1023, para. 52.
, para. 18.
para. 98. Yet, as mentioned, the majority in the Trial Lawyers Association case appears to have
resolved the constitutional question, principally, with reference to Constitution Act, 1867,
s. 96.
, para. 20. To similar effect, see Rogers Communications Inc. v. Châteauguay (City) [2016]
1 S.C.R. 467 at para. 39 (per JJ. Wagner and Côté).
534
David Schneiderman
In a jointly written opinion, the three Quebec-based judges, together
with Justice Abella, strongly disagreed. Describing the circumstances as
“novel,” the dissenting justices characterized cooperative federalism as the
“dominant tide,” in which case, “our courts must protect such schemes both
when they are implemented and when they are dismantled.”
84
In order to
dismantle the federal registry, which had been erected with the cooperation
and partnership of the provinces, it “must be carried out in a manner that is
compatible with the principle of federalism that underlies our Constitution.”
85
The scheme “cannot be dismantled unilaterally by one of the parties with-
out taking the impact of such a decision on its partner’s heads of power into
account.”
86
Though unacknowledged, this looks precisely like the German
idea of federal loyalty. The justices’ silence about this fact is consistent with
the Court’s general unwillingness to refer to constitutional developments
abroad.
87
The dissenting justices also turned to more traditional constitutional meth-
ods. They distinguished between the provisions of the law that terminated the
collection and those that mandated the destruction of data.
88
The former was
entirely within federal authority; the latter had as its principal object the ter-
mination of a partnership that had required the “administrative, financial, and
legislative participation of Quebec.”
89
Not only was this ultra vires the federal
government, it was not sufficiently integrated into an intra vires scheme to
survive constitutional scrutiny (applying the “ancillary” doctrine).
In contrast to the ruling in the Secession Reference, the majority of the
Supreme Court in Quebec v. Canada reverted to more orthodox legal meth-
ods, associated with a traditional “dualist” (or “watertight compartments”)
style of federalism, with a reliance on text above all else.
90
Unlike the former
case, where the Court constructed a novel constitutional apparatus of unwrit-
ten constitutional principles upon which could be derived an unwritten
84
Ibid.
, para. 152.
85
Ibid.
, para. 153.
86
Ibid.
, para. 154.
87
Though they do mingle and exchange ideas with other apex court justices. See Tonda Mac-
Charles, “Canada’s Supreme Court Justices Travel to Exchange Ideas, Discuss Legal Issues
With International Judges” The Toronto Star (February 18, 2017).
88
Paul Daly, “Dismantling Regulatory Structures: Canada’s Long-Gun Registry as Case Study”
(2015) 33 National J of Constitutional L 169, 189. Daly’s argument relies less on unwritten
constitutional principles than on constitutional doctrine informed by those principles (181).
89
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