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The Nature and Scope of Provincial Autonomy: Oliver Mowat, the Quebec Resolutions and the Construction of the British North America Act*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 November 2009

Abstract

In the 1930s, the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council was criticized for allegedly perverting the meaning of the British North America Act and the intentions of its framers. This notion persists, partly because its historiographical basis—the idea that the Fathers of Confederation envisaged a dominant federal government—remains substantially intact. To the Ontario Reformers, however, the Confederation agreement had not established federal dominance. On the contrary, it had implemented the broad claims to local autonomy which Reformers had been advancing ever since the 1820s. And while those claims rested on a legally heterodox conception of colonial constitutional status, the BNA Act gave legal effect to that conception as applied to federal-provincial relations. This allowed Oliver Mowat to do what earlier Reform leaders could not have done: enforce the local claims in court.

Résumé

Dans les années 1930, le Comité judiciaire du Conseil privé a été critiqué pour avoir supposément déformé la signification de l'acte de l'Amérique du Nord britannique et les intentions de ses auteurs. Cette version des faits est encore largement partagée, en partie parce que son fondement historiographique—l'idée que les Pères de la Confédération voulaient un gouvernement fédéral fort—demeure, elle aussi, bien admise dans l'ensemble. Pour les Réformistes ontariens, pourtant, l'accord confédéral n'établissait pas une prédominance fédérale; tout au contraire, il mettait en application les revendications d'autonomie locale que les Réformistes mettaient de l'avant depuis les années 1820. Alors que ces revendications étaient difficiles à ajuster avec le statut constitutionnel colonial, I'AANB leur a donné une reconnaissance légale en l'appliquant aux relations fédérales-provinciales. II a permis à Oliver Mowat de faire ce que les leaders réformistes avaient tenté en vain auparavant: faire valoir les revendications locales devant les tribunaux.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Canadian Political Science Association (l'Association canadienne de science politique) and/et la Société québécoise de science politique 1992

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References

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21 Canada, Legislative Assembly, Parliamentary Debates on the Subject of the Confederation of the British North American Provinces (Quebec: Hunter, Rose, 1865). The response to the Confederation proposals in the Maritime Provinces is reviewed in Phillip Buckner, “CHR Dialogue: The Maritimes and Confederation: A Reassessment,” Canadian Historical Review 71 (1990), 1–30.

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36 See, for example, Donald Creighton's denunciation of Mowat as betraying a “tacit assumption” of the Quebec Conference (Canada's First Century, 1867–1967 [New York: St. Martin's Press, 1970], 47), and the inconsistent reasoning of Saywell, Office of Lieutenant-Governor, 192–93. In 1969 Ramsay Cook began his chapter on the origins of the provincial rights controversy by remarking: “Though it was not always so, it now seems unnecessary to offer an elaborate proof of the contention that the Fathers of Confederation intended to establish a highly centralized federal system in which the central government would exercise a well-understood predominance” (Provincial Autonomy, 7). The persistence of the centralist interpretation is evident in Armstrong, Christopher, The Politics of Federalism: Ontario's Relations with the Federal Government, 1867–1942 (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1982), 812.Google Scholar

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44 Ibid. This was one of a series of letters which Sullivan published under the nomde-plume “Legion” and the title Letters on Responsible Government (Toronto, 1844). On Sullivan, see DCB, Vol. 8, 845–50.

45 On Canadian party politics at this period see Careless, J. M. S., Brown of the Globe (2 vols.; Toronto: Macmillan, 1963)Google Scholar, and Cornell, Paul G., The Alignment of Political Groups in Canada, 1841–1867 (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1962).CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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48 Quoted in Vipond, Liberty and Community, 33.

49 House of Commons Debates, June 11, 1869, 722–28, and Globe, November 24, 1869. The compact theory was at least a striking echo of the Baldwins’ “compact theory” of the Constitutional Act but probably more than that, since Blake came from the same Irish political tradition as the Baldwins and was to end his political career as an Irish Nationalist MP at Westminster (Schull, Joseph, Edward Blake [2 vols.; Toronto: Macmillan, 19751976]Google Scholar, and Banks, Margaret A., Edward Blake, Irish Nationalist: A Canadian Statesman in Irish Politics, 1892–1907 [Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1957]).Google Scholar

50 Globe, November 30, 1872.

51 Macdonald's latest biographers see them as establishing “a new and exacting use of disallowance, so that even the strongest of provincial rights was to be subject to central surveillance,” and Vipond says the guidelines meant that the dominion couldeffectively define the boundaries of provincial autonomy (Johnson, J. K. and Waite, P. B., “Sir John Alexander Macdonald,” in DCB, Vol. 12, 598Google Scholar, and Vipond, “Constitutional Politics,” 285). These opinions overlook the constraints on the veto which to Reformers were inherent in the imperial model.

52 Hodgins, W. E., comp., Correspondence, Reports of the Ministers of Justice, and Orders in Council upon the Subject of Dominion and Provincial Legislation, 1867–1895 (Ottawa, 1896), 61.Google Scholar

53 Severn v. The Queen (1878), 2 S.C.R. 770, at 80–86, 96, per Richards, C.J. Fournier, J. echoed Richards's argument, ibid., 131. Risk, “Canadian Courts Under the Influence,” 695, 696, 705, cites other cases in which Mowat used this argument. Risk mistakenly supposes that Mowat's use of this argument was inconsistent with his statements in the political arena. As Vipond points out, the Reformers never objected to the veto as such and favoured its abolition in the 1880s only because they did not trust Macdonald to apply it constitutionally (Liberty and Community, 189–90).

54 Vipond, “Constitutional Politics,” 282–84, and Romney, “From the Rule of Law to Responsible Government,” 112.

55 On Gwynne, see Romney, Paul, “From Railway Construction to Constitutional Construction: John Wellington Gwynne's National Dream,” Manitoba Law Journal 20 (1991), 91106Google Scholar, and DCB, Vol. 13 (forthcoming).

56 City of Fredericton v. The Queen (1880), 3 S.C.R. 505, at 560; see also Lenoir v. Ritchie (1879), 3 S.C.R. 575, at 630, and Citizens’ Insurance Co. v. Parsons (1880), 4 S.C.R. 215, at 329.

57 4 S.C.R. 215; 7 App. Cas. 96. In the Supreme Court the case consisted of three lawsuits, two of which were heard a fortnight after judgment was given in Lenoir and the third five months later, four days before judgment was given in Fredericton. Mowat appeared in this final hearing, presumably in order to counteract the damage occasioned by Lenoir, though he may also have been forewarned of the judgments in Fredericton.

58 4 S.C.R. 215, at 229–30.

59 Ibid., 346.

60 Sir Blackstone, William, Commentaries on the Laws of England (4 vols.; Oxford, 17651769), 1:49.Google Scholar

61 (1883) 9 App. Cas. 117; and see below, 27–28.

62 Liquidators of the Maritime Bank of Canada v. Receiver-General of New Brunswick [1892] A.C. 437.

63 Armstrong, Politics of Federalism, 24, and Morrison, “Oliver Mowat,” 92–93.

64 O'Connor Report, annex I, 39–50, 63–67, 71–72.

65 City of Fredericton v. The Queen (1880), 3 S.C.R. 505, at 566, and In re Prohibitory Liquor Laws (1895), 24 S.C.R. 170, at 212.

66 3 S.C.R. 505, at 566 (Gwynne's emphasis), and see generally ibid., 563–70.

67 “The general object [of section 91] was to give to the Federal Parliament authority ‘to make laws for the peace, order and good government of Canada in relation to’ not all matters absolutely, but to ‘all matters not coming within the classes of subjects by this Act assigned exclusively to the Legislatures of the Provinces.’ “ Mowat's analysis appears in his brief to respondent's counsel in the JCPC appeal of Citizens’ Insurance, reprinted in Ont. Sess. Papers (1882) no. 31. Emphasis added.

68 See, for example, Severn v. The Queen (1878), 2 S.C.R. 70, at 88 (per Richards, C.J.), 112 (per J.-T. Taschereau, J.), 138–39 (per Henry, J.); City of Fredericton v. The Queen (1880). 3 S.C.R. 505, at 533. 536–37, 540–41 (per Ritchie. C.J.). 558 (per H.-E. Taschereau. J.), 565–68 (per Gwynne. J.); and Citizens’ Insurance v. Parsons (1880). 4 S.C.R. 215, at 316 (per H.-E. Taschereau, J.), 330–31, 333–34 (per Gwynne, J.).

69 O'Connor Report, annex I, 27, 43, 48–50.

70 Laskin, Bora, “The Supreme Court of Canada: A Final Court of and for Canadians,” in Lederman, W. R., ed., The Courts and the Canadian Constitution (Toronto: McClelland and Stewart, 1964), 131.Google Scholar

71 Severn, Fredericton and Mercer v. Attorney General for Ontario (1883), 5 S.C.R. 538, all reversed the courts below. Lenoir did not, but the constitutional question had not been raised below (Ont. Sess. Papers [1888] no. 37, 12–13).

72 The Canada Temperance Act. 1878 (41 Vict., c. 16).

73 Or so Gwynne construed it (Can. Sess. Papers [1885] no. 85, 176).

74 The JCPC was criticized both then and subsequently for basing its construction of the trade and commerce power on the Act of Union, 1707, by which England and Scotland were united. See, for example, Can. Sess. Papers (1885) no. 85, 202; Vaughan, “Critics of the Judicial Committee,” 513; Laskin, “Supreme Court of Canada,” 132–33; and the comments of Gwynne and Sedgewick JJ. cited therein. When the decision is read alongside Mowat's brief, however, it seems that the JCPC cited the Act of Union simply as one more illustration of Mowat's contention that “trade and commerce” need not have the all-embracing meaning apparently ascribed to it by Gwynne (and by his colleague, H.-E. Taschereau)—see 7 App. Cas. 96, at 112–13.

75 The full statement was: “Notwithstanding this endeavour to give pre-eminence to the dominion parliament in cases of a conflict of powers, it is obvious that in some cases where this apparent conflict exists, the legislature could not have intended that the powers exclusively assigned to the provincial legislature should be absorbed in those given to the dominion parliament” (7 App. Cas. 96, at 108). The JCPC's suggestion that the “deeming” clause applied only to art. 92(16) gave O'Connor ammunition to use against the Prohibition decision, but this was irrelevant; what mattered was the fact that, in both decisions, the clause was construed as an aid to federal rather than a bar to provincial legislation.

76 Russell v. The Queen (1882), 7 App. Cas. 829 (quotations at 837–42).

77 Can. Sess. Papers (1885) no. 85, 62.

78 The Ontario Liquor Licence Act. 1876 (39 Vict., 3. 26; R.S.O. 1877, c. 181).

79 The Dominion Licensing Act. 1883 (46 Vict., c. 30).

80 Archives of Ontario [AO], Alexander Campbell Papers, Macdonald to Campbell, August 28, 1882.

81 Can. Sess. Papers (1885) no. 85, 74, 127.

82 Ibid., 174, 178. See also 182–83 (per Ritchie, C.J.), 54, 119, 134, 182–83, 185 (per Strong, J.), 68, 172, 189 (per Henry, J.), and see Loranger, Letters, vi, where Russell and the McCarthy Act are condemned as tending to promote legislative union. At the time neither the Supreme Court not the JCPC were required to publish the reasons for their decisions in referred cases; the cited source is the verbatim record of the Supreme Court hearing. That of the JCPC hearing was printed under the title Report of the Proceedings of the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council on the hearing of the petition of the Governor-General of Canada in relation to the Dominion Liquor License Acts of 1883 and 1884; there is a copy in AO, Irving Papers, box 80, item 15.

83 Compare V. Evan Gray, “ ‘The O'Connor Report’ on the British North America Act, 1867,” Canadian Bar Review 17 (1939), 319: ‘The real difficulty confronting the Privy Council in deciding the Prohibition Case of 1896 was the previous decision in Russell v. The Queen…. followed by Hodge v. The Queen and the McCarthy Act decision of 1885….”

84 Can. Sess. Papers, no. 85, 51–53, 65, 75, 127, 128, 169, 183, 192, 200 (Strong); ibid., 153ff. (Bethune, QC, for the dominion); and Report of the Proceedings, 82–84.

85 53 Vict., c. 56, s. 18, amended by 54 Vict., c. 46.

86 In re Local Option Act, 18 Ont. App. Rep. 573.

87 Hudson v. South Norwich (1895), 24 S.C.R. 145, and In re Prohibitory Liquor Laws (1895), 24 S.C.R. 170. In these simultaneous cases different panels, each of five judges, decided the question differently.

88 The Liquor Prohibition Appeal, 1895. An Appeal from the Supreme Court of Canada to Her Majesty the Queen in Council (London: William Brown, 1895), 117, 142.Google Scholar

89 Browne, Judicial Committee, 14–20.

90 [1896] A.C. 348, at 358.

91 Ibid., 362.

92 Ibid., 359–61.

93 This assumption was consistent with Lord Carnarvon's explanation in Parliament: “I ought to point out that… the residue of legislation, if any, unprovided for in the specific classification … will belong to the central body” (emphasis added). Oddly enough, centralist writers liked to quote this remark as showing the breadth of the federal power. See, for example, MacDonald, Vincent C., “Judicial Interpretation of the Canadian Constitution,” University of Toronto Law Journal 1 (19351936), 163Google Scholar; O'Connor Report, annex 1, 59; ibid., annex 4, 77; Creighton, D. G., British North America at Confederation: A Study Prepared for the Royal Commission on Dominion-Provincial Relations (Ottawa: J. O. Patenaude, 1939), 50Google Scholar; and Kennedy, W. P. M., “The Interpretation of the British North America Act,” Cambridge Law Journal 8 (1943), 150CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Scott, F. R. tended to stop quoting Carnarvon just before the italicized words, see his “The Development of Canadian Federalism,” Proc. Can. Pol. Sci. Assoc. 3 (1931), 233Google Scholar, and “Centralization and Decentralization in Canadian Federalism,” 1108.

94 Globe, July 4, 1887; ibid., March 1, 1888.

95 See above, 19.

96 9 App. Cas. 117, at 132. This was a paraphrase of the judgment of Burton, J., in the Ontario Court of Appeal, where Mowat had argued Ontario's case in person (Hodge v. the Queen [1882], 7 Ont. App. Rep. 246, at 278).