
Sandra Lovelace
v. Canada
Human Rights
Committee
Communication No. 24/1977 :
Canada. 30/07/81.
CCPR/C/13/D/24/1977
Loss of membership status of a woman belonging to an indigenous minority following marriage to a non-indigenous man - Legislation found to be discriminatory on the basis of sex - Violation of Article 27.
Femme a perdu statut d'appartenance à une minorité autochtone suite au
mariage avec un non-autochtone - Législation discriminatoire fondée sur le sexe
- Violation de l'article 27.
Langues et Formats / Languages and
Formats:
English (original)
ANNEX
Views
of the Human Rights Committee under article 5, paragraph 4,
of the Optional Protocol to the International Covenant
on Civil and Political Rights
– Thirteenth session –
Communication
No. 24/1977 (1) & (2)
Submitted by: Sandra Lovelace on 29 December 1977
Alleged victim: The author
State party: Canada
Date of adoption of views: 30 July 1981 (thirteenth session)
Views under article 5 {4) of the Optional Protocol
1. The author of the communication dated 29
December 1977 and supplemented by letters of 17 April 1978, 28 November 1979
and 20 June 1980, is a 32-year-old woman, living in Canada. She was born and
registered as "Maliseet Indian" but has lost her rights and status as
an Indian in accordance with section 12 (1) (b) of the Indian Act, after having
married a non-Indian on 23 May 1970. Pointing out that an Indian man who
marries a non-Indian woman does not lose his Indian status, she claims that the
Act is discriminatory on the grounds of sex and contrary to articles 2 (1), 3,
23 (1) and (4), 26 and 27 of the Covenant. As to the admissibility of the
communication, she contends that she was not required to exhaust local remedies
since the Supreme Court of Canada, in The Attorney-General of Canada v.
Jeanette Lavell, Richard Isaac et al. v. Yvonne Bddard [1974] S.C.R. 1349, held
that decision 12 (1) (b) was fully operative, irrespective of its inconsistency
with the Canadian Bill of Rights on account of discrimination based on sex.
2. By its decision of 18 July 1978 the Human
Rights Committee transmitted the communication, under rule 91 of the
provisional rules of procedure, to the State party concerned, requesting
information and observations relevant to the question of admissibility of the
communication. This request for information and observations was reiterated by
a decision of the Committee's Working Group, dated 6 April 1979.
3. By its decision of 14 August 1979 the
Human Rights Committee declared the communication admissible and requested the
author of the communication to submit additional information concerning her age
and her marriage, which had not been indicated in the original submission. At
that time no information or observations had been received from the State party
concerning the question of admissibility of the communication.
4. In its submission dated 26 September 1979
relating to the admissibility of the communication, the State party informed
the Committee that it had no comments on that point to make. This fact,
however, should not be considered as an admission of the merits of the
allegations or the arguments of the author of the communication.
5. In its submission under article 4 (2) of
the Optional Protocol concerning the merits of the case, dated ,a, April 1980,
the State party recognized that "many of the provisions of the ... Indian
Act, including section 12 (1) (b), require serious reconsideration and
reform". The Government further referred to an earlier public declaration
to the effect that it intended to put a reform bill before the Canadian
Parliament. It none the less stressed the necessity of the Indian Act as an
instrument designed to protect the Indian minority in accordance with article
27 of the Covenant. A definition of the Indian was inevitable in view of the
special privileges granted to the Indian communities, in particular their right
to occupy reserve lands. Traditionally, patrilineal family relationships were
taken into account for determining legal claims. Since, additionally, in the
farming societies of the nineteenth century, reserve land was felt to be more
threatened by non-Indian men than by non-Indian women, legal enactments as from
1869 provided that an Indian woman who married a non-Indian man would lose her
status as an Indian. These reasons were still valid. A change in the law could
only be sought in consultation with the Indians themselves who, however, were
divided on the issue of equal rights. The Indian community should not be
endangered by legislative changes. Therefore, although the Government was in
principle committed to amending section 12 (1) (b) of the Indian Act, no quick
and immediate legislative action could be expected.
6. The author of the communication, in her
submission of 20 June 1980, disputes the contention that legal relationships
within Indian families were traditionally patrilineal in nature. Her view is
that the reasons put forward by the Canadian Government do not justify the
discrimination against Indian women in section 12 (1) (b) of the Indian Act.
She concludes that the Human Rights Committee should recommend the State party
to amend the provisions in question.
7.1 In an interim decision, adopted on 31
July 1980, the Human Rights Committee set out the issues of the case in the
following considerations:
7.2 The Human Rights Committee recognized
that the relevant provision of the Indian Act, although not legally restricting
the right to marry as laid down in article 23 (2) of the Covenant, entails
serious disadvantages on the part of the Indian woman who wants to marry a
non-Indian man and may in fact cause her to live with her fianc6 in an
unmarried relationship. There is thus a question as to whether the obligation
of the State party under article 23 of the Covenant with regard to the
protection of the family is complied with. Moreover, since only Indian women
and not Indian men are subject to these disadvantages under the Act, the
question arises whether Canada complies with its commitment under articles 2
and 3 to secure the rights under the Covenant without discrimination as to sex.
On the other hand, article 27 of the Covenant requires States parties to accord
protection to ethnic and linguistic minorities and the Committee must give due
weight to this obligation. To enable it to form an opinion on these issues, it
would assist the Committee to have certain additional observations and
information.
7.3 In regard to the present communication,
however, the Human Rights Committee must also take into account that the
Covenant entered into force in respect of Canada on 19 August 1976, several
years after the marriage of Mrs. Lovelace. She consequently lost her status as
an Indian at a time when Canada was not bound by the Covenant. The Human Rights
Committee has held that it is empowered to consider a communication when the
measures complained of, although they occurred before the entry into force of
the Covenant, continued to have effects which themselves constitute a violation
of the Covenant after that date. It is therefore relevant for the Committee to
know whether the marriage of Mrs. Lovelace in 1970 has had any such effects.
7.4 Since the author of the communication is
ethnically an Indian, some persisting effects of her loss of legal status as an
Indian may, as from the entry into force of the Covenant for Canada, amount to
a violation of rights protected by the Covenant. The Human Rights Committee has
been informed that persons in her situation are denied the right to live on an
Indian reserve with resultant separation from the Indian community and members
of their families. Such prohibition may affect rights which the Covenant
guarantees in articles 12 (1), 17, 23 (1), 24 and 27. There may be other such
effects of her loss of status.
8. The Human Rights Committee invited the
parties to submit their observations on the above considerations and, as
appropriate, to furnish replies to the following questions:
(a) How many
Indian women marry non-Indian men on an average each year? Statistical data for
the last 20 years should be provided.
(b) What is the
legal basis of a prohibition to live on a reserve? Is it a direct result of the
loss of Indian status or does it derive from a discretionary decision of the
Council of the community concerned?
(c) What reasons
are adduced to justify the denial of the right of abode on a reserve?
(d) What
legislative proposals are under consideration for ensuring full equality
between the sexes with regard to Indian status? How would they affect the
position of Mrs. Lovelace? How soon can it be expected that legislation will be
introduced?
(e) What was Mrs.
Lovelace's place of abode prior to her marriage? Was she at that time living
with other members of her family? Was she denied the right to reside on a
reserve in consequence of her marriage?
(f) What other
persisting effects of Mrs. Lovelace's loss of status are there which may be
relevant to any of the rights protected by the Covenant?
9.1 In submissions dated 22 October and 2
December 1980 the State party and the author, respectively, commented on the
Committee's considerations and furnished replies to the questions asked.
9.2 It emerges from statistics provided by
the State party that from 1965 to 1978, on an average, 510 Indian women married
non-Indian men each year. Marriages between Indian women and Indian men of the
same band during that period were 590 on the average each year; between Indian
women and Indian men of a different band 422 on the average each year; and
between Indian men and non-Indian women 448 on the average each year.
9.3 As to the legal basis of a prohibition to
live' on a reserve, the State party offers the following explanations:
Section 14 of the Indian Act provides that "(an Indian) woman who is a member of a band ceases to be a member of that band if she marries a person who is not a member of that band". (3) As such, she loses the right to the use and benefits, in common with other members of the band, of the land allotted to the band.4 It should, however, be noted that "when (an Indian woman) marries a member of another band, she thereupon becomes a member of the band of which her husband is a member". As such, she is entitled to the use and benefit of lands allotted to her husband's band.
An Indian
(including a woman) who ceases to be a member of a band ceases to be entitled
to reside by right on a reserve. None the less it is possible for an individual
to reside on a reserve if his or her presence thereon is tolerated by a band or
its members. It should be noted that under section 30 of the Indian Act, any
person who trespasses on a reserve is guilty of an offence. In addition,
section 31 of the Act provides that an Indian or a band (and of course its
agent, the Band Council) may seek relief or remedy against any person, other
than an Indian, who is or has been
(a) unlawfully in occupation or possession of,
(b) claiming
adversely the right to occupation or possession of, or
(c) trespassing
upon a reserve or part thereof.
9.4 As to the reasons adduced to justify the
denial of the right of abode on a reserve, the State party states that the
provisions of the Indian Act which govern the right to reside on a reserve have
been enacted to give effect to various treaty obligations reserving to the
Indians exclusive use of certain lands.
9.5 With regard to the legislative proposals
under consideration, the State party offers the following information:
Legislative proposals are being considered which would ensure that no Indian person, male or female, would lose his or her status under any circumstances other than his or her own personal desire to renounce it.
In addition,
changes to the present sections under which the status of the Indian woman and
minor children is dependent upon the status of her spouse are also being
considered.
Further
recommendations are being considered which would give Band Councils powers to
pass by-laws concerning membership in the band; such by-laws, however, would be
required to be non-discriminatory in the areas of sex, religion and family
affiliation.
In the case of
Mrs. Lovelace, when such new legislation is enacted, she would then be entitled
to be registered as an Indian.
Legislative
recommendations are being prepared for presentation to Cabinet for approval and
placement on the Parliamentary Calendar for introduction before the House by
mid-1981.
9.6 As to Mrs. Lovelace's place of abode
prior to her marriage both parties confirm that she was at that time living on
the Tobique Reserve with her parents. Sandra Lovelace adds that as a result of
her marriage, she was denied the right to live on an Indian reserve. As to her
abode since then the State party observes:
Since her marriage and following her divorce, Mrs. Lovelace has, from time to time, lived on the reserve in the home of her parents, and the Band Council has made no move to prevent her from doing so. However, Mrs. Lovelace wishes to live permanently on the reserve and to obtain a new house. To do so, she has to apply to the Band Council. Housing on reserves is provided with money set aside by Parliament for the benefit of registered Indians. The Council has not agreed to provide Mrs. Lovelace with a new house. It considers that in the provision of such housing priority is to be given to registered Indians.
9.7 In this connection the following
additional information has been submitted on behalf of Mrs. Lovelace:
At the present time, Sandra Lovelace is living on the Tobique Indian Reserve, although she has no right to remain there. She has returned to the Reserve, with her children because her marriage has broken up and she has no other place to reside. She is able to remain on the reserve in violation of the law of the local Band Council because dissident members of the tribe who support her cause have threatened to resort to physical violence in her defence should the authorities attempt to remove her.
9.8 As to the other persisting effects of
Mrs. Lovelace's loss of Indian status the State party submits the following:
When Mrs. Lovelace lost her Indian status through marriage to a non-Indian, she also lost access to federal government programs for Indian people in areas such as education, housing, social assistance, etc. At the same time, however, she and her children became eligible to receive similar benefits from programs the provincial government provides for all residents of the province.
Mrs. Lovelace is
no longer a member of the Tobique band and no longer an Indian under the terms
of the Indian Act. She however is enjoying all the rights recognized in the
Covenant, in the same way as any other individual within the territory of
Canada and subject to its jurisdiction.
9.9 On behalf of Sandra Lovelace the
following is submitted in this connection:
All the consequences of loss of status
persist in that they are permanent and continue to deny the complainant rights
she was born with.
A person who ceases to be an Indian under the
Indian Act suffers the following consequences:
(1) Loss of the right to possess or reside on lands on a reserve (ss. 25 and 28 (1)). This includes loss of the right to return to the reserve after leaving, the right to inherit possessory interest in land from parents or others, and the right to be buried on a reserve;
(2) An Indian
without status cannot receive loans from the Consolidated Revenue Fund for the
purposes set out in section 70;
(3) An Indian
without status cannot benefit from instruction in farming and cannot receive
seed without charge from the Minister (see section 71);
{4) An Indian
without status cannot benefit from medical treatment and health services
provided under section 73 (1) (g);
(5) An Indian
without status cannot reside on tax exempt lands (section 87);
(6) A person
ceasing to be an Indian loses the right to borrow money for housing from the
Band Council (Consolidated Regulations of Canada, 1978, c. 949);
(7) A person
ceasing to be an Indian loses the right to cut timber free of dues on an Indian
reserve (section 4--Indian Timber Regulations, c. 961, 1978 Consolidated
Regulations of Canada);
(8) A person
ceasing to be an Indian loses traditional hunting and fishing rights that may
exist;
(9) The major loss
to a person ceasing to be an Indian is the loss of the cultural benefits of
living in an Indian community, the emotional ties to home, family, friends and
neighbours, and the loss of identity.
10. The Human Rights Committee, in the
examination of the communication before it, has to proceed from the basic fact
that Sandra Lovelace married a non-Indian on 23 May 1970 and consequently lost
her status as a Maliseet Indian under section 12 (1) (b) of the Indian Act.
This provision was--and still is--based on a distinction de jure on the
ground of sex. However, neither its application to her marriage as the cause of
her loss of Indian status nor its effects could at that time amount to a
violation of the Covenant, because this instrument did not come into force for
Canada until 19 August 1976. Moreover, the Committee is not competent, as a
rule, to examine allegations relating to events having taken place before the
entry into force of the Covenant and the Optional Protocol. Therefore as
regards Canada it can only consider alleged violations of human rights
occurring on or after 19 August 1976. In the case of a particular individual
claiming to be a victim of a violation, it cannot express its view on the law
in the abstract, without regard to the date on which this law was applied to
the alleged victim. In the case of Sandra Lovelace it follows that the
Committee is not competent to express any view on the original cause of her
loss of Indian status, i.e. the Indian Act as applied to her at the time of her
marriage in 1970.
11. The Committee recognizes, however, that
the situation may be different if the alleged violations, although relating to
events occurring before 19 August 1976, continue, or have effects which
themselves constitute violations, after that date. In examining the situation
of Sandra Lovelace in this respect, the Committee must have regard to all relevant
provisions of the Covenant. It has considered, in particular, the extent to
which the general provisions in articles 2 and 3 as well as the rights in
articles 12 (1), 17 (1), 23 (1), 24, 26 and 27, may be applicable to the facts
of her present situation.
12. The Committee first observes that from 19
August 1976 Canada had undertaken under article 2 (1) and (2) of the Covenant
to respect and ensure to all individuals within its territory and subject to
its jurisdiction, the rights recognized in the Covenant without distinction of
any kind such as sex, and to adopt the necessary measures to give effect to
these rights. Further, under article 3, Canada undertook to ensure the equal
right of men and women to the enjoyment of these rights. These undertakings
apply also to the position of Sandra Lovelace. The Committee considers,
however, that it is not necessary for the purposes of her communication to
decide their extent in all respects. The full scope of the obligation of Canada
to remove the effects or inequalities caused by the application of existing
laws to past events, in particular as regards such matters as civil or personal
status, does not have to be examined in the present case, for the reasons set
out below.
13.1 The Committee considers that the essence
of the present complaint concerns the continuing effect of the Indian Act, in
denying Sandra Lovelace legal status as an Indian, in particular because she
cannot for this reason claim a legal right to reside where she wishes to, on
the Tobique Reserve. This fact persists after the entry into force of the
Covenant, and its effects have to be examined, without regard to their original
cause. Among the effects referred to on behalf of the author (see para. 9.9,
above), the greater number, ((1) to (8)), relate to the Indian Act and other
Canadian rules in fields which do not necessarily adversely affect the
enjoyment of rights protected by the Covenant. In this respect the significant
matter is her last claim, that "the major loss to a person ceasing to be
an Indian is the loss of the cultural benefits of living in an Indian
community, the emotional ties to home, family, friends and neighbours, and the
loss of identity".
13.2 Although a number of provisions of the
Covenant have been invoked by Sandra Lovelace, the Committee considers that the
one which is most directly applicable to this complaint is article 27, which
reads as follows:
In those States in which ethnic, religious or linguistic minorities exist, persons belonging to such minorities shall not be denied the right, in community with the other members of their group, to enjoy their own culture, to profess and practise their own religion, or to use their own language.
It has to be
considered whether Sandra Lovelace, because she is denied the legal right to
reside on the Tobique Reserve, has by that fact been denied the right
guaranteed by article 27 to persons belonging to minorities, to enjoy their own
culture and to use their own language in community with other members of their
group.
14. The rights under article 27 of the
Covenant have to be secured to "persons belonging" to the minority.
At present Sandra Lovelace does not qualify as an Indian under Canadian
legislation. However, the Indian Act deals primarily with a number of privileges
which, as stated above, do not as such come within the scope of the Covenant.
Protection under the Indian Act and protection under article 27 of the Covenant
therefore have to be distinguished. Persons who are born and brought up on a
reserve, who have kept ties with their community and wish to maintain these
ties must normally be considered as belonging to that minority within the
meaning of the Covenant. Since Sandra Lovelace is ethnically a Maliseet Indian
and has only been absent from her home reserve for a few years during the
existence of her marriage, she is, in the opinion of the Committee, entitled to
be regarded as "belonging" to this minority and to claim the benefits
of article 27 of the Covenant. The question whether these benefits have been
denied to her, depends on how far they extend.
15. The right to live on a reserve is not as
such guaranteed by article 27 of the Covenant. Moreover, the Indian Act does
not interfere directly with the functions which are expressly mentioned in that
article. However, in the opinion of the Committee the right of Sandra Lovelace
to access to her native culture and language "in community with the other
members" of her group, has in fact been, and continues to be interfered
with, because there is no place outside the Tobique Reserve where such a
community exists. On the other hand, not every interference can be regarded as
a denial of rights within the meaning of article 27. Restrictions on the right
to residence, by way of national legislation, cannot be ruled out under article
27 of the Covenant. This also follows from the restrictions to article 12 (I)
of the Covenant set out in article 12 (3). The Committee recognizes the need to
define the category of persons entitled to live on a reserve, for such purposes
as those explained by the Government regarding protection of its resources and
preservation of the identity of its people. However, the obligations which the
Government has since undertaken under the Covenant must also be taken into
account.
16. In this respect, the Committee is of the
view that statutory restrictions affecting the right to residence on a reserve
of a person belonging to the minority concerned, must have both a reasonable
and objective justification and be consistent with the other provisions of the
Covenant, read as a whole. Article 27 must be construed and applied in the
light of the other provisions mentioned above, such as articles 12, 17 and 23
in so far as they may be relevant to the particular case, and also the
provisions against discrimination, such as articles 2, 3 and 26, as the case
may be. It is not necessary, however, to determine in any general manner which
restrictions may be justified under the Covenant, in particular as a result of
marriage, because the circumstances are special in the present case.
17. The case of Sandra Lovelace should be
considered in the light of the fact that her marriage to a non-Indian has
broken up. It is natural that in such a situation she wishes to return to the
environment in which she was born, particularly as after the dissolution of her
marriage her main cultural attachment again was to the Maliseet band. Whatever
may be the merits of the Indian Act in other respects, it does not seem to the
Committee that to deny Sandra Lovelace the right to reside on the reserve is
reasonable, or necessary to preserve the identity of the tribe. The Committee
therefore concludes that to prevent her recognition as belonging to the band is
an unjustifiable denial of her rights under article 27 of the Covenant, read in
the context of the other provisions referred to.
18. In view of this finding, the Committee
does not consider it necessary to examine whether the same facts also show
separate breaches of the other rights invoked. The specific rights most
directly applicable to her situation are those under article 27 of the
Covenant. The rights to choose one's residence (article 12), and the rights
aimed at protecting family life and children (articles 17, 23 and 24) are only
indirectly at stake in the present case. The facts of the case do not seem to
require further examination under those articles. The Committee's finding of a
lack of a reasonable justification for the interference with Sandra Lovelace's
rights under article 27 of the Covenant also makes it unnecessary, as suggested
above (para. 12), to examine the general provisions against discrimination
(arts. 2, 3 and 26) in the context of the present case, and in particular to
determine their bearing upon inequalities predating the coming into force of
the Covenant for Canada.
19. Accordingly, the Human Rights Committee,
acting under article 5 (4) of the Optional Protocol to the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, is of the view that the facts of the
present case, which establish that Sandra Lovelace has been denied the legal
right to reside on the Tobique Reserve, disclose a breach by Canada of article
27 of the Covenant.
APPENDIX
Individual opinion submitted by a member of the Human Rights Committee
under rule 94 (3) of the Committee's provisional rules of procedure
Individual opinion appended to the Committee's views at the request of Mr. Nejib Bouziri:
[Original: French]
[30 July 1981]
In the Lovelace case, not only article 27 but
also articles 2 (para. 1), 3, 23 (paras. 1. and 4) and 26 of the Covenant have
been breached, for some of the provisions of the Indian Act are discriminatory,
particularly as between men and women. The Act is still in force and, even
though the Lovelace case arose before the date on which the Covenant became
applicable in Canada, Mrs. Lovelace is still suffering from the adverse
discriminatory effects of the Act in matte/s other than that covered by article
27.
1. Pursuant to rule 85 of the provisional
rules of procedure, Mr. Walter Surma Tarnopolsky, did not participate in the
consideration of this communication or in the adoption of the views of the
Committee under article 5 (4) of the Optional Protocol in this matter.
2. The text of an individual opinion submitted
by a Committee member is appended to these views.
3. Mrs. Lovelace married a non-Indian. As
such, she ceased to be a member of the Tobique band. In addition, by the
application of subparagraph 12 (1), (b) of the Indian Act, she lost her Indian
status.
4. It should be noted that when an Indian
ceases to be a member of a band, he is entitled, if he meets the conditions set
out in sections 15 and 16 of the Indian Act, to compensation from Her Majesty
for this loss of membership.