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Title: Privy Council Appeal No. 121 of 1928 [Item 4 of 7]; Case of the Attorney-General of the Province of Quebec

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

Faded Page eBook #20250739

 

This eBook was produced by: Iona Vaughan, Howard Ross & the online Distributed Proofreaders Canada team at https://www.pgdpcanada.net

 


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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 PARLBYAppellants10
    
and  
    
THE ATTORNEY-GENERAL FOR THE DOMINION  
DOMINION OF CANADA, THE ATTORNEY-  
GENERAL FOR THE PROVINCE OF QUEBEC  
and THE ATTORNEY-GENERAL FOR THE  
PROVINCE OF ALBERTARespondents. 
    
============================= 
CASE OF THE RESPONDENT 
THE ATTORNEY-GENERAL OF THE PROVINCE OF QUEBEC. 
============================= 
Record.   
p. 60   1. This is an appeal by special leave granted on the 20th day of 
November 1928, from a judgment or opinion of the Supreme Court of20
Canada, dated the 24th day of April 1928, answering a question referred 
to the Court for hearing and consideration by the Governor-General of 
Canada in Council under the provisions of the Supreme Court Act. 
   
   2. Section 24 of the British North America Act 1867, is as follows:— 
   
   “24. The Governor General shall from Time to Time, in the 
Queen’s Name, by Instrument under the Great Seal of Canada, 
summon qualified Persons to the Senate; and, subject to the 
Provisions of this Act, every Person so summoned shall become and 
be a Member of the Senate and a Senator.” 

2
Record.   
   3. The question referred with the answer made by the Court is as 
follows:— 
   
p. 38.   Question: Does the word “Persons” in Section 24 of The 
British North America Act 1867 include female persons? 
   
p. 39.   Answer: The question being understood to be “Are women 
eligible for appointment to the Senate of Canada,” the question is 
answered in the negative. 
   
   4. Other sections of The British North America Act 1867, which 
appear to be material to the question are set out in the Joint Appendix 
hereto at page 18.10
   
   5. The question came before the Supreme Court for hearing on the 
14th day of March 1928, the Court being composed of The Right Honourable 
p. 38.F.A. Anglin, Chief Justice, The Right Honourable Mr. Justice Duff and 
Justices Mignault, Lamont and Smith, and the reference having stood over 
for consideration judgment was pronounced on the 24th day of April 1928. 
   
   6. The judgment of the Court was unanimous, though for somewhat 
p. 39.different reasons as indicated in those delivered by the Chief Justice with 
p. 50.which Lamont and Smith, JJ., concurred and the separate reasons delivered 
p. 59.by Mr. Justice Duff and Mr. Justice Mignault. 
   
   7. Section 33 is:—20
   
   “33. If any Question arises respecting the Qualification of a 
Senator or a Vacancy in the Senate the same shall be heard and 
determined by the Senate.” 
   
p. 41, l. 38.   The Chief Justice in his reasons points out— 
   
   That Section 33 only empowers the Senate to hear and determine 
any question respecting the qualification of a Senator after the person 
whose qualification is challenged has been appointed to the Senate. 
   
p. 42, l. 5.   That while the question submitted deals with the word 
“Persons,” Section 24 of The British North America Act speaks 
only of “qualified persons.”30
   
p. 42, l. 23.   That the provisions of The British North America Act bear 
to-day the same construction which the Courts would, if required 
to pass upon them, have given to them when they were first enacted. 

3
Record.   
   The Chief Justice refers to a number of cases decided by the Courts 
in England and notably those of— 
   
Chorlton v. Lings [1868] L.R. 4 C.P. 374, and 
   
Nairn v. University of St. Andrews [1909] A.C., 147. 
   
p. 50, l. 7.   And he concludes: “In our opinion Chorlton v. Lings is conclusive 
against the petitioners alike on the question of the common law incapacity 
of women to exercise such public functions as those 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 . . .”10
   
   Section 23— 
   
   “23. The Qualifications of a Senator shall be as follows: 
   
   “(1.) He shall be of the full age of Thirty Years; 
   
   “(2.) He shall be either a Natural-born Subject of the Queen, 
of a Subject of the Queen naturalized by an Act of the Parliament 
of Great Britain, or of the Parliament of the United Kingdom of 
Great Britain and Ireland, or of the Legislature of One of the 
Provinces of Upper Canada, Lower Canada, Canada, Nova Scotia, 
or New Brunswick, before the Union, or of the Parliament of 
Canada after the Union;20
   
   “(3.) He shall be legally or equitably seised as of Freehold 
for his own Use and Benefit of Lands or Tenements held in free 
and common Socage, or seised or possessed for his own Use and 
Benefit of Lands or Tenements held in Franc-alleu or in Roture, 
within the Province for which he is appointed, of the Value of 
Four Thousand Dollars, over and above all Rents, Dues, Debts, 
Charges, Mortgages, and Incumbrances due or payable out of or 
charged on or affecting the same; 
   
   “(4.) His Real and Personal Property shall be together 
worth Four Thousand Dollars over and above his Debts and30
Liabilities; 
   
   “(5.) He shall be resident in the Province for which he is 
appointed; 
   
   “(6.) In the case of Quebec he shall have his Real Property 
Qualification in the Electoral Division for which he is appointed, 
or shall be resident in that Division.” 

4
Record.   
p. 50, l. 21.   8. Mr. Justice Duff in his reasons for judgment maintains that the 
word “ ‘Persons’ in the ordinary sense of the word includes, of course, 
“natural persons of both sexes” and that the question is whether “we 
“are constrained in construing section 24 to read the word ‘persons’ in a 
restricted sense and to construe the section as authorising the summoning 
“of male persons only.” 
   
p. 52, l. 33.   That he was unable to accept the argument in support of the 
limited construction in so far as it rests upon the view that in construing 
the legislative and executive powers granted by The British North America 
Act, we must proceed upon a general presumption against the eligibility10
of women for public office. 
   
p. 53, l. 7.   He had no doubt that The British North America Act did, in 
Sections 41 and 84, recognise the authority of Parliament 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. 
   
p. 53, l. 42.   But that the legislative authority of Parliament on the subject 
of qualification of members and voters was given under the general language 
of Section 91. 
   
   Sections 41 and 84 are:— 
   
   “41. Until the Parliament of Canada otherwise provides, all20
Laws in force in the several Provinces at the Union relative to the 
following Matters or any of them, namely,—the Qualifications and 
Disqualifications of Persons to be elected or to sit or vote as Members 
of the House of Assembly or Legislative Assembly in the several 
Provinces, the Voters at Elections of such Members, the Oaths to 
be taken by Voters, the Returning Officers, their Powers and Duties, 
the Proceedings at Elections, the Periods during which Elections 
may be continued, the Trial of controverted Elections, and Proceedings 
incident thereto, the vacating of Seats of Members, and 
the Execution of new writs in case of Seats vacated otherwise than30
by Dissolution,—shall respectively apply to Elections of Members 
to serve in the House of Commons for the same several Provinces. 
   
   “Provided that, until the Parliament of Canada otherwise 
provides, at any Election for a Member of the House of Commons 
for the District of Algoma, in addition to Persons qualified by the 
Law of the Province of Canada to vote, every male British Subject, 
aged Twenty-one Years or upwards, being a Householder, shall 
have a Vote.” 
   
   “84. Until the Legislatures of Ontario and Quebec respectively 
otherwise provide, all Laws which at the Union are in force40
in those Provinces respectively, relative to the following Matters, 

5
Record.   
or any of them, namely,—the Qualifications and Disqualifications 
of Persons to be elected or to sit or vote as Members of the Assembly 
of Canada, the Qualifications or Disqualifications of Voters, the 
Oaths to be taken by Voters, the Returning Officers, their Powers 
and Duties, the Proceedings at Elections, the Periods during which 
such Elections may be continued, and the Trial of controverted 
Elections and the Proceedings incident thereto, the vacating of the 
Seats of Members and the issuing and Execution of new Writs in 
case of Seats vacated otherwise than by Dissolution,—shall respectively 
apply to Elections of Members to serve in the respective10
Legislative Assemblies of Ontario and Quebec. 
   
   “Provided that until the Legislature of Ontario otherwise 
provides, at any Election for a Member of the Legislative Assembly 
of Ontario for the District of Algoma, in addition to Persons 
qualified by the Law of the Province of Canada to vote, every 
male British Subject, aged Twenty-one Years or upwards, being a 
Householder, shall have a vote.” 
   
   The general powers of the Parliament under Section 91 are:— 
   
   “91. It shall be lawful for the Queen, by and with the Advice 
and Consent of the Senate and House of Commons, to make Laws20
for the Peace, Order, and good Government of Canada, in relation 
to all Matters not coming within the Classes of Subjects by this 
Act assigned exclusively to the Legislatures of the Provinces; 
and for greater Certainty, but not so as to restrict the Generality 
of the foregoing Terms of this Section, it is hereby declared that 
(notwithstanding anything in this Act) the exclusive Legislative 
Authority of the Parliament of Canada extends to all Matters 
coming within the Classes of Subjects next hereinafter enumerated, 
that is to say,— 
*      *      *      *      *      *      ” 
   
p. 55, l. 15.   That the word “persons” is employed in a number of sections of the30
Act (Sections 41, 83, 84 and 133) as designating members of the House of 
Commons, and though the word appears without an adjective, indubitably 
it is used in the unrestricted sense as embracing persons of both sexes. 
   
p. 55, l. 24.   That the reasoning based on the extraneous circumstances—the 
disabilities of women under the common law, and the law and practice of 
Parliament in respect of appointment to public place or office—was incon- 
siderable 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 in the law and practice 
relating to the election branch might be progressively required by changes40
in public opinion. 

6
Record.   
p. 57, l. 12.   The learned judge was however of opinion that there was no such 
consideration in relation to the Senate 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, and that 
there was 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 (Appendix, p. 6), and 1810 (Appendix, p. 10) as 
amended by the Union Act Amendment Act, 17 and 18 Vic. c. 118, 
(Appendix, p. 16) to which he briefly refers. 
   
p. 58, l. 20.   The learned judge was further of opinion that the Senate possesses10
sole and exclusive jurisdiction to pass upon the claims of any person to 
sit and vote as a member thereof, and such jurisdiction is not confined to 
the right to pass upon questions as to qualification under Section 33, but 
extends to the question whether a person summoned is a person capable 
of being summoned under Section 24. 
   
p. 59.   9. Mignault, J., in a concise judgment, gives as his reasons for 
concurring with the answer of the Court:— 
   
l. 5.   That “the expression ‘persons’ does not stand alone in 
section 24, nor is that section the only one to be considered . . . 
l. 11.It would be idle to enquire whether women are included within the20
meaning of an expression which, in the question as framed, is 
divorced from its context.” 
   
l. 21.   That the question was concluded by decisions by which the 
Court was bound, notably that in Chorlton v. Lings [1868] L.R. 
4 C.P. 374. 
   
l. 26.   That “the word ‘persons’ is obviously a word of uncertain 
l. 29.import” and that “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 statement30
of the intention of the Imperial Parliament . . .” 
   
   10. The Province of Quebec has a special interest in the question 
above that of any other of the Provinces since by Section 73 “the qualifications 
of the Legislative Councillors of Quebec shall be the same as those 
of the Senators for Quebec.” 
   
   Section 73 reads:— 
   
   “73. The Qualifications of the Legislative Councillors of 
Quebec shall be the same as those of the Senators for Quebec.” 

7
Record.   
   Though not referred to in the reasons of the Judges of the Supreme 
Court this section may well assist in determining the construction to be put 
on Section 24. Inasmuch as it is only “qualified persons” who can be 
summoned to the Senate it would follow, if women are qualified to be 
summoned to the Senate, they would also be qualified for appointment 
to the Legislative Council of Quebec by the Lieutenant-Governor of the 
Province under Sections 72 and 75. 
   
   Sections 72 and 75 are:— 
   
   “72. The Legislative Council of Quebec shall be composed 
of Twenty-four Members, to be appointed by the Lieutenant10
Governor, in the Queen’s Name, by Instrument under the Great 
Seal of Quebec, one being appointed to represent each of the Twenty-four 
Electoral Divisions of Lower Canada in this Act referred to, 
and each holding Office for the Term of his Life, unless the Legislature 
of Quebec otherwise provides under the Provisions of this Act.” 
   
   “75. When a Vacancy happens in the Legislative Council of 
Quebec by Resignation, Death, or otherwise, the Lieutenant-Governor, 
in the Queen’s Name, by Instrument under the Great 
Seal of Quebec, shall appoint a fit and qualified Person to fill the 
Vacancy.”20
   
   The judgments both of the Chief Justice and of Mr. Justice Duff direct 
particular attention to the fact that the office of Senator was a new office 
first created by The British North America Act, 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 the office must be found in the 
statute which creates it. 
   
   Notwithstanding this, Mr. Justice Duff considers that The British 
North America Act contemplated a second Chamber which was to be in 
principle the same, though not identical, with that of the second Chambers 
established by the earlier statutes providing the Constitution of the old30
Legislative Councils under the Acts of 1791, 31 George III, c. 31 (Appendix, 
p. 6) and 1840, 3 and 4 Vict., c. 35 (Appendix, p. 10). 
   
   If this conclusion is correct it applies with still further force to the case 
of the Province of Quebec for though the second Chamber in the province, 
that is the Legislative Council of Quebec, was created by Section 71 of the 
British North America Act, yet it was not like the Senate an entirely novel 
office, but was in effect, a continuation of the Legislative Councils under 
the Acts of 1791 and 1840. Each of the 24 members to be appointed to the 
Legislative Council was to be appointed for one of the 24 electoral divisions 
of Lower Canada specified in Schedule A to Chapter I of the Consolidated40
Statutes of Canada. 

8
Record.   
   Even if it had been intended to make a new departure as regards the 
Senate, a body created by the Act for the first time, it might well have been 
that a different provision from Section 73 would have been made for the 
Legislative Council of the Province of Quebec. 
   
   11. The Province of Quebec has the further interest which, indeed, 
it shares in common with the other Provinces that the Senate having been 
specially established for the safeguard of the rights of the Provinces, this 
Province is deeply concerned with any changes which might be made in the 
composition of that body. 
   
   12. There are differences in the legal position of men and women other10
than those of the incapacity of women for appointment to public place or 
office. The common law of property is in many respects different as regards 
men and women. 
   
   The Attorney-General of Quebec submits that the answer of the 
Supreme Court is right for the following, amongst other 
   
REASONS.
   
(1) Because the construction to be put on Section 24 of 
the Act must be governed by the intention of the 
Legislature in 1867, the time of the passing of the Act. 
   
(2) Because prior to that date women had ever been under20
a common law incapacity to perform the duties of public 
office or place and particularly were excluded from holding 
a place in Parliament or voting for the election of a 
member thereof. 
   
(3) Because Section 24 does not authorise the Governor-General 
to summon any persons to the Senate but only 
“qualified persons” and women were neither qualified 
by the common law or by the statutory provisions for 
the qualifications requisite for a Senator. 
   
(4) Because there is nothing in the Act which can suggest30
that the use of the word “persons” in providing for the 
Constitution could be held to include the appointment of 
women to either executive or legislative office. 
   
(5) Because the provisions of Section 73, providing that 
the qualifications of the Legislative Councillors of 
Quebec shall be the same as those of Senators for Quebec, 
would not be appropriate for the Legislative Council of 
Quebec if the Lieutenant-Governor could appoint women 
to the Legislative Council of the Province. 

9
   
(6) Because there are other differences in the legal position 
of men and women than the capacity for appointment 
to public place or office. 
   
(7) For the reasons appearing in the judgments of the Chief 
Justice concurred in by Lamont and Smith, JJ., and those 
of Duff and Mignault, JJ. 

CHARLES LANCTOT.

AIME GEOFFRION.


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 PARLBYAppellants10
    
and  
    
THE ATTORNEY-GENERAL FOR THE DOMINION  
DOMINION OF CANADA, THE ATTORNEY-  
GENERAL FOR THE PROVINCE OF QUEBEC  
and THE ATTORNEY-GENERAL FOR THE  
PROVINCE OF ALBERTARespondents. 
    
============================= 
CASE OF THE RESPONDENT 
The Attorney-General of the Province of Quebec. 
============================= 

BLAKE & REDDEN,

        17 Victoria Street, S.W.1.


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 change:

Legislativ → Legislative p. 7, l. 39

[The end of Case of the Respondent the Attorney-General of the Province of Quebec re Privy Council Appeal No. 121 of 1928 [Item 4 of 7] by The Lords of the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council]