Thank you.
I understand that all of the members have a copy of our paper in front of them, which will be very helpful. We have three comment sections in the brief.
The bill proposes to repeal several sections of the Indian Act. The first section of our paper just reviews the sections where we have no concerns about the repeal of those provisions. They are archaic provisions for the most part, or they are provisions that enough workarounds have been developed that they are no longer in effect as a practical matter. We suggest that the committee should not be concerned about the repeal of those provisions, so I'm not going to spend any time on those.
What I do want to spend time on are the effects of section 7 of the act, which would be the repeal of certain provisions of the Indian Act relating to wills and estates. Section 7 would remove the minister—of I guess it's still legally Indian and Northern Affairs Canada—from the administration of estates and wills. We have considerable concerns about this section. It's a very small section with huge implications, as we see it. I want to talk first with respect to wills, then estates, and then some transition issues that we've identified in the paper.
With respect to the repeal of sections 42 to 47 of the Indian Act that would follow from clause 7 of Bill C-428, the provincial laws with respect to wills wouldn't then apply to the wills of Indians by virtue of section 88 of the Indian Act. It's all very complicated, but section 88 of the Indian Act brings into force provincial laws that apply to wills with respect to Indians. It's referential incorporation of provincial law. Without federal regulation over Indian wills, then the provincial laws would apply. We see a few challenges with this.
First of all, provincial laws are different throughout all provinces and all territories. You would no longer have a uniform law that would apply to Indian wills across the country.
The second thing is that it would be a very complicated and expensive process that would then fall to individual Indian families rather than be administered from the Department of Indian Affairs. We also have to remember that these provisions only touch on wills for Indians who are ordinarily resident on reserve. The wills of Indians who do not live on reserves or whose main residence is not on a reserve are already subject to provincial legislation with one exception. That is, if they hold any land on a reserve, then they still have to go through and are still subject to the Indian Act with respect to transfer of land. The normal conveyancing of land in a provincial system wouldn't apply. They would then still have to go under the Indian Act to be able to transfer and devise land held on a reserve to the beneficiaries. I'll explain that in a moment.
Without that backstop of having Indian Affairs be the default institution, these private citizens—who are now Indians, ordinarily resident on a reserve, or their families—will be forced to start in the provincial system, and potentially move back to Indian Affairs to get a variety of opinions on the value of the estate, perhaps section 50 sales of their certificates of possession. Then, once all that is taken care of, they have to go back to the provincial system to get it probated. The current system allows the minister, who effectively acts as a probate court, to have all of this happen in a very efficient manner. Those efficiencies will be lost.
Families who have to deal with probate of Indian wills will be flipping back and forth between whatever their regulations are in their province, and then back to the Indian Act if there are land issues on reserve, and then back to the province. We expect that this will increase costs.
The other thing that we have identified in the paper is that many Indian estates, frankly, aren't worth that much. Usually, the typical Indian estate, for someone who's ordinarily resident on reserve, is some sort of landholding on the reserve, like a certificate of possession. There will be a family home. But the value of those land holdings tend to be much less, particularly in rural communities, than you might expect off reserve. The value of a certificate of possession doesn't attract a high market price.
Other provisions in the Indian Act require that certificates of possession can only be bought and sold by other members of the band, and of course, mortgage money can't be raised to pay for these, so they tend to be cash transactions. Because you have a small market for certificates of possession—other band members—and because you can't raise financing, the price for these holdings on reserve gets much less.
Why is this a problem? It's a problem because the public trustees in the various provinces and territories simply won't touch small estates. If they can't get their fees out of the estates, then they won't deal with these kinds of issues. So if a will is declared void for whatever reason, or part of it is declared void, or if the will says you can have all the personal property but the real property on the reserve has to be transferred according to the Indian Act, the value of that could be so small that there won't be any backstop. The public trustees in the provinces simply won't deal with it.
As a result, one of our big concerns is that landholdings on reserve may no longer come out of the names of deceased Indians, because there may be no financial incentive for people to actually go through a probate process, or in the case of intestacies, an administration process. You may have certificates of possession that could remain in the names of deceased Indians for years. There's simply nobody who will have an interest in resolving those estate matters. Indian Affairs will no longer be administering that. The minister's jurisdiction will be taken away. The public trustees won't be able to get their fees, so they're not going to be interested. Quite frankly, some of the families in some of these small rural communities, access to justice for them—accessing legal counsel who will understand this, their ability to fund the probate process—probably won't be there in many cases.
There are some other concerns we have, which I only want to touch on, that are unique to first nations. We mention concurrent spouses as an issue. The Indian Act has significant flexibility to deal with situations in which a person may be married to one person, say early on in their life, then by the time they die are living with someone else. The Indian Act allows for the minister to ensure that a will provides for all dependents of a deceased Indian, and that can include concurrent spouses. That flexibility is lost in most of the provincial jurisdictions that we're aware of.
Also, Indian customary adoptions is another big concern. Under the Indian Act the definition of a “child” includes children who are adopted through indigenous legal traditions. The definition of “child” in most of the provinces and territories does not refer to that. So when you have child beneficiaries under Indian wills, currently they can include children who have been adopted according to the custom of that first nation. That may become lost and those beneficiaries may become disentitled under Indian wills.
I've already talked about the problem of dividing land on reserve, so I won't go into that again.
The form of a will is another big concern. Under the Indian Act and the Indian Estates Regulations, the form of a will is that it has to be in writing, signed by the testator, and expressing the testator's wishes. That's it. It's a much more generous definition than what exists in most provinces and territories.
We have—and we note these statistics in our paper—only 5% to 10% of Indians ordinarily resident on reserve making wills now. The fact that this bill would see them fall under provincial jurisdiction and therefore have to comply with the forms of wills that are required under provincial laws may reduce the incidence of Indians, ordinarily on reserve, making wills. It may increase the level of intestacies of Indians ordinarily resident on reserve as a result of having to comply with provincial jurisdiction. Some provinces, it's true, allow for holographic wills, so just a piece of paper signed by the testator, but many don't. We have to be alive to that as the bill is being considered.
I have touched briefly on the ability of the minister currently to void wills in unjust circumstances. Provincial legislation will allow wills to be voided in circumstances of duress or lack of testamentary capacity. The Indian Act provides greater flexibility to the minister currently, particularly when a will disposes of land contrary to the Indian Act or against the public interest. There is a huge flexibility currently in the Indian Act for the minister and the department to make provision for all those who need to be provided for in a will, and to vary it accordingly. That flexibility doesn't exist to the same degree in a variety of provincial regimes, nor uniformly across the country, the way it does now.
Although it removes the minister's exclusive jurisdiction over wills in estates, the bill still keeps the intestacy provisions in place in the Indian Act. As I mentioned earlier, over 90% of Indians who are ordinarily a resident on reserve do die intestate. However, this removal of the jurisdiction under section 43 of the Indian Act means that the minister has certain obligations, but no longer the jurisdiction to trigger them under the intestacy provisions.
In our paper, we talk about what we identify as potentially harsh, unintended consequences. For example, under section 48 of the Indian Act, the minister still needs to be involved in the valuation of estates assets and intestacies, and also has to provide an opinion as to whether adequate provision has been made for children and dependents. Currently, the minister and Indian Affairs act as the administrative backdrop to Indian intestacies. If that's not the case, if they become more passive players in the process, although the minister has the obligation to come to these opinions, that won't be triggered until a private administrator would come forward from an Indian family on behalf of a deceased Indian to ask for those opinions. That means the minister's obligations would be somewhat reliant, then, on the diligence of these private administrators, or reliant on the fact that the private administrators are indeed appointed.
That goes back to my earlier point. On some Indian estates, there simply won't be enough value in the estate to warrant someone being appointed administrator. Their fees and costs won't be covered.