The Quebec Act, 1774
14 George III, c. 83 (U.K.)
An Act for making more effectual Provision for the Government of the Province
of Quebec in North America.
"WHEREAS his Majesty, by his Royal Proclamation bearing Date the seventh
Day of October. in the third Year of his Reign, thought fit to declare the
Provisions which had been made in respect to certain Countries, Territories,
and Islands in America, ceded to his Majesty by the definitive Treaty of
Peace, concluded at Paris on the tenth day of February, one thousand seven
hundred and sixty-three: And whereas, by the Arrangements made by the said
Royal Proclamation a very large Extent of Country, within which there were
several Colonies and Settlements of the Subjects of France. who claimed
to remain therein under the Faith of the said Treaty, was left, without
any Provision being made for the Administration of Civil Government therein;
and certain Parts of the Territory of Canada, where sedentary Fisheries
had been established and carried on by the Subjects of France, Inhabitants
of the said Province of Canada under Grants and Concessions from the Government
thereof, were annexed to the Government of Newfoundland, and thereby subjected
to Regulations inconsistent with the Nature of such Fisheries:'' May it
therefore please your most Excellent Majesty that it may be enacted; and
be it enacted by the King's most Excellent Majesty, by and with the Advice
and Consent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal, and Commons, in this present
Parliament assembled, and by the Authority of the same. That all the Territories,
Islands. and Countries in North America. belonging to the Crown of Great
Britain, bounded on the South by a Line from the Bay of Chaleurs. along
the High Lands which divide the Rivers that empty themselves into the River
Saint Lawrence from those which fall into the Sea. to a Point in forty-five
Degrees of Northern Latitude. on the Eastern Bank of the River Connecticut.
keeping the same Latitude directly West. through the Lake Champlain, until,
in the same Latitude. it meets the River Saint Lawrence: from thence up
the Eastern Bank of the said River to the Lake Ontario; thence through the
Lake Ontario. and the River commonly call Niagara and thence along by the
Eastern and South-eastern Bank of Lake Erie. following the said Bank, until
the same shall be intersected by the Northern Boundary, granted by the Charter
of the Province of Pensylvania. in case the same shall be so intersected:
and from thence along the said Northern and Western Boundaries of the said
Province, until the said Western Boundary strike the Ohio: But in case the
said Bank of the said Lake shall not be found to be so intersected, then
following the said Bank until it shall arrive at that Point of the said
Bank which shall be nearest to the North-western Angle of the said Province
of Pensylvania, and thence by a right Line, to the said North-western Angle
of the said Province; and thence along the Western Boundary of the said
Province, until it strike the River Ohio; and along the Bank of the said
River, Westward, to the Banks of the Mississippi, and Northward to the Southern
Boundary of the Territory granted to the Merchants Adventurers of England,
trading to Hudson's Bay; and also all such Territories, Islands, and Countries,
which have, since the tenth of February, one thousand seven hundred and
sixty-three, been made Part of the Government of Newfoundland, be. and they
are hereby, during his Majesty's Pleasure, annexed to, and made Part and
Parcel of, the Province of Quebec, as created and established by the said
Royal Proclamation of the seventh of October, one thousand seven hundred
and sixty-three.
"II. Provided always. That nothing herein contained, relative to the
Boundary of the Province of Quebec. shall in anywise affect the Boundaries
of any other Colony.
"III. Provided always, and be it enacted, That nothing in this Act
contained shall extend, or be construed to extend. to make void, or to vary
or alter any Right, Title. or Possession, derived under any Grant, Conveyance,
or otherwise howsoever, of or to any Lands within the said Province, or
the Provinces thereto adjoining; but that the same shall remain and be in
Force, and have Effect, as if this Act had never been made.
"IV. And whereas the Provisions, made by the said Proclamation, in
respect to the Civil Government of the said Province of Quebec, and the
Powers and Authorities given to the Governor and other Civil Officers of
the said Province, by the Grants and Commissions issued in consequence thereof,
have been found, upon Experience, to be inapplicable to the State and Circumstances
of the said Province, the Inhabitants whereof amounted, at the Conquest,
to above sixty-five thousand Persons professing the Religion of the Church
of Rome, and enjoying an established Form of Constitution and System of
Laws, by which their Persons and Property had been protected, governed,
and ordered, for a long Series of Years, from the first Establishment of
the said Province of Canada;'' be it therefore further enacted by the Authority
aforesaid. That the said Proclamation, so far as the same relates to the
said Province of Quebec, and the Commission under the Authority whereof
the Government of the said Province is at present administered, and all
and every the Ordinance and Ordinances made by the Governor and Council
of Quebec for the Time being, relative to the Civil Government and Administration
of Justice in the said Province. and all Commissions to Judges and other
Officers thereof, be, and the same are hereby revoked, annulled, and made
void, from and after the first Day of May, one thousand seven hundred and
seventy-five.
"V. And, for the more perfect Security and Ease of the Minds of the
Inhabitants of the said Province," it is hereby declared, That his
Majesty's Subjects, professing the Religion of the Church of Rome of and
in the said Province of Quebec. may have, hold, and enjoy, the free Exercise
of the Religion of the Church of Rome, subject to the King's Supremacy,
declared and established by an Act, made in the first Year of the Reign
of Queen Elizabeth, over all the Dominions and Countries which then did,
or thereafter should belong, to the Imperial Crown of this Realm; and that
the Clergy of the said Church may hold, receive, and enjoy, their accustomed
Dues and Rights, with respect to such Persons only as shall profess the
said Religion.
"Vl. Provided nevertheless, That it shall be lawful for his Majesty.
his Heirs or Successors, to make such Provision out of the rest of the said
accustomed Dues and Rights, for the Encouragement of the Protestant Religion,
and for the Maintenance and Support of a Protestant Clergy within the said
Province, as he or they shall. from Time to Time think necessary and expedient.
"Vll Provided always. and be it enacted, That no Person professing
the Religion of the Church of Rome, and residing in the said Province. shall
be obliged to take the Oath required by the said Statute passed in the first
Year of the Reign of Queen Elizabeth, or any other Oaths substituted by
any other Act in the Place thereof; but that every such Person who, by the
said Statute, is required to take the Oath therein mentioned, shall be obliged,
and is hereby required, to take and subscribe the following Oath before
the Governor, or such other Person in such Court of Record as his Majesty
shall appoint, who are hereby authorized to administer the same; videlicet,
"I A.B. do sincerely promise and swear, That I will be faithful, and
bear true Allegiance to his Majesty King George, and him will defend to
the utmost of my Power, against all traitorous Conspiracies, and Attempts
whatsoever, which shall be made against his Person. Crown. and Dignity;
and I will do my utmost Endeavor to disclose and make known to his Majesty,
his Heirs and Successors, all Treasons, and traitorous Conspiracies, and
Attempts, which I shall know to be against him, or any of them; and all
this I do swear without any Equivocation, mental Evasion, or secret Reservation,
and renouncing all Pardons and Dispensations from any Power or Person whomsoever
to the contrary. So help me GOD.''
And every such Person, who shall neglect or refuse to take the said Oath
before mentioned, shall incur and be liable to the same Penalties, Forfeitures,
Disabilities, and Incapacities, as he would have incurred and been liable
to for neglecting or refusing to take the Oath required by the said Statute
passed in the first Year of the Reign of Queen Elizabeth.
"VIII. And be it further enacted by the Authority aforesaid, That all
his Majesty's Canadian Subjects within the Province of Quebec. the religious
orders and Communities only excepted. may also hold and enjoy their Property
and Possessions, together with all Customs .and Usages relative thereto,
and all other their Civil Rights. in as large. ample, and beneficial Manner.
IS if the said Proclamation, Commissions, Ordinances, and other .Acts and
Instruments. had not been made, and as may consist with their Allegiance
to his Majesty, and Subjection to the Crown and Parliament of Great Britain;
and that in all .Matters of Controversy, relative to Property and Civil
Rights, Resort shall be had to the Laws of Canada, as the Rule for the Decision
of the same; and all Causes that shall hereafter be instituted in any of
the Courts of Justice, to be appointed within and for the said Province
by his Majesty, his Heirs and Successors. shall, · with respect to
such Property and Rights, be determined agreeably to the said Laws and Customs
of Canada, until they shall be varied or altered by any Ordinances that
shall. from Time to Time, be passed in the said Province by the Governor,
Lieutenant Governor, or Commander in Chief, for the Time being, by and with
the Advice and Consent of the Legislative Council of the same, to be appointed
in Manner herein-after mentioned .
"IX. Provided always, That nothing in this Act contained shall extend,
or be construed to extend, to any Lands that have been granted by his Majesty.
or shall hereafter be granted by his Majesty, his Heirs and Successors,
to be holden in free and common Soccage.
"X. Provided also, That it shall and may be lawful to and for every
Person that is Owner of any Lands. Goods, or Credits, in the said Province.
and that has a Right to alienate the said Lands, Goods, or Credits, in his
or her Lifetime, by Deed of Sale, Gift, or otherwise, to devise or bequeath
the same at his or her Death. by his or her last Will and Testament; any
Law, Usage, or Custom, heretofore or now prevailing in the Province, to
the contrary hereof in any-wise notwithstanding; .such Will being executed
either according to the Laws of Canada, or according to the Forms prescribed
by the Laws of England.
''Xl. And whereas the Certainty and Lenity of the Criminal Law of England,
and the Benefits and Advantages resulting from the Use of it, have been
sensibly felt by the Inhabitants, from an Experience of more than nine Years,
during which it has been uniformly administered:'' be it therefore further
enacted by the Authority aforesaid. That the same shall continue to be administered,
and shall be observed as Law in the Province of Quebec, as well in the Description
and Quality of the Offence as in the Method of Prosecution and Trial; and
the Punishments and Forfeitures thereby inflicted to the Exclusion of every
other Rule of Criminal Law. or Mode of Proceeding thereon, which did or
might prevail in the said Province before the Year of our Lord one thousand
seven hundred and seventy-four; any Thing in this Act to the contrary thereof
in any respect notwithstanding; subject nevertheless to such Alterations
and Amendments as the Governor, Lieutenant-governor, or Commander in Chief
for the Time being, by and with the Advice and Consent of the legislative
Council of the said Province, hereafter to be appointed, shall, from Time
to Time, cause to be made therein, in Manner hereinafter directed.
"XII. .And whereas it may be necessary to ordain many Regulations
for the future Welfare and good Government of the Province of Quebec, the
Occasions of which cannot now be foreseen, nor, without much Delay and Inconvenience,
be provided for, without intrusting that Authority, for a certain Time,
and under proper Restrictions, to Persons resident there, and whereas it
is at present inexpedient to call an Assembly;" be it therefore enacted
b~ the Authority aforesaid, That it shall and may be lawful for his Majesty,
his Heirs and Successors, by Warrant under his or their Signet or Sign Manual,
and with the Advice of the Privy Council, to constitute and appoint a Council
for the Affairs of the Province of Quebec, to consist of such Persons resident
there, not exceeding twenty-three, nor less than seventeen, as his Majesty,
his Heirs and Successors, shall be pleased to appoint, and, upon the Death,
Removal, or Absence of any of the Members of the said Council, in like Manner
to constitute and appoint such and somany other Person or Persons as shall
be necessary to supply the Vacancy or Vacancies; which Council, so appointed
and nominated, or the major Part thereof; shall have Power and Authority
to make Ordinances for the Peace, Welfare, and good Government, of the said
Province, with the Consent of his Majesty's Governor, or, in his Absence,
of the Lieutenant-governor, or Commander in Chief for the Time being.
[This section was repealed by The Constitutional Act, 1791]
"Xlll. Provided always, That nothing in this Act contained shall extend
to authorize or impower the said legislative Council to lay any Taxes or
Duties within the said Province, such Rates and Taxes only excepted as the
Inhabitants of any Town or District within the said Province may be authorized
by the said Council to assess, levy, and apply, within the said Town or
District. for the Purpose of making Roads, erecting and repairing publick
Buildings, or for any other Purpose respecting the local Convenience and
Oeconomy of such Town or District.
"XIV. Provided also. and be it enacted by the Authority aforesaid,
That every Ordinance so to be made, shall, within six Months, be transmitted
by the Governor, or, in his Absence, by the Lieutenant-governor. or Commander
in Chief for the Time being, and laid before his Majesty for his Royal Approbation;
and if his Majesty shall think fit to disallow thereof, the same shall cease
and be void from the Time that his Majesty's Order in Council thereupon
shall be promulgated at Quebec.
"XV. Provided also. That no Ordinance touching Religion. or by which
any Punishment may be inflicted greater than Fine or Imprisonment for three
Months. shall be of any Force or Effect, until the same shall have received
his Majesty's Approbation.
"XVI. Provided also, That no Ordinance shall be passed at any Meeting
of the Council where less than a Majority of the whole Council is present,
or at any Time except between the first Day of January and the first Day
of May, unless upon some urgent Occasion, in which Case every Member thereof
resident at Quebec. or within fifty Miles thereof, shall be personally summoned
by the Governor. or. in his absence. by the Lieutenant-governor, or Commander
in Chief for the Time being, to attend the same.
"XVII. And be it further enacted by the Authority aforesaid, That nothing
herein contained shall extend. or be construed to extend. to prevent or
hinder his Majesty, his Heirs and Successors, by his or their Letters Patent
under the Great Seal of Great Britain, from erecting, constituting, and
appointing, such Courts of Criminal, Civil, and Ecclesiastical Jurisdiction
within and for the said Province of Quebec, and appointing, from Time to
Time, the Judges and Officers thereof, as his Majesty, his Heirs and Successors,
shall think necessary and proper for the Circumstances of the said Province.
"XVIII. Provided always, and it is hereby enacted, That nothing in
this Act contained shall extend. or be construed to extend, to repeal or
make void, within the said Province of Quebec. any Act or Acts of the Parliament
of Great Britain heretofore made, for prohibiting. restraining, or regulating.
the Trade or Commerce of his Majesty's Colonies and Plantations in America;
but that all and every the said Acts. and also all Acts of Parliament heretofore
made concerning or respecting the said Colonies and Plantations, shall be,
and are hereby declared to be, in Force, within the said Province of Quebec,
and every Part thereof.