Top
court upholds 1760 aboriginal treaty: The ruling in favour of native
rights could establish a new approach to treaty disputes.
RICK MOFINA
The Vancouver Sun
Saturday, September 18, 1999
OTTAWA. The Supreme
Court decision on Friday to uphold a 240-year- old treaty between
the King of England and Mi'kmaq Indians bestows increased importance
on historical agreements.
The high court's 5-2 decision Friday striking down Donald Marshall
Jr.'s 1996 conviction for illegally catching and selling eels establishes
a new, deeper approach to interpreting native treaty rights.
''It's been hard work, but hard work pays off in the end,'' Marshall
said Friday in Halifax.
Marshall, the man who spent 11 years in prison for a murder he didn't
commit, said he had dealt with bigger problems and was determined
not to quit his treaty case.
In 1993, he sold 200 kilograms of eels caught off Nova Scotia for
$787.10. He was convicted and appealed his conviction to the Supreme
Court.
Marshall maintained that under the treaty signed between the Mi'kmaq
and King George II in 1760, he had the right to catch and sell fish
without government intervention.
The Supreme Court agreed Friday, but stressed that the treaty limits
the Mi'kmaq's fishing rights to daily needs, or what it called a ''moderate
livelihood'' including ''food, clothing and housing, supplemented
by a few amenities,'' Justice Ian Binnie wrote for the majority.
The treaty does not allow those governed by it to establish factory-scale
commercial ventures, the court said.
In reaching its decision, the Supreme Court's analysis of the treaty
went beyond what the document stated but what it meant to the parties
involved.
The high court examined historical records, other documents and looked
at expert testimony in the case, establishing a degree of measurement
that may set a new approach to treaty disputes.
The ruling stands as the latest in a string of positive decisions
for natives by Canada's top courts.
In the wake of favourable rulings for natives in the areas of taxation
and land rights, Supreme Court justices have identified native rights
as being among the chief issues facing the judiciary heading into
the next century.
Although Friday's decision specifically concerns natives represented
by the 1760 treaty with the Mi'kmaq, the Maliseet First Nation and
the Passamaquody First Nation living in New Brunswick, its impact
could reach into all outstanding legal treaty disputes.
The federal government immediately began assessing the depth of Friday's
ruling.
The department of Indian affairs is currently litigating 334 outstanding
treaty cases. They encompass hundreds of billions of dollars of resources
in such areas as oil and gas, fishing, logging, land, as well as taxation
cases.
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{ au: Rick Mofina dt: 09/18/99 sc: vs}