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Title: Privy Council Appeal No. 121 of 1928 [Item 3 of 7]; Case of the Attorney-General of Canada

Date of first publication: 1928

Author: The Lords of the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council

Date first posted: July 30, 2025

Date last updated: July 30, 2025

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See Transcriber’s Notes below.

In the Privy Council.
‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒ 
No. 121 of 1928. 
    
ON APPEAL FROM THE SUPREME COURT OF CANADA. 
    
‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒ 
    
IN THE MATTER of a Reference as to the meaning of the word 
“Persons” in Section 24 of The British North America Act, 
1867. 
    
‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒ 
Between  
    
HENRIETTA MUIR EDWARDS, NELLIE L. McCLUNG,  
LOUISE C. McKINNEY, EMILY F. MURPHY and  
IRENE PARLBYAppellants 
    
and  
    
THE ATTORNEY-GENERAL FOR THE DOMINION  
OF CANADA, THE ATTORNEY-GENERAL  
FOR THE PROVINCE OF QUEBEC and THE  
ATTORNEY-GENERAL FOR THE PROVINCE  
OF ALBERTARespondents. 
   
=============================
CASE OF THE ATTORNEY-GENERAL OF CANADA.
=============================
   
Record.   1. This is an appeal by special leave from the judgment of the 
pp. 38, 39.Supreme Court of Canada pronounced on the 24th April, 1928, upon 
pp. 3, 4.a reference by His Excellency the Governor in Council for hearing and 
consideration by the Court, pursuant to the provisions of section 60 of 
the Supreme Court Act, of the following question relative to the eligibility 
of women to be summoned to a place in the Senate or Upper House of 
of the Parliament of Canada: 
   
   “Does the word ‘Persons’ in section 24 of the British North
America Act, 1867, include female persons?”

2
   
Record.   2. The said reference was made upon the petition of the appellants 
as persons interested in the admission of women to the Senate of Canada. 
   
   3. The provisions of the British North America Act, 1867, relating 
to the constitution of the Senate and the qualifications of a Senator, viz., 
sections 21 to 36 inclusive, are set out with other sections of the said Act 
which have been adverted to in the discussion and consideration of the 
question referred, at pp. 18-33 of the Joint Appendix. 
   
   4. On the hearing of argument of the said reference on the 14th March, 
1928, before the full Court (composed of Anglin, C.J., Duff, Mignault, 
Lamont and Smith, J.J.), counsel for the Attorney-General of Canada10
contended that the word “persons” in sec. 24 of the British North 
America Act was limited to male persons, and counsel for the Province 
of Quebec supported this contention. Counsel for the petitioners contended, 
on the other hand, that the word “persons” in that section included female 
persons, and this contention was supported by the counsel for the Attorney- 
General of Alberta. The Attorneys-General for the other provinces of 
Canada, though duly notified, did not appear on the argument of the said 
reference. 
   
   5. On the 24th April, 1928, the Court pronounced its judgment 
unanimously answering the question referred as follows:20
   
p. 39.   “The question being understood to be, ‘Are women eligible 
for appointment to the Senate of Canada,’ the Question is answered 
in the negative.” 
   
pp. 39-59.   The reasons for judgment delivered by the several members of the 
Court are reported in (1928) S.C.R., pp. 276-304. 
   
   6. The Chief Justice of Canada, in his reasons for judgment (in which 
Mignault, Lamont and Smith, J.J. concurred), after citing the principles 
of construction which he considered to be applicable as affording guidance 
to the true determination of the question referred, proceeded as follows, 
at pages 282 and 283 of the report:30
   
p. 43, l. 15.   “Two outstanding facts or circumstances of importance bearing 
upon the present reference appear to be— 
   
   “(a) that the office of Senator was a new office first created 
by the B.N.A. Act. 
   
   “ ‘It is an office, therefore, which no one apart from the enactments 
of the statute has an inherent or common law right of holding, 
and the right of any one to hold office must be found within the 
four corners of the statute which creates the office and enacts the 
conditions upon which it is to be held and the persons who are 
entitled to hold it; (Beresford-Hope v. Sandhurst (1889) 23 Q.B.D. 79,40
at p. 91, per Lord Coleridge, C.J.);’ 
   
   “(b) that by the common law of England (as also, speaking 
generally, by the civil and canon law: fœminæ ab omnibus officiis 
civilibus vel publicis remotæ sunt) women were under a legal 
incapacity to hold public office, ‘referable to the fact that (as 

3
   
Record.Willes, J., said in Chorlton v. Lings, L.R. 4 C.P. 374, at p. 392) 
in this country in modern times, chiefly out of respect to women, 
and a sense of decorum, and not from their want of intellect, or 
their being for any other reason unfit to take part in the government 
of the country, they have been excused from taking any share in 
this department of public affairs.’ ” 
   
And at pp. 284-288 of the report:— 
   
p. 45, l. 8.   “Prior to 1867 the common law legal incapacity of women to 
sit in Parliament had been fully recognized in the three provinces—Canada 
(Upper and Lower), Nova Scotia and New Brunswick,10
which were then confederated as the Dominion of Canada. 
   
   “Moreover, paraphrasing an observation of Lord Coleridge, C.J., 
in Beresford-Hope v. Sandhurst (1889) 23 Q.B.D. 79, at pp. 91, 92, 
it is not also perhaps to be entirely left out of sight, that in the 
sixty years which have run since 1867, the questions of the rights 
and privileges of women have not been, as in former times they 
were, asleep. On the contrary, we know as a matter of fact that 
the rights of women, and the privileges of women, have been much 
discussed, and able and acute minds have been much exercised 
as to what privileges ought to be conceded to women. That has20
been going on, and surely it is a significant fact, that never from 
1867 to the present time has any woman ever sat in the Senate of 
Canada, nor has any suggestion of women’s eligibility for appointment 
to that House until quite recently been publicly made. 
   
   “Has the Imperial Parliament, in sections 23, 24, 25, 26 and 32 
of the B.N.A. Act, read in the light of other provisions of the statute 
and of relevant circumstances proper to be considered, given to 
women the capacity to exercise the public functions of a Senator? 
Has it made clear its intent to effect, so far as the personnel of the 
Senate of Canada is concerned, the striking constitutional departure30
from the common law for which the petitioners contend, which 
would have rendered women eligible for appointment to the Senate 
at a time when they were neither qualified to sit in the House of 
Commons nor to vote for candidates for membership in that House? 
Has it not rather by clear implication, if not expressly excluded 
them from membership in the Senate? Such an extraordinary 
privilege is not conferred furtively, nor is the purpose to grant it 
to be gathered from remote conjectures deduced from a skilful 
piecing together of expressions in a statute which are more or less 
precisely accurate. (Nairn v. University of St. Andrews (1909)40
A.C. 147, at p. 161). When Parliament contemplates such a decided 
innovation it is never at a loss for language to make its intention 
unmistakable. ‘A judgment,’ said Lord Robertson in the case 
last mentioned at pp. 165-6, ‘is wholesome and of good example 
which puts forward subject-matter and fundamental constitutional 
law as guides of construction never to be neglected in favour of 
verbal possibilities.’ 

4
   
Record.   “There can be no doubt that the word ‘persons’ when 
standing alone prima facie includes women. (Per Loreburn, L.C., 
Nairn v. University of St. Andrews (1909) A.C. 147, at p. 161.) 
It connotes human beings—the criminal and the insane equally 
with the good and the wise citizen, the minor as well as the 
adult. Hence the propriety of the restriction placed upon it by 
the immediately preceding word ‘qualified’ in ss. 24 and 26 and 
the words ‘fit and qualified’ in s. 32, which exclude the criminal 
and the lunatic or imbecile as well as the minor, who is explicitly 
disqualified by s. 23 (1). Does this requirement of qualification10
also exclude women? 
   
   “Ex facie, and apart from their designation as ‘Senators’ 
(s. 21), the terms in which the qualifications of members of the 
Senate are specified in s. 23 (and it is to those terms that reference 
is made by the word ‘qualified’ in s. 24) import that men only are 
eligible for appointment. In every clause of s. 23 the Senator 
is referred to by the masculine pronoun—‘he’ and ‘his’; and 
the like observation applies to ss. 29 and 31. (Frost v. 
The King (1919) Ir. R. I Ch. 81, at p. 91.) Moreover, clause 2 
of section 23 includes only ‘natural-born’ subjects and those20
‘naturalized’ under statutory authority and not those who become 
subjects by marriage—a provision which one would have looked 
for had it been intended to include women as eligible. 
   
   “Counsel for the petitioners sought to overcome the difficulty 
thus presented in two ways: 
   
p. 46, l. 23.   “(a) by a comparison of s. 24 with other sections in the 
B.N.A. Act, in which, he contended, the word ‘persons’ is 
obviously used in its more general signification as including women 
as well as men, notably ss. 11, 14 and 41. 
   
   “(b) by invoking the aid of the statutory interpretation30
provision in force in England in 1867—13-14 Vict., c. 21, s. 4, known 
as Lord Brougham’s Act—which reads as follows: 
   
   “ ‘Be it enacted that in all Acts words importing the Masculine 
Gender shall be deemed and taken to include Females, and the 
Singular to include the Plural, and the Plural the Singular, unless 
the contrary as to Gender or Number is expressly provided.’ 
   
   “(a) A short but conclusive answer to the argument based 
on a comparison of s. 24 with other sections of the B.N.A. Act 
in which the word ‘persons’ appears is that in none of them is 
its connotation restricted, as it is in s. 24, by the adjective40
‘qualified.’ ‘Persons’ is a word of equivocal signification, sometimes 
synomymous with human beings, sometimes including only 
men. ‘It is an ambiguous word,’ says Lord Ashbourne, ‘and must 
be examined and construed in the light of surrounding circumstances 
and constitutional law’ (Nairn v. University of St. Andrews (1909) 
A.C. 147, at p. 162). 

5
   
Record.   “In section 41 of the B.N.A. Act, which deals with the 
qualifications for membership of the House of Commons and of 
the voters at elections of such members, ‘persons’ would seem 
to be used in its wider signification, since, while in both these 
matters the legislation affecting the former Provincial Houses 
of Assembly, or Legislative Assemblies, is thereby made applicable 
to the new House of Commons, it remains so only ‘until the 
Parliament of Canada otherwise provides.’ It seems reasonably 
clear that it was intended to confer on the Parliament of Canada 
an untrammelled discretion as to the personnel of the membership10
of the House of Commons and as to the conditions of and 
qualifications for the franchise of its electorate; and so the 
Canadian Parliament has assumed, as witness the Dominion 
Elections Act, R.S.C. 1927, c. 53, ss. 29 and 38. It would, 
therefore, seem necessary to give the word ‘persons’ in s. 41 of 
the B.N.A. Act the wider signification of which it is susceptible 
in the absence of adjectival restriction. 
   
   “But, in s. 11, which provides for the constitution of the 
new Privy Council of Canada, the word ‘persons,’ though unqualified, 
is probably used in the more restricted sense of ‘male20
persons.’ For the public offices thereby created, women were, 
by the common law, ineligible, and it would be dangerous to 
assume that by the use of the ambiguous term ‘persons’ the 
Imperial Parliament meant in 1867 to bring about so vast a 
constitutional change affecting Canadian women, as would be 
involved in making them eligible for selection as Privy Councillors. 
A similar comment may be made upon s. 14, which enables the 
Governor General to appoint a Deputy or Deputies.” 
   
   “As put by Lord Loreburn in Nairn v. University of St. 
Andrews (1909) A.C. 147, at p. 161:30
   
   ‘It would require a convincing demonstration to satisfy me 
that Parliament intended to effect a constitutional change so 
momentuous and far-reaching by so furtive a process.’ 
   
   “With Lord Robertson (ibid. at pp. 165-6), to mere ‘verbal 
possibilities’ we refer ‘subject-matter and fundamental constitutional 
law as guides of construction.’ When Parliament 
intends to overcome a fundamental constitutional incapacity it 
does not employ such an equivocal expression as is the word 
‘persons’ when used in regard to eligibility for a newly created 
public office. Neither from s. 11 or s. 14 nor from s. 41, therefore,40
can the petitioners derive support for their contention as to the 
construction of the phrase ‘qualified persons’ in s. 24. 
   
   “Section 63 of the B.N.A. Act, the only other section to which 
Mr. Rowell referred, deals with the constitution of the Executive 
Councils of the provinces of Ontario and Quebec. But, since, 
by s. 92 (1), each provincial legislature is empowered to amend 
the constitution of the province except as regards the office of 

6
   
Record.Lieutenant-Governor, the presence of women as members of some 
provincial executive councils has no significance in regard to the 
scope of the phrase ‘qualified persons’ in s. 24 of the B.N.A. Act. 
   
   “(b) ‘Persons’ is not a ‘word importing the masculine 
gender.’ Therefore, ex facie, Lord Brougham’s Act has no application 
to it. It is urged, however, that that statute so affects 
the word ‘Senator’ and the pronouns ‘he’ and ‘his’ in 
s. 23 that they must be ‘deemed and taken to include Females,’ 
‘the contrary’ not being ‘expressly provided.’ 
   
   “The application and purview of Lord Brougham’s Act came10
up for consideration in Chorlton v. Lings (1868) L.R. 4, C.P. 374, 
where the Court of Common Pleas was required to construe a 
statute (passed, like the British North America Act, in 1867) 
which conferred the parliamentary franchise on ‘every man’ 
possessing certain qualifications and registered as a voter. The 
chief question discussed was whether, by virtue of Lord Brougham’s 
Act, ‘every man’ included ‘women.’ Holding that ‘women’ 
were ‘subject to a legal incapacity from voting at the election of 
members of Parliament,’ the court unanimously decided that the 
word ‘man’ in the statute did not include a ‘woman.’ ”20
   
   After quoting from the reasons for judgment delivered by the learned 
Judges in that case, the learned Chief Justice (at page 290 of the Report) 
concluded as follows: 
   
p. 49, l. 35.   “The decision in Chorlton v. Lings (L.R. 4, C.P. 374) is of the 
highest authority, as was recognized in the House of Lords by Earl 
Loreburn, L.C. in Nairn v. University of St. Andrews (1909) A.C. 
147, and again by Viscount Birkenhead, L.C., in rejecting the claim 
of Viscountess Rhondda to sit in the House of Lords, with the concurrence 
of Viscount Cave, and Lords Atkinson, Phillimore, Buckmaster, 
Sumner and Carson, as well as by Viscount Haldane, who30
dissented (1922) 2 A.C. 339.” 
   
   “In his speech, at p. 375, the Lord Chancellor said:— 
   
p. 50, l. 2.   ‘It is sufficient to say that the Legislature in dealing with 
this matter cannot be taken to have departed from the usage of 
centuries or to have employed such loose and ambiguous words to 
carry out so momentous a revolution in the constitution of this 
House. And I am content to base my judgment on this alone. 
   
   “In our opinion Chorlton v. Lings, L.R. 4, C.P. 374 is conclusive 
evidence against the petitioners alike on the question of the common 
law incapacity of women to exercise such public functions as those40
of a member of the Senate of Canada and on that of their being 
expressly excluded from the class of ‘qualified persons’ within 
s. 24 of the B.N.A. Act by the terms in which s. 23 is couched (New 
South Wales Taxation Commissioners v. Palmer) (1907) A.C. 179, 
at p. 184 so that Lord Brougham’s Act cannot be invoked to extend 
those terms to bring “women” within their purview. 

7
   
Record.   “We are, for these reasons, of the opinion that women are not 
eligible for appointment by the Governor-General to the Senate of 
Canada under Section 24 of the British North America Act, 1867, 
because they are not ‘qualified persons’ within the meaning of 
that section. The question submitted, understood as above indicated, 
will, accordingly, be answered in the negative.” 
   
   7. Mignault, J., while concurring generally in the reasoning of the 
Chief Justice, stated briefly, in a separate judgment, the grounds on which 
he based his answer to the question submitted, in part, as follows: (at 
pp. 302, 303 of the report).10
   
p. 59, l. 1.   “The real question involved under this reference is whether on 
the proper construction of the British North America Act, 1867, 
women may be summoned to the Senate.... The expression 
‘persons’ does not stand alone in section 24, nor is that section 
the only one to be considered. It is ‘qualified persons’ whom the 
Governor General shall from time to time summon to the Senate 
(sec. 24), and when a vacancy happens in the Senate, it is a ‘fit and 
qualified person’ whom the Governor-General shall summon to fill 
the vacancy (sec. 32). On the proper construction of these words 
depends the answer we have to give....20
   
p. 59, l. 20.   “The contentions which the petitioners advanced at the hearing 
are not new. They have been conclusively rejected several times, 
and by decisions by which we are bound. Much was said of the 
interpretation clause contained in Lord Brougham’s Act, but the 
answer was given sixty years ago in Chorlton v. Lings (1868) L.R. 4, 
C.P. 374. It appears hopeless to contend against the authority of 
these decisions. 
   
   “The word ‘persons’ is obviously a word of uncertain import. 
Sometimes it includes corporations as well as natural persons; sometimes 
it is restricted to the latter and sometimes again it comprises30
merely certain natural persons determined by sex or otherwise. 
The grave constitutional change which is involved in the contention 
submitted on behalf of the petitioners is not to be brought about by 
inferences drawn from expressions of such doubtful import, but 
should rest upon an unequivocal statement of the intention of the 
Imperial Parliament, since that Parliament alone can change the 
provisions of the British North America Act in relation to the 
‘qualified persons’ who may be summoned to the Senate.” 
   
p. 52, l. 33.   8. Duff, J., after referring to the argument which had been advanced in 
favour of the limited construction of sec. 24 of the British North America40
Act, 1867, and the decisions cited in support of it, proceeded to state that 
he was unable to accept that argument, in so far as it rested upon the view 
that in construing the legislative and executive powers granted by the 
British North America Act, they must proceed upon a general presumption 
against the eligibility of women for public office. He had come to the conclusion 
that there was a special ground upon which the restricted construction 

8
   
Record.of sec. 24 must be maintained, but before stating that he thought it right 
to explain why, in his view, the general presumption contended for had not 
been established. First, one must consider the provisions of the Act themselves, 
apart from “extraneous circumstances.” It would, he thought, 
hardly be disputed that as a general rule the legislative authority of Parliament 
and of the legislatures enabled them, each in their several fields, to 
deal fully with the subject of the incapacity of women. One could not 
hold otherwise without refusing to give effect to the language of secs. 91 and 
92, and, indeed, one felt constrained to say, without ignoring the fact that 
the authors of the Act were engaged in creating a system of representative10
government for the people of half a continent. Counsel did, in the course 
of argument, suggest the possibility that Parliament, in extending the 
parliamentary franchise to women, had exceeded its powers, but he did 
not think that was seriously pressed. There could be no doubt that the 
Act did, in two sections, recognise the authority of Parliament and of the 
Legislatures to deal with the disqualification of women to be elected, or 
sit, or vote, as members of the representative body or to vote in an election 
of such members. These sections were secs. 41 and 84, and the learned 
judge developed an argument in support of that construction of those 
p. 54, l. 23.sections. The subject of the qualification and disqualification of women as20
members of the House of Commons being thus recognized as within the 
jurisdiction of Parliament, was it quite clear that the construction of the 
general words of sec. 11 dealing with the constitution of the Privy Council 
was governed by the general presumption suggested? Inferentially, in 
laying down the “principle” of the British Constitution as the foundation 
of the new policy, the preamble recognized the responsibility of the 
Executive to Parliament, or rather to the elective branch of the legislature 
and the right of Parliament to insist that the advisers of the Crown should 
be persons possessing its “confidence” as the phrase was. 
   
p. 55, l. 1.   It might be suggested, he could not help thinking, with some plausibility,30
that there would be something incongruous in a parliamentary 
system professedly conceived and fashioned on this principle, if persons 
fully qualified to be members of the House of Commons were by an iron 
rule of the constitution, a rule beyond the reach of Parliament, excluded 
from the Cabinet or the Government; if a class of persons who might 
reach any position of political influence, power or leadership in the House 
of Commons, were permanently, by an organic rule, excluded from the 
Government. In view of the intimate relation between the House of 
Commons and the Cabinet, and the rights of initiation and control which 
the Government possesses in relation to legislation and parliamentary40
business generally, and which, it cannot be doubted, the authors of the 
Act intended and expected would continue, that would not, he thought, be 
a wholly baseless suggestion. 
   
   The word “persons” was employed in a number of sections of the 
Act (secs. 41, 83, 84 and 133) as designating members of the House of 
Commons, and though the word appeared without an adjective, indubitably 
it was used in the unrestricted sense as embracing persons of both 

9
   
Record.sexes; while in secs. 41 and 84, where males only were intended, that intention 
was expressed in appropriate specific words. 
   
   Such general inferences therefore as may arise from the language of the 
Act as a whole could not be said to support a presumption in favour of the 
restricted interpretation. 
   
   Nor was he convinced that the reasoning based upon the “extraneous 
circumstances” they were asked to consider—the disabilities of women 
under the common law, and the law and practice of Parliament in respect 
of appointment to public place or office—established a rule of interpretation 
for the British North America Act, by which the construction of powers,10
legislative and executive, bestowed in general terms was controlled by a 
presumptive exclusion of women from participation in the working of the 
p. 56, l. 6.institutions set up by the Act. This mode of approach, though recognized 
by the courts as legitimate, must obviously be employed with caution. 
   
   The “extraneous facts,” upon which the underlying assumption was 
founded, must be demonstrative. It would not do to act upon the general 
resemblances between the questions presented here, and that presented in 
the cases cited. Those cases were concerned with the effect of statutes 
which might at any time be repealed or amended by a majority. They 
had nothing to do with the jurisdiction of Parliament or with that of His20
Majesty in Council executing the highest and constitutional functions 
under his responsibility to Parliament; and were not intended to lay down 
binding rules, for an indefinite future, in the working of a Constitution. 
And, above all, they were not concerned with broad provisions establishing 
new parliamentary institutions, and defining the spheres and powers of 
legislatures and executives, in a system of representative government. 
Passages in the judgments of seemingly general import, must be read 
secundum subjectam materiam. 
   
p. 56, l. 23.   In 1867, the learned judge proceeded to remark by way of illustration, 
it would have been a revolutionary step to appoint a woman to the Privy30
Council or to an Executive Council in Canada—nobody would have thought 
of it. But it would also have been a radical departure to make women 
eligible for election to the House of Commons, or to confer the electoral 
franchise upon them; to make them eligible as members of a provincial 
legislature, or for appointment to a provincial legislative council. And 
yet it is quite plain that, with respect to all these last-mentioned matters, 
the fullest authority was given and given in general terms to Parliament 
and the legislatures within their several spheres; the “policy of centuries” 
being left in the keeping of the representative bodies, which with the consent 
of the people of Canada, were to exercise legislative authority over them.40
   
   In view of this, he did not think the “extraneous facts” relied upon 
were really of decisive importance, especially when the phraseology of the 
particular sections already mentioned was considered; and their value 
became inconsiderable when compared with reasons deriving their force 
from the presumption that the Constitution in its executive branch was 
intended to be capable of adaptation to whatever changes (permissible 

10
   
Record.under the Act) in the law and practice relating to the election branch might 
be progressively required by change in public opinion. 
   
p. 57, l. 5.   For these reasons, the learned judge was not convinced of the existence 
Sic.of any such general resumption such as that contended for. 
   
   On the other hand, there were considerations which he thought specially 
and very profoundly affected the question of the construction of sec. 24, 
and the learned judge, in the following passages of his judgment (at pp. 300 
and 301 of the Report), then proceeded to give his reasons for answering 
the question referred in the negative: 
   
p. 57, l. 8.   “It should be observed, in the first place, that in the economy10
of the British North America Act, the Senate bears no such intimate 
relation to the House of Commons, or to the Executive, as each of 
these bears to the other. There is no consideration, as touching the 
policy of the Act in relation to the Senate, having the force of 
that already discussed, arising from the control vested in Parliament 
in respect of the Constitution of the House of Commons, and affecting 
the question of the Constitution of the Privy Council. On 
the other hand, there is much to point to an intention that the 
constitution of the Senate should follow the lines of the Constitution 
of the old Legislative Councils under the Acts of 1791 and20
1840. 
   
   “In 1854, in response to an agitation in the province of Canada, 
the Imperial Parliament passed an Act amending the Act of Union 
(17 and 18 Vic., Cap. 118 already mentioned) which fundamentally 
altered the status of the Legislative Council. Before the enactment 
of this Act, the Constitution of the Legislative Council had been 
fixed (by secs. 4 to 10 of the Act of Union) beyond the power of the 
legislature of Canada to modify it. By the Statute of 1854, that 
constitution was placed within the category of matters with which 
the Canadian Legislature had plenary authority to deal. Now,30
when the British North America Act was framed, this feature of 
the parliamentary constitution of the province of Canada, the 
power of the legislature of the province to determine the constitution 
of the second Chamber, was entirely abandoned. The authors of 
the Confederation scheme, in the Quebec Resolutions, reverted in 
this matter (the Constitution of the Legislative Council, as it was 
therein called) to the plan of the Acts of 1791 (save in one respect 
not presently relevant) and of 1840. And the clauses in these 
resolutions on the subject of the Council, follow generally in structure 
and phraseology the enactments of the earlier statutes.40
   
   “It seems to me to be a legitimate inference, that the British 
North America Act contemplated a second Chamber, the constitution 
of which should, in all respects, be fixed and determined by 
the Act itself, a constitution which was to be in principle the same 
though, necessarily in detail, not identical, with that of the second 
Chambers established by the earlier statutes. That under those 

11
   
Record.statutes, women were not eligible for appointment is hardly 
susceptible of controversy. 
   
   “In this connection, the language of sections 23 and 31 of the 
British North America Act deserves some attention. I attach 
no importance (in view of the phraseology of secs. 83 and 128) to 
the use of the masculine personal pronoun in section 23, and, indeed, 
very little importance to the provision in section 23 with regard to 
nationality. But it is worthy of notice that subsection 3 of section 23 
points to the exclusion of married women, and subsection 2 of 
section 31 would probably have been expressed in a different way10
if the presence of married women in the Senate had been contemplated; 
and the provisions dealing with the Senate are not easily 
susceptible of a construction proceeding upon a distinction between 
married and unmarried women in respect of eligibility for appointment 
to the Senate. These features of the provisions specially 
relating to the constitution of the Senate, in my opinion, lend 
support to the view that in this, as in other respects, the authors of 
the Act directed their attention to the Legislative Councils of the 
Acts of 1791 and 1840 for the model on which the Senate was to 
be formed.”20
   
   9. It is submitted on behalf of the Attorney-General of Canada that 
the judgment of the Supreme Court of Canada is right and ought to be 
affirmed and that the appeal therefrom ought to be dismissed for the reasons 
stated in the Reasons for Judgment delivered by the Judges of the Supreme 
Court of Canada, and for the following, amongst other 
   
REASONS.
   
1. Because the relevant provisions of the British North America Act, 
1867, ought to be construed to-day according to the intent 
of the Parliament which passed the Act, i.e., by reference 
to the natural and ordinary meaning of the words used at30
the date when the statute was passed and so as to import all 
these implied exceptions which arise from a close consideration, 
not only of the object, the subject-matter, and all parts of the 
Act itself, but also of the then existing state of the law, in 
the light of which the Act must be read and interpreted. 
   
2. Because the terms in which the provisions of the British North 
America Act, 1867, relating to the constitution of the Senate 
are expressed—the constituent title “Senator,” a strictly 
masculine term and the masculine pronouns “he,” 
“him,” and “his” invariably employed throughout in40
reference to members of the Senate, the qualifications required 
of a Senator and the specified causes of his disqualification—in 
themselves all point to the soundness of the inference 
that men only were intended to be “qualified persons” 

12
   
eligible for appointment to the Senate within the meaning 
of sec. 24 of the said Act. 
   
3. Because the declared object of the British North America Act, 
1867, was to unite the several Provinces therein mentioned 
into one Dominion under the British Crown “with a Constitution 
similar in principle to that of the United Kingdom,” 
and there is no room for inference in the light of the then 
existing state of the common law of England and of the law 
and usages of the British Constitution, that the framers of 
that Act intended, without using language apt to express10
such an intention, to render women eligible to be summoned 
to the Upper Chamber of the Canadian Parliament, although 
excluded from the British. 
   
4. Because by the principles of the common law and settled and 
uniform constitutional practice and principle as well in the 
several provinces united by the British North America Act, 
1867, into the Dominion of Canada, as in England, women 
were under a legal incapacity to sit in Parliament, and if 
the framers of that Act had intended to remove that disability, 
as regards eligibility for appointment to the20
Senate of Canada, and effect a constitutional change so fundamental 
and momentous, they would have declared that 
intention in apt and explicit language and not by the 
furtive process of general words or of an indirect implication 
based upon an interpretation clause in a general Act like 
Lord Brougham’s Act, 13 Vict. (1850), c. 21, s. 4. 
   
5. Because the terms of the treaty of union between the several 
Provinces, embodied in the Quebec Resolutions, 1864, and 
given effect by the British North America Act, 1867, considered 
in the light of the form and character of the legislatures30
which had formerly been established in the Canadian 
Provinces, afford strong grounds for the inference that it 
was the intention of the framers of the British North America 
Act, 1867, to make the constitution of the Upper House of the 
Canadian Parliament (designated in those resolutions the 
Legislative Council) in principle the same as, though necessarily 
in detail not identical with, that of the Upper House, 
known as the Legislative Council, under the constitutions 
established by the Constitutional Act, 1791 (31 Geo. III. c. 31), 
for the Provinces of Upper and Lower Canada respectively,40
and later by the Act of Union, 1840 (3 & 4 Vict., c. 35), for 
the Province of Canada; and under those statutes it is past 
question that women were not eligible for appointment to 
the Upper House. 
   
6. Because if the meaning of the term “qualified persons” in 
section 24 of the British North America Act, 1867, be other- 

13
   
wise ambiguous or obscure, the fact that from 1867 to the 
present time qualified men only have been considered eligible 
for appointment to a place in the Senate of Canada—and 
that this interpretation of the enactment has until quite 
recently remained unchallenged—must be allowed full efficacy 
as unbroken and continuous usage showing that the contemporaneous 
interpretation of the enactment by persons 
of authority has been uniformly consistent with what is 
now claimed on behalf of the Attorney-General of Canada 
to be its true legal interpretation.10
   
7. Because the expression “qualified persons,” in said sec. 24 of 
the British North America Act, 1867, in its context and on 
its true construction, necessarily and properly implies qualified 
male persons only, and that being the intention expressed, 
the general interpretation clause that words importing the 
masculine gender shall include females “unless the contrary 
is expressly provided” (Lord Brougham’s Act, 13 Vict. (1850), 
c. 21, s. 4) or “unless the contrary intention appears” (The 
Interpretation Act, 1889, 52-53 Vict., c. 63, s. 1, ss. 1 (a)), 
does not apply and cannot be invoked to extend by implication20
the expression “qualified persons” to female persons. 

LUCIEN CANNON.

E. LAFLEUR.

C. P. PLAXTON.


In the Privy Council.
‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒ 
No. 121 of 1928. 
    
ON APPEAL FROM THE SUPREME COURT OF CANADA. 
    
‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒ 
    
IN THE MATTER of a Reference as to the meaning of the word 
“Persons” in Section 24 of The British North America Act, 
1867. 
    
‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒ 
Between  
    
HENRIETTA MUIR EDWARDS, NELLIE L. McCLUNG,  
LOUISE C. McKINNEY, EMILY F. MURPHY and  
IRENE PARLBYAppellants 
    
and  
    
THE ATTORNEY-GENERAL FOR THE DOMINION  
OF CANADA, THE ATTORNEY-GENERAL  
FOR THE PROVINCE OF QUEBEC and THE  
ATTORNEY-GENERAL FOR THE PROVINCE  
OF ALBERTARespondents. 
   
=============================
CASE OF THE ATTORNEY-GENERAL OF CANADA.
=============================

CHARLES RUSSELL & Co.,

               37, Norfolk Street,

                              Strand, W.C.2.

Solicitors for the Attorney-General of Canada.

‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒‒

EYRE AND SPOTTISWOODE, LTD., EAST HARDING STREET, E.C. 4.


Transcriber’s Notes

This is a legal document and has been treated as such. Every attempt has been made to recreate the structure of the original document. The individual lines of the text and the corresponding line numbers on the right have been retained. In some circumstances individual lines may not fit on the screen and may be wrapped to a new line. Most sidenotes are page references in the Record of Proceedings or the Joint Appendix. These references are given on the left in positions as close to the original as possible. All of the documents in this set were derived from images provided at http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKPC/1929/1929_86.html

All original spelling and punctuation has been retained, with the exception of the following changes:

EMILY P. MURPHY → EMILY F. MURPHY p. 1, l. 10

Colerdige → Coleridge p. 2, l. 41

consitutional → constitutional p. 4, l. 45; p. 5, l. 37

Paliament → Parliament p. 5, l. 8

may → my p. 6, l. 37

no → not p. 7, l. 14

[The end of Case of the Attorney-General of Canada re Privy Council Appeal No. 121 of 1928 [Item 3 of 7], by The Lords of the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council]