, Manitoba in 2004. The Department
of National Defence is currently the custodian of the 90 hectare area. Kapyong
is located on Kenaston
Boulevard
in the southwest quadrant of Winnipeg between the two
affluent neighbourhoods of Tuxedo and River Heights. The Kapyong
Barracks is also located in the traditional territory of the First Nations People
of the Chippewa and Swampy Cree Tribes, ancestors of the Brokenhead and Peguis
First Nations People.
[26]
The
Kapyong Barracks is prime land for commercial development. Canada’s
decision-making with respect to the disposition of the land is specifically for
this purpose. The Applicant First Nations’ interest in the land is for the same
purpose, but under their control, including a long standing interest is the
creation of an urban reserve.
[27]
In
the present Application, Canada has vigorously defended its position that,
based on the extinguishment and release arguments, no duty to consult existed
when it conducted it decision-making with respect to the Kapyong Barracks. However,
Canada also makes
an alternative argument which I cannot take seriously. Canada argues that,
if a duty to consult did exist, it did consult. It is not credible to take the
position in law that a very serious action is not required and to conduct
yourself accordingly, and then argue that, if it is required, it was
accomplished.
[28]
The
record in the present Application shows that the Applicant First Nations
expressed their interest in the Kapyong Barracks over a six-year period, from
2001 to 2007, and they believed that the Land Entitlement Agreements entered
into with the Crown gave a priority in favour of First Nations in the property
disposal process. While the record discloses that some dialogue took place
about the disposition of the Kapyong Barracks, in particular with the Long
Plains and Brokenhead First Nations, it also establishes that from the
beginning to the end of the decision-making with respect to the lands, it is
clear that Canada had no intention to grant the First Nations any meaningful
consultation as described in Chief Justice McLachlin’s decision in Haida
Nation. I find there is no basis in fact to support Canada’s
alternative argument, and it is dismissed.
[29]
There
is no point in setting out the details of the past course of conduct between Canada and the
Applicant First Nations over the land in question because I find that Canada admits that
it believed that it did not have a duty to consult as the explanation for its
actions. Be that as it may, by this decision, a new phase begins in the
relationship between the Canada and the Applicant First Nations.
V. The Duty to
Consult on the Kapyong Barracks
[30]
The
Applicant First Nations bring the present Application to require Canada to draw-back
on its decision-making with respect to the Kapyong Barracks, and to only
proceed forward in consultation with them. Therefore, it is important to define
the point to which the draw-back is required for Canada to discharge
the duty to consult.
[31]
Canada
made three discrete decisions regarding the disposition of the Kapyong
Barracks: in April 2001, Canada decided to declare the Kapyong Barracks as
“surplus” federal lands; in November 2001, Canada decided to classify the
surplus lands at Kapyong Barracks for “strategic” property disposal; and in November
2007, Canada decided to transfer the surplus lands at Kapyong Barracks to the
Canada Lands Company pursuant to the Treasury Board Directive on the Sale or Transfer
of Surplus Real Property (see: Transcript of September 10, 2009, p. 29, lines
22 – 24). While at this point in time Canada has not yet transferred the Kapyong Barracks to
Canada Lands Company, the transfer is imminent depending on the outcome of the
present Application.
[32]
According
to the 2006 Treasury Board Directive on the Sale or Transfer
of Surplus Real Property, which was first introduced in 2001, the concept of
declaring lands as strategic is stated:
Strategic surplus real properties are properties
or portfolios of properties with potential for significantly enhanced value,
those that are highly sensitive, or a combination of these factors. Because of
the complexity associated with these properties, they may require innovative
efforts and a comprehensive management approach to move them into the market.
Canada Lands Company, CLC Limited, as the government’s disposal agent, disposes
of these selected surplus properties through a strategic disposal process.
(Applicant’s Record, Vol. I, p. 108)
[33]
The
Applicant First Nations argue that the draw-back position in Canada’s decision-making must
be to the point before the November 2007 decision to transfer the Kapyong
Barracks to the Canada Land Company. I agree with this argument.
[34]
It
is not disputed that the implementation of the Treasury Board Directive with
respect to the Kapyong Barracks negates the Brokenhead and Peguis First
Nations’ ability to implement the “surplus lands” provisions of their Agreements.
This is so because the Agreements stipulate that “federal surplus land” is
defined as land, the title to which is not vested in a “federal crown
corporation”. In addition a number of other conditions are also imposed.
[35]
The
impositions are very specific. For example, Article 3.03 of the TLE Framework Agreement
to which the Brokenhead First Nation is a signatory sets out “Specific
Principles for Selection of Crown Land”. Article 3.06 sets out “Specific
Principles for Selection or Acquisition of Land in an Urban Area”. Article
3.10 sets out “Specific Principles for Acquisition of Surplus Federal Land”. Surplus Federal Land is defined at
Definition 88 in the Agreement as follows:
“Surplus Federal Land” means any “federal
real property”, as defined in the Federal Real Property Act, excluding
any “real property” as defined in the Federal Real Property Act to which
the title is vested in a “federal crown corporation” as defined in section 83
of the Financial Administration Act, that is:
a. within the Province of Manitoba;
b. determined by a “minister”, as defined
in the Federal Real Property Act, who has the “administration”, as
defined in the Federal Real Property Act, of that “federal real
property”, to no longer be required for the program purposes of that
“minister’s” department;
c. determined by that “minister” to be
available for sale; and
d. made available by that “minister” to
any “other minister” of Canada for a transfer of administration in
accordance with any then existing policies or directives of the Treasury Board
of Canada.
(Applicant’s Record, Vol. III, p. 862)
[36]
In
the present case, the Kapyong Barracks will be placed out of the reach of the
Brokenhead and Peguis First Nations as surplus lands if a transfer takes place
to the Canada Lands Company. Therefore, the draw-back in decision-making must
be to the point in time just before the decision was taken to transfer the
Kapyong Barracks to the Canada Land Company. It is at this point in the
decision-making continuum that meaningful consultation must take place.
[37]
There
is no doubt that Canada understood that acting on the Treasury Board Directive would
have a profound and adverse impact on the ability of the Brokenhead and Peguis
First Nations’ ability to acquire federal land, and, in particular, federal
land that might be used to meet its valid interest and ambition to create an
urban reserve. Thus, I find that the intention by Canada to transfer
the Kapyong Barracks to the Canada Land Company triggered a duty to consult the
Brokenhead and Peguis First Nations before the intention was carried out in the
form of a decision. In my opinion, having made this decision without lawful consultation,
Canada’s decision
to act on the Treasury Board Directive is unlawful and a failure to maintain
the honour of the Crown.
[38]
A
word of caution is required at this point in the legal process presently
engaged between Canada and the Applicant First Nations. During the
course of oral argument, Counsel for Canada made this statement:
MR.
GLINTER: What I can say, based on my many years acting on behalf of the
Government of Canada, is that if this Court issues a declaration saying that
the government acted beyond its jurisdiction or illegally or improperly, the
government would stop doing what it was doing and re-evaluate the situation and
comply with the directions given by the Court with respect to how they should
have done it better, or, alternatively, they would appeal the decision, but
they would not act in the face of a declaration from the Court.
MR.
JUSTICE: All right. So --
MR.
GLINTER: So if the Court --
MR.
JUSTICE: -- how it should have been done is part of the applicants'
argument.
MR.
GLINTER: The most that this Court can do is declare that there was a right
that triggered a duty to be consulted, or for the government to consult, they
failed at the discharge of that duty and, therefore, any order that they made
-- there has to be an order that was made that is the subject of this review --
is not effective, presumably.
And
we would take it from there by then engaging the First Nations in discussions
on a basis that we thought was appropriate to the circumstances of the case.
And if we could reach an agreement, that would be great. And if we couldn't,
that would be great too. There's nothing that requires the parties to reach
an agreement as a result of a consultation, as long as the consultation is done
in a fair, […] manner, that nobody is derogating from their responsibilities,
and that includes both parties.
But
if we can't reach an agreement or we can't reach accommodation, well, we'll
then just proceed to sell the property to the Canada Lands Company. We'll do
whatever it is that we had to do.
If my learned friends have an objection
at that point to our transferring the property because the consultation in
their opinion was not thorough enough or satisfactory, it's open to them to
bring the matter back to the Court for review.
[Emphasis added]
(Transcript of September 10, 2009, pp.
187 – 188)
Chief Justice McLachlin in Haida Nation
makes it clear that accommodation is a feature of the duty to consult. My word
of caution is that, if the standard for meaningful consultation, including
accommodation, expressed by Chief Justice McLachlin is not met in the
consultation that should take place between Canada and the Brokenhead and
Peguis First Nations as result of this decision, the chain of legal dispute
will not be broken, and disruption to the aspirations of Canada and the
Applicant First Nations will continue. In my opinion, while there is an onus on
Canada to consult,
there is a shared responsibility to have the consultation succeed. Consultation
requires engagement in good faith with a shared willingness to move forward to
find a mutually acceptable solution. My hope is that this solution can be found
with respect to the Kapyong Barracks.
ORDER
THIS COURT ORDERS that:
For the reasons provided in conclusion of the present
Application, pursuant to s. 18.1(3) of the Federal Courts Act, I declare
that:
Canada had a legal duty to consult on its decision to
dispose of surplus federal lands at Kapyong
Barracks and Canada did not meet that duty; and, in particular,
Canada acted contrary to law by failing to meet the
mandatory legal requirement of consultation with the Brokenhead and Peguis
First Nations before the making of the November 2007 decision to transfer the
surplus lands at Kapyong Barracks to the Canada Lands Company pursuant to the
Treasury Board Directive on the Sale or Transfer of Surplus Real Property; and,
as a result,
The November 2007 decision is invalid.
I award cost of the present Application to the
Applicant First Nations.
“Douglas
R. Campbell”