Reference Re Upper Churchill Water Rights Reversion Act (Nfld)

Reference Re Upper Churchill Water Rights Reversion Act (Nfld)

Supreme Court of Canada

Hearing: September 28 - October 1, 1982
Judgment: May 3, 1984
Citations [1984] 1 S.C.R. 297
Prior history Newfoundland Court of Appeal
Ruling Appeal allowed
Holding
Where the pith and substance of provincial legislation is intra-provincial, it may have incidental extra-territorial effects.
Court Membership
Chief Justice: Bora Laskin
Puisne Justices: Roland Ritchie, Brian Dickson, Jean Beetz, Willard Estey, William McIntyre, Julien Chouinard, Antonio Lamer, Bertha Wilson
Reasons given
Unanimous reasons by McIntyre J.

Reference Re Upper Churchill Water Rights Reversion Act (Nfld) [1984] 1 S.C.R. 297 is a famous constitutional reference question put the Supreme Court of Canada. The Court found that legislation passed by the government of Newfoundland to take back water rights contracted out to the province of Quebec was unconstitutional. The decision had a huge impact on both provinces, as the Churchill Falls generating station is one of the biggest producers of hydro-electric power in the region and the agreement guarantees Quebec will receive a majority of the revenue from the Falls until 2034.

Background

By an Act of the province of Newfoundland, the Churchill Falls (Labrador) Corporation (CFLCo) developed hydro-electric generators at the Churchill Falls, in Labrador. In 1969, the company, controlled by the British Newfoundland Development Corporation (BRINCO) entered an agreement with Hydro-Québec, a public utility owned by the government of Quebec, to sell a large majority of the power generated by the Falls at a low fixed rate for the next 65 years.

After buying out BRINCO's shares in 1974, the government of Newfoundland began exploring ways to get a greater portion of the power generated from the Falls. In 1980, the legislature passed the Upper Churchill Water Rights Reversion Act that reverted ownership of the Falls to the provincial government and repealed the Act that granted the land to the CF(L)Co and expropriated the company's assets, including Hydro-Québec's participation in the joint venture.[1]

The province submitted a reference to the Newfoundland Court of Appeal which found it intra vires (within the power of) the province.

Supreme Court of Canada judgment

The Court stated that the Act was ultra vires the province and should be struck down. In performing pith and substance analysis on the legislation by looking at the Act's purpose and effect, the Court found that the Act was Colourable. That is, the form of the Act appears to address a valid matter but in substance actually addresses a matter outside its authority. The "Pith and Substance" of the Act, (i.e. its dominant feature or purpose) was to interfere with the right of Hydro-Québec granted by the agreement with Churchill Falls Corp to receive power from across the provincial border.

See also

References

  1. Hydro-Québec owns 34.2% of CF(L)Co.

External links

Further reading

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