Full text: Responsible government in the Dominions (Vol. 2)

CHAP, 1] THE DOMINION OF CANADA 741 
Pacific line was a work for the general advantage under 
3. 92 (10) of the British North America Act, and that by the 
declaration the matter had been definitely removed from 
the jurisdiction of the Provincial Legislature and assumed 
bo be within the cognizance of the Dominion, that the work 
proposed to be carried out was essentially a Dominion work, 
and therefore the whole of the Manitoban action was hope- 
lessly illegal. The Supreme Court decided unanimously 
against this contention, holding that the Provincial Act 
was clearly valid, and that the railway constructed under it 
was entitled to cross the Canadian Pacific Railway subject 
to the approval of the Canadian Railway Commission, as 
provided by the Canadian Railway Act of 1888.1 
On the other hand, there was no disallowance of the remark- 
able Act of the Province of Quebec in 1888 (c. 18), which 
granted the Jesuits a compensation for the estates which were 
baken from them by the annexation of Canada, and which 
they had vainly desired to have restored to them. There 
was much bitterness in Canada as to this action, and pressure 
was brought to bear on the Government to disallow, but the 
Government declined to do so, on the ground that it was 
essentially a fiscal matter for the decision of the Government 
of the province and its Legislature, a decision which naturally 
Was probably in part due to motives of policy with regard 
to the treatment of Quebec. Nor in 1890 was the Manitoba 
Act, which opened the long dispute as to education in that 
Province, disallowed, but in that case it must be remembered 
that the provincial right to legislate was subject to positive 
limits, which could be enforced by the Courts, and which in 
the long run could be made good by the action of the Legis- 
lature of Canada under the powers conferred by the Act 
constituting the Province of Manitoba. 
But a change has certainly come over the spirit of the 
“12L.N. 4,5; Cass. Dig.* 487. 
* Canada House of Commons Debates, 1889, pp. 811-910; Provincial 
Legisiation, 1867-95, pp. 386 seq. ; Hopkins, Sir John Thompson, pp. 116= 
36; Willison, Sir Wilfrid Laurier, ii. 40-6. 
* See Provincial Legislation, 1867-95, pp. 947-9 ; Hopkins, op. cit., pp. 
255-70
	        
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