Dickson,
J:—The
threshold,
and
in
my
opinion
determinative,
issue
in
this
appeal
is
whether
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal,
an
a
section
28
application,
has
the
right
to
review
and
set
aside
an
order
of
a
judge
of
a
superior
court
of
one
of
the
provinces
made
pursuant
to
section
232
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
SC
1970-71-72,
c
63,
as
amended.
The
point
is
narrow
but
of
considerable
importance
as
affecting
the
jurisdiction
of
the
Federal
Court.
The
facts
are
these.
Subsection
231(4)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
permits
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue,
where
he
has
reasonable
and
probable
grounds
to
believe
that
a
violation
of
the
Act
has
been
committed,
and
upon
the
approval
of
a
judge
of
a
superior
or
county
court,
to
seize
and
take
away
documents
and
retain
them
until
they
are
produced
in
any
court
proceedings.
Section
232
of
the
Act
contains
lengthy
provisions
as
to
the
procedure
to
be
followed
when
the
document
to
be
seized
is
in
the
possession
of
a
lawyer,
and
the
lawyer
Claims
that
a
named
client
of
his
has
a
solicitor-client
privilege
in
respect
of
that
document.
The
central
provisions
are
subsections
(4),
(5)
and
(6),
which
read
as
follows:
(4)
Where
a
document
has
been
seized
and
placed
in
custody
under
subsection
(3),
the
client,
or
the
lawyer
on
behalf
of
the
client,
may
(a)
within
14
days
from
the
day
the
document
was
so
placed
in
custody,
apply,
upon
3
days’
notice
of
motion
to
the
Deputy
Attorney
General
of
Canada,
to
a
judge
for
an
order
(i)
fixing
a
day
(not
later
than
21
days'
after
the
date
of
the
order)
and
place
for
the
determination
of
the
question
whether
the
client
has
a
solicitor-client
privilege
in
respect
of
the
document,
and
(ii),
requiring
the
custodian
to
produce
the
document
to
the
judge
at
that
time
and
place;
(b)
serve
a
copy
of
the
order
on
the
Deputy
Attorney
General
of
Canada
and
the
custodian
within
6
days
of
the
day
on
which
it
was
made,
and,
within
the
same
time,,
pay
to
the
custodian
the
estimated
expenses
of
transporting
the
document
to
and
from
the
place
of
hearing
and
of
safeguarding
it;
and
(c)
if
he
has
proceeded
as
authorized
by
paragraph
(b),
apply,
at
the
appointed
time
and
place,
for
an
order
determining
the
question.
(5)
An
application
under
paragraph
(4)(c)
shall
be
heard
in
camera,
and
on
the
application
(a)
the
judge
may,
if
he
considers
it
necessary
to
determine
the
question,
inspect
the
document
and,
if
he
does
so,
he
shall
ensure
that
it
is
repackaged
and
resealed;
and
(b)
the
judge
shall
decide
the
matter
summarily
and,
(i)
if
he
is
of
opinion
that
the
client
has
a
Solicitor-client
privilege
in
respect
of
the
document,
shall
order
the
custodian
to
deliver
the
document
to
the
lawyer,
and
(ii)
if
he
is
of
opinion
that
the
client
does
not
have
a
solicitor-client
privilege
in
respect
of
the
document,
shall
order
the
custodian
to
deliver
the
document
to
the
officer
or
some
other
person
designated
by
the
Deputy
Minister
of
National
Revenue
for
Taxation,
and
he
shall,
at
the
same
time,
deliver
concise
reasons
in
which
he
shall
describe
the
nature
of
the
document
without
divulging
the
details
thereof.
(6)
Where
a
document
has
been
seized
and
placed
in
custody
under
subsection
(3)
and
a
judge,,
on
the.
application
of
the
Attorney
General
of
Canada,
is
satisfied
that
neither
the
client
nor
the
lawyer
has
made
an
application
under
paragraph
(4)(a),
or,
having
made
that
application
neither
the
client
nor
the
lawyer
has
made
an
application
under
paragraph
(c)
thereof,
he
shall
order
the
custodian
to
deliver
the
document
to
the
officer
or
some
other
person
by
the
Deputy
Minister
of
National
Revenue
for
Taxation.
Paragraph
232(1)(a)
defines
“judge”
in
these
terms:
(a)
“judge”
means
a
judge
of
a
superior
court
having
jurisdiction
in
the
province
where
the
matter
arises
or
a
judge
of
the
Federal
Court
of
Canada;
“Solicitor-client
privilege”
had
also
been
defined,
in
paragraph
232
(1)(e),
as
follows:
(e)
“solicitor-client
privilege”
means
the
right,
if
any,
that
a
person
has
in
a
superior
court
in
the
province
where
the
matter
arises
to
refuse
to
disclose
an
oral
or
documentary
communication
on
the
ground
that
the
communication
is
one
passing
between
him
and
his
lawyer
in
professional
confidence,
except
that
for
the
purpose
of
this
section
an
accounting
record
of
a
lawyer,
including
any
supporting
voucher
or
cheque,
shall
be
deemed
not
to
be
such
a
communication.
Pursuant
to
the
authority
reposed
in
him
by
the
Act,
the
Minister
caused
to
be
seized
certain
documents
in
the
possession
of
the
legal
firm
of
Goodman
and
Carr,
in
the
City
of
Toronto.
That
firm
claimed
solicitor-client
privilege
in
respect
of
the
documents
and
the
procedure
for
resolving
that
issue,
as
prescribed
by
section
232
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
was
followed.
The
matter
came
before
Madam
Justice
Boland,
a
judge
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Ontario,
who
ordered
that
Six
letters
and
seven
memoranda
be
delivered
to
the
lawyers,
and
that
four
letters
and
four
memoranda
be
delivered
to
an
officer
designated
by
the
Deputy
Minister
of
National
Revenue
for
Taxation.
The
order
of
Madam
Justice
Boland
contained
a
further
provision
that
the
documents
not
be
delivered
until
an
appeal
or
application
for
leave
to
appeal
from,
or
for
judicial
review
of,
the
order,
if
any,
be
disposed
of,
provided
that
such
appeal
or
application
be
filed
with
the
appropriate
court
within
ten
days
of
the
date
of
the
order.
The
appellants
thereafter
made
an
application
under
section
28
of
the
Federal
Court
Act,
RSC
1970
(2nd
Supp),
c
10,
to
review
and
set
aside
that
part
of
the
order
in
which
Madam
Justice
Boland
declared
that
certain
documents
seized
by
the
Department
were
not
privileged.
That
application
was
followed
by
an
interlocutory
application
for
an
order,
under
Federal
Court
Rule
1402(2),
to
vary
the
contents
of
the
“case”
so
as
to
exclude
the
documents
in
respect
of
which
solicitor-client
privilege
was
claimed.
The
grounds
upon
which
the
interlocutory
motion
was
advanced
were:
that
the
documents
constituted
part
of
the
“case”
(Rule
1402(1)(b)
and
(d));
that
public
access
may
be
had
to
the
contents
of
a
“case“
(Rule
201(3));
that
such
access
would
vitiate
the
appellants’
claim
to
privilege,
and
therefore
the
issues
before
the
Court
should
be
determined
both
on
the
contents
of
the
“case”
and
the
contents
of
the
said
documents.
The
motion
was
dismissed,
the
Chief
Justice
delivering
the
reasons
for
judgment
of
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal,
and
the
present
appeal
followed.
In
argument
before
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal
counsel
agreed
that
the
interlocutory
application
should
be
treated
as
a
general
application
for
an
order
for
directions:
(a)
adding
the
documents
in
question
to
the
“case”
as
constituted
by
Rule
1402(1),
and
(b)
requiring
that
such
documents
be
placed
before
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal
in
some
manner
whereby
they
would
not
be
available
for
examination
except
by
that
Court.
The
Chief
Justice
was
of
the
view
that
that
part
of
Madam
Justice
Boland’s
order
in
which
she
directed
that
the
documents
“not
be
delivered”
until
some
time
in
the
future
was
not
authorized
by
section
232.
It
followed,
therefore,
in
the
opinion
of
the
Chief
Justice,
that
the
continued
custody
of
the
Sheriff
was
of
the
same
character
as
the
custody
of
the
Sheriff
in
Deputy
Attorney
General
of
Canada
v
Brown,
[1965]
SCR
84.
With
respect
to
the
merits
of
the
application,
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal
held
that
even
if
it
had
the
power
to
make
an
order
that
a
certain
part
of
the
“case”
should
be
sealed
up,
nevertheless,
it
would
not
be
appropriate
to
make
an
order
in
the
circumstances
for
the
following
reasons
(per
Jackett,
CJ):
(a)
having
regard
to
the
reasoning
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
The
Deputy
Attorney
General
of
Canada
v
Brown
dealing
with
section
232
when
it
was
section
126A
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
it
would
be
entirely
academic
for
the
Court
to
set
aside
the
decision
or
order
that
is
under
attack,
and
(b)
assuming
that
the
Court’s
jurisdiction
under
section
28
extends
to
reviewing
the
decision
or
order
of
a
judge
under
section
232
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
as
to
whether
a
particular
document
is
subject
to
solicitor-client
privilege,
a
matter
concerning
which
I
have
doubt,
such
jurisdiction
should
not,
in
my
view,
be
exercised
in
respect
of
an
entirely
academic
matter
any
more
than
an
appeal
court’s
jurisdiction
to
hear
an
appeal
should
be
exercised
once
the
order
or
decision
attacked
ceases
to
have
any
practical
effect.
The
judgment
concludes:
If
the
Court
cannot,
on
the
section
28
application,
review
the
order
under
attack
from
the
point
of
view
of
the
availability
of
solicitor-client
privilege
with
reference
to
particular
documents,
in
my
view,
it
is
clear
that
there
IS,
except
possibly
in
exceptional
circumstances
that
I
do
not
perceive
here,
no
point
in
adding
such
documents
to
the
case
as
constituted
by
Rule
1402(1).
I
am,
therefore,
of
the
view
that
the
interlocutory
application
should
be
dismissed.
It
will
be
noted
that
the
Chief
Justice
expressed
doubt
whether
the
jurisdiction
of
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal,
under
section
28,
extends
to
reviewing
the
decision
or
order
of
a
judge,
under
section
232
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
as
to
whether
a
particular
document
is
subject
to
solicitor-client
privilege.
With
respect,
I
share
that
doubt.
For
the
reasons
which
follow,
I
have
concluded
that
the
jurisdiction
of
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal
does
not
extend
to
reviewing
the
decision
or
order
of
a
federally-appointed
provincial
judge
under
section
232
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
Under
subsection
28(1)
of
the
Federal
Court
Act,
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal
has
jurisdiction
to
review
and
set
aside
the
order
of
Madam
Justice
Boland
only
if,
in
making
the
order,
she
was
acting
as
a
“federal
board,
commission
or
other
tribunal.”
The
definition
of
“federal
board,
commission
or
other
tribunal,”
is
found
in
paragraph
2(g),
which,
insofar
as
relevant,
reads:
(g)
“federal
board,
commission
or
other
tribunal”
means
.
.
.
any
person
.
.
.
exercising
.
.
.
jurisdiction
or
powers
conferred
by
or
under
an
Act
of
the
Parliament
of
Canada,
other
than
.
.
.
any
such
person
.
.
.
ap-
pointed
.
.
.
under
section
96
of
The
British
North
America
Act,
1867.
(emphasis
added)
Madam
Justice
Boland
was
appointed
under
section
96
of
The
British
North
America
Act,
1867.
From
a
reading
of
paragraph
2(g)
of
the
Act
one
could
readily
draw
the
conclusion
that
it
was
the
intention
of
Parliament
that
no
decision
of
a
federally-appointed
judge
of
a
provincial
court
would
be
subject
to
the
review
jurisdiction
of
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal,
nor
subject
to
the
jurisdiction
of
the
Trial
Division
under
section
18,
which
is
similarly
restricted
to
any
federal
board,
commission
or
other
tribunal.
The
appellants
contend,
however,
that
where
a
statute
confers
on
a
Class
of
judges
a
special
and
peculiar
jurisdiction,
outside
of
and
independent
of
their
jurisdiction
as
members
of
the
court,
any
member
of
that
class
who
exercises
the
authority
so
given
does
so
as
persona
designate.
Hynes
v
Swartz;
Re
Architects
Act,
[1938]
1
DLR
29
(Ont
CA)
is
cited
in
support
of
this
proposition,
as
is
Canadian
Northern
Ontario
Railway
Company
v
Smith
(1914),
50
SCR
476.
It
is
also
urged
that
where
a
judge
entertains
an
application
under
section
232
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
he
does
so
as
persona
designata
and
not
as
section
96
judge.
If
so,
the
concluding
words
of
paragraph
2(g)
of
the
Federal
Court
Act
would
not
exclude
his
decisions
and
orders
from
review
by
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal.
The
issue
then
is
whether
a
judge
making
an
order
under
section
232
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
is
acting
by
virtue
of
his
appointment
as
a
judge,
or
as
persona
designata.
When
a
person
who
is
a
judge
is
given
powers
under
a
particular
statute
to
make
a
certain
type
of
decision,
it
is
a
question
of
statutory
interpretation
whether
he
is
acting
qua
judge,
or
merely
by
virtue
of
the
power
conferred
on
him
by
the
particular
statute.
The
line
is
sometimes
difficult
to
draw
in
practice.
The
concept
of
persona
designata
is
somewhat
of
an
anomaly.
It
appears
to
be
unknown
to
American
law.
Its
application
in
English
law
is
largely
as
an
aid
in
the
construction
of
wills.
The
other
limited
application
in
England
has
been
in
respect
of
the
taxation
of
costs.
In
the
case
of
Re
The
Sheffield
Waterworks
Act,
1864
(1865),
1
LR
Ex
54,
an
Act
had
been
passed
to
provide
for
the
assessment
of
compensation
claimed
against
the
Sheffield
Waterworks
Company
for
damage
caused
by
the
bursting
of
their
reservoir.
The
Act
constituted
a
body
of
commissioners
for
settling
claims.
It
was
provided
that
the
commissioners
might
give
a
certificate
for
costs
and,
in
the
case
of
difference,
such
costs
could
be
“‘taxed
and
settled
by
a
master
of
a
superior
Court
of
Law
at
Westminster.”
It
was
held
that
the
taxing
masters,
under
this
provision,
rather
resembled
appraisers
called
in
by
the
parties
to
settle
a
claim;
that
the
taxation
of
costs
was
incurred
in
a
matter
wholly
outside
the
jurisdiction
of
the
Exchequer
Court,
and
there
being
no
judgment
or
award
of
that
court,
there
was
no
foundation
for
an
appellate
jurisdiction.
The
masters
taxed
as
personae
designatae
and
not
as
officers
of
the
court,
therefore
the
court
had
no
jurisdiction
to
review
their
taxation.
“Persona
designate"
is
defined
in
Jowitt’s
Dictionary
of
English
Law
(2nd
ed)
as
‘‘a
person
pointed
out
or
described
as
an
individual,
as
opposed
to
a
person
ascertained
as
a
member
of
a
class,
or
as
filling
a
particular
character.”
The
same
definition
is
found
in
Black’s
Law
Dictionary
(4th
ed
Rev)
and
in
Osborn’s
Concise
Law
Dictionary
(3rd
ed).
If
this
definition
is
applied,
it
is
plain
that
Madam
Justice
Boland
would
not
be
regarded
as
persona
designata,
as
she
is
not
described
in
the
Income
Tax
Act
as
an
individual,
but
rather
ascertained
as
a
member
of
a
class.
In
Canada,
the
notion
of
persona
designata
not
only
fell
on
more
fertile
soil
than
in
England
and
the
United
States,
but
it
has
been
given
also
an
application
wider
than,
and
different
from,
the
law
dictionary
definition.
There
is
apparent
in
the
cases,
if
I
may
say
so,
a
looseness
of
language
and
thought
which
has
done
nothing
to
assure
certainty
in
the
application
of
the
persona
designata
construction.
The
following
passage
from
an
address
delivered
by
Mr
D
M
Gordon,
published
in
(1927),
5
Can
Bar
Rev
174,
184,
in
my
view,
is
as
true
today
as
in
1927:
I
can
feel
little
doubt
that
most
men’s
verdict,
after
experience
with
the
persona
designata
idea,
is
that
however
plausible
it
may
be,
it
is
little
better
than
a
trap
for
the
unwary.
While
a
few
ways
of
determining
the
intentions
of
the
Legislature
are
settled,
the
want
of
tests
in
any
way
conclusive
creates
deplorable
uncertainty.
And
the
limits
to
which
principles
now
established
will
be
extended
is
not
yet
realized.
There
are
a
hundred
sections
in
our
statutes,
not
yet
construed
which
invite
attempts
to
apply
the
persona
designata
construction,
and
in
most
cases
it
would
puzzle
Solomon
to
predict
the
view
which
will
prevail.
As
a
wrong
guess
will
render
all
proceedings
void,
the
hardship
to
litigants
is
obvious.
Let
us
now
examine
the
leading
authorities
in
an
endeavour
to
determine
whether
Madam
Justice
Boland,
hearing
an
application
under
section
232
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
did
so
as
a
judge
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Ontario,
or
merely
as
a
person
designated
by
the
Act,
ie
“as
a
sort
of
statutory
arbitrator.”
The
Canadian
case
of
greatest
influence
in
this
branch
of
the
law
is
The
Canadian
Pacific
Railway
Company
v
The
Little
Seminary
of
Ste
Thérèse
(1889),
16
SCR
606.
A
judge
of
the
Superior
Court
of
Quebec
in
Chambers
had
granted
an
order
under
the
Railway
Act,
RSC
1886,
c
109,
for
payment
to
the
seminary
of
certain
moneys
deposited
by
the
railway
company
as
security
for
land
taken
for
railway
purposes.
On
appeal
to
this
Court
from
a
judgment
of
the
Court
of
Queen’s
Bench
for
Lower
Canada
(Appeal
Side),
a
jurisdictional
question
arose
as
to
whether
the
proceeding
was
in
the
Superior
Court,
or
was
merely
the
act
of
the
judge
as
one
of
.the
class
of
persons
designated
by
the
statute
for
a
particular
duty.
In
concluding
that
the
judge
acted
as
persona
designata,
and
did
not
represent
the
court
to
which
he
was
attached,
Patterson
J,
who
wrote
the
principal
judg-
ment,
referred
to
one
authority
only,
Re
The
Sheffield
Waterworks
Act,
supra.
He
rested
his
conclusion
upon
two
grounds
(i)
the
functions
assigned
to
“the
judge”
by
the
Railway
Act
(for
example,
the
right
to
appoint
a
surveyor
or
an
arbitrator
and
issue
a
warrant
to
give
possession
of
land
to
the
railway
company)
were
functions
“which
from
their
nature
and
object
must
be
intended
to
be
exercised
in
a
Summary
manner
and
not
liable
to
the
delay
incident
to
the
appeals
from
court
to
court,”
and
(ii)
the
language
of
the
statute.
which
assigned
to
“the
court”
certain
duties
connected
with
adjudicating
upon
questions
of
title,
preserving
throughout
a
distinction
between
“the
judge”
and
“the
court.”
Neither
of
these
criteria
has
application
an
the
case
at
bar.
No
distinction
is
drawn
in
section
232
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
between
court
and
judge.
Although
paragraph
232(5)(b)
speaks
of
the
judge
deciding
the
matter
summarily,
I
do
not
think
this
aids
in
determining
whether
a
judge
acting
under
section
232
is
doing
SO
qua
judge
or
qua
persona
designate,
since
if
the
contentions
of
the
appellants
are
accepted
and
it
is
held
that
Madam
Justice
Boland
was
persona
designata,
there
would
be
available
to
the
appellants
a
right
of
review
by
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal.
The
finality
which
Mr
Justice
Patterson
associated
with
a
decision
of
a
persona
designata
no
longer
exists.
In
St
Hilaire
v
Lambert
(1909),
42
SCR
264,
a
judge
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Alberta
in
Chambers
refused
to
cancel
a
liquor
licence
under
the
Liquor
Licence
Act
of
Alberta.
An
appeal
from
a
judgment
of
the
full
court
reversing
this
order
was
brought
to
this
Court,
but
dismissed,
the
Chief
Justice
stating
merely:
The
majority
of
the
Court
are
of
opinion
that
this
case
comes
within
the
principle
decided
in
The
Canadian
Pacific
Railway
Co
v
The
Little
Seminary
of
Ste
Thérèse,
and
that
we
are
without
jurisdiction.
The
motion
to
quash
is
granted,
with
costs
which
are
taxed
at
fifty
dollars.
The
judgment
adds
nothing
to
the
Ste
Thérèse
case.
Canadian
Northern
Ontario
Railway
Company
v
Smith,
supra,
is
another
“Railway
Act”
case
which
came
before
this
Court.
It
arose
out
of
the
claim
of
a
lessee
to
special
notice,
and
special
arbitration
as
to
his
compensation,
following
expropriation
of
land
by
the
railway
company.
The
Chief
Justice,
Sir
Charles
Fitzpatrick,
considered
that
the
case
came
within
the
rule
in
Canadian
Pacific
Railway
Company
v
Little
Seminary
of
Ste
Thérèse,
supra.
He
said,
479:
Here
the
judge
to
whom
the
application
was
made
under
the
Dominion
Railway
Act
was,
it
is
true,
a
judge
of
the.
Superior
Court
of
the
Province,
but
for
the
purposes
of
that
application
his
jurisdiction
was
“special
and
peculiar,
distinct
from,
and
independent
of
any
power
or
authority
with
which
he
is
clothed
as
a
judge
of
that
court.”
The
Act
conferring
jurisdiction
upon
him
provides
all
necessary
materials
for
the
full
and
complete
exercise
of
such
jurisdiction
in
a
very
special
manner,
wholly
independent
of,
and
distinct
from,
and
at
variance
with,
the
jurisdiction
and
procedure
of
the
court
to
which
he
belongs
(sections
194,
195,
196,
197
et
seq.
Railway
Act).
If
the
foregoing
criteria
be
applied,
it
is
difficult
to
conceive
that
Madam
Justice
Boland,
acting
under
section
232
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
would
qualify
as
persona
designate.
Mr
Justice
Duff
in
the
same
case
said,
480:
The
jurisdiction
created
by
section
196
of
the
Railway
Act
is
not,
I
think,
a
jurisdiction
given
to
the
Superior
Court
or
County
Court
as
the
case
may
be,
but
to
the
judge
or
judges
of
those
courts.
In
other
words,
when
acting
under
that
section
the
judge
does
not
exercise
the
powers
of
the
court
as
such
but
the
special
powers
given
by
the
Act.
In
Godson
v
The
Corporation
of
the
City
of
Toronto
(1890),
18
SCR
36,
the
council
of
the
City
of
Toronto,
pursuant
to
The
Municipal
Act,
RSO
1887,
c
184,
passed
a
resolution
directing
a
county
court
judge
to
inquire
into
dealings
between
the
City
and
persons
who
were,
or
had
been,
contractors
for
civic
works,
and
to
ascertain
if
the
City.
had
been
defrauded
out
of
public
moneys
in
connection
with
the
contracts.
A
majority
of
this
Court
held
that
the
proceeding
before
the
county
court
judge
was
in
no
sense
a
judicial
proceeding.
The
object
of
the
inquiry
was
simply
to
obtain
information
for
the
council.
The
county
judge
was
in
no
way
acting
judicially;
he
was
in
no
sense
a
court;
he
had
no
powers
of
pronouncing
any
judgment,
decree,
or
order.
That
being
the
case,
he
was
not
subject
to
control
by
writ
from
a
superior
court.
There
is
a
marked
difference
between
the
situation
in
which
a
named
judge
inquires
into
alleged
fraud,
in
which
case
the
judge
may
well
be
regarded
as
persona
designate,
indeed,
within
the
dictionary
definition,
and
the
situation
where,
as
here,
provision
is
made
for
an
application
“to
a
judge”
to
decide
whether
a
client
has
a
solicitor-client
privilege
in
respect
of
a
seized
document.
In
the
recent
case
of
Commonwealth
of
Puerto
Rico
v
Hernandez,
[1975]
1
SCR
228,
the
question
arose
whether
a
county
court
judge
acting
as
an
extradition
commissioner
was
excluded,
because
of
his
appointment
under
section
96
of
the
BNA
Act,
1867,
from
the
definition
of
“federal
board,
commission
or
other
tribunal.”
Speaking
for
a
majority
of
the
Court,
Mr
Justice
Pigeon
said,
238:
In
my
view,
the
exclusion
applies
to
such
appointees
when
they
are
acting
as
such,
that
is
when
exercising
the
jurisdiction
of
a
county
court
judge.
This
is
not
the
case
under
the
Extradition
Act.
When
the
powers
of
an
extradition
commissioner
are
exercised
by
a
county
court
judge,
he
is
acting
as
persona
designate,
that
is
a
person
deriving
his
authority,
not
from
his
appointment,
but
from
a
special
act
of
Parliament.
The
criteria
defining
the
situation
of
a
judge
acting
as
persona
designate
were
considered
in
numerous
cases,
including
CPR
Co
v
Little
Seminary
of
Ste
Thérèse
(1889),
16
SCR
606:
Godson
v
The
City
of
Toronto
(1890),
18
SCR
36;
St
Hilaire
v
Lambert
(1909),
42
SCR
264;
Canadian
Northern
Ontario
Railway
Co
v
Smith
(1914),
50
SCR
476;
Plante
v
Forest
(1936),
61
Que
KB
8,
and
Hynes
v
Swartz,
[1938]
1
DLR
29.
It
is
a
well-established
distinction
and
under
the
Extradition
Act
it
is
especially
clear
that
a
judge
acts
as
persona
designate
because
the
same
powers
may
be
exercised
by
Commissioners
who
are
not
judges.
The
judgment
in
Hernandez
establishes
that
the
right
of
judicial
review
contained
in
section
28
of
the
Federal
Court
Act
is
available
in
respect
of
a
judge
acting
as
persona
designate
under
a
federal
Statute,
and
the
likelihood
of
being
found
to
be
so
acting
is
enhanced
if
the
powers
exercised
are
exercisable
also
by
those
who
are
not
judges.
The
question
in
each
will
be
whether
the
judge
was
acting
persona
designate.
The
quoted
passage
directs
attention
to
whether,
when
the
powers
in
question
are
exercised,
the
judge
derives
his
authority
from
a
special
act
of
Parliament,
or
from
iis
appointment
as
judge.
A
review
of
the
judgments
of
this
Court
on
the
subject
under
discussion
would
not
be
complete
without
reference
to
two
other
cases.
In
Re
Sproule
(1886),
12
SCR
140,
section
51
of
the
Supreme
and
Exchequer
Courts
Act,
SC
1875,
c
11,
enpowering
a
judge
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
to
issue
the
writ
of
habeas
corpus
ad
subjiciendum
fell
to
be
considered.
It
was
held
that,
although
the
power
came
from
the
federal
statute,
it
was
not
a
jurisdiction
conferred
on
the
judge
outside
of
and
independent
of
the
court.
The
exercise
of
the
power
was
subject
to
the
Court’s
inherent
power
of
review
unless
the
contrary
appeared.
In
The
King
v
Northumberland
Ferries
Ltd,
[1945]
SCR
458,
the
Minister
of
Justice,
under
the
War
Measures
Act,
RSC
1927,
c
206,
had
referred
to
the
Exchequer
Court
a
claim
for
compensation
in
respect
of
two
ships.
The
Crown
appealed
to
this
Court
against
the
award.
It
was
argued
that
the
Exchequer
Court
was
curia
designata
and,
no
appeal
being
provided
by
the
War
Measures
Act,
there
was
no
right
of
appeal.
The
contention
was
rejected.
Chief
Justice
Rinfret
had
this
to
say,
466:
When
all
is
said
and
considered,
the
question
of
whether
a
court
or
judge
indicated
in
a
statute
is
intended
as
a
persona
designata
depends
upon
the
construction
to
be
given
to
the
statute
wherein
the
said
court
or
judge
is
indicated;
and,
in
the
present
instance,
there
is
a
strong
presumption
that
Parliament
meant
the
appointed
court
or
judge
to
act
in
its
judicial
capacity.
It
is
to
be
noticed
that
the
statute
giving
the
authority
or
jurisdiction
to
each
of
the
courts
enumerated
in
section
7
or
to
a
judge
thereof,
does
not
purport
to
grant
or
to
give
special
and
independent
powers
either
to
the
court
or
to
the
judge
to
whom
the
reference
is
made.
It
says
that
the
Minister
of
Justice
should
refer
the
matter
of
compensation
to
the
court
or
to
a
judge
thereof,
without
more.
When
once
the
reference
is
made,
the
court
or
the
judge
is
to
deal
with
the
matter
in
the
ordinary
way
and
according
to
the
powers
vested
in
it
by
the
general
Act
and
the
inherent
powers
which
it
already
possesses.
Indeed,
if
the
court
or
judge
chosen
by
the
Minister
of
Justice
were
not
to
resort
to
the
powers
vested
in
them
by
the
general
Act
and
in
the
ordinary
way,
it
would
seem
that
the
exercise
of
its
jurisdiction
would
be
practically
unworkable.
A
canvass
of
the
Canadian
authorities
reveals
a
distinct
need
for
a
greater
element
of
certainty
in
the
application
of
the
notion
of
persona
designata.
Hundreds
of
federal
laws
are
administered
daily
by
federally-appointed
judges
of
provincial
courts.
Yet
a
judge
cannot
become
persona
designata
from
the
mere
fact
that
he
is
administering
a
piece
of
federal
legislation.
As
a
rule,
one
would
expect
that
a
judge
enforces
or
applies
legislation
as
an
unexceptional
function
per-
formed
within
his
ordinary
jurisdiction.
From
time
to
time,
however,
a
judge
may
be
utilized
outside
that
jurisdiction
for
the
purpose
of
gving
effect
to
exceptional
statutory
tribunals
or
functions.
Prima
facie,
Parliament
should
be
taken
to
intend
a
judge
to
act
qua
judge
whenever
by
statute
it
grants
powers
to
a
judge.
He
who
alleges
that
a
judge
is
acting
in
the
special
capacity
of
persona
designate
must
find
in
the
specific
legislation
provisions
which
clearly
evidence
a
contrary
intention
on
the
part
of
Parliament.
The
test
to
be
applied
in
considering
whether
such
a
contrary
intention
appears
in
the
relevant
statute
can
be
cast
in
the
form
of
a
question:
is
the
judge
exercising
a
peculiar,
and
distinct,
and
exceptional
jurisdiction,
separate
from
and
unrelated
to
the
tasks
which
he
performs
from
day-to-day
as
a
judge,
and
having
nothing
in
common
with
the
court
of
which
he
is
a
member?
In
the
present
instance,
I
think
that
Parliament
intended
a
judge
deciding
the
issue
of
privilege,
pursuant
to
section
232
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
to
act
in
his
or
her
capacity
as
a
judge.
An
issue
of
solicitorclient
privilege
can
arise
in
any
civil
or
criminal
case.
There
is
nothing
unusual
or
exceptional
about
that.
It
is
a
routine
exercise
of
inherent
judicial
power.
The
definition
of
solicitor-client
privilege
(paragraph
232(1
)(e))
refers
to
the
right,
if
any,
which
a
person
has
in
the
superior
court,
in
the
province
where
the
matter
arises,
to
refuse
to
disclose
an
oral
or
documentary
communication.
The
subject
matter
is
not
purely
factual.
The
exercise
of
the
power
involves
an
application
of
the
provincial
law.
Section
232
does
not
set
up
a
separate
tribunal,
or
commission,
or
board.
It
does
not
assign
special
machinery
or
materials.
The
procedure
followed
in
the
instant
case
(ie
the
notice
of
motion,
hearing
and
order)
were
in
accordance
with
the
normal
practice
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Ontario.
The
order
is
entitled
in
that
court.
The
court
registry
was
used.
Madam
Justice
Boland
was
not
following
some
unusual
course
to
which
the
machinery
of
the
court
was
not
adapted.
Section
232
merely
asks
the
judge
to
inspect
certain
documents
and
decide
whether,
according
to
the
law
of
the
province,
privilege
attaches.
It
is
difficult
to
conceive
of
a
more
typical,
or
more
commonplace,
judicial
function.
The
judge
does
not
exercise
any
special
and
peculiar
jurisdiction
outside
of,
and
independent
of,
any
authority
with
which
he
or
she
is
clothed
as
a
judge
of
the
court.
Additionally,
there
are
at
least
three
internal
pieces
of
evidence
which
negate
persona
designate:
(1)
subsection
232(8)
authorizes
subsequent
applications
to
another
judge
where
the
judge
to
whom
an
application
has
been
made
cannot
act
or
continue
to
act;
(ii)
subsection
232(9)
provides
that
no
costs
be
awarded,
an
unnecessary
provision
if
the
judge
is
acting
as
persona
designate,
for
at
common
law
a
person
so
acting
was
powerless
to
award
costs;
(iii)
subsection
232(14)
speaks
of
the
client
being
afforded
an
opportunity
of
waiving
the
claim
of
privilege
before
the
matter
comes
on
to
be
decided
by
a
judge
“or
other
tribunal.”
I
conclude
that
a
judge
entertaining
an
application
under
and
exercising
authority
given
by
section
232
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
does
so
in
his
judicial
capacity.
He
therefore
falls
within
the
exception
to
paragraph
2(g)
of
the
Federal
Court
Act,
and
his
decision
or
order
is
not
subject
to
review
by
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal
under
section
28
of
that
Act.
Accordingly,
the
present
appeal
must
fail.
Such
result,
in
my.
view,
is
not
in
conflict
with
the
views
expressed
in
this
Court
in
The
Deputy
Attorney
General
of
Canada
v
Brown,
supra.
In
that
case,
an
officer
of
the
Department
of’National
Revenue
attended
at
the
office
of
Brown,
a
barrister
and
solicitor,
in
the
course
of
a
“spot
check”
of
lawyers’
records,
and
asked
him
for
permission
to
examine
his
trust
account
books
and
records.
Brown
refused
permission.
He
contended
that
his
clients
had
a
solicitor
and
client
privilege
in
respect
of
the
books
and
records.
The
documents
were
seized
and
delivered
into
the
custody
of
the
sheriff
of
the
County
of
Vancouver.
Brown
then
applied
prusuant
to
section
126A
(now
section
232)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
RSC
1952,
c
148.
The
matter
came
on
for
hearing
before
Sullivan,
J
who
held
that
a
solicitor
and
client
privilege
existed
in
respect
of
the
documents
in
question
and
ordered
that
the
sealed
package
of
augments
be
delivered
to
Brown
forthwith:
In
re
The
Income
Tax
Act
and
In
re
a
Solicitor,
62
DTC
1331.
On
appeal,
a
majority
of
the
Court
or
Anneal
for
British
Columbia
held
that
in
hearing
the
application,
Sullivan
J
was
acting
as
persona
designate,
and
their
being
no
statutory
provision
for
appeal
from
this
decision,
the
Court
of
Appeal
did
not
have
jurisdiction
to
entertain
the
appeal:
64
DTC
5107.
The
Deputy
Attorney
General
made
two
applications
to
this
Court
for
leave
to
appeal,
the
first
from
the
decision
of
Sullivan
J
as
being
a
decision
of
the
“highest
court
of
final
resort
in
a
province,
or
a
judge
thereof,
in
which
judgment
can
be
had
in
the
particular
case
sought
to
be
appealed”
within
the
wording
of
section
41
of
the
Supreme
Court
Act,
RSC
1952,
c
259,
and
the
second
from
the
decision
of
the
Court
of
Appeal
of
British
Columbia
that
it
did
not
have
jurisdiction
to
hear
an
appeal
from
an
order
of
Sullivan
J.
Both
applications
were
dismissed.
As
to
the
second
application,
Martland,
J
who
delivered
the
judgment
of
the
Court
said,
at
87:
In
so
far
as
the
latter
application
is
concerned,
despite
the
fact
that
the
application
dor
leave’
has
been
made,
counsel
for
both
parties
submitted
that
no
appeal
did
lie
to
the
Court
of
Appeal
of
British
Columbia
because,
this
being
a
statute
enacted
by
the
Federal
Parliament,
a
right
of
apeal
to
the
Court
of
Appeal
of
British
Columbia
could
only
have
been
given
by
the
terms
of
a
Federal
statute
and
no
such
right
had
been
provided.
Whether
or
not
that
submission
is
sound
was
not
determined
in
the
Court
of
Appeal
of
British
Columbia,
which
reached
its
decision
for
different
reasons,
and,
for
the
reasons
hereinafter
given,
I
do
not
think
it
is
necessary
to
decide
it
here.
and
at
91
:
In
so
far
as
granting
leave
to
appeal
from
the
Court
of
Appeal
of
British
Columbia
is
concerned,
as
previously
mentioned,
neither
counsel
con-
tended
that
an
appeal
did
lie
to
that
Court.
If
leave
were
to
be
granted
to
appeal
from
the
decision
of
the
Court
of
Appeal,
even
if
we
were
to
reach
the
conclusion,
on
the
appeal,
that
an
appeal
did
lie
to
the
Court
of
Appeal,
the
matter
would
then
have
to
be
referred
back
to
that
Court
to
hear
the
appeal
upon
the
merits.
Even
if
that
appeal
were
to
succeed,
the
Court
of
Appeal
would
be
faced
with
the
same
problems
in
formulating
an
order
as
those
which
I
have
already
outlined.
The
paragraph
containing
the
ratio
decidendi,
upon
which
the
rejection
of
both
applications
turned,
appears
on
90:
The
section
contemplates
a
speedy
determination
of
the
issue
of
the
claim
of
privilege
and
thereafter
a
prompt
delivery
of
possession
of
the
document
involved,
either
to
the
solicitor
or
to
the
officer
of
the
Department.
It
seems
to
me
that
once
that
has
been
done
the
whole
matter
has
been
not
only
determined,
but
completed,
and
that
any
order
which
could
be
made
on
an
appeal
(assuming
that
an
appeal
lies)
could
not
have
a
“direct
and
immediate
practical
effect’’,
to
use
the
words
of
Chief
Justice
Duff
in
The
King
on
the
Relation
of
Tolfree
v
Clark.
The
document
in
question
would
no
longer
be
in
the
hands
of
the
custodian.
If
the
order
appealed
from
directed
delivery
to
the
departmental
officer,
he
would,
by
the
time
the
appeal
was
heard,
have
had
his
opportunity
to
inspect
the
document.
If
the
order
appealed
from
directed
delivery
to
the
solicitor,
the
Act
contains
no
provision
which
would
require
him,
after
the
document
has
been
restored
to
him,
to
surrender
it
again
to
the
departmental
officer
or
to
the
Custodian.
It
will
be
seen
from
the
foregoing
that
no
opinion
was
expressed
on
the
question
of
whether
an
appeal
lay
from
the
judgment
of
Sullivan
J,
nor
on
the.correctness
of
the
majority
decision
in
the
Court
of
Appeal
that
Sullivan,
J
was
acting
persona
designate.
It
will
be
apparent
from
what
has
been
said
earlier
in
these
reasons
that,
in
my
opinion,
the
majority
view
in
the
Court
of
Appeal
was
wrong
in
concluding
that
Sullivan,
J
was
acting
as
persona
designate
in
hearing
the
application.
I
would
dismiss
the
appeal
with
costs.
The
Chief
Justice:—I
agree
with
my
brother
Dickson
that
this
appeal
should
be
dismissed.
What
persuades
me
to
add
the
observations
that
follow
is
my
conviction
that
it
is
high
time
to
relieve
the
Courts
of
the
interpretative
exercises
that
have
been
common
in
this
country
when
they
think
that
a
decision
has
to
be
made
whether
a
statutory
jurisdiction
has
been
vested
in
a
Judge
qua
Judge
or
as
persona
designata.
More
than
fifty
years
ago,
D
M
Gordon,
one
of
Canada’s
outstanding
scholarly
practitioners,
wrote
in
the
Canadian
Bar
Review
(see
(1927),
5
Can
Bar
Rev
174,
at
185)
that
"the
whole
persona
designata
conception
could
be
scrapped
without
the
slightest
inconvenience
or
the
least
distortion
of.
legal
principles
I.
I
agree
completely
with
this
sentiment.
I
find
it
odd
(and
Dickson,
J
has
canvassed
the
authorities)
that,
although
the
concept
of
persona
designata
has
been
ignored
in
the
United
States,
and
has
had
little
contemporary
force
in
England
where
the
concept
originated,
it
seems
to
have
a
vigorous
existence
in
Canada.
The
seminal
case
in
England,
seminal
so
far
as
Canadian
acceptance
was
concerned,
is
Re
Sheffield
Waterworks
Act
(1865),
LR
1
Ex
54,
a
case
involving
a
private
Act
relating
to
claims
against
the
Sheffield
Waterworks
Company
for
damages
for
its
admitted
negligence
and
to
the
determination
of
costs,
in
case
of
dispute,
by
a
master
of
a
superior
Court.
The
theory
upon
which
the
Court
in
that
case
acted,
namely
that
the
taxing
master
exercised
an
unusual
function
unrelated
to
his
normal
function
and
that
his
authority
came
from
an
Act
of
Parliament
and
was
not
part
of
his
judicial
authority,
exhibits
a*
primitive
stage
in
judicial
understanding
of
administrative
law.
Nowadays,
the
vesting
of
statutory
functions
in
Courts
or
other
tribunals
is
commonplace,
and
nothing
of
substance
is
added
in
trying
to
apply
a
distinction
between
ordinary
curial
duties
of
a
Judge
and
statutory
duties.
I
do
not
think,
therefore,
that
Hynes
v
Swartz,
[1938]
1
DLR
29,
is
any
longer
acceptable
in
drawing
a
distinction
between
powers
exercisable
by
a
Judge
under
the
Ontario
Judicature
Act
and
powers
vested
in
a
Judge
by
another
public
Act,
a
regulatory
statute
respecting
a
profession.
Dickson,
J
referred
in
his
reasons
to
two
early
cases
in
this
Court
which
came
to
opposite
conclusions
on
whether
powers
conferred
by
statute
upon
a
Judge
were
his
qua
Judge
or
qua
persona
designata.
I
much
prefer
the
reasoning
in
Re
Sproule
(1886),
12
SCR
140
to
that
in
CPR
v
The
Little
Seminary
of
Ste
Thérèse
(1889),
16
SCR
606.
I
see
no
distinguishing
point
of
principle
in
the
fact
that
the
former
case
dealt
with
powers
under
the
then
Supreme
and
Exchequer
Courts
Act
and
the
latter
dealt
with
powers
under
the
Railway
Act.
The
fact
that
a
new
type
of
jurisdiction
is
conferred
by
statute
upon
a
Judge
or
upon
a
Court
should
not
signal
any
need,
by
that
fact,
to
consider
whether
the
jurisdiction
is
exercisable
only
as
persona
designata.
The
quality
of
justice
rendered
by
a
Judge
does
not
depend
on
whether
he
acts
as
Judge
or
as
persona
designata.
Where
the
distinction
is
made,
it
has
been
done
for
the
purpose
of
reaching
beyond
the
Judge’s
decision
in
order
to
consider
its
reviewability,
either
by
straight
appeal
or
by
judicial
review
through
the
prerogative
writs
or
their
statutory
replacement.
If
an
appeal
is
provided,
the
need
for
the
distinction
is
pointless;
if
it
is
not
provided,
review
would
still
be
open
through
the
prerogative
writs
or
their
statutory
substitute,
and
only
in
the
case
of
a
superior
court
Judge
would
the
right
of
such
review
depend
on
holding
that
the
function
or
power
in
question
was
exercised
as
persona
designata.
The
enactment
of
the
Federal
Court
Act,
RSC
1970,
c
10
has
simply
added
to
the
complication
as
to
appeal
or
reviewability
that
persistence
with
persona
designata
has
generated.
A
power
of
review
is
vested
in
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal
by
section
28
of
the
Act
in
respect
of
judicial
or
quasi-judicial
decisions
of
a
‘‘federal
board,
commission
or
other
tribunal”,
defined
in
paragraph
2(g)
as
covering
persons
or
agencies
exercising
powers
under
an
Act
of
the
Parliament
of
Canada
and
not
appointed
under
the
law
of
a
Province
nor
under
s
96
of
the
British
North
America
Act
(which
provides
for
federal
appointment
of
superior,
district
and
county
court
Judges
of
provincial
Courts).
As
a
result
of
this
provision,
a
fresh
interpretative
exercise
is
added
where
statutory
powers
are
vested
in
a
Judge
of
a
provincial
Court
under
federal
legislation,
namely,
to
decide
whether
the
Judge
is
exercising
those
powers
qua
Judge
(and
so
governed
by
provincial
appeal
or
review
procedures)
or
as
persona
designate,
and
thus
subject
to
the
reviewing
authority
of
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal.
Two
recent
judgments
of
this
Court
give
point
to
my
call
for
abandoning
the
persona
designate
conception,
at
least
where
it
turns
on
distinguishing
statutory
functions
of
a
Judge
as
being
curial
or
“normal”
duties
in
some
cases
and
non-curial
in
others.
The
two
cases
are
Commonwealth
of
Puerto
Rico
v
Humberto
Pagan
Hernandez,
[1975]
1
SCR
228
and
Scott
v
Vardy,
[1977]
1
SCR
293.
The
four
dissenting
Judges
in
the
Hernandez
case,
I
being
one
of
them,
did
not
find
it
necessary,
in
the
view
taken
by
them,
to
consider
the
application
of
the
persona
designate
doctrine,
but
it
was
considered
in
the
majority
reasons
delivered
by
Pigeon,
J.
The
main
issue
in
the
Hernandez
case,
as
viewed
by
the
majority,
was
whether
the
decision
of
a
county
court
Judge,
discharging
a
person
who
had
been
apprehended
on
an
extradition
warrant,
was
reviewable
by
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal
under
section
28
of
the
Federal
Court
Act.
This
depended
on
whether
the
extradition
Judge
was
a
“federal
board,
commissioner
or
other
tribunal”
under
paragraph
2(g)
of
the
Act.
Since,
in
this
case,
he
was
a
section
96
appointee
was
he
not
excluded
by
express
words
from
the
categories
of
“federal
board,
commission
or
other
tribunal’’?
Pigeon,
J
held,
however,
that
an
extradition
Judge
exercised
his
powers
as
persona
designate
and
not
as
Judge,
emphasizing
the
fact
that
the
Extradition
Act,
now
RSC
1970,
c
E-21
reposes
its
jurisdiction
in
extradition
commissioners
who
are
not
Judges.
The
relevant
provision
of
the
Act
is
subsection
9(1),
reading
as
follows:
9.(1)
All
judges
of
the
superior
courts
and
of
the
county
courts
of
a
province,
and
all
commissioners
who
are
from
time
to
time
appointed
for
the
purpose
in
a
province
by
the
Governor
in
Council,
under
the
Great
Seal,
by
virtue
of
this
Part,
are
authorized
to
act
judicially
in
extradition
matters
under
this
Part,
within
the
province;
and
every
such
person
has,
for
the
purposes
of
this
Part,
all
the
powers
and
jurisdiction
of
any
judge
or
magistrate
of
the
province.
It
seems
to
me,
and
I
say
this
with
great
respect
to
the
majority
decision
in
Hernandez,
that
section
9
by
its
very
words
raises
extradition
commissioners
into
the
ranks
of
Judges;
and
although
they
are
note
section
96
Judges,
provision
for
their
appointment
should
not
be
taken
to
reduce
the
character
of
superior
or
county
court
Judges
who
are
vested
with
jurisdiction
under
the
Extradition
Act.
Prior
to
the
enactment
of
the
Federal
Court
Act,
it
was
admittedly
the
case
that
extradition
determinations
were
not
reviewable
either
by
appeal
or
otherwise
save
that
habeas
corpus
lay
to
challenge
a
commitment
for
extradition.
There
is
certainly
incongruity
in
subjecting
a
superior
court
Judge
of
a
Province
to
review
of
his
decisions
by
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal.
If
it
is
so
with
the
Extradition
Act,
does
it
also
become
so
with
other
federal
Acts
or
are
the
Courts,
and
especially
this
Court,
to
become
involved
in
an
interpretative
exercise
to
decide
whether
a
Judge
of
a
provincial
suprior
Court
is
acting
as
Judge
or
as
persona
designate?
This
may
mean
review
by
the
Federal
Court
if
power
is
being
exercised
under
a
federal
statute
and
appeal
or
no
review
if
power
is
being
exercised
under
a
provincial
Statute.
Far
more
rational,
in
my
view,
to
let
the
provincial
law
operate
in
respect
of
appeal
or
review
of
judgments
of
Judges
of
provincial
Courts.
Scott
v
Vardy,
supra,
was
also
a
decision
under
the
Extradition
Act.
There
one
of
the
questions
was
whether
the
magistrate,
a
provincial
appointee,
who
took
depositions
under
the
Act
was,
like
the
Judge
in
the
Hernandez
case,
amenable
to
the
reviewing
authority
of
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal
as
a
persona
designate.
This
Court,
unanimously
said
no.
I
find
it
difficult
to
appreciate
the
differentiation
of
functions
in
the
two
cases
leading
to
different
results
which
put
the
higher
judicial
functionary
under
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal
supervision
and
left
the
magistrate
to
be
controlled
under
provincial
authority.
I
think
that
a
conception
which
leads
to
such
results
has
outlived
its
day.
I
suppose
that
a
trial
Judge
of
the
Federal
Court
could
also
be
found
to
be
acting
as
persona
designate
under
a
federal
statute.
But
what
practical
purpose
would
such
a
finding
serve?
His
judgment
qua
Judge
would
be
appealable
and
as
persona
designate
would
be
broadly
reviewable,
having
regard
to
the
wide
scope
of
section
28.
It
seems
to
me
that
the
present
case,
which
includes
such
Judges
in
the
designation
of
those
empowered
to
exercise
the
powers
conferred
by
section
232
of
the
Income
Tex
Act,
1970-71-72
(Can),
c
63,
as
amended,
points
to
the
unlikelihood
that
trial
Judges
of
the
Federal
Court
would
be
exercising
statutory
functions
in
any
other
character
than
as
a
Judge
of
the
Court.
In
his
article
in
the
Canadian
Bar
Review,
above
mentioned,
Mr
Gordon
suggested
an
amendment
to
the
federal
and
provincial
Inter-
pretetion
Acts
to
the
following
effect:
Whenever
by
any
statute
judicial
or
quasi-judicial
powers
are
given
to
a
judge
or
officer
of
any
Court,
in
the
absence
of
express
provision
to
the
contrary,
such
judge
or
officer
shall
be
deemed
to
exercise
such
powers
in
his
official
capacity,
and
as
representing
the
Court
to
which
he
is
attached.
I
endorse
the
principle
he
expresses,
but
I
am
of
the
opinion
that
it
is
open
to
this
Court
to
lay
down
a
similar
rule
without
the
aid
of
legislation.
The
concept
of
persona
designete
came
from
the
Courts
and
it
can
be
modified
or
abolished
by
the
Courts.
In
my
view,
I
think
this
Court
should
declare
that
whenever
a
statutory
power
is
conferred
upon
a
Judge
or
officer
of
a
Court,
the
power
should
be
deemed
exercisable
in
official
capacity
as
representing
the
Court
unless
there
is
express
provision
to
the
contrary.