Article Volume 22:4

The Newfoundland Offshore Claims: Interface of Constitutional Federalism and International Law

Table of Contents

McGILL LAW JOURNAL

No. 4

Vo 122

Montreal
1976

The Newfoundland Offshore Claims:

Interface of Constitutional Federalism and

International Law

George Steven Swan*

Introduction

The following discussion will examine Newfoundland’s claims to
the territorial sea and the continental shelf. The Canadian constitu-
tional ambiguity concerning offshore issues has been reflected in
other federal coastal countries. The Supreme Court of Canada,
in the recent case of Re: Offshore Mineral Rights, faced with
this constitutional ambiguity, invoked provincial history in an
attempt to resolve the conflicting claims. Newfoundland’s claims
must therefore be put in an historical perspective; we will examine
the relevant pre-Confederation statutes and case law of Newfound-
land, and to a lesser extent, of Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, and
Prince Edward Island. But there are considerations other than
constitutional ones; the Newfoundland offshore arguments must be
assessed in light of the international law of the continental shelf,
especially as developed in Australia.

1. Problems of offshore federalism

Following the September 1975 elections in Newfoundland, a con-
frontation was anticipated between St. John’s and the federal govern-
ment over Newfoundland offshore gas and oil, which is claimed both
by the province and Ottawa. Newfoundland at that time was pre-

* BA. (Ohio); J.D. (Notre Dame); LL.M. (Toronto). This article is based
upon a thesis submitted for the degree Master of Laws at the University of
Toronto, Faculty of Law.

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paring to bring its case before the Supreme Court.1 The incent-
ive was obvious; exploration had only begun, but the amount
of petroleum hidden beneath the Labrador Sea seemed to be vast.2
The newly re-elected Premier, Frank Moores, declared:

We have oil, that’s been proved. Every time they stick a well in the
ground, it produces. The problem is getting control of it. It’s our oil, but
Ottawa wants it. If the Supreme Court decides against us, we will not
accept the decision. We will secede from the Confederation, if necessary,
and come back in on our own terms. We don’t need a lot of offshore oil
and gas to satisfy the needs of our small population, but we want the
first shot at what we have.3

1 See “Newfoundland: Last Harrumph” Time Canada, Sept. 29, 1975, 11, 13.
The Hon. T. Alex Hickman, Minister of Justice, Newfoundland, expects a
Reference to be made sometime during 1977. See G. Halverson, “Newfound-
land –
how to exploit its riches”, The Christian Science Monitor, October
18, 1976, at p.20:

“Some analysts here [St John’s, Newfoundland] believe there will be a
federal-provincial struggle over Newfoundland oil and gas – with Ottawa
interested in using the oil and gas to light Toronto and Montreal homes,
and Newfoundland seeking to use the energy sources for its own industrial
development.”

and G. Halverson, “Would undersea oil wealth spoil Newfoundland?”, The
Christian Science Monitor, October 19, 1976, at p.11:

“The Federal Government of Canada covets eventual jurisdiction over any
oil find here with Newfoundland arguing instead for “provincial” control.
Indeed, complaints here [St John’s, Newfoundland] are mounting that
Newfoundland may have made a mistake in not seeking a negotiated share
of eventual revenues with the federal government. Other maritime Cana-
dian provinces, for their part, have negotiated for a 75 percent share of
offshore oil and gas revenues.
In any event, the federal-Newfoundland impasse is expected to be resolved
by the Supreme Court of Canada within the next several years.
In the meantime, according to Brian Peckford, Minister of Mining, New-
foundland may be able to reach a compromise with Ottawa between now
and the time of a court decision.”

2 Time Canada, ibid. In 1976, Newfoundland’s Assistant Deputy Minister
for Energy, Steven M. Millan, estimated a substantial offshore oil discovery
over the 1976-1981 period to have a probability of some 70 per cent. Jean Louis
Corgnet, operations manager for Eastcan, Ltd, declared in late 1976 that
about $100 million had been invested in oil-gas exploration. (In October 1976
three’exploratory rigs were being operated by B.P. Exploration Canada, Ltd,
and by Eastcan.) Sufficient gas and oil was thought present off the New-
foundland-Labrador coast to have led to 52 drilling projects by October 1976,
including 10 on the Labrador shelf, 11 in the east Newfoundland-Avalon Uplift
area, and 31 in the Grand Banks region. Three gas finds (including one that
implied oil deposits) had been established by that point in time. See Halver-
son, Oct. 18, Oct. 19, ibid.

3 “Moores: If Necessary We Will Secede”, Time Canada, ibid., 13. As late as
the autumn of 1976 the population of Newfoundland approximated only one-
half million: Halverson, Oct. 18, Oct. 19, ibid.

19761

THE NEWFOUNDLAND OFFSHORE CLAIMS

The story is a familiar one. Canada and other English-speaking
federal states have not been alone in facing federal offshore con-
troversies. Malaysia too has encountered federal offshore disputes. 4
Sarawak and Sabah at one point issued continental shelf exploration
permits. Malaysia, however, after an agreement was reached in Kuala
Lumpur with Indonesia on the division of the shelf, asserted that it
enjoyed exclusive competence respecting the seabed regions adjacent
to Sarawak and Sabah.5

Federal offshore problems have been encountered also by the
Federal Republic of Germany.6 Under West German municipal law
doubts arose at least as early as a decade ago about offshore resour-
ces rights: Did they belong to the federation’s coastal states or to
the federal government?7 The issue of the continental shelf became
acute in the Federal Republic of Germany following the discovery of
oil at the Ems River mouth and of natural gas basins close to the
coast of the Netherlands.” Canada parallels West Germany in that
the offshore issue became salient to the federal government only
after riches were uncovered 9 As represented by a joint Superior
Mining Authority, the Mines Office of Clausthal-Zellersfeld, the four
coastal Ldinder (states) of Lower Saxony, Schleswig-Holstein, Bremen
and Hamburg as of 1963 gave, under certain terms, a concession to
the German North Sea Consortium (a minimum of four foreign-
controlled firms included) to prospect for and exploit continental
shelf resources. 10 The Linder prudently granted that.concession only
to the extent to which they were empowered by international as well
as municipal law.”

The 1958 Geneva Convention on the Continental Shelf’2 came
into effect in June 1964, yet as late as 1967 Bonn had failed to re-
cognize the validity of the Mines Office concession. It was not until

4 J. Prescott, The Political Geography of the Oceans (1975), 170.
GD.P. O’Connell, The Federal Problem Concerning the Maritime Domain in
Commonwealth Countries (1970) 1 J. of Maritime L. & Commerce 389, 411,
citing (1969) 66 Far Eastern Econ. Rev. 277.

o Supra, note 4, 170.
7 R. Young, Offshore Claims and Problems in the North Sea (1965)

59
A.I.J.L. 505, 513, citing von MiInch, Die Ausnutzung des Festlandsockels von
der deutschen Nordseekilste (1964) 11 Archiv des V6lkerrechts 393.

8J. Brossard, Les Pouvoirs Extdrieurs du Quebec (1967), 331.
9″Only in recent years has more extensive exploitation of the resources of
the bed of the sea become practicable and the question of the ownership of
these resources acquired importance.” G. LaForest, Natural Resources and
Public Property Under the Canadian Constitution (1969), 104.

10 Supra, note 8, 331; D.P. O’Connell, Problems of Australian Coastal Juris-

diction (1968) 42 Australian L.J. 39, 45.

“1 Supra, note 8, 331.
12 499 U.N.T.S. 311; T.I.A.S. No.5578; reprinted in (1958) 52 A…I.L. 858.

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the 1958 Geneva Convention came into operation that Bonn hurried
to proclaim for itself the sovereign and exclusive right to the German
shelf, and to forbid prospecting or development embarked upon
without its authority.13 A federal proclamation of January 20, 1964
announced that:

To remove legal uncertainties, which could originate in the present
situation until the effective date of the Geneva Convention on the
Continental Shelf and until its ratification by the Federal Republic of
Germany, the Federal Government holds it necessary to determine at
present as follows:
1. On the basis of general international law, as it is expressed in the
more recent practice of states and especially in the Geneva Convention
on the Continental Shelf, the Federal Government regards as an ex-
clusive sovereign right of the Federal Republic of Germany the explora-
tion and exploitation of the natural resources of the seabed and subsoil
of the submarine zone adjacent to the German sea coast beyond German
territorial waters to a depth of 200 meters, and beyond this depth so
far as the depth of the waters above permits the exploitation of the
natural resources. In particular, the delimitation of the German continen-
tal shelf in relation to the continental shelf of foreign states is reserved
for agreements with these states.
2. The Federal Government regards as inadmissible all actions which
may be done on the German continental shelf for the purpose of ex-
ploration and exploitation of its natural resources without the express
consent of the proper German authorities. If necessary, it will institute
suitable measures against such actions.14

But in July 1965 the federal parliament, at least provisionally, au-
thorized the Mines Office to grant limited duration concessions, al-
though the federal parliament itself set the concession development
rules concerning continental shelf mining. 5

The issue of the division of the continental shelf between Germany
and Denmark, unresolved until after the February 20, 1969 Inter-
national Court of Justice decision in the North Sea Continental Shelf
Cases,’ postponed the solution of the West German problem of
Bund-Lnder relations. 7 As the January 20, 1964 federal proclama-
tion suggests, in West Germany the federal question of continental
shelf rights was seen as “governed by theoretical considerations
concerning the shelf as much as by the constitutional relations bet-
ween the Bund and the Under”.’8

13 Supra, note 8, 331.
14Supra, note 7, 513, citing Bundesgesetzblatt II

(1964), 104;

(1964) 11

Archiv des Vlkerrechts 488.

15 Supra, note 8, 332.
16 [1969] I.CJ. 3.
17 O’Connell, supra, note 10, 45.
18 Ibid., 45, citing Seidl-Hohenveldern, “Der deutsche Festlandsockel und die

Bundeslinder” in Festschrift ffir Hermann Jahrreis (1964).

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THE NEWFOUNDLAND OFFSHORE CLAIMS

The controversy over the exploitation of offshore mineral wealth
experienced in Malaysia, West Germany and certain English-speak-
ing federal states could have been avoided had their constitutions ex-
pressly addressed the matter.

The constitution of the United Mexican States declares:
In the Nation is vested the direct ownership of all natural resources
of the continental shelf and the submarine shelf of the islands … In the
Nation is likewise vested the ownership of the waters of the territorial
seas, within the limits and terms fixed by international law … The
islands, keys and reefs of the adjacent seas which belong to the national
territory, the continental shelf, the submarine shelf of the islands, keys
and reefs, the inland marine waters, and the space above the national
territory shall depend directly on the Government of the Federation,
with the exception of those islands over which the States have up to
the present exercised jurisdiction.19

Canada of course enjoyed no such easy resolution of her difficulty:

Unfortunately, that much-maligned document, the British North America
Act, does not provide a clear-out solution to the problem although the
Act does give the provinces sole jurisdiction over all resources located
within their boundaries.20

2. The British Columbia precedent

The leading Canadian decision concerning the offshore region is
Re: Offshore Mineral Rights of British Columbia,2′ heard on re-
ference from the Governor in Council.2s

The inquiry dealt with the seabed and subsoil extending sea-
ward from the low-water mark of the British Columbia coast
(excluding inland water regions) to the outer limit of Canada’s
territorial sea. It was asked whether such lands were the property
of Canada or of British Columbia, whether Canada or British Co-
lumbia had the right to explore and exploit such lands, and whether
Canada or British Columbia had
legislative jurisdiction over
them.? As well, the ownership of the seabed and subsoil resources
beyond Canada’s territorial sea, as between Canada and British
Columbia was put into question. Had Canada or British Columbia the
right to exploit such resources, and had Canada or British Columbia
legislative jurisdiction over the resources? 4

The Supreme Court, in assessing the pre-Confederation claim of
British Columbia in 1871 to the territorial sea, regarded of major

19 Constitution of Mexico 1917 as am. 1972, art27, para.4, 5 and art.48.
0 R. Logan, “Parting the Waters – Canadian Style” in R. Gentilcore (ed.),
2
Geographical Approaches to Canadian Problems (1971), 199 (italics in original).

21 [1967] S.C.R. 792.
22 Ibid., 796.
23Ibid.
24 Ibid.

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significance the 1876 decision in R. v. Keyn.25 The facts in Keyn were
that the commander of a foreign ship was indicted before the
Central Criminal Court for manslaughter stemming from the loss of
life on a British ship sunk by the commander’s ship within three
miles of Dover. The accused was a German national whose ship was
passing through English territorial waters with a destination other
than England. 6 A plea of jurisdiction was entered by the accused,
who asserted that inasmuch as the offence was committed outside
the United Kingdom, aboard a foreign ship, by a foreigner, the
offense was not within the English Criminal Court’s jurisdiction.2 7

The Canadian Supreme Court understood that the Keyn trans-
action would have been within the jurisdiction of the English
Criminal Courts had it transpired within an English county; whether
the county encompassed the territorial sea was directly in question
in Keyn. The Court of Crown Cases Reserved held that English
territory ended at low-water mark, the English Criminal Courts,
therefore, having no jurisdiction.”

Considering its reliance on Keyn, it was understandable that the
Supreme Court of Canada held that the territorial sea lay outside
the limits of British Columbia in 1871 and did not become part of the
Province of British Columbia following union with Canada. It also
held that British Columbia acquired no jurisdiction over either
territorial sea or the continental shelf following union with Canada,
thus answering all the questions put to it in favour of the federal
government.29

The Supreme Court of Canada looked at the historical factors

involved in the British Columbia controversy:

British Columbia can only succeed on this branch of the case if it is
found that the solum was situate in British Columbia in 1871 at the time of
British Columbia’s entry into Confederation.. .30
The sovereign state which has the property in the bed of the territorial
sea is Canada. At no time has British Columbia, either as a colony or a
province, had property in these lands 30a
The decision was based on the unique historical situation of

British Columbia and not upon any abstract legal principle:

We have already said that, in our opinion, in 1871 the Province of British
Columbia did not have ownership or property in the territorial sea and

25 (1876-77) 2 Ex.D. 63.
26 [1967] S.C.R. 796, 803.
= Ibid., 803-04.
28 Ibid., 804.
29 Ibid., 814, 821-22.
30 Ibid., 800.
30a Ibid., 816.

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THE NEWFOUNDLAND OFFSHORE CLAIMS

that the province had not, since entering into confederation, acquired such
ownership or property. We are not disputing the proposition that while
British Columbia was a Crown Colony the British Crown might have
conferred upon the Governor or Legislature of the colony rights to which
the British Crown was entitled under international law but the historical
record of the colony does not disclose any such action3 1

In appraising the prospects of Newfoundland and of other coastal
provinces successfully claiming their respective territorial seas and
continental shelves an examination of provincial history is therefore
necessary.

in making this examination reference will be made to the
December 17, 1975 opinion of the High Court of Australia in the case
of New South Wales v. Commonwealth,3 2
in which it was held that
the boundaries of the states of the Australian Commonwealth end
at the low-water mark on the coast.

In the New South Wales decision (as in Re: Offshore Mineral

Rights) the Court looked to the colonial offshore during the Im-
perial period and saw it as attaching directly to the United King-
dom, and not to the colony. As Chief Justice Barwick of the High
Court explained:

If one had in the days of Empire to describe the Imperial territorial
waters which were adjacent to an Imperial colony, one would not un-
naturally speak of the waters as the colonial territorial waters, not in the
sense that the colony itself had dominion over these waters but in the
sense that it was a colony with a littoral, thus attracting to Great
Britain as the nation state the international concession of dominion over
them: the expression described the location of those territorial waters
which washed the shores of the Imperial colonial territory. The dominion
over those waters was, in my opinion, exercisable in the case of the
British Empire by the Imperial executive or Imperial legislature 3

But in following the Canadian pro-federal government precedent
the High Court of Australia echoed the language of the Supreme
Court of Canada, leaving open the door for the Newfoundland off-
shore claim.
Compare

the passage from Re: Offshore Mineral Rights 4
(admitting that the British Crown might have bestowed upon her
colony the offshore rights to which the British Crown was entitled
under international law) with this passage from the 1975 opinion
of Chief Justice Barwick:

-3 Ibid., 808.
32 (1975) 8 A.L.R. 1.
33 Ibid., 7-8. Ibid., 89, per Mason J: “The territorial sea surrounding the
Australian colonies was, in the eye of international law, British territorial
waters.”

34 Supra, pp.546-547.

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Suffice it to say that the Imperial Crown, as representing the Empire,
had at all relevant times dominion according to international law over the
Imperial territorial seas. Had the Imperial authorities been minded to do
so, they could have placed such part of these territorial waters as washed
the shores of a colony within the control of the government of that
colony as representing the Imperial Executive and Legislature. But Great
Britain as the nation state must have remained responsible internationally
for the performance of the obligations associated with the territorial sea.
The Imperial Parliament could have authorized the executive to place
the colonial territorial seas under the control of the appropriate colony:
but no statute of the Imperial Parliament did so.s

Newfoundland can argue that just such control of the colonial
territojal sea was conferred prior to her pre-1949 assumption of
provincial status.

To be sure, the Barwick language of representation and of control
over the colonial offshore may relate only to the potential for a
colony to enjoy as agent, without being sovereign. But if Chief
Justice Barwick would have been influenced by the existence of an
agency relationship in deciding the 1975 offshore claims, how much
more persuasive might he have found a pre-union history entailing
the actual sovereignty of a member state which had enjoyed dominion
status prior to union? If a mere agency control over the offshore
during the pre-federal period would have strengthened Australian
state claims, actual sovereignty during the pre-federal period would
seem all the more greatly to strengthen Newfoundland claims.

The 1949 Terms of Union uniting Newfoundland and Canada
directed that the British North America Acts, 1867 to 1946, should
apply to Newfoundland in the same way and to the same extent as
they applied to the provinces (e.g., British Columbia) already in
Confederation, as if Newfoundland had been one of the original
provinces (except insofar as varied by those 1949 Terms).Y0 The
1949 Terms provide that as a province Newfoundland should com-
prise the same territory as at the date of Union, including “the island
of Newfoundland and the islands adjacent thereto, the Coast of
Labrador…, and the islands adjacent to the said Coast of Labra-
dor”3e

Whether the coast and islands encompassed offshore regions
might be clarified by Newfoundland’s 1949 rights under international
law. The 1949 Terms of Union provide that:

35 (1975) 8 A.L.R.1, 12.
-6 Schedule of Terms of Union Newfoundland with Canada, British North

America Act, 1949, 12-13 Geo. VI, c.22, s.3.

sea 12-13 Geo. VI, c.22, s.2.

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THE NEWFOUNDLAND OFFSHORE CLAIMS

Subject to these Terms, all laws in force in Newfoundland at or imme-
diately prior to the date of Union shall continue therein as if the Union
had not been made, subject nevertheless to be repealed, abolished, or
altered by the Parliament of Canada or by the Legislature of the Province
of Newfoundland according to the authority of the Parliament or of the
Legislature under the British North America Acts, 1867 to 1946, and all
orders, rules, and regulations made under any such laws shall likewise
continue, subject to be revoked or amended by the body or person
that made such orders, rules, or regulations or the body or person that
has power to make such order, rules, regulations after the date of Union,
according to their respective authority under the British North America
Acts, 1867 to 1946.6b

Perhaps Newfoundland had, arguably (thanks to international law)
offshore rights, such enforceable offshore claims amounting
to
“laws in force in Newfoundland” as of 1949. Admittedly, the word
“arguably” is & propos here; “laws in force” generally are understood
to mean statutes and statutory regulations.

3. Newfoundland statutory law

Newfoundland began in 1893 to enact hovering legislation 7
exercising jurisdiction in at least a three-mile offshore belt. The
Foreign Fishing Vessels Act of that year for example provided, in
part, that any foreign fishing vessel hovering in British waters within
three marine miles of any of the coasts or bays of the island might
be boarded by any Justice of the Peace, Sub-Collector, Preventive
Officer, Fishing Warden or Constable38 Any one of these officers
was empowered to bring the foreign vessel into port, search her
cargo and examine her master under oath3 9 These same powers
were delineated in the Foreign Fishing Vessels Act of 190540 and
again in the Foreign Fishing Vessels Act of 1906.”-

This Newfoundland hovering legislation, and the pre-Confedera-
tion hovering legislation of other coastal provinces, is especially
instructive. The Supreme Court of Canada found the 1867 federal
hovering legislation inconsistent with the theory that British Co-
lumbia possessed as part of its territory the solum of the territorial
sea32 If the converse were true, pre-Confederation colonial hovering

36b 12-13 Geo. VI, c.22, s.18(1).
37 Subra, note 9, 101.
38 An Act respecting Foreign Fishing Vessels, 1893, 56 Vict. c.6, s.2 (Nfld).
30 56 Vict., c.6, s.3.
40 An Act respecting Foreign Fishing Vessels, 1905, 5 Edw. VII, c.4, s.1 (Nfld).
41 An Act respecting Foreign Vessels, 1906, 6 Edw. VII, c.1 (Nfld).
42 Re: Offshore Mineral Rights of British Columbia [1967] S.C.R. 792, 806,

citing The Customs Act 1867, 31 Vict. c.6, s.83.

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legislation would ‘help to establish that a colony may have possessed
as part of its territory the solum of the territorial sea. Newfoundland
and other coastal provinces could only benefit.

The Customs Act of March 30, 189841 was a device whereby
Newfoundland exercised jurisdiction in the three mile offshore
region; one provision of that Act stated that Customs officers might
board any vessel at any time or place.44 The Crown Lands Act, 1930
related to applications for the licenses of mining locations covered
by the sea or public tidal waters and to “the holder of a lease or
grant of a mining location which is covered by the sea or public tidal
waters ….” 46

The Oyster Fisheries Act of 191647 provided that the Governor in
Council might “issue leases or free grants of [and promulgate rules
for] any coves, creeks, parts of the coast, lakes, rivers, or banks
of this Ccdlony” 48 Gerard V. LaForest in referring to the Newfound-
land territorial sea/continental shelf claim calls attention40 to the
statute’s use of the word “banks”. Mr LaForest obviously refers to
the definition of that word meaning an elevation beneath the sea
(a shelf, shoal, or shallow).

While this surely is the plainest meaning of the word in this
context, one might parenthetically note that virtually all of the
numerous usages of the term relative to water in Black’s Law
Dictionary, for instance, pertain to a flowing stream.4 a Some im-
aginative federal advocate might attempt to argue that the relation-
ship of the 1916 Oyster Fisheries Act to the offshore issue would be
somewhat ambiguous.

Newfoundland prior to her entry into Confederation, in at least
two statutes used terminology that arguably enunciated her right
to seabed jurisdiction even beyond the three-mile limit, the Oyster
Fisheries Act of 191650 pertaining to the “banks” of Newfoundland,
and the Crown Lands Act, 193051 regulating mining sites beneath the
sea or public tidal waters.

43 The Customs Act, 1898, 61 Vict., c.13 (Nfld).
44 Ibid., s.152.
45 The Crown Lands Act, 1930, 21 Geo. V, c.15, s.168 (Nfld).
46 Ibid., s.170.
4
T Of the Propagation and Protection of Oysters, C.S.N. 1916, c.165.
48 Ibid., s.1-2.
49 Supra, note 9, 102, 107.
49a Black’s Law Dictionary 4th Rev. (1968), 183.
50 Supra, note 47.
51 Supra, note 45.

1976]

THE NEWFOUNDLAND OFFSHORE CLAIMS

4. Newfoundland judicial opinions

Pre-Confederation Newfoundland judicial decisions lend some
weight to her offshore claims. The judgment in the 1875 case of
Anglo-American Telegraph Co. v. Direct United States Cable Co.52
was written by Chief Justice Hoyles of the Newfoundland Supreme
Court and thereafter reviewed and affirmed by the full court. A
telegraph cable had been laid for a distance of approximately
thirty miles within the headlands of Conception Bay in Newfound-
land, a bay about twenty miles wide at its mouth. The cable was
laid farther than three miles from the inner shores of the bay.3
Chief Justice Hoyles determined that the laying of this cable by the
defendants violated an Act of the Newfoundland legislature pro-
hibiting any but the Newfoundland Company from extending, enter-
ing upon or touching any part of Newfoundland or the coast
thereof, or of the islands or places within the jurisdiction of New-
foundland with any telegraph cable from any other place what-
soever. 4

The defendants contended that due to its location the cable
failed to fall within the jurisdiction of Newfoundland, both the
Imperial and Newfoundland jurisdictions being restricted to three
miles from the inner shore of the bay. The defendants added that
even if the Imperial jurisdiction reached to three miles from the
outer coast, that of Newfoundland was limited by the inner line, and
that the floor of Conception Bay constituted neither a part of New-
foundland nor a coast thereof, nor was it an island or place within
the meaning of the statute.
The Chief Justice replied:
I hold that the territorial jurisdiction of the sovereign extends’to three
miles outside of a line drawn from headland to headland of the bay,
[citations omitted], that the local government being the Queen’s govern-
ment, representing and exercising within the limits of the Governor’s
commission, which contains nothing restrictive upon this point, her
authority and jurisdiction is, in this respect, the same with the Imperial
government; that this authority and jurisdiction existed in the local govern-
ment prior to the grant of representative institutions to the colony; that
such grant, while it enlarged the powers, neither added to nor lessened
the territorial jurisdiction of the local government, and that, subject to
the royal instructions and the Queen’s power of dissent, the Acts of the
local legislature have effect and operation to the full extent of that terri-
torial jurisdiction.55

52 (1875) 6 Nfld. L.R. 28.
3Ibid., 32.
5 Ibid., 32-33.
55, Ibid., 33.

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Upon appeal to the Privy Council, the dictum of Chief Justice Hoyles
that the jurisdiction of the Newfoundland government reaches three
miles beyond a line drawn from headland to headland of Conception
Bay went unremarked.rG Admittedly, the Privy Council stated that
it had no need to discuss the questions that had been raised in the
case of R. v. Keyn. It found Conception Bay to be a bay within
Newfoundland 57 if only for historical reasons. 8

The Newfoundland Supreme Court judgment in the 1888 case of
Rhodes v. Fairweather” related to the slaughter of seals, allegedly
in violation of Newfoundland statute. All of the seals killed were
beyond the three-mile limit.”0 Chief Justice Carter held that the
application of the Newfoundland law more than three miles off the
coast was beyond the jurisdiction of Newfoundlandf’ But in de-
fining the territorial jurisdiction of the courts of Newfoundland the
Chief Justice quoted with approval the passage from Anglo-American
Telegraph Company.2 Justice Little (in a separate opinion) agreed
with the Chief Justice that the statute was beyond the compass of
Newfoundland’s jurisdiction.’ Justice Pinsent (dissenting) offered a
territorial sea dictum consistent with those of Hoyles and Carter:
“I take it to be a sound doctrine as a general proposition that the
limits of colonial jurisdiction extend to only three miles from the
shore…”.0

Following the decision in Rhodes the Colonial Office solicited the
assessment of the Law Officers, who on December 27, 1888 res-
ponded:

We are of opinion that, unless specially authorized by Imperial legislation,
it is not within the power of the Colonial Legislature to legislate generally
for the regulation of fisheries outside the three mile limit. [italics added].
The Colonial Legislature could make laws for the peace, order and good
government of the Newfoundland fisheries, and, under that power, might
control the crews of ships engaged in such fisheries, even though they
might be registered elsewhere than in the colony. Indirectly the colony
might thus obtain jurisdiction, in respect of acts done outside the terri-
torial waters of Newfoundland, in the case of ships which had come within

56 Ibid., Appendix, i.
57 Ibid., xix.
58 Ibid., xviii.
59 (1888) 7 Nfid. L.R. 321.
60 Ibid., 323.
01 Ibid., 325-26.
62 Ibid., 324.
03 Ibid., 338-48 (Little J., concurring).
4 Ibid., at 333 (Pinsent I., dissenting).

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THE NEWFOUNDLAND OFFSHORE CLAIMS

the provisions of the Colonial Statute, as, for instance, by taking without
a licence. 5

In this back-handed fashion the Law Officers implicitly recognized
the role of the Newfoundland legislature in exercising jurisdiction
inside the three mile limit.

On the other hand, consider this sceptical appraisal of the Law
Officers’ opinions in the Australian offshore context by Chief
Justice Barwick in the New South Wales case:

A large number of opinions of law officers of the Imperial Crown were
pressed upon us in an endeavour to establish the proposition that the
colonies possessed, as it were in their own right, territorial seas. Of
course, however persuasive in some circumstances,. and however eminent
such law officers were or proved to be, their opinions are not precedents
nor, in any sense, binding. Their opinions speak of the territorial seas
of the colony, a description which, though involving a degree of ambiguity,
I am prepared to assume meant, without being convinced that it did
mean, that such seas were under the control of the colony. But I have
no doubt that these law officers, who did not have to put their minds
to the question now before this court, could quite easily speak of the
territorial seas of the colony and conclude that a law was good because,
though plainly connected with the colony’s affairs, it operated in the
territorial sea. Yet it seems to me that if they meant that such seas were
either colonial “property” or under colonial dominion, they were under
a basic misconception. The territorial seas in themselves were not, in my
opinion, source or subject of colonial power or authority. The colonial
laws which those officers supported in their opinions -all touched and
concerned the colony and its welfare and in later times would be accepted
as valid extra-territorially operating laws.0 5a

Mr Justice Mason added:

There is, … no basis on which the suggestion sometimes made in the
British law officers’ opinions in the nineteenth century that territorial
waters formed part of the territory of the colonies can be supported.
The persuasive effect of these opinions is in any event diminished by the
contrariety of view which they express.6 5b

These comments, of course, would tend to undermine any argument
based upon the Rhodes case and the 1888 assessment of the Law
Officers.

The Newfoundland Supreme Court judgment in the 1889 case of
The Queen v. Delepine0 related to convictions for violation of the

6 5 Quoted by D.P. O’Connell, “Australian Coastal Jurisdiction” in D.P. O’Con-
nell (ed.), International Law in Australia (1966), 246, 277, citing C.O.1 Law
Officers’ Opinions, vol.iv, no.134.

05a 8 A.L.R. 1, 14.
M5b 8 A.L.R. 1, 89 per Mason J. Justice Jacobs’ examination of the advice of

the Law Officers concluded similarly: 8 A.L.R. 1, 111.

60 (1889) 7 Nfid. L.R. 378.

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Newfoundland Bait Act, the appellants having’ been seized while
outside the three mile limit. In handing down the opinion of the
Court, Justice Little again quoted the same passage from Anglo-
American Telegraph Company that had been quoted in Rhodes.1
Justice Little recalled that the former case had been affirmed by the
Privy Council on appeal,6 8 and immediately after quoting the by
now familiar words of Justice Hoyles he offered a dictum of his own:
There should, then, be no question as to the liability and amenability of
any foreign ships for offences committed by the crews thereof within the
territorial waters of this colony, contrary to the public laws of the legis-
lature made for the protection of our revenues, fisheries, or other public
interests.69
With this, Justice Little joined Carter and Pinsent in providing
territorial sea dicta affirming the jurisdiction of Newfoundland.
Carter, Pinsent and Little JJ. (all of whom sat simultaneously)
appear to have constituted the entire Court, and their views, there-
fore, could reflect a unanimity of thinking on the matter.

Of course, this entire “line of authority” stems from the single
dictum of a colonial Chief Justice, upon which the Privy Council
studiously avoided any comment. Yet the insistent repetition of
dicta affirming Newfoundland jurisdiction must be considered in
order to understand the contemporary Newfoundland point of view.
But in any event, the mere exercise in the offshore region of
colonial authority as reflected in statutory and case law does not in
itself demonstrate a blanket jurisdiction over the 6ffshore area. As
Justice Mason wrote in the New South Wales case:

This power and jurisdiction were exercisable in an appropriate case by
a colonial legislature possessing power to legislate for the peace, order
and good government of the colony. The power to make laws for the peace
order and good government of a colony was wide enough to enact laws
applying to territorial waters and beyond.69 a

The language ohosen by the Law Officers in 1888 tied the power of
the colonial legislature to legislate for the offshore to the peace, order
and good government of the colony itself, but did not necessarily
see the offshore as itself a portion of the colony.

5. The other Atlantic Provinces

The British Columbia Re: Offshore Mineral Rights case affected
the claims of all the maritime provinces. Nova Scotia offshore claims

67 Ibid., 385-86.
68 Ibid., 385.
69 Ibid., 386.
69a 8 A.L.R. 1, 90 per Mason 1.

19761

THE NEWFOUNDLAND OFFSHORE CLAIMS

rested upon various statutory and other pieces of evidence. In the
early commissions to the governors of both Nova Scotia and New
Brunswick each province was so defined as to include all islands
within a certain distance from the coast and “all the rights, mem-
bers and appurtenances thereunto belonging”.7 0 In the Royal Com-
mission to Lord Elgin of September 1, 1846 the boundaries of Nova
Scotia were described thus:

Our said Province of Nova Scotia in America, the said Province being
bounded on the westward by a line drawn from Cape Sable across the
entrance to the centre of the Bay of Fundy; on the northward by a line
drawn along the centre of the said Bay to the mouth of the Musquat
River by the said river to its source, and from thence by a due East line
across the Isthmus into the Bay of Verte; on the Eastward by the said Bay
of Verte and the Gulf of St. Lawrence to the Cape of Promontory called
Cape Breton in the Island of that name, including the said Island, and
also including all Islands within six Leagues of the Coast, and on the
Southward by the Atlantic Ocean from the said Cape to Cape Sable
aforesaid, including the Island of that name, and all other Islands within
forty leagues of the Coast, with all the rights, members and appurtenances
whatsoever thereunto belonging. 1
Perhaps such early commissions in some -degree distinguished the
cases of Nova Scotia and of New Brunswick arising after the Re:
Offshore Mineral Rights case from that of the Australian states. As
Chief Justice Barwick reminded the New South Wales litigants,
there was:

… nothing in the Constitution granted to any of the colonies which
supports the view that thereby the boundaries, or the territorial descrip-
tion, of the colony were or was enlarged. Local autonomy replaced re-
presentative government of limited capacity; but still only in relation to
colonial affairs, of which, in my opinion, .the control of the territorial
seas and subjacent soil did not form partlla

At least something along these lines did support the Nova Scotia
and New Brunswick offshore claims after 1967.

Nova Scotia prior to Confederation successfully exercised her
offshore jurisdiction in the three-mile territorial zone. In 1770 it

70 Supra, note 9, 87.
71Description supplied by Department of the Attorney General of Nova

Scotia officials to G. LaForest, quoted ibid., 86 fn.8.

71a 8 A.L.R. 1, 14. Or as Chief Justice Barwick elsewhere put it:

“What was involved in the process of colonization in the case of the
Australian colonies was the placing under delegated government defined
areas of land. No alienation of property or of rights was involved.
Nothing in the least comparable to the consequences of a conveyance of
land occurred upon or by the act of establishing a colony. No ad medium
filum analogy is available. The colonies were colonies in the classical
sense of that word” (at p.12).

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enacted a statute providing that should fishermen in any vessels
within three leagues of the shores of the province throw into the
sea any heads, bones or other offal of the fish they had taken, they
would be liable to a fine of five pounds.7 2 The Nova Scotia hovering
act of March 12, 1836 empowered customs and excise officers and
sheriffs and magistrates to board any vessel within three marine
miles of the coast, to search each such vessel’s cargo, and in some
instances to forfeit the ships and cargoes.73 Mr LaForest recalls that
the hovering acts of Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island and New
Brunswick clearly were consistent with the thinking of the Crown
because British orders-in-council confirmed them; they surely would
have been disallowed had they violated British policy.74

In the January 9, 1963 opinion of the Nova Scotia Supreme Court
in the case of Re: Dominion Coal Co. Ltd and County of Cape Bre-
ton75 a question at issue was whether a submarine mine in Spanish
Bay within three miles of the Nova Scotia coast”0 was assessable
by Cape Breton County. Chief Justice Isley made an important
assumption when he held that it was not:

In my opinion, the fact that the Crown in the right of Nova Scotia owns
the coal under the marine belt (assumilng, but not deciding, this to be
the case) has no bearing on the question whether the marine belt is part
of the county7 7

The Isley assumption that Nova Scotia owned the submarine coal
that was in question seemed encouraging to post-1967 Nova Scotia
territorial sea and continental shelf claims. However, Chief Justice
Isley explained in this way his determination that the Cape Breton
County assessment must fail:

I think that the outside limit of a county at common law is low-water mark
(not high-water mark) and that this is clear from the opinions of numerous
Judges who expressed opinions in The Queen v. Keyn.78

Any salute to Keyn must (at least slightly) seem to weaken pro-
vincial offshore claims; it was seen above how the Supreme Court
of Canada invoked Keyn at provincial expense.

On the other hand, in Dominion Coal Justice Currie did offer a

more friendly assessment of Nova Scotia’s position:

72 1770, 10 Geo.III, c.10 (N.S.).
73 1836, 6 Wm.IV, c.8 (N.S.)
74 Supra, note 9, 101, citing “Proceedings in the North Atlantic Fisheries
Arbitration, 1910”, Washington (1912), vol.5, appendix to the Case of Great
Britain, 962, 963, 1055.

7 (1963), 40 D.L.R. (2d) 593.
76 Ibid., 597.
77 Ibid., 601,
78 Ibid., 599.

1976]

THE NEWFOUNDLAND OFFSHORE CLAIMS

Prior to Confederation of Canada, Nova Scotia exercised jurisdiction
over an area of territorial waters three miles in width measured from its
coasts, bays and rivers. See particularly the “hovering” Act, 1836, 6 Win.
IV, c.8, approved by the King in Council, thus recognizing that the control
and administration of these waters reposed in the Province of Nova Scotia.
By virtue of s.109, B.N.A. Act, all property rights held by Nova Scotia
before Confederation were retained: [citation omitted]. The subsoil in
territorial waters belongs to the Provinces rather than to Canada, subject
to certain reservations in the B.N.A. Act. [citations omitted] Since Con-
federation Nova Scotia has exercised exclusive jurisdiction and adminis-
tration over the submarine coal areas of the Province, as is evidenced by
the many statutes, leases, grants, etc.79

But this solid-sounding declaration is obiter and of limited conse-
quence.

Prior to Confederation, New Brunswick successfully exercised
her offshore jurisdiction in the three-mile territorial zone. An Act
of May 3, 1853 granted Fisheries Wardens the power to designate fit
places for the deposit of fish offal (gurry grounds), defendants
casting offal overboard into the waters of or near Grand Manan
Island being liable to a five pound fine.80 An 1854 Act gave the
Governor in Council the authority to make regulations for the
management and protection of seacoast fisheries, or around any
island of the New Brunswick coast within three marine miles of
the low-water mark, offenders being liable to a fifteen pound fine
and ten days incarceration.8 ‘

The April 22, 1932 Supreme Court of New Brunswick Appellate
Division opinion in Rex v. Burt 2 assessed the November 7, 1931
seizure in the Bay of Fundy of Captain Burt’s schooner laden with
intoxicating
liquor approximately one and three-quarter miles
offshore. Defendant Burt was charged with and convicted of having
liquor in his possession within the Province of New Brunswick in
violation of the 1927 Intoxicating Liquor Act.82a Justice Baxter wrote
for the Court:

The first question to be answered [sic], and the most important in the
case, is whether the locus of the seizure, approximately one and three-
quarter miles from the shore, is part of the Province of New Brunswick.
By the Royal Instructions issued to Governor Carlton upon the separation
of what is now the Province of New Brunswick from the Province of’Nova
Scotia, the southern boundary of the new Province was defined as “a line
in the centre of the Bay of Fundy from the River Saint Croix aforesaid to

19 Ibid., 620 (Currie J., dissenting in part).
80 16 Vict., c.39, s.5 (N.B.).
81 R.S.N.B. 1854, c.101, s.6.
82 (1932) 5 M.P.R. 112.
82a An Act to Regulate and Control the Sale of Liquor, 17 Geo.V, c.3 (N.B.).

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the mouth of the Musquat (Missiquash) River” clearly indicating the claim
of Great Britain at that time to the whole of the Bay of Fundy as a
portion of her territory. Upon this the Crown bases the contention that
the Bay is a mare clausum. In its largest sense this may be a political
rather than a legal question. [citation omitted] It is sufficient for the
disposition of the present appeal to say that, as the greater includes the
less, the three-mile limit was undoubtedly treated as part of the new
Province. The exercise of jurisdiction over the lesser limit is now so
generally admitted in international law that I do not think it is open
to question that the legislative authority of the Province extends over that
area at least. Whether the three miles are to be measured from the
coast or from low water mark is another point which does not fall to be
decided here.83
In recognizing that “the greater includes the less” Justice Baxter
premised the holding upon both the ground that the Bay of Fundy
constitutes waters internal to New Brunswick, and the ground that
New Brunswick enjoyed rights in the three mile offshore region.
(The 1967 Supreme Court of Canada considered only the former as
a premise of its holding.)”4 As Justice Baxter would add in the
February 14, 1934 Supreme Court of New Brunswick Appellate
Division opinion in Filion v. New Brunswick International Paper
Company:85

The soil right within the three mile limit must have been in the Province
or if the area were included in the harbour of Dalhousie it may have
passed to the Dominion by the British North America Act so far as the
area formed a part of that harbour at Confederation.SO
It had been pointed out that, particularly as to their continental
shelf claims after 1967, Nova Scotia and New Brunswick were aided
by the fact that the early commissions establishing these provinces
included all of the rights and appurtenances to the described re-
gions; the continental shelf doctrine developed in large part through
the concept of appurtenance.’ As the International Court of Justice
held in the North Sea Continental Shelf Cases in 1969:


the right of the coastal State to its continental shelf areas is based
on its sovereignty over the land domain, of which the shelf area is the
natural prolongation into and under the sea. From this notion of appur-

83 Ibid., 117-18.
84 Re: Offshore Mineral Rights of British Columbia [1967] S.C.R. 792, 809.
LaForest, supra, note 9, 102: “Though the Supreme Court of Canada … refers
to the case as one dealing with inland waters, the fact is that it was based
on both grounds, and indeed, Chief [sic] Justice Baxter appears to have
had more confidence in the holding that the area in question was within
New Brunswick because it was within three miles of the coast.”

85 (1934) 8 M.P.R. 89.
86 Ibid., 95 (italics added).
8
7 Supra, note 9, 107 (citing scholarly authorities).

1976]

THE NEWFOUNDLAND OFFSHORE CLAIMS

tenance [italics added] is derived the view which, … the Court accepts,
that the coastal States rights exist ipso facto and ab initio without there
being any question of having to make good a claim to the areas con-
cerned, or of any apportionment of the continental shelf between different
States.88

And as in that three party continental shelf case the Court then
reiterates:

fundamental … appears to be the principle –

constantly relied upon
by all the Parties – of the natural prolongation or continuation of the
land territory or domain, or land sovereignty of the coastal State, into and
under the high seas, via the bed of its territorial sea which is under the
full sovereignty of that State. There are various ways of formulating this
principle, but the underlying idea, namely of an extension of something
already possessed, is the same, and it is this idea of extension which is,
in the Court’s opinion, determinant. Submarine areas do not really
appertain to the coastal State because – or not only because –
they are
near it. They are near it of course; but this would not suffice to confer
title, any more than, according to a well-established principle of law
recognized by both sides in the present case, mere proximity confers
per se title to land territory. What confers the ipso jure title which in-
ternational law attributes to the coastal State in respect of its continental
shelf, is the fact that the submarine areas concerned may be deemed
to be actually part of the territory over which the coastal State already
has dominion, –
in the sense that, although covered with water, they are
a prolongation or continuation of that territory, an extension of it under
the sea.88A
The commission to Governor Patterson establishing as a separate
colony Prince Edward Island (which at that time was known as
the Island of Saint John) describes it as “our island of Saint John,
and Territories adjacent thereto in America, and which now are or
.”.8 Prince
which heretofore have been dependent thereupon.
Edward Island’s 1843 hovering act empowered officers throughout
the Island to board any vessel hovering within three marine miles
of the coast in order to enforce fishing regulations and prevent
smuggling. 0

It must be pointed out that the continental shelf claim of Prince
Edward Island after 1967 could have been but little facilitated by
the fact that the commission establishing the colony included the
adjacent territories. As the International Court of Justice has noted,
specifically in relation to the terminology of adjacency, continental

88 North Sea Continental Shelf Cases [1969] I.CJ. 3, 30.
88a Ibid., 32.
89 Quoted in Laforest, supra, note 9, 87, citing Can.Sess.Pap. 1883, no.70, 2.
90 6 Vict., c.14 (P.E.I.).

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shelf language is “imprecise”9′ 1 and “capable of a considerable
fluidity of meaning”. 9

6. Newfoundland and the World Court

Cabot Martin has asserted aggressively that the pre-Confederation
scope of jurisdiction claimed by Newfoundland, as evidenced in her
various statutes, should not distract from the underlying fact that
coastal state continental shelf rights prevail ipso facto. 3 For this
he relies upon the decision of the International Court of Justice in
the North Sea Continental Shelf Cases.9 4

In a critical paragraph rejecting the continental shelf delimitation
“just and equitable share” doctrine proposed by the Federal Republic
of Germany, the International Court of Justice went to the very
heart of international law as it pertains to the continental shelf:

… important is the fact that the doctrine of the just and equitable
share appears to be wholly at variance with what the Court entertains
no doubt is the most fundamental of all the rules of law relating to the
continental shelf, enshrined in Article 2 of the 1958 Geneva Convention,
though quite independent of it, – namely that the rights of the coastal
State in respect of the area of continental shelf that constitutes a natural
prolongation of its land territory into and under the sea exist ipso facto
and ab initio, by virtue of its sovereignty over the land, and as an extension
of it in an exercise of sovereign rights for the purpose of exploring the
seabed and exploiting its natural resources. In short, there is here an
inherent right. In order to exercise it, no special legal process has to be
gone through, nor have any special legal acts to be performed. Its
existence can be declared
this) but
does not need to be constituted. Furthermore, the right does not de-
pend on its being exercised. To echo the language of the Geneva Con-
vention, it is “exclusive” in the sense that if the coastal State does not
choose to explore or exploit the areas of shelf appertaining to it, that is its
own affair, but no one else may do so without its express consent9 5

(and many States have done

9′ [1969] I.C.J. 3, 30.
92 Ibid.
93 C. Martin, Newfoundland’s Case on Offshore Minerals: A Brief Outline
(1975) 7 OttawaL.R. 34, 36. For a pro-federal government discussion of the
Newfoundland offshore issue, see A. Kovach, An Assessment of the Merits
of Newfoundland’s Claim to Offshore Mineral Resources (1975) 23 Chitty’s LJ.
18. For the most recently published analysis of the Newfoundland ofD.
shore, see J. Ippolito, Newfoundland and the Continental Shelf: From Cod
to Oil and Gas (1976) 15 Columbia J. of Transnat’l. L. 138. For a pro-federal
government, anti-state discussion of Nigerian offshore federalism, see E.
Nwogugu, Problems of Nigerian Offshore Jurisdiction (1973) 22 Int’l. &
Comp. L.Q. 349.

” [19693 I.CJ. 3.
95Ibid., 23, para.19.

1976]

THE NEWFOUNDLAND OFFSHORE CLAIMS

That Newfoundland prior to Confederation may not expressly have
exercised continental shelf rights need not defeat her proprietary
claim if, as Mr Martin remarks, in quoting from this critical para-
graph, the rights are inherent and need not be constituted or
exercisedY8

Further, Mr Martin could have added the comment which Dr
Daniel Patrick O’Connell, a leading international law scholar,’ made
four years prior to the North Sea Continental Shelf Cases decision:

At Geneva [in 1958] it was agreed that the shelf, to a depth of 200 metres,
or beyond where the depth of the superjacent waters admits of exploita-
tion, was subject to the “sovereign rights” of the littorial State for the
purpose of exploitation of natural resources. No one else might make a
claim to another’s shelf, and the rights of the coastal State were ex-
pressed to be independent of occupation, or, indeed, of any formal pro-
clamation. The result seems to be that a State may assert jurisdiction over
its shelf without ever having claimed it.X

Dr O’Connell understood that coastal state continental shelf rights
obtain ipso facto, and that no special legal process is necessary on
the part of the coastal state, nor need any special legal acts be
performed.

Dr O’Connell considered that the only appropriate continental
shelf approach to be that of ipso jure subjection to the littoral state.
He considered this implicit in the final Act of the 1958 Geneva
Conference; he found this continental shelf approach
initially
advanced incidental
to a high seas regime preliminary report
by the United Nations International Law Commission 98

In order to support this latter finding Dr O’Connell correctly
relies on the proceedings of the International Law Commission
meeting of July 14, 1950. Mr Manley 0. Hudson of the United States
pointed out immediately following a Commission vote of that date
that the Commission ithereby was declaring that the right to explore
and exploit the continental shelf did not depend on any claim to the
right by the littoral country.9 Indeed he took that opportunity to
vent his displeasure, expounding his personal opinion that the right
of littoral states to exercise control and jurisdiction over the con-
tinental shelf should be subject to the exercise of the right for the

W Supra, note 94, 36-37.
07 D.P. O’Connell, International Law (1965), 578. This O’Connell treatise seems
especially authoritative, having been expressly and repeatedly relied upon by
the Supreme Court of Canada in the 1967 decision Re: Offshore Mineral Rights
of British Columbia [1967] S.C.R. 792, 807, 808.

98 O’Connell, ibid., 578.
09 U.N. Doc. A/CN.4/SR.68, p.13, para.37.

McGILL LAW JOURNAL

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purposes of exploring and exploiting the shelf, and should not ipso
jure be granted them.””0

On the same occasion, Mr Ricardo J. Alfaro of Panama affirmed
that the submarine platform was neither res nullius nor res com-
rnunis.’0 ‘ He recognized that the only thing to do was to wait and
see what the littoral state would choose to do.’ 0 When Mr Alfaro
speculated as to the implications of a littoral state’s determination
neither to explore nor exploit the shelf, he questioned whether the
subsoil recources might originally be explored or exploited by a
second state.1 Mr Hudson logically replied that at any time a littoral
state in exercising its proper right could evict an intruder. 14 These
positions are significant inasmuch as they tend to support the pre-
existing rights of the littoral state.

The I.C.I. is not the only authority consulted by Mr Martin. He
quotes the latter portion of this passage from the August 1951
decision of Lord Asquith of Bishopstone as Umpire in the Abu
Dhabi Arbitration:0 5

I am not impressed by the argument that there was in 1939 no word
for “territorial waters” in the language of Abu Dhabi, or that the Sheikh
was quite unfamiliar with that conception. Mr. Jourdain had none the
less been talking “prose” all his life because the fact was only brought to
his notice somewhat late. Every State is owner and sovereign in respect
of its territorial waters, their bed and subsoil, whether the Ruler has read
the works of Bynkershoek or not. The extent of the Ruler’s Dominion
cannot depend on his accomplishments as an international jurist.106

In Mr Martin’s appraisal, Lord Asquith’s comments about the terri-
torial sea apply equally to the continental shelf.

But of course such territorial sea/continental shelf analogy is
not as simple as might appear. Even in the Abu Dhabi Arbitration
Lord Asquith, speaking of the continental shelf doctrine, declared:

I am of opinion that there are in this field so many ragged ends and unfilled
blanks, so much that is merely tentative and exploratory, that in no form
can the doctrine claim as yet to have assumed hitherto the hard lineaments
or the definitive status of an established rule of international law. 07

And the period “hitherto” 1951 included the 1949 entry of New-
foundland into Confederation.

300 Ibid., at p.14, para.37.
lOl Ibid., at p.14, para.42.
102 Ibid., at pp.14-15, para.42.
103 Ibid., at p.15, para.42.
0 4 Ibid., at para.43.

105 (1952) 1 Int’l. & Comp. L.Q. 247.
106 Ibid., 253.
1O Ibid., 256.

19761

THE NEWFOUNDLAND OFFSHORE CLAIMS

7. Federal implications of the North Sea principles

Chief Justice Barwick of the High Court of Australia recognized
in the August 6, 1969 offshore federalism case of Bonser v. La
Macchia’18 that if the continental shelf had not of its very nature
belonged a priori to the nation-state, and if the contemporary rights
to it depend upon convention, it is after all the federal state that
is the relevant party to the convention. 1 9 The late, renowned Dr
Wolfgang Friedmann, in quoting the critical paragraph of the World
Court decisiono0a saw that the Court dealt briefly and almost
casually with the issue of whether the continental shelf concept
had already become part of general international law 10 He quoted
with approval from the dissenting opinion in the North Sea Con-
tinental Shelf Cases of Judge Tanaka, who enunciated the process
whereby the continental shelf concept had passed into general
customary law:

The Geneva convention of 1958 on the Continental Shelf, first lex ex
contractu among the States parties, has been promoted by the subsequent
practice of a number of other States through agreements, unilateral acts
and acquiescence to the law of the international community which is
nothing else but world law or universal law.”‘
Chief Justice Barwick, then, speculated that if continental shelf
rights were conventional the federal government would enjoy con-
tractual rights as parties to the convention. Judge Tanaka, applauded
by the most eminent Dr Friedmann, found the continental shelf
rights articulated in the 1958 Convention, i.e., after the Abu Dhabi
Arbitration, as originally lex ex contractu.

Had continental shelf rights accrued to coastal states only after
1949, as a result of the 1958 Geneva Convention, Newfoundland today
would be unable successfully to assert that she had carried con-
tinental shelf rights with her into Confederation. This message was
implicit in the words of Chief Justice Barwick in the Bonser opinion
as he discussed the territorial sea claims of Australian states (the
Supreme Court of Canada’s Re: Offshore Mineral Rights precedent
obviously in the front of his mind):

I think it is essential to bear in mind that when colonies were formed all
that relevantly occured was that a specified land mass was placed at the

108 (1968-69) 122 Commw. L.R. 177.
109 Ibid., 187.
10 9a Supra, p.560.
110W. Friedmann, The North Sea Continental Shelf Cases –

A Critique

(1970) 64 AJ.I.L. 229, 232.

232 (italics in Tanaka).

111 [1969] I.CJ. 3, 178 (Tanaka J., dissenting), quoted by Friedmann, ibid.,

McGILL LAW JOURNAL

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outset under governorship, and later, under the control of a legislature.
The instruments setting up the colonies did not in terms include as
territory and subject to colonial governorship any part of the bed of the
sea or the superincumbent waters. The progression was from the condition
of governorship with near absolute powers to a state of self-government
with plenary powers to make laws for the peace, order and good govern-
ment of that land mass. This was the utmost to which the colonies ever
attained. The colonies were never at any stage international personae nor
sovereign and the States still are not. Thus any concession or convention
made between nations as to the use which might be made of the bed of
the sea or of the waters above it applied and still applies, in my opinion,
only as between nations and, in the case of conventions, as between nations
parties to the convention. The plenary nature of the legislative power
granted over and with respect to described territory cannot, in my
opinion, be a basis for regarding that territory as itself extended to those
places in which laws made undersuch a power may validly have effect.
Apart from legislation or prerogative or statutory instrument of the United
Kingdom, any seeming accession to the realm or to jurisdiction over the
sea by reason of international arrangements accrued, in my opinion, only
to Great Britain and not to her colonies or her dominions or their terri-
tories in their own right.
I respectfully agree with the conclusion drawn in connexion with the
seabed and the waters above it adjacent to the Province of British Co-
lumbia by the Supreme Court of Canada in Reference re Ownership of
Off-Shore Mineral Rights, and with the reasons which were given for that
conclusion.”12

One should not undei-emphasize the significance that the Chief
Justice here attaches to the issue of whether the colonies/states
were at any stage international persons. Had they been, their bids
for their territorial seas would have been of greater substance. With-
out international personality, their claim, like that of British Co-
lumbia, could only be the weaker.

But continental shelf rights did in fact accrue to coastal states
prior to 1949, according to the 1969 Barwick opinion. The Chief
Justice accepted, at any rate for the purposes of Bonser, that the
continental shelf appertains naturally to a nation as an international
person.” 3 If the continental shelf does in truth appertain naturally
to a nation as an international person, and if Newfoundland prior
to her entry into Confederation was an international person, then
she brought into Confederation continental shelf rights accruing to
her naturally. The International Court of Justice holding in North
Sea Continental Shelf Cases, to which Chief Justice Barwick looked,
insisted that ipso facto coastal state continental shelf rights arise,

112 Supra, note 108, 185.
13 Ibid., 187.

19761

THE NEWFOUNDLAND OFFSHORE CLAIMS

and that to enjoy these rights the coastal state need not have per-
formed any particular act, legal or otherwise.

As Dr O’Connell correctly commented in 1970:
It has not taken the High Court of Australia long to perceive the implica-
tions of the International Court’s statement that the continental shelf
rights exist ipso facto and ab initio, by virtue of sovereignty over the
land. By ipso facto seems to be implied that these rights exist even if the
coastal state does not claim or exercise them, and indeed, this is what the
International Court said. The expression ab initio suggests a relation back
in time, perhaps in geological time, for what the Court appears to mean is
that no history of events can be utilized to negate any coastal state’s
inherent rights to the seabed, even though, when the events occurred,
the continental shelf doctrine was not imagined. On this argument, the
rights in question existed in relation to the seabed of the Australian
continental shelf in 1876, and it then becomes arguable that it was
beyond the power of the Court in Regina v. Keyn to deprive the Crown of
them. If they amount to sovereignty, then Regina v. Keyn might have been
wrongly decided, and everything that follows from it would be fallacious.” 4
Dr O’Connell admittedly does not see the issue of ancient littoral
state rights to the continental shelf as one absolutely cut and dried,
but in the Australian circumstances he agrees that the notion of
“relation back in time” would seem to support not a Commonwealth
but a state pretension to the seabed.115

This is immediately relevant to the territorial sea/continental
shelf demands of Canada’s eastern provinces. Australian appraisals
are instructive in the Canadian framework, and vice versa. (Of
course, the foreign judgment must be correctly interpreted; it will
be seen below that the High Court in New South Wales misunder-
stood Re: Offshore Mineral Rights.)

Weighty authority supports the proposition that the Australian
and Canadian offshore federal circumstances are constitutionally
analogous, so that the judicial holdings in each nation may be
highly persuasive in the other. Chief Justice Barwick himself drew
the parallel, and Dr O’Connell in 1970 had -commented that:

Sir Percy Spender, with all the authority of a former President of the
International Court of Justice, and at a symposium presided over by
Barwick C.J., when the case of Bonser v. La Macchia had been argued but
not decided, stated emphatically that he could find no plausible argument
for distinguishing the Canadian from the Australian constitutional situa-

“40’Connell, supra, note 5, 407. “Chief Justice Barwick, in Bonser v. La
Macchia, obviously accepts the argument that ipso facto and ab initio attri-
bution of the continental shelf to the coastal state means that the continental
shelf has always lain within the inherent sovereignty thereof” (at p.408).

15 Ibid., 404.

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tion, and argued for the persuasive authority in Australia of the Canadian
Supreme Court decision.”16
In the New South Wales case, Chief Justice Barwick wrote as

though he could have had Newfoundland in mind:

Elsewhere I have expressed the view that the Imperial territorial waters
in due time passed to Australia as the nation state and that in truth no
territory of the Commonwealth ever had territorial waters of its own:
[citing Bonser]. But, upon a territory being given its independence of
Australia and ceasing to be a dependent territory, the marginal seas
become, by virtue of that very independent national status, the territorial
seas of the new nation.117
The strength of the Newfoundland offshore claims is further
illuminated by the opinion in the New South Wales case of Mr
Justice Gibbs, who agreed with Chief Justice Barwick that Australian
states have no valid continental shelf claims:

The Argument submitted on behalf of the States starts with the proposi-
tion, accepted by the International Court in the North Sea Continental
Shelf Cases (at par.19) that “the rights of the coastal State in respect
of the area of continental shelf that constitutes a natural prolongation of
its land territory into and under the sea exist ipso facto and ab initio, by
virtue of its sovereignty over the land, and as an extension of it in an
exercise of sovereign rights for the purpose of exploring the sea-bed and
exploiting its natural resources”. Therefore it is said that the rights of the
States to the continental shelf, although never asserted by any colony
before federation, must now be taken always to have existed and that
the States’ ownership of the sea-bed no longer stops at the three-mile limit
but extends to the outer limits of the continental shelf.
To say the rights of coastal States in respect of the continental shelf
existed from the beginning of time may or may not be correct as a
matter of legal theory. In fact, however, the rights now recognized re-
present the response of international law to modern developments of
science and technology, which permit the sea-bed to be exploited in a way
which it was quite impossible for governments or lawyers of earlier
centuries to foresee [italics added]. In this matter the arguments of
history are stronger than those of logic. In truth, when the Act was passed,
the States had not asserted and did not have the rights to the con
tinental shelf which the convention now accords to coastal States. Those
rights, if theoretically inherent in the sovereignty of coastal States, were
in fact the result of the operation of a new legal principle. When those
rights were recognized by international law the Commonwealth was the
international person entitled to assert them, and it did so. The assertion
by the Commonwealth of those rights in no way interfered with any
existing right of any State.118

116 D.P. O’Connell, The Commonwealth Fisheries Power and Bonser v. La

Macchia (1970) 3 A.L.R. 500, 504.

117 New South Wales v. Commonwealth (1975) 8 A.L.R. 1, 10.
118 Ibid., 49 (Gibbs J., dissenting).

1976]

THE NEWFOUNDLAND OFFSHORE CLAIMS

However deadly the Gibbs logic may be to offshore claims of the
Atlantic provinces of Canada other than Newfoundland, it can only
reinforce the claims of Newfoundland.

Mr Justice Gibbs insisted that attention be paid to the original
foreseeability of a 1975 offshore claim of an Australian state. Both
1976 territorial sea and continental shelf claims on the part of
Canada’s Atlantic provinces may have been unforeseeable as late as
1867 or 1871, and (at least) continental shelf claims in 1975 on the
part of Australian states may have been unforeseeable as late as
1901. But the foreseeability prior to Newfoundland’s entry into
Confederation in 1949 of a 1976 offshore claim of Newfoundland was
very real, not only as to the territorial sea but even as to the con-
tinental shelf.

After all, the fact that the Truman Proclamation of September 28,
1945 initiated the positive law of the continental shelf has been
noted in the North Sea Continental Shelf Cases by the International
Court of Justice,119 and the Supreme Court of Canada in agreeing
that the 1967 international law of the shelf had been foreshadowed
by that Proclamation 120 included it in full in Re: Offshore Mineral
Rights of British Columbia. 12
1 Mr Justice Gibbs in New South Wales
adopts as his own the conclusion of the World Court that the
Truman Proclamation initiated positive continental -shelf law.’2
Mr Martin records that the United Kingdom by June 1949 had
recognized that “‘the right of a littoral state to exercise its control
over the natural resources of the seabed and subsoil adjacent to its
coasts had been established in international practice’ “,w. and that,
as Edwin J. Cosford pointed out in 1953,’2 Canadian acquiescence
to various continental shelf claims (notably those of the United
States) may have estopped Ottawa from denying the validity of those
claims. 25

By 1949 it was at least foreseeable that international actors like
Newfoundland might enforce valid continental shelf claims. (Prior

119 North Sea Continental Shelf Cases [1969] I.C.J. 3, 33.
10Re: Offshore Mineral Rights of British Columbia [1967] SC.R. 792, 817.
121 Ibid., 818-19.
122New South Wales v. Commonwealth (1975) 8 A.L.R. 1, 48-49 (GibbS.,

dissenting).

123 Supra, note 93, 42-43.
124 E.J. Cosford, The Continental Shelf and the Abu Dhabi Award (1953)

1 McGiIL.

109, 125.

125 Supra, note 93, 43.

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to the 1949 Terms of Union coming into effect, the pre-1934 New-
foundland constitution was expressly revived by Term 7.126)

In New South Wales Justice.Mason, in the course of delivering
his pro-federal government opinion, made a parenthetical effort 127
to distinguish coastal state rights in offshore territory from rights
in land territory:

the International Court of Justice has held that the continental shelf

is a natural extension of the land territory of the coastal State appertain-
ing to it for the purpose of exercising its sovereign rights [citing North
Sea Continental Shelf Cases]. Even so, it is necessary to distinguish bet-
ween the land territory of a coastal State on the one hand and its terri-
torial sea and solum on the other band, for the coastal State in the
exercise of its sovereign rights is bound to give effect to the obligations
relating to the right of innocent passage imposed upon it by the conven-
tion in respect of its territorial sea and solum. Accordingly, the territorial
rights now conceded by international law to the coastal State in the solum
of territorial waters stamp it with the character of territory that is
different from the land territory of the coastal State.128

But the character stamped upon the offshore area in truth is similar
to that of the land territory.

It should be kept in mind that the World Court states in the
North Sea Continental Shelf Cases that “the legal regime of the
continental shelf is that of a soil and a subsoil, two words evocative
of the land and not of the sea”.2 9 Nor in Canada at any rate need
the defense and foreign relations dimension of the offshore ne-
cessarily bar a Newfoundland claim, despite the fears of Mr Justice
Mason. Even were it held that the Atlantic provinces owned the
resources of- the offshore, their exploitation rights would remain
subordinate to the federal power to legislate respecting defense,
navigation and other matters that come under section 91 of the
Constitution. 30 Ottawa also could delimit boundaries with foreign
countries because, touching as they must upon sovereignty, such
treaties are self-implementing.’

126 Schedule of Terms of Union Newfoundland with Canada, British North

America Act, 1949, 12-13 Geo. VI, c.22, (7).

12 7 “All this in a sense is by the way.” New South Wales v. Commonwealth

(1975) 8 A.L.R. 1, 88.

128 Ibid.
129 [1969] I.CJ. 3, 52.
130 Supra, note 9, 103.
I’Ibid., citing Francis v. R. [1956] S.C.R. 618, per Rand and Cartwright JJ.

1976]

THE NEWFOUNDLAND OFFSHORE CLAIMS

8. Re: Offshore Mineral Rights and New South Wales contrasted

Attention must be called to the fact that in New South Wales the
High Court of Australia held that even offshore rights brought into
the Australian union by a state would belong thereafter to the
federal government. Chief Justice Barwick wrote:

A consequence of creation of the Commonwealth under the Constitution
and the grant of the power with respect to external affairs was, in my
opinion, to vest in the Commonwealth any proprietary rights and legisla-
tive power which the colonies might have had in or in relation to the
territorial sea, sea-bed and airspace and continental shelf and incline.
Proprietary rights and legislative powers in these matters of international
concern would then coalesce and unite in the nation. That, in my opinion,
was the intendment of the Constitution. It is far easier to conclude that
the Act of the Imperial Parliament setting up the federal Constitution
intended to vest such matters of international consequence in the new
Commonwealth, withdrawing them from the former colonies, than it was
to decide that when an American state, already an independent nation
in possession of international rights, entered the Union, these rights
became vested in the United States. Yet that is received doctrine in the
United States expressed in decisions which have recently been affirmed:
[citing California, Texas, Louisiana and Maine]. The Supreme Court’s
reasons were applicable to the circumstances of the states originally
entering the Union. These were then independent nation states. Yet
without so clear an indication as the grant of the power with respect to
external affairs, those states did not retain any rights or legislative power
over the territorial sea, subsoil, etc. Later entrants to the Union, coming
in on an “equal footing”, were in the same situation.
This result conforms, in my opinion, to an essential feature of a federation,
namely, that it is the nation and not the integers of the federation which
must have the power to protect and control as a national function the
area of the marginal seas, the sea-bed and airspace and the continental
shelf and incline.’ 32

And as Justice Murphy added in the same case:

Even if they [the Australian states] had become independent nations
before [union in] 1901 with the sovereign rights of an independent state,
on federation they would have lost the territorial seas and other attributes
of international personality. 33
Chief Justice Barwick equated the rationale in both the New
South Wales case and Re: Offshore Mineral Rights of British Col-
umbia to a rationale relied upon by the United States Supreme Court
in California, Texas, Louisiana and Maine: 133a the federal government
enjoys exclusive offshore rights due to its role as international actor.

132 (1975) 8 A.L.R. 1, 16-17.
‘3 Ibid., 119, per Murphy3.
’33a U.S. v. California 332 U.S. 19 (1947), U.S. v. Texas 339 U.S. 707 (1950),

U.S. v. Louisiana 339 U.S. 699 (1950), U.S. v. Maine 43 L.W. 4359 (1975).

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The Canadian Supreme Court reached its conclusion after a close examina-
tion of the case law. I do not disagree with anything that is said in
the Supreme Court’s judgment about that law, though for my part, I
have found it unnecessary to deal with it in these my reasons. However,
the Supreme Court’s conclusion depends in no small degree upon the
fact of Canada’s independent nationhood and its recognition as such
by the nations of the world. Appropriately, it is concluded that such
international rights and obligations as derive from the convention on
the territorial sea devolve on Canada and not on any province of the
federation. I can find no reason to differentiate in relevant respects
the circumstances of this federation from those of the other great federa-
tions, except to say that the result of the cases to which I have referred
more obviously flows in the case of our Constitution. 34

But Chief Justice Barwick exaggerates the significance to the Re:
Offshore Mineral Rights outcome of the international personality of
Canada.

This exaggeration is suggested by his own choice of language.
First, the Chief Justice states merely that the pro-Ottawa decision
depended in “no small degree” on the international personality of
Ottawa; even he does not appear to deem that dependence as having
been overriding. Secondly, the Chief Justice accurately notices that
the Canadian opinion closely examined the relevant case law (i.e.,
history, and not any logical imperative inherent in federalism); he
declares that his own conclusion hinges on reasons making such
case law dissection unnecessary. Thirdly, the Supreme Court of
Canada, in choosing the rule by which to ascertain ‘provincial off-
shore rights, probably had Newfoundland, a former international
actor, in mind; the Chief Justice of the High Court of Australia in
isolating a rule to determine Australian state offshore rights could
have had no such former international actor in mind. The Chief
Justice working within his historical framework understandably
found that the conclusion to which he and the majority in New
South Wales adhered was a more obvious one in the Australian than
in the Canadian instance.

A close reading of the British Columbia opinion shows the de-
tailed attention paid by the Supreme Court of Canada to provincial
history, and the modest attention afforded the federal government’s
performance on the international stage. The Supreme Court in the
twenty-six page Re: Offshore Mineral Rights opinion opened with a
four page outline’3 5 detailing the historical background up to 1967.
The Court followed with a six page discussion30 of statutes and

134 Ibid., 17.
135 [1967] S.C.R. 792, 797-800.
136 Ibid., 800-807.

19761

THE NEWFOUNDLAND OFFSHORE CLAIMS

case precedents relating to the territorial sea. The Court then
devoted merely one page to the contemporary international law
dealing with the territorial sea. 37 This did not lead the Court to jump
to the conclusion that Canada as an international personality ne-
cessarily held the territorial sea; on the contrary, the Court did not
dispute that while British Columbia was a Crown Colony the
British Crown might have conferred upon the Governor or Legisla-
ture of the colony rights to which under international law the British
Crown was entitled. 138

There followed seven pages of additional study139 of case pre-
cedents concluding that the territorial sea lay beyond the limits
of the territory of British Columbia in 1871 and did not become
part of British Columbia following union with Canada. 40 Only then
did the Court look to Canada as an international actor, and to the
federal government as holder of the territorial sea rights at issue in
the litigation.’4’

To be sure, in its subsequent analysis of the continental shelf issue
the Court did immediately look into international law.142 But the
decision in the continental shelf issue was contingent upon the
outcome of the territorial sea issue. The Court recognized that “[a]s
with the territorial sea, so with the continental shelf,”‘ 4 and de-
clared that, of the two reasons why the federal government prevailed
over British Columbia, foremost was the fact that the continental
shelf was beyond the boundaries of British Columbia.'” Canada’s
role as international actor was a secondary reason given by the
Court. 45

Consequently, the attempt in New South Wales to equate the
primary rationale of Re: Offshore Mineral Rights of British Columbia
with that inderlying California, Texas, Louisiana and Maine is mis-
guided. The outcome in the Canadian case hinged upon provincial
history and not upon any abstract imperatives inhering in federalism.
British Columbia, unlike the United Kingdom, Canada or New-
foundland, was never a sovereign international person.

1’7 Ibid., 808-809.
138 Ibid., 808.
139 Ibid., 808-14.
140 Ibid., 814.
141 Ibid., 814-17.
142 Ibid., 817-21.
’43Ibid., 821.
14Ibid.
145 Ibid.

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Conclusion

Because Newfoundland was itself a sovereign international actor
prior to Confederation, and because under international law con-
tinental shelf rights (and by implication territorial sea rights) adhere
to the sovereign coastal state ipso facto, Newfoundland brought
these rights into Confederation. Because the Supreme Court of
Canada has relied upon evidence as to what offshore rights a pro-
vince has brought with it into Confederation in determining whether
offshore rights obtain in the province or in the federal government,
Newfoundland as a matter of Canadian constitutional law should
prevail in her offshore dispute with Ottawa.

Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, and Prince Edward Island were
never themselves sovereign international actors. Continental shelf
rights and territorial sea rights may always have inhered in the
coastal state, but during the respective colonial periods of these
provinces the coastal state for these purposes might have been the
United Kingdom.

Chief Justice Barwick, after all, could easily accept in Bonser
that offshore rights inhered ipso facto, but that the defined terri-
tories granted by the United Kingdom to the states during their
respective colonial periods did not include the offshore waters or
seabed; he examined the territorial terms of the instruments estab-
lishing the colonies in order to conclude this. The Supreme Court of
Canada similarly recognized that although the history of British
Columbia disclosed no conferring upon the governor or legislature
of British Columbia the rights to which the British Crown was
entitled under international law, such a prior development would
have affected the 1967 decision. After the Re: Offshore Mineral Rights
case such a pre-Confederation conferring of rights was precisely
what Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island had
to allege; this is the reason for the resort to history.1 40

Inasmuch as nation-state territorial sea and continental shelf
claims prior to Confederation ranged from diffuse to non-existent,
it was impossible for these provinces to point to territorial sea/
continental shelf grants to them made in so many words. It has been
seen above that grants using adjacency and appurtenance termino-

146 See The Wall Street Journal, Feb. 3, 1977, p.17: “The Canadian Govern-
ment and the provinces of Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and Prince Edward
Island have reached a partial accord on offshore mineral rights.
The accord deals with matters of administration and revenue sharing, but
doesn’t cover the unresolved issues of jurisdiction and ownership.”

1976J

THE NEWFOUNDLAND OFFSHORE CLAIMS

573

logy do exist, and offshore jurisdiction was exercised in some cases.
The Supreme Court of Canada in the post-Re: Offshore Mineral
Rights era would have had to decide as to each province whether
these pieces of evidence did demonstrate the grant of offshore
imperial rights to the colony.

Newfoundland is in a rather unique constitutional position. A
most convincing argument may be advanced to the effect that, unlike
the other Canadian provinces, and unlike the Australian states, New-
foundland historically possessed and exercised sovereign rights and
powers which survived Confederation. The historical argument in
Re: Offshore Mineral Rights, while it served to dismiss British
Columbia’s claim, can only strengthen Newfoundland’s. The Su-
preme Court of Canada should recognize as valid Newfoundland’s
offshore claims.