684 THE FEDERATIONS AND THE UNION [PART 1v
so forth, in these lands, and that they were entitled to the
proceeds. On the part of Ontario it was contended that
the right in these lands was always in the Crown, not in the
Indians : that being in the province, the lands passed to
the province under s. 109 of the Constitution, and the only
power which the Dominion could have would be a power
of legislation in respect of the lands under the powers to
legislate in s. 91. Tt was decided by the majority of the
Supreme Court?! that the lands formed part of the public
domain and were the property of Ontario. They insisted on
the fact that the French Crown claimed in full propriety all
the lands in the country, and ceded them in full propriety
to the English Crown in 1763. The claims of the Indians
were always under the French, and still were, claims to
benevolent consideration, but not legal claims to be enforced
by the Courts. This decision was in effect upheld by the
Judicial Committee, who also held that the Indians had no
title, but were allowed a fructuary use of the lands, and that
the timber on the land was wholly vested in the Crown.
Moreover the Judicial Committee then decided that the lands
were not burdened with any trust or other compulsion to pay
the Indians sums out of them, but they held that with the
lands the province must relieve the Crown and the Dominion
of the burden of all promises made to the Indians and in part
fulfilled by the Dominion, though the remark is apparently
only an obiter dictum and does not mean a legal obligation,
and of course the actual hunting, &ec., rights morally bound
the province.
In the case of The Dominion of Canada v. The Province of
Ontario, decided on July 29, 1910, the question was raised
£138. C. R. 577. Cf. Boyd C. in 10 O. R. 196.
* 8t. Catherine's Milling and Lumber Co. v. Reg., 14 App. Cas. 46; 13
S.C. R. 577; 13 O. A. R. 148; Lefroy, pp. 612-4. See also Ontario Mining
Co. v. Seybold, [1903] A. C. 73. As to the annuities see also Attorney-
General for Canada v. Attorney-General for Ontario, [1897] A. C. 199: 25
S. C. R. 434.
' [1910] A. C. 637, affirming the decision in 42 8. C. R. 1, where Idington,
Maclennan, and Duff JJ. agreed, Girouard and Davies JJ. dissenting. Cf.
the valuable correspondence in Ontario Sess. Pap., 1908, No. 71. Since