R v Symonds: Difference between revisions
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==Background== |
==Background== |
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Faced with a "virtually bankrupt colonial administration" Governor [[Robert FitzRoy]] had in 1843 waived the Crown's right of pre-emption to buy Māori land, allowing settlers to directly buy land from Maori if they held certificates waiving the Crown's right.<ref name=":0">{{Cite book|title = Māori Property Rights and the Foreshore and Seabed: The Last Frontier|last = Willliams|first = David|publisher = Victoria University Press|year = 2007|isbn = |location = Wellington|pages = 35|chapter = Wi Parata is Dead, Long Live Wi Parata}}</ref> When Governor [[George Grey]] took office in 1845, he decided to take a test case, with a claimant seeking a writ of [[scire facias]], to, "justify his refusal to award Crown grants over land to persons whose claims were based on those certificates."<ref name=":0" /> The [[Attorney-General (New Zealand)|attorney general]], [[William Swainson (lawyer)|William Swainson]], appeared for [[Jermyn Symonds]], and [[Thomas Bartley (politician)|Thomas Bartley]] appeared for Charles Hunter McIntosh.<ref>{{cite news |title=Supreme Court |url=http://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/cgi-bin/paperspast?a=d&d=NZ18470508.2.8 |accessdate=21 September 2015 |work=New Zealander |volume=2 |issue=101 |date=8 May 1847 |page=3}}</ref> The case involved an island in the [[Firth of Thames]] that McIntosh had bought from [[Māori people|Māori]], which he claimed extinguished all title that the Crown had. The same island was then conveyed by Grey as a Crown grant to Symonds.<ref>{{cite news |title=Auckland |url=http://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/cgi-bin/paperspast?a=d&cl=search&d=NENZC18470710.2.3 |accessdate=21 September 2015 |work=Nelson Examiner and New Zealand Chronicle |volume=VI |issue=279 |date=10 July 1847 |page=71}}</ref> |
Faced with a "virtually bankrupt colonial administration" Governor [[Robert FitzRoy]] had in 1843 waived the Crown's right of pre-emption to buy Māori land, allowing settlers to directly buy land from Maori if they held certificates waiving the Crown's right.<ref name=":0">{{Cite book|title = Māori Property Rights and the Foreshore and Seabed: The Last Frontier|last = Willliams|first = David|publisher = Victoria University Press|year = 2007|isbn = |location = Wellington|pages = 35|chapter = Wi Parata is Dead, Long Live Wi Parata}}</ref> When Governor [[George Grey]] took office in 1845, he decided to take a test case, with a claimant seeking a writ of [[scire facias]], to, "justify his refusal to award Crown grants over land to persons whose claims were based on those certificates."<ref name=":0" /> The [[Attorney-General (New Zealand)|attorney general]], [[William Swainson (lawyer)|William Swainson]], appeared for [[Jermyn Symonds]], and [[Thomas Bartley (politician)|Thomas Bartley]] appeared for Charles Hunter McIntosh.<ref>{{cite news |title=Supreme Court |url=http://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/cgi-bin/paperspast?a=d&d=NZ18470508.2.8 |accessdate=21 September 2015 |work=New Zealander |volume=2 |issue=101 |date=8 May 1847 |page=3}}</ref> The case involved an island in the [[Firth of Thames]] that McIntosh had bought from [[Māori people|Māori]], which he claimed extinguished all title that the Crown had. The same island was then conveyed by Grey as a Crown grant to Symonds.<ref>{{cite news |title=Auckland |url=http://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/cgi-bin/paperspast?a=d&cl=search&d=NENZC18470710.2.3 |accessdate=21 September 2015 |work=Nelson Examiner and New Zealand Chronicle |volume=VI |issue=279 |date=10 July 1847 |page=71}}</ref> |
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The argument for the plaintiff was that the [[Māori language|Maori language]] text of the Treaty of Waitangi only gave the Crown the right of first refusal and not pre-emption over Maori land.<ref>{{Cite book|title = Historical Frictions: Maori Claims and Reinvented Historie|last = Belgrave|first = Michael|publisher = Auckland University Press|year = 2005|isbn = |location = Auckland|pages = }}</ref> |
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As [[David Vernon Williams|David Williams]] has noted, "The essential political issue at stake in the Gipps/Wentworth debates and in ''The Queen v Symonds'' related to the extent of Crown control over the profits to be made in the process of extinguishing Maori title and making land available to incoming settlers."<ref name=":2">{{Cite journal|url = |title = The Queen v. Symonds reconsidered|last = Williams|first = David|date = 1 November 1989|journal = Victoria University of Wellington Law Review|doi = |pmid = |access-date = 21 September 2015|issue = 4|volume = 19}}</ref> |
As [[David Vernon Williams|David Williams]] has noted, "The essential political issue at stake in the Gipps/Wentworth debates and in ''The Queen v Symonds'' related to the extent of Crown control over the profits to be made in the process of extinguishing Maori title and making land available to incoming settlers."<ref name=":2">{{Cite journal|url = |title = The Queen v. Symonds reconsidered|last = Williams|first = David|date = 1 November 1989|journal = Victoria University of Wellington Law Review|doi = |pmid = |access-date = 21 September 2015|issue = 4|volume = 19}}</ref> |
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Tom Bennion, in ''New Zealand Land Law'' has noted that the [[Ratio decidendi|ratio]] of the case, "that Maori customary interests were to be solemnly respected and were not to be extinguished without the free consent of Maori", "remains one of the strongest assertions of aboriginal title in any of the jurisdictions in which it has been recognised".<ref>{{Cite book|title = New Zealand Land Law|last = Bennion|first = Tom|publisher = Thomson Reuters|year = 2009|isbn = |location = Wellington|pages = 383|editor-last = |chapter = Maori Land}}</ref> David Williams, has however been critical of the effect of the decision on the historical trajectory of colonisation, noting that for the colonial government, "Crown pre-emption was now seen more as a device to maintain Crown control over colonisation than to protect Maori interests."<ref name=":2" /> |
Tom Bennion, in ''New Zealand Land Law'' has noted that the [[Ratio decidendi|ratio]] of the case, "that Maori customary interests were to be solemnly respected and were not to be extinguished without the free consent of Maori", "remains one of the strongest assertions of aboriginal title in any of the jurisdictions in which it has been recognised".<ref>{{Cite book|title = New Zealand Land Law|last = Bennion|first = Tom|publisher = Thomson Reuters|year = 2009|isbn = |location = Wellington|pages = 383|editor-last = |chapter = Maori Land}}</ref> David Williams, has however been critical of the effect of the decision on the historical trajectory of colonisation, noting that for the colonial government, "Crown pre-emption was now seen more as a device to maintain Crown control over colonisation than to protect Maori interests."<ref name=":2" /> |
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The effect of the decision was undone in 1877 by the ruling of Justice [[James Prendergast (judge)|Prendergast]] in ''[[Wi Parata v Bishop of Wellington]]'' that the Treaty of Waitangi, ''"''could not transform the natives’ right of occupation into one of legal character since, so far as it purported to cede the sovereignty of New Zealand, it was a simple nullity for no body politic existed capable of making cession of sovereignty".<ref>i Parata v The Bishop of Wellington (1877) 3 NZ Jur (NS) SC 72.</ref> |
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⚫ | Reconciling the concept of aboriginal title, and the radical title of the Crown, was critical to the decision of the Court of Appeal in ''[[Ngati Apa v Attorney-General]],'' and as such ''R v Symonds'' provided a precedent for the ''Ngati Apa'' decision.<ref>Ngati Apa v A-G [2003] 3 NZLR 643 at [30]-[31].</ref> |
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⚫ | The concept of aboriginal title has made a come back in court cases since the advent of [[Māori protest movement|Maori protest]] in the 1970s and [[Treaty of Waitangi Act 1975|statutory recognition]] of the Treaty. Reconciling the concept of aboriginal title, and the radical title of the Crown, was critical to the decision of the Court of Appeal in ''[[Ngati Apa v Attorney-General]],'' and as such ''R v Symonds'' provided a precedent for the ''Ngati Apa'' decision.<ref>Ngati Apa v A-G [2003] 3 NZLR 643 at [30]-[31].</ref> |
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==References== |
==References== |
Revision as of 01:23, 22 September 2015
R v Symonds | |
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Court | Auckland Supreme Court |
Full case name | The Queen at the suit of Charles Hunter McIntosh v John Jeremyn Symonds |
Decided | 9 June 1847 |
Citation | (1847) NZPCC 388 |
Transcript | Available here |
Court membership | |
Judges sitting | Martin CJ and Chapman J |
Keywords | |
Aboriginal title, Treaty of Waitangi, Scire facias |
R v Symonds incorporated the concept of Aboriginal title into New Zealand law and upheld the Government's pre-emptive right of purchase to Maori land deriving from the common law and expressed in the Treaty of Waitangi. Although the Native Lands Act 1862 waived Crown pre-emption, the notion of Aboriginal title has been revived in the 20th century to deal with Maori property rights.
Background
Faced with a "virtually bankrupt colonial administration" Governor Robert FitzRoy had in 1843 waived the Crown's right of pre-emption to buy Māori land, allowing settlers to directly buy land from Maori if they held certificates waiving the Crown's right.[1] When Governor George Grey took office in 1845, he decided to take a test case, with a claimant seeking a writ of scire facias, to, "justify his refusal to award Crown grants over land to persons whose claims were based on those certificates."[1] The attorney general, William Swainson, appeared for Jermyn Symonds, and Thomas Bartley appeared for Charles Hunter McIntosh.[2] The case involved an island in the Firth of Thames that McIntosh had bought from Māori, which he claimed extinguished all title that the Crown had. The same island was then conveyed by Grey as a Crown grant to Symonds.[3]
The argument for the plaintiff was that the Maori language text of the Treaty of Waitangi only gave the Crown the right of first refusal and not pre-emption over Maori land.[4]
As David Williams has noted, "The essential political issue at stake in the Gipps/Wentworth debates and in The Queen v Symonds related to the extent of Crown control over the profits to be made in the process of extinguishing Maori title and making land available to incoming settlers."[5]
Judgment
The judges of the Supreme Court asserted the "paramount importance of the Crown's pre-emptive monopoly right to purchase lands from Maori".[1]
In addition, Justice Chapman held,
"Whatever may be the opinion of jurists as to the strength or weakness of the Native title, whatsoever may have been the past vague notions of the Natives of their country, whatever may be their present clearer and still growing conception of their dominion over land, it cannot be too solemnly asserted that it is entitled to be respected, that it cannot be extinguished (at least in times of peace) otherwise than by the free consent of the native occupiers."[6]
Chief Justice Martin considered whether there was any authority for the Governor-General to issue the certificates and concluded that there was no express authority and that no authority could be implied as,
"The 2nd section of the Land Claims Ordinance of June 1841 (Sess. 1, No.2,) declares and enacts that "the sole and absolute right of pre-emption from the aboriginal inhabitants vest in and can only be exercised by her Majesty, her Heirs and Successors, and that all titles to land in the said colony which are held or claimed by virtue of purchases or gifts.... either mediately or immediately from the chiefs or other individuals ...shall be, absolutely null and void."[6]
Significance
Tom Bennion, in New Zealand Land Law has noted that the ratio of the case, "that Maori customary interests were to be solemnly respected and were not to be extinguished without the free consent of Maori", "remains one of the strongest assertions of aboriginal title in any of the jurisdictions in which it has been recognised".[7] David Williams, has however been critical of the effect of the decision on the historical trajectory of colonisation, noting that for the colonial government, "Crown pre-emption was now seen more as a device to maintain Crown control over colonisation than to protect Maori interests."[5]
The effect of the decision was undone in 1877 by the ruling of Justice Prendergast in Wi Parata v Bishop of Wellington that the Treaty of Waitangi, "could not transform the natives’ right of occupation into one of legal character since, so far as it purported to cede the sovereignty of New Zealand, it was a simple nullity for no body politic existed capable of making cession of sovereignty".[8]
The concept of aboriginal title has made a come back in court cases since the advent of Maori protest in the 1970s and statutory recognition of the Treaty. Reconciling the concept of aboriginal title, and the radical title of the Crown, was critical to the decision of the Court of Appeal in Ngati Apa v Attorney-General, and as such R v Symonds provided a precedent for the Ngati Apa decision.[9]
References
- ^ a b c Willliams, David (2007). "Wi Parata is Dead, Long Live Wi Parata". Māori Property Rights and the Foreshore and Seabed: The Last Frontier. Wellington: Victoria University Press. p. 35.
- ^ "Supreme Court". New Zealander. Vol. 2, no. 101. 8 May 1847. p. 3. Retrieved 21 September 2015.
- ^ "Auckland". Nelson Examiner and New Zealand Chronicle. Vol. VI, no. 279. 10 July 1847. p. 71. Retrieved 21 September 2015.
- ^ Belgrave, Michael (2005). Historical Frictions: Maori Claims and Reinvented Historie. Auckland: Auckland University Press.
- ^ a b Williams, David (1 November 1989). "The Queen v. Symonds reconsidered". Victoria University of Wellington Law Review. 19 (4).
{{cite journal}}
:|access-date=
requires|url=
(help) - ^ a b R v Symonds (1847) NZPCC 388
- ^ Bennion, Tom (2009). "Maori Land". New Zealand Land Law. Wellington: Thomson Reuters. p. 383.
- ^ i Parata v The Bishop of Wellington (1877) 3 NZ Jur (NS) SC 72.
- ^ Ngati Apa v A-G [2003] 3 NZLR 643 at [30]-[31].