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Robinson Huron leadership says half of $510M legal fees going back to communities

Robinson Huron Litigation Fund files application for 'direction from the court' in response to action launched by Garden River, Atikameksheng over treaty settlement legal bills
2023-09-09-treatyrenewalceremonyjh02
Indigenous Affairs of Ontario Minister Greg Rickford presents a gift to litigation committee member Duke Peltier during a renewal ceremony for the 1850 Robinson Huron Treaty at GFL Memorial Gardens in Sault Ste. Marie September 9, 2023.

The Robinson Huron Treaty Litigation Fund says the law firm responsible for litigating the treaty annuities claim in court has agreed to allocate half of its earned legal fees from that court case — amounting to $255 million — to support various Anishinabek causes. 

This comes after two First Nations publicly disputed the $510-million lawyers bill incurred in the lengthy court case, which led to a historic $10-billion settlement for Robinson Huron Treaty trustees and beneficiaries being struck with Canada and Ontario last year. 

Garden River First Nation and Atikameksheng Anishnawbek First Nation filed an application in Ontario Superior Court last week, requesting that the $510 million in legal fees paid out to Nahwegahbow Corbiere Genoodmagejig Barristers and Solicitors for its work on the annuities claim be held in trust while the bill for legal services is reassessed in the courtroom.  

The litigation management committee, in turn, has filed its own application, requesting direction from the court.   

A statement from the Robinson Huron Litigation Fund follows:  

The Robinson Huron Treaty Litigation Fund (RHTLF) provides the following update regarding the application to review the legal fees for the annuities case, filed by Atikameksheng Anishnawbek and Garden River First Nation:

The RHTLF, as a whole, is the client that entered into the partial contingency fee agreement with the RHT Legal Team. The RHTLF is composed of 22 trustees, one appointed by each of the 21 First Nations, plus one trustee appointed to represent annuitants that are not members of the 21 First Nations.

The RHTLF represents the collective interests of the Lake Huron Anishinaabe that entered into the Robinson Huron Treaty in 1850, including the 21 RHT First Nations and their members. The RHTLF was established by a trust document (Trust Indenture), which set out a process by which the trustees would make decisions on behalf of the Lake Huron Anishinaabe, based on 70 per cent majority vote. The RHTLF entered into the contingency agreement with the RHT Legal Team, according to that decision-making process. The RHTLF did not have the funds to undertake the litigation, so it explicitly chose the partial contingency agreement, rather than the straight hourly retainer.

The legal fees and distribution terms are detailed in the Compensation Disbursement Agreement, which was unanimously adopted by all Chiefs-in-Assembly on August 8, 2012. Additionally, each of the 21 First Nation Councils passed a Band Council Resolution to adopt this Agreement.

The decision-making process in the Trust Indenture was also followed by the RHTLF when deciding on the Settlement Agreement for Past Compensation.

The decision to accept the RHT Legal Team’s proposal with respect to its legal fees, was made by the RHTLF, after a full discussion, according to the decision-making process in the Trust Indenture. The discussion on legal fees was made at an in camera meeting in Bawaating (Sault Ste. Marie) on April 22, 2024, in which the Legal Team was excluded. Only Atikmeksheng’s Trustee and Garden River’s Trustee opposed. The Atikmeksheng and Garden River Trustees brought it to a second vote on May 14, 2024, in Sudbury, but again, they were defeated.

Despite the decision by the RHTLF to approve the legal fees, Atikmeksheng and Garden River have filed an Application in Superior Court, to challenge the decision of the RHTLF regarding legal fees. Chief Nootchtai had earlier alleged that the RHTLF Trustees were wasting trust assets by approving the legal fees. To respond, the Litigation Management Committee (LMC) of the RHTLF has filed its own Application to get directions from the Court.

We expect that the LMC’s application and the application brought by Atikameksheng Anishnawbek and Garden River First Nation will be heard on an expedited basis by the Court. The LMC remains optimistic that both Court applications will be resolved swiftly, enabling the planned distribution of funds to the Lake Huron First Nations in early August.

In a community update released in April 2024, the RHTLF's Legal Team announced a commitment to the principles of resurgence and reciprocity. The Legal Team has agreed to allocate half of its earned fees, amounting to $255 million of the total $510 million, to support RHT Anishinaabek purposes. These funds will be used for:

● Revitalization of Anishinaabemowin (the Anishinaabe language)

● Advocacy for Anishinaabe law and customs

● Enhancing the well-being of elders, who play a vital role in preserving Anishinaabe perspectives

● Securing future arrangements for the augmentation clause

The RHTLF is dedicated to ensuring that these resources significantly benefit the Anishinaabe communities and uphold the spirit of the Robinson Huron Treaty.


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