Dubé,
J:—The
issue
to
be
determined
here
is
whether
the
plaintiff
is
entitled
to
deduct
an
inventory
allowance
of
$1,931,180
in
respect
of
grain
of
a
value
of
$192,590,327,
held
by
the
plaintiff,
for
its
1977
taxation
year.
The
plaintiff
(“the
Pool”)
is
Canada’s
largest
agricultural
cooperative.
It
owns
and
operates
for
receipt,
storage,
cleaning
and
shipment
of
grain,
a
number
of
country
elevators
situated
in
the
Province
of
Saskatchewan
and
terminal
elevators
located
at
Thunder
Bay
and
North
Vancouver.
It
exploits
an
extensive
network
of
facilities
for
getting
wheat
and
other
grains
from
field
to
market.
It
provides
services
to
some
70,000
farmer
owners
annually.
It
employs
some
4,000
people
and
its
head
office
is
in
Regina,
Saskatchewan.
In
its
statement
of
claim
the
Pool
alleges
that
at
the
commencement
of
its
1977
taxation
year
it
held
grain
inventories
valued
at
$223,523,620
in
its
primary
(country)
elevators,
or
in
transit
to
its
terminal
elevators.
It
claims
that,
of
these
inventories,
grain
valued
at
$192,590,327
(“Board
grain”)
was
held
by
it
subject
to
an
agreement
existing
between
it
and
the
Canadian
Wheat
Board
(“the
Board”).
The
Pool
alleges
that
under
its
agreement
with
the
Board
it
had
purchased
Board
grain
from
farmers
at
its
country
elevators
for
storage,
handling
and
ultimate
delivery
to
the
Board
at
its
terminal
elevators,
or
at
other
destinations
designated
by
the
Board.
It
recorded
the
Board
grain
as
inventory
in
its
audited
financial
statement.
On
the
other
hand,
the
Minister,
in
assessing
the
plaintiff
for
its
1977
taxation
year,
assumed
that
the
Board
grain
was
not
the
property
of
the
Pool,
but
the
property
of
the
Board,
and
therefore
was
not
held
by
the
Pool
for
sale,
or
to
be
otherwise
used
by
it
for
sale
within
the
meaning
of
subparagraph
20(1
)(gg)(ii)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
with
the
results
that
the
Pool
was
not
entitled
to
an
inventory
deduction
in
respect
thereof.
The
subparagraph
reads
as
follows:
20.(
1)
Notwithstanding
paragraphs
18(1)(a),
(b)
and
(h),
in
computing
a
taxpayer’s
income
for
a
taxation
year
from
a
business
or
property,
there
may
be
deducted
such
of
the
following
amounts
as
are
wholly
applicable
to
that
source
or
such
part
of
the
following
amounts
as
may
reasonably
be
regarded
as
applicable
thereto.
(gg)
an
amount
in
respect
of
any
business
carried
on
by
the
taxpayer
in
the
year,
equal
to
that
portion
of
3%
of
the
cost
amount
to
the
taxpayer,
at
the
commencement
of
the
year,
of
the
tangible
property
(other
than
real
property
or
an
interest
therein)
that
was
(ii)
held
by
him
for
sale
or
for
the
purposes
of
being
processed,
fabricated,
manufactured,
incorporated
into,
attached
to,
or
otherwise
converted
into
or
used
in
the
packaging
of,
property
for
sale
in
the
ordinary
course
of
the
business
that
the
number
of
days
in
the
year
is
of
365;
The
heart
of
the
matter,
therefore,
is
whether
or
not
the
so-called
Board
grain
was
held
by
the
Pool
for
sale
to
the
Board,
or
was
the
property
of
the
Board
with
the
Pool
acting
as
its
agent.
Inventory
is
defined
in
subsection
48(1)
as
follows:
INVENTORY
“inventory”
means
a
description
of
property
the
cost
or
value
of
which
is
relevant
in
computing
a
taxpayer’s
income
from
a
business
for
a
taxation
year.
As
appears
from
the
oral
evidence
at
the
hearing,
as
well
as
from
a
publication
filed
by
the
plaintiff,
“Field
to
Market”,
the
Pool
in
1982
operated
965
licensed
elevators
with
a
total
capacity
of
2.3
million
tonnes
at
nearly
600
stations
throughout
Saskatchewan.
Farmers
deliver
their
grain
to
the
elevators
under
a
quota
system
administered
by
the
Board.
This
system
enables
the
Board
to
obtain
the
types
of
grain
it
needs
from
areas
in
which
it
is
available,
while
giving
everyone
a
chance
to
deliver
grain
on
as
equal
a
basis
as
possible.
The
grain
is
graded
by
the
elevator
agent,
who
pays
the
farmers
at
the
time
of
delivery
by
way
of
Cash
Purchase
Tickets.
Grade
is
determined
by
quality,
appearance
and
plumpness
of
the
kernels,
protein
content
and
weight.
“When
a
farmer
sells
his
grain
to
the
Canadian
Wheat
Board
through
his
elevator,
the
payment
he
receives
is
known
as
an
initial
payment.”*
The
Board,
responsible
for
marketing,
repays
the
elevator
company
for
its
outlay
in
making
the
initial
payment.
A
portion
of
the
proceeds
is
deducted
to
cover
operating
expenses
and
the
remainder
returned
to
the
farmers
as
a
‘final
payment”.
When
wheat
is
delivered
to
an
elevator,
four
basic
operations
take
place
prior
to
shipping:
receiving,
storage,
handling
(including
blending,
cleaning,
turning
and
natural
drying)
and
loading
into
railway
cars.
The
grain
is
then
moved
by
hopper
cars
along
rail
lines,
either
to
the
head
of
the
Great
Lakes
or
to
the
Pacific,
for
shipping
from
the
terminals.
The
giant
concrete
terminals
are
located
at
North
Vancouver
and
Thunder
Bay.
The
operations
at
the
terminals
are
essentially
similar
to
those
at
the
originating
elevators,
except
that
it
is
on
a
larger
scale.
Hopper
cars
unload
through
openings
below
and
from
the
holding
bins
the
grain
passes
through
cleaning
equipment.
When
an
outward
shipment
is
made
valves
open
at
the
bottom
of
the
bins
and
the
grain
falls
onto
conveyor
belts,
is
carried
to
shipping
scales
for
weighing,
then
transferred
to
a
ship.
Generally,
the
grain
purchased
from
different
farmers
is
not
kept
separate
and
identifiable,
but
is
dumped
into
vast
bins
at
the
country
elevators
where
it
is
mixed
up,
cleaned,
or
otherwise
dealt
with,
along
with
other
grains.
Moreover,
the
Pool
carries
out
several
operations,
such
as
mixing,
drying,
grading,
pelletizing,
which
may
increase
or
reduce
the
actual
volume
or
quality
of
the
grain.
The
plaintiff’s
main
contention
is
that
the
grain,
once
purchased
from
the
farmers
at
the
elevators,
becomes
the
property
of
the
Pool
until
it
is
delivered
to
the
Board
at
the
shipping
terminals:
the
farmers
are
paid
with
the
Pool’s
money,
actually
Pool
tickets
cashable
at
all
banks;
the
grain
is
purchased
by
the
Pool’s
agents;
the
grain
is
handled
by
the
Pool’s
personnel;
it
is
not
kept
separate,
but
dumped
into
bins
with
other
grains;
the
grain
while
in
transit
is
kept
insured
by
the
Pool,
not
the
Board;
the
Pool
keeps
control
over
it
until
final
delivery
to
the
Board
at
the
terminal.
The
Board’s
accountants
have
therefore
been
entering
the
Board
grain
as
part
of
the
Pool’s
inventory.
The
plaintiff
relies
inter
alia
on
MNR
v
Wardean
Drilling
Limited
[1969]
CTC
265;
69
DTC
5194,
a
decision
of
Cattanach,
J.
of
this
Court
wherein
the
learned
judge
held
that
assets
were
“acquired”
within
the
meaning
of
paragraph
20(5)(e)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
at
the
time
title
passed,
or
when
the
purchaser
had
acquired
ail
the
attributes
of
title,
such
as
possession,
use
and
risk.
Counsel
argues
that
the
Board
only
acquires
the
three
essential
attributes
of
ownership
at
the
time
of
delivery
at
the
terminals.
Before
that,
it
is
the
Pool
which
has
possession,
use
and
risk
of
the
grain.
Counsel
argues
that
there
exists
a
form
of
agency
which
does
not
preclude
ownership.*
He
lists
an
impressive
number
of
factors
which
tend
to
show
that
the
property
of
the
grain
remains
with
the
Pool
until
delivery
at
the
terminals.
For
instance,
the
farmers
may
not
sue
the
Board,
but
the
Pool
for
reimburse-
ment;
the
Board
does
not
reimburse
the
Pool
for
its
expenses;
the
Pool
does
not
have
to
account
to
the
Board
for
all
its
expenditures;
the
Pool
may
pelletize
chaffed
grain
and
turn
it
into
chicken
feed
without
rendering
account
to
the
Board;
all
the
employees
of
the
elevators
are
employees
of
the
Pool,
not
the
Board;
money
paid
to
the
farmers
is
Pool’s
money
not
Board’s
money;
it
is
the
Pool
which
holds
the
licence
to
operate
the
elevators,
not
the
Board;
it
is
the
Pool
which
insures
the
grain,
not
the
Board;
the
Board
does
not
send
auditors
around
the
elevators,
the
Pool
does
that;
the
documents
issued
until
delivery
are
the
Pool’s
documents,
not
the
Board’s
documents;
clause
16
of
the
agreement
between
the
Pool
and
the
Board
allows
the
Pool
to
pledge
the
grain
as
security
for
borrowing
from
the
bank;
it
is
the
Pool,
not
the
Board
that
sets
the
price
it
will
pay
the
farmers,
and
the
farmers
are
free
to
sell
elsewhere;
the
Pool
does
not
have
to
deliver
exactly
the
same
grain
to
the
Board,
as
long
as
it
delivers
the
same
quantity
and
the
same
quality;
the
Pool
must
absorb
the
risk
for
any
damage
sustained
during
the
voyage
to
the
terminals.
Therefore,
according
to
counsel
for
the
Pool,
all
those
ingredients
lead
to
the
conclusion
that
property
over
the
grain
remains
with
the
Pool
until
delivery
at
the
terminals
where
the
grain
is
graded,
weighed
and
sold
to
the
Board.
All
those
elements
would
indeed
point
to
ownership
of
the
grain
by
the
Pool
at
the
time
of
purchase
from
the
farmers,
were
it
not
for
the
Canadian
Wheat
Board
Act,
which
governs
all
those
activities,
and
the
agreement
made
under
that
Act
by
the
Board
and
the
Pool.
The
scheme
of
the
Act
indicates
that
the
Board,
not
the
Pool,
buys
the
grain
from
the
farmers.
Section
4
provides
that
the
Board
has
capacity
to
contract,
to
be
sued
and
is
an
agent
of
Her
Majesty
in
right
of
Canada.
Its
object
is
to
market
in
an
orderly
manner,
in
interprovincial
and
export
trade,
grain
grown
in
Canada.
It
has
power
to
buy,
take
delivery
of,
store,
ship
or
otherwise
dispose
of
grain.
It
has
the
power
to
operate
elevators
directly
or
by
means
of
agents,
and
subject
to
the
Canada
Grain
Act
to
pay
such
agents,
commissions,
storage
and
other
charges
as
may
be
agreed
upon,
with
the
approval
of
the
Canadian
Grain
Commission.
It
is
provided
under
section
17
that,
except
with
the
permission
of
the
Board,
no
person
shall
deliver
grain
to
an
elevator,
unless
the
person
delivering
the
grain
is
the
actual
producer.
Under
section
21,
the
Board
may
prescribe
the
forms
and
manner
of
completing
applications
for
permit
books
allowing
for
the
delivery
of
grain
and
the
Board
may
require
any
person
engaged
in
a
business
of
delivering,
receiving,
storing,
transporting
and
handling
grain
to
make
returns
to
the
Board
of
information
relating
thereto
or
of
any
facilities
therefor,
owned,
possessed
or
controlled
by
him.
Section
25
prescribes
that
the
Board
shall
undertake
the
marketing
of
wheat
produced
for
interprovincial
or
export
trade,
and
for
such
purpose
the
Board
shall
“buy
all
wheat
produced",
pay
to
producers
“a
sum
certain
per
tonne
basis
in
storage
Thunder
Bay
or
Vancouver”.
The
Board
shall
issue
to
a
producer
a
certificate
indicating
the
number
of
tonnes
purchased,
which
certificate
entitles
the
producer
to
share
in
the
equitable
distribution
of
the
surplus,
if
any.
Section
26
authorizes
the
Board
to
deduct
from
the
total
amount
received
all
moneys
disbursed
by
the
Board
or
on
behalf
of
the
Board
and
to
distribute
the
balance
remaining
among
holders
of
certificates.
Section
12
of
the
Canadian
Wheat
Board
Regulations
describes
the
form
of
certificates
to
be
issued
to
producers
delivering
and
selling
wheat.
In
order
to
carry
out
the
provisions
of
the
Act,
the
Board
and
the
Pool
entered
into
an
agreement
on
August
8,
1977
covering
the
period
from
Au-
gust
1,
1977
to
July
31,
1978.
The
agreement
declares
that
the
Board
is
incorporated
under
the
Canadian
Wheat
Board
Act
with
the
object
of
marketing
grain
in
an
orderly
manner
in
interprovincial
and
export
trade
and,
pursuant
to
the
said
object,
to
receive
grain
from
producers
and
to
market
the
same.
It
provides
that
the
Board,
“to
accomplish
the
said
object”,
may
employ
the
services
of
persons
and
corporations
owning
and
operating
primary
elevators.
The
agreement
is
said
to
be
made
with
the
object
of
facilitating
delivery
to
the
Board
of
the
grains
of
producers.
It
is
clearly
stated
that
the
Pool
“has
agreed
with
the
Board
that
it
will
act
as
an
agent
of
the
Board
to
accept
deliveries
and
to
carry
out
the
purchase
of
wheat,
oats
and
barley”.
Clause
3
provides
that
the
Pool
will
“as
agent
of
the
Board”
during
the
term
of
this
agreement
at
its
primary
elevators
“accept
delivery
of
wheat.
..
on
behalf
of
the
Board
from
any
producer”,
store
such
grain
and
deliver
it
as
instructed
by
the
Board.
Clause
4(a)
provides
that
the
Pool
will
purchase
grain
which
has
a
level
of
excellence
higher
than
that
of
feed
grain
“exclusively
for
the
Board”.
Under
Clause
8(a)
the
Pool
will
deliver
the
grain
to
the
Board
at
terminal
points
and
“assume
the
risk
of
grade”
of
such
grain.
Clause
9
recites
that
the
Pool
will
provide
the
Board
with
a
daily
report
of
grain
received
at
its
elevators
and
a
list
showing
the
railway
cars
loaded
with
grain
and
their
destinations.
Clause
10
provides
that
the
Pool
will
insure
against
fire
and
report
promptly
to
the
Board
any
loss
or
damage.
Under
Clause
12,
the
Board
will
pay
the
Pool
on
date
of
invoice
the
fixed
price
at
Thunder
Bay
or
Vancouver
in
respect
of
grain
delivered
at
terminal
points.
During
the
crop
year
the
Board
will
pay
the
Pool
storage
and
interest
as
well
as
carrying
charges.
Under
Clause
14
the
Board
will
reimburse
the
Pool
for
any
difference
in
freight
rates.
Clause
16,
as
previously
mentioned,
authorizes
the
Pool
to
borrow
from
the
bank
on
the
security
of
all
grain
on
hand
and
may
give
security
on
such
grain.
“For
all
such
purposes”
the
Pool
shall
be
deemed
to
be
the
owner.
Finally,
the
termination
Clause
24
recites
that
if
the
parties
fail
to
agree
before
October
1st,
1977
upon
the
terms
of
the
agreement,
then
‘the
agency
shall
terminate
and
come
to
an
end”.
It
seems
therefore
clear
to
me
in
light
of
the
provisions
of
the
Act
and
the
clauses
of
the
agreement
that
the
Pool
acts
as
an
agent
of
the
Board,
purchases
the
Board
grain
on
behalf
of
the
Board,
and
that
the
Board
becomes
the
owner
of
the
grain
from
the
day
of
the
purchase
from
the
producers.
Now
returning
to
subparagraph
20(1
)(gg)(ii)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
it
cannot
be
said
that
the
Board
grain
held
in
the
plaintiff’s
elevators,
or
in
transit
to
the
terminals,
was
“held
by
him
[the
Pool]
for
sale”,
for
it
was
not
his
to
sell;
it
was
held
by
him
for
delivery
to
the
owner,
the
Board.
In
a
recent
decision
of
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal,
Saskatchewan
Wheat
Pool
v
The
Queen
[1981]
2
FC
212,
Heald,
J
on
behalf
of
the
Court
analyzed
the
scheme
of
the
Canadian
Wheat
Board
Act
and
described
the
Board
as
an
agent
of
the
federal
Crown
which
purchases
the
farmers’
grain
from
them
through
the
Board’s
agents
“the
primary
country
elevator
companies”.
He
said
as
follows
at
218;
_..
The
Canadian
Wheat
Board,
under
the
Canadian
Wheat
Board
Act,
RSC
1970,
c
C-12,
is
an
agent
of
the
federal
Crown
for
all
purposes
(see
Canadian
Wheat
Board
Act,
subsection
4(2)).
Under
the
scheme
of
the
Canadian
Wheat
Board
Act,
The
Canadian
Wheat
Board
administers
the
system
of
orderly
marketing
of
grain
grown
by
western
grain
producers.
Every
grain
elevator
is
required
to
be
operated
for
and
on
behalf
of
The
Canadian
Wheat
Board
(Canadian
Wheat
Board
Act,
subsection
13(1)).
Thus,
while
The
Canadian
Wheat
Board
is
an
agent
of
the
federal
Crown,
and
while
the
primary
country
elevator
operators
are
agents
of
The
Canadian
Wheat
Board,
it
cannot
be
said
that
The
Canadian
Wheat
Board
is
an
agent
of
the
grain
producers.
On
the
contrary,
it
is
The
Canadian
Wheat
Board
which
purchases
the
farmers’
grain
from
them,
in
most
cases
through
their
agents,
the
primary
country
elevator
companies.
[Italics
mine.]
In
the
second
full
paragraph
of
his
judgment
Heald,
J
has
also
described
the
so-called
Board
grain,
that
is
grain
shipped
from
country
elevators
to
terminals,
as
“at
all
relevant
times,
grain
owned
by
The
Canadian
Wheat
Board”.*
It
is
trite
law
that
in
order
to
benefit
from
a
tax
exemption
the
taxpayer
must
place
himself
squarely
within
the
four
corners
of
the
exempting
provision.
Unfortunately
for
the
plaintiff,
it
cannot
do
so
in
this
instance.
This
appeal,
therefore,
must
be
dismissed
with
costs.