Supreme Court of Canada
Trusts and Guarantee Co. v. The King, (1916) 54 S.C.R.
107
Date: 1916-10-24
The Trusts and
Guarantee Company (Defendants) Appellants;
and
His Majesty the
King (Plaintiff) Respondent.
1916: May 5, 8; 1916: October 24.
Present: Sir Charles Fitzpatrick, C.J. and
Davies, Idington, Anglin and Brodeur, JJ.
ON APPEAL FROM THE EXCHEQUER COURT OF
CANADA.
Devolution of estates—Intestacy—Failure of
heirs—Escheat—Royalty—Bona vacantia—Dominion lands—Constitutional law—Surrender
of Hudson Bay Company's lands—Construction of statute—"B. N. A. Act,
1867"—"Dominion Lands Act"—"Land Titles Act"—"Alberta
Act"—(Alta.) 5 Geo. V., c. 5, Intestate estates.
In 1911, certain lands of the Dominion of
Canada, situate in the Province of Alberta, were granted in fee to a person who
died, in 1912, intestate and without heirs, being still seized in fee simple of
the lands.
Held, Idington
and Brodeur JJ. dissenting, that the right of escheat arising in consequence of
the intestacy and failure of heirs was a royalty reserved to the Dominion of
Canada by virtue of the 21st section of the "Alberta Act," 4 & 5
Edw. VII., ch. 3, and belonged to the Crown for the purposes of Canada. Attorney-General
of Ontario v. Mercer (8 App. Cas. 767), followed.
Per Davies and
Anglin JJ.—It was not competent for the Legislature of the Province of Alberta,
by the statute of 1915, 5 Geo. V., ch. 5, relating to the property of
intestates dying without next of kin, to affect the rights so reserved to the
Dominion of Canada.
Per Idington
and Brodeur JJ.—Upon the grant of the lands in question by the Dominion
Government they ceased to be Crown lands of the Dominion and royalties reserved
to the Dominion could not attach thereto. Further, the effect of section 3 of
the Dominion statute, 51 Vict. ch. 20, amending the "Territories Real
Property Act," R.S.C. 1886, ch. 51, and declaring that lands in the
North-West Territories should go to the personal representatives of the
deceased owner thereof in the same manner as personal estate, constituted an
absolute renunciation of all such claims to royalties by the Crown in the right
of the Dominion of Canada.
The appeal from the judgment of the Exchequer
Court of Canada, (15 Ex. C.R. 403) was dismissed.
[Page 108]
APPEAL from the judgment of the Exchequer
Court of Canada,
maintaining the prayer of the information filed by the Attorney-General for
Canada and declaring that the lands in question, upon the death of the owner
intestate and without next of kin, escheated to the Crown in the right of the
Dominion of Canada.
The questions in issue on the present appeal
are stated in the judgments now reported.
Frank Ford K.C. for the appellants.
W. D. Hogg K.C. for the respondent.
The Chief
Justice.—The Attorney-General for Canada by information
filed in the Exchequer Court, claimed a declaration that certain lands in the
Province of Alberta of which one Yard Rafstadt, who died intestate and without
heirs, was formerly the owner had escheated to His Majesty in right of the
Dominion of Canada.
The claim is similar to that put forward in the
Privy Council in the appeal of Attorney-General of Ontario v. Mercer, by the Dominion Government
in the name of the respondent. In that case the lands of which the deceased who
died intestate and without heirs had been the owner were situate in the
Province of Ontario. By the judgment it was held that lands escheated to the
Crown for want of heirs belonged to the province and not to the Dominion. The
ground of the decision was that although section 102 of the "British North
America Act, 1867," imposed upon the Dominion the charge of the general
public revenue as then existing of the provinces yet, by section 109, the
casual revenue arising from lands escheated to the Crown after the Union was
reserved to the provinces—the
[Page 109]
words "land, mines, minerals and
royalties," therein including, according to their true construction,
royalties in respect of lands, such as escheats.
What is now the Province of Alberta was formerly
a part of the North-West Territories under the sole authority of the Dominion
Government. Up to the time of the establishment of the province, by the statute
4 & 5 Edw. VII., ch. 3, there could be no doubt to whom the lands and their
revenues belonged. Lest there should be any doubt as to the position of the
public lands in the Province of Alberta the Act by which it was established
provided by section 21 that all Crown lands, mines, minerals and royalties
incident thereto should continue to be vested in the Crown and administered by
the Government of Canada for the purposes of Canada. The words are practically
the same as those in section 109 of the "British North America Act,
1867," from which they are doubtless taken whereby the like reservation
was made in favour of the provinces.
I do not myself understand how, in face of the
decision of the Judicial Committee, it can be contended that the same words
which were held to reserve to the provinces the casual revenue arising from
lands escheated to the Crown should now receive the opposite meaning and be
held not to include royalties in respect of lands such as escheats.
I am not sure that it is very necessary to deal
with the arguments put forward on behalf of the province. They seem to be
largely those urged and expressly negatived in the Mercer Case. The present
appellant in his factum claims that "the word 'royalties' has relation
back only to mines and minerals." This was, perhaps, the main contention
put forward by
[Page 110]
the Dominion in the Mercer Case, and their Lordships say, a
p. 779:—
The question is whether the word
"royalties" ought to be restrained to rights connected with mines and
minerals only, to the exclusion of royalties, such as escheats, in respect of
lands. Their Lordships find nothing in the subject, or the context, or in any
other part of the Act, to justify such a restriction of its sense.
It is useless to ask us to find now that the
word in the same subject and context has the opposite meaning to that placed
upon it by their Lordships.
Judgment for the respondent on this appeal does
not involve any decision as to the right of the legislature of the province to
change the laws of inheritance. Lands escheat to the Crown for defect of heirs
and this has nothing to do with the question who are a person's heirs. But
altering the law of inheritance is one thing and appropriating the right of the
Dominion on failure of heirs is quite another thing. This is what has been done
by the Alberta statute, chap. 5 of 1915. The statute in terms deals with
property of a person dying
intestate and without leaving any next of,
kin or other person entitled thereto.
It is because there is no one who can claim the
property that the Crown takes it. There is no possibility of getting at this
property through the deceased. The Crown does not claim it by succession at
all, but because there is no succession.
In the Mercer Case, the
Judicial Committee say:—
Their Lordships are not now called upon to
decide whether the word "royalties" in section 109 of the
"British North America Act, 1867," extends to other royal rights
besides those connected with "lands, mines and minerals."
It is not necessary in the present case either
to decide this question. The right of the Crown to bona
[Page 111]
vacantia is a
different one from the right to an escheat. No question as to the former right
really arises in this case and I do not express any opinion as to whether it
belongs to the Crown in the right of the Dominion or of the province. The
question will have to be decided if necessary in a proper case.
I would dismiss the appeal with costs.
Davies J.—Concurred with Anglin J.
Idington J. (dissenting).—One Rafstadt the registered owner of a quarter
section in Alberta who had obtained a certificate of title therefor, under the
"Land Titles Act," died intestate without leaving heirs at law or
next of kin.
The land had been granted to him on the 25th of
July, 1911, by the Crown acting through the administration of the Department of
the Interior of Canada.
The claim made that the said land escheated to
and became vested in the respondent in right of the Dominion of Canada has been
maintained by the Exchequer Court and the appellant, the administrator, having
sold the land and administered the estate of deceased, has been ordered by said
court to account to the respondent in right of the Dominion.
I respectfully submit that there seems to be
thus presented a curious confusion of thought at the very threshold of this
litigation.
If, as claimed by respondent and as held below,
the Act, upon which the appellant acted as administrator is ultra vires, then
nothing which that court can do, or we in reviewing its action and maintaining
same view can do, will be of any avail.
The title to the land is, in such view, in
respondent or liable to become so vested upon inquisition duly
[Page 112]
found. The Crown certainly cannot desire that
innocent persons purchasing from or claiming through the purchaser from the
appellant should suffer loss, as they inevitably must when, if ever, it is
finally determined that the Act apparently constituting the appellant owner was
ultra vires and all it had done thereunder null and void.
If I were driven to entertain the same view I
should feel much embarrassed in maintaining such a judgment fraught with such
obvious consequences unless and until proper concurrent legislation had been
enacted adopting and validating the appellant's sale and remitting the trial of
the right to the proceeds to the courts to determine.
However praiseworthy saving costs and going
directly to the point may be as a rule, there are some cases where it cannot be
done properly. And if the correct conclusion is as held below the proceedings
herein should be stayed or the action dismissed.
The respondent can have no claim to money
improperly received by appellant or any one else in Alberta unless under such
circumstances that he can properly affirm the transaction and be no party to
something detrimental to some of his subjects.
Passing that phase of this litigation and coming
to the issue attempted to be raised and decided herein, let us ask ourselves
what an escheat is and consider the "definition thereof as given in
Stroud's Judicial Dictionary, vol. 2, page 639, condensed from Coke upon
Littleton, as follows:—
Escheat is a word of art, and signifieth
properly when, by accident, the lands fall to the lord of whom they are holden,
in which case we say the fee is escheated.
Then let us bear in mind that the very
basis of the argument in support of the view contended for by
[Page 113]
respondent herein is the tenure by which the
land is assumed to have been held and that it has to be presumed a grant had
been made by the lord of an estate which for want of heirs has come to an end,
and by reason thereof the land has fallen to the lord who had made the grant.
Such is the theory rested upon.
The respondent, it is claimed, must be held in
this case to be the lord so entitled.
To make no doubt of the theory and its resting
upon tenure as the basis of this claim we have but to consider the
illustrations furnished by cases where the estate is held upon a copyhold
tenure when the title escheats to the lord of the manor. See in Watson's
"Compendium of Equity," the chapter on "Escheat and
Forefeiture," page 187, and cases cited there, especially Walker v.
Denne
at page 187, where Lord Loughborough, then Lord Chancellor, expressly says the
title would not escheat to the Crown but to the lord of the manor. See also the
more recent cases of Weaver v. Maule; Gallard v. Hawkins, and especially at pages
306-7.
This last mentioned case brings forward another
view, dealt with in Watson's work at pages 186-7, where it is explained that,
until 47 & 48 Vict. ch. 71, equitable estates did not escheat to the Crown
for they were not the subject of tenure and where there was a conveyance or
devise in trust and there was no heir of the grantor or testator the trustee
held for his own use absolutely.
The case of Burgess v. Wheate, contains elaborate
learning on the subject, and the much more recent case of Cox v. Parker, presents the law in
a very
[Page 114]
concise judgment of Sir John Romilly, Master of
the Rolls.
These cases and many others make clear that the
escheat of land is dependent on tenure and the title to the land only falls to
the Crown in case by reason of the nature of the tenure thereof under the Crown
such is the legal result when there is no one left to take the legal estate.
Let us now consider the nature of the tenure of
the lands in question herein and see if and how it can ever produce such a
result as contended for by respondent herein.
If ever legislation could sweep away such a
right as escheat in relation to land so far as dependent on tenure surely the
enactment of 51 Vict. ch. 20, sec. 3, did so.
It enacted as follows:—
3. Section five of the said Act is hereby
repealed, and the following substituted therefor:
5. Land in the Territories shall go to the
personal representatives of the deceased owner thereof in the same manner as
personal estate now goes.
That was a comprehensive declaration of the
Dominion Parliament relative to the doctrine of tenure upon which alone the
escheat of land so far as dependent on tenure could rest. It was an absolute
renunciation by the respondent, by assenting thereto, of any such possible
claim.
It was repeated in section 3 of the "Land
Titles Act" of 1894.
And in the same session in which the Province of
Alberta was created, and as declaratory of the policy of parliament in that
regard, it was enacted by the respondent's assent given same day as the
"Alberta Act" was assented to as follows:—
1. Upon, the establishment of a province in
any portion of the North-West Territories and the enactment by the legislature
of that
[Page 115]
province of an Act relating to the
registration of land titles, the Governor in Council may, by order, repeal the
provisions of the "Land Titles Act, 1894," and of any of its amending
Acts in so far as they apply to the said province, and by such order, or by any
subsequent order or orders, may adjust all questions arising between the
Government of Canada and the Government of the province by reason of the
provisions of this section being carried into effect.
In pursuance thereof the Alberta Legislature at
its first session enacted a "Land Titles Act" carrying out the
purpose so designed and by the language thereof put beyond doubt, so far as it could,
the possibility of any such thing as escheat dependent on tenure. It enacted as
follows:—
74. Whenever the owner of any land for
which a certificate has been granted dies, such land shall, subject to the
provisions of this Act, vest in the personal representative of the deceased
owner, who shall, before dealing with such land, make application in writing to
the registrar to be registered as owner and shall produce to the registrar the
probate of the will of the deceased owner, or letters of administration, or the
order of the court authorizing him to administer the estate of the deceased
owner, or a duly certified copy of the said probate, letters of administration
or order, as the case may be; and thereupon the registrar shall enter a
memorandum thereof upon the certificate of title; and for the purposes of this
Act the probate of a will granted by the proper court of any province of the
Dominion of Canada, or of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, or
an exemplification thereof, shall be sufficient.
2. If the certificate of title for the land
has not been granted to the deceased owner the personal representatives before
being entitled to be registered under this section shall bring the land under
this Act in the ordinary way.
3. Upon such memorandum being made, the
executor or administrator, as the case may be, shall be deemed to be the owner
of the land; and the registrar shall note the fact of the registration by a
memorandum under his hand on the probate of the will, letters of administration,
order or other instrument as aforesaid.
4. The title of the executor or
administrator to the land shall relate back and take effect as from the date of
the death of the deceased owner.
Surely the respondent by acting upon this local
legislation stipulated for in the enactment of Parliament above quoted must be
taken to have assented thereto as if bargained for when in pursuance thereof
[Page 116]
he by order-in-council repealed the "Land
Titles Act" of 1894.
The grant in question herein was made in pursuance
of that policy and registered in conformity therewith.
Does it not seem repugnant to reason that such a
claim as escheat by virtue of tenure could be permitted to spring from such
grants and rest upon such a foundation? That legislation by Parliament and
legislature adopted and carried into force by said order-in-council was, I
submit, as absolute and final a renunciation by respondent in right of the
Dominion as could be conceivable.
It is argued, however, that by reason of the
Dominion having retained the control of the disposition of the Crown lands in
Alberta, it must be taken to have intended to reserve to itself such incidental
sources of revenue as might result from escheat.
The "Alberta Act," by section 21
thereof, enacted as follows:—
21. All Crown lands, mines and minerals and
royalties incident thereto, and the interest of the Crown in the waters within
the province under the "North-West Irrigation Act, 1898," shall
continue to be vested in the Crown and administered by the Government of Canada
for the purposes of Canada, subject to the provisions of any Act of the
Parliament of Canada with respect to road allowances and roads or trails in
force immediately before the coming into force of this Act, and shall apply to
the said province with the substitution therein of the said province for the
North-West Territories.
When we are called upon to interpret and
construe this enactment I think we can refer not only to the whole scope of the
Act but also as in pari materiâ the enactments passed in same session
bearing upon the policy of Parliament in its relation to the powers to be
conferred upon the Alberta Legislature and especially that enactment already
referred to which provided for that legislature carrying out the policy of
Parliament
[Page 117]
relative to the tenure of lands and their
transmission in cases of intestates.
Having due regard not only to the "Alberta
Act" itself but also these other enactments, it seems inconceivable that
whatever Parliament intended, it could ever have sought to reserve to the
respondent in right of the Dominion any such thing as escheat dependent upon
tenure of the land.
There remains, however, the question of the
right of the Crown to become possessed of bona vacantia quite
independently of tenure. That sometimes is spoken of as a right to an escheat.
Of the existence of that right, call it what we
may, there can, in light of the authorities such as Taylor v. Haygarth, and in In re
Bond; Panes v. Attorney-General;
Dyke v. Walford,
and In re Barnett's Trusts,
be no doubt. Each is illustrative of the varying condition under which the
right may exist.
And if the respondent had sued appellant to
recover the proceeds of the estate left after its due administration the
question would arise whether such balance could be treated as bona vacantia falling
to respondent in right of the Dominion or in right of the Province of Alberta.
Then we should have to consider the neat point
in light of the following provision of the "Alberta Act," 5 Edw.
VII., ch. 3, sec. 3, as follows:—
3. The provisions of the "British
North America Acts," 1867 to 1886, shall apply to the Province of Alberta
in the same way and to the like extent as they apply to the provinces
heretofore comprised in the Dominion, and if the said Province of Alberta had
been one of the provinces originally united, except in so far as varied by this
Act and except such provisions as are in terms made, or by reasonable
intendment may be held to be, specially applicable to or only to affect one or
more and not the whole of the said provinces.
[Page 118]
Wherein do the provisions of the "British
North America Acts "differ from those thus made applicable to the Province
of Alberta?
It is said the provisions of the section 21,
above quoted, make a difference.
True, the management of the Crown domain is
reserved as a matter of public policy for the Dominion, but how can that touch
anything turning upon the right of the respondent to recover bona vacantia on
behalf of the Dominion?
There is nothing in the language of section 21
reaching so far as to require such a meaning to be given it.
There may arise cases similar to that which
enabled the Court dealing with personal property in the hands of executors, in
question in the case of Taylor v. Haygarth, cited above. Can it
be said in such a case that bona vacantia derived from or being mere
personal property is to be held recoverable by the respondent on behalf of the
Dominion, instead of by him on behalf of the province?
Surely the reservation of the revenue from the
sales and leasing of lands, mines and minerals is rather a shadowy foundation
for such a claim. Yet there is nothing else in this "Alberta Act"
distinguishing the status and powers of the new province from others in that
regard which can be relied upon.
The right of the other provinces to escheat had
been long determined in their favour by the case of the Attorney-General for
Ontario v. Mercer,
when the "Alberta Act" was passed and if there had been any such
purpose as making a distinction in that regard against the new province it
would have found expression
[Page 119]
in the Act in some more explicit way than by
such indirect language as used in section 21.
And when the claim to bona vacantia is
made how can it rest upon the single line
All Crown lands, mines, minerals and
royalties incidental thereto
for that is what the matter comes to?
There is nothing therein which in the remotest
sense can extend to mere bona vacantia consisting of or derivable from
personal property.
And with the claim thereto surely must fall also
the claim to proceeds of real estate which had been declared at that time to
become distributable as personal property.
And let us again observe the language of the
first line of section 21 which defines nothing of that sort. Only the word
"royalties" therein can be taken to have any possible
semblance of meaning applicable to what is involved in the claim.
And these royalties are not presented as jura
regalia but as "royalties incident thereto," i.e. incident
to the "Crown lands, mines and minerals."
In common parlance we all know how the term
"royalties" is used relative to the timber dues and any share of the
minerals extracted under and by virtue of leases of mines or mining lands. How
can such a term be made to have such an extended meaning as claimed herein?
The moment the lands are granted by the Crown
they cease to be "Crown lands" and how a royalty can attach thereto
puzzles one.
Again we must never forget that the whole
subject of property and civil rights is relegated to the jurisdiction of the
legislature of the province which can change the whole law of descent and
constitute whomsoever or whatsoever it sees fit the heir at law or next
[Page 120]
of kin entitled to take the estate of an
intestate or indeed if it saw fit could revoke the power to make a will and
distribute the estates of deceased in such a way as it might determine.
To say that a legislature possessed of such
plenary powers cannot enact such a law as declared by the judgment appealed
from to be ultra vires seems to me somewhat remarkable.
I think the appeal should be allowed with costs
throughout and the judgment appealed from be reversed.
Anglin J.—In this proceeding the Government of Canada seeks to recover from
the administrator of one Yard Rafstadt, who died in November, 1912, in the
Province of Alberta, intestate and without heirs or next of kin, the proceeds
left in his hands, after satisfying claims of creditors, of land granted to the
intestate in 1911, by letters patent issued from the Department of the Interior
of Canada, of which he died seized.
The substance of an arrangement between the
parties is that, if, upon the death of Rafstadt, the Crown in right of the
Dominion of Canada was entitled to the land owned by him, either as an escheat
or as bona vacantia, the net proceeds of the sale of such land in the
hands of the administrator shall for all purposes be deemed the property of the
Crown in right of the Dominion—that they shall represent the land.
A doubt was suggested as to the jurisdiction of
the Exchequer Court to entertain this action on the ground that the money in
question is in fact neither land escheated nor property of the Crown in right
of the Dominion. The relief claimed by the information,
[Page 121]
however, is primarily a declaration that the
land owned by Rafstadt upon his death
escheated to and became vested in His Majesty
the King in right of the Dominion of Canada,
That relief may properly be claimed in the
Exchequer Court under 9 & 10 Edw. VII., (D.), chap. 18, sec. 2. The
judgment has taken this declaratory form and a clause has been added, based
upon the consent of parties, for the recovery by the Crown of the net proceeds
of the sale held by the administrator.
The material facts were established by
admissions and are fully stated in the judgment of the learned judge of the
Exchequer Court.
Counsel for the appellant urges several distinct
grounds of appeal:—
(1) That the right of property in the lands
surrendered by the Hudson Bay Company to Her late Majesty Queen Victoria, was
never vested in the Crown in right of the Dominion of Canada;
(2) That the right of escheat, if not vested in
His Majesty in right of the United Kingdom, is vested in the Crown in right of
the Province of Alberta;
(3) That the reservation made by section 21 of
the "Alberta Act" does not include the royalties of escheat or bona
vacantia;
(4) That under the Dominion "Land Titles
Act," 57 & 58 Vict., ch. 28 (1894), the holder of a certificate of
title obtained not merely an estate in the land but the full allodial rights
therein and that it was, therefore, not subject to escheat;
(5) That under section 3 of that Act providing
that
land in the Territories shall go to the
personal representatives in the same manner as personal estate now goes, and be
dealt with and distributed as personal estate,
the real property of a deceased owner became for
all
[Page 122]
purposes personalty, and, while a case of bona
vacantia might arise in respect of it, â case of escheat could not.
(1) I doubt if the appellant, claiming through a
grant from the Canadian Government, should be heard to raise the first point,
if it were otherwise tenable. But that all the property rights both of the
Crown and of the company in those parts of the former Hudson Bay Lands which
were not reserved for the company were vested in the Crown in right of the
Dominion of Canada, is, I think, fully established. The original grant to the
Hudson Bay Company; the "Rupert's Land. Act," 31 & 32 Vict.
(Imp.) ch. 105; the surrender by the Hudson Bay Company to the Crown; the addresses
of the Senate and House of Commons of Canada to Her Majesty; and the Imperial
order-in-council passed pursuant to the "Rupert's Land Act" contain
the history of the arrangement and the steps by which the territory that had
formerly been held by the Hudson Bay Company (saying the reserved sections)
became vested in the Crown and subject to the legislative control of the
Parliament of Canada.
That Parliament exercised the power thus
conferred upon it of legislating in regard to the Crown lands in the territory
thus acquired. The first "Dominion Lands Act," passed in 1872 (35
Vict. ch. 23), after designating them in the preamble as "certain of the
public lands of the Dominion" enacted that the
lands in Manitoba and the North-West
Territories * * * shall be styled and known as Dominion lands.
The Act further provided for the administration
and alienation of these lands in a manner consistent only with the assertion of
the existence in the Dominion of the fullest proprietary rights therein. These
provisions are continued in the Revised Statutes of Canada, 1886, ch. 54, and
the Revised Statutes of
[Page 123]
Canada, 1906, ch. 55, and it is under the
authority of that legislation that the patent or grant to Yard Rafstadt issued.
Section 21 of the "Alberta Act," (4 & 5 Edw. VII., ch. 3)
may also, if necessary, be invoked as legislation, within the power conferred
on the Dominion Parliament by the "Rupert's Land Act," declaratory of
the title and interest of the Crown in right of the Dominion in the public lands
within the territorial limits of the Province of Alberta. On this branch of the
case I concur in the conclusion reached by the learned judge of the Exchequer
Court.
(2) and The second and third points can be
conveniently dealt with together. By the 21st section of the "Alberta
Act," (4 & 5 Edw. VII., ch. 3), it is declared that
All Crown lands, mines and minerals and
royalties incident thereto * * * shall continue to be vested in the Crown and
administered by the Government of Canada for the purposes of Canada.
In Attorney-General of Ontario v. Mercer, the Judicial
Committee considered the provisions of section 109 of the "British North
America Act" that
All lands, mines, minerals and royalties
belonging to the several provinces of Canada, Nova Scotia and New Brunswick at
the Union * * * shall belong to the several Provinces of Ontario, Quebec, Nova
Scotia and New Brunswick in which the same are situated or arise.
Their Lordships held that "royalties"
in this context includes escheat. After discussing the meaning of the term
"royalties" and the nature of the objects which it covers, they say,
at page 779:—
Their Lordships are not now called upon to
decide whether the word "royalties" in section 109 of the
"British North America Act" of 1867 extends to other royal rights
besides those connected with "lands," "mines" and
"minerals." The question is whether it ought to be restrained to
rights connected with mines and minerals only, to the
[Page 124]
exclusion of royalties, such as escheats,
in respect of lands. Their Lordships find nothing in the subject, or the
context, or in any other part of the Act, to justify such a restriction of its
sense.
The restriction of the reservation of royalties
in the "Alberta Act" to those incident to Crown lands, mines and
minerals, does not distinguish the case at bar from the Mercer Case, since
their Lordships there proceeded on the assumption that only royalties
"connected with lands, mines and minerals," are covered by section
109 of the "British North America Act" (p. 779); nor does the
omission of the words "in which the same are situated or arise" from
the section of the "Alberta Act" render the decision in the Mercer
Case, inapplicable. The right of
escheat is a royalty incident to "Crown lands," or lands belonging to
the Crown, and that royalty or right in respect to such lands in Alberta is
declared by the "Alberta Act" to continue to be vested in the Crown
for the purposes of Canada. I am, therefore, of the opinion that escheats
arising in the Province of Alberta at all events in respect of lands which
belonged to the Crown at the date of the creation of that province Were amongst
the rights and sources of revenue excepted and reserved to the Dominion by
section 21 of the "Alberta Act."
(4) The grant by the Crown to the Hudson Bay
Company of the lands comprised in the territory granted to it was "in free
and common soccage." All lands in that territory conveyed by the company
to settlers or others prior to the surrender by the company to Her late Majesty
Queen Victoria and the subsequent transfer to the Dominion were held by that
tenure. By an Act of the Dominion Parliament passed in preparation for the
assumption of control of Rupert's Land by Canada it was provided that
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all the laws in force in Rupert's Land and
in the North-Western Territory at the time of their admission into the Union
shall, so far as they are consistent with the "British North America Act,
1867", with the terms and conditions of such admission approved of by the
Queen under the" 146th section thereof, and with this Act, remain in force
until altered by the Parliament of Canada or by the Lieutenant-Governor under
the authority of this Act, (32 & 33 Vict. chap. 3, sec. 5).
This legislation, which left in force English
law as it stood in 1670, the date of the Hudson Bay Company's charter, subject
possibly to some question as to the portions of the region which may have been
first occupied by French settlers (Clement on the Constitution, (2nd ed.), p.
54, n. 4), was re-enacted after the actual admission of the territory
into the Union (34 Vict. chap. 16). In 1886 the Dominion Parliament enacted
that
All the laws of England relating to civil
and criminal matters, as the same existed on the 15th day of July, 1870, shall
be in force in the Territories in so far as the same are applicable to the
Territories (49 Vict., ch. 25, sec. 3).
Since the statute of Charles II., free and
common soccage has been the ordinary tenure on which freehold lands are held in
England and it is the tenure prescribed in all the early colonial charters or
patents in America (Blackstone, Lewis's edition, vol. 1, page 78, n. 1).
The habendum in the patent to Rafstadt, put in by consent, was "in fee
simple," making it clear that his estate was a fee simple to be held in
free and common socage, to which the royalty of escheat has always been
incident (11 Hals., page 24).
In the second volume of his commentaries
(Lewis's edition, at page 104-5), Blackstone wrote:—
1. Tenant in fee simple (or, as he is
frequently styled, tenant in fee) is he that hath lands, tenements, or
hereditaments, to hold to him and to his heirs forever; generally, absolutely
and simply; without mentioning what heirs, but referring that to his own
pleasure, or to the disposition of the law. The true meaning of the word fee
(feodum) is the same with that of feud or fief, and in its original sense it is
taken
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in contradiction to allodium which latter
the writers on this subject define to be every man's own land, which he
possesseth merely in his own right, without owing any rent or service to any
superior. This is property in its highest degree; and the owner thereof hath absolutum
et directum dominium, and therefore is said to be seised thereof absolutely
in dominico suo, in his own demense. But feodum, or fee, is that which
is held of some superior, on condition of rendering him service; in which
superior the ultimate property of the land resides. And therefore Sir Henry
Spelman defines a feud or fee to be the right which the vassal or tenant hath
in lands, to use the same, and take the profits thereof to him and his heirs,
rendering to the lord his due services; the mere allodial property of the soil
always remaining in the lord. This allodial property no subject in England has;
it being a received, and now undeniable principle in the law, that all the
lands in England are holden mediately or immediately of the king. The king
therefore only hath absolutum et directum dominium: but all subjects'
lands are in the nature of feodum or fee; whether derived to them by descent
from their ancestors, or purchased for a valuable consideration; for they
cannot come to any man by either of those ways, unless accompanied with those
feudal clogs which were laid upon the first feudatory when it was originally
granted. A subject therefore hath only the usufruct, and not the absolute
property of the soil; or, as Sir Edward Coke expresses it, he hath dominium
utile, but not dominium directum. And hence it is, that, in the most
solemn acts of law, we express the strongest and, highest estate that any
subject can have by these words:—"he is seised thereof in his demesne,
'as of fee.'" It is a man's demesne, dominicum, or property,
since it belongs to him and his heirs forever: yet this dominicum property or
demesne, is strictly not absolute or allodial, but qualified or feudal: it is
his demesne, as of fee: that is, it is not purely and simply his own, since it
is held of a superior lord, in whom the ultimate property resides.
In any part of the King's dominions where the
English legal system prevails it would require legislation very clear and
explicit indeed to take from the Crown its allodial interest and vest it in the
subject. There is no such legislation in regard to land in Alberta, and, so far
as it might affect the reservation in favour of the Dominion made by section 21
of the "Alberta Act," provincial legislation intended to have that
effect, would be ultra vires.
The appellant invokes the provisions of the
Dominion "Land Titles Act," 1894 (57 & 58 Vict., ch. 28),
making special reference to sections 3,4 and 10, as indicating
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the purpose of the Dominion Parliament to have
been that in the North-West Territories a grant of land from the Crown followed
by registration under the "Land Titles Act" should vest in the
grantee the absolute or allodial title and that land so granted and registered
should for all purposes be converted into and be subject to the incidents of
personal property. But the definition in the Dominion "Land Titles
Act" of 1894 of the word "grant" as meaning "any grant from
the Crown of land whether in fee or for years" the definition of
the word "owner" as meaning "any person or body corporate
entitled to any freehold or other estate or interest in land," the
provision of section 56 that
the land mentioned in any certificate of
title granted under this Act shall by implication and without any special
mention therein, unless the contrary is expressly declared, be subject to (a)
any subsisting reservations or exceptions contained in the original grant
from the Crown,
and the provision of section 57 that
Every certificate of title granted under
this Act shall * * * be conclusive evidence * * * that the person named therein
is entitled to the land included in the same for the estate or interest therein
specified, subject to the exceptions and reservations mentioned in the
preceding section,
afford striking and, I think, conclusive, proof
that it was not intended by this legislation to affect any such radical change
as would be involved in vesting in the grantees of Crown lands in the
North-West Territories (as they then were) not merely the fee simple of the
lands granted—"the strongest and highest estate that any subject can
have"—but also the allodial rights of the Crown. While section 4 dispenses
with words of limitation in transfers and provides that, if used, they shall
have the like force and meaning as if used in connection with personal
property, this provision does
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not apply to Crown grants and the effect of a
transfer is declared to be to pass "all such right and title as the
transferror has"—not the allodial rights in the land. While section 10
speaks of an "absolute estate," it so denominates an estate in fee
simple, which may not be reduced by words of limitation to a limited fee or
fee-tail. Far from indicating an intention to confer an allodial interest on
grantees of the Crown these sections evince an intention that the greatest
estate of a subject—that in fee simple— shall be the nature of the holding.
This statute was repealed as to Alberta by
order-in-council of the 22nd July, 1906, authorized by statute 4 & 5 Edw.
VII., chap. 18.
(4) and (5) Section 3 of the Act so
repealed—reproduced in the Alberta "Land Titles Act"—is as follows:—
Land in the Territories (Alberta) shall
goto the personal representative of the deceased owner thereof in the same
manner as personal estate now goes, and be dealt with and distributed as
personal estate.
As originally introduced, in 1886 (49 Vict. ch.
26, sec. 5), the prototype of this provision read
All lands in the Territories which by the
common law are regarded as real estate shall be held to be chattels real and
shall go to the executor or administrator of any person or persons dying,
seised or possessed thereof as other personal estate now passes to the personal
representative.
But this section was repealed in 1888 (51 Vict.
ch. 20, sec. 3), and the provision then substituted read
Land in the Territories shall go to the
personal representative of the deceased owner thereof in the same manner as personal
estate now goes.
No substantial change was made by the Act of
1894 (57 & 58 Vict., ch. 28, sec. 3, above quoted). The omission
from these later enactments of the words "shall be held to be chattels
real" is
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significant and shews that, at all events since
1888, whatever may have been the case under the Act of 1886, land is still land
and it is only for purposes of descent and distribution that it is to be
regarded as personalty. Otherwise it remains land and subject to all the
incidents of land. On the death of an owner of land intestate and without heirs
he leaves nothing to be dealt with as a subject of descent or distribution. On
his death his estate in the land comes to an end and, eo instanti, the
Crown, by virtue, of the escheat, is seised of the land which had been his.
There is nothing to pass to a personal representative.
The legislation relied upon is, no doubt,
effective to convert into personalty, and to attach to it all the incidents of
personalty, for purposes of succession and distribution, whatever estate or
interest the deceased owner held in his real property. But it leaves untouched
the allodial interest or "ultimate property" which remained resident
in the Crown after the grant of the fee and by virtue of which, on the death of
the owner intestate and without heirs, the fee having determined, the Crown was
again seised of the land as it had been before the grant. Nothing passed to the
personal representative of the owner. There was nothing upon which the
provisions of section 3 could operate. The owner's interest simply ceased to
exist. As put in Attorney-General of Ontario v. Mercer, at page 772,
When there is no longer any tenant, the
land returns by reason of tenure, to the lord by whom or by whose predecessors
in title, the tenure was created * * * The tenant's estate (subject to any
charges upon it which he may have created) has come to an end and the lord is
in by his own right.
While it is no doubt competent to the
legislature of the Province of Alberta, subject to the restrictions
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of section 21 of the "Alberta Act," to
determine the tenure of land in that province and to amend the law of descent,
it cannot deal with either of these matters so as to affect the rights by that
section reserved to the Crown in right of the Dominion, including inter alia
the right of escheat. In so far as it may purport to do so chapter 5 of the
Alberta statutes of 1915 is ultra vires.
I would, for these reasons, dismiss this appeal
with costs.
Brodeur J (dissenting).—For the reasons given by Mr. Justice Idington, I am
of opinion that this appeal should be allowed with costs throughout.
Appeal dismissed with costs.
Solicitors for the appellants: Emery,
Newell, Ford, Bolton & Mount.
Solicitors for the respondent: Hogg & Hogg.