Aboriginal Title On Nootka Island
A court can end up deciding the fate of an island by looking at the scars on cedar trees and counting the rings inside them. We dig into a new British Columbia Court of Appeal decision on Aboriginal title for Nootka Island off Vancouver Island, where the key legal question is what “sufficient use” meant at the moment of sovereignty in 1846 under the Oregon Treaty. That one date forces everyone to reconstruct the past using expert anthropology, historical records, and physical evidence on the land.
We talk through the building blocks of an Aboriginal title claim in Canada: proving the proper Indigenous collective, demonstrating continuity and exclusivity, and even answering foundational questions such as whether the society had a concept of ownership. Then we get into the appellate turning point: culturally modified Western red cedar trees in the interior. The court challenges the idea that a marine-oriented culture only “used” the coastline, noting that canoes, paddles, ropes, hooks, clothing, and ceremonial items all come from forests. The discussion also tracks how the claim is framed to avoid competing interests for now, and why the ruling’s impact on the Forest Act and Parks Act raises real governance and resource questions.
We finish with a very different legal problem from Provincial Court near Enderby on Highway 97A: a tragic crosswalk death on Canada Day and a charge of driving without due care and attention. By breaking down Motor Vehicle Act section 179, we sort out right of way, what counts as being “on the highway,” the pedestrian duty not to step into traffic when it is impracticable for a driver to yield, and the role of reaction time evidence in the acquittal.
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Legally Speaking with Michael Mulligan is live on CFAX 1070 every Thursday at 12:30 p.m. It’s also available on Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.