Why this article is proposed
The structure of Alberta's courts today rests on the federal Constitution Act, 1867 (the superior court appointment power), federal statute (the Supreme Court of Canada), and provincial statute (the Provincial Court, Court of King's Bench rules, and Court of Appeal procedure). This article proposes to write Alberta's part of that picture into a provincial constitution and to flag where Alberta would want changes if the broader constitutional framework allowed.
What it would change
Article IV restates several principles already in force in Alberta law: judicial independence, merit-based appointment of provincial judges, and judicial review for constitutional consistency. It also stakes out three positions that go past what Alberta can do under section 45 alone:
- Article IV s1 and s3 assert provincial control over courts and judges that are constitutionally superior courts, currently appointed by the federal government under Constitution Act, 1867 s.96.
- Article IV s4 contemplates the eventual creation of a provincial final court of last resort, which would require amendment of s.41(d) (composition of the Supreme Court of Canada).
- Article IV s6 says the Constitution of Alberta prevails over federal law in irreconcilable conflict within provincial jurisdiction. This reverses federal paramountcy.
- Article IV s7 contemplates Alberta assuming full control of the criminal law, which is exclusively federal under s.91(27).
The legal basis
Section 45 lets Alberta organise its own provincial court system and its own constitutional review. It does not let Alberta appoint superior court judges, displace the Supreme Court, or rewrite the rule of federal paramountcy. The classification notes identify the procedure that would be required for each of those changes.
Open questions
Two referendum questions on the October 2026 ballot relate to this article:
- Question 6 asks whether provinces should select superior court justices. That change would require amending s.96 under the general amending formula (7/50) per Constitution Act, 1982 s.38.
- Question 9 asks whether provincial laws should have priority over federal laws in provincial or shared jurisdiction. Reversing paramountcy is structural and is not cleanly reachable through any single Part V procedure.
Albertans will also need to consider whether to entrench a transitional clause on criminal law that signals Alberta's interest in eventually assuming the federal criminal-law power, or to leave that question for a future constitutional negotiation.