Constitution Act, 1867
(Originally, "The British North America Act, 1867")
(U.K. 30 & 31 Victoria, C.3)

(Consolidated with amendments)

An Act for the Union  of Canada, Nova Scotia,  and New Brunswick,  and
the Government thereof, and for Purposes connected therewith.

                                               (29 March, 1867.)

WHEREAS  the Provinces of Canada, Nova  Scotia  and New Brunswick have
expressed their Desire to be  federally united into One Dominion under
the Crown of the  United Kingdom of  Great Britain and Ireland, with a
Constitution similar in Principle to the United Kingdom;

AND WHEREAS such a Union would conduce to the Welfare of the Provinces
and promote the Interests of the British Empire;

AND  WHEREAS  on  the  Establishment  of    the Union by  Authority of
Parliament  it  is expedient, not only that   the  Constitution of the
Legislative Authority in the Dominion be  provided for,  but also that
the Nature of the Executive Government therein be declared;

AND WHEREAS it is expedient  that Provision be  made  for the eventual
Admission into the Union of other Parts of British North America:


                       I. Preliminary

       1. This Act may be cited as the Constitution Act, 1867.

       2. REPEALED.


                       II. Union

       3. It shall be lawful for the Queen, by and with the Advice of
       Her Majesty's  Most  Honourable Privy Council,   to declare by
       Proclamation  that, on and  after a Day therein appointed, not
       being more than Six Months after the passing  of this Act, the
       Provinces of Canada, Nova Scotia and  New Brunswick shall form
       and be One Dominion under the Name of Canada; and on and after
       that Day those Three Provinces shall form  and be One Dominion
       under that Name accordingly.

       [July 1st, 1867 was fixed by proclamation dated May 22, 1867.]

       4.  Unless  it is  otherwise   expressed or implied, the  Name
       Canada shall be taken to mean Canada as constituted under this
       Act.

       5. Canada shall be divided into Four Provinces, named Ontario,
       Quebec, Nova Scotia and New Brunswick.

       6. The parts  of the Province  of Canada (as it exists  at the
       passing of  this Act)  which formerly constituted respectively
       the provinces of Upper and Lower Canada shall  be deemed to be
       severed, and shall form Two separate Provinces. The Part which
       formerly   constituted   the Province  of  Upper  Canada shall
       constitute  the   Province  of Ontario,   and  the  Part which
       formerly  constituted   the Province   of  Lower  Canada shall
       Constitute the Province of Quebec.

       7. The Provinces of Nova  Scotia and New  Brunswick shall have
       the same Limits as at the passing of this Act.

       8. In the general Census of the Population of Canada, which is
       hereby  required to be  taken in  the  Year One thousand eight
       hundred and seventy-one,  and in every  Tenth Year thereafter,
       the   respective Populations  of the  Four Provinces  shall be
       distinguished.


                       III. Executive Power

       9.  The Executive Government and Authority  of and over Canada
       is hereby declared to continue and be vested in the Queen.

       10. The Provisions  of  this Act   referring  to the  Governor
       General extend and apply to the Governor General for  the Time
       being  of   Canada,   or other   Chief    Executive Officer or
       Administrator for the Time being carrying on the Government of
       Canada  on behalf and  in the Name  of the Queen,  by whatever
       Title he is designated.

       11.  There  shall  be a Council   to  aid  and  advise in  the
       Government of  Canada, to be styled  the Queen's Privy Council
       for Canada;  and the Persons  who are  to  be Members of  that
       Council shall be from Time to Time chosen and summoned  by the
       Governor General   and  sworn in   as Privy   Councillors, and
       Members  thereof may   be from  Time to  Time removed  by  the
       Governor General.

       12. All Powers, Authorities and Functions which under  any 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 Upper   Canada,  Lower  Canada,  Canada,  Nova
       Scotia,  or New  Brunswick, are  at the   Union vested  in  or
       exercisable  by  the  respective    Governors  or   Lieutenant
       Governors  of  those Provinces, with the  Advice,  or with the
       Advice  and Consent,  of   the respective  Executive  Councils
       thereof, or  in conjunction with  those Councils,  or with and
       Number of Members thereof, or by those Governors or Lieutenant
       Governors individually, shall, as far as  the same continue in
       existence and  capable being  exercised  after  the Union   in
       relation  to   the Government of   Canada,   be  vested in and
       exercisable by the Governor  General with the  Advice,  or the
       Advice and Consent of or in conjunction with the Queen's Privy
       Council for Canada, or any Member thereof, or  by the Governor
       General individually,    as   the  Case    requires,   subject
       nevertheless (except with  respect to  such as exist under the
       Acts of the Parliament  of Great Britain  or the Parliament of
       the  United  Kingdom   of Great  Britain and  Ireland)   to be
       abolished or altered by the Parliament of Canada.

       [The restriction against  abolishing or altering Laws  enacted
       by the  Parliament of the United Kingdom   was removed by _The
       Statute of Westminster, 1931_, 22 Geo. V., c.4 (U.K).]

       13. The Provisions  of  this  Act referring to  the   Governor
       General  in Council shall  be  construed  as referring to  the
       Governor General acting by and with the  Advice of the Queen's
       Privy Council for Canada.

       14.  It shall be  lawful for the Queen,  if Her Majesty thinks
       fit, to  authorize the Governor General  from Time to  Time to
       appoint and Person or any Persons jointly  or  severally to be
       his Deputy or Deputies within any Part or Parts of Canada, and
       in that  Capacity   to  exercise during  the  Pleasure  of the
       Governor  General   such of the   Powers,    Authorities,  and
       Functions of  the  Governor General   as  the Governor General
       deems it necessary  or expedient to  assign  to  him  or them,
       subject to any Limitations or Directions expressed or given by
       the  Queen; but  the Appointment  of such a Deputy or Deputies
       shall not affect the exercise  by the Governor General himself
       of any Power, Authority or Function.

       15. The Command-in-Chief of the Land and Naval Militia, and of
       all  Naval and Military  Forces, of and  in  Canada, is hereby
       declared to continue and be vested in the Queen.

       16. Until the Queen otherwise directs,  the Seat of Government
       of Canada shall be Ottawa.


                       IV. Legislative Power

       17. There shall be One Parliament for Canada consisting of the
       Queen,  and  Upper House Styled the Senate,  and the House  of
       Commons.

       18. The privileges, immunities,  and powers held, enjoyed, and
       exercised by  the Senate and  House  of   Commons, and  by the
       Members thereof, shall   be such  as are  from  Time  to  Time
       defined by Act of  the Parliament of  Canada, but  so that any
       Act of  the   Parliament of Canada  defining  such privileges,
       immunities,   or powers  shall    not  confer and  privileges,
       immunities,  or powers exceeding  those at  the passing of the
       Act held, enjoyed  and  excercised by  the Commons   House  of
       Parliament of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland,
       and by the members thereof.

       19. The  Parliament of  Canada shall be  called  together  not
       later than Six Months after the Union.

       20. REPEALED.

                       The Senate

       21. The Senate Shall, subject to  the Provisions of  this Act,
       consist of One  Hundred and four Members,  who shall be styled
       Senators.

       22. In relation to the Constitution of the Senate Canada shall
       be deemed to consist of Four Divisions:

               1. Ontario
               2. Quebec
               3.   The  Maritime Provinces,   Nova  Scotia  and  New
               Brunswick, and Prince Edward Island;
               4.   The  Western Provinces   of    Manitoba,  British
               Columbia, Saskatchewan, and Alberta;

       which Four Divisions shall  (subject to the Provisions of this
       Act) be equally represented in  the Senate as follows: Ontario
       by 24 senators; Quebec by 24  senators; the Maritime Provinces
       and Prince Edward Island by twenty four  senators, ten thereof
       representing   Nova   Scotia,    ten thereof representing  New
       Brunswick, and four thereof representing Prince Edward Island;
       the Western  Provinces by  twenty four senators,  six  thereof
       represting  Manitoba,    six   thereof representing    British
       Columbia,   six thereof  representing   Saskatchewan,  and six
       thereof   representing     Alberta; Newfoundland shall  be  be
       entitled to  be represented in  the Senate by six members, the
       Yukon territory and   the  Northwest   Territories   shall  be
       entitled to be represented in the Senate by one member each.

       In the  Case  of Quebec,    each of the Twenty-four   Senators
       representing  that Province shall  be appointed for One of the
       Twenty-four Electoral  Divisions of Lower  Canada specified in
       Schedule A. to Chapter  One  of  the  Consolidated  statues of
       Canada.

       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 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,
               Nova Scotia, or New Brunswick, before the Union, or of
               the Parliament of Canada, after the Union;

               (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
               and 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.

       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.

       25. REPEALED.

       26.   If at  any Time  on  the Recommendation  of the Governor
       General the  Queen thinks fit  to  direct  that  Four or Eight
       Members be added to  the  Senate, the Governor General may  by
       Summons to Four or Eight qualified  Persons  (as the  case may
       be), representing equally the Four Divisions of Canada, add to
       the Senate accordingly.

       27. In case of such Addition be at any Time made, the Governor
       General shall not summon any Person to the Senate, except upon
       a    further  like   Direction by   the   Queen on  the   like
       Recommendation, to  represent, to  represent one  of the  Four
       Divisions until  such Division  is represented  by Twenty-Four
       Senators and no more.

       28.  The Number of Senators shall  not at any Time exceed  One
       Hundred and twelve.

       29. (1) Subject to subsection (2), a Senator shall, subject to
       the provisions of this Act, hold his  place in the  Senate for
       life.
           (2)  A  Senator who is  summoned  to the Senate  after the
       coming into  force of this subsection shall,  subject  to this
       Act, hold his place in the Senate until he attains  the age of
       seventy-five years.

       30. A Senator may by Writing under  his Hand  addressed to the
       Governor General resign his Place in the Senate, and thereupon
       the same shall be vacant.

       31. The Place of a Senator shall  become vacant in  any of the
       following Cases:

               1. If for Two consecutive  Sessions of  the Parliament
               he fails to give his Attendance in the Senate;

               2.  If he  takes   an Oath  or  makes a Declaration or
               Acknowledgement of Allegiance, Obedience, or Adherence
               to a Foreign Power, or does  an Act whereby he becomes
               a Subject or Citizen, or  entitled  to  the Rights and
               Privileges  of  a  Subject or Citizen, of   a  Foreign
               Power;

               3. If he is adjudged Bankrupt or Insolvent, or applies
               for the Benefit  of  any  Law relating to    Insolvent
               Debtors, or becomes a public Defaulter;

               4. If he  is  attainted  of Treason or convicted  of a
               Felony or of any infamous Crime;

               5. If he ceases to be qualified in respect of Property
               or of Residence; provided, that a Senator shall not be
               deemed to have ceased  to  be qualified in  respect of
               Residence by reason only  of his residing  at the Seat
               of  the Government of Canada while   holding an Office
               under that Government requiring his Presence there.

       32.  When a Vacancy  happens   in  the Senate by  Resignation,
       Death, or otherwise, the Governor General shall  by Summons to
       a fit and qualified Person fill the Vacancy.

       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.

       34. The Governor General may from Time to  Time, by Instrument
       under the Great  Seal  of  Canada, appoint   a Senator to   be
       Speaker of the Senate, and may remove  him and appoint another
       in his Stead.

       35.  Until the  Parliament of  Canada otherwise  provides, the
       Presence of at least Fifteen  Senators, including the Speaker,
       shall be necessary to  constitute a Meeting  of the Senate for
       the Exercise of its Powers.

       36. Questions arising  in the Senate  shall be  decided   by a
       Majority of Voices, and the Speaker shall in  all Cases have a
       Vote, and when  the Voices are   equal the  Decision shall  be
       deemed to be in the Negative.


                       The House of Commons

       37. The House of Commons  shall,  subject to the Provisions of
       this  Act, consist of two hundred  and  eighty-two  members of
       whom ninety- five shall  be elected  for Ontario, seventy-five
       for  Quebec, eleven  for Nova Scotia,  ten  for New Brunswick,
       fourteen for Manitoba, twenty-eight for British Columbia, four
       for Prince Edward Island, twenty-one for Alberta, fourteen for
       Saskatchewan,    seven  for Newfoundland,  one   for the Yukon
       Territory and two for the Northwest Territories.

       38.  The Governor  General shall  from Time   to  Time, in the
       Queen's Name, by  Instrument under the Great Seal  of  Canada,
       summon and call together the House of Commons.

       39. A  Senator shall  not be capable   of  being elected or of
       sitting or voting as a Member of the House of Commons.

       40. SPENT.

       [Defined    Federal  electoral   districts  for  the  original
       provinces.  Now  covered by the   _Representation  Act, 1952_,
       c.334, as amended.]

       41. SPENT.

       [Defined  Federal   electoral    regulations  for the  orginal
       provinces.  Now covered by the  _Canada  Elections Act, 1960_,
       c.38, as amended.]

       42. REPEALED.

       43. REPEALED.

       44. The  House  of Commons on  its  first  assembling after  a
       General Election shall  proceed with all practicable  Speed to
       elect One of its Members to be Speaker.

       45. In case of a Vacancy happening in the office of Speaker by
       Death, Resignation, or otherwise, the  House of Commons  shall
       with all  practicable Speed  proceed to  elect another of  its
       Members to be Speaker.

       46. The Speaker shall preside at all Meetings of the  House of
       Commons.

       47. SPENT.

       [Provisions for exercising the powers  of the  Speaker  of the
       House of Commons  in his absence. Now covered  by _The Speaker
       of the House of Commons Act, 1952_, c. 254, as amended.]

       48. The Presence of  at least  Twenty Members  of the House of
       Commons shall be  necessary to constitute   a  Meeting  of the
       House for the Exercise of its Powers, and for that Purpose the
       Speaker shall be reckoned as a Member.

       49. Questions arising in the House of Commons shall be decided
       by  a Majority of  Voices other than that  of the Speaker, and
       when  the Voices are equal,   but  not  otherwise, the Speaker
       shall have a Vote.

       50. Every House of Commons shall continue  for Five Years from
       the  Day of  the Return of  the  Writs for choosing  the House
       (subject to be sooner dissolved by the  Governor General), and
       no longer.

       51. Omitted.

       51A.  Notwithstanding anything in  this Act  a province  shall
       always be entitled to  a  number of  members  in the House  of
       Commons not less than the number of Senators representing such
       province.

       52. The Number of Members of the House of  Commons may be from
       Time to Time increased  by the Parliament  of Canada, provided
       that   the    proportionate  Representation of the   Provinces
       prescribed by this Act is not thereby disturbed.


                       Money Votes; Royal Assent

       53. Bills for appropriating any Part of the Public Revenue, or
       for imposing  any Tax or Impost,  shall originate in the House
       of Commons.

       54. It shall not be lawful for the  House of Commons  to adopt
       or  pass   any  Vote, Resolution,   Address,  or Bill  for the
       appropriation of any Part of the Public Revenue, or of any Tax
       or Impost, to any Purpose that has not been  first recommended
       to   that House  by Message   of the Governor   General in the
       Session in which  such Vote,  Resolution, Address,  or Bill is
       proposed.

       55. Where   a   Bill passed  by Houses  of the  Parliament  is
       presented  to the Governor General for  the Queen's assent, he
       shall declare, according to his Discretion, but subject to the
       Provisions of  this  Act and to  Her   Majesty's Instructions,
       either that he assents thereto in the Queen's name, or that he
       withholds the Queen's Assent, or that he reserves the Bill for
       the signification of the Queen's Pleasure.

       56. Where  the Governor  General   assents  to  a Bill  in the
       Queen's Name, he  shall  by  the first convenient  Opportunity
       send an  authentic  Copy of the  Act to one of   Her Majesty's
       Principal  Secretaries of State, and if   the Queen in Council
       within Two  Years  after Receipt thereof by  the  Secretary of
       State thinks fit to disallow the  Act, such Disallowance (with
       a Certificate of  the Secretary of  State on the Day on  which
       the Act was  received by him) being  signified by the Governor
       General, by  Speech or Message to  each of   the Houses of the
       Parliament  or by Proclamation,  shall annul the Act from  and
       after the Day of such Signification.

       57. A   Bill reserved for  the  Signification of   the Queen's
       Pleasure shall not have any Force unless and until, within Two
       Years from the Day on  which it was presented to  the Governor
       General for  the     Queen's Assent,     the  Governor General
       signifies, by Speech or Message to  each of the  Houses of the
       Parliament or by Proclamation, that it has received the Assent
       of the Queen in Council.

           An Entry of  every such Speech,  Message, or  Proclamation
       shall be  made in the  Journal of each  House, and a Duplicate
       thereof duly attested shall be delivered to the proper Officer
       to be kept among the Records of Canada.

                       V. Provincial Constitutions

       58. For each Province there  shall  be an Officer, styled  the
       Lieutenant  Governor, appointed by  the   Governor General  in
       Council by Instrument under the Great Seal of Canada.

       59. A   Lieutenant Governor  shall   hold  Office   during the
       Pleasure of the Governor General; but  any Lieutenant Governor
       appointed  after the Commencement  of the First Session of the
       Parliament of Canada shall not be removable withing Five Years
       from his Appointment,  except for Cause assigned,  which shall
       be  communicated to be  in Writing within One  Month after the
       Order  for his removal  is made, and  shall be communicated by
       Message to the Senate and  to the House  of Commons within One
       Week thereafter if the Parliament is then  sitting, and if not
       then within  One  Week after   the  Commencement of  the  next
       Session of the Parliament.

       60.  The Salaries of  the Lieutenant Governors  shall be fixed
       and provided by the Parliament of Canada.

       61.  Every  Lieutenant Governor  shall,    before assuming the
       Duties of his Office,  make and subscribe before  the Governor
       General  of some Person authorized by  him Oaths of Allegiance
       and Office similar to those taken by the Governor General.

       62.  The Provisions of this Act  referring   to the Lieutenant
       Governor extend and apply  to the  Lieutenant Governor for the
       Time  being of  each Province,  or   other the Chief Executive
       Officer or Administrator for the   Time being carrying on  the
       Government    of the Province,   by    whatever   Title he  is
       designated.

       63. The Executive Council of  Ontario and  of Quebec shall  be
       composed of such Persons as the  Lieutenant Governor from Time
       to Time thinks fit, and in the first instance of the following
       Officers, namely, -- the Attorney  General, the Secretary  and
       Registrar of the Province, the Treasurer of  the Province, the
       Commissioner  of Crown Lands, the  Commissioner of Agriculture
       and  Public   Works, with   in  Quebec  the  Speaker   of  the
       Legislative Council and the Solicitor General.

       64. The Constitution of the Executive Authority in each of the
       Provinces of Nova  Scotia and  New Brunswick shall, subject to
       the Provisions of this Act, continue as it exists at the Union
       until altered under the Authority of this Act.

       65. All Powers, Authorities, and Functions which under any 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 Upper Canada, Lower Canada, or Canada,  were or
       are before  or at the Union  vested in  or exercisable  by the
       respective   Governors   or     Lieutenant Governors  of those
       Provinces, with  the Advice  and   Consent of  the  respective
       Executive Councils  thereof,  or   in conjunction  with  those
       Councils, or with any  Number of Members  thereof, or by those
       Governors or  Lieutenant Governors individually, shall, as far
       as the same are capable of being exercised  after the Union in
       relation to the Government of Ontario and Quebec respectively,
       be vested in and shall or may  be  exercised by the Lieutenant
       Governors of Ontario and  Quebec respectively, with the Advice
       or  the Advice  and  consent of  or  in  conjunction  with the
       respective Executive  Councils, or  any Members thereof, or by
       the Lieutenant  Governor individually,  as the Case  requires,
       subject nevertheless (except   with respect to  such  as exist
       under  Acts of  the Parliament  of Great  Britain, or   of the
       Parliament  of  the   United Kingdom   of  Great  Britain  and
       Ireland), to  be   abolished  or altered   by  the  respective
       Legislatures of Ontario and Quebec.

       [See note to section 12, above.]

       66.  The  Provisions of this  Act referring to  the Lieutenant
       Governor  in Council shall  be construed  as  referring to the
       Lieutenant Governor  of  the Province acting  by and  with the
       Advice of the Executive Council thereof.

       67.  The Governor General  in Council   may  from Time to Time
       appoint an Administrator  to execute  the office and Functions
       of Lieutenant Governor  during his  Absence, Illness, or other
       Inability.

       68. Unless and until the Executive Government  of any Province
       otherwise directs with respect to that  Province, the Seats of
       Government of the Provinces shall be as follows, namely, -- of
       Ontario, the City  of Toronto; of Quebec,  the City of Quebec;
       of Nova Scotia, the City of Halifax; and of New Brunswick, the
       City of Fredricton.


                       Legislative Power

                       1. Ontario

       69. There shall be a Legislature for Ontario consisting of the
       Lieutenant Governor and of  One House, styled the  Legislative
       Assembly of Ontario.

       70. SPENT.
       [Defined size  and composition of the  Legislative Assembly of
       Ontario.  Now  covered  by  the _Representation  Act,   R.S.O.
       1960_, c.353.]

                       2. Quebec

       71. There shall be a Legislature for Quebec  consisting of the
       Lieutenant Governor and  of Two Houses, styled the Legislative
       Council of Quebec and the Legislative Assembly of Quebec.

       72. SPENT.
       [Defined size, composition and term of the Legislative Council
       of Quebec. Now covered by the _Legislature Act, R.S.Q. 1964_,
       c. 6.]

       73.  The Qualifications   of the  Legislative  Councillors  of
       Quebec shall be the same as those of the Senators of Quebec.

       74. The  Place  of a  Legislative  Councillor  of Quebec shall
       become  vacant in the Cases,  _mutatis mutandis_, in which the
       Place of Senator becomes vacant.

       75. When 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.

       76. If any Question  arises respecting the Qualifications of a
       Legislative  Councillor  of Quebec,    or  a Vacancy  in   the
       Legislative  Council of Quebec,  the same  shall  be heard and
       determined by the Legislative Council.

       77. SPENT.
       [Appointment of Speaker  of the Legislative Council of Quebec.
       Now covered by the _Legislature Act_.]

       78. Until the  Legislature of  Quebec otherwise  provides, the
       Presence of at least  ten Members of the Legislative  Council,
       including  the Speaker,   shall be  necessary  to constitute a
       Meeting for the Exercise of its Powers.

       79. Questions  arising in the   Legislative Council  of Quebec
       shall be decided  by a  Majority  of Voices,  and  the Speaker
       shall in all Cases have a Vote, and  when the Voices are equal
       the Decision shall be deemed to be in the Negative.

       80. SPENT.
       [Defined  size  and composition    of Legistlative Assembly of
       Quebec.  Now covered by the _Legislature Act_.]


                       3. Ontario and Quebec

       81. REPEALED.

       82. The Lieutenant Governor  of Ontario  and Quebec shall from
       Time to  Time, in the  Queen's Name,   by Instrument under the
       Great  Seal of the Province,   summon and  call  together  the
       Legislative Assembly of the Province.

       83. SPENT.
       [Eligibility requirements for    members of  the   Legislative
       Assembly.   Covered by the  _Legislative  Assembly Act, R.S.O.
       1960_ in Ontario, and by the _Legislature Act, R.S.Q. 1964_ in
       Quebec.]

       84. SPENT.
       [Defined Provincial election rules for Ontario and Quebec. Now
       covered by the a number of Acts in  each province, notably the
       _Elections Act, R.S.O. 1960_  in   Ontario and the  _Elections
       Act, R.S.Q.  1964_ in Quebec.]

       85. SPENT.
       [Defined the  maximum duration of  a sessions  of  each of the
       Legislative Assemblies.   Now covered by the _Legislature Act_
       of each of the provinces (see above).]

       86. There shall be a Session of the Legislature of Ontario and
       of that of Quebec once at least in every  Year, so that Twelve
       Months shall   not intervene between the last   Sitting of the
       Legislature in each Province and its first Sitting of the next
       Session.

       87 The following Provisions  of  this Act respecting the House
       of Commons of Canada shall extend and apply to the Legislative
       Assemblies  of  Ontario and  Quebec,  that is  to say,  -- the
       Provisions relating to  the Election of  a  Speaker originally
       and on Vacancies, the  Duties of the Speaker,  the Absence  of
       the Speaker, the Quorum,  and the Mode of  Voting, as if those
       Provisions  were here re-enacted  and applicable   in Terms to
       each such Legislative assembly.


                       4. Nova Scotia and New Brunswick

       88. The Constitution   of  the  Legislature  of  each  of  the
       Provinces of Nova  Scotia and New Brunswick shall,  subject to
       the provisions of this Act, continue as it exists at the Union
       until altered under the Authority of this Act.

       89. REPEALED.


                       6. The Four Provinces

       90. The  following   provisions  of  this  Act respecting  the
       Parliament of  Canada,  namely, -- the Provisions  relating to
       Appropriation   and  Tax Bills,   the  Recommendation of Money
       Votes, the Assent to Bills,  the Disallowance of Acts, and the
       Signification of  Pleasure on Bills  reserved, -- shall extend
       and apply to  the Legislatures  of the several Provinces as if
       those Provisions where here  re-enacted and made applicable in
       Terms  to   the  respective Provinces   and the   Legislatures
       thereof,  with the Substitution of  Lieutenant Governor of the
       Province for the Governor General, of the Governor General for
       the Queen and  for a Secretary  of State, of One  Year for Two
       Years, and of the Province for Canada.


                       VI. Distribution of Powers

       91. It  shall be Lawful for the  Queen, by and with the Advice
       and Consent of the Senate and  the House of  Commons,  to make
       Laws 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 the 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 hereinafter enumerated; that is to say,

               1.  REPEALED.
               1A. The Public Debt and Property.
               2.  The Regulation of Trade and Commerce.
               2A. Unemployment insurance.
               3.  The Raising of Money by any Mode or System of
                   Taxation.
               4.  The borrowing of Money on the Public Credit.
               5.  Postal Service.
               6.  The Census and Statistics.
               7.  Militia, Military and Naval Service, and Defence.
               8.  The fixing of and providing for the Salaries and
                   Allowances of Civil and other Officers of the
                   Government of Canada.
               9.  Beacons, Buoys, Lighthouses, and Sable Island.
               10. Navigation and Shipping.
               11. Quarantine and the Establishment and Maintenance
                   of Marine Hospitals.
               12. Sea Coast and Inland Fisheries.
               13. Ferries between a Province and any British or
                   Foreign Country, or between two Provinces
               14. Currency and Coinage
               15. Banking, Incorporation of Banks, and the Issue of
                   Paper Money
               16. Savings Banks
               17. Weights and Measures
               18. Bills of Exchange and Promissory Notes
               19. Interest
               20. Legal Tender
               21. Bankruptcy and Insolvency
               22. Patents of Invention and Discovery
               23. Copyrights
               24. Indians, and Lands reserved for the Indians
               25. Naturalization and Aliens
               26. Marriage and Divorce
               27. The Criminal Law, except for the Constitution of
                   Courts of Criminal Jurisdiction, but including the
                   Procedure in Criminal Matters.
               28. The Establishment, Maintenance, and Management of
                   Penitentiaries.
               29. Such Classes of Subjects as are expressly excepted
                   in the Enumeration of the Classes of Subjects by
                   this Act assigned exclusively to the Legislatures
                   of the Provinces.

       And  any Matter coming  within any  of the Classes of Subjects
       enumerated in this Section shall not be  deemed to come within
       the Class of matters of a local or private Nature comprised in
       the    Enumeration of the Classes  of    Subjects by this  Act
       assigned exclusively to the Legislatures of the Provinces.


               Exclusive Powers of the Provincial Legislatures

       92. In each Province the Legislature may exclusively make Laws
       in relation  to matters coming  within the Classes  of Subject
       next hereinafter enumerated; that is to say, --

               1.  REPEALED.
               2.  Direct Taxation within the Province in order to
                   the raising of a Revenue for Provincial Purposes.
               3.  The borrowing of Money on the sole Credit of the
                   Province.
               4.  The Establishment and Tenure of Provincial Offices
                   and the Appointment and Payment of Provincial
                   Officers.
               5.  The Management and Sale of the Public Lands
                   belonging to the Province and of the Timber and
                   Wood thereon.
               6.  The Establishment, Maintenance, and Management of
                   Public and Reformatory Prisons in and for the
                   Province.
               7.  The Establishment, Maintenance, and Management of
                   Hospitals, Asylums, Charities, and Eleemosynary
                   Institutions in and for the Province, other than
                   Marine Hospitals.
               8.  Municipal Institutions in the Province.
               9.  Shop, Saloon, Tavern, Auctioneer, and other
                   Licences in order to the raising of a Revenue for
                   Provincial, Local, or Municipal Purposes.
               10. Local Works and Undertakings other than such as
                   are of the following classes:
                       (a) Lines of Steam or other Ships, Railways,
                       Canals, Telegraphs, and other Works and
                       Undertakings connecting the Province with any
                       other or others of the Province, or extending
                       beyond the Limits of the Province;
                       (b) Lines of Steam Ships between the Province
                       and any British or Foreign Country;
                       (c) Such Works as, although wholely situate
                       within the Province, are before or after their
                       Execution declared to be for the general
                       Advantage of Canada or for the Advantage of
                       Two or more of the Provinces.
               11. The Incorporation of Companies with Provincial
                   Objects.
               12. The Solemnization of Marriage in the Province.
               13. Property and Civil Rights within the Province.
               14. The Administration of Justice in the Province,
                   including the Constitution, Maintenance, and
                   Organization of Provincial Courts, both of Civil
                   and of Criminal Jurisdiction, and including
                   Procedure in Civil Matters in those Courts.
               15. The Imposition of Punishment by Fine, Penalty, or
                   Imprisonment for enforcing any Law of the Province
                   made in relation to any Matter coming within any
                   of the Classes of Subjects enumerated in this
                   Section.
               16. Generally all Matters of a merely local or private
                   Nature in the Province.


                       Non-Renewable Natural Resources, Forestry
                            Resources, and Electrical Energy

       92A. (1) In each province, the legislature may exclusively
                make laws in relation to
               (a) exploration for non-renewable natural resources in
                   the province;
               (b) development, conservation and management of non-
                   renewable natural resources and forestry resources
                   in the province, including laws in relation to the
                   rate of primary production therefrom; and
               (c) development, conservation and management of sites
                   and facilities in the province for the generation
                   and production of electrical energy.

            (2) In each province,  the legislature may make  laws  in
                relation to the  export from the province  to another
                part   of Canada  of   the   primary production  from
                non-renewable   natural  resources    and    forestry
                resources  in the province  and the  productions from
                facilities in   the  province for  the  generation of
                electrical energy, but such laws may not authorize or
                provide for  discrimination  in  prices   or supplies
                exported to another part of Canada.

            (3) Nothing   in  subsection   (2)  derogates  from   the
                authority of Parliament  to enact laws in relation to
                the matters referred to in that subsection and, where
                such a  law  of Parliament  and  a law of  a Province
                conflict, the law  of  Parliament   prevails   to the
                extent of the conflict.

            (4) In  each province,  the  legislature may make laws in
                relation  to  the raising of money   by  any  mode or
                system of taxation in respect of

               (a) non-renewable    natural resources   and
                   forestry  resources in the  province and
                   the primary production therefrom, and

               (b) sites and facilities in the province for
                   the generation of electrical  energy and
                   the production therefrom,

                whether or not such production  is exported  in whole
                or in part from  the province, but such laws  may not
                authorize or provide for taxation that differentiates
                between production exported to another part of Canada
                and production not exported from the province.

            (5) The Expression "primary production"  has the  meaning
                assigned in the Sixth Schedule.

            (6) Nothing  subsections (1) to   (5) derogates from  any
                powers or rights that a legislature or  government of
                a province had  immediately  before  the  coming into
                force of this section.

                       Education

       93. In and  for each Province the Legislature  may exclusively
       make Laws  in relation to Education, subject  and according to
       the following Provisions: --

               1. Nothing in   any  such Law shall prejudicially
                  affect any Right or  Privilege with respect to
                  Denominational Schools  which  any  Class   of
                  Persons  have by  Law  in the Province  at the
                  Union.

               2. All the Powers,  Privileges, and Duties at the
                  Union by  Law conferred  and imposed in  Upper
                  Canada   on  the Separate  Schools  and School
                  Trustees   of   the  Queen's    Roman Catholic
                  Subjects  shall be  and  the same  are  hereby
                  extended to  the Dissentient  Schools of   the
                  Queen's Protestant and Roman Catholic Subjects
                  in Quebec.

               3. Where in any Province  a System of Separate or
                  Dissentiant Schools exists by Law at the Union
                  or     is    thereafter  established   by  the
                  Legislature  of the Province,  an Appeal shall
                  lie to  the  Governor General in  Council from
                  any   Act  or   Decision   of  any  Provincial
                  Authority affecting  any Right or Privilege of
                  the Protestant or  Roman  Catholic Minority of
                  the Queen's Subjects in relation to education.

               4. In case any such  Provincial  Law as from Time
                  to Time seems  to   the  Governor  General  in
                  Council requisite for the due Execution of the
                  Provisions of this  Section is not made, or in
                  case any Decision of  the Governor  General in
                  Council on  any appeal under  this Section  is
                  not duly  executed  by  the proper  Provincial
                  Authority  in that  behalf,  the and in  every
                  such    Case,  and  as     far  only   as  the
                  Circumstances   of  each    Case require,  the
                  Parliament of  Canada  may make  remedial Laws
                  for the  due Execution  of   the Provisions of
                  this  Section  and  of any     Decision of the
                  Governor General  in    Council   under   this
                  Section.


           Uniformity of Laws in Ontario, Nova Scotia and
                           New Brunswick

       94. Notwithstanding  anything in this  Act, the Parliament  of
       Canada may make Provision for the Uniformity of all or  any of
       the  Laws relative to  Property  and Civil Rights  in Ontario,
       Nova Scotia, and New Brunswick, and of the Procedure of all or
       any of the Courts of Those Three Provinces, and from and after
       the  passing of any   Act in that Behalf   the   Power  of the
       Parliament of Canada to  make Laws  in relation  to any Matter
       comprised in any  such Act shall, notwithstanding anything  in
       this Act,  be  unrestricted; but any Act of  the Parliament of
       Canada  making  Provision for such  Uniformity  shall not have
       effect in any   Province unless and until   it is adopted  and
       enacted as Las by the Legislature thereof.

                          Old Age Pensions

       94A. The Parliament of Canada may make laws in relation to old
       age pensions and supplementary  benefits, including survivors,
       and disability benefits irrespective of  age, but no  such law
       shall affect the operation  of any law present  or future of a
       provincial legislature in relation to any such matter.

                       Agriculture and Immigration

       95. In each Province the Legislature may make Laws in relation
       to Agriculture  in the Province, and  to Immigration into  the
       Province;  and  it is hereby  declared that the  Parliament of
       Canada may    from Time to  Time   make Laws in   relation  to
       Agriculture in all of any of the Provinces, and to Immigration
       into all  or  any  of   the Provinces;  and   any Law  of  the
       Legislature  of  a   Province  relative  to   Agriculture   or
       Immigration shall have effect in  and for the Province as long
       and as far  only as it  is not repugnant to  any   Act of  the
       Parliament of Canada.


                       VII. Judicature

       96.  The Governor  General shall  appoint  the Judges  of  the
       Superior, District, and County Courts in each Province, except
       those  of   the   Course of  Probate  in Nova  Scotia and  New
       Brunswick.

       97. Until the laws relative  to Property and  Civil Rights  in
       Ontario,  Nova Scotia and  New Brunswick, and the Procedure of
       the Courts in those Provinces, are made uniform, the Judges of
       the Courts   of  those  Provinces  appointed  by  the Governor
       General shall  be selected from the  respective  Bars of those
       Provinces.

       98. The Judges of the Courts  of Quebec shall be selected from
       the Bar of that Province.

       99. (1) Subject to subsection two of this section,  the Judges
       of the  Superior   Courts  shall hold   office   during   good
       behaviour, but shall  be removable by the Governor  General on
       Address of the Senate and House of Commons.

           (2) A Judge of a Superior  Court, whether appointed before
       or after the coming into force of this section, shall cease to
       hold office upon attaining  the age  of seventy-five years, or
       upon the coming into forces of this section if at that time he
       has already attained that age.

       100. The  Salaries, Allowances, and  Pensions of the Judges of
       the Superior, District and County Courts (except the Courts of
       Probate  in  Nova  Scotia  and   New Brunswick),   and  of the
       Admiralty Courts in Cases where the Judges thereof are for the
       Time being paid by Salary, shall be  fixed and provided by the
       Parliament of Canada.

       101. The Parliament of Canada may, notwithstanding anything in
       this  Act, from Time  to  Time  provide for the  Constitution,
       Maintenance, and Organization of a General Court of Appeal for
       Canada, and for the Establishment of any additional Courts for
       the better Administration of of the Laws of Canada.

                       VIII. Revenues; Debts; Assets; Taxation

       102.  All Duties and    Revenues  over  which the   respective
       Legislatures of Canada, Nova Scotia,  and New Brunswick before
       and  at the Union had  and have Power of Appropriation, except
       such Portions  thereof  as are by  this  Act reserved  to  the
       respective  Legislatures  of  the Provinces, or  are raised by
       them in accordance with the special Powers  conferred  on them
       by this Act,  shall for One  Consolidated Revenue Fund, to  be
       appropriated for the Public   Service of Canada in  the Manner
       and subject to the Charges in this Act provided.

       103.  The  Consolidated   Revenue   Fund  of Canada   shall be
       permanently  charged  with   the Costs,  Charges  and Expenses
       incident to  the Collection, Management,  and Receipt thereof,
       and the same shall  form the First Charge  thereon, subject to
       be reviewed and audited in such Manner as shall  be ordered by
       the Governor General in Council until the Parliament otherwise
       provides.

       104. The annual Interest on  the  Public Debts of the  Several
       Provinces of Canada, Nova  Scotia,  and New  Brunswick  at the
       Union shall form the Second Charge on the Consolidated Revenue
       Fund of Canada.

       105. Unless altered by the Parliament of Canada, Salary of the
       Governor General  shall  be  Ten thousand Pounds   of Sterling
       Money of  the United  Kingdom of  Great  Britain and  Ireland,
       payable out of the  Consolidated Revenue Fund  of  Canada, and
       the same shall form the Third Charge thereon.

       106. Subject  to the several Payments by   this Act charged on
       the Consolidated  Revenue Fund of   Canada, the same  shall be
       appropriated  by  the Parliament  of    Canada for the  Public
       Service.

       107. All Stocks, Cash, Banker's  Balances, and Securities  for
       Money  belonging  to each Province at  the  Time of the Union,
       except  as in this Act  mentioned,  shall be  the  Property of
       Canada, and shall be taken in  Reduction of the  Amount of the
       respective Debts of the Provinces at the Union.

       108.  The  Public   Works   and Property   of  each  Province,
       enumerated in the  Third  Schedule to this  Act, shall be  the
       Property of Canada.

       109. All lands, Mines, Minerals and Royalties belonging to the
       Several Provinces of Canada, Nova Scotia, and New Brunswick at
       the Union, and all  Sums  then due or  payable for such Lands,
       Mines,  Minerals or Royalties,  shall belong to   the  several
       Provinces of Ontario, Quebec, Nova Scotia and New Brunswick in
       which the same  are situate of   arise, subject to any  trusts
       existing in  respect thereof, and to any  Interest  other than
       that of the Province in same.

       110.  All Assets connected   with such Portions  of the Public
       Debt  of each Province  as are assumed  by that Province shall
       belong to that Province.

       111. Canada  shall be liable  for  the Debts and Liabilites of
       each Province existing at the Union.

       112.  Ontario and Quebec conjointly shall  be liable to Canada
       for the Amount (if any)  by which  the Debt of the Province of
       Canada exceeds  at  the Union  Sixty-Two million  five hundred
       thousand Dollars, and shall be  charged with  Interest at  the
       Rate of Five per Centum per Annum thereon.

       113. The Assets enumerated in the Fourth Schedule to  this Act
       belonging at the Union to the Province of Canada  shall be the
       property of Ontario and Quebec conjointly.

       114.  Nova Scotia shall be liable to Canada for the Amount (if
       any)  by which its  Public Debt  exceeds  at the  Union  Eight
       million Dollars,  and shall  be charged with  Interest  at the
       Rate of Five per Centum per Annum thereon.

       115.  New  Brunswick shall be liable  to Canada for the Amount
       (if any) by which  its Public Debt exceeds  at the Union Seven
       million Dollars, and  shall  be charged with Interest   at the
       Rate of Five per Centum per Annum thereon.

       116. In case the Public Debts of Nova Scotia and New Brunswick
       do not at the Union amount to Eight  million and Seven million
       Dollars  respectively,  they  shall   respectively receive  by
       half-yearly Payments in advance  from the Government of Canada
       Interest  at Five per  Centum   per Annum  on  the  Difference
       between the actual Amounts  of their respective Debts and such
       stipulated Amounts.

       117. The  several Provinces shall retain  all their respective
       Public Property not otherwise disposed of in this Act, subject
       to the Right of Canada to assume any  Lands or Public Property
       required for Fortifications or for the Defence of the Country.

       118. REPEALED.

       119. SPENT.
       [Initial transfer payments on New Brunswick's debt at the time
       of Union.]

       120. All Payments to be made under  this Act, or  in discharge
       of  Liabilities  created under  any  Act of the  Provinces  of
       Canada,  Nova Scotia,    and New  Brunswick  respectively, and
       assumed by  Canada,   shall,  until  the Parliament  of Canada
       otherwise directs, be made in such Form and Manner as may from
       Time to Time be ordered by the Governor General in Council.

       121. All  Articles of the Growth,   Produce, or Manufacture of
       any one of  the Provinces shall, from and  after the Union, be
       admitted free into each of the other Provinces.

       122. SPENT.

       123. SPENT.

       124. SPENT.

       [These three  clauses defined initial  and the transition from
       the existing Provincial regulations to the new Federal customs
       regulations. Now covered by a  host of Federal regulations and
       Acts.]


       125. No Lands or Property  belonging to Canada or any Province
       shall be liable to Taxation.

       126. Such  Portions of the Duties  and Revenues over which the
       respective Legislatures  of   Canada, Nova  Scotia,  and   New
       Brunswick had before the Union Power  of Appropriation  as are
       by this Act reserved to    the  respective   Governments   and
       Legislatures  of the  Provinces,  and all  Duties and Revenues
       raised by them in accordance with the special Powers conferred
       upon them by   this   Act, shall  in  each  Province  form One
       Consolidated Revenue Fund  to be appropriated   for the Public
       Service of the Province.


                       IX. Miscellaneous Provisions

                               General

       127. REPEALED.

       128. Every Member of the Senate or House of Commons  of Canada
       shall before taking his Seat therein take and subscribe before
       the Governor General  or some Person  authorized  by him,  and
       every member of a  Legislative Council or Legislative Assembly
       of any Province shall before taking this Seat therein take and
       subscribe before  the   Lieutenant  Governor or   some  Person
       authorized  by him, the Oath of  Allegiance  contained  in the
       Fifth Schedule to this Act; and every  Member of the Senate of
       Canada  and every Member of the  Legislative Council of Quebec
       shall also, before taking his Seat therein, take and subscribe
       before the Governor General or  some Person authorized by him,
       the Declaration contained in the same Schedule.

       129.  Except as  otherwise provided by   this Act, all Laws in
       force in Canada,  Nova Scotia or New Brunswick  at the  Union,
       and all Courts  of   Civil and Criminal  Jurisdiction, and all
       legal Commissions,  Powers, and Authorities, and all Officers,
       Judicial, Administrative, and Ministerial, existing therein at
       the Union, shall continue  in Ontario, Quebec, Nova Scotia and
       New Brunswick respectively, as if the Union had not been made;
       subject  nevertheless (except  with  respect to such   as  are
       enacted by  or exist  under Acts of   the Parliament  of Great
       Britain  or of the  Parliament of the United  Kingdom of Great
       Britain and Ireland,) to be repealed, abolished, or altered by
       the Parliament   of  Canada, or  by    the  Legislature of the
       respective  Province,   according   to the   Authority of  the
       Parliament or of that Legislature under this Act.

       [See the note to section 12, above.]

       130. SPENT.
       [Withdrawl of  power from  provincial officals concerned  with
       subjects coming   under  the jurisdiction   of    the  Federal
       government at the time of Union.]

       131. Until the Parliament  of  Canada otherwise provides,  the
       Governor General in Council may from Time to Time appoint such
       Officers as the Governor General in Council deems necessary or
       proper for the effectual Execution of this Act.

       132. The Parliament and  Government of Canada  shall have  all
       Powers  necessary or proper for  performing the Obligations of
       Canada or  of any Province  thereof, as  Part  of  the British
       Empire,  towards  Foreign   Countries, arising  under Treaties
       between the Empire and such Foreign Countries.

       133. Either the English or the French Language  may be used by
       any Person in the  Debates of the  Houses or the Parliament of
       Canada  and  of the Houses  of the Legislature  of Quebec; and
       both these Languages  shall be used  in the respective Records
       and Journals  of  those Houses; and  either of those Languages
       may be used by any Person or in any Pleading  or Process in or
       issuing from any Court of  Canada established under  this Act,
       and in or from all or any of the Courts of Quebec.

       The Acts of the Parliament of Canada and of the Legislature of
       Quebec shall be printed and published in both those Languages.

       134. SPENT.

       135. SPENT.

       [These two clauses deal  with   the withdrawl of   power  from
       provincial cabnet ministers dealing with subjects coming under
       the  jurisdiction of the  Federal   government at the  time of
       Union.]

       136. Until altered by the  Lieutenant Governor in Council, the
       Great Seals  of  Ontario and Quebec  respectively shall be the
       same, or of the same Design, as those used in the Provinces of
       Upper Canada and Lower Canada respectively  before their Union
       as the Province of Canada.

       137. The  words "and  from thence  to the   End of  then  next
       ensuing  Session  of the Legislature,"  or  Words to  the same
       Effect, used in  any temporary Act of the  Province of  Canada
       not expired before the Union, shall be construed to extend and
       apply to the next Session  of the Parliament of Canada  if the
       Subject Matter of the Act is within the Powers of  the same as
       defined   by this Act,   or   to the   next  Sessions  of  the
       Legislatures of Ontario and Quebec respectively if the Subject
       Matter of the Act is within the  Powers of the same as defined
       by this Act.

       138. From and  after  the Union  the Use of  the  Words "Upper
       Canada" instead  of  "Ontario"  or "Lower Canada"   instead of
       "Quebec," in  any  Deed,   Writ, Process, Pleading,  Document,
       Matter or Thing, shall not invalidate the same.

       139. SPENT.
       [Continuance  of proclamations issued under the  Great Seal of
       the Province of Canada issued before the  Union to take effect
       after the Union.]

       140. SPENT.
       [Issue of proclamations  after  the Union  authorized by  Acts
       passed by the Province of Canada before the Union.]

       141. SPENT.
       [Continuance of the Penitentiary of Canada as the Penitentiary
       of Ontario and Quebec.]

       142. SPENT.
       [Arbitration of debts between  Ontario and  Quebec at the time
       of Union.]

       143. SPENT.
       [Division of records between Ontario and Quebec at the time of
       Union.]

       144. The Lieutenant Governor of Quebec may  from Time to Time,
       by Proclamation under the Great  Seal of the Province, to take
       effect from a  Day to appointed  therein, constitute Townships
       in those Parts  of the Province of Quebec  in  which Townships
       are not then already constituted, and fix the Metes and Bounds
       thereof.

       145. REPEALED.

       146. It shall be lawful for the Queen,  by and with the Advice
       of Her Majesty's Most Honourable  Privy Council,  on Addresses
       from the Houses of Parliament of  Canada,  and from the Houses
       of the respective Legislatures of the Colonies or Provinces of
       Newfoundland, Prince  Edward Island, and British  Columbia, to
       admit those Colonies or Provinces,  or any of  them, into  the
       Union, and on Address from the  Houses of Parliament of Canada
       to admit Rupert's   Land and the  North-western  Territory, or
       either of them,  into the Union,  on such Terms and Conditions
       in each Case  as are  in the  Addresses  expressed and as  the
       Queen thinks fit to approve, subject to the provisions of this
       Act; and the Provisions of any Order in Council on that Behalf
       shall  have effect  as  if  they   had been  enacted  by   the
       Parliament of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland.

       147. SPENT.
       [Admission of Newfoundland and Nova Scotia.]


                             SCHEDULES

               (The first to fifth schedules are omitted)

                         The Sixth Schedule

           Primary Production from Non-Renewable Natural
                 Resources and Forestry Resources.


       1. For the purposes of Section 92A of this Act,

               (a) production from    a  non-renewable   natural
               resource is primary production therefrom if

                       (i) it is in  the form in which it exists
                           upon        its recovery or severance
                           from its natural state, or

                       (ii) it is a  product    resulting   from
                           processing  or refining the resource,
                           and is not  a manufactured product or
                           a  product  resulting  from  refining
                           crude oil, refining   upgraded  heavy
                           crude oil, refining  gases or liquids
                           derived   from   coal,   or  refining
                           synthetic equivilant   of  crude oil;
                           and

               (b)  production  from  a  forestry   resource  is
               primary production therefrom if  it  consists  of
               saw logs,  poles, lumber, wood chips,  sawdust or
               other  primary wood product or wood  pulp, and is
               not a product manufactured from wood.


>From [email protected] Thu Aug 27 21:33:03 1992
Received: from BYRON.SP.CS.CMU.EDU by eff.org with SMTP id AA21277
(5.65c/IDA-1.4.4/pen-ident for <[email protected]>); Thu, 27 Aug 1992 21:33:01 -0400
Message-Id: <[email protected]>
From: "Stewart M. Clamen" <[email protected]>
Date: Thu, 27 Aug 92 21:32:36 EDT
To: "Carl M. Kadie" <[email protected]>
In-Reply-To: [email protected]'s message of 27 Aug 92 20:43:04 GMT
Subject: Constitution Act, 1982
Reply-To: [email protected]
Status: RO


                       Constitution Act, 1982


       Part I

               Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms

       Whereas Canada is founded  upon  the principles that recognize
       the supremacy of God and the rule of law:


       Guarantee of Rights and Freedoms

       1. The Canadian Charter  of Rights and Freedoms guarantees the
       rights and  freedoms set  out in it   subject  only  to   such
       reasonable  limits prescribed  by law  as can be  demonstrably
       justified in a free and democratic society.


       Fundamental Freedoms

       2. Everyone has the following fundamental freedoms:
               (a) freedom of conscience and religion
               (b) freedom of thought, belief, opinion and expression,
               including freedom of the press and other means of
               communication.
               (c) freedom of peaceful assembly; and
               (d) freedom of association.


       Democratic Rights

       3.   Every citizen of  Canada has   the   right to vote in  an
       election   of  members  of  the   House    of Commons or  of a
       legislative assembly  and  to  be qualified   for   membership
       therein.

       4. (1) No House  of Commons and no legislative  assembly shall
              continue for longer than five years from the date fixed
              for the return of the  writs at  a general election  of
              its members.

          (2) In    time  of real or   apprehended   war, invasion or
              insurrection,  a House  of Commons may  be continued by
              Parliament and a legislative  assembly may be continued
              by   the legislature  beyond     five  years   if  such
              continuation is not opposed by  the  votes of more than
              one-third of the members of the House of Commons or the
              legislative assembly, as the case may be.

       5. There   shall  be  a sitting  of   Parliament and  of  each
       legislature at least once every twelve months.


       Mobility Rights

       6. (1) Every citizen of Canada has the right to  enter, remain
              in, and leave Canada.

          (2) Every  citizen of Canada  and every person  who has the
              status of a permanent resident of Canada has the right
              (a) to move to and take up residence in an province; and
              (b) to pursue the gaining of livelyhood in any province.

          (3) The rights specified in subsection (2) are subject to
               (a)  any laws or  practices of general  application in
               force in a province other than those that discriminate
               among persons primarily  on  the basis  of present  or
               previous residence; and
               (b)  any   laws  providing for   reasonable  residency
               requirements as  a  qualification for the  receipt  of
               publically provided social services.

          (4) Subsections   (2) and (3)   do  not  preclude any  law,
              program   or  activity that  has  as  its  object   the
              amelioration in a province of conditions of individuals
              in that  province  who  are  socially  or  economically
              disadvantaged  if   the  rate of  employment   in  that
              province is below the rate of employment in Canada.


       Legal Rights

       7. Everyone has the right to life, liberty and security of the
       person and the right   not to be  deprived thereof   except in
       accordance with the principles of fundamental justice.

       8. Everyone has  the  right to be secure  against unreasonable
       search or seizure.

       9. Everyone has the right  not to be  arbitrarily  detained or
       imprisoned.

       10. Everyone has the right on arrest or detention
               (a) to be informed promptly of the reason therefor;
               (b) to retain and  instruct counsel without  delay and.
               to be informed of that right; and
               (c) to  have  the validity of the detention determined
               by way  of  habeas  corpus and to  be released  if the
               detention is not lawful.

       11. Any person charged with an offence has the right
               (a) to be informed without unreasonable delay of the
               specific offence;
               (b) to be tried within a reasonable time;
               (c) not to be compelled to be a witness in a proceedings
               against that person in respect of the offence;
               (d) to be presumed innocent until proven guilty according
               to law in a fair and public hearing by an independent and
               impartial tribunal;
               (e) not to be denied reasonable bail without cause;
               (f) except in the case of an offence under military law
               tried before a military tribunal, to the benefit of trial
               by jury where the maximum punishment for the offence is
               imprisonment for five years or a more severe punishment;
               (g) not to be found guilty on account of any act or
               omission unless, at the time of the act or omission, it
               constituted an offence under Canadian or International law
               or was criminal according to the general principles of law
               recognized by the community of nations;
               (h) if finally acquited of the offence, not to be tried for
               it again and, if finally found guilty and punished for the
               offence, not to be tried or punished for it again; and
               (i) if found guilty of the offence and if punishment for
               the offence has been varied between the time of commission
               and the time of sentencing, to the benefit of the lesser
               punishment.

       12. Everyone has the right not to be subjected to any cruel or
       unusual treatment or punishment.

       13. A witness who testifies  in any  proceedings has the right
       not  to  have  any incriminating  evidence  so given  used  to
       incriminate that witness in any other proceedings, except in a
       prosecution for perjury  or   for the giving  of contradictory
       evidence.

       14.  A party  or   witness  in  any proceedings who   does not
       understand or speak the language in which  the proceedings are
       conducted or who is deaf has the right to the assistance of an
       interpreter.


       Equality Rights

       15. (1) Every individual is equal before the and under the law
       and has the right to the equal protection and equal benefit of
       the law without  discrimination  based  on race,   national or
       ethnic  origin, colour,  religion,  sex,  age, or  mental   or
       physical disability.

           (2) Subsection (1) does  not preclude any law,  program or
       activity that has as its object the amelioration of conditions
       of disadvantaged individuals  or  groups  including those that
       are disadvantaged because or race,  national or ethnic origin,
       colour, religion, sex, age, or mental or physical disability.


       Official Languages of Canada

       16.  (1)  English  and  French are  the  official languages of
       Canada and have equal rights and privileges as to their use in
       all institutions of the Parliament and government of Canada.

           (2) English and  French are the  official languages of New
       Brunswick  and have  equality of status  and equal  rights and
       privileges   as  to the   use  in all   institutions   of  the
       legislature and government of new Brunswick.

           (3)   Nothing in  this    Charter limits  the authority of
       Parliament of a legislature to advance  the equality of status
       or use of English and French.

       17. (1) Everyone has the right to use English or French in any
       debates or other proceedings of Parliament.

           (2) Everyone has the right to use English or French in any
       debate   and other   proceeding  of   the  legislature of  New
       Brunswick.

       18. The Statutes, records  and journals of Parliament shall be
       printed and published in English and  French and both language
       versions are equally authoritative.

       19. (1) Either English or French may be used by any person in,
       or  in any   pleading  in or  process   issuing from any court
       established by Parliament.

           (2) Either English or French may be used by any person in,
       or in any pleading in or process issuing from any court of New
       Brunswick.

       20. (1) Any member of the  public of Canada  has the  right to
       communicate with, and to receive available  services from, any
       head or central office of an institution  of the Parliament or
       government of Canada  in English or  French, and has  the same
       right with respect to any other office of any such institution
       where
               (a) there is  significant  demand  for  communications
               with and services  from that office in  such language;
               or
               (b) due to the nature of the  office, it is reasonable
               that communications with and services from that office
               be available in both English and French.

           (2) Any member  of  the public in   New Brunswick  has the
       right to communicate  with, and to receive  available services
       from,  any office of  an institution   of  the legislature  or
       government of New Brunswick in English or French.

       21. Nothing  in sections 16 to 20  abrogates or derogates from
       any right, privilege or obligation with respect to the English
       and  French languages,  or either of  them, that  exists or is
       continued by virtue of any other provision of the Constitution
       of Canada.

       22. Nothing in sections  16 to 20  abrogates or derogates from
       any legal or customary right or  privilege acquired or enjoyed
       either before  or after the  coming into force of this Charter
       with respect to any language that is not English or French.


       Minority Language Educational Rights

       23. (1) Citizens of Canada
               (a) whose  first language learned and still understood
               is that of the  English or  French linguistic minority
               population of the province in which they reside, or
               (b) who have received their primary school instruction
               in Canada in   English   or French  and reside  in   a
               province  where the language  in  which  they received
               that instruction is the language  of  the  English  or
               French linguistic minority population of the province,
       have the  right to  have  their  children receive  primary and
       secondary school   instruction   in  that   language in   that
       province.

           (2) Citizens of Canada of  whom any child has received  or
       is  receiving   primary  or  secondary  school  instruction in
       English or French in Canada, have the  right to have all their
       children  receive primary and secondary  school instruction in
       the same language.

           (3) The right of citizens of  Canada under subsections (1)
       and  (2) to have  their children receive primary and secondary
       school  instruction in the  language of the English or  French
       linguistic minority population of a province
               (a) applies wherever  in  the  province the number  of
               children  of  citizens  who  have   such   a  right is
               sufficient  to  warrant  the provision to them  out of
               public funds of minority language instruction; and
               (b)   includes,  where the   number   of  children  so
               warrants,  the   right  to  have    them  receive that
               instruction  in    minority     language   educational
               facilities provided out of public funds.


       Enforcement

       24. (1) Anyone whose rights or freedoms, as guaranteed by this
       Charter, have been infringed or denied may apply to a court of
       competent  jurisdiction  to obtain such  remedy  as  the court
       considers appropriate and just in the circumstances.

           (2) Where, in proceedings under   subsection (1), a  court
       concludes   that  evidence  was   obtained  in a  manner  that
       infringed or denied any rights  or freedoms guaranteed by this
       Charter, the evidence  shall be excluded  if it is established
       that, having regard to all the circumstances, the admission of
       it in the   proceedings would   bring  the administration   of
       justice into disrepute.


       General

       25.  The guarantee in  this   Charter of certain   rights  and
       freedoms shall not be construed  so as to abrogate or derogate
       from any aboriginal,  treaty or other  rights or freedoms that
       pertain to the aboriginal peoples of Canada including
               (a)  any rights or  freedoms that have been recognized
               by the Royal Proclamation of October 7, 1763; and
               (b) any rights or freedoms that may be acquired by the
               aboriginal   peoples of Canada  by  way of land claims
               settlement.

       26. The  guarantee  in this  Charter  of  certain  rights  and
       freedoms  shall not  be construed as  denying the existence of
       any other rights and freedoms that exist in Canada.

       27. This Charter  shall be interpreted in  a manner consistent
       with  the  preservation  and enhancement of the  multicultural
       heritage of Canadians.

       28. Notwithstanding  anything in this Charter, the  rights and
       freedoms referred to in it are guaranteed  equally to male and
       female persons.

       29. Nothing in  this Charter abrogates or derogates   from any
       rights or privileges  guaranteed by  or under the Constitution
       of  Canada    in   respect  of   denominational,   separate or
       dissentient schools.

       30. A  reference  in this Charter  to   a province or   to the
       legislative  assembly or  legislature of  a province  shall be
       deemed to  include a reference to  the Yukon Territory and the
       Northwest Territories,  or   to the   appropriate  legislative
       authority thereof, as the case may be.

       31. Nothing in this Charter extends the legislative  powers of
       any body or authority.


       Application of Charter

       32. (1) This Charter applies
               (a) to the  Parliament  and government of  Canada   in
               respect   of  all  matters    within  the authority of
               Parliament including all matters relating to the Yukon
               Territory and Northwest Territories; and
               (b)  to   the   legislatures  and governments  of each
               province  in  respect  of  all   matters   within  the
               authority of the legislature of each province.
           (2) Notwithstanding subsection  (1), section  15 shall not
       have  effect until  three years after  this section comes into
       force.

       33.  (1) Parliament  or  the legislature   of a province   may
       expressly    declare in an   Act  of  Parliament   or of   the
       legislature,  as the case may be,  that the Act or a provision
       thereof shall operate notwithstanding  a provision included in
       section 2 or section 7 to 15 of this Charter.
           (2) An Act or a provision of an Act in respect  of which a
       declaration made  under this section  is  in effect shall have
       such operation as it would have but for the provision  of this
       Charter referred to in the declaration.
           (3) A declaration made under subsection (1) shall cease to
       have effect five years after  it comes into  force  or on such
       earlier date as may be specified in the declaration.
           (4)   Parliament or  the  legislature  of  a  province may
       re-enact a declaration made under subsection (1).
           (5) Subsection (3) applies in respect of re-enactment made
       under subsection (4).

       34. This Part may be  cited as the  Canadian Charter of Rights
       and Freedoms.



                               Part II

       Rights of the Aboriginal Peoples of Canada

       35.  (1) The  existing aboriginal  and  treaty  rights  of the
       aboriginal  peoples   of  Canada  are  hereby recognized   and
       affirmed.

           (2) In this Act, "aboriginal  peoples of  Canada" includes
       the Indian, Inuit, and Metis peoples of Canada.



                               Part III

       Equalization and Regional Disparties

       36.  (1)    Without  altering  the  legislative  authority  of
       Parliament or of the provincial legislatures, or the rights of
       any of them with respect to the  exercise of their legislative
       authority, Parliament  and the legislatures, together with the
       government of   Canada and   the  provincial governments,  are
       committed to
               (a) promoting equal opportunities for  the  well-being
                   of Canadians;
               (b) furthering the  economic    development to  reduce
                   disparity in opportunities; and
               (c) providing essential public services of  reasonable
                   quality to all Canadians.

           (2) Parliament and the government  of Canada are committed
       to   the principle of   making equalization payments to ensure
       that      provincial governments have  sufficient  revenues to
       provide reasonably comparable  levels of public   services  at
       reasonably comparable levels of taxation.


                               Part IV

       Constitutional Conference

       37. SPENT.
       [Discussed convention of a constitutional conference including
       discussions relating  to aboriginal rights  within one year of
       the adoption of the Act.]


                               Part V

       Procedure for Amending the Constitution of Canada

       38. (1) An amendment to the Constitution of Canada may be made
       by proclamation issued by the Governor General under the Great
       Seal of Canada where so authorized by
               (a)  resolutions  of the   Senate and   the  House  of
               Commons; and
               (b) resolutions  of the  legislative assemblies  of at
               least  two-thirds of the  provinces  that have, in the
               aggregate,  according to  the   then latest    general
               census, at  least fifty per cent  of the population of
               the provinces.

           (2) An amendment made under subsection  (1) that derogates
       from  the legislative  powers, the proprietary   rights or any
       other rights or privileges of the legislature or government of
       a province shall require  a resolution supported by a majority
       of the members of each of the Senate, the House of Commons and
       the legislative assemblies required under subsection (1).

           (3) An amendment  referred to in  subsection (2) shall not
       have  effect in a  province the legislative assembly  of which
       has expressed its dissent thereto by resolution supported by a
       majority of its members prior to the issue of the proclamation
       to  which  the  amendment  relates  unless  that   legislative
       assembly, subsequently,  by resolution supported by a majority
       of  its members,   revokes    its dissent and  authorizes  the
       amendment.

           (4) A resolution of  dissent made   for  the  purposes  of
       subsection (3) may be revoked at any  time before or after the
       issue of the proclamation to which it relates.

       39. (1) A proclamation  shall  not be issued  under subsection
       38(1) before  the expiration of  one year from the adoption of
       the resolution initiating the amendment  procedure, unless the
       legislative assembly of each province has previously adopted a
       resolution of assent or dissent.

           (2) A  proclamation  shall not be  issued under subsection
       38(1) after the expiration of three years from the adoption of
       the resolution initiating the amendment procedure thereunder.

       40.  Where an amendment  is  made under  subsection 38(1) that
       transfers  provincial legislative powers relating to education
       or  other  cultural matters from   provincial  legislatures to
       Parliament, Canada  shall  provide reasonable  compensation to
       any province to which the amendment does not apply.

       41. An amendment to the Constitution of Canada in  relation to
       the  following matters may  be made  by proclamation issued by
       the Governor General under the Great Seal of Canada only where
       authorized by resolutions of  the  Senate and House of Commons
       and of the legislative assemblies of each province:
               (a) the office of the Queen,  the Governor General and
               the Lieutenant Governor of a province;
               (b) the right of a province to  a number of members in
               the  House  of  Commons not less   than the number  of
               Senators  by which  the  province is entitled  to   be
               represented at the time this Part comes into force;
               (c) subject to section  43, the use  of the English or
               the French language;
               (d) the composition   of the Supreme Court of  Canada;
               and
               (e) an amendment to this Part.

       42. (1) An amendment to the Constitution of Canada in relation
       to the following matters may  be made  only in accordance with
       subsection 38(1):
               (a) the principle of  proportionate representation  of
               the provinces in  the House of   Commons prescribed by
               the Constitution of Canada;
               (b)   the  powers of   the Senate   and  the method of
               selecting Senators;
               (c)  the  number  of members by  which  a  province is
               entitled to  be  represented  in  the  Senate and  the
               residence qualifications of Senators;
               (d) subject  to paragraph  41(d), the Supreme Court of
               Canada;
               (e)   the extension   of  existing provinces into  the
               territories; and
               (f) notwithstanding  any other  law or   practice, the
               establishment of new provinces;

           (2) Subsections 38(2) to 38(4) do not  apply in respect of
           amendments  in   relation  to     matters referred   to in
           subsection (1).

       43. An amendment to the Constitution  of Canada in relation to
       any  provision  that  applies  to   one or   more, but not all
       provinces, including
               (a) any  alteration  to boundaries between  provinces,
               and
               (b) any amendment to any provisions that relate to the
               use of  the  English or the  French  language within a
               province

       may  be made  by proclamation issued   by the Governor General
       under  the Great Seal  of Canada  only  where so authorized by
       resolutions of the  Senate and House  of  Commons  and  of the
       legislative  assembly of each province  to which the amendment
       applies.

       44. Subject to sections 41  and 42, Parliament may exclusively
       make laws amending  the Constitution of  Canada in relation to
       executive government of   Canada or the  Senate and  House  of
       Commons.

       45. Subject  to section 41,  the legislature of  each province
       may exclusively make  laws amending  the  constitution of  the
       province.

       46. (1) The procedures  for  amendment under sections 38,  41,
       42, and 43 may be initiated either by the Senate or  the House
       of Commons or by the legislative assembly of province.

           (2) A resolution of  assent for the  purposes of this Part
       may be revoked at any time before the issue  of a proclamation
       authorized by it.

       47.  (1) An amendment  to the Constitution  of  Canada made by
       proclamation  under section  38,  41, 42,  or  43 may be  made
       without  a resolution of the Senate  authorizing  the issue of
       the proclamation if, within one hundred and  eighty days after
       the   adoption by  the   House  of  Commons  of  a  resolution
       authorizing its  issue, the  Senate  has  not  adopted such  a
       resolution  and if, at  any time after  the expiration of that
       period, the House of Commons again adopts the resolution.

           (2) Any period  when Parliament is  prorogued or dissolved
       shall not be counted in  computing the one  hundred and eighty
       day period referred to in subsection (1).

       48. The  Queen's  Privy  Council for  Canada  shall advise the
       Governor General to  issue  a  proclamation  under this   Part
       forthwith on the  adoption of the  resolution  required for an
       amendment made by proclamation under this part.

       49. A  constitutional   conference of the   Prime  Minister of
       Canada and the first ministers shall be convened by  the Prime
       Minister of Canada within fifteen years after this  Part comes
       into force to review the provisions of this Part.


                               Part VI

       Amendment to the Constitution Act, 1867

       50. SPENT.
       [Amended the _Constitution  Act, 1867_ by  adding  section 92A
       (q.v), having to  do  with provincial powers to administer and
       tax non-renewable natural resources.]

       51. SPENT.
       [Amended the  _Constitution Act, 1867_  by adding  a the Sixth
       Schedule    (q.v.),     defining  "primary production   from a
       non-renewable natural resource".]


                               Part VII

       General

       52. (1)  The  Constitution  of Canada   is the supreme  law of
       Canada,  and any law  that is inconsistent with the provisions
       of the Constitution is, to the extent of the inconsistency, of
       no force or effect.

           (2) The Constitution of Canada includes
               (a) the _Canada Act, 1982_, including this Act;
               (b) the Acts  and orders referred  to in the Schedule;
               and
               (c) any amendment to any Act or order referred to in
               paragraph (a) or (b).

           (3) Amendments to the Constitution of Canada shall be made
       only in   accordance   with the   authority contained   in the
       Constitution of Canada.

       53. (1) The enactments referred to in Column I of the schedule
       are hereby  repealed  or amended  to  be extent  indicated  in
       Column II thereof, and unless repealed,  shall continue as law
       in Canada under the names set out in Column III thereof.

           (2) Every enactment,  except the _Canada Act, 1982_,  that
       refers to an enactment referred to in the schedule by the name
       in Column I thereof is hereby amended by substituting for that
       name the corresponding name  in  Column  III thereof,  and any
       British North America Act not referred to in the  schedule may
       be cited  as the _Constitution  Act_ followed by  the year and
       number, if any, of its enactment.

       54. Part IV is repealed on the day that is one year after this
       Part comes into force, and  this section may  be repealed  and
       this Act renumbered, consequentially  upon the repeal  of Part
       IV and  this section,  by proclamation issued by the  Governor
       General under the Great Seal of Canada.

       55. A French version of  the  portions  of the Constitution of
       Canada referred  to  in the schedule shall  be prepared by the
       Minister of Justice of  Canada  as expeditiously  as  possible
       and, when  any portion thereof   sufficient to warrant  action
       being  taken has been prepared, it   shall be  put forward for
       enactment by proclamation issued by the Governor General under
       the  Great   Seal of  Canada  pursuant  to the  procedure then
       applicable to   an   amendment  of the same  provisions of the
       Constitution of Canada.

       56.  Where any portion of the  Constitution of Canada has been
       or is enacted in English and French or  where a French version
       of  any  portion of the Constitution  is enacted   pursuant to
       section 55, the English and French versions of that portion of
       the Constitution are equally authoritative.

       57. The English and  French versions  of  this Act are equally
       authoritative.

       58. Subject to section 59, this Act shall come into force on a
       day  to be fixed  by proclamation issued  by the  Queen or the
       Governor General under the Great Seal of Canada.

       59. (1) Paragraph 23(1)(a) shall come into force in respect of
       Quebec on a  day to be fixed by  proclamation  issued  by  the
       Queen or the Governor General under the Great Seal of Canada.

           (2) A  proclamation under subsection  (1) shall  be issued
       only  where   authorized   by   the legislative assembly    or
       government of Quebec.

           (3) This section  may  be repealed  on the   day paragraph
       23(1)(a) comes into  force in respect of  Quebec and this  Act
       amended and renumbered, consequentially up  the repeal of this
       section, by proclamation  issued by  the Queen or the Governor
       General under the Great Seal of Canada.

       60. This Act may be cited as the _Constitution Act, 1982_, and
       the Constitution Acts 1867 to 1975 (No. 2) and this Act may be
       cited together as the _Constitution Acts, 1867 to 1982_.