Aboriginal title can’t apply to private land, Supreme Court of Canada decides
A Supreme Court of Canada decision upholding that Aboriginal title cannot be declared over private land gives British Columbia an avenue to win a future appeal in the landmark Cowichan Tribes case, says the province’s attorney general.
The high court refused to hear an appeal on Thursday involving Aboriginal title on private land in the case of a New Brunswick First Nation, and Niki Sharma said that is promising for its appeal in the Cowichan case, which has cast doubt on the primacy of private property rights.
“I think it gives us a clear path to an appeal here in B.C., and we are continuing to pursue that legal option,” she said. “When it’s the same legal issues that we are dealing with here, I think that bodes well for our arguments, and the appeals that we are seeking in B.C.”
A B.C. Supreme Court in August ruled that the Cowichan Tribes has Aboriginal title over land along the Fraser River, that the granting of private titles by government unjustifiably infringed on the nation’s title.


