B.C. landowner loses bid to reopen landmark Cowichan Aboriginal title case
An attempt by a Richmond, B.C., company to reopen a landmark Aboriginal title case after the original trial lasted more than 500 days is an “abuse of process for relitigation” and will not be allowed, a B.C. Supreme Court judge ruled this week.
The court ruled in August that the Cowichan Nation have Aboriginal title over a portion of Crown, city and private land in Richmond, saying the Crown’s granting of private titles on the land “unjustifiably” infringed on the Cowichan title.
Montrose Properties, the area’s largest landowner, took the unusual step of trying to have the case reopened, arguing it was unfairly omitted from the original trial and that its fee simple land interests are directly affected by a declaration of Aboriginal title.
While the Cowichan did not seek to have private titles invalidated, and are not laying claim to those lands, the case has led to concerns that it puts private property at risk.
