It is interesting to note that in 1956 the Arrow Lake Band was declared extinct by the Federal Government of Canada and the Oatscott reserve reverted to the Crown. Under the Indian Act, without a Band a person cannot be granted an Indian Status card. Therefore, under Canadian law Desautel is not an Indian and is not covered under section 35 of the Constitution Act, 1982.
Here is the Court decision for
R. v. Desautel, 2017 BCSC 2389 with Justice Sewell stating at paragraphs 80 to 83, 85 to 90 and 124:
[80] In Van der Peet, there was no dispute that the persons asserting the right in question were aboriginal peoples of Canada. The question before the Court was whether the right in question was an aboriginal right entitled to the protection of s. 35. Van der Peet therefore addresses the nature of aboriginal rights protected by s. 35 rather than the identity of the persons asserting the right. However, it is of some value to re-state briefly the requirements of the Van der Peet test to provide context to the issue before me.
[81] To establish an aboriginal right to a practice, custom or tradition, the claimant must establish that the practice, custom or tradition in question was a defining feature of the culture of the group to which he or she belongs (para. 59).
[82] In considering this question, the relevant time period is the period prior to contact between aboriginal and European societies (para. 60).
[83] The reasons for this are explained in para. 61:
61. The fact that the doctrine of aboriginal rights functions to reconcile the existence of pre-existing aboriginal societies with the sovereignty of the Crown does not alter this position. Although it is the sovereignty of the Crown that the pre-existing aboriginal societies are being reconciled with, it is to those pre-existing societies that the court must look in defining aboriginal rights. It is not the fact that aboriginal societies existed prior to Crown sovereignty that is relevant; it is the fact that they existed prior to the arrival of Europeans in North America. As such, the relevant time period is the period prior to the arrival of Europeans, not the period prior to the assertion of sovereignty by the Crown. [Emphasis in original.]
[85] In this case, the Boundary Treaty of 1846 split the traditional territory of the Sinixt people into two pieces. By far the larger piece was north of the 49th parallel, in what was eventually to become Canada. A smaller portion became part of the United States. Despite this, the trial judge made unchallenged findings that hunting in the traditional territory that is now in Canada was carried on in pre-contact times, was integral to the Sinixt aboriginal culture and that there has been no breach of continuity in the practice.
[86] As a result of the actions of non-aboriginal authorities, the Sinixt people who make up the Lakes Tribe can only continue to exercise that activity by crossing an international boundary, but subject to the Crown’s sovereign immunity argument, I do not see how that necessity brings them outside of the protection of s. 35.
[87] I therefore conclude that the fact that the Sinixt people in issue in this case are now resident in the United States does not preclude them from being considered to be an aboriginal people of Canada.
[88] I find that recognizing that the Sinixt are aboriginal people of Canada under s. 35 is entirely consistent with the objective of reconciliation established in the jurisprudence. In my view, it would be inconsistent with that objective to deny a right to a group that occupied the land in question in pre-contact times and continued to actively use the territory for some years after the imposition of the international boundary on them.
[89] I conclude that the term aboriginal peoples of Canada as used in s. 35 means those peoples who occupied a part of what became Canada prior to first contact, and the rights referred to are those that are established in accordance with the Van der Peet test and sought to be exercised in Canada.
[90] I find that the trial judge made no error in applying the Van der Peet test to determine the issue before her because the Sinixt, of whom Mr. Desautel is a member are an aboriginal people of Canada. Her findings of fact confirm the deep connection between the Sinixt and their traditional territory in Canada. The right asserted is based entirely on the use and practices carried out by the Sinixt prior to first contact on lands that are now incorporated into Canada, and the continuity of the Lakes Tribe’s practices with those of their ancestors.
Disposition
[124] Accordingly, the appeal is dismissed except to the extent that the trial judge relied on s. 24(1) of the Charter. There will therefore be a finding that
ss. 11(1) and 47(a) of the Wildlife Act do not apply to Mr. Desautel in this case.