Canada's Constitutional Development Before 1867

AuthorPatrick J. Monahan, Byron Shaw
Pages31-52
31
CHA PTER 2
C A NA DA’S
CONSTITUTIONAL
DEVELOPMENT
BEFOR E 1867
A. R EPRESENTATIVE AND R ESPONSIBLE
GOV ER NME NT
The Constitution Act, 1867
1 did not attempt to comprehensively describe
the institutions of government or their manner of operation. Instead,
certain public institutions or practices that had become f‌irmly estab-
lished in the law of the British North American colonies were simply
continued by the 1867 Act. These established institutions or practices
in many cases were not explicitly referenced. The only oblique refer-
ence to this constitutional continuity was the phrase in the preamble
to the Act stating that Canada was to have a “Constitution similar in
Principle to that of the United Kingdom.” To understand what was con-
templated by this reference, it is necessary to examine the manner in
which governmental institutions had evolved in both Great Britain and
British North America by the middle of the nineteenth century.
It is beyond the scope of this book to descr ibe fully the constitution-
al or political history of the British North American colonies. Rather,
our focus is on two constitutional developments in the late eighteenth
and early nineteenth centuries that are key to understanding the man-
ner in which the constitutional ar rangements in 1867 were intended to
operate. The f‌irst is the development of representative government and
the second is the development of responsible government.
1 (U.K.), 30 & 31 Vict., c. 3, Prea mble.
CONSTITUTIONA L LAW
32
Representative government refers to the requirement that laws can
only be made by a legislature that is elected by the people, as opposed
to the Crown legislating through the royal prerogative. Responsible
government refers to the requirement that the powers of the Crown
can be exercised only in accordance with the advice or instr uctions of
political leaders who control a majority of votes in the legislature. Both
of these constitutional developments had become incor porated into the
legal structure of the British North American colonies by 1867, and the
drafters of the 1867 Act simply assumed that they would continue in
place following Confederation.
B. REPR ESENTATI V E GOV ERNMENT
1) Aboriginal Government
Before the arrival of Europeans in North America, Aboriginal peoples
had developed representative political institutions and a body of cus-
tomary law. These Aboriginal forms of government and laws survived
European settlement in North America. It is arguable that section 35
of the Constitution Act, 1982, which “recognized and aff‌irmed” Aborig-
inal and Treaty rights, gave some constitutional recognition to them.2
The interaction between Aboriginal forms of government and those of
European settlers is a complex topic addressed in Part Five. The focus
of this chapter is on the manner in which representative political in-
stitutions were imported to North America as part of the colonial law
established under British authority.
2) French Civil Law
The earliest European settlement in what is now Canada was estab-
lished by the French. Following the conquest in 1759, certain aspects of
the legal system of the former colony of New France were retained and
incorporated into the legal framework of the colony of Quebec. In par-
ticular, although British law governed the relations between the state
and individuals, the French civil law was retained in respect of the
legal rules governing the relations among private individuals in con-
tract, property, and civil wrongs. This distinctive legal framework con-
tinues in place today, with the civil law rules in Quebec being def‌ined
2 This argume nt and other issues with re spect to Aboriginal r ights are considered
in Chapter 14.

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