Quebec judge rules Kanien'keh:ka have treaty rights to trade tobacco - Action News
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Indigenous

Quebec judge rules Kanien'keh:ka have treaty rights to trade tobacco

A Quebec Superior Court judge ordered a stay of proceedings onchargesrelated to tobacco trade against two Kanien'keh:ka (Mohawk) men on Wednesday, citing treaty rights.

Ruling called a 'landmark decision' and 'extremely helpful' for Indigenous people asserting treaty rights

Two men stand in front of a wall in a courthouse.
Derek White and Hunter Montour in 2019 at a courthouse in Longueuil, Que. The two launched a constitutional challenge following a conviction on federal charges for not paying excise tax on tobacco products. (Kanhehs:io Deer/CBC)

A Quebec Superior Court judge ordered a stay of proceedings onchargesrelated to tobacco trade against two Kanien'keh:ka (Mohawk) men on Wednesday, citing treaty rights.

Derek White and Hunter Montour, both from Kahnaw:ke, south of Montreal, were granted a permanentstay of criminal proceedings oncharges related to the largest Sret du Qubec operation targeting a cross-border contraband tobacco ring.

"It's a lot of weight lifted off my chest," White told CBC Indigenous on Thursday.

In 2019, a jury acquitted White on charges of defrauding Quebec of $44 million in tobacco taxes but found the two guilty on federal charges for not paying excise tax on tobacco products.

The pair had asked for a stay ofproceedings,arguing that the government had violated their Section 35 Constitutional rights, as well as the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, and inherent rights as Kanien'keh:ka to trade tobacco tax-free.

The Covenant Chain

The paircitedthe Covenant Chain, a series of agreementsstarting in the 1700sbetween the Haudenosaunee Confederacy and British colonies that included the right to trade.

While the Crown argued that the Covenant Chain was not a treaty, Justice Sophie Bourque concluded in her nearly 400-page decision that it was still binding.

She also ruled that the federal Excise Act "unjustifiably infringes" on Section 35 and treaty rights of the defendants, and ordered a stay on their convictions. She wrote that the government also failed a duty to consult with Haudenosaunee, including Kahnaw:ke, on the adoption of the Excise Act.

"It's going to benefit everyone," said White, about the decision.

Montour echoed similar sentiments.

"It's a history changing event," he said.

"We've always been talking about this, we've always known this, but nobody ever listened, especially the government."

'Landmark decision'

The Mohawk Council of Kahnaw:ke (MCK) described it as a "landmark decision." In a news release Wednesday, the MCKsaid it will conduct a comprehensive legal analysis of the decision, but congratulated White and Montour.

A woman wearing a ribbon shirt sits on the grass in front of a large rock painted with the Haudenosaunee Confederacy flag.
Ohn:ton :iente ne Ratitsnhaienhs (Grand Chief) Kahsennenhawe Sky-Deer congratulated Derek White and Hunter Montour in a news release. (Paul Chiasson/The Canadian Press)

"The judge meaningfully understood the true essence of the nation-to-nation relationship between the Haudenosaunee and Canada," said Ohn:ton :iente ne Ratitsnhaienhs (Grand Chief) Kahsennenhawe Sky-Deer in therelease.

"Not only did she capture the spirit and intent of the Covenant Chain, but she understood that Aboriginal rights cannot be frozen in time and are living, breathing rights."

The proceedings took place between October 2021 and April 2022. The Mohawk Nation Council of Chiefs, a traditional government, was authorized to intervene in the case to present evidence of a Kanien'keh:ka perspective.

A portrait of a man standing in front of a stone facade.
Paul Williams is a lawyer from Six Nations of the Grand River. (Submitted by Paul Williams)

Its lawyer Paul Williams said the most important part of Bourque's decision is the recognition of the Covenant Chain relationship.

"We're talking about the relationships almost entirely inside Indigenous legal systems rather than inside the Crown's common law system. That's big," he said.

"A relationship like this is permanent. It cannot be terminated unilaterally by one party."

'Judicial pioneering'

James O'Reilly, who was one of four lawyers on the case representing White and Mountour, also said he considered the case precedent-setting.

"This is judicial pioneering in certain aspects. The result is, basically, she said that the commerce of tobacco in Kahnaw:ke is constitutionally protected," said O'Reilly.

"It's a pretty fantastic development when you think about all the problems at the Mohawks of Kahnaw:ke and other groups that have endured."

O'Reilly said while the government will likely appeal, the judgment remains a "strong declaration by the court." He expects it will be an "extremely helpful decision" for Indigenous people across Canada asserting treaty rights.

The Attorney General of Canada referred a request forcomment to the Canada Revenue Agency, which said it is carefully reviewing the decision.

"The matter considered by the court is important to our ongoing efforts to preserve the integrity of Canada's tax base and to protect the interests of the Government and Canadians, including Indigenous Peoples," media relations spokesperson Kim Thiffaultsaid in an emailed statement.

CBC Indigenous also asked the Attorney General of Quebec for comment but did not receive a response by time of publishing.

With files from the Canadian Press