Six Miles Deep

Fiduciary Duty

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A fiduciary duty arises when one party undertakes to act in the best interests of another in a relationship of trust, confidence, and vulnerability. The fiduciary must be loyal, avoid conflicts of interest, and manage the other’s property or interests with care. In Canada, courts have recognized that the Crown can owe fiduciary duties to Indigenous peoples when it controls land or resources on their behalf.

In the Haldimand context, the Crown’s role in purchasing, granting, managing, and later selling or leasing Grand River lands sits squarely in a fiduciary frame. If the Crown failed to protect the land, allowed it to be chipped away without proper consent, or used it as if it were its own to profit from, those actions can be analyzed as breaches of fiduciary duty to Mohawk posterity. Fiduciary thinking shifts the narrative from “policy choices that went wrong” to “breaches of trust that carry legal consequences.”

152 words

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About Benjamin Doolittle U.E.

listen to BLOODLINE

“Bloodline” follows the Haldimand Proclamation from its original promise to the present fight to have it honoured. The track moves through Crown grants, broken commitments, and the legal and political road back to enforcement, asking listeners to hear the Proclamation not as a relic of the past, but as a living obligation that still binds the Crown to the Mohawk Nation of Grand River.

Artist: One Way Current
Writer: Benjamin Doolittle UE
Producer: One Way Current
Publisher: Corn Press Publications
Affiliation: Six Miles Deep / Mohawk Nation of Grand River

Six Miles Deep