MacKay,
J.:—This
action,
an
appeal
of
a
decision
of
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
rendered
July
11,
1989,
came
on
for
hearing
on
June
27,
1991,
in
Halifax.
At
the
commencement
of
the
hearing,
I
allowed
an
application
to
amend
the
statement
of
claim,
including
the
style
of
cause,
to
record
that
the
action
is
carried
on
by
the
trustee
in
bankruptcy
of
the
successor
of
the
original
corporate
plaintiff.
In
advance
of
the
hearing,
on
consent,
an
order
of
this
Court
permitted
the
introduction
at
trial
of
the
transcript
of
proceedings
and
exhibits
tendered
before
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada,
and
those
were
admitted
as
exhibits
at
the
hearing.
The
issue
before
the
Tax
Court,
and
the
issue
before
me,
in
general
terms,
is
whether
certain
assets
acquired
in
the
original
plaintiffs
1982
and
1983
taxation
years
and
used
in
its
business
were
used
primarily
in
the
manufacturing
or
processing
of
goods
for
sale
or
lease.
On
the
basis
that
they
were
so
used,
in
its
tax
returns
for
the
years
in
question
the
taxpayer
claimed
capital
cost
allowance
in
relation
to
the
equipment
on
the
basis
that
those
assets
came
within
Class
29
of
Schedule
Il
of
the
Regulations.
It
also
claimed
an
investment
tax
credit
in
relation
to
some
of
the
expenditures
for
the
equipment,
under
subsection
127(5)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148
(am.
S.C.
1970-71-72,
c.
63)
(the
"Act").
In
reassessing
the
taxpayer's
liability
for
tax,
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
disallowed
those
claims,
reclassifying
the
equipment
within
Class
8
of
Schedule
II,
thus
substantially
reducing
the
allowable
capital
cost
allowances,
and
he
disallowed
the
claimed
investment
tax
credits.
The
reassessments
were
based
on
the
determination
that
the
equipment
in
question
was
not
used
primarily
for
manufacturing
or
processing
of
goods
for
sale
or
lease.
On
appeal
to
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada,
Christie,
A.C.T.C.C.J.
dismissed
the
taxpayer's
appeal
and
upheld
the
ruling
of
the
Minister
finding
that
the
equipment
in
question
was
not
used
primarily
in
the
manufacturing
or
processing
of
goods
for
sale
or
lease.
He
concluded
no
sale
or
lease
was
contemplated
in
relation
to
work
described
as
repair
and
re-manufacturing.
He
considered
himself
bound
by
the
decision
of
Strayer,
J.
of
this
Court
in
Crown
Tire
Service
Ltd,
v.
The
Queen,
[1983]
C.T.C.
412,
83
D.T.C.
5426
(F.C.T.D.).
In
this
appeal
counsel
were
agreed
that
the
sole
issue
was
whether,
particularly
in
light
of
subsequent
decisions
of
this
Court
and
the
Court
of
Appeal,
the
Crown
Tire
decision
was
applicable
in
this
case.
If
it
is,
the
appeal
is
to
be
dismissed.
If
it
is
not
applicable,
the
appeal
is
to
be
allowed,
with
the
calculation
of
the
investment
tax
credit
to
be
made
in
relation
to
the
equipment
agreed
by
counsel
to
have
been
new,
not
used,
when
acquired
by
the
taxpayer
and
excluding
one
category
of
equipment
identified
as
miscellaneous”,
acquired
in
1982.
The
effect
of
decisions
subsequent
to
Crown
Tire,
relied
on
by
the
plaintiff,
has
been
further
clarified
by
decisions
of
my
colleagues
in
this
Court
since
this
case
was
argued
before
me.
Before
reviewing
the
jurisprudence,
however,
it
is
essential
to
set
out
briefly
the
facts
giving
rise
to
the
issue
in
this
case.
Those
facts
are
not
in
dispute,
though
their
significance
for
the
application
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
and
Regulations
is
not
agreed
upon.
The
Facts
The
taxpayer,
Maritime
Hydraulic
Repair
Centre
Ltd.,
was
in
the
business
of
sales,
manufacturing
and
"repair
and
remanufacturing”
of
hydraulic
compo-
nents,
and
to
a
lesser
extent
pneumatic
components,
for
equipment
used
in
a
variety
of
industries.
That
business
had
several
aspects,
including:
a.
"off-the-shelf"
sales
of
hydraulic
parts
and
accessories
manufactured
by
others;
b.
the
replacement
of
defective
parts
in
hydraulic
systems
with
parts
manufactured
by
others
(e.g.,
hydraulic
seals);
c.
manufacture
of
hydraulic
components
or
systems
manufactured
and
sold
as
a
unit
to
customers,
usually
custom-made
to
specification
or
sample;
and
d.
"repair
and
remanufacture”
of
hydraulic
systems
which
involved
the
replacement
of
a
part
or
parts
with
a
part
or
parts
manufactured
by
the
taxpayer.
The
first
two
aspects
did
not
involve
manufacturing
or
use
of
the
equipment
in
question.
The
latter
two
aspects
involved
manufacturing
by
Maritime
Hydraulic
using
the
equipment
in
question
in
the
machining
and
fabrication
of
components
and
parts
from
raw
materials.
The
assets
in
question
were
items
of
shop
equipment
purchased
for
$340,942
in
the
1982
taxation
year,
and
shop
equipment
purchased
for
$97,249
in
the
1983
taxation
year.
These
items
included
metal
lathes,
presses,
a
lapping
machine,
a
milling
machine,
an
electric
hoist,
welder,
hones,
chroming
units—
in
all
some
30
items
and
categories
of
equipment.
They
were
used
for
those
activities
set
out
above
in
c
and
d,
the
manufacturing
or
the
“repair
and
remanufacturing”
aspects
of
the
business.
As
already
noted,
some
of
these
items
were
used
when
acquired
by
the
taxpayer
and
thus
were
not
eligible
for
the
investment
tax
credit
and
the
parties
agreed
that
one
other
category,
miscellaneous"
equipment
acquired
in
1982,
should
be
disregarded
in
considering
that
credit.
It
is
accepted
that
the
portion
of
the
taxpayer's
business
concerned
with
manufacture
of
hydraulic
components
or
systems
(category
c)
meets
the
requirements
of
both
subsection
127(10)
and
Class
29.
However,
there
is
dispute
over
whether
the
use
of
the
assets
in
relation
to"
repair
or
remanufacture"
(category
d)
satisfies
these
requirements.
There
was
no
argument
that
the
equipment
was
used
for
manufacturing
or
processing
and
that
the
taxpayer
used
it
in
relation
to
work
in
category
d,
to
make
or
manufacture,
to
rebuild
or
refinish
cylinders
and
parts
for
hydraulic
equipment,
but
the
defendant
did
not
agree
that
this
resulted
in
"goods
for
sale
or
lease”.
Counsel
for
the
plaintiff
admitted
that
if
the
"repair
or
remanufacture”
activity
did
not
qualify,
then
it
could
not
be
said
that
the
primary
use
of
the
assets
was
in
the
manufacturing
or
processing
of
goods
for
sale
or
lease.
As
a
percentage
of
revenue,
the
"repair
and
remanufacture"
category
was
a
greater
part
of
the
business
than
the
manufacture
of
new
components
category,
some
52
per
cent
in
1982
and
72
per
cent
in
1983
of
the
total
of
invoices
for
work
in
categories
c
and
d.
The
appeal
thus
succeeds
or
fails
on
the
determination
of
whether
the
taxpayer's
activities
described
in
category
d
constituted
manufacturing
or
processing
of
goods
for
sale
or
lease.
A
summary
of
information
from
invoices
relating
to
“manufacturing
or
processing”,
utilizing
the
equipment
acquired
by
the
taxpayer,
was
adduced
in
evidence
before
the
Tax
Court,
and
was
there
accepted,
as
it
was
by
the
parties
in
the
hearing
in
this
Court.
It
shows
the
following
totals
(to
the
nearest
dollar).
No
argument
was
directed
to
the
significance,
if
any,
of
the
breakdown
of
invoices
for"
repair
and
remanufacturing”
between
parts
and
labour,
or
to
the
work
in
chrome
application
in
1983.
The
taxpayer's
assertion
that
the
chrome
application
was
essential
for
certain
of
the
manufactured
products
was
accepted.
That
work
was
subcontracted
to
others
in
1982
and
was
undertaken
by
the
taxpayer
in
1983,
using
new
equipment
acquired
in
1982
which
is
among
the
equipment
on
which
the
taxpayer's
claimed
deductions
were
based.
|
Chrome
|
|
Repair
and
Remanufacturing
|
|
Application
|
Manufacturing
|
Total
|
Parts
|
Labour
|
1982
Taxation
Year
|
(subcontracted)
|
213,751
|
234,649
|
75,093
|
159,556
|
1983
Taxation
Year
|
17,454
|
121,524
|
368,193
|
148,124
|
220,058
|
In
the
category
of
its
work
that
the
taxpayer
described
as
“repair
and
remanufacture"
the
evidence
is
that
a
customer
would
bring
to
the
taxpayer
and
leave
for
repair
equipment
with
hydraulic
components,
or
the
components
themselves.
The
hydraulic
component
would
be
taken
apart
or
"disassembled"
and
some
part
of
it,
either
the
cylinder,
or
a
piston
or
a
rod,
or
some
other
part,
would
be
replaced
with
a
corresponding
part
manufactured
to
fit
the
component
from
raw
materials
held
in
inventory
or
acquired
by
the
taxpayer.
In
the
manufacture
of
the
required
parts
the
equipment
in
question
was
used,
as
it
was
in
the
manufacture
of
hydraulic
components
to
meet
customers'
specifications
(category
c,
above),
which
is
not
here
in
issue.
When
the
new
part
was
manufactured,
the
component
or
the
customer's
equipment
was
reassembled
and
tested.
The
charges
for
parts
in
the
repair
and
remanufacturing
category
were
said
to
be
primarily
the
costs
of
raw
materials
used
in
the
manufacture
of
new
parts,
while
the
charges
for
labour
were
costs
for
labour
involved
in
disassembly
of
the
component,
in
manufacturing
of
new
parts,
and
in
assembly
and
testing
of
the
component.
When
invoices
for
this
work
were
prepared
they
described
the
work
done
as
“repair”,
not
as
“repair
and
remanufacture”,
of
the
component.
The
description
of
the
work
as
repair
and
re-manufacture”
was
devised
by
the
taxpayer
to
separate
this
work
from
that
involving
repairs
using
parts
manufactured
by
others,
a
separation
based
on
details
provided
in
invoices
or
appended
work
orders
that
were
part
of
the
evidence
in
the
Tax
Court
and
before
me.
The
Act
and
Regulations
Under
paragraph
20(1)(a)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
provision
is
made
for
deductions
in
relation
to
capital
cost
allowances.
Section
1100
of
the
Regulations
sets
out
the
particular
allowance
in
relation
to
each
of
several
classes
of
property
set
out
in
Schedule
II,
including
a
20
per
cent
allowance
for
Class
8
and
up
to
50
per
cent
for
Class
29.
The
latter
class
is
described
in
Schedule
II,
so
far
as
it
is
relevant
for
this
case,
as
property
manufactured
or
acquired
by
the
taxpayer
"to
be
used
directly
or
indirectly
by
him
in
Canada
primarily
in
the
manufacturing
or
processing
of
goods
for
sale
or
lease
Section
127
of
the
Act
provides
for
investment
tax
credits
in
relation
to
qualified
property
which,
under
paragraph
127(10)(b)
and
subparagraph
127(10)(c)(i)
includes
prescribed
machinery
and
equipment
acquired
by
the
taxpayer
"that
has
not
been
used,
or
acquired
for
use
or
lease,
for
any
purpose
whatever
before
it
was
acquired
by
the
taxpayer
and
that
is
(c)
to
be
used
by
him
in
Canada
primarily
for
the
purpose
of
(i)
manufacturing
or
processing
of
goods
for
sale
or
lease
While
it
has
no
application
in
this
case
it
is
useful
to
add
reference
here
to
section
125.1
of
the
Act,
a
provision
dealt
with
in
some
of
the
cases
here
relied
upon
in
argument,
which
contains
wording
analogous
to
that
in
Class
29
of
Schedule
II
of
the
Regulations
and
paragraph
127(10)(c)
of
the
Act.
Section
125.1
as
dealt
with
in
a
number
of
the
cases
to
be
reviewed
below
provided
for
a
deduction
from
tax
otherwise
payable
of
a
portion
of
a
corporation's
income,
which,
under
paragraph
125.1(3)(a),
was
“applicable
to
the
manufacturing
or
processing
in
Canada
of
goods
for
sale
or
lease
Since
all
three
provisions,
i.e.,
section
125.1
and
paragraphs
127(10)(b)
and
(c)
of
the
Act,
and
Schedule
II
Class
29
of
the
Regulations,
incorporate
the
same
phrase
“manufacturing
or
processing
of
goods
for
sale
or
lease”
in
relation
to
different
incentives
provided
in
the
legislative
regime,
decisions
applying
these
provisions
have
treated
the
phrase
without
regard
to
the
particulars,
in
wording
and
purposes,
of
the
respective
incentives.
The
Jurisprudence
Crown
Tire
Service
Ltd.
v.
The
Queen,
supra,
(F.C.T.D.)
was
relied
upon
by
Christie,
A.C.T.C.C.].
in
his
decision
in
the
Tax
Court.
He
referred
to
decisions
at
trial
in
this
Court
in
Tenneco
Canada
Inc.
v.
The
Queen,
[1987]
2
C.T.C.
231,
87
D.T.C.
5434,
and
Halliburton
Services
Ltd.
v.
Canada,
[1985]
2
C.T.C.
52,
85
D.T.C.
5336
(F.C.T.D.),
and
concluded
they
were
not
inconsistent
with
Crown
Tire.
Appeals
of
Tenneco
and
Halliburton
Services
were
decided
following
the
decision
given
by
Christie,
A.C.T.C.C.J.
Counsel
for
the
plaintiff
in
this
case
urged
that
the
test
set
out
by
Strayer,
J.
in
Crown
Tire
is
not
applicable
to
determine
the
question
at
issue
in
the
instant
case,
in
light
of
subsequent
decisions
of
the
Court
of
Appeal,
particularly
in
Halliburton
Services
Ltd.
v.
Canada,
[1990]
1
C.T.C.
427,
90
D.T.C.
6320
(F.C.A.),
and
in
Nowsco
Well
Service
Ltd.
v.
Canada,
[1990]
1
C.T.C.
416,
90
D.T.C.
6312
(F.C.A.).
Counsel
for
the
defendant,
on
the
other
hand,
submitted
that
the
decisions
referred
to
by
the
plaintiff
are
distinguishable
and
should
be
limited
to
factual
situations
in
the
oil
industry,
and
that
the
Crown
Tire
case
is
applicable
to
the
issue
in
this
case.
Since
this
case
was
heard,
my
colleagues
in
the
Trial
Division
have
dealt
in
two
other
cases
with
the
argument
that
the
Court
of
Appeal
in
Halliburton
and
Nowsco
had
effectively
rejected
the
approach
in
Crown
Tire.
On
both
occasions
the
argument
was
rejected.
In
commenting
on
the
jurisprudence,
Martin,
J.
in
Rolls-Royce
(Canada)
Ltd.
v.
Canada,
[1991]
2
C.T.C.
252,
91
D.T.C.
5579
(F.C.T.D.)
at
page
255
(D.T.C.
5581)
said:
In
taxation
cases
of
this
sort
there
are
two
lines
of
authority.
One
line,
Halliburton
Services
Ltd.
v.
The
Queen,
[1985]
2
C.T.C.
52,
85
D.T.C.
5336
(F.C.T.D.);
[1990]
1
C.T.C.
427,
90
D.T.C.
6320
(F.C.A.),
and
Nowsco
Well
Service
Ltd.
v.
The
Queen,
[1990]
1
C.T.C.
416,
90
D.T.C.
6312
which
appear
to
favour
the
plaintiff's
case,
and
the
other
line
of
cases
represented
by
Crown
Tire
Service
Ltd.
v.
The
Queen,
[1983]
C.T.C.
412,
83
D.T.C.
5426
(F.C.T.D.),
Tenneco
Canada
Inc.
v.
The
Queen,
[1988]
2
F.C.
3,
[1987]
2
C.T.C.
231,
87
D.T.C.
5434
(F.C.T.D.)
[affirmed
on
appeal,
Mar.
21,
1991
F.C.A.],
and
Reg
Rad
Tech
Ltd.
v.
The
Queen,
[1990]
2
C.T.C.
77,
90
D.T.C.
6350
(F.C.T.D.);
[1991]
2
C.T.C.
201,
91
D.T.C.
5518
(F.C.A.),
which
appear
to
favour
the
defendant's
case.
This
was
quoted
with
approval
by
Dubé,
J.
in
Stowe-Woodward
Inc.
v.
Canada,
[1992]
1
C.T.C.
209,
92
D.T.C.
6149
(F.C.T.D.).
In
each
of
these
later
cases
my
colleagues
extracted
the
guiding
principles
from
each
line
of
authority
and
applied
them
to
the
cases
before
them,
a
course
I
propose
to
follow.
In
the
latest
of
the
cases,
Dubé,
J.
reviewed
the
previous
cases
in
the
following
terms,
in
part
at
pages
212-15
(D.T.C.
6152-53):
In
Crown
Tire,
the
taxpayer
was
engaged
in
the
tire
retreading
business.
The
old
tread
of
the
tire
would
be
stripped
off,
leaving
a
casing;
a
new
tread
would
be
applied
and
secured
and
the
tire
would
then
be
returned
to
the
customer.
Strayer,
J.
found
that
the
taxpayer
was
not
engaged
in
the
manufacturing
or
processing
of
goods
for
sale.
The
contracts
were
for
work
and
materials
and
since
the
taxpayer
did
not
establish
that
the
retreading
of
casings
of
its
own
tires
amounted
to
more
than
10
per
cent
of
its
business,
the
Minister's
assessment
was
upheld.The
learned
judge
referred
to
Benjamin's
sale
of
goods
to
distinguish
between
a
contract
of
sale
of
goods
and
a
contract
for
work
and
material:
where
work
is
done
on
the
chattel
of
another
involving
the
use
of
affixing
materials,
the
contract
will
ordinarily
be
one
for
work
and
materials,
the
property
passing
from
one
to
the
other
“by
accession
and
not
under
any
contract
of
sale".
The
Tenneco
decision
was
a
decision
of
mine
released
in
1987.
Tenneco
was
in
the
business
of
installing
mufflers
on
automobiles.
I
held
that
it
did
not
manufacture
goods
for
sale;
it
merely
installed
on
cars
goods
already
manufactured
elsewhere.
I
referred
to
Crown
Tire
and
to
Halliburton
as
well
but
felt
that
Crown
Tire
better
applied
to
the
facts
of
the
case
then
before
me.
On
March
21,
1991,
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal
confirmed
my
decision
in
Tenneco.
Linden,
J.A.
referred
to
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal's
decision
in
Halliburton
but
did
not
state
that
Crown
Tire
was
bad
law.
On
the
contrary,
it
confirmed
mine
which
relied
largely
on
it.
In
Reg
Rad
Tech
my
colleague
Collier,
J.
held
that
the
substance
of
the
taxpayer’s
business
was
providing
services
to
patients
in
processing
x-ray
films
for
medical
partnerships.
The
sale
of
developed
films
was
only
a
minor
step
in
this
process.
My
colleague
relied
heavily
on
a
previous
decision
of
McNair,
J.
of
this
Court
in
Dixie
X-Ray
Associates
Ltd.
v.
The
Queen,
[1988]
1
C.T.C.
69,
88
D.T.C.
6076,
and
reported
this
key
paragraph
of
his
decision
at
page
74
(D.T.C.
6079):
The
test
for
determining
whether
a
contract
is
one
for
the
sale
of
goods
or
for
the
supply
of
services
is
to
ask
the
question:
What
is
the
substance
of
the
contract?
If
the
substance
of
the
contract
is
the
production
of
something
to
be
sold
and
the
transference
of
property
therein
to
a
buyer
then
the
contract
is
a
sale
of
goods.
But
if
the
real
substance
of
the
contract
is
the
skill
and
labour
of
the
supplier
in
the
performance
of
work
for
another
then
that
is
a
contract
for
work
and
labour,
notwithstanding
that
property
in
some
materials
may
pass
under
the
contract
as
accessory
thereto
.
.
.
[Citations
in
original
are
here
omitted].
Judge
Collier's
decision
was
confirmed
by
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal
on
September
4,
1991.
Marceau,
J.,
speaking
for
the
Court,
said
that
the
case
was
“quite
unlike
the
situations
in
Halliburton
and
Nowsco
Well
Services
where
the
production
and
eventual
sale
of
the
product
was
found
to
be
the
dominant
feature
of
company
activity”.
As
to
the
other
line
of
cases,
also
known
as
the
"oil
well
cases",
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal
decisions
in
Nowsco
and
Halliburton
were
both
released
on
April
10,
1990
and
were
written
by
Urie,
J.A.
The
two
decisions
favoured
the
taxpayer.
The
facts
are
similar
in
both
cases
and
the
substantial
judgment
was
rendered
in
Nowsco.
The
learned
judge
reviewed
the
cases
I
have
already
mentioned
as
well
as
others
and
found
each
to
be
quite
distinguishable
on
its
facts.
Urie,
J.
preferred
the
reasoning
of
Reed,
J.
of
the
Trial
Division
in
Halliburton
and
quoted
her
extensively.
The
taxpayer
in
Halliburton
was
engaged
in
the
business
of
oil
well
servicing
and
its
activities
included
the
preparation
and
pumping
into
well
sites
of
special
mixtures
of
cement.
These
materials
were
used
to
facilitate
the
extraction
of
oil.
Reed,
J.
found
it
inappropriate
to
adopt
a
fragmented
view
that,
when
the
blending
has
been
completed
there
is
a
finished
good,
and
that
pumping
constitutes
the
delivery
of
a
finished
good
which
would
not
be
manufacturing
or
processing.
Cullen,
J.
found
in
Nowsco
that
the
taxpayer's
activities
constituted
a
continuous
process,
and
all
aspects
of
it,
including
the
blending,
mixing,
pressurizing
and
pumping,
were
one
and
the
same
process
Urie,
J.A.
wholly
subscribed
to
the
arguments
of
Reed,
J.
and
added
his
own
analysis
as
follows
at
pages
423-24
(D.T.C.
6317-18):
First,
as
earlier
noted,
the
respondent,
in
consultation
with
the
operator,
its
customer,
prepares
a
treatment
proposal.
According
to
the
evidence,
it
is
the
operator
who
is
familiar
with
the
formation
through
which
the
drill
hole
is
bored
as
well
as
that
from
which
he
hopes
to
extract
the
oil
or
gas.
Consequently,
he
must
decide
on
the
type
of
cement
slurry
required
and
the
stimulation
most
likely
to
assist
in
the
extraction,
relying
on
the
advice
of
the
respondent
in
each
case
as
to
the
proper
products
to
be
used
to
achieve
the
best
results,
the
equipment
to
be
used
and
the
pressures
and
rates
utilized
for
the
best
results.
In
all
cases
it
is
the
customer
who
must
ultimately
make
the
decisions
on
each
branch
of
the
proposal.
Secondly,
as
I
understand
the
evidence,
after
the
proposal
as
amended
is
accepted,
the
respondent
proceeds
to
the
well
site
with
its
equipment
to
carry
out
its
proposal
which
involves,
on
a
carefully
orchestrated
and
integrated
basis,
the
mixing,
blending,
pressuring
and
pumping
of
the
various
materials,
additives,
acids,
proppants
and
gases
required
in
cementing
and
well
stimulation.
Thirdly,
the
form
of
invoice
rendered
clearly
indicates
that
the
customer
is
billed
for
both
the
materials
which
it
provides
in
accordance
with
the
customer's
specifications
and
the
services
it
performs
in
utilizing
those
materials
to
achieve
the
stimulation
or
cementing
results
required
by
the
customer.
Even
a
rather
cursory
inspection
of
the
various
invoices
in
the
record,
apparently
selected
and
entered
in
evidence
on
a
random
basis,
indicates
that
in
dollar
amounts
the
division
between
materials
and
services
is
roughly
fifty-fifty.
Fourthly,
while
the
evidence
is
somewhat
sparse
there
is
on
the
record
evidence
of
an
element
of
profit
to
the
respondent
in
the
sale
of
its
material
which
on
a
gross
profit
basis,
(which
is
the
only
basis
disclosed)
is
roughly
equivalent
to
the
gross
profit
derived
from
it
by
the
supply
and
rental
of
its
equipment.
In
the
Rolls-Royce
case,
supra,
the
issues
included
the
application
of
section
125.1
of
the
Act
and
Class
29
of
Schedule
II
of
the
Regulations.
In
that
case,
at
issue
was
whether
the
taxpayer's
operations
were
primarily
in
overhauling
airplane
engines
to
certification
standards.
Those
operations,
described
by
the
taxpayer
as
re-manufacturing,
involved
overhauling
engines
delivered
by
customers
to
whom
the
same
engines
were
returned
when
the
work
was
completed.
Martin,
J.
in
concluding
that
the
situation
was
comparable
to
that
in
Crown
Tire,
not
the
oil
well
cases,
found
that
of
the
criteria
set
out
by
Urie,
J.A.
in
Nowsco
only
one,
the
billing
by
the
taxpayer
to
its
customers
for
both
materials
and
services,
appeared
in
the
Rolls-Royce
situation
but
even
then
the
materials
itemized
on
invoices
were
those
the
taxpayer
decided
were
necessary
for
overhaul
of
an
engine,
not
materials
provided
in
accord
with
specifications
of
the
customer
which
was
the
case
in
Nowsco.
He
also
said,
in
part
at
page
258
(D.T.C.
5583-84):
I
agree
with
the
observations
made
by
Urie,
J.A.
that
the
Crown
Tire
case
and
the
oil
well
cases
are
not
comparable
and
I
find
that
the
present
case
bears
far
more
similarity
to
the
Crown
Tire
case
than
to
the
oil
well
cases.
In
this
case
the
customer
relies
completely
upon
the
taxpayer's
judgment
for
the
work
and
materials
to
be
supplied.
No
new
goods
are
created
which
are
sold
to
the
customer
prior
to
their
being
incorporated
into
the
customer's
engine.
It
is
the
taxpayer
and
not
the
customer
who
remains
in
control
of
the
entire
operation.
It
is
the
taxpayer
who
guarantees
the
work.
Finally,
title
to
the
materials
used
passes
from
the
taxpayer
to
the
customer
not
by
sale
as
found
by
Urie,
J.A.
in
the
oil
well
cases
but
by
accession
at
the
time
they
are
attached
to
and
become
a
part
of
the
engine
being
overhauled
similarly
to
the
position
in
the
Crown
Tire
case.
Furthermore
it
is
a
fact
and,
according
to
Reed,
J.,
a
significant
factor
differentiating
the
cases
that
in
the
Crown
Tire
case
the
customer
owned
the
chattel
throughout.
Urie,
J.A.
did
not
suggest
that
this
was
not
a
significant
factor
in
the
Crown
Tire
case
or
that
it
was
a
factor
to
be
ignored
in
other
cases.
He
simply
pointed
out
that
in
his
view
counsel’s
overemphasis
on
this
factor
in
the
oil
well
cases
had
the
effect
of
misconstruing
the
nature
of
the
relationship
between
the
parties.
I
am
unable
to
accept
those
observations
as
being
tantamount
to
overruling
the
Crown
Tire
case
or
the
reasoning
upon
which
it
was
based.
In
Stowe-Wood
ward,
supra,
the
issues
included
all
three
of
the
tax
incentives
applicable
in
relation
to
the
manufacturing
of
goods
for
sale,
under
sections
125.1
and
127
of
the
Act
and
within
Schedule
Il
Class
29
applicable
under
paragraph
20(1)(a)
of
the
Act.
There
the
operations
of
the
taxpayer
consisted
mainly
of
the
application
of
rubber
covers
to
roll
cores,
mostly
from
mills
in
the
pulp
and
paper
industry.
Covers
were
made
from
raw
materials
according
to
specifications
applicable
to
the
customer's
roll
core
requirements
in
accord
with
the
particular
trade-mark
requirements
of
the
original
manufacturer.
(The
taxpayer
was
a
licensed
user
of
the
various
trade-marks.)
The
operation
included
stripping
old
covers
off
used
cores,
preparing
the
surface
of
the
cores
to
ensure
bonding,
applying
the
rubber
product
specially
prepared
by
the
taxpayer
for
each
roll
core,
and
subsequently
vulcanizing
the
product
onto
them.
In
concluding
that
the
case
fell
within
the
principles
of
Halliburton
and
Nowsco,
not
within
those
of
Crown
Tire
and
the
cases
following
it,
Dubé,
J.
found
that
the
taxpayer
did
not
repair,
rather
it
replaced
covers,
and
while
there
was
an
element
of
service
in
its
operations,
the
bulk
of
its
activities
and
the
substance
of
its
manufacturing
and
processing
took
place
before
the
cover
was
applied
to
the
roll
core.
A
product,
the
rubber
material
prepared
to
specifications
before
its
application
to
the
roll
core,
was
created
using
sophisticated
machinery
and
the
product
was
delivered
to
the
customer
by
applying
it
to
the
customer’s
roll.
Customers
might
separately
buy
the
product
for
purposes
of
making
their
own
repairs.
The
primary
object
of
the
contracts
between
the
taxpayer
and
its
customers
was
for
the
transfer
of
property
in
the
product.
Customers
received
roll
covers
prepared
to
their
particular
specifications
for
which
they
paid
a
flat
list
price
without
separate
billing
for
services.
In
this
case,
counsel
for
the
plaintiff
submitted
that
the
principle
enunciated
by
Chief
Justice
Dickson
in
McClurg
v.
M.N.R.,
[1990]
3
S.C.R.
1020,
[1991]
1
C.T.C.
169,
91
D.T.C.
5001,
should
be
followed.
There
his
Lordship
set
out
guidelines
for
the
interpretation
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
as
developed
in
recent
decisions
of
the
Supreme
Court,
concluding
(at
C.T.C.
183,
D.T.C.
5011)".
.
.it
is
necessary
to
determine
both
the
purpose
of
the
legislative
provision
and
the
economic
and
commercial
reality
of
the
taxpayer's
actions”.
Counsel
for
the
plaintiff
urged
that
determination
of
this
case
based
on
the
distinction
between
contracts
for
the
sale
of
goods
and
contracts
for
work
and
materials
or
services
would
be
a
triumph
of
juristic
classification
of
form"
over
“commercial
and
economic
realities’,
adopting
phrases
employed
by
Dickson,
C.J.C.
in
Bronfman
Trusts.
The
Queen,
[1987]
1
S.C.R.
32,
[1987]
1
C.T.C.
117,
87
D.T.C.
5059,
at
page
53
(C.T.C.
5067,
D.T.C.
128).
In
Halliburton
Services,
supra,
Urie,
J.A.
for
the
Court
of
Appeal
quoted
and
supported
comments
of
Madame
Justice
Reed
at
trial
in
relation
to
argument
that
the
main
activity
of
the
taxpayer
was
the
provision
of
services
and
not
goods
for
sale
at
pages
55-56
(D.T.C.
5338):
This
argument
is
based
on
the
well
known
distinction
between
contracts
for
the
sale
of
goods
and
contracts
for
work,
labour
and
materials,
developed
with
respect
to
sale
of
goods
legislation.
I
have
considerable
difficulty
with
this
line
of
argument.
In
the
first
place,
it
is
based
on
distinctions
developed
for
purposes
of
the
sale
of
goods
legislation,
not
with
respect
to
subsection
125.1(3)(b)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
I
do
not
read
subsection
125.1(3)(b)
as
requiring
that
a
taxpayer's
profit
has
to
arise
out
of
a
contract
for
a
sale
of
goods
as
defined
by
the
various
Sales
of
Goods
Acts.
Subsection
125.1(3)(b)
does
not
talk
of
a
sale
of
goods.
It
talks
of
profit
arising
out
of
the
processing
of
goods
for
sale.
Secondly,
I
do
not
find
any
requirement
that
the
contract
which
gives
rise
to
the
taxpayer’s
profit
must
be
of
a
particular
nature,
e.g.,
one
for
the
sale
of
goods
and
not
one
of
a
more
extensive
nature
involving
work
and
labour
as
well
as
the
goods
or
materials
supplied.
In
the
third
place,
to
adopt
the
distinction
for
which
the
defendant
argues
would
be
to
create
an
illogical
result.
As
counsel
for
the
plaintiff
pointed
out,
under
such
a
regime,
a
manufacturer
or
processor
of
a
product
(e.g.,
a
chemical
fertilizer)
who
also
provided
a
service
in
connection
therewith
(e.g.,
spreading
the
fertilizer
for
his
customers)
would
be
denied
the
processing
tax
deduction.
If
he
merely
sold
the
product
to
his
customers
he
would
be
allowed
the
deduction.
[Emphasis
in
original.]
Decision
The
purposes
of
the
legislative
provisions
here
in
issue,
subsection
127(10)
of
the
Act
and
Class
29
of
Schedule
II,
are
to
provide
incentives
related
to
expenditures
on
equipment
acquired
for
use
in
manufacturing
or
processing
goods
for
sale
or
lease.
Implicitly
the
incentives
recognize
and
encourage
expenditures
incurred
by
those
engaged
in
that
activity.
That
activity
may
depend
substantially
upon
the
relationship
between
the
taxpayer
and
its
customers
or
clients,
but
in
my
view
it
depends
as
well
upon
the
inherent
nature
of
the
functions
carried
on
by
the
taxpayer
in
using
the
equipment.
Here
it
is
acknowledged
that
those
functions
constitute
manufacturing.
It
could
hardly
be
otherwise
for
the
equipment
was
used
to
make
parts
for
hydraulic
equipment
from
raw
materials,
including
steel,
cast
iron,
plastic,
nylon
and
other
materials,
held
in
inventory
or
acquired
by
the
taxpayer.
From
those
raw
materials,
using
the
equipment
here
put
forth
as
the
basis
of
the
plaintiff's
claims
to
incentives,
products
were
produced
in
the
form
of
parts
or
components
for
hydraulic
equipment.
Those
parts
were
made
to
meet
specifications
of
the
customer
in
category
c
of
the
plaintiff's
classification
of
its
work,
or
to
replace
parts
of
defective
hydraulic
equipment
owned
by
the
customer,
a
requirement
that
is
no
less
a
specification
of
the
customer
than
if
the
latter
had
described
the
part
or
parts
required
in
detail.
Here
the
customer
of
repair
and
re-manufacturing
services
relied
upon
the
skill
and
workmanship
of
the
taxpayer,
but
that
reliance
related
not
only
to
the
taxpayer's
service
in
dismantling
the
defective
equipment
and
reassembling
it
after
servicing
its
parts
but
also
to
the
taxpayer's
skill
and
workmanship
in
manufacturing
parts
to
replace
any
that
were
defective.
These
were
incorporated
in
the
customer's
equipment
when
it
was
reassembled
to
make
a
satisfactorily
functioning
hydraulic
component.
In
sum,
the
relationship
between
the
taxpayer
and
its
customers
was
one
based
on
a
contract
for
services
and
for
transfer
of
property
in
the
replacement
parts
for
a
price,
that
is
a
sale.
The
price
for
the
work
done
by
the
taxpayer
was
not,
as
in
Nowsco
and
in
Stowe-Woodward,
fixed
solely
in
relationship
to
the
product
provided,
rather
it
was
fixed
in
terms
of
materials,
the
raw
materials
used,
and
labour,
including
labour
costs
in
dismantling
the
equipment
of
the
customer
and
its
re-assembly
as
well
as
labour
costs
in
the
manufacturing
of
replacement
parts.
In
my
view,
that
ought
not
to
obscure
the
true
nature
of
the
use
of
the
equipment
by
the
taxpayer.
If
the
taxpayer's
work
has
been
priced
with
reference
to
the
replacement
parts
alone,
including
all
of
the
costs
for
the
service
provided,
the
taxpayer
might
be
more
readily
seen
as
a
user
of
equipment
in
the
production
of
goods
for
sale,
but
this
would
not
have
any
bearing
on
the
inherent
nature
of
the
functions
it
carried
out
using
the
equipment
in
question.
Nor
should
the
share
of
total
costs
for
labour
unassociated
with
the
manufacturing
process
have
any
significance
for
it
is
the
acquisition
and
use
of
the
equipment
that
is
the
purpose
of
the
incentives,
and
it
is
not
here
argued
as
a
separate
item
even
by
the
defendant.
It
seems
to
me
a
formalistic
splitting
of
the
taxpayer's
business
activity,
using
the
equipment
in
question,
to
recognize
for
incentive
purposes
the
use
of
the
equipment
where
the
taxpayer
manufactured
parts
as
specified
by
a
customer,
including
an
entire
hydraulic
component
by
manufacture
and
assembly
of
its
parts,
but
not
to
do
so
where
the
customer
leaves
defective
hydraulic
compo-
nents
for
repair
and
the
taxpayer's
equipment
is
used
in
exactly
the
same
manner
to
produce
a
part
or
parts
for
replacement
of
defective
parts.
In
both
cases
the
equipment
is
used
in
the
same
manner
to
make
products,
to
manufacture
goods.
In
all
cases
when
the
product
is
made
from
raw
materials
owned
by
the
taxpayer
it
is
the
property
of
the
taxpayer.
It
remains
so
until
the
product
is
paid
for
in
those
cases
where
the
product
is
made
to
the
customer's
specifications,
when
property
would
pass
under
sale
of
goods
legislation.
Counsel
for
the
plaintiff
here
argued
that
the
same
situation
applies
in
the
case
of
products
made
and
installed
to
effect
repair
of
the
customer's
component,
but
it
is
unnecessary
to
determine
the
time
of
transfer
of
property
in
replacement
parts
to
dispose
of
this
case;
it
is
sufficient
to
note
that
property
in
those
parts
is
transferred
from
the
taxpayer
to
the
customer
at
some
point
in
time.
Since
it
is
the
acquisition
of
equipment
for
use
in
manufacture
of
goods
for
sale
that
is
assisted
by
the
incentives
under
the
Act,
when
the
relationship
between
the
parties
is
for
both
work
and
materials,
or
service,
as
well
as
for
property
to
pass,
the
use
of
the
equipment
in
production
of
discrete
products
before
their
adhesion
or
affixing
to
a
customer's
property
would
seem
to
be
of
significance
for
the
application
of
the
incentives.
In
Halliburton,
Nowsco
and
Stowe-Woodward
the
equipment
in
question
was
found
to
be
used
to
produce
a
product
which
was
then
sold
to
a
customer.
However
that
sale
is
made
in
terms
of
the
forms
or
invoicing
practices
of
the
parties,
or
however
the
taxpayer's
product
is
priced
for
sale,
has
no
significance
for
the
ultimate
transfer
of
property
in
the
product
produced.
Nor
should
these
have
significance
for
the
assessment
of
the
inherent
nature
of
the
taxpayer's
functions
in
use
of
the
equipment.
I
distinguish
Crown
Tire
on
the
basis
that
there
was
no
product
produced
by
the
taxpayer
before
the
work
and
materials
provided
resulted
in
adding
to
the
customer's
property
by
adhesion
of
the
materials.
No
new
tire
treads
existed
until
the
customer's
tire
casing
was
retreaded.
In
Rolls-Royce
there
was
no
evidence
of
any
product
made,
rather
the
evidence
was
that
the
equipment
in
question
was
used
in
servicing
engines
and
parts
and
it
was
argued
that
the
substantial
work
involved
resulted
in
a
new
engine,
a
conclusion
that
Martin,
J.
rejected.
Both
cases
would
clearly
be
analogous
to
use
of
the
taxpayer's
chroming
equipment
to
add
chrome
to
parts
of
the
customer's
hydraulic
components.
But
that
was,
at
most,
a
minor
aspect
of
the
taxpayer’s
business
here.
Rather,
the
equipment
in
this
case
was
used
to
manufacture
goods,
parts
for
hydraulic
components,
to
some
of
which
chrome
was
added,
made
to
specifications
of
customers
or
as
replacement
parts
for
defective
components
of
customers.
It
was
urged
by
the
defendant
that
the
hydraulic
components
continued
throughout
to
be
owned
by
customers,
as
tire
casings
were
in
Crown
Tire,
but
here
that
could
not
be
said
for
the
replacement
parts
made
by
the
taxpayer,
distinct
products,
that
were
not
the
property
of
the
customer,
until
at
the
earliest
when
affixed
to
the
customer's
component
on
reassembly,
or
at
some
later
time.
Conclusion
I
conclude
that
the
taxpayer's
appeal
is
allowed,
for
the
equipment
that
here
forms
the
basis
for
its
claims
to
incentives
was
acquired
for
“use
in
the
manufacture
of
goods
for
sale”
within
the
meaning
of
those
words
in
Class
29
of
Schedule
II
of
the
Regulations
and
in
subsection
127(10)
of
the
Act.
Thus,
the
action
is
allowed
with
respect
to
the
1982
and
1983
taxation
years;
the
listed
assets
(except
item
#25)
as
agreed
between
counsel
qualify
for
capital
cost
allowance
under
Class
29
of
Schedule
II
of
the
Income
Tax
Regulations;
and
the
listed
assets
which
were
purchased
new
in
each
of
the
two
taxation
years
(i.e.
numbers
19
to
24,
26,
and
28
to
30),
as
agreed
between
counsel,
qualify
for
the
investment
tax
credit
under
subsection
127(5)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
This
matter
is
referred
back
to
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
for
reconsideration
and
reassessment
on
the
basis
of
the
judgment
issued
herein
in
accord
with
these
reasons.
Appeal
allowed.