ADMINISTRATION. 24.1 (0) The Sea-coast. s. 91 (12). (¢) Inland Fisheries. The meaning of “inland fisheries” was discussed in The Queen v. Robertson’. “I am of opinion,” said Ritchie, C. J. “that the legislation in regard to inland and sea fisheries contemplated by the B. N. A. Act was not in reference to ‘property and civil rights’ that is to say, not as to the ownership of the beds of the rivers or of the fisheries or the rights of individuals therein, but to subjects affecting the fisheries generally, tending to their regulation, pro- tection, and preservation, matters of a national and general concern and important to the public, such as the forbidding fish to be taken at improper seasons in an improper manner, or with destructive instruments, laws with reference to the improvement and increase of the fisheries: in other words, all such general laws as enure as well to the benefit of the owners of the fisheries as to the public at large who are interested in the fisheries as a source of national and pro- vincial wealth: in other words, laws in relation to the fisheries such as those which the local Legislatures were, previously to and at the time of Confederation, in the habit of enacting for their regulation, preservation and protection, with which the property in the fish or the right to take the fish out of the water to be appropriated to the party so taking the fish has nothing whatever to do, the property in the fishing or the right to take the fish being as much the property of the province or the individual as the dry land or the land covered with water.” The grant by the Dominion Minister of Marine and Fisheries of a right to fish in a provincial river was therefore held invalid. 4. Matters of State Management. The Dominion has exclusive jurisdiction in regard to :— (a) The Census. s. 91 (6). Sea-coast. Fisheries. Census. 1 6 Can. 8S. C. R. 52; 2 Cart. 65. A