Title: Canadian Constitutional Law October 20 Supplemental
1Canadian Constitutional LawOctober 20
Supplemental
2Citizens Insurance Co. v. Parsons, 1881
- First major 92(13) case.
- Impugned Ontario Fire Insurance Policy Act.
- Fire in Parsons warehouse. Parsons wanted
insurance payment - Ins Co you didnt observe the fine print.
- Parsons the fine print didnt conform to the
Ontario Act. - Ins Co The act is ultra vires Ontario.
- Sir Montague Smith discusses how s. 91 92
overlap. JCPC will interpret the BNA Act as an
ordinary statute, applying similar rules of
interpretation.
- -Smith Invokes presumption that specific takes
precedence over general. Property Civil
Rights more specific than Trade Commerce. - cubby hole doctrine. S. 92(13)? Yes. Also S.
91(2)-TC? No. Feds can incorporate Cos with
national objective, but this doesnt prevent
provinces from regulating intraprovincial
transactions - Three aspects of TC international,
interprovincial and general. - He doesnt define these categories. Left for
later cases. - What is holding? What is obiter?
3Russell v. The Queen, 1882
- Impugned legislation Canada Temperance Act,
1878 - Certiorari rule nisi
- ¼ of electors in a county or city may petition
for a plebiscite on prohibition. - Fredericton went dry
- Charles Russell Fredericton pub owner, sold
anyway convicted - Previous SCC decision City of Fr. v. Queen Can
Temp Act intra vires under TC (91-2) - JCPC decision Sir Montague Smith.
- Russells lawyer delegation argument
Parliament cant delegate its powers.
Legislation says GG may, not shall.
- cubby hole doctrine
- Is subject-matter of impugned legislation in
s.92? If so, is it also in 91? - If not in s. 92, it must be in s. 91
- Russells lawyer argued legis. Falls in s. 92
9, 13 or 16 - pith and substance
- Smith Nearly anything could fall under 92(13)
what is ps? - Central subject matter is public order safety,
not TC - Not local because of local option. (eg.
contageous disease orders with greater impact in
some areas) - Therefore, not under s.92.
- No comment on SCCs decision in Fredericton re s.
91(2), but seems to emphasize POGG - Eg of Gap (residual) branch of POGG
4Case 4 Local Prohibition Case, 1896 (Ian Greene)
- Pith substance vice of intemperance at local
level - 92(16) (local) yes.
- 92(13) no the law prohibits rather than
regulates - if conflict fed. law is paramount
- conflict of laws no conflict if strictest
obeyed - aspect (or double aspect) doctrine a
legislative subject-matter can fall under s. 91
for one purpose, and s. 92 for another. - National dimension or national concern doctrine
of POGG hinted at a subject matter can become a
matter of national concern and then feds can
regulate under POGG.
- Impugned Onts Local Prohibition Act (1890)
- Townships, towns, villages ( cities)
- Appeal from SCC reference re validity of Ont
Local Proh. Act - Lord Watson
- Feds (under POGG) can trench on s.92 only if
incidental to a legitimate fed purpose
otherwise, all of s.92 would fall under s. 91. - s.94 issue (power to unify common law in
anglophone provs) meaningless if POGG
interpreted broadly. - Ontario argued that legis. falls under 92(8)
(municipalities). Watson not a convincing
argument
5Case 9, AG Canada v. AG Ontario, Labour
Conventions Case (restriction of federal power
over international affairs,1937) Ian Greene
- Lord Atkin - wrote decision
- Distinguished Aeronautics and Radio cases. He
said that the Radio case decided that power to
regulate radio transmissions is new, and
therefore falls under POGG. (Is that what you
think was decided?) The treaty-signing power
falls to the feds under POGG, but the
treaty-implementation power depends on the
subject-matter of the treaty. Matters that fall
under S. 92 can only be implemented by the
provinces.
- Extraterritoriality
- Federal
- Provincial
- Treaty-making powers
- Head of states
- Intergovernmental
- Exchange of notes
6Chicken Egg Reference - 1971 (Ian Greene)
- In 1970, Que govt authorized Que egg marketing
agency to restrict import of eggs from out of
province - Ont and Man were suppliers of eggs to Que
- Que supplied chickens to other provinces they
restricted Quebec chickens - Man passed egg marketing legis identical to
Quebecs and referred it to Mn CAp
- Man legis. struck down appealed to SCC (What if
leg upheld?) - 9 judges on panel 6 2 1 (all agreed ultra
vires) - Martland Pith and substance interprovincial
TC.
7Chicken Egg (2)
- Laskins first major decision.
- Annoyed that case is fabricated. Why?
- Obiter since Parsons led to attenuation of
literal interp of TC. - Prov. Marketing legislation OK if producers in
other provinces treated the same a local
producers - Purpose of this legislation to control the
import of eggs. Therefore it is ultra vires
trenches in fed control over interprovincial TC - Scholarly analysis both of case law and realities
of trade in eggs other goods - Not necessary to invoke s. 121
8Ref re Anti-Inflation Act (1976)
- Trudeau campaigned against wage price controls
during 1974 election. After his election
victory, he reversed his position. - 1975 federal Anti-Inflation Act enacted. All
prov's cooperated. Ont public employee unions
challenged in court, so the feds sent a ref
question to the SCC to settle the issue. - AG of Canada defended Act under nat concern
branch of POGG, and also argued that an economic
crisis equals an emergency. - There were two decisions for the majority, by
Laskin and Ritchie. However, the dissenters
agreed with Ritchies interpretation of POGG,
leaving the Courts interpretation of POGG
unclear.
- Laskin (3 judges) Laskin had been a law prof,
and wrote the leading text (before Hogg) on Can.
const. law. - Reviewed history of POGG
- Const must adapt to change.
- If judges can defend as crisis, not nec to look
at national concern argument. - Evidence shows there is a rational basis for
believing a crisis exists (Stats Can) - Lipsey 39 economists in an affidavit argued
that 1975 inflation is not a crisis. Laskin
there is disagreement amongst economists, and
its not up to SCC to decide. (Beginning of use
of soc sci evidence in court.) - Fed power supported by 91 (14-21 except 17),
TC, so its intra vires. - Ont. order-in-council is ultra vires needs
primary legislation.
9Monahan, Chapter 10 Property Civil Rights
(92-13) within provinces
- During JCPC era, 92(13) was the de facto residual
clause - Federal legislation directly relating to one of
the enumerated heads of power in S. 91 was
upheld, even if it had an incidental effect on
provincial powers other legislation was usually
declared ultra vires. The enumerated heads were
no longer examples of federal power, but nearly
the whole of federal power. - Even though the Chicken Egg reference prevented
provinces from using 92(13) to interfere with
interprovincial marketing, an interprovincial egg
marketing scheme with federal and provincial
dovetailing legislation was later held to be
constitutional. - Earlier decisions (Carnation, 1968) supported
provincial regulation of trade within provinces.
In later decisions in the 70s, the court looked
into whether provincial legislation worded to
control only trade within a province might be
designed to impact interprovincial or
international trade if so the provincial
legislation could be struck down. In reaction to
these decisions, the provinces demanded that S.
92A be added to the Constitution Act, 1867
giving provinces more control over production and
export of non-renewable natural resources. - Sometimes provincial laws have an incidental
impact outside the province. If the pith and
substance of the law is intended to have a purely
provincial impact, then the SCC will uphold the
law (eg. BC legislation to hold extraprovincial
tobacco companies liable for health care costs in
B.C. of B.C. residents made sick by tobacco -
2005). (In contrast, federal laws can have
extraterritorial application if practical. It is
a criminal offence to hijack a Canadian plane
inside or outside of Canada.)
10Monahan, Constitutional Law, Ch 11 Criminal Law
(Ian Greene)
- In contrast to U.S., criminal law is a federal
power in Canada (91-27) in U.S. state law.
But in Canada, provinces control enforcement
(most police prosecutions) - Case law a criminal law prohibits with a
penalty, and is for a criminal public purpose
including peace, order, security, health,
morality. (margarine ref, 1949) - 1993 Tobacco Products Control Act within
federal criminal power - 1997 Can Environmental Protection act valid
criminal law - 2000 Federal Firearms Act valid criminal law
- 1980 Federal regulation of light beer not
valid criminal law
11Monahan, Constitutional Law, Ch 11 Criminal Law
(Ian Greene) slide 2
- Provincial power to enact penal laws
- S. 92(15) gives provinces the power to impost
punishment by fine, penalty or imprisonment for
enforcing provincial laws. Quasi-criminal
legislation. (Provincial laws imprisonment up
to 2 years federal criminal law up to life.
Prov laws prosecuted by way of summary
conviction fed criminal law prosecution by
either summary conviction or indictment.
Provinces build jails for offenders sentenced to
less than 2 years feds build penitentiaries.) - SCC case law separating criminal law from valid
provincial law is contradictory and confusion
eg cases about criminal law and municipal bylaws
regulating strip joints. - Police functions under the criminal code are
provincial jurisdiction under 92(14). RCMP has
the power to enforce federal laws other than the
criminal law. Eight provinces rent the RCMP
from the federal govt for provincial police
services the RCMP in these provinces is under
the control of the provincial Attorney General.
But investigation of complaints is a federal
responsibility for the RCMP. - SCC has held that the federal government can
prosecute drug cases thus, a confusing array of
federal prosecutors, at first appointed for
patronage reasons. Monahan claims that the
federal government could extend the role of
federal prosecutors into criminal cases.