Lamarre
Proulx,
T.C.C.J.:—The
appellant
is
appealing
the
assessment
of
the
respondent,
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
(the''Minister")
for
1988.
The
question
in
issue
concerns
the
constitutionality
of
paragraph
118(1)(b)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148
(am.
S.C.
1970-71-72,
c.
63)
(the
"Act"),
and
more
particularly
one
of
the
conditions
under
which
it
applies.
Paragraph
118(1)
(b)
of
the
Act
provides
for
a
tax
credit
in
respect
of
an
unmarried
individual
or
a
married
individual
who
neither
supports
nor
lives
with
his
spouse
and
is
not
supported
by
his
spouse,
and
who
maintains
a
self-
contained
domestic
establishment
(in
which
the
individual
lives)
and
actually
supports
therein
a
person
related
to
him.
Such
person
must
not
be
18
years
of
age
or
older,
except
in
the
case
of
a
parent
or
grandparent
or
where
the
person
is
dependent
by
reason
of
mental
or
physical
infirmity.
It
is
this
age
condition,
which
was
added
in
1988,
that
is
questioned
by
the
appellant
on
the
ground
that
it
is
contrary
to
section
15
of
the
Canadian
Charter
of
Rights
and
Freedoms
(the
"Charter").
Subsection
118(1)(b)
of
the
Act
reads
as
follows:
(1)
For
the
purpose
of
computing
the
tax
payable
under
this
Part
by
an
individual
for
a
taxation
year,
there
may
be
deducted
an
amount
determined
by
the
formula
A
x
B
where
A
is
the
appropriate
percentage
for
the
year,
and
B
is
the
aggregate
of
(b)
in
the
case
of
an
individual
not
entitled
to
a
deduction
by
reason
of
paragraph
(a)
who,
at
any
time
in
the
year,
(i)
is
an
unmarried
person
or
a
married
person
who
neither
supported
nor
lived
with
his
spouse
and
is
not
supported
by
his
spouse,
and
(ii)
whether
by
himself
or
jointly
with
one
or
more
other
persons,
maintains
a
self-contained
domestic
establishment
(in
which
the
individual
lives)
and
actually
supports
therein
a
person
who,
at
that
time,
is
(A)
except
in
the
case
of
a
child
of
the
individual,
resident
in
Canada,
(B)
wholly
dependent
for
support
on
the
individual,
or
the
individual
and
such
other
person
or
persons,
as
the
case
may
be,
(C)
related
to
the
individual,
and
(D)
except
in
the
case
of
a
parent
or
grandparent
of
the
individual,
either
under
18
years
of
age
or
so
dependent
by
reason
of
mental
or
physical
infirmity,
an
amount
equal
to
the
aggregate
of
(iii)
$6,000,
and
(iv)
an
amount
determined
by
the
formula
$5,000
—
(D
—
$500)
where
D
is
the
greater
of
$500
and
the
income
for
the
year
of
the
dependent
person;
[Emphasis
added]
Subsection
(1)
of
section
15
and
section
1
of
the
Charter
read
as
follows:
15(1)
Every
individual
is
equal
before
and
under
the
law
and
has
the
right
to
the
equal
protection
and
equal
benefit
of
the
law
without
discrimination
and,
in
particular,
without
discrimination
based
on
race,
national
or
ethnic
origin,
colour,
religion,
sex,
age
or
mental
or
physical
disability.
1.
The
Canadian
Charter
of
Rights
and
Freedoms
guarantees
the
rights
and
freedoms
set
out
in
it
subject
only
to
such
reasonable
limits
prescribed
by
law
as
can
be
demonstrably
justified
in
a
free
and
democratic
society.
The
facts
The
facts
are
not
disputed.
The
appellant
maintains
by
herself
a
self-
contained
domestic
establishment
where
she
lives
with
her
son.
She
wholly
supports
her
son,
who
was
24
years
of
age
in
1988
and
suffered
from
no
mental
or
physical
infirmity.
At
the
beginning
of
1988
he
worked
as
a
guard
in
the
Duberger
city
hall.
He
stopped
working
in
the
middle
of
the
summer
because
there
apparently
was
a
summer
closure.
In
the
fall,
when
he
went
to
offer
his
services,
there
was
someone
else
occupying
the
position.
His
income
for
1988
was
composed
of
income
from
employment
of
$561
and
interest
income
of
$134.21.
The
respondent
admits
that
the
son
was
wholly
dependent
on
the
appellant.
The
appellant's
position
The
agent
for
the
appellant
drew
the
Court's
attention
to
the
fact
that
the
requirement
that
the
child
be
under
18
years
of
age
was
added
in
1988,
to
a
provision
which
had
been
in
existence
for
a
long
time.
The
agent
for
the
appellant
argues
that
this
is
a
credit
for
a
related
person,
who
is
wholly
dependent,
and
that
the
only
criterion
which
should
count
is
whether
that
related
person
is
wholly
dependent
or
not.
Moreover,
this
is
historically
the
only
criterion
that
the
legislator
had
retained.
The
age
condition
would
therefore
be
contrary
to
section
15
of
the
Charter,
since
the
age
criterion
is
not
relevant
in
the
circumstances
of
paragraph
118(1)
(b)
of
the
Act,
and
amounts
to
discrimination.
The
respondent's
position
The
respondent
admits
that,
were
it
not
for
this
requirement
as
to
the
son's
age,
the
appellant
would
have
been
entitled
to
the
tax
credit.
However,
the
respondent
argues
that
this
requirement
is
not
contrary
to
section
15
of
the
Charter,
because
it
is
a
classification
that
is
not
discriminatory.
But
if
it
were
the
case,
it
is
justified
under
section
1
of
the
Charter
because
its
objective
is
sufficiently
important
to
justify
the
infringement
of
a
right
guaranteed
by
the
Charter.
Counsel
for
the
respondent
notes
that
the
argument
that
the
Act
has
to
be
read
as
it
has
always
been
read
is
not
valid
because
there
are
no
vested
rights
to
a
tax
deduction.
She
argues
that
paragraph
118(1)(b)
of
the
Act
must
be
read
together
with
paragraph
118(1)(d)
of
the
Act,
which
is
the
credit
for
dependent
persons.
The
latter
of
these
paragraphs
was
also
amended
in
1988.
The
conditions
became
the
same,
which
was
not
the
case
previously,
and
[Translation]
"this
uniformiza-
tion
is
important
in
the
overall
perception
of
the
Act
and
of
what
was
intended
by
the
legislator"
I
quote
some
of
her
comments
with
regard
to
sections
15
and
1
of
the
Charter:
Is
it
an
insular
and
disadvantaged
group?
.
.
.
in
this
case,
there
is
no
evidence
per
se
of
disadvantage
or
of
social,
political
or
other
prejudice
against
persons
on
whom
adults
are
ultimately
dependent,
adult
children
who
are
not
the
mother,
the
father,
the
grandfather
or
grandmother
and
adults
who
are
normally
capable
of
entering
the
labour
market.
All
that,
as
opposed,
we
must
still
see
them
as
opposed
to
persons
on
whom
minor
or
infirm
children
are
dependent.
Is
there
a
justification
under
section
1
of
the
Charter?
The
objective
of
the
classification:
.
.
.
in
this
case
it
was
designed
primarily
to
protect
infirm
persons
and
underage
children,
at
least
people
on
whom
infirm
persons
are
dependent,
whatever
their
age,
or
underage
children
or
parents
or
grandparents,
which
and
it
was
not
designed
to
protect
people,
other
people
who
are
themselves
supposed
to
look
after
themselves,
either
to
continue
their
studies,
in
which
case
there
are
other
kinds
of
credits
which
exist
for
those
people,
or
who
are
capable
of
entering
the
labour
market,
and
where
there
are
other
statutes,
other
social
systems
which
exist
to
help
these
people.
And
we
must
take
into
account
the
legislative
system
which
it
was
intended
to
establish,
and
this
is
really,
this
is
again
not
a
special
statute
which
is
in
question
here.
Thus
the
means
of
a
tax
credit
for
people
who
have
minor
or
handicapped
dependants
infringed
as
little
as
possible
the
rights
of
people
who
have
adult
dependants
who
are
not
infirm
not
to
be
subject
to
discrimination
because,
moreover,
since
the
credit
is
also
given
to
the
father,
mother,
grandfather,
grandmother,
thus
it
infringed
as
little
as
possible
on
adults
who
might
still
be
dependent,
and
again,
if
the
adult
dependant
was
still
in
school,
there
were
other
means
provided
by
the
legislator
for
these
people.
Thus
the
prejudicial
effects
of
the
credit,
if
such
prejudicial
effects
there
are,
because
it
is
not
available
to
24
years
of
age
dependants
who
are
not
handicapped,
that
does
not
supplant
the
intended
objective
which
is
that
the
public
at
large
should
not
have
to
bear,
through
higher
taxes,
the
cost,
the
burden
of
those
who
are
not
working
when
they
are
capable
of
working,
ultimately
that
is
what
is
behind
the
reform,
and
so
which
is
also
primarily
to
lighten
the
tax
burden
of
those
who
have
dependent
minor
children
or
handicapped
persons.
Thus
we
conclude
that
if
there
was
discrimination,
it
is
a
justified
limit
under
section
1.
Counsel
for
the
respondent
referred
to
the
following
case
law:
Douglas
College
v.
Douglas/Kwantlen
Faculty
Assn.,
[1990]
3
S.C.R.
570,
77
D.L.R.
(4th)
94;
The
Queen
v.
David
Edwin
Oakes,
[1986]
1
S.C.R.
103,
26
D.L.R.
(4th)
200;
The
Attorney
General
of
Quebec
v.
Irwin
Toys
Ltd.,
[1989]
1
S.C.R.
927,
58
D.L.R.
(4th)
577;
M.N.R.
v.
Inland
Industries
Ltd.,
[1974]
S.C.R.
514,
23
D.L.R.
(3rd)
677;
Cuddy
Chicks
Ltd.
v.
Ontario
Labour
Relations
Board;
The
Queen
v.
Edwards
Books,
[1986]
2
S.C.R.
713,
29
D.L.R.
(4th)
127;
Keyes
v.
M.N.R.,
[1989]
1
C.T.C.
2157,
89
D.T.C.
91;
Smith
v.
M.N.R.,
[1989]
2
C.T.C.
2069,
89
D.T.C.
639;
France
Julien
v.
M.N.R.,
[1991]
1
C.T.C.
2391,
91
D.T.C.
586;
Tiberio
et
al
v.
M.N.R.,
[1990]
2
C.T.C.
2345,
91
D.T.C.
17;
Prior
v.
The
Queen,
[1989]
2
C.T.C.
280,
89
D.T.C.
5503;
Andrews
v.
Law
Society
of
British
Columbia,
[1989]
1
S.C.R.
143,
56
D.L.R.
(4th)
1;
The
Queen
v.
Turpin,
[1989]
1
S.C.R.
1296;
A.
Gerol
v.
The
Attorney
General
of
Canada,
[1986]
1
C.T.C.
75,
85
D.T.C.
5561;
Smith,
Kline
&
French
Laboratories
Ltd.
v.
Canada,
[1987]
2
F.C.
359,
34
D.L.R.
(4th)
584;
Ontario
Public
Service
Employees
Union
v.
The
National
Citizens
Coalition
Inc.,
[1987]
2
C.T.C.
59,
87
D.T.C.
5270;
Weronski
v.
M.N.R.,
[1991]
2
C.T.C.
2431,
91
D.T.C.
1105;
The
Queen
v.
Elizabeth
C.
Symes,
[1991]
2
C.T.C.
1,
91
D.T.C.
5397.
Analysis
This
appeal
arises
from
an
amendment
to
the
Act
in
1988
in
relation
to
the
deduction
known
as
the
equivalent
to
married
exemption.
Before
1988,
the
appellant
was
entitled
to
deduct
this
equivalent
in
computing
her
taxable
income,
because
the
age
of
the
dependant
was
not
a
criterion
for
eligibility.
In
1988,
this
deduction
became
a
tax
credit
and
age
became
an
eligibility
factor.
Paragraph
118(1)(b)
of
the
Act
reproduces
former
paragraph
109(1)
(b)
of
the
Act,
except
in
respect
of
the
addition
of
the
condition
that
a
related
person
who
is
not
a
parent
or
grandparent
or
is
not
infirm
must
be
under
18
years
of
age
and
except
for
the
fact
that
the
deduction
in
computing
taxable
income
became
a
tax
credit.
Former
paragraph
109(1)(b)
of
the
Act
read
as
follows:
in
the
case
of
an
individual
not
entitled
to
a
deduction
under
paragraph
(a)
who,
during
the
year,
(i)
was
an
unmarried
person
or
a
married
person
who
neither
supported
nor
lived
with
his
spouse
and
was
not
supported
by
his
spouse,
and
(ii)
whether
by
himself
or
jointly
with
one
or
more
other
persons,
maintained
a
self-contained
domestic
establishment
(in
which
the
individual
lived)
and
actually
supported
therein
a
person
who,
during
the
year,
was
(A)
except
in
the
case
of
a
child
of
the
individual,
resident
in
Canada,
(B)
wholly
dependent
for
support
on
the
taxpayer,
or
the
taxpayer
and
such
person
or
persons,
as
the
case
may
be,
and
(C)
connected,
by
blood
relationship,
marriage
or
adoption,
with
the
taxpayer,
or
the
taxpayer
and
such
other
person
or
persons,
as
the
case
may
be,
an
amount
equal
to
the
aggregate
of
(iii)
$1,600,
and
(iv)
$1,400
less
the
amount,
if
any,
by
which
the
income
for
the
year
of
the
dependent
person
exceeds
$200;
Paragraph
109(1)(b)
exists
since
1972.
It
was
amended
only
in
respect
of
the
amounts
of
the
deductions.
In
1972,
that
paragraph
read
as
follows:
(b)
in
the
case
of
an
individual
not
entitled
to
a
deduction
under
paragraph
(a)
who,
during
the
year,
(i)
was
an
unmarried
person
or
a
married
person
who
did
not
support
or
live
with
his
spouse
and
was
not
supported
by
his
spouse,
and
(ii)
whether
by
himself
or
jointly
with
one
or
more
other
persons,
maintained
a
self-contained
domestic
establishment
(in
which
the
individual
lived)
and
actually
supported
therein
a
person
who,
during
the
year,
was
(A)
wholly
dependent
for
support
upon,
and
(B)
connected,
by
blood
relationship,
marriage
or
adoption,
with
the
taxpayer,
or
the
taxpayer
and
such
one
or
more
other
persons,
as
the
case
may
an
amount
equal
to
the
aggregate
of
(iii)
$1,500,
and
(iv)
$1,350
less
the
amount,
if
any,
by
which
the
income
for
the
year
of
the
dependent
person
exceeds
$250;
Finally,
if
we
go
back
still
further
in
time,
this
right
to
a
deduction
for
a
person
who
maintains
a
self-contained
domestic
establishment
has
existed
since
1933.
That
provision
read
as
follows:
(c)
Two
thousand
dollars
in
the
case
of
(i)
A
married
person;
(ii)
A
widow
or
widower
with
a
son
or
daughter
under
twenty-one
years
of
age
who
is
dependent
upon
such
parent
for
support,
or
if
twenty-one
years
of
age
or
over
is
likewise
dependent
on
account
of
mental
or
physical
infirmity;
(iii)
An
individual
who
maintains
a
self-contained
domestic
establishment
and
who
actually
supports
therein
one
or
more
individuals
connected
with
him
by
blood
relationship,
marriage
or
adoption;
Discrimination
under
section
15
of
the
Charter
Age
is
one
of
the
heads
of
discrimination
enumerated
in
subsection
15(1)
of
the
Charter.
However,
not
every
statute
which
contains
differences
in
protection
and
benefits
based
on
age
is
necessarily
discriminatory.
For
a
court
to
be
able
to
find
that
there
is
an
infringement
of
section
15,
it
must
first
find
that
the
difference
in
treatment
is
discrimination.
With
respect
to
the
analysis
of
section
15
of
the
Charter,
we
should
recall
the
comments
of
McIntyre
J.
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
Andrews:
In
other
words,
the
admittedly
unattainable
ideal
should
be
that
a
law
expressed
to
bind
all
should
not
because
of
irrelevant
personal
differences
have
a
more
burdensome
or
less
beneficial
impact
on
one
than
another
.
It
is
not
every
distinction
or
differentiation
in
treatment
at
law
which
will
transgress
the
equality
guarantees
of
s.
15
of
the
Charter.
It
is,
of
course,
obvious
that
legislatures
may—and
to
govern
effectively—must
treat
different
individuals
and
groups
in
different
ways.
Indeed,
such
distinctions
are
one
of
the
main
preoccupations
of
legislatures.
The
classifying
of
individuals
and
groups,
the
making
of
different
provisions
respecting
such
groups,
the
application
of
different
rules,
regulations,
requirements
and
qualifications
to
different
persons
is
necessary
for
the
governance
of
modern
society.
As
noted
above,
for
the
accommodation
of
differences,
which
is
the
essence
of
true
equality,
it
will
frequently
be
necessary
to
make
distinctions.
What
kinds
of
distinctions
will
be
acceptable
under
subsection
15(1)
and
what
kinds
will
violate
its
provisions?
It
now
seems
to
be
well
established
that
the
equality
guarantees
of
section
15
of
the
Charter
are
not
violated
simply
because
an
Act
contains
classifications.
How
may
we
determine
whether
a
classification
is
contrary
to
section
15
of
the
Charter?
Certain
principles
have
been
developed
in
the
case
law
and
I
again
refer
to
Andrews:
.
.
.I
would
say
then
that
discrimination
may
be
described
as
a
distinction,
whether
intentional
or
not
but
based
on
grounds
relating
to
personal
characteristics
of
the
individual
or
group,
which
has
the
effect
of
imposing
burdens,
obligations,
or
disadvantages
on
such
individual
or
group
not
imposed
upon
others,
or
which
withholds
or
limits
access
to
opportunities,
benefits,
and
advantages
available
to
other
members
of
society.
However,
in
assessing
whether
a
complainant's
rights
have
been
infringed
under
subsection
15(1),
it
is
not
enough
to
focus
only
on
the
alleged
ground
of
discrimination
and
decide
whether
or
not
it
is
an
enumerated
or
analogous
ground.
The
effect
of
the
impugned
distinction
or
classification
on
the
complainant
must
be
considered.
Once
it
is
accepted
that
not
all
distinctions
and
differentiations
created
by
law
are
discriminatory,
then
a
role
must
be
assigned
to
subsection
15(1)
which
goes
beyond
the
mere
recognition
of
a
legal
distinction.
A
complainant
under
subsection
15(1)
must
show
not
only
that
he
or
she
is
not
receiving
equal
treatment
before
and
under
the
law
or
that
the
law
has
a
differential
impact
on
him
or
her
in
the
protection
and
benefit
accorded
by
law
but,
in
addition,
must
show
that
the
legislative
impact
of
the
law
is
discriminatory.
[Emphasis
added.]
Madam
Justice
Wilson
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
expressed
the
following
views
in
Turpin
concerning
the
way
to
determine
whether
the
impact
is
discriminatory:
In
determining
whether
there
is
discrimination
on
grounds
relating
to
the
personal
characteristics
of
the
individual
or
group,
it
is
important
to
look
not
only
at
the
impugned
legislation
which
has
created
a
distinction
that
violates
the
right
to
equality
but
also
to
the
larger
social,
political
and
legal
context.
Accordingly,
it
is
only
by
examining
the
larger
context
that
a
court
can
determine
whether
differential
treatment
results
in
inequality
or
whether,
contrariwise,
it
would
be
identical
treatment
which
would
in
the
particular
context
result
in
inequality
or
foster
disadvantage.
A
finding
that
there
is
discrimination
will,
I
think,
in
most
but
perhaps
not
all
cases,
necessarily
entail
a
search
for
disadvantage
that
exists
apart
from
and
independent
of
the
particular
legal
distinction
being
challenged.
Mcintyre,
J.
recognized
in
Andrews
that
the
"'enumerated
and
analogous
grounds'
approach
most
closely
accords
with
the
purposes
of
s.
15
and
the
definition
of
discrimination
outlined
above"
(p.
182)
and
suggested
that
the
alleged
victims
of
discrimination
in
Andrews,
i.e.,
non-citizens
permanently
resident
in
Canada
were"
a
good
example
of
a‘
discrete
and
insular
minority’
who
came
within
the
protection
of
s.
15”
(p.
183).
If
the
larger
context
is
not
examined,
the
s.
15
analysis
may
become
a
mechanical
and
sterile
categorization
process
conducted
entirely
within
the
four
corners
of
the
impugned
legislation.
A
determination
as
to
whether
or
not
discrimination
is
taking
place,
if
based
exclusively
on
an
analysis
of
the
law
under
challenge
is
likely,
in
my
view,
to
result
in
the
same
kind
of
circularity
which
characterized
the
similarly
situated
similarly
treated
test
clearly
rejected
by
this
Court
in
Andrews.™
I
believe
that
this
means
that
a
classification
is
contrary
to
section
15
of
the
Charter
if
it
has
a
discriminatory
impact
on
the
complainant.
We
must
examine
the
legal
context
of
the
classification
to
determine
whether
this
classification
has
such
an
impact.
It
must
also
be
understood
that
discrimination
is
usually
taken,
although
not
necessarily,
to
refer
to
disadvantaged
or
insular
groups
which
are
more
subject
to
discrimination
and
in
respect
of
which
the
Courts
must
be
more
vigilant
in
examining
their
equality
rights.
Let
us
first
consider
the
aspect
of
the
disadvantaged
or
insular
group.
In
this
provision,
there
are
two
groups:
the
group
in
which
we
find
the
taxpayer
who
is
claiming
the
credit
and
the
group
in
which
we
find
the
person
living
with
and
wholly
dependent
on
an
individual
of
the
first
group.
I
believe
that
I
may
say,
without
having
any
sociological
studies
at
hand,
that
the
second
group,
composed
of
persons
who
have
attained
the
age
of
majority
whose
annual
income
does
not
exceed
$5,000,
may
be
a
disadvantaged
and
even
insular
group.
The
first
group,
the
group
of
taxpayers
who
may
claim
the
credit,
might
be
composed
of
poor
people
and
wealthy
people.
In
the
case
at
bar,
the
person
involved
had
a
very
modest
income.
No
evidence
was
submitted
in
respect
of
the
approximate
composition
of
either
of
these
groups.
Given
the
circumstances
of
this
appeal,
I
may
consider
the
groups
to
be
disadvantaged
and,
consequently,
subject
to
a
greater
vigilance
in
the
examination
of
the
equality
right.
Let
us
now
turn
to
an
examination
of
the
legal
context.
As
Madam
Justice
Wilson
noted,
the
right
to
equality
does
not
mean,
that
everyone
in
the
same
legal
situation
must
be
treated
in
the
same
way,"
because
then
only
administrative
action
would
be
affected
by
section
15
of
the
Charter.
I
believe,
however,
that
the
examination
of
which
individuals
are
in
a
similar
legal
situation
and
should
be
entitled
to
the
benefit
of
the
Act,
considering
the
purpose
of
the
Act,
before
the
challenged
classification,
and
which
individuals
do
not
have
access
to
it
after
the
classification
is
a
useful
exercise.
This
exercise
is
done
to
determine
the
legal
context
of
the
classification
and
so
assess
its
discriminatory
impact.
If
I
refer
to
Andrews
this
is
the
exercise
which
was
carried
out
in
order
to
determine
that
subsection
15(1)
of
the
Charter
had
been
violated:
The
distinction
would
deny
admission
to
the
practice
of
law
to
non-citizens
who
in
all
other
respects
are
qualified.
In
this
appeal,
the
people
who
should
be
entitled
to
the
benefit
of
the
tax
credit
under
paragraph
118(1)(b)
of
the
Act,
before
the
classification
in
issue,
are
people
who
are
unmarried,
or
are
married
and
live
separately
from
their
spouse
and
maintain
a
self-contained
domestic
establishment
where
they
wholly
support
a
related
person
whose
income
does
not
exceed
a
threshold
established
by
the
Act.
After
the
classification,
people
in
the
same
legal
(and
economic)
situation,
but
where
the
related
person
is
18
years
of
age
or
over,
except
in
the
case
of
parents,
grandparents
and
infirm
persons,
are
excluded
from
the
benefit.
Counsel
for
the
respondent
argues
that
the
purpose
of
the
tax
credit
provided
in
paragraph
118(1)(b)
of
the
Act
is
to
relieve
a
taxpayer
who
has
a
dependant
who
is
related
and
is
a
minor,
or
who,
if
he
is
not
a
minor,
is
infirm
or
is
a
parent
or
grandparent.
She
emphasized
the
aspect
of
it
being
a
credit
for
a
dependant.
It
is
this,
but
it
is
also
something
else.
I
do
not
believe
that
it
is
firstly
a
tax
credit
for
a
dependant
because
this
credit
is
provided
by
paragraph
118(1)(d)
of
the
Act
to
any
individual.
I
believe
that
the
primary
purpose
of
this
provision
is
the
relief
that
the
legislator
wishes
to
provide
for
a
person
who
maintains
a
domestic
establishment
where
he
or
she
supports
a
wholly
dependent
related
person.
The
purpose
of
this
provision
is
explained
as
follows
by
Professor
Harris:
Equivalent
marital
status
is
intended
to
apply
only
where
the
taxpayer,
either
alone
or
together
with
one
or
more
others,
must
operate
a
larger
residence,
so
as
to
maintain
a
dependent
relative,
than
would
otherwise
have
been
necessary.
It
is
the
equivalent
of
the
credit
which
is
allowed
for
a
married
person
who
supports
his
or
her
spouse.
This
is
the
title
which
has
been
given
to
the
deduction,
and
which
is
still
given
to
this
tax
credit
and
which,
in
my
view,
is
a
good
description
of
its
nature.
Historically,
it
was
part
of
the
category
of
deductions
permitted
for
a
taxpayer
as
a
married
person
supporting
his
or
her
spouse,
or
as
a
person
maintaining
a
domestic
establishment
and
supporting
therein
a
related
person,
or
as
an
unmarried
person
or
person
who
is
not
entitled
to
the
first
two
credits.
In
other
words,
the
provisions
in
paragraph
118(1)(a),
118(1)(b)
and
118(1)(c)
of
the
Act
are
provisions
dealing
with
the
basic
credit
of
any
individual,
to
which
credit
is
added
the
credit
provided
in
(a)
and
the
credit
provided
in
(b),
depending
on
the
circumstances.
This
category
shall
not
be
confused
with
the
other
categories
of
credits
for
dependants
and
other
categories
of
credits
allowed
by
the
Act.
The
purpose
is
to
provide
relief
for
the
taxpayer
in
an
amount
equivalent
to
what
is
granted
to
a
married
person,
in
that
such
a
taxpayer
must
maintain
a
larger
self-contained
domestic
establishment
than
for
a
single
person
and
must
wholly
support
a
related
person.
Some
taxpayers
in
this
legal
situation
are
not
entitled
to
the
tax
credit
provided
in
paragraph
118(1)(b)
of
the
Act
because
of
the
age
of
the
related
person
when
that
person
is
not
a
parent,
a
grandparent
or
an
infirm
person.
Is
the
age
condition
of
the
related
person,
with
the
exception
of
a
parent
and
grandparent,
a
condition
relating
to
personal
characteristics
that
creates
an
inequality
which
constitutes
a
disadvantage.
I
believe
that
the
answer
lies
more
in
the
affirmative
than
in
the
negative.
If
this
disadvantage
were
imposed
on
individuals
in
general,
there
would
not
be,
in
my
view,
discrimination.
However,
here
it
is
a
disadvantage
imposed
on
a
specific
group
which
is,
often,
a
disadvantaged
group,
and
on
which
is
imposed
a
burden
that
is
not
imposed
on
other
groups
in
the
same
situation.
I
must
also
take
into
account,
as
counsel
for
the
respondent
said,
and
I
agree
with
that
statement,
that
there
are
no
vested
rights
to
deductions
in
tax
law.
This
is
true,
but
there
is
nothing
in
our
law
to
prevent
the
courts,
even
in
the
case
of
a
legislative
provision
in
the
nature
of
tax
deductions
or
credits,
from
ascertaining
whether
it
complies
with
the
rights
guaranteed
by
the
Charter,
not
in
order
to
ensure
continuity
in
the
law,
but
to
ascertain
that
the
unequal
treatment
is
not
discrimination.
The
American
courts
have
arrived
at
the
same
conclusion,
although
normally
a
classification
will
not
be
set
aside
if
it
is
justified.
The
concept
that
constitutional
rights
turn
on
whether
a
Governmental
benefit
is
characterized
as
a
right
or
privilege,
has
been
emphatically
rejected.
And
normally
a
legislative
classification
made
will
not
be
set
aside
if
any
set
of
facts
rationally
justifying
it
is
demonstrated
or
perceived
by
the
courts.
I
can
only
find,
in
the
legal
context
involved,
that
the
appellant
does
not
receive
treatment
equal
to
other
taxpayers
in
the
same
legal
situation
and
that
the
classification
imposes
on
her
a
burden
different
from
the
others.
I
therefore
conclude
that
the
criterion
of
the
age
of
the
related
person
in
the
legal
context
of
paragraph
118(1)(b)
of
the
Act
infringes
the
right
to
equality
guaranteed
by
section
15
of
the
Charter.
Justification
under
section
1
of
the
Charter
If
a
court
finds
that
section
15
has
been
infringed,
it
must
ask
whether
this
infringement
is
justified
under
section
1
of
the
Charter.
I
again
refer
to
the
comments
of
Mcintyre,
J.
in
Andrews:
Any
justification
of
an
infringement
which
is
found
to
have
occurred
must
be
made,
if
at
all,
under
the
broad
provisions
of
s.
1.
It
must
be
admitted
at
once
that
the
relationship
between
these
two
sections
may
well
be
difficult
to
determine
on
a
wholly
satisfactory
basis.
It
is,
however,
important
to
keep
them
analytically
distinct
if
for
no
other
reason
than
the
different
attribution
of
the
burden
of
proof.
It
is
for
the
citizen
to
establish
that
his
or
her
Charter
right
has
been
infringed
and
for
the
state
to
justify
the
infringement.^
[Emphasis
added.]
Where
discrimination
is
found
a
breach
of
s.
15(1)
has
occurred
and—where
s.
15(2)
is
not
applicable—any
justification,
any
consideration
of
the
reasonableness
of
the
enactment;
indeed,
any
consideration
of
factors
which
could
justify
the
discrimination
and
support
the
constitutionality
of
the
impugned
enactment
would
take
place
under
s.
1.
This
approach
would
conform
with
the
directions
of
this
Court
in
earlier
decisions
concerning
the
application
of
s.
1
and
at
the
same
time
would
allow
for
the
screening
out
of
the
obviously
trivial
and
vexatious
claim.
In
this,
it
would
provide
a
workable
approach
to
the
problem.
In
The
Queen
v.
Oakes,
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
set
out
the
criteria
that
must
be
met
in
order
to
establish
that
a
restriction
is
justifiable
under
section
1
of
the
Charter.
First,
it
must
be
shown
that
the
objective
of
the
restriction
is
sufficiently
important
to
warrant
overriding
a
constitutionally
protected
right.
An
important
objective
is
one
which
relates
to
pressing
and
substantial
concerns.
Second,
the
means
chosen
must
be
proportional
to
the
objective.
Chief
Justice
Dickson
noted
that
the
proportionality
test
involves
the
following
three
components;
(1)
The
measures
must
be
fair
and
not
arbitrary,
carefully
designed
to
achieve
the
objective
in
question
and
rationally
connected
to
that
objective;
(2)
The
means
chosen
must
be
such
as
to
impair
the
right
in
question
as
little
as
possible;
(3)
There
must
be
a
proportionality
between
the
effects
of
the
measures
limiting
the
constitutional
right
and
the
important
objective
in
question.
Furthermore,
the
burden
of
proving
that
a
restriction
on
a
right
guaranteed
by
the
Charter
is
reasonable
and
justifiable
in
a
free
and
democratic
society
rests
on
the
person
who
is
seeking
to
have
the
restriction
upheld.
The
standard
of
proof
applicable
is
proof
on
a
balance
of
probabilities.
Counsel
for
the
respondent
referred
to
certain
documents
which
were
produced
in
preparation
for
enactment
of
the
legislation
in
question.
The
following
passage
appears
in
the
Explanatory
Notes
accompanying
the
Bill,
dated
June
1988,
at
page
252:
New
subsection
118(1)
of
the
Act
provides
for
the
calculation
of
the
deduction
from
tax
payable
in
respect
of
married
status,
equivalent
to
married
status,
single
status
and
dependants.
Further
on,
at
page
253,
the
Explanatory
Notes
simply
refer
to
the
age
requirement
under
paragraph
118(1)(b)
of
the
Act
but
give
no
explanation.
This
lack
of
explanation
merely
reflects
another
document,
entitled
Income
Tax
Reform,
Tax
Reform
1987,
dated
June
18,
1987,
from
the
Minister
of
Finance.
At
page
71
of
that
document,
there
is
a
simple
reference
to
this
new
requirement,
with
no
explanation
as
to
the
reasons.
However,
the
Report
on
the
White
Paper
on
Tax
Reform
of
the
Standing
Committee
on
Finance
and
Economic
Affairs
(House
of
Commons),
dated
November
1987,
at
pages
34
and
35,
expressed
concern
about
this
change
in
respect
of
children
18
years
of
age
and
over.
The
same
concern
was
noted
in
the
Twentieth
Report
(Interim)
of
the
Standing
Senate
Committee
on
Banking,
Trade
and
Commerce,
dated
December
1987.
I
quote
from
page
35
of
that
report:
.
.
.
While
we
consider
the
relief
offered
to
parents
of
students
in
Universities
and
other
post-secondary
programmes,
through
transferable
tax
credits,
to
be
a
step
forward,
it
seems
unfair
that
many
other
dependent
children,
especially
in
areas
of
high
youth
unemployment,
get
short
shrift
from
the
proposals.
In
respect
of
the
evidence
of
pressing
and
substantial
concerns,
there
was
the
statement
that
the
legislator
wanted
to
reduce
the
national
debt,
spread
the
tax
burden
as
fairly
as
possible
and
give
effect
to
certain
priorities
of
the
government.
From
this
perspective,
counsel
for
the
respondent
explained
that
the
objective
of
this
classification
is
to
give
priority
to
those
under
18
years
of
age,
to
persons
with
infirmities
and
to
the
aged,
and
not
to
have
taxpayers
in
general
bear,
through
taxation,
the
burden
of
those
who
are
not
working.
There
is
other
legislation
available
to
those
people.
The
importance
of
the
goal
aimed
at
by
the
legislator
cannot
be
and
is
not
in
dispute.
Let
us
now
see
if
the
means
used
to
achieve
this
goal
are
proportional
to
it.
May
I
find
that
there
is
a
rational
connection
between
the
means
chosen
and
the
objective
of
the
classification?
The
respondent
argues
that
there
is
a
rational
connection
between
tax
relief
to
assist
those
who
seem
to
be
in
most
need
and
the
tax
credit
provided
in
paragraph
118(1)(b)
of
the
Act,
and
that
it
is
the
means
which
infringes
as
little
as
possible
on
taxpayers
who
have
adult
dependants;
Thus
the
means
of
a
tax
credit
for
people
who
have
minor
or
handicapped
dependants
impaired
as
little
as
possible
the
rights
of
people
who
have
adult
dependants
who
are
not
infirm
not
to
be
subject
to
discrimination
because,
moreover,
since
the
credit
is
also
given
to
a
father,
mother,
grandfather,
grandmother,
thus
it
infringed
as
little
as
possible
on
adults
who
might
still
be
dependent,
and
again,
if
the
adult
dependant
was
still
in
school,
there
were
other
means
provided
by
the
legislator
for
these
people.
[Translation]
Quoting
from
the
comments
of
La
Forest,
J.
in
The
Queen
v.
Edwards
Books
and
Art
Ltd.,
supra,
in
support
of
her
argument,
counsel
for
the
respondent
asserted
that
the
legislator
must
have
reasonable
room
to
manoeuvre
to
meet
conflicting
pressures:
By
the
foregoing,
I
do
not
mean
to
suggest
that
this
Court
should,
as
a
general
rule,
defer
to
legislative
judgments
when
those
judgments
trench
upon
rights
considered
fundamental
in
a
free
and
democratic
society.
Quite
the
contrary,
I
would
have
thought
the
Charter
established
the
opposite
regime.
On
the
other
hand,
having
accepted
the
importance
of
the
legislative
objective,
one
must
in
the
present
context
recognize
that
if
the
legislative
goal
is
to
be
achieved,
it
will
inevitably
be
achieved
to
the
detriment
of
some.
Moreover,
attempts
to
protect
the
rights
of
one
group
will
also
inevitably
impose
burdens
on
the
rights
of
other
groups.
There
is
no
perfect
scenario
in
which
the
rights
of
all
can
be
equally
protected.
In
seeking
to
achieve
a
goal
that
is
demonstrably
justified
in
a
free
and
democratic
society,
therefore,
a
legislature
must
be
given
reasonable
room
to
manoeuvre
to
meet
these
conflicting
pressures,
of
course,
what
is
reasonable
will
vary
with
the
context.
Regard
must
be
had
to
the
nature
of
the
interest
infringed
and
to
the
legislative
scheme
sought
to
be
implemented.
No
one
doubts
that
the
legislator
must
have
room
to
manoeuvre
and
that
classifications
are
necessary.
However,
a
classification
within
a
group
which
is
already
limited
by
the
income
of
the
dependant
and
maintenance
of
a
self-
contained
establishment
must
be
considered
with
greater
care
than
if
it
were
a
classification
which
affected
the
general
public.
As
La
Forest,
J.
stated,"what
is
reasonable
will
vary
with
the
context.
Regard
must
be
had
to
the
nature
of
the
interest
infringed
and
to
the
legislative
scheme
sought
to
be
implemented".
Is
the
classification
the
means
to
attain
the
desired
goals?
No
evidence
was
presented
to
me
with
respect
to
the
savings
which
the
classification
in
issue
would
produce
in
terms
of
the
national
debt,
or
as
to
how
and
in
what
respect
this
classification
would
benefit
young
and
infirm
people
in
terms
of
the
priority
given
to
young
and
infirm
people
or
with
respect
to
the
composition
of
the
groups
which
claimed
this
deduction
before
in
terms
of
the
priority
given
to
the
elderly
and
in
terms
of
people
who
are
protected
by
social
legislation.
The
deduction
already
existed
in
respect
of
people
under
18
years
of
age
and
the
infirm.
With
respect
to
the
elderly,
priority
does
not
seem
to
have
been
given
to
all
of
them,
since
elderly
related
persons
are
excluded,
with
the
exception
of
parents
and
grandparents.
A
taxpayer
may
have
an
elderly
dependent
sister,
brother,
uncle
or
aunt.
This
therefore
does
not
seem
to
be
the
best
means
of
attaining
the
desired
priority
in
terms
of
the
elderly.
The
suggestion
that
social
welfare
legislation
is
available
to
persons
of
full
age
who
have
no
income
is
not
really
useful,
because
in
cases
where
that
legislation
applies,
the
base
income
of
the
dependent
related
persons
would
be
sufficient
to
exclude
them
from
the
benefit
of
the
provision
in
issue.
The
credit
applies
to
cases
where
social
welfare
or
old
age
security
legislation
has
not
provided
an
income
equal
to
the
threshold
amount
provided
in
the
Act.
Consequently,
one
may
think
that
it
is
not
necessary
to
exclude
the
dependent
related
persons
by
using
the
age
condition
where
other
social
legislation
is
involved.
The
base
income
criterion
will
suffice.
Are
these
the
means
which
least
impair
the
rights
of
the
people
affected?
The
fact
that
those
who
are
the
first
to
suffer
from
the
classification
are
people
in
the
appellants
category
hardly
prompts
me
to
believe
that
the
means
used
to
achieve
the
goals
sought
is
the
most
logical
and
the
one
that
will
least
affect
the
rights
of
the
people
concerned
by
the
classification.
As
noted
earlier,
no
evidence
was
presented
to
me
as
to
the
relevance
of
the
means
to
the
objectives
in
question
or
to
show
that
these
means
were
reasonable
in
terms
of
the
objectives
in
question.
It
would
be
difficult
for
me
to
find
that
the
effects
of
the
means
adopted
on
the
taxpayers
affected
are
proportional
to
the
goals
aimed
at.
I
refer
again
to
the
comments
of
Mr.
Justice
La
Forest
in
Andrews:
The
degree
to
which
a
free
and
democratic
society
such
as
Canada
should
tolerate
differentiation
based
on
personal
characteristics
cannot
be
ascertained
by
an
easy
calculus.
There
will
rarely,
if
ever,
be
a
perfect
congruence
between
means
and
ends,
save
where
legislation
has
discriminatory
purposes.
The
matter
must,
as
earlier
cases
have
held,
involve
a
test
of
proportionality.
In
cases
of
this
kind,
the
test
must
be
approached
in
a
flexible
manner.
The
analysis
should
be
functional,
focusing
on
the
character
of
the
classification
in
question,
the
constitutional
and
societal
importance
of
the
interests
adversely
affected,
the
relative
importance
to
the
individuals
affected
of
the
benefit
of
which
they
are
deprived,
and
the
importance
of
the
state
interest.
Under
section
1
of
the
Charter,
“it
is
entirely
appropriate
that
government
sustain
the
constitutionality
of
its
conduct".
I
am
of
the
opinion
that
there
is
insufficient
evidence
before
me
to
persuade
me,
on
the
balance
of
probabilities,
that
the
classification
in
issue
is
justified
under
section
1
of
the
Charter,
and
accordingly
I
find
that
it
is
not.
Remedy
The
remedy
sought
is
to
consider
the
requirement
that
the
appellant’s
son
be
under
18
years
of
age
to
be
contrary
to
the
Charter
and
to
hold
that
the
appellant
was
entitled
to
deduct
the
credit
provided
in
paragraph
118(1)(b)
of
the
Act
from
the
tax
payable
by
her.
In
fact,
I
am
asked
to
strike
out
clause
D
of
subparagraph
118(1)(b)
(ii)
of
the
Act
under
subsection
52(1)
of
the
Constitution
Act,
1982,
which
reads
as
follows:
The
Constitution
of
Canada
is
the
|
La
Constitution
du
Canada
est
la
loi
|
supreme
law
of
Canada,
and
any
law
|
suprême
du
Canada;
elle
rend
inop
|
that
is
inconsistent
with
the
provi
|
érantes
les
dispositions
incompat
|
sions
of
the
Constitution
is,
to
the
|
ibles
de
toute
autre
règle
de
droit.
|
extent
of
the
inconsistency,
of
no
force
or
effect.
If
I
refer
to
Douglas/Kwantlen
Faculty
Assn.
v.
Douglas
College,
this
Court
has
the
power
to
rule
on
the
constitutional
validity
of
a
provision
in
the
exercise
of
its
statutory
mandate.
I
quote
from
the
headnote
of
this
decision,
at
page
572:
A
tribunal’s
power
is
that
conferred
by
its
statutory
mandate.
The
jurisdiction
of
a
statutory
tribunal
must
be
found
in
a
statute
and
must
extend
not
only
to
the
subject
matter
of
the
application
and
the
parties,
but
also
to
the
remedy
sought.
A
tribunal,
in
the
exercise
of
its
statutory
mandate,
is
empowered
to
examine
and
rule
upon
the
constitutional
validity
of
a
statute
it
is
called
upon
to
apply.
Where
a
tribunal
is
engaged
in
performing
what
it
was
empowered
to
do
by
law,
it
is
entitled
not
only
to
construe
the
relevant
legislation
but
also
to
determine
whether
that
legislation
was
validly
enacted.
Any
law
that
is
inconsistent
with
the
provisions
of
the
Constitution
of
Canada
is,
to
the
extent
of
its
inconsistency,
of
no
force
or
effect.
A
tribunal,
if
it
finds
a
law
it
is
applying
to
be
constitutionally
invalid,
must
treat
it
as
having
no
force
or
effect
under
s.
52(1)
of
the
Constitution
Act,
1982.
The
mandate
of
this
Court
is
described
in
section
12
of
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
Act.
That
section
provides,
inter
alia,
that
this
Court
shall
hear
appeals
to
the
Court
on
matters
arising
under
the
Act.
By
virtue
of
subsection
171(1)
of
the
Act:
171(1)
The
Tax
Court
of
Canada
may
dispose
of
an
appeal
by
(a)
dismissing
it,
or
(b)
allowing
it
and
(i)
vacating
the
assessment,
(ii)
varying
the
assessment,
or
(iii)
referring
the
assessment
back
to
the
Minister
for
reconsideration
and
reassessment.
In
Keyes
v.
M.N.R.,
Judge
Bonner
of
this
Court
stated
the
following:
It
is
clear
therefore
that
this
Court,
in
the
exercise
of
its
jurisdiction
to
dispose
of
an
appeal
as
laid
down
in
section
171
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
is
entitled
and
obliged
to
consider
the
constitutional
validity
of
relevant
statutes.
The
Family
Allowances
Act
is
not,
as
the
respondent
seems
to
suggest,
in
some
strange
way
exempt
from
review.
However,
Judge
Bonner
was
of
the
opinion
that
subsection
24(1)
did
not
confer
on
this
Court
the
power
to
amend
the
legislative
provision
in
the
manner
requested
by
the
taxpayer.
Judge
Rip
reached
a
similar
conclusion
when
he
was
asked
in
Smith
v.
M.N.R.
with
respect
to
paragraph
109(1)(b)
of
the
Act,
to
rule
that
Clause
C
of
subparagraph
109(1)(b)(ii)
of
the
Act
was
invalid.
While
he
was
of
the
opinion
that
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
had
a
duty
to
review
the
constitutionality
of
the
applicable
legislation,
he
held
that
he
would
be
exceeding
his
jurisdiction
if
he
struck
out
the
clause
in
question.
He
refused
to
do
so
for
the
reason
that
this
would
be
tantamount
to
amending
subparagraph
109(1)(b)(ii)
of
the
Act,
which
he
did
not
have
the
power
to
do,
because
this
condition
appeared
to
him
to
be
essential
to
the
very
existence
of
the
provision.
A
condition
contained
in
a
statutory
provision
is
not
to
be
trifled
with
since
without
such
condition
Parliament
may
or
may
not
have
enacted
the
provision.
For
this
court
to
decide
this
case
as
if
subclause
(C)
had
never
been
enacted
would
be
tantamount
to
amending
paragraph
109(1)(b)
by
deleting
subclause
(C),
in
my
view
making
a
policy
decision
which
is
beyond
a
Canadian
court's
constitutional
authority
and
competence.
In
enacting
subsection
109(1)(b)
Parliament
required
that
there
be
a
degree
of
connection
between
the
dependant
and
a
taxpayer
for
the
taxpayer
to
be
permitted
the
deduction.
To
sever
the
connection
is
a
function
of
the
legislature,
not
the
Court.
In
the
two
preceding
cases
the
judges
questioned
whether
it
was
appropriate
for
a
court
to
decide
the
constitutional
validity
of
a
Provision
of
the
Act
in
the
context
of
an
appeal
of
a
tax
assessment.
This
was
because
in
both
of
those
cases
such
a
decision
would
have
resulted
in
the
defeat
of
the
entire
provision
establishing
the
deduction,
and
the
taxpayer
would
therefore
have
been
unable
to
claim
the
deduction,
so
that
the
result
in
any
event
would
have
been
that
the
assessment
was
correct.
In
Tiberio
v.
M.N.R.,
in
obiter,
Judge
Garon
made
the
same
comment:
If
I
had
concluded
that
the
provisions
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
under
attack
here
violated
the
Charter
and
if
I
had
decided
these
appeals
as
if
the
inconsistent
provisions
were
of
no
force
or
effect,
the
fact
would
remain
that
this
result
would
be
of
no
assistance
to
the
appellants
since
the
deductions
in
respect
of
age
in
paragraph
109(1)(d)
and
subsection
118(2)
and
the
larger
deductions
in
respect
of
dependent
children
would
not
have
been
available
to
the
appellants
because
they
had
to
be
considered
as
inoperative
and
of
no
force
or
effect.
As
we
have
seen
in
the
decisions
of
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada,
the
judges
of
this
Court
have
to
date
hesitated
to
strike
out
parts
of
provisions,
either
because
the
impugned
condition
appeared
to
be
essential
to
the
existence
of
the
provision,
or
because
if
the
provision
was
held
to
be
invalid
it
would
give
the
taxpayer
no
more
rights.
Yet
the
courts
have
on
numerous
occasions
held
provisions
or
parts
of
provisions
to
be
inoperative.
The
courts
task
in
Russow
v.
British
Columbia
Attorney-General
was
to
consider
the
constitutional
validity
of
section
164
of
the
School
Act,
R.S.B.C.
1979,
c.
375,
which
required
children
to
recite
prayers
in
public
school,
although
it
was
possible
to
be
excused
from
prayer.
The
applicants
asked
the
court
to
strike
out
the
part
of
section
164
relating
to
religious
practices.
In
considering
this
issue,
Hollinrake,
J.
stated:
Counsel
for
the
Attorney-General
submits
that
the
doctrine
of
the
severance
should
not
be
applied
here
and
thus
all
of
s.
164
of
the
School
Act
should
be
declared
of
no
force
or
effect
if
any
part
is
so
to
be
declared.
I
accept
the
law
on
this
subject
as
set
out
in
The
Canadian
Constitution
and
the
Courts,
3rd
ed.,
by
the
Honourable
Barry
L.
Strayer,
at
p.
301-2,
where
it
states:
(b)
Severability
Taking
the
process
one
step
further,
suppose
that
the
court
finds
that
certain
provisions
of
a
law
standing
alone
would
be
valid
whereas
certain
others
would
be
invalid.
Must
it
find
the
whole
law
to
be
invalid?
The
classic
test
is
well
expressed
in
a
1947
judgment
of
the
Judicial
Committee
of
the
Privy
Council
in
A.G.
Alta.
v.
A.G.
Can.
(Bill
of
Rights
Reference)
where
it
was
said
that
if
certain
sections
of
a
law
are
found
to
be
invalid
The
real
question
is
whether
what
remains
is
so
inextricably
bound
up
with
the
part
declared
invalid
that
what
remains
cannot
independently
survive
or,
as
it
has
sometimes
been
put,
whether
on
a
fair
review
of
the
whole
matter
it
can
be
assumed
that
the
legislature
would
have
enacted
what
survives
without
enacting
the
part
that
is
ultra
vires
at
all.
The
Courts
have
more
commonly
found
against
severability,
usually
finding
that
the
otherwise
valid
portions
are
inextricably
linked
with
the
invalid
provisions.
They
have
refused
to
uphold
remaining
sections
even
where
the
legislators
specifically
provided
that
in
case
of
a
finding
of
invalidity
of
some
provisions
the
remaining
ones
should
not
be
held
invalid,
"the
intention
of
Parliament
being
to
give
independent
effect
to
the
extent
of
its
powers
to
every
enactment
and
provision
in
this
Act
contained".
The
Judicial
Committee
found
that
despite
the
clear
statement
of
legislative
intent
that
Parliament
would
have
passed
the
various
provisions
individually,
the
marketing
scheme
in
question
was
so
interconnected
that
the
detailed
provisions
of
the
scheme
would
not
stand
without
the
board
and
the
basic
marketing
arrangement
which
had
been
held
ultra
vires.
This
suggests
that
severability
is
as
much
a
matter
of
functional
considerations
as
it
is
of
legislative
intent
and
that
the
courts
will
have
the
last
word.
This
is
a
proposition
which
must
be
viewed
with
some
scepticism,
as
it
should
not
be
for
the
Court
to
decide
that
a
truncated
Act
is
nonsensical
and
therefore
non-existent,
if
the
Legislature
has
clearly
said
that
it
wishes
surviving
sections
which
are
not
per
se
invalid
to
remain.
In
deciding
whether
to
declare
the
whole
of
s.
164
of
the
School
Act
of
no
force
or
effect
or
just
those
words
set
out
above,
I
must
decide"
whether
on
a
fair
review
of
the
whole
matter
it
can
be
assumed
that
the
Legislature
would
have
enacted
what
survives
without
enacting
a
part
that
is”
in
this
case,
of
no
force
or
effect.
As
noted
above,
a
historical
analysis
of
paragraph
118(1)(b)
of
the
Act
showed
that
the
provision
had
existed
for
nearly
60
years
in
the
past,
without
the
condition
as
to
the
age
of
related
persons.
It
therefore
seems
that
the
legislative
provision
which
would
remain
in
paragraph
118(1)(b)
of
the
Act
is
not
so
inextricably
bound
to
clause
D
of
that
paragraph
that
it
could
not
survive
without
that
clause.
In
view
of
subsection
52(1)
of
the
Constitution
Act,
1982,
which
provides
that
a
law
is,
to
the
extent
of
its
inconsistency,
of
no
effect,
given
that
clause
D
of
subparagraph
118(1)(b)(ii)
of
the
Act
violates
section
15
of
the
Charter,
given
that
this
violation
is
not
justifiable
under
section
1
of
the
Charter
and
given
that
clause
D
is
not
essential
to
the
existence
of
that
subparagraph,
clause
D
of
subparagraph
118(1)(b)(ii)
of
the
Act
must
be
considered
to
be
of
no
effect
and
subparagraph
118(1)(b)(ii)
must
be
read
as
if
clause
D
had
not
been
enacted.
Consequently,
the
appeal
by
the
appellant
is
allowed,
with
costs,
if
any.
Appeal
allowed.