Peter W. Hutchins


Peter William Hutchins was a Canadian lawyer specializing in Canadian Aboriginal law. He was "one of top litigators in aboriginal cases".

Early life and academic career

Hutchins received a bachelor of arts at McGill University, followed then by his legal education at Université Laval in Quebec City where he obtained an LL.L and at the London School of Economics, University of London where he received an LL.M in international law. In 1980 he created for the Faculty of Law, McGill University, the course Aboriginal Peoples and the Law, which he continued to teach until 1996.

Legal career

As a litigator, Hutchins appeared before the Supreme Court of Canada, the Federal Court of Canada, the courts of Quebec, Ontario, British Columbia, Manitoba, New Brunswick, Newfoundland, the Northwest Territories, as well as the United Nations Human Rights Committee and the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights. In addition to litigating, he worked to improve the litigation process, notably by advocating that expert witness be less partisan and more independent.
He was involved in negotiations concerning historic and contemporary treaties between First Nations and the Crown in right of Canada. Hutchins advised the Federal and Territorial governments on Aboriginal governance and treaty implementation issues. He lectured and wrote on the Inuit and arctic sovereignty.

James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement

Hutchins acted for the Cree of northern Quebec during the negotiation of the James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement, which upon its conclusion in 1975 became the first modern treaty between the Crown and a Canadian First Nation.

Supreme Court of Canada litigation

Hutchins appeared before the Supreme Court of Canada in numerous cases relating to Canadian Aboriginal law:

Memberships and Associations

Hutchins was a member of the Barreau du Quebec from 1970. He was a founding member and past-chair of the Canadian Bar Association National Aboriginal Law Section. He has been a member of the Federal Court Statutory Rules Committee since 2006 and its Sub-Committee on Expert Evidence. He was a member of the Canadian Bar Association, the American Bar Association, the International Bar Association, the Canadian Council on International Law, the American Society of International Law, the International Commission of Jurists and the International Law Association.

Publications

Hutchins authored or co-authored numerous peer reviewed articles:
  • “Holding the Mirror Up to Nature: Law, Social Science, and Professor Arthur Ray”, the introduction to Telling It to The Judge: Taking Native History to Court, by Arthur J. Ray, published in 2011 by UBC Press
  • “Cede, Release and Surrender: Treaty-Making, the Aboriginal Perspective and the Great Juridical Oxymoron Or Let's Face it - It Didn't Happen”, Chapter 16 to Aboriginal Law Since Delgamuukw, ed. Maria Morellato, published in 2009 by Canada Law Book
  • “Power and Principles: State-Indigenous Relations across Time and Space”, the conclusion to Aboriginal Title and Indigenous Peoples: Canada, Australia, and New Zealand, published in 2010 by UBC Press
  • “From Calder to Mitchell: Should the Courts Patrol Cultural Borders” 16 Supreme Court Law Review
  • “When Do Fiduciary Obligations to Aboriginal People Arise?” 59 Saskatchewan Law Review 97
  • “The Aboriginal Right to Self-Government and the Canadian Constitution: the Ghost in the Machine” 29 University of British Columbia Law Review 251

Awards

In 2012, Hutchins was awarded the Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Medal by Senator Charlie Watt for his career dedicated to advancing the rights of aboriginal people.
Hutchins was repeatedly listed as a leading practitioner in Aboriginal Law by Best Lawyer and as "most frequently recommended" in The Canadian Legal Lexpert Directory.

Personal life and death

Hutchins was married and had one child. He died on January 13, 2023.