There Is No Right To Sportfish!!!!!
It appears we
DO have a right to fish but DFO refuses to recongnise it.
Here are some references to our right to fish outlined by Bill Otway
Page 1
Mr. Pat Chamut, Senior Asst. Deputy Minister December 28,2002
Fisheries and Oceans Canada
200 Kent Street
Ottawa, Ontario
K1A 0E6
Dear Pat:
It was a pleasure to see you again and have a chance to talk during the 2002 Sockeye
Review.
During the course of the discussions with those of us in attendance you commented on
remarks one of the participants made regarding “Sparrow” and angler “rights”. Also as I
am given to understand, on the previous day you advised the commercial sector
representatives that the only people with a “right” to fish were the Indians and for the rest
of Canadians fishing was a “privilege”.
While for my part it did not seem productive to enter into a discussion on this issue at that
time, I did indicate that there was a need to deal with it. In fact if your view represents
that of the Department in general, then it is critical the matter be clarified. Unless and
until the Department and the Government recognize that all Canadians hold “a right to
fish”, our fishery will never be properly managed and our “rights” will continue to be
infringed upon and marginalized.
The facts are clear that we as citizens of Canada do indeed have a “right” to fish. These
were clearly stated and pointed out in the report commissioned by DFO on the subject
from Dalhousie University in 1985. This report, “Individual Entitlements In The Tidal
Fisheries: Some Legal Problems” repeatedly identifies the public “right to fish”. In
addition we have the 1996 judgement from the Supreme Court of Canada in R. v.
Gladstone.
With regard the report, I would refer you to Page 48, 1
st
para. “Chief Justice Ritchie held
that a public right to fish only applied to tidal waters, this was a right derived from the
common law.”
Page 53 – Supreme Court of Canada Chief Justice Strong with regard the right fish in
navigable lakes and non-tidal navigable rivers and the limitation of the power of
parliament of the Dominion to legislate respecting the fisheries in those waters.
“Secondly – so long as the property in the beds of this class of river remains ungranted
the right of fishing in such waters belongs to the public as of common right.”
Page 54 – Again SCC Chief Justice Strong regarding licenses. “Such licenses must,
however, be purely personal licenses conferring qualification, and any legislation
going beyond this and assuming to confer exclusive rights of fishing (subject to
exception as to waters belonging to the Dominion and waters within the confines of
unsurrendered Indian Reserves) unconstitutional and void.”
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Page 55 – “wherever the exclusive right of fishing does not already exist by law; and
there are to be leases as well as licenses; language which indicates an intention to
authorize the Minister to confer by means of such licenses exclusive rights of fishing.
This I hold to have been beyond the jurisdiction of Parliament to enact so far as
provincial waters are concerned and within the expression ‘provincial waters’ I include
all navigable waters within the boundaries of the province whether tidal or non-tidal,
excepting only such waters as belong to the Dominion…”
Page 57 – Chief Justice Wilson states “But as to tidal waters the Supreme Court of Nova
Scotia, Hill J., adopted the principles of the English and held in Meisner v. Fanning that
the Crown cannot grant the waters of a navigable arm of the sea as to give a right of
exclusive fishery therein.”
In Rose v. Belyea, the Supreme Court of New Brunswick held that:
“The soil of a public navigable river (in this case the St. John River, within the ebb and
flow of the tide) is in the Crown, and the right of fishing belongs to the public. Since
Magna Charta the Crown cannot grant the exclusive right of fishing in a public navigable
river to a private individual.”
And in The Queen v. Lord, Peters J. delivering the judgement of the Supreme Court of
Prince Edward Island said:
“With respect to these public rights viz., navigation and fishery, the King is, in fact
nothing more that a trustee of the public, and has no authority to obstruct or grant
others, any right to obstruct or abridge the public in the free enjoyment of them.”
Pages 64/65 – “The B.C. Fisheries Reference was a decision rendered by the Privy
Council which dealt with fishing rights within the railway belt. It is of special interest
because the Province of British Columbia wanted to alter the public right to fish in tidal
waters.” Viscount Haldane noted: “ Since the decision of the House of Lords in
Malconlmson v O’Dea [ 10 H.L.C. 593] it has bee unquestioned law that since Magna
Charta no new exclusive fishery could be created by Royal Grant in tidal waters, and that
no public right of fishing in such waters then existing, can be taken away without
competent legislation. This is now part of the law of England, and their Lordships
entertain no doubt that it is part of the law of British Columbia.”
Viscount Haldane went on to speak of the public right to fish and stated:
“The legal character of this right is not easy to define. It is probably a right enjoyed so
far as the high seas are concerned by common practice from time immemorial, and
it was probably in very early times extended by the subject without challenge to the
foreshore and tidal waters which were continuous with the ocean, if indeed, it did not in
fact first take rise in them. The right into which this practice has crystallized resemble in
some respects the right to navigate the seas or the right to use a navigable river as a
highway, and its origin is not more obscure than that of these rights of navigation.