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Administrative Law in Context, 2nd Edition - Part36
Administrative Law in Context, 2nd Edition - Part36
V. Conclusion
This chapter has attempted to explore different perspectives on the emerging field of Aboriginal administrative law. We examined the application of administrative law principles
in Aboriginal contexts, the forms and types of administrative justice that may be developed
by Aboriginal communities in the context of self-government, and the relationship between
Aboriginal and Canadian systems of administrative justice in the context of the duty to
consult and accommodate. This chapter is intended as a point of departure, rather than a
synthesis of existing bodies of law. We hope this chapter contributes to a broader and deeper
dialogue about the future of Aboriginal administrative law.
SUGGESTED ADDITIONAL READINGS
BOOKS AND ARTICLES
Canadian
Christie, Gordon, Developing Case Law: The Future of Consultation and Accommodation
(2006) 39 U.B.C. L. Rev. 139.
Knox, Anthony & Thomas Isaac, Judicial Deference and the Significance of the Supreme
Court of Canadas Decisions in Haida and Taku River (2006) 64 Advocate 487.
Mullan, David, The Duty to Consult Aboriginal PeoplesThe Canadian Example (2009)
22 Can. J. Admin. L. & Prac. 107.
Newman, Dwight G., The Duty to Consult: New Relationships with Aboriginal Peoples (Saskatoon: Purich Publishing, 2009).
Slattery, Brian, Aboriginal Rights and the Honour of the Crown (2005) 29 Sup. Ct. L. Rev.
(2d) 433.
170 Hewko v. B.C., 2006 BCSC 1638 (CanLII). Thanks to Freya Kodar for drawing this case to our attention.
Regarding the potential cross-fertilization of concepts of reasonable accommodation, see David Robitaille &
Sbastien Grammond, Le processus daccommodement religieux et autochtone dans les institutions publiques canadiennes: Quelques comparaisons (2009) 50 C. de D. 75.
171 See e.g. Lorne Sossin, The Promise of Procedural Justice in A. Dodek & D. Wright, eds., Public Law at the
McLachlin Court: The First Decade (Toronto: Irwin, 2011).
V. Conclusion
487
Sossin, Lorne, The Duty to Consult and Accommodate: Procedural Justice as Aboriginal
Rights (2010) 23 Can. J. Admin. L. & Prac. 93-113.
I nter national
Imai, Shin, Indigenous Self-Determination and the State in Benjamin J. Richardson, Shin
Imai & Kent McNeil, eds., Indigenous Peoples and the Law: Comparative and Critical
Perspectives (Oxford and Portland: Hart Publishing, 2009) 285.
Potes, Veronica, The Duty to Accommodate Aboriginal Peoples Rights: Substantive Consultation? (2006) 17 J. Envtl. L. & Prac. 27.
CASES
Beckman v. Little Salmon/Carmacks First Nation, 2010 SCC 53, [2010] 3 S.C.R. 103.
Canadian Pacific Ltd. v. Matsqui Indian Band, [1995] 1 S.C.R. 3.
Haida Nation v. British Columbia (Minister of Forests), 2004 SCC 73, [2004] 3 S.C.R. 511.
Lafferty v. Tlicho Government, [2009] 3 C.N.L.R. 151.
Rio Tinto Alcan Inc. v. Carrier Sekani Tribal Council, 2010 SCC 43, [2010] 2 S.C.R. 650.
Sparvier v. Cowessess Indian Band No 73, [1993] 3 F.C. 175, 13 Admin. L.R. (2d) 266 (TD).
West Moberly First Nations v. British Columbia (Chief Inspector of Mines), 2011 BCCA 247,
18 B.C.L.R. (5th) 234, leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada refused, 2012
CanLII 8361 (SCC).
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
489
491
495
496
496
499
499
504
509
510
517
520
523
524
I. Introduction
If we define administrative law as the set of principles and rules that places limits on the
exercise by administrative decision-makers of their statutory power or authority, then international human rights law is, and has long been, relevant to administrative lawyers. However,
it only garnered significant attention as a source of administrative law after the controversial
judgment of the Supreme Court of Canada in Baker v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration).1 More recently, the Court has focused on the role of international human
1 [1999] 2 S.C.R. 817 [Baker]. For the facts of Baker, see Grant Huscroft, Chapter 5, From Natural Justice to
Fairness: Thresholds, Content, and the Role of Judicial Review.
489
490
491
text. This does not mean that international human rights law is not relevant in other spheres
of administrative decision making. This reflects only that it is an important source of state
obligations toward non-citizens and that, absent sufficient express legal protections for their
clients, immigration and refugee lawyers have more frequently and consistently raised international human rights norms in argument before administrative decision-makers and reviewing courts.7 As these norms continue to proliferate and more attention is paid to them
by advocates,8 judges, and administrative decision-makers,9 the opportunities to apply them
in other administrative contexts will only multiply.10
Because many readers may not be familiar with public international law and, in particular, international human rights law, section II of this chapter sets out a brief synopsis of the
sources of international law. Section III describes the rules that govern the reception of
international law into Canadas domestic legal order. Section IV of this chapter examines
how international human-rights norms affect the review by courts of the interpretation by
officials and agencies of their enabling legislation, including discretionary powers, and
whether this legislation complies with the Charter. Section V describes the role of international human rights law in administrative procedure and, in particular, the duty of decision-makers to act in accordance with the rules of procedural fairness and the principles of
fundamental justice.
492
practice that meets these two requirements and qualifies as customary law is obligatory for
all states that have not objected to it.13 To establish that a legal norm is a rule of customary
international law, there must be evidence that states have consistently and generally (universality is not required) followed the rule14 and that they have acted in this manner because
they were of the view they were obliged to do so under international law rather than for
reasons of political expediency.15 Some norms expressed in international instruments of
universal character may eventually give rise to customary rules of international law.
Whether a rule of customary law has crystallized from a treaty norm depends on whether
ratification of the treaty is widespread among interested states and whether these states extensively and uniformly accept that the treaty provision sets out a rule of law that is binding
as custom.16
Customary law is not static, and groups of states may create a new customary regime by
introducing a new rule backed up with consistent and general practice. Moreover, an international treaty may displace otherwise applicable customary rules as between the parties to
that treaty.17 This is not true of jus cogens, or peremptory norms of customary international
law, which are recognized by the international community of states as norms from which
no derogation is permitted and which can be modified only by a subsequent norm of general international law having the same character.18 States cannot contract out of peremptory
norms by acquiescing to their breach or by ratifying inconsistent treaties. Accordingly, the
burden of proof to establish their existence is high. The International Court of Justice has
held that peremptory norms derive from the outlawing of acts of aggression, and of genocide, as also from the principles and rules concerning the basic rights of the human person
including protection from slavery and racial discrimination.19 The prohibition against torture may also have reached the status of a peremptory norm.
Most international human rights norms find their source in conventional, rather than
customary, international law. Following the Second World War, to further their pledge
under the United Nations (UN) Charter to promote universal respect for, and observance
13 As Brownlie notes, a state may contract out of a custom in the process of formation by persistently objecting
to it: Ian Brownlie, Principles of Public International Law, 6th ed. (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003) 11
[Brownlie (6th ed.)].
14 Ian Brownlie, Principles of Public International Law, 5th ed. (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1998) 5-6
[Brownlie (5th ed.)]. Evidence of official state conduct could include diplomatic correspondence, state policies and legislation, executive decisions, treaties, and UN General Assembly resolutions.
15 Opinio juris (opinion of justice), the sense among states that they are obligated under international law to
follow a certain practice, is sometimes implied on the basis of the evidence of a consistent and general practice: Asylum Case (1950), 17 I.L.R. 280 at 285.
16 Alan Brudner, The Domestic Enforcement of International Covenants on Human Rights: A Theoretical
Framework (1985) 35 U.T.L.J. 219 at 248. See also Brownlie (5th ed.), supra note 14 at 12, who notes that
non-parties may, by their conduct, accept that the provisions of an international convention represents general international law.
17 Buergenthal & Maier, supra note 12 at 25. In this sense, conventions play a role analogous to that of statutory
law in common-law domestic legal systems.
18 Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties, 23 May 1969, Can. T.S. 1980 No. 37, UN Doc. A/Conf. 39/26,
art.53 [Vienna Convention].
19 Barcelona Traction, [1970] I.C.J. Rep. 33 at para. 34.
493
of, human rights and fundamental freedoms for all,20 states engaged in an intense international effort, coordinated by the UN, to codify human rights and fundamental freedoms
in declarations and treaties. Regional international organizationsthe Organization of
American States (OAS), the Council of Europe, and the Organization of African Unity
also developed treaty-based systems for the protection of human rights. These instruments
form a vast body of legal norms, a veritable human rights code, that gives meaning to the
phrase human rights and fundamental freedoms.21 Canada is a party to many important
multilateral and regional international treaties that bind Canada at international law, some
of which are discussed below.22 Canada has also adopted important declarations, including
the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR),23 which, while not formally binding
at international law, may have solemn effects as the formal act of a deliberative body of
global importance.24 International treaties to which Canada is not a party are also important sources of human rights norms that could eventually bind Canada if they become customary international law.25
20 UN Charter, supra note 11, arts. 55(c), 56.
21 Thomas Buergenthal, Dinah Shelton, & David Stewart, International Human Rights, 3d ed. (St. Paul, MN:
West Publishing, 2002) 33.
22 These include the UN Charter, supra note 11; the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, 16
December 1966, [1976] Can. T.S. No. 47 [ICCPR]; the International Covenant on Economic, Social and
Cultural Rights, 16 December 1966, [1976] Can. T.S. No. 46 [ICESCR]; the Convention Against Torture and
Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment, 25 May 2000, [2002] Can. T.S. No. 5 [CAT];
the 1951 Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees, 28 July 1951, [1969] Can. T.S. No. 6 [1951 Convention]; the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination, 21 December
1965, [1970] Can. T.S. No. 28; the Convention on the Rights of the Child, 20 November 1989, [1992] Can.
T.S. No. 3 [CRC]; the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women, 18
December 1989, [1982] Can. T. S. No. 31 [CEAFDAW]; and the Charter of the Organization of American
States, 30 April 1948, [1990] Can. T.S. No. 23 [OAS Charter].
23 GA Res. 217(III), UN GAOR, 3d Sess., Supp. No. 13, UN Doc. A/810 (1948) [UDHR]. The UDHR has acquired a moral and normative status unlike that of any other declaration. The repeated reliance of state governments and international organizations on the UDHR as an authoritative expression of human rights has
likely given to some of its provisions the status of customary international law: Buergenthal, Shelton, &
Stewart, supra note 21 at 41-43. See also the American Declaration of the Rights and Duties of Man, 2 May
1948, 43 A.J.I.L. 133, art. 2 [ADRDM]. The ADRDM contains and defines the fundamental rights proclaimed
by OAS member states in art. 3(l) of the OAS Charter: Interpretation of the American Declaration of the Rights
and Duties of Man Within the Framework of Article 64 of the American Convention on Human Rights (1989),
Advisory Opinion OC-10/89, Inter-Am. Ct. H.R. (Ser. A), No. 10 at paras. 45-46.
24 H.J. Steiner & P. Alston, International Human Rights in Context: Law, Politics, Morals, 2d ed. (Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 2000) 142, describing the impact of UN General Assembly declarations.
25 These include the American Convention on Human Rights, 22 November 1969, 65 A.J.I.L. 679 [American
Convention]; the European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, 4
November 1950, 213 U.N.T.S. 221 [ECHR]; and the African Charter of Human and Peoples Rights, 27 June
1981, 1520 U.N.T.S. 217 [African Charter]. In interpreting a states human rights obligations under the
ADRDM, the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights takes the American convention into account
even if the state has not ratified it because the convention represents, in many cases, an authoritative expression of the fundamental principles set forth in the American Declaration: OAS, Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, Report on the Situation of Human Rights of Asylum Seekers Within the Canadian
Refugee Determination System, OEA/Ser.L/V/II.106/Doc. 40, rev. 28 February 2000 at para. 38 [IACHR Report]. The ECHR is a particularly important source of international norms for Canada because it is historically
494
Broadly speaking, international human rights treaties contain several kinds of provisions
that may be relevant to Canadian administrative decision-makers, reviewing courts, and
public lawyers. Some guarantee substantive rights at international law to individuals. These
range from the right to freedom from torture or cruel, inhumane, or degrading treatment,
conferred by the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) and the
Convention against Torture,26 to the right to the opportunity to gain ones living by work
that one freely chooses or accepts, granted by the International Covenant on Economic,
Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR).27 Others impose substantive obligations on states
parties at international law, like the Convention on the Rights of the Childs (CRCs) duty on
states social welfare institutions, courts of law, administrative authorities, or legislative bodies to take into account the best interests of the child as a primary consideration in all actions concerning children.28 Many treaties require states to provide an effective remedy to
persons whose substantive treaty rights are violated.29 In conjunction with the right to an
effective remedy, substantive rights may imply institutional or procedural safeguards without which the substantive rights cannot be effectively implemented. Other treaty provisions
expressly guarantee institutional and procedural rights at international law, such as the
ICCPR right to a fair and public hearing by a competent, independent, and impartial tribunal established by law in the determination of ones rights and obligations in a suit at
law,30 or the CRC right of children, in expressing their own views on matters affecting them,
to be heard in any judicial and administrative proceedings affecting them, either directly, or
through a representative or an appropriate body.31 The rights and obligations set out in the
international treaties to which Canada is a party are clearly binding on Canada at international law. The extent to which they are sources of domestic law that bind Canadian
courts and constrain the powers of administrative decision-makers is the more difficult
question addressed in the following sections of this chapter.
Although many international human rights treaties comprise enforcement mechanisms,
they rely primarily on the institutions of the signatory states to enforce their guarantees in
domestic law. For example, most of the major UN treaties establish treaty bodies charged
and conceptually related to the ICCPR, a treaty ratified by Canada. The drafting of these treaties was conducted, in part, contemporaneously, and important linkages can be drawn between their respective provisions: see P. van Dijk, The Interpretation of Civil Rights and Obligations by the European Court of Human
RightsOne More Step to Take in F. Matscher & H. Petzold, eds., Protecting Human Rights: The European
DimensionStudies in Honour of Grard Wiarda, 2d ed. (Berlin: Carl Heymans Verlag KG, 1990) 137.
26 CAT, supra note 22; ICCPR, supra note 22, art. 7. These provisions were considered by the Supreme Court of
Canada in Suresh, supra note 6. Compare ECHR, supra note 25, art. 3; American Convention, supra note 25,
art. 5.
27 ICESCR, supra note 22, art. 6(1). This provision was considered by the Supreme Court of Canada in Slaight
Communications, infra note 129.
28 CRC, supra note 22, art. 3.
29 ICCPR, supra note 22, art. 2(3). Compare ECHR, supra note 25, art. 13; American Convention, supra note 25,
art. 25; ADRDM, supra note 23, art. XVIII.
30 ICCPR, supra note 22, art. 14.
31 CRC, supra note 22, art. 12.
495
with the task of supervising states parties implementation of the rights set out in their
constituent treaties. Treaty bodies carry out several supervisory functions, including reviewing periodic reports submitted by states parties regarding their implementation efforts,32 issuing interpretive guidelines (general comments) that give meaning to specific
treaty provisions, investigating systemic violations of treaty rights,33 and reviewing petitions
alleging treaty violations by a state party filed by other states34 or by individuals.35 However,
consistent with the primacy of state laws and institutions in protecting human rights, individual petitions are admissible before UN treaty bodies only if the petitioners have exhausted
all domestic remedies available to vindicate the rights in question.36 Canadian institutions
may enforce the rights and obligations expressed in international human rights treaties or
in customary international law in one of several ways.37 For example, Parliament or the
provincial legislatures may draft laws to achieve compliance with international human
rights norms. In turn, administrative decision-makers may interpret their statutory powers
in a manner consistent with international human rights norms. Canadian courts may also
give effect to such norms in individual cases, including those that involve procedural or
substantive challenges to the decisions of administrative decision-makers. The principles
governing whether courts may give effect to a norm of international lawthe rules of receptionare discussed in the next section of this chapter.
496
There is a sharp contrast between the Courts tentative conclusion that, absent an express
derogation, courts may look to customary international law to aid in the interpretation
of Canadian law and the development of the common law and its stronger restatement of
the doctrine of adoption in the preceding lines of its judgment. Under that doctrine, absent
an express statutory derogation, customary international law is Canadian law and thus directly binding on Canadian courts.41 This contrast may be evidence of the Courts unease
with strong presumptions requiring the invocation of international law.
497
plane, but only Parliament or the provincial legislatures can enact laws that affect legal rights
and obligations within Canada.43 If treaties created legally enforceable rights and obligations
without the need to enact enabling legislation, the federal executive could legislate without
the consent of Parliament or the provincial legislatures.44 Thus, international treaty provisions must be implemented or transformed into domestic law to impose obligations or
confer rights legally enforceable in domestic courts. From the traditionalist perspective, an
automatic domestic application of treaty norms by courts leads to a democratic deficit,
which must be cured by legislative or constitutional reforms to enhance legislatures involvement in the decision to ratify international treaties.45 A distinct but related objection
to the domestic application of international treaty norms without specific legislative implementation is that federal treaty-making may affect areas of provincial legislative jurisdiction
and lead to violations of Canadas constitutional division of powers.46
The claim that a treaty obligation binding on Canada at international law is irrelevant
unless implemented by a specific statute following the treatys ratification is hotly contested
for a number of reasons. First, not all implementing legislation is obviously so.47 For example, Parliament may enact statutes for the purpose of implementing a treaty obligation
without referring to the treaty. Moreover, legislation that was not originally intended to
implement a treaty may later be relied upon by the federal government as its means of doing
so.48 Canada ratifies most international human rights treaties without adopting implementing legislation, on the assumption that Canadian constitutional, statutory, and common-law
regimes already conform to the treaty norms.49 Controversially, despite this claim of conformity, the Canadian government resists attempts to enforce human rights treaty norms in
Canadian courts on the ground that, absent implementing legislation, they are not binding
43 Baker, supra note 1 at paras. 80-83, per Iacobucci J., dissenting. See also Baker v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) (1996), 142 D.L.R. (4th) 554 at 563-64 (F.C.A.) [Baker (FCA)].
44 Attorney General for Canada v. Attorney General for Ontario (Labour Conventions), [1937] A.C. 326 (P.C.)
[Labour Conventions]; Hugh M. Kindred, International Law: Chiefly as Interpreted and Applied in Canada,
7th ed. (Toronto: Emond Montgomery, 2006) 206 [Kindred, International Law]. The jurisdiction to enact
laws to implement a treaty resides with Parliament or the provincial legislatures, depending on the particular
legislative subject matter dealt with by the treaty.
45 Joanna Harrington, Redressing the Democratic Deficit in Treaty Law Making: (Re-)Establishing a Role for
Parliament (2005) McGill L.J. 465 at 468. For a detailed description of Canadian practice regarding the negotiation and implementation of treaties and a proposal for a federal Canada Treaties Act to bring greater
unity to the relationship between international and domestic law, see de Mestral & Fox-Decent, Rethinking
the Relationship, supra note 41 at 538 et seq.
46 See Labour Conventions, supra note 44.
47 Freeman & van Ert, supra note 42 at 166.
48 Ibid. at 167. Canadas government claims that many laws and policies, adopted by the federal, provincial and
territorial governments, assist in the implementation of Canadas international human rights obligations:
ibid., n. 94. For an enumeration of the different modes of treaty implementation used in Canada, see de
Mestral & Fox-Decent, Rethinking the Relationship, supra note 41 at 617 et seq.
49 Irit Weiser, Effect of International Human Rights Treaties Ratified Without Implementing Legislation in
The Impact of International Law in the Practice of Law in Canada (The Hague: Kluwer Law, 1999) 132 at 132.
Toope, supra note 39 at 538.
498
in Canadian law.50 Many now convincingly argue that express statutory implementation of
a treaty is required only if the treaty purports to alter existing domestic law,51 and that implementation should be inferred where Canada premises its ratification on the prior conformity of Canadian legislation, common law, and administrative policy.52 Indeed, Canadas
Department of Foreign Affairs now states that the government can accept the obligations
within many treaties without new legislation.53
Others challenge the traditionalist view by questioning the very basis of the formal separation of powers doctrinethe legislatures monopoly over the production of domestic legal
norms. They point out that courts have long constrained the administrative states exercise
of statutory powers by insisting that it conform with fundamental or constitutional
common-law values,54 including the duty of procedural fairness in administrative law.55 In
their view, courts increasing reliance on norms expressed in international human rights
treaties (whether implemented by statute or not) is best understood as the judicial updating of the catalogue of values to which the common law subjects the administrative state
from pre-democratic, property-based values, to a more modern set of democratic values,
including fundamental human rights.56
The Supreme Court appeared to endorse the traditionalist approach when it stated, in
Baker,57 that [i]nternational treaties and conventions are not part of Canadian law unless
they have been implemented by statute.58 Despite this pronouncement, it is clear that unimplemented treaties may still influence statutory interpretation through a well-established
50 See Baker (FCA), supra note 43; Ahani v. Canada (M.C.I.) (2002), 58 O.R. (3d) 107 (C.A.), leave to appeal
denied, [2002] S.C.C.A. No. 62 (QL) [Ahani]. See also K. Norman, Taking Human Rights Lightly: The Canadian Approach (2001) 12 N.J.C.L. 2 at 291.
51 S. Toope & J. Brunne, A Hesitant Embrace: The Application of International Law by Canadian Courts
(2002) 40 Can. Y.B. Intl Law 3 at 26-27 [Toope & Brunne, Hesitant]. See Labour Conventions, supra note
44 at 347 per Lord Atkin: the performance of treaty obligations requires legislative action if they entail alterations of existing domestic law. See also Francis v. The Queen, [1956] S.C.R. 618 at 626, Rand J.: statutory
action is needed if treaties purport to change existing law or restrict future legislative action.
52 Toope & Brunne, Hesitant, supra note 51 at 26; J. Brunne & S. Toope, A Hesitant Embrace: Baker and the
Application of International Law by Canadian Courts in Dyzenhaus, supra note 7, 357 at 363 [Brunne &
Toope, Embrace]. See also Hugh M. Kindred, The Use and Abuse of International Legal Sources by Canadian Courts: Searching for a Principled Approach in Fitzgerald, supra note 37, 5 at 15-17; de Mestral & FoxDecent Implementation and Reception, supra note 37 at 54-55.
53 (2008), online: Canada Treaty Information <http://www.treaty-accord.gc.ca/procedures.aspx> at para. 6.2.
For a contrary view reflecting the traditionalist approach to implementation, see William A. Schabas &
Stphane Beaulac, International Human Rights and Canadian LawLegal Commitment, Implementation and
the Charter, 3d ed. (Toronto: Thomson Carswell, 2007) at 60.
54 David Dyzenhaus, Murray Hunt, & Michael Taggart, The Principle of Legality in Administrative Law: Internationalisation as Constitutionalisation (2001) 1 O.U.C.L.J. 5 at 7, 34 [Principle of Legality]. See also John
Mark Keyes & Ruth Sullivan, A Legislative Perspective on the Interaction of International and Domestic
Law in Fitzgerald, supra note 37, 277 at 292 et seq.
55 de Mestral & Fox-Decent Implementation and Reception, supra note 37 at 57-58; Knight v. Indian Head
School Division No. 19, [1990] 1 S.C.R. 653 at paras. 22 and 24.
56 Principle of Legality, supra note 54 at 7, 34.
57 Supra note 1.
58 Ibid. at para. 69.
IV. International Human Rights Norms and Substantive Review of Decision Making 499
principle of statutory interpretation that legislation will be presumed to conform to international law, including customary international law and treaty obligations:
The presumption of conformity is based on the rule of judicial policy that, as a matter of law,
courts will strive to avoid constructions of domestic law pursuant to which the state would be
in violation of its international obligations, unless the wording of the statute clearly compels
that result. [T]he presumption has two aspects. First, the legislature is presumed to act in
compliance with Canadas obligations as a signatory of international treaties and as a member
of the international community. In deciding between possible interpretations, courts will avoid
a construction that would place Canada in breach of those obligations. The second aspect is
that the legislature is presumed to comply with the values and principles of customary and
conventional international law. Those values form part of the context in which statutes are enacted, and courts will therefore prefer a construction that reflects them. The presumption is
rebuttable, however. Parliamentary sovereignty requires courts to give effect to a statute that
demonstrates an unequivocal legislative intent to default on an international obligation.59
Several academics claim that courts should and do apply the presumption of conformity
with international law to interpret legislation that does not implement a treaty ratified by
Canada, because the underlying rationale of the presumptionto avoid an unintended
breach of Canadas international obligations through judicial misconstruction of a statute
applies as much to ordinary laws as it does to implementing legislation.60 Notwithstanding
the Supreme Courts assertion in Hape that the presumption of conformity is a general
principle of statutory interpretation, it is too early to conclude that the Court has embraced
a general duty on courts to interpret domestic legislation in conformity with unimplemented treaties. For example, the Court followed a more restrained approach to the reception of international norms in Baker when it applied a permissive rule allowing courts to
have regard to Canadas treaty obligations as an aid to statutory interpretation.61 We begin
our review of the impact of international human rights norms on the substantive review of
administrative decisions with a closer examination of the Baker decision.
500
Canada where she could care for her Canadian-born children and continue treatment for
paranoid schizophrenia. The minister denied her application. Although the Supreme Court
decided Baker on the procedural issue of bias, it also held that this was an unreasonable
exercise of discretion because a review of the notes of the immigration officer who examined Bakers case revealed that his decision was not made in a manner that showed attentiveness and sensitivity to the best interests of Bakers children. The Courts assessment of
the reasonableness of the decision was informed by the objectives of the Immigration Act, in
particular family reunification, ministerial guidelines that emphasized preserving family
connections, and the values underlying the CRC. The Act, the guidelines, and the CRC indicated that emphasis on the rights, interests, and needs of children, and special attention
to childhood were important values that should be considered in reasonably interpreting
humanitarian and compassionate considerations that guide the exercise of the discretion.63 The Court rejected Bakers claim that in assessing her application, the minister of
citizenship and immigration should have given primacy to the best interests of her children
as required by article 3(1) of the CRC64 because, in its view, the CRC was not implemented
by statute and article 3(1) was thus not part of Canadian law and could not apply directly to
structure the ministers discretion under the Act.65 However, LHeureux-Dub J., for the
majority, ruled that the CRC still played an important role:
[T]he values reflected in international human rights law may help inform the contextual approach to statutory interpretation and judicial review. As stated in R. Sullivan, Driedger on the
Construction of Statutes (3rd ed. 1994) at p. 330:
[T]he legislature is presumed to respect the values and principles enshrined in international law, both customary and conventional. These constitute a part of the legal context in which legislation is enacted and read. In so far as possible, therefore, interpretations
that reflect these values and principles are preferred.66
The decision that values reflected in an unimplemented international treaty may help
inform the interpretation, exercise, and judicial review of statutory discretion sparked an
animated debate. Iacobucci and Cory JJ. dissented on this point, arguing that allowing reference to an unincorporated treaty during the process of statutory interpretation allowed
Baker to achieve indirectly what cannot be achieved directly, namely, to give force and effect within the domestic legal system to international obligations undertaken by the executive alone that have yet to be subject to the democratic will of Parliament.67 Arguably,
however, the majority did not go far enough in giving effect to the CRC, which is ratified, in