Abstract
The James Bay Treaty-Treaty No. 9 was unique among the numbered treaties of Canada in that there was a need for the concurrence of the Province of Ontario. Last-minute negotiations by the Dominion of Canada to gain said concurrence led to an agreement with the Province of Ontario, and this agreement became part of the Treaty No. 9 package at Ontario’s insistence. However, since the agreement was not executed until after the Treaty No. 9 expedition had left for the field, an incomplete Treaty No. 9 package that lacked the agreement was presented to and signed by the First Nation groups in 1905. Furthermore, spaces had been left in the vellum copies of Treaty No. 9 and the agreement to add in the date of the agreement when fully executed. In the spaces that were left for this purpose, the date of the agreement was backdated to 3 July. This act of deception was suggested by the Treasurer of the Government of Ontario, A. Matheson in order to date of the agreement earlier than the date in the Treaty. Thus, the common law legality of the Treaty No. 9 package must be questioned, especially since officials of the Governments of Canada and Ontario left documentation of their deception. Without the agreement being attached as specified in the Treaty No. 9 document that left Ottawa in 1905, consideration of the terms of the agreement by the First Nation signatories of the treaty could not have occurred prior to signing. It follows that there exists a question of whether the land south of the Albany River was ever ceded in Treaty No. 9 from a common law perspective, unless documentation can be presented indicating that the complete Treaty No. 9 package was presented to the First Nation signatories; the written record indicates otherwise. In the end, the courts will have to decide the legality of Treaty No. 9 from a common law perspective.
Highlights
In 1867, when the Dominion of Canada was created, the Province of Ontario was only a fraction of the size of present-day Ontario (Government of Ontario, 2019; Fig. 1)
Catherine’s Milling decision (Drake, 2018). This requirement led to the last-minute negotiations with Ontario in order to obtain their concurrence with respect to Treaty No 9 and is one of the reasons why so much controversy has been associated with Treaty No 9 (1905) and its Adhesions
The last-minute negotiations with respect to Treaty No 9—especially Ontario’s demands for the Agreement between the Dominion of Canada and the Province of Ontario to gain their concurrence with respect to Treaty No 9—led to an incomplete Treaty No 9 package lacking the Agreement being presented to and signed by the Indians in 1905
Summary
In 1867, when the Dominion of Canada was created, the Province of Ontario was only a fraction of the size of present-day Ontario (Government of Ontario, 2019; Fig. 1). The Dominion of Canada made this accommodation because Canada required the concurrence of the Government of Ontario for any treaties with respect to Indian lands in Ontario in the post-1894 period after Ontario won the St. Catherine’s Milling decision (Drake, 2018). It should be noted that “Indians, and Lands reserved for the Indians” (Section 91(24)) fell under the jurisdiction of the Government of Canada as specified in the division of powers in the Canadian Constitution Act, 1867. In this context, a memorandum from J. This map was the starting point for discussions of the land to be considered for Treaty No 9 (Tsuji and Tsuji, 2021)
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