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"There
hasn't been a single piece of law that has been passed
that doesn't take the charter into account"
Bob Rae - former
Ontario premier |
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Documents in History - A Primary View
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Treaties One & Two |
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1870
Manitoba Act, 1870
33 Victoria, c 3 (Canada)
(An Act to amend and continue the Act 32 and 33 Victoria chapter
3;
and to establish and provide for the Government of the Province
of Manitoba)
[Assented to 12th May, 1870]
Whereas it is probable that Her Majesty The Queen may,
pursuant to the Constitution Act, 1867, be pleased to admit
Rupert's Land and the North-Western Territory into the Union or
Dominion of Canada, before the next Session of the Parliament of
Canada: And Whereas it is expedient to prepare for the transfer
of the said Territories to the Government of Canada at the time
appointed by the Queen for such admission: And Whereas it is
expedient also to provide for the organization of part of the
said Territories as a Province, and for the establishment of a
Government therefor, and to make provision for the Civil
Government of the remaining part of the said Territories , not
included within the limits of the Province: Therefore Her
Majesty, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate and
House of Commons of Canada. enacts as follows: 1. On, from and
after the day upon which the Queen, by and with the advice and
consent of Her Majesty's Most Honorable Privy Council, under the
authority of the 146th Section of the Constitution Act. 1867,
shall, by Order in Council in that behalf, admit Rupert's Land
and the North-Western Territory into the Union or Dominion of
Canada, there shall be formed out of the same a Province, which
shall be one of the Provinces of the Dominion of Canada. and
which shall be called the Province of Manitoba, and be bounded
as follows: that is to say, commencing at the point where the
meridian of ninety-six degrees west longitude from Greenwich
intersects the parallel of forty-nine degrees north
latitude,--thence due west along the said parallel of forty-nine
degrees north latitude (which forms a portion of the boundary
line between the United States of America and the said
North-Western Territory) to the meridian of ninety-nine degrees
of west longitude.--thence due north along the said meridian of
ninety-nine degrees west longitude, to the intersection of the
same with the parallel of fifty degrees and thirty minutes north
latitude.--thence due east along the said parallel of fifty
degrees and thirty minutes north latitude to its intersection
with the before- mentioned meridian of ninety-six degrees west
longitude,--thence due south along the said meridian of
ninety-six degrees west longitude to the place of beginning. 2.
On. from and after the said day on which the Order of the Queen
in Council shall take effect as aforesaid. the provisions of the
Constitution Act, 1867. shall, except those parts thereof which
are in terms made, or, by reasonable intendment. may be held to
be specially applicable to, or only to affect one or more, but
not the whole of the Provinces now composing the Dominion. and
except so far as the same may be varied by this Act, be
applicable to the Province of Manitoba. in the same way, and to
the like extent as they apply to the several Provinces of
Canada. and as if the Province of Manitoba had been one of the
Provinces originally united by the said Act. 3. The said
Province shall be represented in the Senate of Canada by two
Members, until it shall have. according to decennial census, a
population of fifty thousand souls, and from thenceforth it
shall be represented therein by three Members. until it shall
have. according to decennial census, a population of
seventy-five thousand souls, and from thenceforth it shall be
represented therein by four Members. 4. The said Province shall
be represented, in the first instance, in the House of Commons
of Canada, by four Members, and for that purpose shall be
divided by proclamation of the Governor General, into four
Electoral Districts, each of which shall be represented by one
Member: Provided that on the completion of the census in the
year 1881, and of each decennial census afterwards, the
representation of the said Province shall be re-adjusted
according to the provisions of the fifty-first section of the
Constitution Act, 1867. 5. Until the Parliament of Canada
otherwise provides, the qualification of voters at Elections of
Members of the House of Commons shall be the same as for the
Legislative Assembly hereinafter mentioned: And no person shall
be qualified to be elected, or to sit and vote as a Member for
any Electoral District, unless he is a duly qualified voter
within the said Province. 6. For the said Province there shall
be an officer styled the Lieutenant-Governor, appointed by the
Governor General in Council, by instrument under the Great Seal
of Canada. 7. The Executive Council of the Province shall be
composed of such persons, and under such designations, as the
Lieutenant-Governor shall, from time to time, think fit; and, in
the first instance, of not more than five persons. 8. Unless and
until the Executive Government of the Province otherwise
directs, the seat of Government of the same shall be at Fort
Garry, or within one mile thereof. 9. There shall be a
Legislature for the Province, consisting of the
Lieutenant-Governor, and of two Houses, styled respectively, the
Legislative Council of Manitoba, and the Legislative Assembly of
Manitoba. 10. The Legislative Council shall, in the first
instance, be composed of seven Members, and after the expiration
of four years from the time of the first appointment of such
seven Members, may be increased to not more than twelve Members.
Every member of the Legislative Council shall be appointed by
the Lieutenant-Governor in the Queen's name, by Instrument under
the Great Seal of Manitoba, and shall hold office for the term
of his life. unless and until the Legislature of Manitoba
otherwise provides under the Constitution Act, 1867. 11. The
lieutenant-Governor may, from time to time. by Instrument under
the Great Seal, appoint a Member of the Legislative Council to
be Speaker thereof, and may remove him and appoint another in
his stead. 12. Until the Legislature of the Province otherwise
provides, the presence of a majority of the whole number of the
Legislative Council, including the Speaker, shall be necessary
to constitute a meeting for the exercise of its powers. 13.
Questions arising in the Legislative Council shall be decided by
a majority of voices, and the Speaker shall, in all cases, have
a vote, and when the voices are equal the decision shall be
deemed to be in the negative. 14. The Legislative Assembly shall
be composed of twenty-four Members, to be elected to represent
the Electoral Divisions into which the said Province may be
divided by the Lieutenant-Governor. as hereinafter mentioned.
15. The presence of a majority of the Members of the Legislative
Assembly shall be necessary to constitute a meeting of the House
for the exercise of its powers; and for that purpose the Speaker
shall be reckoned as a Member. 16. The Lieutenant-Governor shall
(within six months of the date of the Rupert's Land and
North-Western Territory Order), by Proclamation under the Great
Seal, divide the said Province into twenty-four Electoral
Divisions, due regard being had to existing Loc al Divisions and
population. 17. Every male person shall be entitled to vote for
a Member to serve in the Legislative Assembly for any Electoral
Division, who is qualified as follows, that is to say, if he
is:-- 1. Of the full age of twenty-one years, and not subject to
any legal incapacity: 2. A subject of Her Majesty by birth or
naturalization: 3. And a bona fide householder within the
Electoral Division, at the date of the Writ of Election for the
same, and has been a bona fide householder for one year next
before the said date; or, 4. If, being of the full age of
twenty-one years. and not subject to any legal incapacity, and a
subject of Her Majesty by birth or naturalization. he was, at
any time within twelve months prior to the passing of this Act.
and (though in the interim temporarily absent) is at the time of
such election a bona fide householder, and was resident within
the Electoral Division at the date of the Writ of Election for
the same: But this fourth sub-section shall apply only to the
first election to be held under this Act for Members to serve in
the Legislative Assembly aforesaid. 18. For the first election
of Members to serve in the Legislative Assembly, and until the
Legislature of the Province otherwise provides, I the
Lieutenant-Governor shall cause writs to be issued, by such
person, in such form, and addressed to such Returning O fficers
as he thinks fit; and for such first election, and until the
Legislature of the Province otherwise provides, the
Lieutenant-Governor shall, by Proclamation, prescribe and
declare the oaths to be taken by voters, the powers and duties
of Returning and Deputy Returning Officers, the proceedings to
be observed at such election, and the period during which such
election may be continued, and such other provisions in respect
to such first election as he may think fit. 19. Every
Legislative Assembly shall continue for four years from the date
of the return of the writs for returning the same (subject
nevertheless to being sooner dissolved by the
Lieutenant-Governor), and no longer; and the first Session
thereof shall be called at such time as the Lieutenant-Governor
shall appoint. 20. There shall be a Session of the Legislature
once at least in every year, so that twelve months shall not
intervene between the last sitting of the Legislature in one
Session and its first sitting in the next Session. [Note:
Repealed by the Constitution act, 1982] 21. The following
provisions of the Constitution Act. 1867, respecting the House
of Commons of Canada. shall extend and apply to the Legislative
Assembly, that is to say: --Provisions relating to the election
of a Speaker, originally, and on vacancies,--the duties of the
Speaker.--the absence of the Speaker and the mode of voting, as
if those provisions were here re-enacted and made applicable in
terms to the Legislative As sembly. 22. In and for the Province,
the said Legislature may exclusively make Laws in relation to
education, subject and according to the following provisions:--
(1) Nothing in any such Law shall prejudicially affect any right
or privilege with respect to Denominational Schools which any
class of persons have by Law or practice in the Province the
Union:-- (2) An appeal shall lie to the Governor General in
Council from any Act or decision of the Legislature of the
Province, or of any Provincial Authority, affecting any right or
privilege of the Protestant or Roman Catholic minority the
Queen's subjects in re lation to Education: (3) In case any such
Provincial Law, as from time to time seems to the Governor
General in Council requisite for the due execution of the
provisions of this section, is not made, or in case any decision
of the Governor General in Council on any appeal under this
section is not duly executed by the proper Provincial Authority
in that behalf, then, and in every such case, and as far only as
the circumstances of each case require, the Parliament of Canada
may make remedial Laws for the due execution of the provisions
of this section, and of any decision of he Governor General in
Council under this section. 23. Either the English or the French
language may be used by any person in the debates of the Houses
of the Legislature and both those languages shall be used in the
respective Records and Journals of those Houses; and either of
those languages may be used by any person, or in any Pleading or
Process, in or issuing from any Court of Canada established
under the Constitution Act, 1867, r in or from all or any of the
Courts of the Province. The Acts of the Legislature shall be
Printed and published in both those languages. 24. Inasmuch as
the Province is not in debt, the said Province shall be entitled
to be paid, and to receive from the Government of Canada, by
half-yearly payments in advance, interest at the rate of five
per centum per annum on the sum of four hundred and seventy-two
thousand and ninety dollars. 25. The sum of thirty thousand
dollars shall be paid yearly by Canada to the Province, for the
support of its Government and Legislature, and an annual grant,
in aid of the said Province, shall be made, equal to eighty
cents per head of the population, estima ted at seventeen
thousand souls; and such grant of eighty cents per head shall be
augmented in proportion to the increase of population, as may be
shown by the census that shall be taken thereof in the year one
thousand eight hundred and eighty-one, and by each subsequent
decennial census, until its population amounts to four hundred
thousand souls, at which amount such grant shall remain
thereafter, and such sum shall be in full settlement of all
future demands on Canada, and shall be paid half- yearly, in
advance, to the said Province. 26. Canada will assume and defray
the charges for the following services:-- 1. Salary of the
Lieutenant-Governor. 2. Salaries and allowances of the Judges of
the Superior and District or County Courts. 3. Charges in
respect of the Department of the Customs. 4. Postal Department.
5. Protection of Fisheries. 6. Militia. 7. Geological Survey. 8.
The Penitentiary. 9. And such further charges as may be incident
to. and connected with the services which, by the Constitution
Act. 1867. appertain to the General Government, and as are or
may be allowed to the other Provinces. 27. The Customs duties
now by Law chargeable in Rupert's Land, shall be continued
without increase for the period of three years from and after
the passing of this Act, and the proceeds of such duties shall
form part of the consolidated Revenue Fund of Canada. 28. Such
provisions of the Customs Laws of Canada (other than such as
prescribe the rate of duties payable) as may be from time to
time declared by the Governor General in Council to apply to the
Province of Manitoba, shall be applicable thereto. and in force
therein accordingly. 29. Such provisions of the Laws of Canada
respecting the Inland Revenue, including those fixing the amount
of duties, as may be from time to time declared by the Governor
General in Council applicable to the said Province, shall apply
thereto. and be in force therein accordingly. 30. All ungranted
or waste lands in the Province shall be, from and after the date
of the said transfer, vested in the Crown, and administered by
the Government of Canada for the purposes of the Dominion,
subject to, and except and so far as the same may be a ffected
by, the conditions and stipulations contained in the agreement
for the surrender of Rupert's Land by the Hudson's Bay Company
to Her Majesty . 31. And whereas, it is expedient, towards the
extinguishment of the Indian Title to the lands in the Province,
to appropriate a portion of such ungranted lands, to the extent
of one million four hundred thousand acres thereof, for the
benefit of the families of the half-breed residents, it is
hereby enacted. that, under regulations to be from time to time
made by the Governor General in Council, the Lieutenant-Governor
shall select such lots or tracts in such parts of the Province
as he may deem expedient, to the extent aforesaid. and divide
the same among the children of the half-breed heads of families
residing in the Province at the time of the said transfer to
Canada. and the same shall be granted to the said children
respectively, in such mode and on such conditions as to
settlement and otherwise. as the Governor General in Council may
from time to time determine. 32. For the quieting of titles, and
assuring to the settlers in the Province the peaceable
possession of the lands now held by them, it is enacted as
follows:-- (1) All grants of land in freehold made by the
Hudson's Bay Company up to the eighth day of March, in the year
1869, shall, if required by the owner, be confirmed by grant
from the Crown. (2) All grants of estates less than freehold in
'and made b- the Hudson's Bay Company up to the eighth day of
March aforesaid. shall, if required by the owner, be converted
into an estate in freehold by grant from the Crown. (3) All
titles by occupancy with the sanction and under the license and
authority of the Hudson's Bay Company up to the eighth day of
March aforesaid. of land in that part of the Province in which
the Indian Title has been extinguished. shall. if required by
the owner, be converted into an estate in freehold by grant from
the Crown. (4) All persons in peaceable possession of tracts of
land at the time of the transfer to Canada. in those parts of
the Province in which the Indian Title has not been
extinguished, shall have the right of pre-emption of the same,
on such terms and conditions as may be determined b- the
Governor in Council. (5) The Lieutenant-Governor is hereby
authorized, under regulations to be made from time to time b-
the Governor General in Council, to make all such provisions for
ascertaining and adjusting. on fair and equitable terms, the
rights of Common, and rights of cutting Hay held and enjoyed by
the settlers in the Province, and for the commutation of the
same by grants of land from the Crown. 33. The Governor General
in Council shall from time to time settle and appoint the mode
and form of Grants of Land from the Crown, and an- Order in
Council for that purpose when published in the Canada Gazette.
shall have the same force and effect as if it were a portion of
this Act. 34. Nothing in this Act shall in any way prejudice or
affect the rights or properties of the Hudson's Bay Company. as
contained in the conditions under which that Company surrendered
Rupert's Land to Her Majesty. 35. And with respect to such
portion of Rupert's Land and the North-Western Territory, as is
not included in the Province of Manitoba, it is hereby enacted,
that the Lieutenant-Governor of the said Province shall be
appointed. by Commission under the Great Seal of Canada. to be
the Lieutenant-Governor of the same. under the name of the
North-West Territories, and subject to the provisions of the Act
in the next section mentioned. 36. Except as hereinbefore is
enacted and provided. the Act of the Parliament of Canada,
passed in the now last Session thereof, and entitled. "An Act
for the Temporary Government of Rupert's Land. and the
North-Western Territory when united with Canada," is hereby
re-enacted, extended and continued in force until the first day
of January. 1871, and until the end of the Session of Parliament
then next succeeding .
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