The Crown as fiduciary and the conflict of interest inherent in its use of Indian lands for public purposes.

This thesis examines the fiduciary relationship between the federal Crown and Indian bands arising under the Indian Act, and more particularly the obligations adhering to the Crown when it accepts surrenders of reserve lands for its own purposes. It begins with an analysis of the theoretical basis o...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Salembier, John Paul.
Other Authors: Sullivan, Ruth
Format: Others
Published: University of Ottawa (Canada) 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10393/10080
http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-8118
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spelling ndltd-uottawa.ca-oai-ruor.uottawa.ca-10393-100802018-01-05T19:05:58Z The Crown as fiduciary and the conflict of interest inherent in its use of Indian lands for public purposes. Salembier, John Paul. Sullivan, Ruth, Canadian Studies. This thesis examines the fiduciary relationship between the federal Crown and Indian bands arising under the Indian Act, and more particularly the obligations adhering to the Crown when it accepts surrenders of reserve lands for its own purposes. It begins with an analysis of the theoretical basis of the fiduciary relationship in private law, concluding that such a relationship arises whenever a person acquires a power or property subject to the condition that the power will be exercised, or the property used, to further the interests of another. The thesis then examines the source of the Crown/Indian fiduciary relationship, and concludes that the Indian Act requirement that a band contemplating an alienation of its lands must first transfer those lands to the Crown, and the corresponding discretion vested in the Crown in disposing of those lands on the band's behalf, supply the requisite conditions, in accordance with private law fiduciary principles, for establishment of an ongoing fiduciary relationship in respect of the alienation of Indian lands. The thesis then provides a detailed review of the rules applicable to conflict of interest by a fiduciary in private law, and concludes that the more stringent requirements applicable to conflict of interest by a fiduciary in private law should also be extended to the Crown where the Crown accepts surrenders of land, or deals with Indian assets, in a manner that ultimately benefits the Crown. 2009-03-25T20:01:51Z 2009-03-25T20:01:51Z 1995 1995 Thesis Source: Masters Abstracts International, Volume: 35-01, page: 0109. 9780612116009 http://hdl.handle.net/10393/10080 http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-8118 218 p. University of Ottawa (Canada)
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Canadian Studies.
spellingShingle Canadian Studies.
Salembier, John Paul.
The Crown as fiduciary and the conflict of interest inherent in its use of Indian lands for public purposes.
description This thesis examines the fiduciary relationship between the federal Crown and Indian bands arising under the Indian Act, and more particularly the obligations adhering to the Crown when it accepts surrenders of reserve lands for its own purposes. It begins with an analysis of the theoretical basis of the fiduciary relationship in private law, concluding that such a relationship arises whenever a person acquires a power or property subject to the condition that the power will be exercised, or the property used, to further the interests of another. The thesis then examines the source of the Crown/Indian fiduciary relationship, and concludes that the Indian Act requirement that a band contemplating an alienation of its lands must first transfer those lands to the Crown, and the corresponding discretion vested in the Crown in disposing of those lands on the band's behalf, supply the requisite conditions, in accordance with private law fiduciary principles, for establishment of an ongoing fiduciary relationship in respect of the alienation of Indian lands. The thesis then provides a detailed review of the rules applicable to conflict of interest by a fiduciary in private law, and concludes that the more stringent requirements applicable to conflict of interest by a fiduciary in private law should also be extended to the Crown where the Crown accepts surrenders of land, or deals with Indian assets, in a manner that ultimately benefits the Crown.
author2 Sullivan, Ruth,
author_facet Sullivan, Ruth,
Salembier, John Paul.
author Salembier, John Paul.
author_sort Salembier, John Paul.
title The Crown as fiduciary and the conflict of interest inherent in its use of Indian lands for public purposes.
title_short The Crown as fiduciary and the conflict of interest inherent in its use of Indian lands for public purposes.
title_full The Crown as fiduciary and the conflict of interest inherent in its use of Indian lands for public purposes.
title_fullStr The Crown as fiduciary and the conflict of interest inherent in its use of Indian lands for public purposes.
title_full_unstemmed The Crown as fiduciary and the conflict of interest inherent in its use of Indian lands for public purposes.
title_sort crown as fiduciary and the conflict of interest inherent in its use of indian lands for public purposes.
publisher University of Ottawa (Canada)
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/10393/10080
http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-8118
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