BILL 29 – 2004
MINERAL TENURE AMENDMENT ACT, 2004
HER MAJESTY, by and with the advice and consent of the
Legislative Assembly of the Province of British Columbia, enacts as
follows:
1 Section 1 of the Mineral Tenure Act,
R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 292, is amended
(a) by repealing the definitions of "anniversary
date" and "legal corner post",
(b) by repealing the definitions of "claim",
"exploration and development", "lease",
"mining lease", "placer
lease" and "recorded holder"
and substituting the following:
"claim"
means a mineral claim or a placer claim and includes a legacy claim;
"exploration and
development" has the meaning in the regulations;
"lease"
means a mining lease or a placer lease and includes a legacy lease;
"mining lease"
means a mining lease issued under section 42 and a legacy mining lease;
"placer lease"
means a placer lease issued under section 45 and a legacy placer lease;
"recorded holder"
means a person whose name appears as the owner of the mineral title on
the record of that title in the registry; , and
(c) by adding the following
definitions:
"cell"
means an area shown electronically on a map of British Columbia, for
the purpose of the registry, in accordance with the regulations;
"cell claim" means
a claim consisting of a cell or cells;
"expiry date"
means the day one year after the date that a claim is recorded or
registered and includes an expiry date as revised under section 29 or
33.1;
"legacy"
when used in relation to a claim or lease means a claim or lease made
before the coming into force of this definition;
"register" means
register in the registry;
"registry"
means the mineral titles online registry established and maintained by
the chief gold commissioner under section 6.2 (1); .
2 Section 4 is amended
(a) by repealing subsection (1) and
substituting the following:
(1) A chief gold
commissioner and one or more gold commissioners may be appointed under
the Public Service Act. , and
(b) by adding the following
subsection:
(6) The chief gold
commissioner may appoint one or more gold commissioners to be a deputy
chief gold commissioner, and may delegate to any person employed in the
ministry some or all of the functions of the chief gold commissioner
other than powers to make regulations under sections 22 and 46.
3 Section 5 is repealed and the
following substituted:
How chief gold commissioner
furnishes records
5 (1) A
written copy of any record kept in the registry, certified by the chief
gold commissioner to be a true copy, must be received in a court
without proof of the signature of the chief gold commissioner.
(2) Any notice or
information that the chief gold commissioner is required to give to a
recipient under this Act or the regulations may be given
(a) in paper form,
(b) by being transmitted by
electronic means to the recipient, or
(c) in any prescribed
manner.
4 Section 6 is repealed and the
following substituted:
Searching the registry
6 A
person may search the registry in accordance with the regulations.
5 The following Part is added:
Part 1.1 -- Mineral
Titles Online Registry
Electronic Transactions Act
applies
6.1
Despite section 2 (4) (d) of the Electronic Transactions Act,
that Act applies to this Part.
Mineral titles online
registry
6.2 (1)
The chief gold commissioner must establish and maintain a mineral
titles online registry for the purposes of registrations respecting
claims, leases and notices.
(2) In addition to any
requirements under the regulations, the chief gold commissioner may
(a) establish requirements
for information that must be supplied to effect a registration and the
format in which the information must be supplied, and may make those
requirements known electronically to users of the registry,
(b) establish any other
matter or requirement in order to ensure proper functioning of the
registry, and
(c) require a registration
to be made electronically in accordance with the regulations.
(3) The electronic
signature of an applicant for registration must be incorporated into
the electronic application in accordance with the requirements of the
chief gold commissioner.
(4) An electronic
application or electronic instrument is submitted for the purposes of
this Part when the application or instrument is entered electronically
into the registry using the technology established by the chief gold
commissioner and in accordance with the requirements of the chief gold
commissioner.
Claims
6.3 A
person may register a claim in accordance with the regulations.
Claim or lease changes
6.31
(1) The following changes to a claim are not effective until registered:
(a) an amalgamation of
claims under section 24.2;
(b) a reduction in the area
of the claim under section 25;
(c) a revision of an expiry
date under section 29 or section 33.1;
(d) a deletion or
correction under section 6.36;
(e) any other kind of
change specified in the regulations for the purposes of this subsection.
(2) The recorded holder of
a lease must register the following changes to a lease, and the changes
are not effective until registered:
(a) a renewal of the lease
under section 42, 45 or 47;
(b) a change in the area of
the lease under section 44 or 47;
(c) any other kind of
change specified in the regulations for the purposes of this subsection.
(3) The chief gold
commissioner may register the following against a claim or lease:
(a) notice of any order
made by the chief gold commissioner;
(b) notice of a court order;
(c) notice of a complaint
under section 40;
(d) any other matter
specified in the regulations for the purposes of this subsection.
Conversions of leases and
rights under other enactments
6.32
(1) A recorded holder of a mineral claim or a placer claim who wishes
to convert the claim to a mining lease or placer lease under section 4
or 45 must register an application for the lease.
(2) A person referred to in
section 53 (2) (a) who wishes to obtain a mining lease or placer lease
under section 42 or 45 must register an application for the lease.
(3) When a lease is entered
into under subsection (1) or (2), the chief gold commissioner must
register the information required by the chief gold commissioner
respecting the lease and give notice of the registration to the
recorded holder.
Discharge of claims and
leases
6.33
(1) To abandon a claim or surrender a lease, the recorded holder must
register a discharge of the claim or lease.
(2) The abandonment or
surrender does not entitle the recorded holder to a refund of fees or
other money paid under this or a former Act.
(3) The chief gold
commissioner may register a notice of a forfeiture of a claim under
section 35 or of a lease under section 50.
Registration of transfers
of ownership of claims and leases
6.34 A
recorded holder of a claim or lease or a person who meets the
requirements under the regulations in relation to a claim or lease may
register a transfer of ownership to another person in accordance with
the regulations.
Registration of documents
and notices against a claim or lease
6.35 A
person may register a document or notice relating to a mineral title
according to the regulations.
Deletion from registry or
amendment or correction of entry
6.36
(1) The chief gold commissioner may
(a) delete or correct an
entry in the registry in accordance with the regulations, or
(b) delete or amend an
entry in the registry if the registration does not comply with the Act
or the regulations.
(2) If the chief gold
commissioner deletes, corrects or amends an entry, the chief gold
commissioner must give notice to any affected person.
(3) A notice under
subsection (2) may be given before or after deleting, correcting or
amending an entry in the registry.
Information in registry
prevails
6.4 If
there is a difference between electronic information in the registry
and other information or another document, the information in the
registry prevails, whether or not the other information or the other
document contains an original signature.
Calculation of time for
purposes of registry
6.5
Section 25 (2) and (3) of the Interpretation Act
does not apply to a time specified under this Act for doing something
in the registry.
Suspending functions of
registry
6.6
Despite any other provision of this Act, the chief gold commissioner
may
(a) suspend one or more of
the functions of the registry if the chief gold commissioner is
satisfied that circumstances are such that it is not practicable to
provide those functions, and
(b) if the chief gold
commissioner is satisfied that, but for a suspension under paragraph
(a), an application for registration or a record submitted to the chief
gold commissioner would have been received on a date within the
suspension period,
(i) the chief gold
commissioner may date the registration or accept the record as of that
date, and
(ii) the date referred to
in subparagraph (i) must be considered for all purposes to be the date
on which the record was received by or filed with the chief gold
commissioner.
No overlapping registrations
6.7
Only one claim or lease may be registered with respect to a cell,
unless the registration is in respect of the following:
(a) an area of a cell over
which the mapping of a legacy claim has been challenged;
(b) a cell only part of
which is covered by a legacy claim, and the registration is in respect
of the part of the cell that is not covered by the legacy claim;
(c) a claim or lease under
section 53 (2);
(d) one cell covered by any
of the following:
(i) a mineral claim and a
placer claim;
(ii) a mineral claim and a
placer lease.
Priority
6.8 (1)
Registration is effective from the time of payment of the prescribed
fee for registration, if any, or if there is no prescribed fee, the
date of registration as recorded by the registry.
(2) If more than one
payment is received for the same registration, the order of
registration is determined by the time of payment, if any, as
determined by the time confirmation of payment is received by the
Minister of Finance.
Registration by other than
electronic means
6.9 The
chief gold commissioner may authorize a person to use a means of
registration other than a means required by this Act, if satisfied that
(a) it is necessary to
avoid great hardship or great injustice, and
(b) the integrity of the
registry will be maintained.
6 Section 7 is repealed and the
following substituted:
Certain registrations must
be by free miner
7 A
person, other than the government, must be a free miner to register a
claim or lease or to register exploration and development under section
29 or 33.1.
7 Section 8 is amended
(a) in subsection (5) by striking out
"section 7 (1)," and substituting
"section 7,", and
(b) by adding the following
subsection:
(6) A free miner
certificate may be issued in electronic form.
8 Section 10 is amended
(a) in subsection (1) by striking out
"A copy of such notice must be provided to the
minister.", and
(b) in subsection (3) (a) by striking
out "and to the minister,".
9 Section 11 (2) is amended
(a) by adding "or"
at the end of paragraph (f),
(b) by striking out "or"
at the end of paragraph (g), and
(c) by repealing paragraph (h).
10 Section 12 (1) is amended by
striking out "by different methods of location or
by separate acquisition".
11 Section 13 (6) (a) is amended by
striking out "located," and
substituting "located or registered,".
12 Section 15 (2) is amended
(a) by striking out "minister
may" and substituting "minister
responsible for the Land Act may",
and
(b) in paragraphs (b) and (c) by
striking out "the minister" and
substituting "that minister".
13 Section 16 (1) and (2) is amended
by striking out "located"
wherever it appears and substituting "located or
registered".
14 Section 17 (3) is repealed and the
following substituted:
(3) The chief gold
commissioner must serve the order on the recorded holder and register
notice of the order in the registry.
15 Section 18 is amended
(a) by repealing subsections (3) and
(5) and substituting the following:
(5) The chief gold
commissioner must serve notice of the cancellation of a claim on the
recorded holder and register the cancellation in the registry. ,
and
(b) in subsection (4) by striking out
"may" and substituting "may,
by order,".
16 Section 19 is amended
(a) by repealing subsection (1) (b)
and substituting the following:
(b) provides, within 30
days after serving the notice required by paragraph (a), a copy of the
notice to the chief gold commissioner and to an inspector under the Mines
Act. , and
(b) in subsections (3) and (4) by
striking out "gold commissioner"
wherever it appears and substituting "chief gold
commissioner".
17 Section 22 is amended
(a) in subsection (2) (a) and (b) by
striking out "locating or recording"
and substituting "registering",
and
(b) in subsection (4) (b) by adding "or
registered" after "located".
18 Section 23 is repealed.
19 Section 24 is repealed.
20 The following sections are added:
Validity and priority of
legacy claims
24.1
(1) A legacy claim continues until forfeited, cancelled, abandoned or
converted to a lease.
(2) A legacy lease
continues until it expires, is surrendered or otherwise terminates.
(3) The inclusion of part
of a legacy claim in an area in which the location or registration of
that part is prohibited does not affect the validity of the location of
the remainder of the claim, and the location of any post does not
invalidate the claim.
(4) Priority of location of
a legacy claim is based on the time that the location was completed so
long as it was located in the prescribed manner.
Amalgamation of cell claims
24.2 In
accordance with the regulations, mineral cell claims may be amalgamated
with other adjoining mineral cell claims, and placer cell claims may be
amalgamated with other adjoining placer cell claims, if the amalgamated
claims are held by the same recorded holder.
21 Section 25 is repealed and the
following substituted:
Reduction of cell claim
25 The
recorded holder of a cell claim who complies with the regulations may
reduce the area of the claim by registration under section 6.31.
22 Section 26 is amended
(a) by repealing subsection (2), and
(b) in subsection (3) by striking out
"after August 15, 1988".
23 Section 27 is repealed.
24 Section 28 (1) is amended by adding
"that are held by the government and"
after "as the case may be,".
25 Section 29 is repealed and the
following substituted:
Continuation of claims
29 A
recorded holder may hold a claim until the expiry date, and after that,
in accordance with the regulations, may hold the claim from year to
year by
(a) doing exploration and
development and registering a statement of the exploration and
development, or making payments instead of exploration and development,
and
(b) registering a revised
expiry date.
26 Section 30 is repealed.
27 Section 31 is repealed and the
following substituted:
Portable assessment credits
31 If a
recorded holder performs exploration and development and submits a
report on that exploration and development which is acceptable to the
chief gold commissioner, the recorded holder, subject to the
regulations, may have the cost of that exploration and development
credited to a portable assessment credit account, and the recorded
holder may, to the extent authorized by the regulations, use this
account
(a) to facilitate
exploration and development required as a consequence of revising an
expiry date, and
(b) for the purpose of
sections 29 and 33.1 to keep any claim in good standing.
28 Section 32 is repealed.
29 Section 33 (1) and (2) is amended
by striking out "29 (a) or 30"
and substituting "29 or 33.1".
30 The following section is added:
Registration of revised
expiry date of claim
33.1
The recorded holder of a claim who complies with the regulations may
revise the expiry date of the claim by registration.
31 Section 34 (1) and (2) is repealed
and the following substituted:
(1) On the failure of a
co-recorded holder or that person's personal representative to
contribute the co-recorded holder's portion of the exploration and
development required by section 29, another co-recorded holder, who has
performed and recorded the exploration and development may serve the
delinquent co-recorded holder or the personal representative with a
notice that the co-recorded holder's portion must be contributed within
3 months after service of the notice.
(2) If the co-recorded
holder or the personal representative fails to contribute in full,
including the costs of service, during the 3 month period, the
delinquent co-recorded holder's interest in the claim vests in the
co-recorded holder who has performed and recorded the required
exploration and development, on filing evidence satisfactory to the
chief gold commissioner that the co-recorded holder or the personal
representative was served and the contribution not made.
32 Section 35 (1) is amended
(a) by repealing paragraph (b) and
substituting the following:
(b) does not perform and
register the exploration and development required by section 29,
, and
(b) by striking out "anniversary"
and substituting "expiry".
33 Sections 36 to 38 are repealed.
34 Section 39 is amended by striking
out "recording" and substituting "registration".
35 Section 39 is repealed.
36 Section 40 is amended
(a) by repealing subsection (1) (b)
and substituting the following:
(b) a person has knowingly
made a false statement or report under section 29, 33 or 33.1 or in a
registration or an application for a registration under section 29, 33
or 33.1, or ,
(b) in subsection (2) (b) by adding "chief"
before "gold commissioner", and
(c) by adding the following
subsections:
(2.1) Complaints made under
this section have priority according to the earliest notice of
complaint registered against a claim.
(7.1) On making an order
under subsection (7) (b) or (c), the chief gold commissioner may
(a) delete, correct or
amend an entry in the registry,
(b) discharge the
registration of a claim of the recorded holder against whom a complaint
has been upheld, and
(c) if the complainant is
not the government, register a cell claim of the complainant over that
cell.
(7.2) If the chief gold
commissioner's order is overturned on appeal, the chief gold
commissioner may make any changes to the register in respect of the
claim that are required to implement the order of the court.
37 Section 40 is amended
(a) by repealing subsection (1) (a),
and
(b) by repealing subsection (2) and
substituting the following:
(2) A complaint under
subsection (1) (b) must be made within one year after the statement or
report was registered with the chief gold commissioner.
38 Section 41 is repealed and the
following substituted:
Production on claim
41 (1)
A recorded holder of a mineral claim may produce ore from a claim in
accordance with the regulations.
(2) A recorded holder of a
placer claim may produce pay dirt from a claim in accordance with the
regulations.
39 Section 42 is amended
(a) by repealing subsections (1), (3)
and (4) and substituting the following:
(1) A recorded holder of a
mineral claim who wishes to replace the claim with a lease must comply
with subsection (2) after registration of an application for a lease
under section 6.32.
(4) If the chief gold
commissioner is satisfied that the recorded holder has met all of the
requirements of subsection (2), the chief gold commissioner must issue
a mining lease for an initial term not longer than 30 years on
conditions the chief gold commissioner considers necessary. ,
(b) in subsection (2) (b) by striking
out "appropriate" and
substituting "chief", and
(c) in subsection (5) by striking out
"20 years" and substituting "30
years".
40 Section 44 is amended
(a) by repealing subsection (1) and
substituting the following:
(1) If a lessee complies
with all prescribed requirements for mapping and surveying, on
application by the lessee, the chief gold commissioner may amend the
area of a mining lease by deleting land from it.
(1.1) If a lease is amended
under subsection (1), the rental payment is not reduced until the next
year of the lease. , and
(b) in subsection (3) by striking out
"appropriate" and substituting "chief".
41 Section 45 is amended
(a) by repealing subsections (1) and
(5) and substituting the following:
(1) A recorded holder of a
placer claim or a placer lease issued under any of the former Acts who
wishes to replace it with a lease issued under this Act must comply
with subsection (2) after registration of an application for a lease
under section 6.32. ,
(b) in subsection (2) by striking out
"appropriate" and substituting "chief",
(c) in subsections (3) and (4) (b) by
adding "chief" before "gold
commissioner", and
(d) by adding the following
subsections:
(3.1) If the chief gold
commissioner is satisfied that the recorded holder has met the
requirements of subsections (2) and (3) and the regulations respecting
the issuance of a placer lease, the chief gold commissioner must issue
the placer lease on conditions the chief gold commissioner considers
necessary.
(7) In addition to any
terms and conditions referred to in subsection (6) that apply to a
placer lease, if a placer lease is issued and no legal survey of the
area of the placer lease was performed by a practising land surveyor
under the Land Surveyors Act, it is a term of the
placer lease that the lessee must indemnify and save harmless the
government against any loss or damage sustained by the government
arising out of the issuance of the placer lease.
(8) If a placer lease is
issued based on a technical survey and the technical survey plan is
later found to be inaccurate, the chief gold commissioner may amend the
plan and revise the area of the placer lease.
42 Section 47 (1) is repealed and the
following substituted:
(1) If a lessee complies
with all prescribed requirements for mapping and surveying, on
application by the lessee the chief gold commissioner may amend the
area of a placer lease by deleting land from it.
(1.1) If a placer lease is
amended under subsection (1), the rental payment is not reduced until
the next year of the lease.
43 Section 48 is amended
(a) by repealing subsection (1), and
(b) in subsection (2) by striking out
"charge recorded" and
substituting "charge registered".
44 Section 49 (2) is repealed.
45 Section 50 is amended
(a) by repealing subsection (1) and
substituting the following:
(1) It is a condition of
every lease that before the end of a rental year the recorded holder
must pay to the government the prescribed annual rental for the next
rental year. , and
(b) in subsections (2) and (3) by
striking out "minister" and
substituting "chief gold commissioner".
46 Section 52 is repealed.
47 Section 53 is amended
(a) in subsection (2) (a) by striking
out "gold commissioner" in both
places and substituting "chief gold commissioner",
(b) in subsections (2) (b) and (6) by
striking out "locate" and
substituting "register",
(c) by adding "or"
at the end of subsection (7) (b),
(d) by repealing subsection (7) (c)
and (d) and substituting the following:
(c) is surrendered or
abandoned under section 6.33, , and
(e) in subsection (8) by adding "and
the chief gold commissioner may discharge the registration of the
recorded holder whose mineral title has escheated"
after "other recorded holder".
48 Section 55 is repealed.
49 Section 56 is repealed and the
following substituted:
Court orders affecting
mineral titles
56 If a
court proceeding results in a change in the original boundaries of a
mineral title, the court must order that
(a) a plan in accordance
with the regulations be filed with the chief gold commissioner, and
(b) the expense of
obtaining the plan be shared among the parties to the proceeding in the
manner the court considers just.
50 Sections 57 and 58 are repealed.
51 Section 61 is amended by striking
out "gold commissioner for the mining division in
which the mineral title is situated" and substituting
"chief gold commissioner".
52 Section 63 is repealed and the
following substituted:
Offence
63 (1)
A person commits an offence who does any of the following:
(a) wilfully and without
lawful excuse pulls down, defaces, alters or removes a staking or legal
post, a legal corner post or other survey monument;
(b) explores for, develops
or produces minerals contrary to this Act or the regulations;
(c) knowingly makes a false
statement or provides false information under this Act or the
regulations, or in a registration;
(d) offers for sale, or
sells, a mineral title for a non-mining usage.
(2) Sections 4 and 5 of the
Offence Act do not apply to this Act.
(3) A person who is
convicted of an offence is liable to a fine of not more than $25 000 or
to imprisonment for not more than 6 months, or to both.
Power of chief gold
commissioner to require information for audits
63.1
For the purpose of determining the accuracy of information provided to
the chief gold commissioner under this Act, the chief gold commissioner
may require a person to provide verification of the information
provided or additional information or documents that relate to the
information provided.
53 Section 65 (2) is amended
(a) by repealing paragraphs (c) and
(e),
(b) by repealing paragraphs (i), (j)
and (k) and substituting the following:
(i) revising expiry dates
for mineral titles; ,
(c) in paragraph (m) by striking out "located
or",
(d) by repealing paragraph (o) and
substituting the following:
(o) establishing or setting
fees for performing duties or providing services under this Act,
including setting rents, costs and payments; , and
(e) by repealing paragraphs (r) and
(s) and substituting the following:
(r) specifying how and when
particular exploration and development activities may be applied to a
claim and the amount of credit that may be allowed for any type of
exploration and development done in respect of a claim;
(s) respecting portable
assessment credits for the purposes of section 31 and prohibiting any
type of exploration and development from being applied to a portable
assessment credit account; .
54 Section 65 is amended by adding the
following subsection:
(2.1) Without limiting
subsection (1), the Lieutenant Governor in Council may make regulations
to provide for the following:
(a) specifying other
changes or other matters for the purposes of section 6.31;
(b) limiting and regulating
production on a claim for the purposes of section 41;
(c) defining a word or
expression used but not defined in this Act;
(d) cells and cell claims,
including a reduction in the maximum size of a cell claim, a reduction
in the size of a cell claim and the amalgamation of multiple cell
claims;
(e) legacy claims and
legacy leases;
(f) requirements that,
under section 29, must be met in order to maintain a claim;
(g) who is eligible to use
the registry to register a claim, charge, transfer of ownership, notice
or other matter or to search the registry;
(h) registration of cell
claims, leases, legacy claims and legacy leases and any transfers,
notices of debt instruments and options, changes of name and other
documents related to any of them;
(i) discharges;
(j) searches in the
registry;
(k) the effect of
registration;
(l) information required to
effect a registration;
(m) documents or
information for which registration is not required but which must be
provided to the chief gold commissioner in support of a registration,
and when they must be provided;
(n) the method of
identifying the land that is the subject of a claim or lease, including
any limitation on the area of land that may be the subject of a single
registration;
(o) transition issues
respecting deemed registrations when the underlying title terminates,
including, for the purposes of transition, the granting of additional
rights to existing holders of registrations;
(p) restrictions and
prohibitions on registration;
(q) agents and agency;
(r) amalgamation of claims
or leases;
(s) delegating a matter to
a person employed by the minister;
(t) conferring a discretion
on the chief gold commissioner;
(u) making different
regulations for different persons, places, things or transactions.
55 Section 65 (3) is repealed.
56 The following Part is added:
Part 5 -- Transition
Transfer of legacy claims
and legacy leases to registry
68 (1)
The chief gold commissioner may enter a legacy claim or legacy lease
into the registry by registering information in accordance with the
regulations.
(2) The law that applies to
a legacy claim or legacy lease entered into the registry under
subsection (1) is the law that applies to a registered claim or a lease
for which a notice of lease has been registered, except for the
following:
(a) the area of land
covered by a legacy title continues unchanged after its registration
despite any provision to the contrary in this Act or the regulations
respecting the shape or size of areas that may be registered;
(b) if a legacy claim is
converted to a lease, the lease may be registered in the registry
despite the area or shape of the lease being contrary to a provision of
this Act or the regulations, if the area and shape is supported by a
survey plan as required under section 42 or 45;
(c) sections 39, 40 (1) (a)
and 40 (2) (a), as they were immediately before the coming into force
of this section, continue to apply to legacy claims;
(d) a conveyance, bill of
sale, assignment or transfer entered into before the coming into force
of this paragraph is governed by section 57 as it was immediately
before the coming into force of this paragraph, except that the right
to record a document referred to in section 57 (2) is a right to
register the document or a notice of the document in accordance with
the regulations.
(3) Despite subsection (2),
if the law that applies to a cell claim imposes obligations with
respect to exploration and development, or payment instead of
exploration and development, that differ from the obligations that
applied to a legacy claim before the coming into force of this
subsection, then, on the claim's expiry date in effect at the time this
section comes into force, those new obligations apply to the legacy
claim.
(4) Despite subsection (2),
if the law that applies to a lease for which a notice of lease has been
registered imposes obligations with respect to annual rent that differ
from the obligations that applied to a legacy lease before the coming
into force of this subsection, then, on the lease's expiry date in
effect at the time this section comes into force those new obligations
apply to the legacy lease.
(5) A person has no right
of action and may not commence or maintain proceedings, as a result of
the enactment of this section or the exercise of a function under this
section,
(a) to claim damages or
compensation of any kind from the government or a person acting on
behalf of the government, or
(b) to obtain a declaration
that damages or compensation are payable by the government or a person
acting on behalf of the government.
(6) For all purposes,
including for the purposes of the Expropriation Act,
no expropriation or injurious affection occurs as a result of the
enactment of this section or the exercise of a function under this
section.
Extension of title over
cell on termination of legacy title
69 (1)
Subject to the regulations, on the termination of a mineral claim or
mining lease that applies to only part of a cell, any other mineral
cell claim over the remaining part of the cell is extended to apply to
the whole cell.
(2) Subject to the
regulations, on the termination of a placer claim or placer lease that
applies to only part of a cell, any other placer cell claim over the
remaining part of the cell is extended to apply to the whole cell.
Transitional regulation
making powers
70 (1)
The Lieutenant Governor in Council may make regulations considered
necessary or advisable for the purpose of more effectively bringing
into operation the registry and to remedy any transitional difficulties
encountered in doing so.
(2) A regulation made under
this section may be made retroactive to a date not earlier than the
date subsection (1) comes into force.
(3) This section is
repealed 2 years after section 6.2 of the Mineral Tenure Act
comes into force.
57 The Supplement to the Mineral
Tenure Act is repealed.
Consequential Amendments
Energy and Mines Statutes Amendment Act, 2003
58 Section 3 of the Energy and Mines
Statutes Amendment Act, 2003, S.B.C. 2003, c. 1, is repealed.
Evidence Act
59 Section 40 of the Evidence Act,
R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 124, is repealed and the following substituted:
Certified copies of records
of chief gold commissioner
or gold commissioner as evidence
40 For
the purpose of a record kept by or a document filed with the chief gold
commissioner or a gold commissioner under the Mineral Tenure
Act, copies of or extracts from the record or document,
certified as true copies or extracts by the chief gold commissioner or
gold commissioner, must be received in a court in British Columbia as
evidence of the matters contained in them.
Park Act
60 Section 2 (1) of the Park Act,
R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 344, is amended by striking out "section
23 of the Mineral Tenure Act and regulations made
under that section,".
61 Section 9 (8) is repealed.
Commencement
62 The
provisions of this Act referred to in column 1 of the following table
come into force as set out in column 2 of the table:
Item
|
Column 1
Provisions of Act
|
Column 2
Commencement
|
1
|
Anything not elsewhere covered by this table
|
The date of Royal Assent
|
2
|
Sections 1 to 8
|
By regulation of the Lieutenant Governor in Council
|
3
|
Sections 10 to 17
|
By regulation of the Lieutenant Governor in Council
|
4
|
Sections 19 to 56
|
By regulation of the Lieutenant Governor in Council
|
5
|
Section 58
|
By regulation of the Lieutenant Governor in Council
|
6
|
Section 61
|
By regulation of the Lieutenant Governor in Council
|