Marceau,
J.A.:—This
is
an
appeal
from
a
decision
of
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
rejecting
the
application
by
the
Canada
UNI
Association
to
be
granted
the
status
of
"charity"
under
paragraph
149.1(1)(b)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148
(am.
S.C.
1970-71-72,
c.
63)
(the
"Act").
The
appellant
is
a
non-profit
organization
which
was
formed
in
August
1991
with
the
broad
purpose
of
promoting
Canadian
unity.
The
articles
of
association
state
the
following
objects:
(i)
to
inform
Canadians
concerning
the
unique
geographic,
social,
cultural
and
linguistic
nature
of
Canada;
(ii)
to
establish
direct
personal
communications
between
citizens
of
Canada's
distinct
groups
and
regions
especially,
though
not
exclusively,
between
Canadians
whose
first
language
is
English
and
those
whose
first
language
is
French;
(iii)
to
enhance
appreciation
and
tolerance
of
linguistic
and
cultural
differences
through
knowledge
and
understanding.
The
association
proposes
to
match
participants
in
different
regions
who
will
engage
in
direct
communication
with
one
another.
The
association
also
plans
to
find
forums
for
those
wishing
to
address
audiences
in
other
regions
of
Canada.
The
reasons
for
rejecting
the
appellant's
application
for
charitable
status
are
contained
in
two
letters
from
Revenue
Canada.
The
Minister
held
that
the
activities
of
the
Canada
UNI
Association
did
not
fall
within
any
one
of
the
four
heads
recognized
as
charitable
by
the
Courts
namely,
the
relief
of
poverty;
the
advancement
of
religion;
the
advancement
of
education;
and
other
purposes
beneficial
to
the
community
as
a
whole
in
a
way
which
the
law
regards
as
charitable.
The
application
had
relied
on
the
third
and
fourth
heads.
With
respect
to
the
third
head,
the
Minister
took
the
position
that,
in
order
to
fall
under
it,
an
"activity
must
involve
an
element
of
training
or
instruction,
the
development
of
faculties,
or
the
improvement
of
a
branch
of
human
knowledge.
The
mere
provision
of
information
cannot
in
itself
be
considered
educational.”
With
respect
to
the
fourth
head,
the
Minister
simply
noted
that
no
legal
precedent
had
ever
established
that
the
promotion
of
national
unity
or
personal
exchanges
between
Canadians
would
be
beneficial
to
the
community
in
a
way
which
the
law
deems
to
be
charitable.
Counsel
for
the
appellant
contends
that
the
Minister
erred
in
failing
to
realize
that
his
client's
activities
did
fall
within
both
the
third
and
fourth
heads
recognized
as
charitable
for
the
granting
of
the
status
of
"charity"
under
the
Income
Tax
Act.
His
argument
essentially
goes
as
follows.
The
advancement
of
education
contemplated
by
the
third
head
extends
beyond
formal
instruction
in
schools
and,
in
fact,
interchanges
between
cultures
have
been
found
to
fall
within
the
category
of
charities.
As
in
Native
Communication
Society
of
B.C.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1986]
3
F.C.
471,
[1986]
2
C.T.C.
170,
86
D.T.C.
6353
(C.A.),
Canada
UNI
Association's
activities
will
enhance
participants'
knowledge
of
other
cultures,
languages,
ethnicity,
geographic
location
and
the
history
of
Canadians.
Coming
to
the
fourth
head,
counsel
notes
that,
in
Ontario,"charity"
is
defined
by
the
Charities
Accounting
Act,
R.S.O.
1990,
c.
10,
and
he
argues
that
it
is
this
definition,
which
was
found
by
the
Ontario
courts
to
be
broader
than
the
traditionally
accepted
one
of
coming
within
the
spirit
and
intendment
of
the
preamble
to
the
Statute
of
Elizabeth,
which
should
be
applied
in
the
absence
of
any
definition
in
the
federal
statute
to
determine
if
the
activities
were
beneficial
to
the
community
in
a
way
regarded
by
law
as
charitable.
In
any
event,
he
adds,
the
contents
of
the
enumerated
traditional
categories
are
not
fixed;
rather,
they
must
respond
to
current
social
conditions,
and
the
promotion
of
multiculturalism
and
the
bilingual
character
of
Canada
are
recognized
in
the
Canadian
Constitution,
indicating
that
these
objects
should
be
considered
beneficial
to
the
community
in
the
charitable
sense.
Finally,
he
disputes
that
the
Association's
activities
could
be
said
to
be
political
since
they
do
not
further
the
interests
of
a
political
party,
procure
changes
in
legislation,
or
promote
a
particular
political
viewpoint.
These
submissions
made
in
support
of
the
appeal
do
not
appear
to
us
to
be
compelling,
and
we
are
of
the
view
that,
on
the
basis
of
the
existing
law,
the
appeal
must
fail.
The
nature
of
the
appellant
association's
objects
and
intended
activities
are
virtually
indistinguishable
from
those
considered
in
the
case
Toronto
Volgograd
Committee
v.
M.N.R.,
[1988]
1
C.T.C.
365,
88
D.T.C.
6192
(F.C.A.),
where
the
object
of
the
society
was
to
recreate
links
between
the
cities
of
Toronto
and
Volgograd
in
order
to
reduce
world
tensions
and
the
threat
of
nuclear
holocaust.
The
Court
found
in
that
case,
after
having
dismissed,
at
least
indirectly,
any
possible
reliance
on
the
definition
of
"charity"
in
the
Ontario
Charities
Accounting
Act,
that
the
inherently
political
nature
of
the
organization's
objects
and
activities
precluded
a
finding
that
they
fell
under
the
third
or
fourth
charitable
heads
developed
under
the
federal
law,
whether
advancement
of
education
or
benefit
to
the
community.
To
find
otherwise
in
this
similar
case
is
simply
not
open
to
us
as
it
would
be
not
only
an
evolution
of
the
concepts
involved,
but
a
complete
transformation
of
them.
We
agree
with
the
respondent
that
the
Native
Communications
Society
case,
decided
before
the
Toronto
Volgograd
one,
is
distinguishable,
in
that
the
Society's
activities
there
were
directed
towards
native
persons
who
hold
a
special
position
in
Canadian
society.
In
the
result,
we
think
that
however
beneficial
they
may
be,
the
political
nature
of
the
appellant's
activities
precludes
charitable
status
within
the
meaning
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
of
Canada.
The
appeal
will
therefore
be
dismissed,
without
costs.
Appeal
dismissed.