Cory,
J.:—The
question
presented
in
this
case
is
whether
a
court
of
appeal
has
jurisdiction
to
hear
an
appeal
from
the
decision
of
a
superior
court
judge
not
to
quash
a
search
warrant
which
that
judge
had
earlier
issued
upon
an
ex
parte
motion
pursuant
to
section
231.3
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
S.C.
1970-71-72,
c.
63,
as
amended.
Factual
Background
On
July
5,
1986,
Turnbull,
J.
of
the
Court
of
Queen's
Bench
of
New
Brunswick
heard
an
ex
parte
application
brought
by
officials
of
the
Ministry
of
National
Revenue
to
issue
a
search
warrant
pursuant
to
section
231.3
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
At
the
conclusion
of
the
hearing,
Turnbull,
J.
issued
search
warrants
for
the
premises
occupied
by
Knox
Contracting
Ltd.
as
well
as
for
the
home
and
garage
of
the
corporation's
president,
Harold
Hazen
Knox.
On
July
22,
1986,
further
search
warrants
were
issued
for
the
offices
of
their
auditors.
When
the
warrants
were
executed
the
appellants,
Knox
Contracting
Ltd.
and
its
president,
brought
an
application
before
Turnbull,
J.
seeking
to
quash
the
warrants
on
the
ground
that
they
were
invalid
and
to
impound
the
material
seized
until
the
disposition
of
the
matter.
On
August
22,
1986,
it
was
ordered
that
all
the
documents
seized
pursuant
to
the
warrants
were
to
be
impounded
and
sealed
pending
a
decision
on
the
application.
Turnbull,
J.
considered
the
matter
carefully.
He
determined
that
he
had
jurisdiction
to
review
the
ex
parte
order
on
the
ground
that
there
is
an
inherent
jurisdiction
in
a
judge
who
makes
an
ex
parte
order
to
revoke
or
rescind
it.
He
then
considered
the
matter
on
the
merits.
He
found
that
the
search
warrants
were
validly
issued
and
dismissed
the
application
on
March
3,
1987.
The
appellants
then
appealed.
The
Court
of
Appeal
once
again
ordered
that
the
documents
be
impounded
and
sealed
pending
its
decision
on
the
matter.
The
court
held
that
Turnbull,
J.
did
not
have
jurisdiction
to
review
the
issuing
of
the
search
warrants.
It
found
that
while
a
trial
judge
has
jurisdiction
to
review
his
or
her
own
orders,
there
was
no
order
in
existence
which
could
be
reviewed
or
appealed.
A
distinction
was
drawn
between
the
ordering
of
the
issuance
of
a
search
warrant
and
the
mere
act
of
issuing
the
warrant.
It
was
held
that
no
order
had
been
given
and
that
the
issuing
of
the
search
warrants
was
an
administrative
process
which
could
not
be
reviewed.
The
appeal
was
dismissed
and
the
order
sealing
the
documents
was
vacated.
Position
of
the
Parties
At
the
outset,
the
respondents
very
properly
conceded
that
the
Court
of
Appeal
was
in
error
in
holding
that
the
issuance
of
search
warrants
was
not
an
ex
parte
order.
There
can
be
no
question
that
the
issuing
of
the
search
warrant
pursuant
to
section
231.3
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
must
be
considered
to
be
an
order
of
the
judge.
Since
it
is
an
ex
parte
order,
it
was
properly
reviewable
pursuant
to
the
inherent
jurisdiction
of
trial
judges
to
review
such
an
ex
parte
order.
See
for
example,
Wilson
v.
The
Queen,
[1983]
2
S.C.R.
594;
4
D.L.R.
(4th)
577.
It
still
must
be
determined
whether
or
not
the
Court
of
Appeal
had
jurisdiction
to
review
or
to
hear
an
appeal
from
the
review
of
the
ex
parte
order.
The
appellants
contended
that
section
231.3
derives
its
constitutional
validity
from
the
taxing
power
of
the
federal
government
pursuant
to
subsection
91(3)
of
the
Constitution
Act,
1867.
It
is
argued
that
the
constitutional
basis
for
the
impugned
section
rests
upon
the
taxation
power
for
the
federal
government
and
not
upon
the
criminal
law
power
provided
by
subsection
91(27).As
a
result,
the
appellants
argued
that
the
province,
pursuant
to
subsection
92(14),
had
the
constitutional
authority
to
dictate
the
appropriate
routes,
methods
and
procedures
of
appeal.
This,
it
was
said,
had
been
done
in
the
present
case
by
means
of
subsection
8(3)
of
the
Judicature
Act,
R.S.N.B.
1973,
c.
J-
2,
as
amended,
which
granted
jurisdiction
to
the
Court
of
Appeal
to
entertain
the
appeal.
The
respondents
took
the
position
that
section
231.3
is
purely
criminal
in
nature
in
that
it
authorizes
search
warrants
to
obtain
documents
which
may
afford
evidence
of
the
commission
of
an
"offence"
as
defined
in
section
239
of
the
Act.
It
is
said
that
the
offences
described
in
that
section
should
be
considered
to
be
criminal
in
nature
and
that,
therefore,
search
warrants
issued
to
obtain
evidence
for
the
prosecution
of
those
offences
should
also
be
considered
criminal
in
nature.
The
respondents
submitted
that
criminal
law
and
criminal
procedure
come
within
the
exclusive
jurisdiction
of
the
federal
government,
and
this
must
include
the
authority
to
legislate
regarding
provisions
for
appeals.
The
respondents
argued
that
since
section
231.3
must
be
considered
to
be
criminal
in
nature
and
no
appeal
procedure
from
the
issuance
of
search
warrants
is
provided
in
the
Income
Tax
Act,
it
is
then
necessary
to
look
to
the
Criminal
Code
to
determine
whether
the
decision
may
be
appealed.
The
Code
does
not
provide
for
an
appeal
from
an
order
issuing
search
warrants
and
thus
it
is
said
the
appellants
cannot
appeal
the
order
of
Turnbull,
J.
If
sections
231.3
and
239
are,
as
I
believe
them
to
be,
criminal
in
nature,
then
this
submission
must
prevail.
Are
Sections
231.3
and
239
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
in
their
Essence
Criminal
Law?
This
appeal
can
be
resolved
by
determining
but
one
issue,
namely,
whether
the
provisions
of
sections
231.3
and
239
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
are
by
their
nature
criminal
law.
If
they
are,
then
no
appeal
lies
to
the
Court
of
Appeal
from
the
decision
of
a
superior
court
judge
to
issue
the
search
warrants.
These
sections
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
read
as
follows:
231.3(1)
Search
warrant.
A
judge
may,
on
ex
parte
application
by
the
Minister,
issue
a
warrant
in
writing
authorizing
any
person
named
therein
to
enter
and
search
any
building,
receptacle
or
place
for
any
document
or
thing
that
may
afford
evidence
as
to
the
commission
of
an
offence
under
this
Act
and
to
seize
and,
as
soon
as
practicable,
bring
the
document
or
thing
before,
or
make
a
report
in
respect
thereof
to,
the
judge
or,
where
the
judge
is
unable
to
act,
another
judge
of
the
same
court
to
be
dealt
with
by
the
judge
in
accordance
with
this
section.
239.(1)
Every
person
who
has
(a)
made,
or
participated
in,
assented
to
or
acquiesced
in
the
making
of,
false
or
deceptive
statements
in
a
return,
certificate,
statement
or
answer
filed
or
made
as
required
by
or
under
this
Act
or
a
regulation,
(b)
to
evade
payment
of
a
tax
imposed
by
this
Act,
destroyed,
altered,
mutilated,
secreted
or
otherwise
disposed
of
the
records
or
books
of
account
of
a
taxpayer,
(c)
made,
or
assented
to
or
acquiesced
in
the
making
of,
false
or
deceptive
entries,
or
omitted,
or
assented
to
or
acquiesced
in
the
omission,
to
enter
a
material
particular,
in
records
or
books
of
account
of
a
taxpayer,
(d)
wilfully,
in
any
manner,
evaded
or
attempted
to
evade,
compliance
with
this
Act
or
payment
of
taxes
imposed
by
this
Act,
or
(e)
conspired
with
any
person
to
commit
an
offence
described
by
paragraphs
(a)
to
(d),
is
guilty
of
an
offence
and,
in
addition
to
any
penalty
otherwise
provided,
is
liable
on
summary
conviction
to
(f)
a
fine
of
not
less
than
25%
and
not
more
than
double
the
amount
of
the
tax
that
was
sought
to
be
evaded,
or
(g)
both
the
fine
described
in
paragraph
(f)
and
imprisonment
for
a
term
not
exceeding
2
years.
(2)
Every
person
who
is
charged
with
an
offence
described
in
subsection
(1)
may,
at
the
election
of
the
Attorney
General
of
Canada,
be
prosecuted
upon
indictment
and,
if
convicted,
is,
in
addition
to
any
penalty
otherwise
provided,
liable
to
imprisonment
for
a
term
not
exceeding
5
years
and
not
less
than
2
months.
As
a
point
of
commencement,
it
may
be
helpful
to
consider
what
constitutes
criminal
law.
While,
like
a
work
of
art,
it
is
something
that
may
be
easier
to
recognize
than
define,
some
guidelines
have
been
established.
It
would
be
going
too
far
to
say
that
a
law
needs
only
to
prohibit
an
act
with
penal
consequences
to
be
criminal.
Such
an
overly
wide
definition
would
permit
Parliament
to
"colourably
invade
areas
of
exclusively
provincial
legislative
competence":
Scowby
v.
Glendinning,
[1986]
2
S.C.R.
226;
32
D.L.R.
(4th)
161,
at
237
(D.L.R.
169).
A
very
helpful
definition
of
criminal
law
can
be
found
in
the
Reference
re
Validity
of
Section
5(a)
of
the
Dairy
Industry
Act
(Margarine
Reference),
[1949]
S.C.R.
1;
1
D.L.R.
433;
affd
(sub
nom.
Can.
Federation
of
Agriculture
v.
A.-G.
Quebec)
[1951]
A.C.
179;
4
D.L.R.
689.
In
that
case
Rand,
J.
stated
at
page
49:
A
crime
is
an
act
which
the
law,
with
appropriate
penal
sanctions,
forbids;
but
as
prohibitions
are
not
enacted
in
a
vacuum,
we
can
properly
look
for
some
evil
or
injurious
or
undesirable
effect
upon
the
public
against
which
the
law
is
directed.
That
effect
may
be
in
relation
to
social,
economic
or
political
interests;
and
the
legislature
has
had
in
mind
to
suppress
the
evil
or
to
safeguard
the
interest
threatened.
Dickson,
J.,
as
he
then
was,
in
dissenting
reasons
in
R.
v.
Hauser,
[1979]
1
S.C.R.
984;
98
D.L.R.
(3d)
193,
defined
the
subject
in
this
way
at
page
1026
(D.L.R.
226):
Head
27
of
section
91
of
the
British
North
America
Act
empowers
Parliament
to
make
substantive
laws
prohibiting,
with
penal
consequences,
acts
or
omissions
considered
to
be
harmful
to
the
State,
or
to
persons
or
property
within
the
State.
Section
239
and
its
investigative
arm
section
231.3
fall
within
these
definitions.
Section
231.3
provides
for
the
issuance
of
search
warrants
where
they
may
afford
evidence
of
an
"offence"
under
the
Act.
Section
239
describes
those
offences.
They
are
by
their
very
nature
criminal.
Upon
reading
section
239
the
key
descriptive
words
spring
from
the
page,
such
as:
"false
or
deceptive
statements",
“to
evade
payment
of
a
tax
imposed
by
this
Act,
destroyed,
altered,
mutilated,
secreted.
.
.records",
"false
or
deceptive
entries"
and
"wilfully.
.
.evaded".
The
section
speaks
of
fraud,
deception,
destruction
and
alteration
of
documents,
false
statements,
false
documents
and
the
wilful
evasion
of
income
tax.
It
is
readily
apparent
that
those
who
commit
these
offences
have
deliberately
committed
acts
which
by
their
very
nature
come
well
within
the
definition
of
what
constitutes
criminal
law.
The
offences
described
in
section
239
are
"clearly
harmful
to
the
State”.
The
fact
that
these
offences
may
be
prosecuted
upon
indictment
and
that
terms
of
imprisonment
of
up
to
five
years
may
be
imposed
serves
to
further
strengthen
the
conclusion
that
these
offences
are
criminal
in
nature.
The
criminal
nature
of
making
false
or
deceptive
statements
on
income
tax
returns
has
long
been
recognized.
In
Re
Ramm,
[1958]
O.R.
98;
120
C.C.C.
c.
44,
the
Ontario
Court
of
Appeal
considered
whether
the
Public
Accountants
Council
could
revoke
the
appellant's
licence
to
practise
after
he
had
been
convicted
of
making
a
false
or
deceptive
statement
on
an
income
tax
return.
This
was
dependent
upon
whether
the
conviction
constituted
a
“criminal
offence"
under
the
Public
Accountancy
Act,
R.S.O.
1950,
c.
302.
The
court
held
that
a
conviction
for
such
an
offence
under
the
earlier
Income
Tax
Act
would
be
a
criminal
offence.
As
stated
by
LeBel,
J.A.
at
page
47:
.
.
.we
are
convinced
that
to
make
false
or
deceptive
statements
in
a
return
filed
or
made
as
required
by
either
tax
Act
is
to
commit
a
crime,
and
a
serious
crime,
rather
than
to
contravene
a
statutory
law
not
ordinarily
regarded
as
criminal.
It
is
fitting
and
appropriate
that
the
section
239
offences
be
considered
as
criminal
law.
The
Income
Tax
Act
is
a
major
source
of
funds
for
the
federal
government.
Its
provisions
are
applicable
to
most
adult
Canadians.
The
vast
majority
pay
their
income
tax
by
way
of
payroll
deduction
with
little
or
no
opportunity
for
evasion
or
misstatement.
Those
who
do
evade
the
payment
of
income
tax
not
only
cheat
the
State
of
what
is
owing
to
it,
but
inevitably
increase
the
burden
placed
upon
the
honest
taxpayers.
It
is
ironic
that
those
who
evade
payment
of
taxes
think
nothing
of
availing
themselves
of
the
innumerable
services
which
the
State
provides
by
means
of
taxes
collected
from
others.
The
entire
system
of
levying
and
collecting
income
tax
is
dependent
upon
the
integrity
of
the
taxpayer
in
reporting
and
assessing
income.
If
the
system
is
to
work,
the
returns
must
be
honestly
completed.
All
taxpayers
have
the
right
to
know
that
it
is
a
criminal
violation
to
commit
any
of
the
offences
described
in
section
239.
The
Act
imposes
a
public
duty.
A
breach
of
that
fundamentally
important
public
duty
should
constitute
a
criminal
offence.
Federal
Jurisdiction
Flowing
from
Criminal
Law
Authority
The
appellants
submitted
that
the
Income
Tax
Act
must
derive
its
constitutional
validity
from
the
taxing
provision
set
out
in
subsection
91(3)
of
the
Constitution
Act,
1867
and
not
the
criminal
law
powers
provided
in
subsection
91(27).
The
submission
is
not
appropriate
when
considering
sections
231.3
and
239
of
the
Act.
It
is
no
doubt
correct
that
the
Act
is
concerned
with
taxation,
but
that
does
not
prevent
its
penal
provisions
from
also
being
characterized
as
criminal
law.
And
for
the
reasons
I
have
set
out
earlier,
I
am
convinced
that
sections
231.3
and
239
are
truly
criminal
in
their
nature.
They
must
be
considered
as
enacted
pursuant
to
the
exclusive
federal
jurisdiction
in
the
domain
of
criminal
law.
The
relevant
provisions
of
the
Constitution
Act,
1867
are
as
follows:
91.
It
shall
be
lawful
for
the
Queen,
by
and
with
the
Advice
and
Consent
of
the
Senate
and
House
of
Commons,
to
make
Laws
for
the
Peace,
Order,
and
good
Government
of
Canada,
in
relation
to
all
Matters
not
coming
within
the
Classes
of
Subjects
by
this
Act
assigned
exclusively
to
the
Legislatures
of
the
Provinces;
and
for
greater
Certainty,
but
not
so
as
to
restrict
the
Generality
of
the
foregoing
Terms
of
this
Section,
it
is
hereby
declared
that
(notwithstanding
anything
in
this
Act)
the
exclusive
Legislative
Authority
of
the
Parliament
of
Canada
extends
to
all
Matters
coming
within
the
Classes
of
Subjects
next
hereinafter
enumerated;
that
is
to
say,—
27.
The
Criminal
Law,
except
the
Constitution
of
Courts
of
Criminal
Jurisdiction,
but
including
the
Procedure
in
Criminal
Matters.
92.
In
each
Province
the
Legislature
may
exclusively
make
Laws
in
relation
to
Matters
coming
within
the
Classes
of
Subject
next
hereinafter
enumerated;
that
is
to
say,
—
14.
The
Administration
of
Justice
in
the
Province,
including
the
Constitution,
Maintenance,
and
Organization
of
Provincial
Courts,
both
of
Civil
and
of
Criminal
Jurisdiction,
and
including
Procedure
in
Civil
Matters
in
those
Courts.
It
has
long
been
held
that
although
a
court
may
be
provincially
organized
and
maintained,
its
jurisdiction
and
the
procedures
to
be
followed
by
such
a
court
in
the
application
of
laws
enacted
by
the
federal
government
are
within
the
paramount
jurisdiction
of
the
federal
government.
This
is
particularly
true
of
criminal
law.
In
A.-G.
Quebec
v.
A.-G.
Canada,
[1945]
S.C.R.
600;
4
D.L.R.
305,
Taschereau,
J.
stated
at
page
602:
It
is
also
well
established
that,
although
a
court
may
be
provincially
organized
and
maintained,
its
jurisdiction
and
the
procedure
to
be
followed
for
the
application
of
laws
enacted
by
the
Parliament
of
Canada,
in
relation
to
matters
confided
to
that
Parliament,
are
within
its
exclusive
jurisdiction.
That
applies
to
criminal
law
and
procedure
in
criminal
matters
which
by
subsection
27
of
section
91
of
the
B.N.A.
Act
are
subject
to
the
legislative
powers
of
the
Dominion.
Still
earlier,
Duff,
J.
set
forth
the
same
principle
in
Reference
re
Validity
of
the
Combines
Investigation
Act
and
of
s.
498
of
the
Criminal
Code,
[1929]
S.C.R.
409,
at
page
418:
The
authority
in
relation
to
the
Criminal
Law
and
Criminal
Procedure
given
by
subsection
91(27)
would
appear
to
confer
upon
the
Dominion,
not
as
an
incidental
power
merely,
but
as
an
essential
part
of
it,
the
power
to
provide
for
investigation
into
crime,
actual
and
potential.
It
has
been
made
quite
clear
that
the
provisions
of
subsection
92(14)
of
the
Constitution
Act,
1867
cannot
be
construed
to
include
jurisdiction
over
the
conduct
of
criminal
prosecutions.
Laskin,
C.J.
in
A.-G.
Canada
v.
Canadian
National
Transportation
Ltd.,
[1983]
2
S.C.R.
206;
7
C.C.C.
(3d)
449,
at
223
stated
:
Section
92(14)
grants
jurisdiction
over
the
administration
of
justice,
including
procedure
in
civil
matters
and
including
also
the
constitution,
maintenance
and
organization
of
civil
and
criminal
provincial
courts.
The
section
thus
narrows
the
scope
of
the
criminal
law
power
under
section
91,
but
only
with
respect
to
what
is
embraced
within
"the
Constitution,
Maintenance,
and
Organization
of
Provincial
Courts.
.
.of
Criminal
Jurisdiction”.
By
no
stretch
of
language
can
these
words
be
construed
to
include
jurisdiction
over
the
conduct
of
criminal
prosecutions.
Moreover,
as
a
matter
of
conjunctive
assessment
of
the
two
constitutional
provisions,
the
express
inclusion
of
procedure
in
civil
matters
in
provincial
Courts
points
to
an
express
provincial
exclusion
of
procedure
in
criminal
matters
specified
in
subsection
91(27).
In
that
same
case
Laskin,
C.J.
expressly
adopted
the
reasons
of
Martin,
J.A.
in
R.
v.
Hoffmann-LaRoche
Ltd.,
[1981]
33
O.R.
(2d)
694;
62
C.C.C.
(2d)
118,
where
it
was
held
that
legislation
which
in
pith
and
substance
pertains
to
criminal
procedure
is
within
the
exclusive
competence
of
Parliament.
The
investigation
and
prosecution
of
offences
under
the
Income
Tax
Act
is
thus
a
valid
exercise
of
the
exclusive
criminal
law
power
of
the
federal
government.
Any
right
to
appeal
the
issuance
of
a
search
warrant
under
that
Act
must
be
found
within
a
statute
since
at
the
least
a
right
to
appeal
in
interlocutory
matters
in
criminal
cases
does
not
exist
at
common
law:
Mills
v.
The
Queen,
[1986]
1
S.C.R.
863;
26
C.C.C.
(3d)
481
at
958.
However,
because
sections
231.3
and
239
constitute
^n
exercise
of
the
criminal
law
jurisdiction,
a
right
of
appeal
cannot
be
founded
upon
the
provincial
Judicature
Act,
which
is
concerned
with
civil
procedures.
Nor
does
the
Income
Tax
Act
itself
provide
for
an
appeal
from
such
an
order.
Subsection
34(2)
of
the
Interpretation
Act,
R.S.C.,
1985,
c.
I-
21,
states
that
the
provisions
of
the
Criminal
Code
are
to
apply
to
indictable
and
summary
conviction
offences
created
by
an
Act
of
Parliament
unless
the
enacting
statute
provides
otherwise.
It
reads:
34.
.
.
.
(2)
All
the
provisions
of
the
Criminal
Code
relating
to
indictable
offences
apply
to
indictable
offences
created
by
an
enactment,
and
all
the
provisions
of
that
Code
relating
to
summary
conviction
offences
apply
to
all
other
offences
created
by
an
enactment,
except
to
the
extent
that
the
enactment
otherwise
provides.
The
Criminal
Code
does
not
provide
for
an
appeal
from
the
issuance
of
a
search
warrant.
Thus
Parliament
has
refrained
from
providing
for
an
appeal
of
such
an
order
and
the
Court
of
Appeal
therefore
lacked
jurisdiction
to
hear
the
appeal.
This
does
not
mean
that
an
accused
is
left
without
remedies.
Wide
powers
are
provided
in
the
Criminal
Code
for
a
person
from
whom
articles
are
seized
pursuant
to
a
search
warrant
to
make
a
speedy
application
for
their
return.
See
Criminal
Code,
R.S.C.,
1985,
c.
C-46,
subsections
490(7),
(8),
(10)
and
(17).
If
thematter
should
proceed
to
trial
then
of
course
the
accused
may
attack
the
search
warrant
in
any
way
he
considers
appropriate,
including
the
allegation
that
it
infringes
the
provisions
of
section
8
of
the
Canadian
Charter
of
Rights
and
Freedoms.
If,
for
any
reason,
the
matter
should
not
go
to
trial,
a
party
may
still
seek
civil
damages
for
compensation.
No
injustice
arises
from
the
absence
of
a
right
to
appeal
the
order
issuing
the
search
warrants.
In
summary,
the
issuance
of
search
warrants
is
an
interlocutory
procedure.
Appeals
from
interlocutory
orders
by
the
parties
in
criminal
proceedings
must
be
based
upon
a
statutory
provision.
No
such
statutory
provision
exists
and
thus
no
appeal
lies
to
the
Court
of
Appeal.
It
is
appropriate
that
the
Code
provides
no
avenue
for
appeal
from
these
procedures,
as
such
appeals
are
neither
desirable
nor
necessary
and
should
not,
as
a
general
rule,
be
encouraged.
See
Mills
v.
The
Queen,
supra,
and
R.
v.
Meltzer,
[1989]
1
S.C.R.
1764;
96
N.R.
391.
It
is
unnecessary
to
consider
the
effect
of
section
8
of
the
Canadian
Charter
of
Rights
and
Freedoms
as
no
submission
was
advanced
that
the
proceedings
before
the
judge
of
first
instance
on
the
issuance
of
the
search
warrants
infringed
in
any
way
section
8.
Since
preparing
the
above,
I
have
had
the
benefit
of
reading
the
reasons
of
my
colleague,
Sopinka,
J.
and
would
add
the
following
observations.
In
Canada
v.
McKinlay
Transport
Ltd.,
[1990]
1
S.C.R.
627;
[1990]
2
C.T.C.
103;
90
D.T.C.
6243,
Wilson,
J.
indicated,
for
the
majority
of
the
Court,
that
the
Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148
was
essentially
administrative
and
regulatory
in
nature
since
it
put
in
place
a
self-reporting
and
self-assessing
system
which
depended
upon
the
honesty
and
integrity
of
taxpayers
for
its
effectiveness.
In
this
respect
she
carefully
contrasted
the
Income
Tax
Act
with
the
Combines
Investigation
Act,
R.S.C.
1970,
c.
C-23,
dealt
with
in
Thomson
Newspapers
Ltd.
v.
Canada
(Director
of
Investigation
and
Research,
Restrictive
Trade
Practices
Commission),
[1990]
1
S.C.R.
425;
67
D.L.R.
(4th)
161,
and
Stelco
Inc.
v.
A.-G.
Canada,
[1990]
1
S.C.R.
617;
55
C.C.C.
(3d)
227,
which
was
essentially
a
policing
statute
designed
to
uncover
and
punish
anti-competitive
behaviour.
L'Heureux-Dubé,
J.,
relying
on
A.-G.
Canada
v.
Canadian
National
Transportation
Ltd.,
supra,
held
in
Thomson
that
the
combines
legislation
was
supportable
under
the
federal
trade
and
commerce
power.
Sopinka,
J.
in
the
present
case
similarly
asserts
that
the
Income
Tax
Act
was
passed
pursuant
to
the
federal
taxing
power.
I
take
no
issue
with
my
colleagues
as
to
the
legislative
authority
for
the
enactment
of
these
statutes.
This
does
not
mean,
however,
that
the
provisions
in
them
creating
offences
and
imposing
penal
sanctions
are
not
criminal
law.
The
Income
Tax
Act,
for
example,
to
the
extent
it
creates
a
regulatory
scheme
for
the
calculation
and
payment
of
taxes
by
taxpayers
and
authorizes
spot
audits
to
ensure
that
voluntary
compliance
is
working,
is
not
criminal
law.
It
is
clearly
tax
law.
But
to
the
extent
the
legislation
makes
the
filing
of
a
fraudulent
and
dishonest
return
an
offence
punishable
by
fine
or
imprisonment,
it
just
as
clearly
appears
to
be
legislation
in
relation
to
criminal
law.
Those
provisions
recognize
that
not
all
taxpayers
can
be
trusted
to
report
their
incomes
accurately
and
that
the
self-reporting
and
self-assessing
system
has
to
have
some
teeth
in
it
in
order
to
deal
with
miscreants.
While
it
is,
of
course,
possible
to
view
these
provisions
as
part
of
administration
or
regulation
in
that
they
may
have
a
deterrent
effect
on
those
disposed
in
the
future
to
stray
from
the
straight
and
narrow
path,
they
are
more
than
that.
They
deal
with
deliberate
misconduct
that
has
already
taken
place
by
characterizing
it
as
an
offence
punishable
on
summary
conviction
or
by
indictment.
They
are
aimed
at
the
suppression
of
an
evil
and
an
injury
to
the
public
interest.
In
that
sense
they
are
quintessential
criminal
law.
There
is,
in
my
view,
nothing
unusual
or
inconsistent
about
an
otherwise
predominantly
regulatory
piece
of
legislation
containing
criminal
prohibitions
and
sanctions
and
a
challenge
to
specific
provisions
in
the
statute
under
the
division
of
powers
must,
in
my
view,
be
directed
at
the
challenged
provisions,
not
at
the
statute
as
a
whole.
In
this
case
the
question
is
whether,
in
the
absence
of
any
right
of
appeal
in
either
the
Income
Tax
Act
or
the
Criminal
Code
from
a
decision
of
a
superior
court
judge
not
to
quash
a
search
warrant
issued
pursuant
to
section
231.3
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
the
province
can
confer
such
a
right
pursuant
to
its
power
under
subsection
92(14).
It
seems
fairly
clear
that
the
purpose
of
the
search
contemplated
in
section
231.3
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
is
to
gather
evidence
of
an
offence
under
section
239.
Such
offence
may
be
proceeded
on
by
way
of
summary
conviction
under
subsection
239(1)
or
by
way
of
indictment
under
subsection
239(2)
at
the
election
of
the
Attorney
General
of
Canada.
It
is,
in
my
view,
unrealistic,
for
purposes
of
deciding
whether
or
not
there
is
an
appeal
from
a
refusal
to
quash
a
search
warrant,
to
divorce
section
231.3
from
the
offences
sought
to
be
uncovered
by
the
search
and
to
characterize
the
former
as
a
matter
of
civil
procedure
and
the
latter
as
criminal
law.
Thus,
although
sections
231.3
and
239
may
be
constitutionally
justified
under
the
general
taxing
power,
it
is
not
necessary
for
the
purposes
of
this
case
to
explore
that
aspect.
These
sections
are
truly
criminal
in
their
nature,
and
criminal
procedure
is
expressly
excluded
from
provincial
jurisdiction:
See
Canadian
National
Transportation
Ltd.
v.
A.-G.
Canada,
supra,
at
pages
216-23.
Conclusion
In
the
result,
the
appeal
must
be
dismissed
although
for
reasons
that
are
different
from
those
or
the
Court
of
Appeal.
Sopinka,
J.
(dissenting);
—I
have
had
the
advantage
of
reading
the
reasons
for
judgment
herein
of
my
colleague,
Cory,
J.,
but
I
am
unable
to
agree
with
either
his
reasons
or
his
disposition
of
this
appeal.
The
appellants
claim
that
the
trial
judge
erred
in
refusing
to
quash
search
warrants
under
section
231.3
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
S.C.
1970-71-72,
c.
63,
as
amended.
Without
considering
the
merits
of
their
claim,
the
Court
of
Appeal
determined
that
the
trial
judge,
Turnbull,
J.,
did
not
have
the
jurisdiction
to
review
the
section
231.3
search
warrants.
While
the
respondents
now
concede
that
the
trial
judge
did
have
such
jurisdiction,
they
contend
that
there
was
no
appeal
from
the
trial
judge's
decision.
The
issue
in
this
appeal,
therefore,
is
whether
an
appeal
lies
from
the
decision
of
a
superior
court
judge
not
to
quash
a
search
warrant
issued
pursuant
to
section
231.3
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
Cory,
J.
finds
that
sections
231.3
and
239
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
are
supportable
under
subsection
91(27)
of
the
Constitution
Act,
1867
and
that
appeal
procedures
are
therefore
within
the
federal
government's
exclusive
jurisdiction
over
criminal
procedure.
In
his
opinion,
since
the
Income
Tax
Act
and
the
Criminal
Code
are
silent
with
respect
to
appeals
from
an
order
regarding
search
warrants,
then
necessarily
no
appeal
lies.
In
my
opinion,
these
provisions
are
supportable
under
both
the
criminal
law
power
and
the
power
in
relation
to
federal
taxation.
Accordingly,
an
appeal
lies
under
New
Brunswick's
Judicature
Act,
R.S.N.B.
1973,
c.
J-2.
While
I
accept
that
sections
231.3
and
239
are
supportable
under
the
power
over
criminal
law
and
procedure,
that
does
not
end
the
inquiry.
If
these
provisions
are
also
supportable
under
subsection
91(3)
of
the
Constitution
Act,
1867,
the
federal
taxation
power,
then
the
jurisdiction
to
provide
for
an
appeal
is
not
exclusively
federal.
Subsection
92(14)
of
the
Constitution
Act,
1867
confers
jurisdiction
on
the
province
to
legislate
in
respect
of
procedure
in
civil
matters.
Accordingly,
if
sections
231.3
and
239
are
supportable
under
two
heads
of
power,
one
criminal
and
one
civil
in
nature,
a
right
of
appeal
can
be
conferred
by
either
federal
or
provincial
legislation.
In
the
absence
of
conflict,
both
forms
of
legislation
are
valid
on
the
basis
of
the
double
aspect
doctrine:
see
Multiple
Access
Ltd.
v.
McCutcheon,
[1982]
2
S.C.R.
161;
138
D.L.R.
(3d)
1.
The
notion
that
a
statute
is
supportable
under
two
heads
of
legislation
is
well
established:
see
R.
v.
Hauser,
supra;
R.
v.
Wetmore,
[1983]
2
S.C.R.
284;
2
D.L.R.
(4th)
577.
The
fact
that
provision
is
made
for
enforcement,
including
the
creation
of
severe
penalties,
does
not
mean
that
the
legislation
is
necessarily
criminal.
For
example,
the
Combines
Investigation
Act,
R.S.C.
1970,
c.
C-23,
which
contains
provision
for
the
issue
of
search
warrants
and
creates
indictable
offences,
has
been
held
by
this
Court
to
be
supportable
under
the
trade
and
commerce
power:
see
General
Motors
of
Canada
Ltd.
v.
City
National
Leasing,
[1989]
1
S.C.R.
641;
58
D.L.R.
(4th)
255.
In
R.
v.
Hauser,
supra,
Pigeon,
J.
stated
at
page
1000
(D.L.R.
209):
The
mere
fact
that
severe
penalties
are
provided
for
violations
cannot
of
itself
stamp
out
a
federal
statute
as
criminal
law.
Such
is
the
case
for
most
revenue
acts
which
are
clearly
a
class
of
statutes
founded
on
legislative
authority
other
than
head
27.
[Emphasis
added.]
Similar
enforcement
provisions,
including
powers
of
search
and
seizure,
are
found
in
provincial
taxing
statutes.
See
Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.O.
1980,
c.
213,
sections
38
and
43.
Could
it
be
suggested
that
these
are
ultra
vires
the
province
because
they
create
penalties
by
way
of
fines
and
imprisonment?
The
nature
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
is
such
that
it
was
undoubtedly
passed
under
the
federal
taxation
power.
Most
of
its
provisions
have
nothing
to
do
with
the
criminal
law
power.
In
Canada
v.
McKinlay
Transport
Ltd.,
supra,
we
held
that
the
Income
Tax
Act
is
a
taxation
statute
and
not
criminal
in
nature.
Wilson,
J.
states
at
page
110
(D.T.C.
6247-48;
S.C.R.
641):
Subsection
231(3)
is
not
criminal
or
quasi-criminal
legislation.
The
Income
Tax
Act
is
essentially
a
regulatory
statute
since
it
controls
the
manner
in
which
income
tax
is
calculated
and
collected.
This
Court
pointed
out
in
R.
v.
Grimwood,
[1987]
2
S.C.R.
755;
[1988]
1
C.T.C.
44;
88
D.T.C.
6001
at
page
44
(D.T.C.
6001;
S.C.R
756),
that
"the
purpose
of
ss.
231(3)
and
238(2),
when
read
together,
is
not
to
penalize
criminal
conduct
but
to
enforce
compliance
with
the
Act”.
McKinlay
dealt
with
the
Income
Tax
Act
as
it
stood
before
the
amendment
which
added
section
231.3
in
its
present
form—S.C.
1986,
c.
6,
section
121.
But
as
pointed
out
by
La
Forest,
J.
in
his
reasons
in
Thomson
Newspapers
Ltd.
v.
Canada
(Director
of
Investigation
and
Research,
Restrictive
Trade
Practices
Commission,
[1990]
1
S.C.R.
420,
the
offence
sections
do
not
remove
the
Act
from
the
regulatory,
administrative
sphere.
He
stated
at
pages
516-17:
All
of
these
offences
relate
to
conduct
that
might
well
be
discovered
by
the
exercise
of
the
power
to
order
the
production
of
documents
which
section
231(3)
confers
on
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue.
This
has
not
prevented
this
Court
from
characterizing
section
231(3)
as
a
regulatory
or
administrative
power
of
investigation;
see
Canada
v.
McKinlay
Transport
Ltd,
supra.
.
.
.the
degree
of
privacy
that
can
reasonably
be
expected
within
the
investigative
scope
of
the
Act
is
akin
to
that
which
can
be
expected
by
those
subject
to
other
administrative
and
regulatory
legislation,
rather
than
to
that
which
can
legitimately
be
expected
by
those
subject
to
police
investigation
for
what
I
have
called
“real”
or
"true"
crimes.
While
I
agree
with
the
statement
of
Cory,
J.
that
the
procedures
to
be
followed
by
a
court
in
the
application
of
federal
laws
are
within
the
paramount
jurisdiction
of
Parliament,
it
does
not
follow
that
in
the
absence
of
conflict,
provincial
procedure
is
ousted.
The
provincial
courts
are
competent
to
and
do
adjudicate
in
relation
to
federal
law
and
apply
their
procedure
unless
that
law
prescribes
otherwise.
The
contrary
view
would
leave
a
huge
hiatus
in
the
procedure
to
be
followed
because
federal
laws
seldom
specify
either
the
court
or
the
procedure
by
which
they
are
to
be
administered.
In
the
absence
of
a
provision
in
the
Federal
Court
Act,
R.S.C.,
1985,
c.
F-7,
conferring
exclusive
jurisdiction
on
that
court,
provincial
courts
have
jurisdiction,
and
in
that
case
apply
their
own
procedure.
Professor
P.W.
Hogg,
in
Constitutional
Law
of
Canada
(2nd
ed.
1985),
summarizes
this
set-up
as
follows
at
page
135:
The
general
jurisdiction
of
the
provincial
courts
means
that
there
is
no
need
for
a
separate
system
of
federal
courts
to
decide
"federal"
questions.
Nor
does
the
power
to
decide
federal
questions
have
to
be
specifically
granted
to
the
provincial
courts
by
the
federal
Parliament.
On
the
contrary,
if
federal
law
calls
for
the
exercise
of
adjudication,
but
is
silent
as
to
the
forum,
the
appropriate
forum
will
be
the
provincial
courts.
The
learned
author
refers
in
support
to
Board
v.
Board,
[1919]
A.C.
956;
48
D.L.R.
13;
Laskin,
"The
Constitutional
Systems
of
Canada
and
the
United
States:
Some
Comparisons"
(1967),
16
Buffalo
L.
Rev.
591,
at
592;
and
Laskin,
The
British
Tradition
in
Canadian
Law,
at
page
114.
There
is
nothing
in
A.-G.
Canada
v.
Canadian
National
Transportation
Ltd.,
[1983]
2
S.C.R.
206,
that
conflicts
with
this
view.
That
case
dealt
with
the
power
to
legislate
with
respect
to
the
prosecution
of
offences
under
the
Combines
Investigation
Act.
Parliament
had
legislated
to
confer
on
the
Attorney
General
of
Canada
concurrent
jurisdiction
with
the
Attorney
General
of
a
province
over
prosecution
of
offences
under
that
Act.
In
upholding
the
legislation,
Laskin,
C.J.
opined
that
the
federal
government
had
exclusive
legislative
jurisdiction
in
relation
to
the
prosecution
of
all
federal
offences.
This
obiter
dictum,
concurred
in
by
three
judges,
has
been
criticized.
See
Hogg,
supra,
at
page
430.
It
is
clear,
however,
that
the
exclusivity
of
federal
legislation
depended
on
the
fact
that
Parliament
had
legislated.
Laskin,
C.J.
explained
why
the
province
did
not
have
concurrent
jurisdiction
in
the
following
passage
at
pages
226-27:
It
is
patent
that
neither
the
respondents
nor
their
supporting
interveners
view
the
present
case
as
pointing
to
possible
concurrency.
Since
Parliament
has
in
fact
legislated,
that
would
defeat
their
contention
without
more.
Yet
there
is
good
reason
to
say
that
even
if
there
is
merit
in
the
respondents'
position,
there
is
at
least
equal
merit
in
the
assertion
of
parliamentary
authority
to
control
prosecution
for
violation
of
the
federal
criminal
law.
The
issue,
put
in
these
terms,
is
not
a
new
one.
The
Privy
Council
explained
the
matter
in
terms
of
the
so-called
trenching
doctrine
in
Tennant
v.
Union
Bank
of
Canada,
[1984]
A.C.
31,
as
supporting
a
privileged
encroachment
on
provincial
legislative
authority
to
give
effect
to
exclusive
and
paramount
federal
power
in
relation
to
the
classes
of
subjects
assigned
to
Parliament
under
the
enumerated
heads
of
section
91.
The
obverse
view
arises,
as
shown
in
the
Assignments
and
Preferences
case,
Attorney-General
of
Ontario
v.
Attorney-General
of
Canada,
[1894]
A.C.
189,
when
there
is
an
absence
of
federal
legislation
to
supersede
the
lawful
enactment
of
provincial
legislation
within
one
of
its
assigned
powers.
[Emphasis
added.]
In
the
present
case,
Parliament
has
not
legislated
and
concurrency
does
arise.
The
obverse
view
referred
to
by
Laskin,
C.J.
therefore
applies.
The
operation
of
the
constitutional
scheme
referred
to
above
is
illustrated
by
this
very
case.
The
application
to
quash
the
search
warrants
was
made
to
Turnbull,
J.
of
the
New
Brunswick
Court
of
Queen's
Bench.
No
procedure
for
such
an
application
is
prescribed
in
the
Income
Tax
Act.
In
dealing
with
the
application,
the
judge
applied
the
procedure
applicable
on
a
motion
to
a
judge
of
that
court.
The
propriety
of
so
doing
is
not
contested.
The
rule
that
a
judge
may
review
an
ex
parte
order
is
itself
a
rule
inhering
in
a
superior
court
judge
of
the
province,
and
is
often
the
subject
of
a
specific
rule
of
procedure.
For
an
example
one
may
refer
to
R.
37.14
of
the
Ontario
Rules
of
Civil
Procedure,
O.
Reg.
560/84.
It
would
be
anomalous
if
provincial
procedure
applied
in
first
instance
but
ceased
to
apply
thereafter.
I
know
of
no
constitutional
principle
which
would
distinguish
between
proceedings
at
first
instance
and
appeal
with
respect
to
the
legislative
jurisdiction
over
procedure.
Provincial
law
of
procedure
is
inapplicable
only
in
respect
of
proceedings
that
are
exclusively
criminal
in
nature.
By
virtue
of
subsection
91(27)
of
the
Constitution
Act,
1867,
Parliament
is
given
exclusive
legislative
power
over
criminal
law
and
procedure.
Matters
arising
out
of
a
statute
enacted
exclusively
under
the
criminal
law
power
must
be
dealt
with
under
federal
laws,
including
laws
of
procedure.
A
recent
example
can
be
found
in
R.
v.
Meltzer,
[1989]
1
S.C.R.
1764;
96
N.R.
391.
This
Court
held
that
no
appeal
lay
from
the
decision
of
a
judge
renewing
a
wiretap
authorization.
In
so
doing,
McIntyre,
J.,
for
the
Court,
adopted
the
following
passage
from
R.
v.
Cass
(1985),
71
A.R.
248
at
pages
1769-70:
In
my
view
it
cannot
be
argued
that
a
wire
tap
authorization,
or
a
review
of
it,
or
an
appeal
from
such
a
review,
is
anything
other
than
a
criminal
matter.
Indeed,
Parliament's
authority
in
the
field
of
interception
of
private
communications
derives
from
its
criminal
law
jurisdiction.
An
Alberta
statute
or
rule
of
court
relating
to
civil
matters
purporting
to
govern
an
appeal
from
the
review
of
an
authorization
would
be
ultra
vires.
Poje
v.
A.-G.
British
Columbia,
[1953]
1
S.C.R.
516;
2
D.L.R.
785,
and
In
re
Storgoff,
[1945]
S.C.R.
526;
3
D.L.R.
673,
contain
further
examples
of
proceedings
that
are
exclusively
criminal
in
nature.
As
previously
stated,
a
matter
arising
under
a
federal
statute
that
is
supportable
under
another
head
of
power
in
addition
to
the
criminal
law
power
can
have
two
aspects:
one
criminal
and
one
civil.
A
provincial
court
which
is
seized
of
the
matter
may
validly
apply
its
own
rules
of
civil
procedure
unless
resort
thereto
is
precluded
by
federal
legislation
or
the
matter
is
clearly
related
to
a
criminal
proceeding.
This
is
particularly
true
of
proceedings
to
review
a
search
warrant
or
other
process
issued
under
federal
legislation
that
is
supportable
under
a
head
of
power
other
than
the
criminal
law
power.
In
General
Motors
of
Canada
Ltd.
v.
City
National
Leasing,
supra,
this
Court
found
the
Combines
Investigation
Act
as
a
whole
supportable
under
the
trade
and
commerce
power
as
well
as
the
criminal
law
power.
That
Act
contains
provision
for
searches
and
seizures
pursuant
to
warrants
to
search.
The
sections
authorizing
the
issue
of
search
warrants
were
found
to
violate
section
8
of
the
Charter
in
Hunter
v.
Southam
Inc.,
[1984]
2
S.C.R.
145;
11
D.L.R.
(4th)
641;
14
C.C.C.
(3d)
97,
and
were
struck
down.
The
proceeding
to
review
the
warrant
was
by
way
of
interlocutory
injunction
to
a
judge
of
the
Court
of
Queen's
Bench
of
Alberta.
The
appeals
were
taken
and
eventually
reached
this
court.
The
proceedings
by
way
of
interlocutory
injunction
and
the
appeal
were
taken
in
accordance
with
the
procedure
applicable
to
civil
proceedings
in
the
Alberta
Court
of
Queen's
Bench
and
Court
of
Appeal:
see
(1982),
136
D.L.R.
(3d)
133;
68
C.C.C.
(2d)
356,
and
(1983),
147
D.L.R.
(3d)
420;
3
C.C.C.
(3d)
497.
Similarly,
in
Thomson
Newspapers
Ltd.
v.
Canada
(Director
of
Investigation
and
Research,
Restrictive
Trade
Practices
Commission),
supra,
the
proceeding
to
quash,
on
Charter
grounds,
orders
issued
under
section
17
of
the
Combines
Investigation
Act
for
the
attendance
of
witnesses
and
production
of
documents
could
not
have
reached
this
Court
but
for
the
provisions
of
the
Ontario
Courts
of
Justice
Act,
1984,
S.O.
1984,
c.
11,
and
the
Ontario
Rules
of
Civil
Procedure.
A
motion
to
review
the
issuance
of
a
search
warrant,
like
a
prerogative
proceeding,
takes
its
character
from
earlier
proceedings
out
of
which
it
arises.
In
Storgoff,
supra,
Kellock,
J.
stated
at
pages
585-86:
In
my
opinion,
all
the
members
of
the
Court
approach
the
matter
first
from
the
standpoint
of
the
situation
with
regard
to
the
nature
of
certiorari
as
it
was
understood
before
the
Judicature
Acts
were
passed,
and
they
determine
that
its
nature
depends
upon
the
character
of
the
earlier
proceedings
to
which
the
proceeding
by
way
of
certiorari
is
directed.
And
at
page
588:
In
my
opinion,
all
these
authorities
are
based
on
the
view
that
habeas
corpus,
being
procedural,
partakes
of
the
nature
of
the
earlier
proceeding,
as
a
result
of
which
it
has
been
invoked,
and
that
this
view
of
its
nature
is
not
dependent
upon
anything
enacted
in
England
by
the
Judicature
Acts
but
was
well
recognized
long
before
their
enactment.
I
have
explained
above
that
in
my
opinion
the
provision
out
of
which
this
proceeding
arises
has
both
a
civil
and
criminal
aspect.
The
motion
for
review
cannot
therefore
be
characterized
as
exclusively
criminal
for
the
purpose
of
determining
rights
of
appeal.
This
is
particularly
so
in
view
of
the
fact
that
no
charges
have
been
laid
and
indeed
may
not
be
laid.
The
main
purpose
of
the
application
is
stated
in
the
notice
of
application
as
follows:
5.
The
Applicants
seek
the
order
for
return
of
the
documents
and
things
that
were
seized
from
the
Applicants
and
from
Thorne
Riddell
on
July
7,
1986
and
July
23,
1986,
respectively,
and
all
extracts
therefrom,
on
the
following
grounds
There
is
nothing
therefore
in
the
nature
of
the
application
itself
to
convert
the
proceeding
into
an
exclusively
criminal
proceeding.
Finally,
I
am
concerned
that,
contrary
to
the
views
expressed
by
my
colleague,
the
appellants
and
others
in
the
same
position
will
find
themselves
without
a
remedy.
If
the
matter
should
proceed
to
trial
(assuming
charges
are
laid),
it
is
doubtful
that
the
trial
judge
would
have
jurisdiction
to
set
aside
an
order
of
a
superior
court
judge.
In
New
Brunswick,
the
trial
would
be
before
a
provincial
court
judge.
The
applicant
would
be
faced
with
this
Court's
decision
in
Wilson
v.
The
Queen,
[1983]
S.C.R.
594;
4
D.L.R.
(4th)
577
which
precludes
a
collateral
attack
on
an
order
made
by
a
court
having
jurisdiction
to
make
it.
The
application
of
this
principle
to
an
attempt
to
review
a
search
warrant
at
trial
is
illustrated
by
the
case
of
R.
v.
Komadowski,
[1986]
3
W.W.R.
657;
27
C.C.C.
(3d)
319
(leave
to
appeal
to
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
denied,
[1986]
1
S.C.R.
x).
O’Sullivan,
J.A.
stated
at
325:
"Since
the
search
was
conducted
under
a
search
warrant,
which
is
valid
on
its
face
and
which
has
not
been
quashed
or
set
aside
in
a
proceeding
directly
attacking
it,
the
search
warrant
should
be
upheld."
He
dismissed
an
appeal
from
the
trial
judge
who
refused
to
reject
evidence
obtained
as
a
result
of
the
execution
of
a
search
warrant
which
was
attacked
at
trial
by
the
appellant.
Although
Wilson,
supra,
may
have
no
application
where
the
attack
on
a
previous
order
is
based
on
Charter
grounds,
it
presents
grave
difficulties
for
an
applicant
who
seeks
to
attack
a
search
warrant
on
traditional
grounds
for
the
first
time
at
trial.
Apart
from
Wilson,
it
has
been
suggested
that
where
the
purpose
of
the
motion
is
to
obtain
the
property
seized
and
not
a
rejection
of
the
evidence
obtained,
the
trial
judge
may
not
be
the
appropriate
forum.
See
Re
Zevallos
and
The
Queen
(1987),
37
C.C.C.
(3d)
79;
32
C.R.R.
373,
at
86-87.
Furthermore,
if
sections
490(7),
(10)
and
(17)
of
the
Criminal
Code,
R.S.C.,
1985,
c.
C-46,
have
any
application
to
a
seizure
under
the
Income
Tax
Act,
they
have
no
application
where
it
is
alleged
that
the
search
is
unlawful
and
it
is
sought
to
prevent
or
terminate
the
search.
On
the
other
hand,
if
the
matter
does
not
go
to
trial,
I
fail
to
see
how
an
action
for
damages
could
be
pursued
grounded
on
conduct
of
the
authorities
pursuant
to
an
order
of
the
superior
court
which
had
not
been
set
aside.
I
would
therefore
allow
the
appeal
and
remit
the
matter
to
the
Court
of
Appeal
to
hear
the
appeal
on
its
merits.
Appeal
dismissed.