The boy who won’t be king: uOttawa law grad challenging succession rules

 

 
 
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The boy who won’t be king: uOttawa law grad challenging succession rules
 

Former prime minister Pierre Trudeau and Queen Elizabeth sign Canada’s constitution in April 1982. Bryan Teskey, a recent University of Ottawa law grad, brought an application to the Ontario Superior Court of Justice asking it declare Canada’s constitution prevents the government from agreeing with recent changes to Britains rules of succession, specifically the rule that prohibits Catholics from ascending to the throne.

OTTAWA — A recent University of Ottawa law school graduate, even if somehow in line for the British throne, will never be king on account of his Catholic religion, and he’s not happy about it.

Bryan Teskey, 25, brought an application to the Ontario Superior Court of Justice asking it declare Canada’s constitution prevents the government from agreeing with recent British legislation which changes the rules of succession. In his argument, Teskey asked the court to declare the provisions that prohibit Catholics from ascending to the throne of “no force and effect.”

This application was dismissed earlier this month.

Teskey filed his application after Canada agreed to enact two changes to succession rules at a meeting of the heads of government from the British Commonwealth.

The first change was to end the system of male preference where a younger son in line for the throne could displace an older daughter.

The second change was to remove the provision that deems anyone who marries a Roman Catholic ineligible to ascend to the throne.

Teskey said in a interview the second provision is a red herring, because while it does away with banning the succession of those married to Catholics, it doesn’t do away with a general prohibition on Catholics being King or Queen.

While some may wonder why the monarchy means so much to Teskey, he said the impact on a country such as Canada where the British monarch is still a head of state is important.

“[The Canadian government] doesn’t get to selectively pick who does or doesn’t get rights, it’s a very dangerous thing to have,” Teskey says.

The Canadian government has already introduced and passed the Succession to the Throne Act, 2013, with the changes. It hasn’t yet come into force.

“At law, what they are doing is getting rid of partial discrimination against women but keeping a total prohibition against Catholics,” Teskey said.

“It’s a very dangerous precedent,” he said, likening the effect of the law to the holocaust and Japanese internment.

“It’s very dangerous when governments say people of a certain religious group are not worthy of rights or protection.

“Why are we saying anyone can become our head of state, except for Catholics?”

Ontario Superior Court Justice Charles Hackland, bound by an Ontario Court of Appeal decision on a similar case where the same succession rule was challenged on the basis of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, dismissed the application, stating that the matter wasn’t under the review jurisdiction of the court.

Hackland relied on a constitutional rule that the Charter cannot be used to amend or trump another part of the constitution, since succession rules in Britain became part of the supreme law of Canada.

Hackland also ruled Teskey, with “no connection to the Royal Family,” has no legal standing to bring the matter to court. Standing is the applicant’s ability to show how the law challenged impacts or harms him specifically.

“He deposes that he is a member of the Catholic faith but that appears to be his only interest in the issues raised in this application,” Hackland wrote.

Hackland said Teskey also presented “purely hypothetical issues which may never occur, namely a Roman Catholic Canadian in line for succession to the throne being passed over because of his or her religion.”

Hackland said he believed that should the hypothetical issue occur, “a proper factual matrix would be available to the court to deal with a matter of this importance.”

But, Teskey said that being from an Irish Catholic family, with religious roots, he is best positioned to challenge the rules.

“At the end of the day, people who should bring charter applications forward are the people most directly impacted,” he said.

It’s not the first time others may have questioned why he’s involved in a specific cause.

For one academic year, Teskey served as the president of the University of Ottawa’s Asian Law Students Society, despite, of course, not being Asian. He’s always been a bridge between communities, he said.

Teskey, who represented himself in the matter, said he plans to appeal the decision. He said he’s in the process of assembling an appeal team.

He has moved back to Markham, Ont., since his graduation and is working - but not as a lawyer, saying settling this matter deserves his undivided time.

syogaretnam@ottawacitizen.com

Twitter.com/shaaminiwhy

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Former prime minister Pierre Trudeau and Queen Elizabeth sign Canada’s constitution in April 1982. Bryan Teskey, a recent University of Ottawa law grad, brought an application to the Ontario Superior Court of Justice asking it declare Canada’s constitution prevents the government from agreeing with recent changes to Britains rules of succession, specifically the rule that prohibits Catholics from ascending to the throne.
 

Former prime minister Pierre Trudeau and Queen Elizabeth sign Canada’s constitution in April 1982. Bryan Teskey, a recent University of Ottawa law grad, brought an application to the Ontario Superior Court of Justice asking it declare Canada’s constitution prevents the government from agreeing with recent changes to Britains rules of succession, specifically the rule that prohibits Catholics from ascending to the throne.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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