The court established that for aboriginal title to prevail, the Cowichan must prove sufficient occupation of the land claimed, and to have had clear title at the time of assertion of European sovereignty, and continuity of occupation where present occupation is relied on as the basis of the claim. This rules out the initial nightmare scenario bandied about over this case that the vast majority of Canadian indigenous, who were nomads moving endlessly from place to place, could effectively simply announce the pre-eminence of the eminent domain due to them as the original occupants of Canada to reclaim the entire country. Nothing in this judgment opens the window on such a scenario.
The case is complicated by the Cowichan’s claim for submerged lands beneath the surface of the Fraser River. This is an argument that has never been addressed before. The background is that in 1853, Gov. James Douglas told the Cowichan Tribes that Queen Victoria had given him a special mandate to treat them justly and humanely as long as they remained at peace with the European settlers. The presiding judge, on behalf of the B.C. Supreme Court, determined that this undertaking committed the honour of the Crown.
Douglas appropriated settlement lands to the Cowichan from the Crown’s land disposition with the intention that they would eventually become Indian reserves. They were never established as such, however, and eventually were sold to settlers without the knowledge or consent of the Cowichan Tribes. Because occupied First Nations settlements were effectively appropriated, the judge found that most of the Crown grants involved were made without statutory authority and that they contravened legislation that limited the province’s ability to sell the lands without first dealing with the Cowichan’s interest. Again, these are very specific circumstances that would be rarely replicated elsewhere in the country.
The ultimate judgment was that an aboriginal title grounded in precolonial occupation and constitutionally protected is a senior interest to a fee simple title derived from Crown grants; it is effectively a straight question of seniority in implicit Crown legitimization. Even at this, the justice determined that aboriginal title does not necessarily prevail over a fee simple title, and the priority between them must be addressed within what is imprecisely described as the broader framework of “reconciliation.” This presumably means applying equity to law in each case individually. The judge then laboured the national duty to attempt to conciliate the different interests in good faith “consistent with the honour of the Crown.” This is the ultimate velleity—the exultation of unspecific virtue: let’s always try to do the right thing.
The basis of the judgment was that the governments of Canada and British Columbia, as well as the Vancouver Fraser Port Authority, failed in their duty to consult the Cowichan Tribes over infringing activities on their title lands and failed to demonstrate that these infringements met the Crown’s fiduciary obligations in respect of the originally recognized aboriginal title. The judge also found, somewhat arbitrarily, that Richmond’s equitable defences of bona fide acquisition for value were not adequately proved.
Although the maximum imagined inconvenience of this judgment, if it is affirmed by higher courts, can safely be set aside, the judge’s finding that aboriginal title will generally prevail over simple titles leaves ample room for the dispossession of long-standing, good-faith property owners, evidently including the Crown itself. Assumedly, victims would have some recourse against the Crown as defective vendors opposite the Crown as grantor of original aboriginal title.
This was a specious and incomplete verdict that created confusion and, with the airy unworldliness often encountered on the Canadian bench, substituted platitudes about reconciliation for practical resolution of the problem. The chief takeaway is that we need better judges—ones who are less intoxicated by the absurdly magnified powers inadvertently conferred upon them by the Charter of Rights.







