Joyal
J.:
—
The
issues
raised
in
these
cases
are
sufficiently
similar
in
both
fact
and
law
as
to
warrant
this
Court,
on
February
5,
1996,
to
rule
that
they
should
both
be
heard
at
the
same
time.
The
Facts:
The
plaintiffs
in
these
actions
have
each
filed
a
Statement
of
Agreed
Facts.
The
Statement
for
NCS
International
Inc.
(“NCS”),
in
file
T-2659-92,
reads
as
follows:
1.
The
Plaintiff
is
a
company
incorporated
under
the
laws
of
Canada.
2.
the
Plaintiff
is
engaged
in
business
including
the
sale
of
electric
wire
and
cable.
3.
The
Plaintiff
is
a
licensed
wholesaler
under
the
Excise
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1985,
C.
E-15.
4.
The
Plaintiff
was
not
a
licensed
manufacturer.
5.
The
Plaintiff
distributes
its
wire
products
on
reusable
reels.
6.
The
Plaintiff
purchases
its
wire
product
and
the
reusable
reels
from
the
same
suppliers.
7.
The
purchase
price
the
Plaintiff
paid
for
the
wire
and
reusable
reels
included
an
amount
for
federal
sales
tax,
which
the
Plaintiff’s
supplier
was
liable
to
pay.
For
the
purpose
of
Memorandum
ET302,
paragraph
26,
therefore,
the
Plaintiff
purchased
the
reels
“tax
paid”.
8.
The
Plaintiff
would
return
the
reels
to
its
suppliers
of
wire
and
reels,
and
receive
a
refund
for
the
price
charged
in
respect
of
the
reels.
9.
the
Plaintiff
sold
its
wire
products
to
manufacturers,
other
wholesalers
and
contractors.
Approximately
1/3
of
these
sales
were
subject
to
federal
sales
tax.
The
Plaintiff
collected
and
remitted
to
the
Defendant
the
federal
sales
tax
on
these
sales.
10.
the
Plaintiff
collected
a
deposit
from
its
customers
for
the
reels,
which
deposit
was
refunded
when
the
reels
were
returned.
The
deposit
was
the
same
amount
paid
by
the
Plaintiff
to
its
suppliers,
that
is,
inclusive
of
federal
sales
tax.
11.
the
Plaintiff
did
not
charge
any
of
its
customers
additional
FST
on
the
deposit
paid
for
the
reels
whether
the
sales
were
taxable
or
tax
exempt.
12.
The
FST
the
Plaintiff
remitted
was
in
respect
of
its
taxable
sales
of
wire
and
cable
products.
It
did
not
remit
any
FST
in
respect
of
the
reusable
reels.
13.
The
Plaintiff
applied
to
operate
a
returnable
container
account
by
letter
dated
December
28,
1990.
14.
Other
taxpayers
applying
to
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
(the
“Minister”)
at
the
same
time,
that
is,
late
December
1990,
were
approved
by
the
Minister
to
operate
returnable
container
accounts.
15.
The
Plaintiff
claimed
a
deduction
for
federal
sales
tax
in
the
amount
of
$43,877.33
by
return
dated
January
17,
1991,
for
the
federal
sales
tax
it
had
paid
its
suppliers
in
respect
of
the
reusable
reels
in
inventory,
calculated
as
set
out
at
page
J-1-2
at
Tab
18
of
the
Joint
Book
of
Documents.
16.
The
Plaintiff
applied,
by
application
dated
January
25,
1991,
for
a
refund
of
federal
sales
tax
in
respect
of
the
reusable
reels
in
inventory
as
of
November
30,
1990,
in
the
amount
of
$12,325.40,
calculated
as
set
out
at
Tab
3
of
the
Joint
Book
of
Documents.
17.
The
Plaintiffs
suppliers
charged
the
Plaintiff
FST
on
any
purchase
of
the
reusable
reels
up
to
and
including
December
31,
1990.
Tax
so
paid
by
the
Plaintiff
had
to
be
remitted
by
the
suppliers
within
sixty
(60)
days.
Any
FST
levied
and
collected
by
the
Plaintiff
on
its
taxable
sales
had
to
be
remitted
to
the
Defendant
within
sixty
(60)
days,
that
is,
by
February
28,
1991.
18.
On
the
sales
of
its
products
after
January
1,
1991,
the
Plaintiff
was
required
to
charge
its
customers
and
remit
to
the
Defendant
GST
on
the
reusable
reels.
In
the
result
the
Plaintiff
was
unable
to
recoup,
at
any
time,
the
federal
sales
tax
paid
by
the
Plaintiff
on
the
reusable
reels
in
inventory
on
December
31,
1990.
19.
In
making
the
application,
the
Plaintiff
hoped
to
gain
a
tax
advantage.
20.
By
letter
dated
March
7,
1991,
the
firm
of
Oates,
Anderson
&
Associates,
Consultants
in
Commodity
Taxes
and
Duty,
acting
as
agent
for,
among
others,
the
Plaintiff,
requested
an
explanation
of
Revenue
Canada’s
policy
with
respect
to
returnable
container
accounts
as
set
out
in
Memorandum
ET302.
21.
By
letter
dated
March
15,
1991,
Rene
Noel,
Director,
Tax
Interpretations,
Excise
responded
to
the
Plaintiff’s
queries
concerning
the
Department’s
policy
in
respect
of
returnable
container
accounts.
22.
By
letter
dated
March
21,
1991,
the
Plaintiff
was
advised
that
its
request
to
operate
a
returnable
container
account
was
denied.
23.
Further
letters,
dated
March
25,
1991,
and
May
16,
1991,
were
sent
to
Oates,
Anderson
and
Associates
by
Mr.
Noel
concerning
the
Department’s
policy
regarding
returnable
container
accounts.
24.
By
Notice
of
Determination
Number
PAC
07001
dated
March
29,
1991,
the
Plaintiff’s
application
for
a
refund
of
federal
sales
tax
in
the
amount
of
$12,325.40
was
denied.
25.
A
memorandum
dated
August
26,
1991,
was
issued
to
all
Regional
Audit
Managers,
Excise
by
R.J.
Courneyea,
Director,
Audit
Excise/GST
Operations
concerning
returnable
containers.
26.
The
Canadian
International
Trade
Tribunal
granted
the
Plaintiff
an
extension
of
time
to
file
a
Notice
of
Objection
with
respect
to
the
Notice
of
Determination
Number
PAC
07001.
27.
By
Notice
of
Assessment
Number
PAC
5149
dated
November
14,
1991,
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
assessed
the
Plaintiff
for
federal
sales
tax
in
the
amount
of
$43,877.44,
plus
interest
in
the
amount
of
$4,056.60
and
penalty
in
the
amount
of
$2,338.91
in
respect
of
the
deduction
claimed
for
federal
sales
tax
with
respect
to
the
reusable
reels.
28.
By
Notice
of
Objection
dated
December
3,
1991,
the
Plaintiff
objected
to
the
Notice
of
Determination
Number
PAC
07001
dated
March
29,
1991.
29.
By
Notice
of
Objection
dated
December
11,
1991,
the
Plaintiff
objected
to
the
Notice
of
Assessment
Number
PAC
5149.
30.
Another
memorandum
dated
March
18,
1992,
was
issued
to
all
Regional
Directors,
Excise
by
R.J.
Courneyea,
Director,
Audit
Excise/GST
Operations
concerning
returnable
containers.
31.
L.J.
Robidoux,
Director,
FST
Objections
wrote
a
letter
dated
May
11,
1992
(incorrectlydated
May
11,
1991)
to
Mr.
Earl
Coates,
Director
Appeals,
Alberta
Region,
with
a
copy
to
L.
Binet,
Director,
Appeals
Operations,
with
respect
to
processing
of
objections
relating
to
assessments
or
refunds
on
returnable
containers.
32.
By
Notice
of
Decision
dated
July
31,
1992,
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
disallowed
the
Plaintiffs
objection
dated
December
11,
1991,
and
confirmed
Assessment
Number
PAC
5149.
33.
By
Notice
of
Decision
dated
July
31,
1992,
the
Plaintiffs
objection
to
Notice
of
Determination
PAC
07001
was
disallowed
and
the
Notice
of
Determination
Number
07001
was
confirmed.
The
Statement
of
Agreed
Facts
for
the
plaintiff
Fraser
Valley
Milk
Producers
Cooperative
Association
(“Fraser
Valley”),
in
file
T-2661-92,
reads
as
follows:
1.
The
Plaintiff
is
an
association
incorporated
under
the
laws
of
British
Columbia.
2.
The
Plaintiff
and
Dairyland
Foods
are
one
and
the
same.
3.
The
Plaintiff
is
engaged
in
the
business
of
processing
and
distributing
diary
and
some
non-dairy
products.
4.
The
Plaintiff
is
a
licensed
manufacturer
under
the
Excise
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1985
c.
E-15.
5.
The
Plaintiff
distributes
its
products
in
reusable
plastic
carrying
cases
and
on
reusable
pallets.
6.
The
Plaintiff
applied
to
operate
a
returnable
container
account
in
respect
of
returnable
plastic
cases
and
pallets
by
letter
dated
December
21,
1990.
7.
The
Plaintiff
purchases
16
litre
plastic
cases
from
GHJ
Industries
Ltd.,
J&A
Plastic
Ltd.
and
Jamber
and
Associates.
8.
The
Plaintiff
purchased
9
litre
plastic
cases
from
GHJ
Industries
Ltd.
9.
The
Plaintiff
purchased
pallets
from
Pacific
Pallets.
10.
Federal
sales
tax
was
included
in
the
purchase
price
the
Plaintiff
paid
to
the
suppliers
for
its
plastic
cases
and
pallets.
For
the
purposes
of
Memorandum
ET302,
paragraph
33,
therefore,
the
Plaintiff
“paid
tax
on
their
purchases
of
returnable
containers”.
11.
The
9
and
16
litre
plastic
cases
and
pallets
were
used
for
distributing
milk.
12.
The
majority
of
the
products,
essentially
the
dairy
products,
sold
by
the
Plaintiff
to
its
customers
were
federal
sales
tax
exempt.
Some
products,
for
example,
fruit
flavoured
drinks,
were
taxable.
On
those
sales,
the
Plaintiff
collected
and
remitted
federal
sales
tax
to
the
Defendant.
13.
The
Plaintiff
charged
its
customers
a
deposit
on
the
returnable
containers.
the
customer
received
a
credit
when
the
container
was
returned.
14.
The
deposit
the
Plaintiff
charged
its
customers
did
not
include
an
FST
component,
nor
did
the
Plaintiff
remit
FST
in
respect
of
the
cases
or
pallets.
15.
On
December
27,
1990,
the
Plaintiff
applied
for
a
refund
of
federal
sales
tax
in
the
amount
of
$127,666.78,
calculated
as
set
out
at
Tab
2
in
the
Joint
Book
of
Documents.
16.
Other
taxpayers
applying
to
the
Defendant
at
the
same
time,
that
is,
late
December,
1990,
were
approved
by
the
Defendant
to
operate
returnable
container
accounts.
17.
The
Plaintiffs
request
to
operate
a
returnable
container
account
was
denied
by
letter
dated
February
8,
1991.
18.
By
letter
dated
March
7,
1991,
the
firm
of
Oates,
Anderson
&
Associates,
Consultants
in
Commodity
Taxes
and
Duty,
acting
as
agents
for,
among
others,
the
Plaintiff,
requested
an
explanation
of
Revenue
Canada’s
policy
with
respect
to
returnable
container
accounts
as
set
out
in
Memorandum
ET302.
19.
The
Plaintiffs
suppliers
charged
the
Plaintiff
FST
on
any
purchase
of
the
reusable
reels
[sic]
up
to
and
including
December
31,
1990.
Tax
so
paid
by
the
Plaintiff
had
to
be
remitted
by
the
suppliers
within
sixty
(60)
days.
Any
FST
levied
and
collected
by
the
Plaintiff
on
its
taxable
sales
had
to
be
remitted
to
the
Defendant
within
sixty
(60)
days,
that
is,
by
February
28,
1991.
20.
The
Plaintiffs
application
for
refund
of
federal
sales
tax
was
denied
by
Notice
of
Determination
dated
March
13,
1991.
21.
By
letter
dated
March
15,
1991,
Rene
Noel,
Director,
Tax
Interpretations,
Excise
responded
to
the
Plaintiffs
queries
concerning
the
Department’s
policy
in
respect
of
returnable
container
accounts.
22.
Further
letters,
dated
March
25,
1991,
and
May
16,
1991,
were
sent
to
Oates,
Anderson
&
Associates
by
Mr.
Noel
concerning
the
Department’s
policy
regarding
returnable
container
accounts.
23.
The
Plaintiff
objected
to
the
Notice
of
Determination
by
Notice
dated
June
10,
1991.
24.
A
memorandum
dated
August
26,
1991,
was
issued
to
all
Regional
Audit
Managers,
Excise
by
R.J.
Courneyea,
Director,
Audit
Excise/GST
Operations
concerning
returnable
containers.
25.
Another
memorandum
dated
March
18,
1992,
was
issued
to
all
Regional
Directors,
Excise
by
R.J.
Courneyea,
Director,
Audit
Excise/GST
Operations
concerning
returnable
containers.
26.
L.J.
Robidoux,
Director,
FST
Objections
wrote
a
letter
dated
May
11,
1992,
(incorrectly
dated
May
11,
1991)
to
Mr.
Earl
Coates,
Director,
Appeals,
Alberta
Region,
with
a
copy
to
L.
Binet,
Director,
Appeals
Operations,
with
respect
to
processing
of
objections
relating
to
assessments
or
refunds
on
returnable
containers.
27.
By
Notice
of
Decision
dated
July
31,
1992,
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
disallowed
the
Plaintiffs
objection
and
confirmed
the
determination
denying
the
Plaintiff’s
application
for
a
refund
of
federal
sales
tax.
28.
The
Defendant’s
reason
for
not
allowing
a
manufacturer
of
tax
exempt
products
to
operate
a
returnable
container
account
is
as
set
out
in
counsel
for
the
Defendant’s
letter
of
June
20,
1996.
In
both
the
NCS
and
Fraser
Valley
cases,
the
plaintiffs’
appeals
are
on
grounds
that
the
defendant
Crown
unlawfully
refused
to
apply
to
them
the
policy
outlined
in
paragraph
33
of
Memorandum
ET302,
which
states
the
following:
Licensed
manufacturers
who
have
paid
tax
on
their
purchases
or
importation
of
reusable
containers
may
change
over
to
accounting
for
tax
at
the
time
the
containers
were
shipped
out.
In
these
circumstances,
the
licensed
manufacturers
may
request
permission
from
their
local
Excise
office
to
take
a
deduction
of
the
tax
paid
on
these
containers
which
are
on
hand
at
the
date
of
the
changeover
and
which
were
purchased
or
imported
by
them
in
new
condition
within
two
years
from
the
changeover
date.
Licensed
manufacturers
may
choose
the
method
they
wish
to
use
in
accounting
for
tax
on
returnable
containers.
However,
they
must
use
one
method
or
the
other
in
a
consistent
manner
and
not
a
combination
of
the
two.
It
is
noted
on
the
facts
of
both
cases
that
applications
by
the
plaintiffs
to
avail
themselves
of
the
foregoing
optional
accounting
method
were
filed
in
late
December
1990.
That
was
but
a
short
time
before
January
1,
1991,
when
the
Goods
and
Services
Tax
(“GST”)
became
effective
and
imposed
different
taxing
procedures.
It
was
also
the
end
of
the
Federal
Sales
Tax
(“FST”)
regime.
The
applications
for
the
changeover
were
refused
by
the
defendant
Crown.
Admittedly,
there
was
some
degree
of
confusion
between
some
local
or
regional
Excise
offices
as
to
the
grounds
for
refusal,
and
there
was
evidence
that
some
applications
were
accepted.
Nevertheless,
by
March
1991,
the
defendant
Crown’s
Ottawa
office
was
able
to
confirm
to
the
plaintiffs
that
their
applications
were
being
refused.
Among
the
reasons
expressed
in
various
documents,
the
following
may
be
listed:
1.
That
Section
50(1)
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act
imposes
a
tax
on
all
goods
manufactured
or
imported
into
Canada;
not
to
impose
tax
on
returnable
containers
under
the
proposed
arrangement
would
be
inequitable
for
others
who
have
opted
to
pay
the
tax
at
time
of
purchase.
2.
That
when
a
sales
tax
exemption
is
applied
on
goods
for
which
reusable
containers
are
issued,
the
sales
tax
could
not
be
accounted
for
on
the
containers
when
the
goods
are
issued.
3.
That
the
legislative
provisions
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act,
on
which
Memorandum
ET302
was
based,
were
in
fact
repealed
effective
January
1,
1991.
Documents
filed
by
the
parties
contain
a
number
of
pieces
of
correspondence
between
the
plaintiffs
and
the
Crown,
and
it
might
be
helpful
to
condense
everything
which
was
said
by
referring
to
a
Notice
of
Decision
of
the
Appeals
Directorate
of
Customs
and
Excise,
addressed
to
Fraser
Valley
and
dated
July
31,
1992
(Ex.
13).
This
document
says
in
part:
Section
1
of
Part
I
of
Schedule
III
to
the
Excise
Tax
Act
exempted
from
tax
usual
coverings
and
containers
used
in
containing
goods
not
subject
to
sales
tax.
Hence,
Section
1
denied
exemption
to
coverings
or
containers
designed
for
dispensing
goods
for
sale
or
designed
for
repeated
use”.
That
document
also
states:
Memorandum
ET302
allowed
manufacturers
who
sold
goods
under
taxable
conditions
to
account
for
tax
on
returnable
containers
at
the
time
the
containers
were
shipped
out,
rather
than
at
the
time
they
were
purchased
or
imported.
Under
the
Memorandum,
manufacturers
were
required
to
request
permission
from
the
Minister
to
take
a
deduction
of
the
tax
paid
on
those
containers
which
were
on
hand
at
the
date
of
the
changeover.
The
evidence
is
that
the
goods
for
which
the
containers
at
issue
are
designed
to
deliver
are
goods
which
were
exempt
from
sales
tax
and
therefor,
sales
tax
could
not
be
accounted
for
on
the
containers
when
the
goods
are
sold.
In
a
similar
letter
of
the
same
date
addressed
to
the
plaintiff
NCS
(Ex.
27),
the
defendant
Crown
stated
as
follows:
The
conversion
instruction
in
Memorandum
ET302
was
administrative
in
nature.
Further,
it
was
based
on
the
assumption
that
the
federal
sales
tax
program
would
continue
on
an
ongoing
basis
and
sales
tax
would
ultimately
be
collected
on
the
full
sale
price,
including
the
charge
for
the
container,
on
all
taxable
goods
sold
under
taxable
conditions.
The
letter
continues:
The
Minister
subsequently
rejected
your
refund
application
[
...
]
because
the
legislative
provisions
of
the
Excise
Sales
Tax
under
which
Memorandum
Et302
was
based,
were
repealed
effective
January
1,
1991.
Plaintiffs’
Position:
In
my
respectful
view,
the
position
of
the
plaintiffs
rests
more
importantly
on
the
doctrine
of
equity
and
fair
dealing.
Assuming
for
the
moment
that
the
Crown’s
role
in
dealing
with
the
plaintiff’s
application
is
discretionary,
such
power
is
not
unfettered.
Discretion
may
not
be
exercised
out
of
whim
or
on
the
basis
of
extraneous
matters.
There
is
no
unlimited
arbitrary
power
exercisable
for
any
purpose,
however
capricious
or
irrelevant,
regardless
of
the
nature
or
purpose
of
the
statute
[...]
Discretion
necessarily
implies
good
faith
in
discharging
public
duty
[...]
and
any
clear
departure
from
its
lines
or
objects
is
just
as
objectionable
as
fraud
or
corruption.
The
preceding
and
more
may
be
found
in
the
judgement
of
Rand
J.
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
the
well-known
Roncarelli
case
.
There
is
reliance
also
on
a
more
recent
decision
of
the
Supreme
Court
in
the
Maple
Lodge
Farms
case
,
where
McIntyre
J.
stated
that
the
exercise
of
discretion
will
be
respected
by
the
courts
and
the
courts
will
not
interfere
where
the
power
has
been
exercised
in
good
faith
and,
if
required,
in
accordance
with
the
principles
of
natural
justice,
and
where
reliance
has
not
been
placed
upon
considerations
irrelevant
or
extraneous
to
the
statutory
purpose.
The
doctrines
expressed
might
be
said
to
have
particular
relevance
when
considering
that
during
the
critical
period
of
December
17,
1990,
to
January
1,
1991,
a
number
of
applications
from
similar
manufacturers
or
wholesalers
to
invoke
Memorandum
ET302
were
casually
and
expeditiously
accepted.
The
plaintiffs,
therefore,
argue
that
the
Crown
has
exercised
its
discretion
in
an
arbitrary
or
discriminatory
manner,
that
it
has
favoured
some
taxpayers
over
others,
that
it
failed
in
the
proper
administration
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act
by
permitting
some
of
its
regional
or
local
offices
to
exercise
their
discretion
in
a
different
and
completely
contradictory
manner.
In
effect,
the
judicial
remedy
requested
by
the
plaintiffs
is
that
the
application
for
refund
of
federal
sales
tax
claimed
by
them
in
late
1990
be
granted,
and
that
an
Order
issue
to
the
Crown
to
refund
the
tax
as
claimed.
The
Crown
’s
Position:
The
Crown’s
basic
position
is
that
two
wrongs
do
not
make
a
right.
If
the
plaintiffs,
through
their
consultants,
were
able
to
obtain
evidence
of
other
taxpayers
being
granted
ET302
treatment
at
approximately
the
same
time,
it
is
not
evidence
bearing
on
the
proper
exercise
of
discretion.
It
simply
suggests
that
the
concordance
of
statute,
regulation
and
practice
under
two
regimes
is
especially
onerous
and
that
some
applications
which
did
not
merit
favourable
consideration
were
approved.
Of
course,
there
is
no
evidence
as
to
what
was
done
with
those
cases
subsequently.
The
Court
only
notes
that
according
to
Crown
counsel,
those
other
taxpayers
were
not,
any
more
than
the
plaintiffs,
entitled
to
the
relief
which
Memorandum
ET302
otherwise
provided.
The
Crown
takes
the
position
that
the
inconsistent
treatment
is
ir-
relevant.
There
is
no
legal
argument
that
ET302
was
not
in
conformity
with
the
Excise
Tax
Act
as
it
existed
prior
to
January
1,
1991,
nor
is
there
evidence
that
the
Crown
acted
in
a
capricious
or
malicious
manner,
or
that
its
action
was
arbitrary,
or
that
it
decided
the
issue
on
extraneous
considerations.
Further,
says
Crown
counsel,
the
policy
under
ET302
was
effectively
changed
with
the
adoption
of
the
Goods
and
Services
Tax
on
December
17,
1990,
and
its
coming
into
force
on
January
1,
1991.
That
change
of
policy
was
necessary
because
it
no
longer
enjoyed
a
valid
statute
base.
There
was
no
bad
faith
in
abandoning
it
and
indeed,
says
counsel,
the
plaintiffs
were
not
entitled
to
the
relief
claimed.
Findings:
I
should
firstly
find
that
the
policy
set
out
in
ET302
is
purely
administrative.
It
is
an
option
which
a
qualified
manufacturer
may
take
up.
It
does
not
create
a
right
per
se,
but
whatever
discretion
is
exercisable
by
the
Crown,
that
discretion
must
be
exercised
equitably
and
responsibly.
Secondly,
although
it
is
optional
to
a
taxpayer
to
apply
under
ET302,
that
option
may
be
exercised
by
way
of
an
application
requesting
permission
to
do
so.
In
the
normal
course
of
events,
permission
would
be
forthcoming,
but
there
remains
nevertheless
a
residue
of
discretionary
authority
dependent
upon
all
sorts
of
surrounding
circumstances.
It
is
that
kind
of
residual
discretion
which
cannot
be
exercised
arbitrarily,
capriciously
or
discriminately
and,
on
the
strength
of
case
law,
these
categories
of
decisions
may
be
judicially
challenged.
Based
on
the
evidence
before
me,
I
do
not
find
grounds
to
attribute
to
the
defendant
Crown’s
refusal
to
endorse
the
application
the
kind
of
taint
or
error
or
breach
otherwise
charged
against
it.
I
am
satisfied
that
the
refusal,
based
on
administrative
exigencies
and
requirements,
was
adequately
motivated
by
the
pending
entry
into
the
statute
books
of
a
brand
new
taxation
scheme.
It
might
have
been
purely
a
judgment
call
by
the
Crown
to
refuse,
but
certain
it
is
that
one
of
the
elements
thrown
into
the
hopper
at
that
time
was
the
maintenance
of
equity
and
fairness
among
all
persons
liable
to
the
new
tax.
It
is
unfortunate
that
in
the
process
of
the
changeover
from
the
old
to
the
new
order,
during
the
last
days
of
1990
and
the
first
days
of
1991,
some
applications
came
before
regional
or
local
offices
who
had
possibly
not
been
sufficiently
briefed
to
refer
them
to
Ottawa
for
action,
or
at
least
for
consultation.
Occurrences
of
different
treatment
always
send
a
wrong
message
to
taxpayers.
Nevertheless,
I
am
not
satisfied
that
the
incidents
provide
to
the
plaintiffs
the
necessary
grounds
to
establish
that
a
right
to
treatment
under
ET302
was
thereby
created
.
It
is
my
view
that
the
underpinnings
of
ET302
were
lost
to
the
plaintiffs
by
January
1,
1991,
when
the
new
tax
regime
came
into
force.
Conclusion:
Although
the
Court
is
conscious
of
the
plaintiffs’
sense
of
concern
at
the
chronology
of
events,
I
must
dismiss
their
respective
appeals.
Costs
to
the
defendant
Crown,
if
demanded.
Appeal
dismissed.