Court affirms Tsilhqot'in Nation hunting rights, not title - Action News
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British Columbia

Court affirms Tsilhqot'in Nation hunting rights, not title

The B.C. Court of Appeal has upheld a landmark B.C. Supreme Court judgment affirming the Tsilhqot'in Nation's aboriginal rights but not title over a vast tract of the B.C. Interior.

Ruling does allow for site-specific title claims to be pursued

Land ruling

12 years ago
Duration 2:05
B.C. appeal court rules the Tsilhqot'in people have hunting rights, but not land title

The B.C. Court of Appeal has upheld a landmark B.C. Supreme Court judgment affirming theTsilhqot'in Nation's aboriginal rightsbut not title over a vast tract of the B.C. Interior.

In a decision on William v. British Columbia released Wednesday, B.C.'s highest court said Justice David Vickers was correct in finding members of the Tsilhquot'in Nation had hunting and trapping rights within a 4,380 square kilometre of traditional territory.

The B.C. Court of Appeal found that the Crown had infringed on the rights of the Tsilhqot'in Nation with its management of forestry in the claim area, which lies to the south and west of Williams Lake and Alexis Creek. (CBC)

The appeal judges agreed with Vickers' finding that the Crown had infringed on those rights with its management of forestry in the claim area, which lies to thesouth and west ofWilliams Lake and Alexis Creek.

But while the appeal court upheld Vickers' original findings, they disagreed with the logic of his ruling, inwhich he accepted a theory of traditional occupation of the land as opposed to claims on site-specific tracts of land.

"Aboriginal title must be proven on a site-specific basis," Justice Harvey Groberman wrote for the appeal court.

"A title site may be defined by a particular occupancy of the land (e.g., village sites, enclosed or cultivated fields) or on the basis that definite tracts of land were the subject of intensive use (specific hunting, fishing, gathering, or spiritual sites). In all cases, however, aboriginal title can only be proven over a definite tract of land, the boundaries of which are reasonably capable of definition," he wrote.

Roger William filed the historic suit against the province on his own behalf, and on behalf of the Xeni Gwetin First Nations Government and members of the Tsilhqotin Nation. (Denis Dossman/CBC)

The two other justices concurred with Groberman.

In his original ruling, Vickers offered a non-binding opinion that Tsilhqot'in aboriginal title did exist for about 200,000 hectares inside and outside the claim area. But the appeal court found that aboriginal title to the landas opposed to rights had not been established.

"The connection of the Tsilhqotin Nation to its traditional territory has both spiritual and temporal aspects that are difficult to convey in the dry words of a judgment. This deep connection must, however, remain foremost in the courts mind in considering issues of aboriginal title and aboriginal rights," Groberman wrote.

"I am not convinced that the relationship of the Tsilhqotin people to the land requires recognition of title on a territorial basis; it does, however, require the court to affirm the existence of aboriginal rights that respect the Tsilhqotin perspective on its own culture and values. The recognition of such rights will serve to prevent incompatible uses of the land."

The appeal court ruling will allow the Tsilhqot'in Nation to pursue title claims to specific sites.