Estey,
       
        CJ:—This
      
      is
      an
      appeal
      from
      two
      assessments
      made
      by
      the
      
      
      Comptroller
      of
      Revenue
      of
      Ontario
      under
      
        The
       
        Retail
       
        Sales
       
        Tax
       
        Act
      
      of
      
      
      Ontario
      against
      the
      appellant
      with
      reference
      firstly
      to
      the
      taxation
      
      
      period
      commencing
      November
      1,
      1964
      and
      ending
      October
      31,
      1967,
      
      
      and
      secondly
      the
      taxation
      period
      commencing
      November
      1,
      1967
      and
      
      
      ending
      April
      30,
      1970.
      
      
      
      
    
      By
      reason
      of
      the
      
        assertion
       
        of
       
        unconstitutionality
      
      of
      
        The
       
        Retail
       
        Sales
      
        Act
      
      of
      Ontario
      by
      the
      appellant,
      notice
      was
      given
      to
      the
      Attorney
      General
      
      
      of
      Canada
      and
      the
      Attorney
      General
      of
      Ontario.
      Counsel
      for
      the
      
      
      appellant
      advised
      that
      the
      Attorney
      General
      of
      Canada
      has
      stated
      that
      
      
      he
      would
      not
      be
      appearing
      in
      these
      proceedings.
      L
      E
      Weinrib
      appeared
      
      
      before
      the
      Court
      for
      the
      Attorney
      General
      of
      Ontario.
      
      
      
      
    
      The
      appeal
      raises
      many
      issues
      with
      respect
      to
      the
      recovery
      of
      taxes
      
      
      under
      this
      Statute
      and
      the
      factual
      considerations
      surrounding
      .these
      
      
      questions
      are
      very
      complicated.
      It
      therefore
      will
      be
      helpful
      to
      first
      
      
      describe
      briefly
      the
      factual
      situation
      against
      which
      these
      assessments
      
      
      were
      issued.
      The
      appellant,
      hereinafter
      referred
      to
      as
      Beckers,
      at
      the
      
      
      time
      in
      question
      operated
      a
      number
      of
      convenience
      store
      Outlets;
      
      
      that
      is
      to
      say
      stores
      which
      are
      located
      in
      neighbourhoods,
      are
      open
      
      
      long
      hours,
      and
      which
      sell
      milk,
      cigarettes,
      a
      limited
      range
      of
      grocery
      
      
      items,
      soft
      drinks,
      ice
      cream
      and
      sundries.
      About
      half
      of
      these
      sales
      
      
      is
      made
      up
      of
      milk
      and
      cigarettes.
      At
      the
      opening
      of
      the
      first
      taxation
      
      
      period
      Beckers
      operated
      about
      81
      stores
      and
      by
      the
      close
      of
      the
      
      
      second
      taxation
      period,
      the
      number
      had
      increased
      to
      293
      stores.
      The
      
      
      average
      sale
      in
      these
      stores
      involved
      about
      $1.60
      and
      the
      sales
      involve
      
      
      tax
      exempt
      items,
      items
      which
      are
      in
      all
      circumstances
      taxable
      
      
      and
      items
      which
      when
      sold
      for
      less
      than
      21
      cents,
      are
      not
      taxable.
      
      
      
      
    
      The
      application
      of
      the
      Act
      to
      the
      operation
      of
      these
      stores
      is
      complicated
      
      
      by
      many
      factors
      such
      as
      the
      sale
      of
      items
      which
      sometimes
      
      
      attract
      tax
      and
      sometimes
      do
      not;
      for
      example,
      insecticides
      used
      inside
      
      
      the
      house
      are
      exempt
      and
      those
      used
      outside
      the
      house
      are
      not
      
      
      exempt.
      A
      further
      complicating
      fact
      is
      the
      high
      volume
      of
      individual
      
      
      sales
      involving
      small
      amounts.
      The
      staff
      of
      the
      store
      is
      small
      and
      there
      
      
      is
      a
      high
      incidence
      of
      turnover
      among
      both
      managers
      and
      clerks.
      In
      
      
      many
      instances
      the
      stores
      are
      staffed
      by
      persons
      with
      limited
      knowledge
      
      
      of
      the
      English
      language
      and
      the
      stores
      are
      located
      in
      regions
      
      
      where
      the
      clientele
      is
      similarly
      limited
      in
      its
      capacity
      in
      English.
      
      
      
      
    
      The
      stores
      are
      equipped
      with
      rather
      rudimentary
      machines
      for
      the
      
      
      recording
      of
      sales
      and
      the
      taxes
      collected.
      The
      clerk
      first
      records
      the
      
      
      customer’s
      order
      on
      an
      adding
      machine,
      which
      produces
      a
      single
      
      
      copy
      of
      tape
      on
      which
      taxable
      and
      non-taxable
      items
      are
      grouped
      and
      
      
      sub-totalled
      and
      the
      tax
      applicable
      to
      the
      former
      is
      set
      out.
      This
      tape
      
      
      is
      given
      by
      the
      clerk
      to
      the
      customer
      when
      the
      customer
      leaves
      with
      
      
      the
      purchased
      merchandise.
      The
      clerk
      at
      the
      same
      time
      posts
      on
      an
      
      
      adjoining
      cash
      register
      the
      total
      cash
      sale
      and
      the
      tax
      collected
      with
      
      
      reference
      thereto.
      The
      customer
      is
      not
      given
      a
      copy
      of
      this
      tape.
      At
      
      
      the
      end
      of
      each
      day
      the
      Manager
      of
      the
      branch
      completes
      a
      summary
      
      
      Sheet
      setting
      out
      total
      sales,
      taxes
      collected
      with
      reference
      thereto,
      
      
      monies
      deposited
      in
      the
      bank,
      cash
      float
      retained
      and
      information
      
      
      referable
      to
      the
      inventory
      such
      as
      goods
      received
      during
      the
      day.
      
      
      
      
    
      At
      the
      Beckers’
      Head
      Office,
      the
      daily
      summary
      sheets
      and
      the
      information
      
      
      from
      the
      cash
      register
      tape
      are
      recorded
      on
      a
      computer
      
      
      and
      the
      bank
      deposits
      are
      reconciled.
      After
      the
      information
      has
      been
      
      
      so
      recorded
      from
      the
      cash
      register
      tape,
      the
      tapes
      are
      destroyed.
      It
      
      
      should
      be
      pointed
      out
      in
      passing
      that
      the
      destruction
      of
      these
      tapes
      
      
      is
      almost
      a
      physical
      necessity
      because
      even
      a
      ten
      day
      accumulation
      
      
      from
      all
      branches
      fill
      a
      substantial
      amount
      of
      office
      space
      at
      Beckers’
      
      
      Head
      Office.
      
      
      
      
    
      The
      testimony
      of
      Beckers’
      witnesses
      (and
      it
      is
      not
      controverted)
      is
      
      
      to
      the
      effect
      that
      it
      is
      not
      economically
      feasible
      for
      the
      clerk
      to
      issue
      
      
      individual
      invoices
      for
      all
      sales,
      or,
      indeed,
      to
      do
      more
      than
      record
      
      
      the
      sales
      in
      the
      manner
      outlined
      above.
      The
      evidence
      is
      also
      clear
      
      
      that
      after
      the
      customer
      leaves
      the
      store,
      there
      is
      no
      way
      of
      verifying
      
      
      whether:
      
      
      
      
    
        (a)
        tax
        has
        been
        levied
        on
        all
        taxable
        goods;
        
        
        
        
      
        î
        -(b).
        the-amount
        of
        tax
        levied
        was
        correct:
        
        
        
        
      
        (c)
        assuming
        the
        tax
        was
        correctly
        collected,
        it
        was
        correctly
        reflected
        in
        
        
        the
        cash
        register
        tape.
        
        
        
        
      
      In
      any
      event
      it
      is
      clear
      from
      the
      record
      at
      trial
      that
      all
      monies
      reported
      
      
      in
      the
      branch
      accounting
      to
      the
      head
      office
      as
      tax
      collected
      
      
      from
      customers
      at
      the
      point
      of
      sale,
      was
      transmitted
      by
      Beckers
      to
      
      
      the
      respondent.
      In
      fact,
      the
      evidence
      is
      that
      usually
      the
      branch
      was
      
      
      charged
      by
      Beckers’
      Head
      Office
      with
      tax
      greater
      than
      the
      amount
      
      
      of
      cash
      collected
      as
      tax
      and
      that
      Beckers
      had
      remitted
      to
      the
      respondent
      
      
      as
      tax,
      more
      money
      than
      was
      collected
      as
      tax
      by
      Beckers’
      
      
      branches.
      This
      was
      because
      of
      a
      formula
      adopted
      by
      Beckers
      for
      ^elfassessment
      
      
      with
      respect
      to
      tax
      liability
      under
      
        The
       
        Retail
       
        Sales
       
        Tax
       
        Act
      
      
      
      relating
      to
      the
      sales
      in
      its
      branches,
      and
      about
      which
      more
      will
      be
      
      
      said
      later.
      
      
      
      
    
      In
      a
      summary
      way
      it
      can
      be
      said
      that
      these
      proceedings
      originated
      
      
      from
      two
      assessments
      issued
      by
      the
      respondent
      in
      respect
      of
      the
      two
      
      
      taxation
      periods
      mentioned,
      and
      based
      upon
      a
      different
      formula
      of
      
      
      tax
      calculation
      than
      that
      employed
      by
      Beckers
      in
      the
      aforementioned
      
      
      self-assessment
      ‘process.
      The
      parties
      contend
      in
      favour
      of
      their
      respective
      
      
      formula
      but
      the
      larger
      question
      arises
      as
      to
      whether
      or
      not
      
      
      taxation
      by
      formula
      prospectively
      or
      retrospectively
      is
      permissible
      
      
      under
      the
      Act
      at
      all,
      and
      if
      so
      is
      the
      tax
      claimed
      recoverable
      by
      this
      
      
      assessment
      procedure.
      The
      determination
      of
      these
      issues
      is
      further
      
      
      complicated
      by
      the
      fact
      that
      the
      respondent
      took
      the
      position
      throughout
      
      
      that
      it
      did
      not
      have
      to
      advise
      either
      the
      appellant
      or
      the
      Court
      as
      
      
      to
      the
      section
      of
      the
      Statute
      which
      was
      relied
      upon
      by
      the
      respondent
      
      
      in
      issuing
      these
      notices
      of
      assessment.
      
      
      
      
    
      If
      their
      respective
      positions
      can
      be
      summarized
      shortly
      it
      might
      be
      
      
      done
      as
      follows:
      
      
      
      
    
        (a)
        The
        appellant
        takes
        the
        position
        that
        he
        is
        not
        a
        taxpayer
        and
        cannot
        
        
        be
        a
        tax
        payer
        either
        under
        the
        Tax
        Statute
        as
        it
        now
        stands
        or
        under
        a
        
        
        variation
        thereof
        within
        the
        constitutional
        limitations
        on
        provincial
        legisla-
        
        
        ion
        under
        the
        British
        North
        America
        Act,
        and,
        therefore,
        the
        contest
        between
        
        
        the
        parties
        hereto
        is
        one
        between
        a
        principal
        and
        its
        agent
        for
        accounting
        
        
        for
        monies
        had
        and
        received,
        and
        that
        the
        appellant
        has
        accounted
        for
        at
        
        
        least
        the
        monies
        collected
        by
        it
        under
        the
        Tax
        Act.
        
        
        
        
      
        (b)
        The
        position
        of
        the
        respondent
        is
        that
        the
        Tax
        Act
        places
        an
        onus
        upon
        
        
        the
        vendor
        Beckers;
        who
        is
        a
        tax
        payer
        under
        the
        Act
        and
        that
        Beckers
        
        
        must
        either
        pay
        the
        amount
        assessed,
        or
        discharge
        its
        onus
        by
        demonstrating
        
        
        some
        lesser
        tax•
        liability
        consistent
        with
        the
        terms
        of
        the
        Act,
        and
        the
        respondent
        
        
        says
        the
        appellant
        has
        not
        been
        able
        to
        do
        so.
        
        
        
        
      
      I
      turn
      now
      to
      the
      assessments
      themselves.
      To
      begin
      with,
      it
      must
      
      
      be
      observed
      that
      the
      respondent
      did
      not
      issue
      a
      notice
      of
      assessment
      
      
      for
      the
      taxation
      periods
      in
      question
      on
      a
      total
      liability
      or
      global
      assessment
      
      
      basis,
      but
      rather
      a
      net
      assessment
      without
      revealing
      this
      fact
      on
      
      
      the
      face
      of
      the
      assessment.
      In.
      the
      case
      of
      the
      first
      taxation
      period
      
      
      ending
      October
      31,
      1967,
      the
      respondent
      issued
      a
      notice
      of
      assessment
      
      
      claiming
      a
      net
      balance
      of
      $179,925.16.
      This
      assessment
      is
      dated
      
      
      February
      9,
      1968.
      The
      assessment
      is
      not
      accompanied
      by
      any
      explanation.
      
      
      On
      May
      30,
      1968
      a
      further
      notice
      of
      assessment
      with
      reference
      
      
      to
      the
      period
      ending
      October
      31,
      1967
      was
      issued,
      wherein
      a
      net
      
      
      balance
      of
      $340,115.71
      was
      claimed
      to
      be
      due
      and
      payable.
      The
      liability
      
      
      of
      the
      appellant
      is
      then
      reduced,
      on
      what
      appears
      to
      be
      a
      second
      
      
      page
      of
      the
      assessment,
      but
      which,
      in
      fact,
      is
      a
      second
      form
      identical
      
      
      to
      that
      dated
      May
      30,
      and
      already
      summarized,
      to
      an
      amount
      of
      
      
      $160,190.55.
      Nowhere
      in
      these
      assessments
      is
      the
      taxation
      period
      revealed,
      
      
      nor
      is
      any
      mention
      made
      of
      payments
      received
      in
      respect
      of
      
      
      such
      taxation
      period
      from
      the
      appellant.
      Counsel
      agreed
      at
      the
      outset
      
      
      that
      the
      first
      taxation
      period
      assessment
      now
      under
      appeal
      is
      the
      
      
      second
      page
      of
      the
      two
      documents
      dated
      May
      30,
      1968,
      and
      the
      amount
      
      
      claimed
      by
      the
      respondent
      from
      the
      appellant
      is
      $160,190.55.
      
      
      
      
    
      The
      second
      taxation
      period,
      being
      the
      thirty
      month
      period
      commencing
      
      
      November
      1,
      1967
      and
      ending
      April
      30,
      1970,
      is
      the
      subject
      
      
      of
      an
      assessment
      dated
      December
      16,
      1970
      wherein
      the
      respondent
      
      
      claims
      from
      the
      appellant
      $272,776.24.
      Attached
      to
      this
      notice
      of
      assessment
      
      
      is
      an
      explanatory
      computation
      wherein
      the
      amount
      claimed
      is
      
      
      broken
      down
      into
      that
      portion
      computed
      by
      the
      respondent
      on
      the
      
      
      appellant’s
      own
      formula,
      an
      additional
      amount
      calculated
      by
      the
      respondent
      
      
      using
      the
      respondent’s
      formula,
      and
      two
      amounts
      claimed
      
      
      with
      respect
      to
      minor
      items
      relating
      to
      the
      appellant’s
      machinery
      and
      
      
      equipment,
      to
      which
      reference
      will
      be
      made
      later.
      
      
      
      
    
      This
      second
      notice
      of
      assessment
      was
      varied
      by
      a
      notice
      of
      assessment
      
      
      issued
      on
      June
      4,
      1976
      which
      granted
      to
      the
      appellant
      a
      credit
      
      
      with
      respect
      to
      the
      second
      assessment
      of
      $34,413.33.
      The
      accompanying
      
      
      letter
      states:
      
      
      
      
    
        The
        credit
        adjustment
        is
        based
        on:
        
        
        
        
      
        (a)
        Allowance
        for
        tax
        previously
        charged
        on
        returnable
        bottles.
        
        
        
        
      
        (b)
        Allowance
        for
        price
        changes
        during
        the
        audit
        period.
        
        
        
        
      
      It
      is
      agreed
      by
      the
      parties
      hereto
      that
      the
      net
      amount
      assessed
      and
      
      
      Claimed
      by
      the
      respondent
      against
      the
      appellant
      in
      respect
      of
      the
      
      
      second
      taxation
      period
      is
      $238,362.91.
      
      
      
      
    
      The
      respondent,
      as
      I
      have
      said,
      has
      steadfastly
      declined
      to
      identify
      
      
      the
      section
      of
      the
      Statute
      under
      which
      these
      assessments
      were
      issued.
      
      
      This
      reluctance
      may
      spring
      from
      the
      fact
      that
      the
      Statute
      on
      close
      
      
      examination
      throws
      up
      many
      difficult
      questions
      surrounding
      its
      application
      
      
      to
      the
      circumstances
      now
      before
      the
      Court.
      In
      order
      to
      reach
      the
      
      
      answers
      to
      these
      questions,
      it
      is
      necessary
      to
      look
      at
      the
      general
      plan
      
      
      of
      the
      Act
      and
      its
      detailed
      implementing
      provisions.
      
      
      
      
    
      It
      is
      trite
      to
      say
      that
      the
      Statute
      imposes
      a
      direct
      tax
      on
      purchasers
      
      
      of
      “tangible
      personal
      property’’
      at
      the
      rate
      of
      3%
      and
      later
      at
      the
      rate
      
      
      Of
      5%.
      For
      the
      purpose
      of
      this
      proceeding
      it
      should
      be
      noted
      that
      
      
      there
      is
      an
      exemption
      from
      this
      tax
      in
      the
      case
      of
      the
      sale
      of
      food
      
      
      products,
      excluding
      candy
      and
      soft
      drinks,
      and
      an
      exemption
      for
      the
      
      
      sale
      of
      items
      otherwise
      taxable
      when
      the
      total
      purchase
      price
      is
      less
      
      
      than
      21
      cents.
      
      
      
      
    
      The
      basic
      taxing
      provision
      of
      the
      Act
      is
      found
      in
      section
      15
      which
      
      
      reads
      as
      follows:
      
      
      
      
    
        15.
        The
        purchaser
        is
        liable
        for
        the
        tax
        imposed
        by
        this
        Act
        until
        it
        has
        been
        
        
        collected,
        and,
        in
        the
        event
        of
        failure
        on
        the
        part
        of
        the
        vendor
        to
        collect
        
        
        the
        tax.
        he
        shall
        immediately
        notify
        the
        Comptroller
        and
        the
        purchaser
        may
        
        
        be
        sued
        therefor
        in
        any
        court
        of
        competent
        jurisdiction.
        
        
        
        
      
      No
      doubt
      this
      clause,
      in
      addition
      to
      setting
      forth
      the
      primary
      basis
      of
      
      
      the
      taxation
      scheme,
      is
      included
      for
      constitutional
      certainty.
      There
      
      
      can
      be
      no
      doubt
      that
      the
      plan
      of
      the
      Act
      is
      to
      impose
      a
      direct
      tax
      on
      
      
      the
      purchaser
      and
      to
      impose
      a
      collection
      burden
      on
      the
      vendor.
      The
      
      
      section
      does
      not
      impose
      a
      tax
      liability
      on
      the
      vendor
      and
      this
      aspect
      
      
      of
      the
      proceeding
      is
      discussed
      below
      in
      the
      context
      of
      the
      judgment
      
      
      in
      
        F
      
      W
      
        Woolworth
       
        &
       
        Co
       
        Limited
      
      v
      
        The
       
        Queen,
      
      [1957]
      SCR
      738.
      
      
      
      
    
      The
      vendor
      in
      the
      sale
      transaction
      is
      required
      to
      obtain
      a
      permit
      
      
      under
      the
      Act
      before
      making
      any
      such
      sales.
      The
      vendor
      is
      defined
      
      
      as
      a
      “collector’’
      under
      the
      Act.
      The
      vendor’s
      status
      is
      further
      defined
      
      
      in
      section
      6,
      which
      provides:
      
      
      
      
    
        6.(1)
        Every
        vendor
        is
        an
        agent
        of
        the
        Treasurer
        and
        as
        such
        shall
        levy
        and
        
        
        collect
        the
        taxes
        imposed
        by
        this
        Act
        upon
        the
        purchaser
        or
        consumer.
        
        
        
        
      
      The
      vendor
      is
      directed
      by
      the
      Statute
      to:
      
      
      
      
    
        (a)
        collect
        all
        taxes
        imposed
        by
        the
        Act
        at
        the
        time
        of
        the
        sale,
        and
        
        
        
        
      
        (b)
        remit
        taxes
        collected
        as
        directed,
        and
        
        
        
        
      
        (c)
        keep
        “such
        records
        ...
        as
        are
        prescribed
        by
        the
        regulations
        .
        .
        and
        
        
        “to
        keep
        records
        of
        all
        purchases
        and
        sales
        made
        by
        him
        .
        .
        
        
        
        
      
      By
      section
      16
      of
      the
      Statute
      it
      is
      provided
      that
      a
      collector
      of
      tax
      under
      
      
      the
      Act
      “shall
      be
      deemed
      to
      hold
      it
      in
      trust
      for
      Her
      Majesty
      in
      right
      
      
      of
      Ontario
      .
      .
      
      
      
      
    
      The
      assessment
      provisions
      are
      found
      in
      section
      13
      and
      require
      a
      
      
      more
      detailed
      examination.
      Subsection
      (1)
      relates
      to
      the
      assessment
      
      
      of
      a
      vendor
      who
      has
      failed
      to
      remit
      taxes
      after
      a
      sale,
      or
      “the
      tax
      
      
      collected
      by
      such
      vendor
      for
      which
      he
      has
      not
      accounted
      .
      .
      .”.
      The
      
      
      section
      reads
      as
      follows:
      
      
      
      
    
        13.(1)
        When
        a
        vendor
        having
        sold
        tangible
        personal
        property
        fails
        to
        make
        
        
        a
        return
        or
        a
        remittance
        as
        required
        under
        this
        Act
        or
        if
        his
        returns
        are
        
        
        not
        substantiated
        by
        his
        records,
        the
        Comptroller
        may
        make
        an
        assessment
        
        
        of
        the
        tax
        collected
        by
        such
        vendor
        for
        which
        he
        has
        not
        accounted
        and
        
        
        such
        assessed
        amount
        shall
        thereupon
        be
        deemed
        to
        be
        the
        tax
        collected
        
        
        by
        the
        vendor.
        
        
        
        
      
      It
      is
      to
      be
      noted
      at
      once
      that
      the
      Comptroller
      may
      make
      an
      assessment
      
      
      “of
      the
      tax
      collected
      by
      such
      vendor
      for
      which
      he
      has
      not
      accounted
      
      
      .
      .
      only
      in
      two
      circumstances:
      firstly
      when
      a
      vendor
      has
      
      
      sold
      property
      and
      fails
      to
      make
      a
      return
      or
      remittance
      as
      required
      by
      
      
      the
      Act,
      or
      secondly
      if
      the
      vendor’s
      returns
      are
      not
      substantiated
      by
      
      
      the
      vendor’s
      records.
      The
      respondent
      makes
      no
      claim
      that
      Beckers
      
      
      collected
      tax
      which
      it
      did
      not
      remit.
      One
      witness
      testified
      that
      in
      the
      
      
      course
      of
      one
      investigation
      he
      observed
      that
      an
      employee
      of
      Beckers
      
      
      did
      not
      record
      the
      tax
      collected
      on
      a
      sale
      on
      the
      cash
      register
      available
      
      
      for
      this
      purpose,
      but
      no
      attempt
      was
      made
      by
      the
      witness
      to
      identify
      
      
      the
      transaction,
      the
      amount
      of
      the
      sale,
      or
      the
      tax
      collected.
      The
      evidence
      
      
      led
      by
      the
      respondent
      included
      more
      than
      one
      acknowledgement
      
      
      that
      the
      respondent
      has
      no
      record,
      and
      has
      made
      no
      claim
      in
      respect
      
      
      of
      any
      tax
      collected
      but
      not
      remitted
      by
      Beckers.
      
      
      
      
    
      Subsection
      (1)
      prescribes
      as
      a
      condition
      precedent
      to
      an
      assessment
      
      
      thereunder
      a
      failure
      to
      make
      ‘a
      return
      or
      a
      remittance”
      but
      the
      
      
      respondent
      has
      directed
      the
      Court
      to
      no
      regulation
      or
      statutory
      provision
      
      
      violated
      by
      Beckers
      with
      respect
      to
      sales
      made
      by
      Beckers
      in
      the
      
      
      conduct
      of
      its
      business.
      Reference
      will
      be
      later
      made
      to
      the
      regulations
      
      
      with
      respect
      to
      records
      and
      returns.
      The
      second
      and
      alternative
      
      
      condition
      precedent
      to
      an
      assessment
      under
      this
      subsection
      is
      a
      failure
      
      
      by
      a
      vendor
      to
      substantiate
      his
      return
      by
      his
      records.
      The
      evidence
      
      
      reveals
      that
      Beckers,
      during
      these
      lengthy
      taxation
      periods
      in
      question,
      
      
      remitted
      tax
      monthly
      in
      prescribed
      form
      and
      no
      assertion
      was
      
      
      made
      by
      the
      respondent
      that
      these
      returns
      were
      unsubstantiated
      by
      
      
      the
      Beckers’
      records.
      Again
      reference
      will
      be
      made
      later
      to
      the
      response
      
      
      by
      the
      respondent
      to
      the
      Beckers’
      filings.
      
      
      
      
    
      The
      concluding
      portion
      of
      this
      subsection,
      of
      course,
      does
      not
      become
      
      
      operative
      until
      a
      valid
      assessment
      has
      been
      issued
      thereunder.
      
      
      When
      this
      has
      been
      done,
      and
      only
      when
      this
      has
      been
      done,
      does
      
      
      the
      amount
      stipulated
      in
      the
      assessment
      become
      the
      tax
      “deemed
      to
      
      
      be
      the
      tax
      collected
      by
      the
      vendor”.
      The
      constructive
      collection
      of
      
      
      taxes
      by
      a
      vendor
      occurs
      only
      when
      the
      Comptroller
      assesses
      the
      
      
      vendor
      in
      the
      manner
      and
      under
      the
      conditions
      precisely
      prescribed
      
      
      by
      the
      subsection.
      On
      the
      facts
      here,
      the
      respondent
      has
      not
      done
      
      
      so.
      These
      assessments
      therefore
      cannot
      find
      their
      roots
      in
      subsection
      
      
      (1).
      
      
      
      
    
      Subsection
      (2)
      is
      to
      the
      same
      effect
      except
      that
      it
      extends
      to
      the
      
      
      assessment
      of
      a
      purchaser
      for
      the
      tax
      payable
      but
      not
      paid
      at
      the
      
      
      time
      of
      the
      sale.
      It
      is
      academic
      to
      speak
      of
      assessing
      purchasers
      from
      
      
      Beckers
      or
      any
      business
      conducting
      trade
      in
      the
      manner
      of
      the
      Beckers’
      
      
      business,
      because
      once
      the
      purchaser
      has
      left
      the
      store,
      it
      is
      impossible
      
      
      to
      find
      him,
      or
      to
      recast
      the
      transaction
      for
      the
      purpose
      of
      
      
      recovering
      any
      tax
      properly
      payable
      by
      the
      purchaser
      under
      the
      Act.
      
      
      This
      subsection
      relates
      as
      well
      to
      the
      recovery
      of
      collected
      tax
      and
      
      
      is
      discussed
      further
      with
      reference
      to
      the
      
        Woolworth
      
      case
      below.
      
      
      
      
    
      Subsections
      (4)
      and
      (5)
      have
      no
      application
      as
      they
      relate
      to
      assessments
      
      
      made
      under
      subsection
      (1),
      which,
      in
      my
      view,
      is
      not
      the
      case
      
      
      here.
      Subsection
      (7)
      purports
      to
      maintain
      liability
      for
      tax
      under
      the
      
      
      Act
      despite
      “an
      incorrect
      or
      incomplete
      assessment”
      or
      a
      failure
      to
      
      
      make
      an
      assessment.
      The
      assessments
      herein
      under
      examination
      do
      
      
      not
      appear
      to
      suffer
      from
      incorrectness
      or
      incompleteness
      in
      the
      ordinary
      
      
      sense
      of
      these
      terms.
      A
      similar
      saving
      clause
      is
      found
      in
      section
      
      
      23
      of
      the
      Act
      which
      directs
      that
      an
      assessment
      “shall
      not
      be
      vacated
      
      
      or
      varied
      on
      appeal
      by
      reason
      only
      of
      any
      irregularity,
      informality,
      
      
      omission
      or
      error
      .
      .
      .”.
      Again
      that
      provision
      would
      appear
      to
      have
      
      
      no
      application
      in
      this
      proceeding.
      This
      leaves
      for
      consideration
      only
      
      
      subsection
      (3)
      and
      the
      related
      subsection
      (6)
      of
      section
      13.
      Subsection
      
      
      
      
    
      (3)
      provides:
      
      
      
      
    
        (3)
        The
        Comptroller
        may,
        at
        any.
        time
        he
        considers
        reasonable,
        assess
        or
        
        
        re-assess
        any
        tax
        collectable
        by
        a
        vendor
        or
        any
        tax
        payable
        by
        a
        purchaser
        
        
        under
        this
        Act.
        
        
        
        
      
      By
      inference
      the
      Comptroller
      here
      must
      be
      taken
      to
      have
      found
      it
      
      
      “reasonable”
      to
      assess
      the
      vendor
      Beckers
      in
      May
      1968
      for
      the
      three
      
      
      year
      period
      ending
      October
      31,
      1967,
      and
      in
      June
      1970
      for
      the
      thirty
      
      
      month
      period
      which
      ended
      on
      the
      previous
      April
      30.
      Obviously
      the
      
      
      tax
      was
      not
      then
      “collectable”
      by
      the
      vendor
      or
      anyone
      else
      with
      respect
      
      
      to
      purchases
      and
      sales
      which
      had
      by
      then
      occurred
      in
      the
      respective
      
      
      taxation
      periods.
      By
      reason
      of
      the
      nature
      of
      the
      retail
      business
      
      
      carried
      on
      by
      Beckers,
      the
      identity
      of
      the
      purchaser
      is
      not
      recorded.
      
      
      No
      invoice
      is
      issued
      and
      the
      evidence
      of
      the
      appellant
      is
      unchallenged
      
      
      that
      after
      the
      purchaser
      leaves
      the
      store
      the
      transaction
      cannot
      be
      
      
      verified
      or
      examined.
      Tax
      recovery
      after
      the
      departure
      of
      the
      purchaser
      
      
      is
      out
      of
      the
      question.
      The
      Comptroller
      of
      course
      may
      not
      act
      
      
      arbitrarily
      in
      invoking
      a
      statutory
      provision;
      
        Pioneer
       
        Laundry
       
        &
       
        Dry
      
        Cleaners
       
        Limited
      
      v
      
        MNR,
      
      [1942]
      Ex
      CR
      179;
      [1942]
      CTC
      201;
      2
      DTC
      
      
      595;
      and
      a
      court
      should
      not
      assume
      that
      a
      public
      authority
      in
      a
      given
      
      
      instance
      has
      done
      so.
      I
      therefore
      assume
      that
      the
      Comptroller
      has
      
      
      not
      done
      so
      here
      and
      note
      again
      that
      the
      respondent
      does
      not
      claim
      
      
      the
      assessments
      issued
      under
      subsection
      (3).
      
      
      
      
    
      The
      wording
      of
      subsection
      (3)
      is
      inappropriate
      to
      these
      transactions
      
      
      and
      to
      the
      appellant’s
      position
      in
      trade.
      Furthermore,
      the
      respondent
      
      
      has
      never
      asserted
      that
      the
      assessments
      were
      made
      under
      subsection
      
      
      (3).
      Notwithstanding
      the
      direction
      in
      subsection
      19(1),
      the
      Treasurer
      
      
      has
      not
      delivered
      to
      the
      appellant
      or
      filed
      in
      Court
      a
      reply
      “containing
      
      
      a
      statement
      of
      such
      further
      allegations
      of
      fact
      and
      of
      such
      statutory
      
      
      provisions
      and
      reasons
      as
      he
      intends
      to
      rely
      on”.
      Under
      the
      circumstances
      
      
      described
      in
      the
      evidence
      now
      before
      the
      Court,
      and
      bearing
      
      
      in
      mind
      that
      we
      are
      here
      concerned
      with
      the
      construction
      of
      a
      taxation
      
      
      statute,
      the
      plain
      meaning
      to
      be
      accorded
      to
      subsection
      (3)
      in
      
      
      my
      view
      requires
      the
      Comptroller
      to
      assess
      for
      “tax
      collectable
      by
      
      
      a
      vendor”
      and
      “tax
      payable
      by
      a
      purchaser”
      at
      a
      time
      when
      the
      assessor
      
      
      can
      demonstrate
      that
      the
      tax
      was
      collectable
      in
      the
      case
      of
      
      
      the
      vendor.
      An
      interpretation
      of
      subsection
      (3)
      which
      would
      allow
      the
      
      
      Comptroller
      to
      assess
      a
      vendor
      for
      “collectable”
      tax,
      without
      any
      reference
      
      
      to
      the
      purchaser
      or
      the
      special
      circumstances
      wherein
      the
      vendor
      
      
      may
      have
      chosen
      to
      risk
      liability,
      may
      open
      up
      the
      question
      of
      the
      
      
      constitutionality
      of
      the
      subsection.
      Where
      alternative
      interpretations
      
      
      are
      available,
      the
      one
      leaving
      the
      provision
      constitutional
      should
      be
      
      
      adopted.
      
        McKay
      
      v
      
        The
       
        Queen
      
      (1965),
      53
      DLR
      (2d)
      532
      at
      536-7,
      per
      
      
      Cartwright,
      J.
      A
      preferable
      interpretation
      of
      subsection
      (3)
      is
      one
      that
      
      
      limits
      its
      application
      to
      circumstances
      wherein
      a
      vendor
      has
      by
      improper
      
      
      conduct
      or
      neglect,
      put
      the
      purchaser
      and
      indeed
      the
      transaction
      
      
      beyond
      the
      reach
      of
      the
      act
      and
      thus
      has
      rendered
      himself
      
      
      liable
      under
      subsection
      (3).
      
      
      
      
    
      This
      is
      a
      taxing
      statute
      and
      thus
      calls
      for
      a
      strict
      construction.
      
        Rex
      
        v
       
        Gooderham
       
        &
       
        Worts
       
        Ltd
      
      (1928),
      62
      OLR
      218.
      Unless
      the
      statute
      in
      
      
      question
      otherwise
      provides,
      the
      onus
      is
      upon
      the
      Crown
      to
      show
      
      
      that
      the
      person
      assessed
      comes
      within
      the
      taxing
      provisions.
      
        The
      
        Attorney-General
      
      v
      
        The
       
        Earl
       
        of
       
        Selborne,
      
      [1902]
      1
      KB
      388:
      The
      respondent
      
      
      here
      has
      not
      met
      the
      onus
      with
      reference
      to
      subsection
      (3).
      
      
      For
      these
      reasons
      subsection
      (3)
      is
      not
      available
      to
      the
      Comptroller
      
      
      in
      the
      circumstances
      before
      the
      Court.
      Alternatively,
      if
      subsection
      (3)
      
      
      has
      some
      application,
      it
      becomes
      necessary
      to
      consider
      whether
      the
      
      
      respondent
      is
      not,
      as
      will
      be
      discussed
      later,
      estopped
      from
      objecting
      
      
      to
      the
      method
      and
      amount
      of
      remittance
      by
      the
      vendor
      after
      receiving
      
      
      its
      remittance
      on
      a
      known
      basis
      for
      a
      36
      and
      a
      30
      month
      period.
      In
      
      
      any
      case,
      I
      do
      not
      find
      subsection
      (3)
      applicable
      to
      these
      assessments.
      
      
      
      
    
      I
      return
      to
      subsection
      (5)
      which,
      as
      has
      been
      said,
      is
      conditional
      
      
      in
      its
      application
      upon
      a
      notice
      being
      served
      under
      subsection
      (4)
      
      
      which,
      in
      turn,
      is
      operative
      only
      if
      the
      assessment
      in
      question
      is
      made
      
      
      under
      subsection
      (1).
      Since
      subsection
      (5)
      is
      the
      only
      provision
      in
      
      
      the
      assessing
      section
      which
      purports
      to
      ‘‘constitute[s]
      
        prima
       
        facie
      
      
      
      evidence”
      that
      the
      amount
      assessed
      is
      owing,
      and,
      since
      it
      is
      the
      only
      
      
      provision
      purporting
      to
      place
      on
      the
      vendor
      the
      “onus
      of
      proving
      otherwise”,
      
      
      the
      appellant
      Beckers
      is
      not
      under
      any
      special
      statutory
      burden
      
      
      to
      demonstrate
      that
      the
      assessment
      is
      defective
      or
      that
      the
      amount
      
      
      owing
      is
      different
      from
      that
      claimed
      in
      the
      assessment.
      Reference
      will
      
      
      be
      later
      made
      to
      the
      prosecutorial
      provisions
      of
      the
      Act
      where
      the
      
      
      question
      of
      onus
      again
      arises,
      but
      nowhere
      other
      than
      in
      subsection
      
      
      
      
    
      (5)
      is
      an
      onus
      of
      proof
      placed
      upon
      a
      vendor.
      
      
      
      
    
      I
      turn
      now
      to
      section
      14
      which
      authorizes
      the
      Comptroller
      to
      assess
      
      
      a
      vendor
      where
      “in
      the
      opinion
      of
      the
      Comptroller
      a
      vendor
      or
      a
      purchaser
      
      
      is
      attempting
      to
      avoid
      payment
      of
      tax
      imposed
      by
      this
      Act
      .
      .
      
      
      
      
    
      No
      allegation
      has
      been
      made
      and
      no
      evidence
      has
      been
      led
      to
      show
      
      
      that
      the
      vendor
      is
      “attempting
      to
      avoid
      payment”
      of
      the
      tax
      imposed
      
      
      by
      the
      Act.
      The
      contest
      between
      the
      parties
      is
      as
      to
      the
      appropriate
      
      
      formula
      to
      be
      adopted
      for
      the
      calculation
      of
      tax,
      if
      any,
      remittable
      by
      
      
      the
      vendor
      over
      and
      above
      that
      already
      remitted
      by
      the
      vendor
      pursuant
      
      
      to
      its
      self-assessment
      procedures.
      The
      evidence
      is
      clear
      that
      
      
      the
      respondent
      is
      not
      aware
      of
      any
      collected
      and
      unremitted
      tax.
      It
      
      
      is
      also
      clear
      that
      the
      respondent
      is
      not
      asserting
      that
      in
      specific
      instances
      
      
      of
      transactions
      of
      purchase
      and
      sale
      the
      vendor
      neglected,
      
      
      or
      refused
      to
      collect
      the
      tax
      established
      under
      this
      Act.
      It
      therefore
      
      
      appears
      that
      the
      provisions
      of
      section
      14
      are
      likewise
      inapplicable
      
      
      in
      these
      circumstances.
      
      
      
      
    
      Finally
      the
      Act
      provides
      in
      section
      29
      for
      a
      civil
      action
      by
      the
      Treasurer
      
      
      to
      recover
      any
      tax
      collectable
      or
      payable
      under
      this
      Act.
      Elsewhere
      
      
      in
      the
      Statute
      the
      Comptroller
      is
      authorized
      for
      the
      further
      protection
      
      
      of
      the
      revenue
      to
      be
      collected
      under
      the
      Act,
      to
      require
      any
      
      
      vendor
      to
      deposit
      cash
      or
      other
      security
      with
      the
      Treasurer,
      and
      which
      
      
      security
      may
      be
      applied
      by
      the
      Comptroller
      to
      the
      amount
      that
      ‘‘should
      
      
      have
      been
      collected,
      remitted
      or
      paid
      by
      the
      vendor”.
      
      
      
      
    
      These
      and
      similar
      provisions
      already
      mentioned
      are
      part
      of
      a
      tax
      
      
      collection
      plan
      established
      under
      the
      Act
      to
      protect
      the
      Public
      Revenue
      
      
      in
      the
      course
      of
      the
      operation
      of
      the
      Statute
      and
      not
      as
      an
      independent
      
      
      scheme
      of
      taxation
      to
      tax
      a
      vendor
      without
      reference
      to
      any
      intended
      
      
      impact
      on
      the
      purchaser
      in
      the
      transaction.
      The
      constitutional
      aspect
      
      
      of
      this
      Statute
      will
      be
      examined
      later.
      Similarly,
      the
      Act
      creates
      a
      
      
      system
      of
      fines
      to
      prevent
      breaches
      of
      the
      Act
      by
      anyone
      including
      
      
      the
      vendor.
      The
      fine
      may
      be
      equal
      to
      the
      amount
      of
      taxes
      which
      should
      
      
      have
      been
      collected.
      Again
      this
      is
      part
      of
      a
      provincial
      taxing
      Statute
      
      
      aimed
      at
      collecting
      taxes
      at
      the
      situs
      of
      the
      purchase
      from
      the
      purchaser
      
      
      through
      the
      vendor
      as
      the
      collecting
      agent
      of
      the
      province.
      
      
      In.
      passing
      it
      should
      be
      noted
      that
      by
      section
      36
      of
      the
      Statute,
      the
      
      
      onus
      in
      any
      prosecution
      thereunder
      of
      proving
      “that
      the
      tax
      was
      paid,
      
      
      collected
      or
      remitted
      .
      .
      .”
      is
      upon
      the
      accused.
      There
      is
      no
      mention
      
      
      anywhere
      in
      the
      Statute
      of
      onus
      on
      a
      vendor
      to
      show
      that
      any
      amount
      
      
      was
      “not
      collectable”.
      Furthermore,
      no
      proceedings
      have
      been
      
      
      launched
      against
      Beckers
      throughout
      the
      taxation
      periods,
      or
      thereafter,
      
      
      for
      any
      breach
      of
      the
      Act.
      
      
      
      
    
      Pursuant
      to
      section
      39
      of
      the
      Statute,
      regulations
      were
      issued
      by
      
      
      the
      Lieutenant
      Governor
      in
      Council
      “prescribing
      the
      method
      of
      collection
      
      
      and
      remittance”
      of
      tax.
      The
      principal
      regulation
      directly
      applicable
      
      
      to
      these
      proceedings
      is
      section
      13
      (O
      Reg
      232/61
      as
      amended).
      Section
      
      
      13
      requires
      that
      every
      vendor
      shall
      keep
      books
      of
      account,
      records
      
      
      and
      documents
      sufficient
      to
      furnish
      the
      Comptroller
      with
      particulars
      
      
      of,
      
        inter
       
        alia,
      
      sales
      of
      tangible
      personal
      property
      and
      the
      amount
      of
      
      
      tax
      collected.
      Section
      12
      of
      the
      regulations
      directs
      that
      a
      vendor
      shall
      
      
      “charge
      the
      tax
      to
      be
      collected
      on
      each
      taxable
      sale
      separately
      from
      
      
      the
      sale
      price
      and
      shall
      show
      such
      tax
      separately
      from
      the
      sale
      price
      
      
      on
      any
      record,
      receipt,
      bill,
      invoice,
      ticket
      or
      other
      document
      kept
      or
      
      
      issued
      by
      the
      vendor”.
      
      
      
      
    
      The
      records
      of
      the
      respondent
      include
      an
      audit
      report
      dated
      October
      
      
      28,
      1970
      and
      signed
      by
      the
      departmental
      auditor,
      group
      leader
      and
      
      
      supervisor.
      Box
      6
      of
      this
      report
      refers
      to
      the
      tax
      payers
      records
      as
      
      
      “good”
      with
      the
      associated
      comment
      ‘except
      that
      the
      cash
      register
      
      
      tapes
      which
      support
      the
      daily
      sales
      for
      each
      store
      are
      not
      retained”.
      
      
      The
      principal
      witnesses
      for
      the
      respondent,
      including
      Mr
      Fisher,
      a
      
      
      departmental
      auditor
      and
      one
      of
      the
      signatories
      to
      the
      above
      mentioned
      
      
      report,
      agreed
      that
      the
      retention
      of
      the
      cash
      register
      tapes
      
      
      after
      they
      had
      been
      incorporated
      into
      the
      appellant’s
      computer
      and
      
      
      earlier
      records,
      would
      have
      added
      nothing
      to
      the
      respondent’s
      knowledge
      
      
      of
      the
      transactions
      and
      would
      not
      have
      afforded
      any
      better
      basis
      
      
      for
      accounting
      for
      the
      tax
      collected
      and
      remitted
      by
      the
      vendor
      Beckers.
      
      
      By
      a
      letter
      from
      the
      respondent
      to
      Beckers
      dated
      November
      18,
      
      
      1970
      a
      reference
      is
      also
      made
      to
      the
      retention
      of
      these
      cash
      register
      
      
      slips
      until
      permission
      for
      destruction
      is
      obtained.
      By
      the
      time
      this
      
      
      letter
      was
      written,
      the
      taxation
      periods
      were
      completed
      as
      were
      the
      
      
      audits
      and
      assessments
      thereof
      by
      the
      respondent.
      In
      an
      earlier
      letter
      
      
      from
      the
      respondent
      to
      Beckers,
      dated
      January
      31,
      1968,
      during
      the
      
      
      currency
      of
      the
      taxation
      periods
      in
      question
      and
      prior
      at
      least
      to
      the
      
      
      audit
      of
      the
      second
      period,
      the
      respondent
      made
      no
      mention
      of
      any
      
      
      failure
      by
      Beckers
      to
      maintain
      adequate
      records
      and
      books
      of
      entry.
      
      
      
      
    
      Returning
      to
      the
      audit
      report
      of
      October
      28,
      1970
      a
      further
      reference
      
      
      is
      made
      under
      the
      heading
      “tax
      payers
      compliance
      with
      Act”
      to
      the
      
      
      vendor’s
      failure
      “to
      account
      for
      tax
      correctly
      assessed
      on:
      (1)
      taxable
      
      
      Sales,
      particularly
      soft
      drinks
      and
      under
      21
      cent
      items”.
      The
      report
      
      
      further
      observes
      that
      excess
      hours
      were
      involved
      in
      this
      audit
      because
      
      
      of
      complexities
      and
      necessity
      to
      make
      ‘‘physical
      tests
      for
      seven
      
      
      day
      periods
      at
      ten
      stores
      .
      .
      .”.
      It
      is
      evident
      from
      this
      internal
      report
      
      
      that
      the
      respondent
      was
      endeavouring
      to
      assess
      Beckers
      not
      with
      
      
      reference
      to
      Beckers’
      records
      and
      tax
      remittance.
      forms,
      but
      on
      the
      
      
      basis
      of
      sample
      tests
      made
      after
      the
      close
      of
      the
      taxation
      period
      in
      
      
      question,
      whereby
      the
      respondent
      purported
      to
      deduce
      that
      Beckers
      
      
      had
      failed
      to
      collect
      the
      proper
      taxes.
      The
      respondent
      was
      unable
      
      
      to
      direct
      the
      Court
      to
      any
      provision
      in
      the
      Statute
      or
      the
      regulations
      
      
      which
      authorized
      the
      assessment
      of
      a
      vendor
      on
      the
      basis
      of
      tests,
      
      
      samples
      or
      observations
      made
      by
      the
      Comptroller
      and
      particularly
      
      
      when
      made
      after
      the
      expiration
      of
      the
      audit
      period
      in
      question
      and
      
      
      long
      after
      the
      completion
      of
      the
      sales
      transactions
      under
      review.
      
      
      
      
    
      In
      essence
      the
      parties
      hereto,
      recognizing
      the
      difficulty
      if
      not
      the
      
      
      impossibility
      or
      at
      least
      the
      economic
      impossibility
      of
      a
      vendor
      in
      the
      
      
      position
      of
      Beckers,
      maintaining
      procedures
      including
      record
      keeping
      
      
      procedures
      which
      would
      be
      self-auditing
      or
      susceptible
      to
      retroactive
      
      
      audit,
      adopted
      a
      method
      of
      calculation
      which
      produced
      an
      amount
      
      
      of
      tax
      remittable
      by
      the
      vendor
      in
      respect
      of
      all
      its
      sales
      in
      a
      given
      
      
      period.
      The
      formula
      adopted
      produced
      the
      taxes
      to
      be
      remitted
      by
      
      
      applying
      to
      the
      gross
      sales
      of
      the
      appellant
      one
      or
      more
      percentages
      
      
      relating
      to
      the
      different
      categories
      of
      sale
      transactions.
      For
      example,
      
      
      the
      amount
      of
      tax
      to
      be
      collected
      and
      remitted
      with
      reference
      to
      soft
      
      
      drinks
      was
      determined
      by
      applying
      a
      predetermined
      percentage
      to
      
      
      gross
      sales
      of
      taxable
      goods
      and
      to
      the
      resulting
      amount
      was
      applied
      
      
      the
      tax
      rate
      from
      time
      to
      time
      applicable.
      The
      same
      procedure
      was
      
      
      adopted
      with
      reference
      to
      the
      tax
      remittable
      on
      sales
      of
      taxable
      goods,
      
      
      so
      as
      to
      make
      allowance
      for
      sale
      transactions
      where
      the
      gross
      price
      
      
      was
      less
      than
      21
      cents
      and
      therefore
      not
      taxable.
      
      
      
      
    
      Beckers
      established
      these
      ratios
      in
      the
      first
      instance
      pursuant
      to
      
      
      a
      self-assessment
      procedure
      and
      remitted
      the
      greater
      of
      the
      amount
      
      
      determined
      by
      the
      self-assessment
      formula
      or
      the
      monies
      reported
      
      
      as
      tax
      collections
      by
      the
      branch
      managers
      to
      the
      head
      office
      of
      Beckers.
      
      
      In
      February
      of
      1968
      the
      respondent
      adopted
      a
      different
      set
      of
      ratios
      
      
      or
      percentages
      after
      analysing
      the
      purchase
      records
      of
      50
      stores
      
      
      selected
      at
      random.
      This
      calculation
      was
      made
      with
      respect
      to
      the
      
      
      taxation
      period
      commencing
      November
      1,
      1964
      and
      ending
      October
      
      
      31,
      1967
      and
      thus
      was
      made
      after
      the
      close
      of
      the
      period
      under
      assessment.
      
      
      Beckers
      had
      81
      stores
      at
      the
      beginning
      of
      the
      tax
      period
      and
      
      
      156
      stores
      at
      the
      end
      of
      the
      period.
      The
      assessment
      was
      then
      produced
      
      
      by
      subtracting
      the
      tax
      remitted
      by
      Beckers
      pursuant
      to
      its
      
      
      collection
      records
      and
      self-assessment
      formula,
      from
      the
      amount
      of
      
      
      tax
      collectable
      as
      calculated
      by
      the
      application
      of
      the
      respondent’s
      
      
      formula
      to
      gross
      sales
      of
      taxable
      goods
      developed
      in
      1968.
      
      
      
      
    
      The
      respondent
      in
      mid-1970
      surveyed
      ten
      of
      Beckers’
      stores
      and
      
      
      developed
      percentages
      or
      ratios
      as
      above
      which
      the
      respondent
      then
      
      
      applied
      to
      the
      second
      assessment
      period,
      that
      is
      the
      30
      month
      period
      
      
      commencing
      November
      1,
      1967
      and
      ending
      April
      30,
      1970.
      Again
      the
      
      
      assessment
      issue
      was
      the
      difference
      between
      the
      remittances
      made
      
      
      by
      the
      vendor
      Beckers
      under
      its
      self-assessment
      formula
      and
      the
      
      
      amount
      of
      collectable
      tax
      produced
      by
      the
      formula
      evolved
      as
      stated
      
      
      in
      1970.
      This
      assessment
      formula
      was
      also
      applied
      retrospectively
      to
      
      
      the
      second
      taxation
      period
      then
      closed.
      In
      each
      case
      there
      were
      subsequent
      
      
      adjustments
      but
      the
      foregoing
      describes
      the
      plan
      followed
      
      
      by
      the
      respondent
      in
      making
      these
      two
      assessments.
      
      
      
      
    
      A
      great
      deal
      of
      evidence
      was
      led
      by
      both
      parties
      concerning
      proper
      
      
      techniques
      of
      sampling,
      appropriate
      time
      bases
      for
      analysis
      of
      purchases,
      
      
      the
      appropriate
      sampling
      techniques
      for
      determining
      revenues,
      
      
      sales
      and
      categories
      of
      sales,
      as
      well
      as
      the
      appropriateness
      or
      inappropriateness
      
      
      of
      the
      statistical
      and
      analytical
      approaches
      of
      both
      
      
      the
      appellant
      and
      the
      respondent.
      In
      the
      view
      taken
      of
      these
      assessments,
      
      
      conclusions
      need
      not
      be
      drawn
      as
      to
      whether
      such
      techniques
      
      
      are
      open
      to
      either
      party
      under
      this
      Statute
      in
      the
      circumstances
      of
      
      
      this
      proceeding.
      
      
      
      
    
      The
      case
      of
      
        F
      
      1/V
      
        Woolworth
       
        &
       
        Co
       
        Ltd
      
      v
      
        Her
       
        Majesty
       
        the
       
        Queen
       
        in
      
        the
       
        right
       
        of
       
        the
       
        Province
       
        of
       
        British
       
        Columbia,
       
        supra
      
      is
      remarkably
      apt.
      
      
      That
      case
      likewise
      involved
      an
      appeal
      by
      a
      vendor
      against
      an
      assessment
      
      
      for
      tax
      liability
      under
      a
      British
      Columbia
      Statute
      very
      similar
      to
      
      
      the
      Act
      here
      in
      question.
      The
      appellant
      vendor,
      by
      reason
      of
      the
      nature
      
      
      of
      its
      business
      (as
      was
      the
      case
      here)
      did
      not
      issue
      individual
      itemised
      
      
      invoices
      for
      each
      sale,
      but
      rather
      relied
      upon
      a
      cash
      register
      
      
      tape
      and
      a
      system
      of
      coupons
      which
      the
      cashier
      used
      to
      identify
      the
      
      
      amount
      of
      tax
      recovered
      from
      the
      purchaser
      on
      each
      sale.
      The
      records
      
      
      of
      the
      appellant
      did
      not
      assist
      an
      audit
      made
      by
      the
      tax
      collector
      to
      
      
      determine
      the
      amount
      of
      tax
      which
      should
      have
      been
      collected
      on
      
      
      each
      transaction,
      the
      amount
      of
      tax
      in
      fact
      collected,
      and
      the
      accuracy
      
      
      of
      the
      amount
      of
      the
      tax
      remitted
      by
      the
      appellant
      vendor.
      As
      was
      
      
      stated
      by
      Rand,
      J
      at
      740:
      
      
      
      
    
        In
        the
        result,
        with
        such
        a
        recording
        system,
        it
        was
        impossible,
        from
        the
        
        
        tape
        of
        the
        register,
        to
        make
        any
        check
        of
        the
        taxes
        collected
        based
        on
        the
        
        
        individual
        sales.
        
        
        
        
      
      The
      respondent
      tax
      collector
      assessed
      a
      three
      year
      taxation
      period
      
      
      retrospectively
      after
      analyzing
      the
      returns
      for
      each
      of
      the
      three
      taxation
      
      
      years
      and
      comparing
      the
      ratio
      between
      taxes
      remitted
      and
      total
      
      
      sales
      in
      these
      years,
      with
      the
      same
      ratio
      during
      comparable
      periods
      
      
      in
      a
      period
      subsequent
      to
      the
      close
      of
      the
      taxation
      period
      under
      assessment.
      
      
      In
      the
      result,
      the
      assessor
      issued
      an
      assessment
      based
      upon
      
      
      the
      difference
      between
      these
      two
      percentages
      or
      ratios.
      
      
      
      
    
      It
      should
      be
      observed
      that
      there
      is
      significant
      factual
      difference
      
      
      between
      the
      
        Woolworth
      
      case
      and
      the
      situation
      before
      this
      Court.
      Beckers
      
      
      proceeded
      prospectively
      to
      collect
      and
      remit
      tax
      after
      an
      arrangement
      
      
      had
      been
      established
      with
      the
      representatives
      of
      the
      respondent
      
      
      to
      remit
      tax
      based
      upon
      a
      self-assessment
      technique
      utilizing
      percentages
      
      
      of
      taxable
      sales.
      This
      technique
      was
      predicated
      upon
      assumed
      
      
      ratios
      of
      tax
      exempt
      sales
      to
      total
      sales
      of
      taxable
      items;
      for
      
      
      example,
      the
      ratio
      of
      soft
      drink
      sales
      and
      other
      sales
      of
      items
      under
      
      
      21
      cents,
      to
      total
      sales
      of
      taxable
      items.
      The
      stores
      managers
      remitted
      
      
      to
      Beckers’
      Head
      Office
      on
      a
      daily
      basis,
      as
      has
      been
      stated
      above,
      
      
      the
      tax
      actually
      collected
      according
      to
      the
      manager’s
      report.
      Where
      
      
      the
      self-assessment
      procedure
      produced
      for
      the
      branch
      store
      in
      question
      
      
      a
      higher
      amount
      of
      tax
      than
      that
      remitted
      by
      the
      manager,
      the
      
      
      former
      was
      charged
      against
      the
      branch
      and
      remitted
      by
      Beckers
      to
      
      
      the
      respondent.
      In
      other
      words,
      where
      the
      self-assessment
      calculation
      
      
      made
      each
      month
      during
      the
      taxation
      periods
      in
      question
      produced
      
      
      a
      greater
      amount
      of
      tax
      than
      that
      paid
      over
      by
      the
      branch
      to
      Beckers’
      
      
      Head
      Office,
      Beckers
      remitted
      to
      the
      respondent
      the
      greater
      sum.
      
      
      Differences
      arose
      between
      the
      parties
      to
      this
      proceeding
      because
      
      
      of
      the
      retrospective
      establishment
      by
      the
      respondent
      of
      percentages
      
      
      or
      ratios
      of
      taxable
      transactions,
      after
      the
      respondent
      had
      throughout
      
      
      the
      period
      knowingly
      accepted
      from
      the
      appellant
      tax
      remittances
      
      
      based
      upon
      the
      prospective
      understanding
      between
      the
      principal
      (the
      
      
      respondent)
      and
      its
      agent
      (the
      appellant).
      
      
      
      
    
      In
      the
      
        Woolworth
      
      case
      the
      parties
      agreed
      that
      the
      correct
      amount
      
      
      of
      tax
      has
      been
      collected
      at
      source
      by
      the
      appellant.
      Here
      the
      respondent’s
      
      
      auditors
      testified
      that
      in
      some
      instances
      the
      appellant’s
      
      
      staff
      had
      failed
      to
      collect
      tax,
      or
      collected
      the
      wrong
      amount;
      and
      
      
      in
      other
      instances
      the
      correct
      amount
      had
      been
      collected
      but
      was
      
      
      not
      recorded
      as
      tax
      collected
      on
      the
      cash
      register
      tapes.
      In
      the
      
        Woolworth
      
      
      
      case
      the
      Court
      confirmed
      an
      assessment
      made
      under
      a
      section
      
      
      almost
      identical
      with
      subsection
      13(2)
      of
      the
      Ontario
      Statute
      but
      with
      
      
      one
      significant
      difference
      mentioned
      below.
      It
      is
      helpful
      in
      understanding
      
      
      the
      difference
      between
      that
      case
      and
      the
      one
      now
      before
      
      
      this
      Court,
      to
      refer
      to
      the
      judgment
      of
      the
      British
      Columbia
      Court
      of
      
      
      Appeal
      delivered
      by
      Coady,
      JA
      
        Fie
       
        Social
       
        Services
       
        Tax
       
        Act;
       
        Re
       
        F
       
        W
      
        Woolworth
       
        Company
       
        Limited
      
      (1956),
      18
      WWR
      322
      at
      326:
      
      
      
      
    
        The
        appellant
        admits
        that
        the
        tax
        was
        collected
        on
        such
        sales
        from
        the
        
        
        purchaser,
        and
        the
        tax,
        it
        must
        be
        kept
        in
        mind,
        is
        a
        tax
        imposed
        on
        the
        
        
        purchaser
        and
        not
        on
        the
        vendor.
        It
        seems
        to
        me,
        as
        the
        learned
        trial
        judge
        
        
        has
        held,
        that
        whether
        under
        the
        Act
        the
        tax
        is
        collectable
        on
        15
        and
        16
        
        
        cents
        sales
        or
        not,
        that
        is
        not
        a
        matter
        that
        has
        to
        be
        determined
        in
        these
        
        
        proceedings.
        The
        fact
        is
        that
        the
        appellant
        did,
        as
        agent
        for
        the
        Minister
        
        
        of
        Finance,
        collect
        such
        tax
        on
        such
        sales,
        and
        the
        commissioner,
        in
        making
        
        
        an
        assessment,
        included
        that
        tax
        already
        collected
        from
        the
        purchaser
        by
        
        
        the
        appellant.
        If
        the
        appellant
        had
        not
        collected
        a
        tax
        on
        these
        sales,
        and
        
        
        the
        commissioner
        contended
        that
        he
        should
        have,
        then
        it
        would
        be
        open
        
        
        to
        the
        appellant
        to
        contend
        that
        the
        Act
        did
        not
        authorize
        the
        collection
        
        
        of
        a
        tax
        on
        these
        items
        and
        consequently
        the
        assessment
        was
        invalid.
        But
        
        
        the
        tax
        has
        been
        collected
        and
        it
        is
        part
        of
        the
        amount
        which
        has
        been
        
        
        assessed,
        and
        in
        my
        view
        the
        appellant
        cannot
        in
        these
        proceedings
        question
        
        
        the
        assessment
        on
        that
        basis.
        
        
        
        
      
      The
      evidence
      in
      this
      appeal
      includes,
      as
      I
      have
      said,
      testimony
      
      
      from
      the
      auditors
      for
      the
      respondent
      that
      in
      reviewing
      the
      second
      
      
      assessment
      period,
      observations
      were
      made
      by
      their
      representatives,
      
      
      and
      in
      one
      instance
      by
      the
      auditor
      himself,
      of
      failure
      by
      Beckers
      to
      
      
      collect
      the
      correct
      amount
      of
      tax
      and
      failure
      to
      post
      the
      tax
      collected
      
      
      as
      such
      on
      the
      cash
      register
      tapes.
      Despite
      the
      presence
      of
      two
      audit
      
      
      representatives
      of
      the
      respondent
      in
      ten
      Beckers
      stores
      during
      seven
      
      
      day
      periods
      in
      December
      1970
      and
      January
      1971
      for
      the
      purpose
      of
      
      
      checking
      oh
      the
      procedures
      followed
      by
      Beckers’
      staff
      in
      complying
      
      
      with
      the:
      Statute,
      no
      record
      was
      made
      by
      such
      representatives
      of
      the
      
      
      actual
      sales
      made
      during
      their
      presence
      in
      the
      stores,
      of
      the
      price
      
      
      paid
      by
      the
      purchaser,
      the
      tax
      properly
      collectable
      in
      respect
      thereof
      
      
      by
      the
      vendor
      from
      the
      purchaser,
      the
      amount
      of
      tax
      actually
      collected
      
      
      by
      the
      vendor,
      and
      the
      amount
      of
      cash
      and
      tax
      posted
      on
      the
      cash
      
      
      register
      tapes
      by
      the
      vendor’s
      clerk.
      The
      audit
      witnesses
      of
      the
      respondent
      
      
      testified,
      when
      asked
      by
      appellant
      counsel
      if
      they
      had
      any
      
      
      record
      of
      tax
      collected
      by
      the
      appellant
      and
      not
      remitted,
      that
      they
      
      
      had
      no
      such
      record.
      In
      the
      
        Woolworth
      
      case,
      the
      parties
      agreed
      that
      
      
      the
      appropriate
      tax
      was
      collected
      and
      the
      appellant
      did
      not
      seem
      to
      
      
      challenge
      seriously
      the
      mathematics
      applied
      by
      the
      respondent
      tax
      
      
      collector
      to
      determine
      the
      amount
      of
      tax
      which
      had
      been
      collected
      
      
      and
      should
      have
      been
      remitted.
      Furthermore,
      there
      does
      not
      seem
      
      
      to
      be
      in
      the
      British
      Columbia
      proceeding
      the
      subjective
      difficulties
      
      
      in
      determining
      the
      tax
      applicable
      to
      a
      variety
      of
      sales
      which
      are
      here
      
      
      present,
      and
      which
      were
      mentioned
      earlier.
      
      
      
      
    
      The
      British
      Columbia
      Statute
      has
      one
      other
      significant
      difference
      
      
      from
      the
      Ontario
      Act.
      In
      subsection
      25(2)
      of
      the
      BC
      Statute
      (the
      Ontario
      
      
      subsection
      13(2)
      discussed
      above)
      the
      Commissioner
      is
      authorized
      
      
      to
      calculate
      the
      tax
      collected
      or
      
        due
       
        .
      
      .
      .”
      and
      pursuant
      to
      that
      authority
      
      
      the
      respondent
      in
      the
      
        Woolworth
      
      case
      did
      calculate
      the
      tax
      due
      
      
      from
      the
      vendor
      notwithstanding
      the
      fact
      there
      was
      no
      physical
      record
      
      
      that
      the
      tax
      had
      been
      collected
      by
      the
      vendor.
      Subsection
      13(2)
      in
      the
      
      
      Ontario
      Statute
      limits
      the
      assessment
      by
      the
      Comptroller
      thereunder
      
      
      to
      a
      calculation
      of
      the
      ‘tax
      collected
      by
      the
      vendor’’.
      The
      section
      
      
      goes
      on
      to
      refer
      to
      the
      purchaser
      but
      does
      not
      purport
      to
      make
      the
      
      
      vendor
      liable
      under
      an
      assessment
      pursuant
      to
      that
      subsection
      for
      
      
      taxes
      payable
      by
      or
      due
      from
      the
      purchaser,
      but
      not
      collected
      by
      the
      
      
      vendor.
      It
      may
      be
      that
      this
      feature
      was
      omitted
      from
      the
      Ontario
      Statute
      
      
      to
      avoid
      a
      constitutional
      contest
      concerning
      the
      provincial
      right
      so
      
      
      to
      provide.
      The
      constitutional
      issue
      was
      not
      raised
      in
      the
      
        Woolworth
      
      
      
      case.
      
      
      
      
    
      In
      disposing
      of
      the
      appeal
      from
      the
      assessment,
      the
      Supreme
      Court
      
      
      confirmed
      the
      assessment,
      two
      of
      the
      majority
      doing
      so
      by
      reason
      
      
      of
      a
      finding
      of
      compliance
      with
      the
      Statute
      in
      question
      by
      the
      Commissioner
      
      
      and
      the
      third
      agreeing
      with
      the
      Court
      of
      Appeal
      of
      British
      
      
      Columbia
      that
      the
      operative
      section
      comparable
      to
      the
      Ontario
      subsection
      
      
      13(2)
      was
      indeed
      retrospective
      because
      of
      its
      procedural
      
      
      character.
      Two
      members
      of
      the
      Court
      dissented
      on
      the
      issue
      of
      re-
      
      
      trospectivity
      of
      subsection
      25(2).
      
      
      
      
    
      The
      judgment
      of
      Rand,
      J
      concurred
      in
      by
      Fauteux,
      J
      included
      the
      
      
      following
      passage
      at
      743-5
      of
      the
      report:
      
      
      
      
    
        What
        is
        confused
        is
        the
        nature
        of
        the
        claim:
        it
        is
        taken
        to
        be
        an
        action
        for
        
        
        taxes.
        But
        it
        is
        not
        such
        an
        action
        at
        all:
        in
        substance,
        it
        is
        the
        simple
        claim
        
        
        by
        a
        principal
        against
        his
        agent
        for
        money
        had
        and
        received
        by
        the
        latter.
        
        
        nothing
        more;
        and
        it
        is
        agreed
        that
        the
        taxes
        were
        properly
        collected.
        In
        
        
        determining
        the
        amount
        we
        are
        at
        large
        with
        the
        statute
        and
        the
        long-
        
        
        established
        principles
        governing
        an
        agent’s
        obligation
        to
        account.
        
        
        
        
      
        It
        should
        be
        emphasized
        that
        the
        statute
        creates
        two
        distinct
        liabilities:
        
        
        that
        of
        the
        purchaser
        of
        goods
        to
        pay
        the
        tax,
        and
        that
        of
        the
        seller
        to
        
        
        collect
        and
        remit.
        Throughout
        the
        provisions
        these
        obligations
        are
        dealt
        
        
        with
        as
        disparate
        both
        substantively
        and
        procedurally
        and
        different
        remedies
        
        
        are
        provided
        for
        their
        enforcement.
        
        
        
        
      
        section
        13
        deals
        with
        the
        recovery
        of
        collected
        taxes
        from
        a
        seller.
        As
        
        
        can
        be
        seen
        from
        the
        facts
        of
        this
        dispute,
        the
        determination
        of
        the
        amount
        
        
        after
        some
        time
        has
        elapsed
        from
        the
        collection
        will
        necessarily
        depend
        
        
        
        
      
        upon
        the
        seller’s
        records:
        and
        if
        these
        are
        such
        as
        do
        not
        furnish
        all
        the
        
        
        essential
        evidence
        there
        must
        necessarily
        be
        something
        less
        than
        mathematical
        
        
        correctness.
        Here
        is
        a
        good
        example
        of
        a
        business,
        in
        its
        own
        interests,
        
        
        adopting
        a
        mode
        of
        recording
        transactions
        which
        prevents
        a
        strictly
        
        
        accurate
        check
        and
        which
        puts
        the
        Government
        at
        the
        risk
        of
        the
        performance
        
        
        of
        duty
        by
        clerks.
        
        
        
        
      
        To
        meet
        that
        known
        situation,
        s
        13
        enables
        the
        Commissioner,
        once
        on
        
        
        reasonable
        grounds
        he
        has
        come
        to
        the
        conclusion
        that
        a
        seller
        has
        failed
        
        
        to
        “make
        a
        return
        or
        remittance
        under
        this
        Act,
        or
        if
        his
        returns
        are
        not
        
        
        substantiated
        by
        his
        records”
        to
        make
        “an
        estimate
        of
        the
        amount
        of
        the
        
        
        tax
        collected”
        and
        that
        estimate
        is
        declared
        to
        be,
        prima
        facie,
        the
        amount
        
        
        of
        the
        collected
        taxes
        and
        to
        be
        due
        and
        owing,
        with
        the
        onus
        of
        proving
        
        
        ‘otherwise’
        placed
        upon
        the
        seller.
        It
        is
        unnecessary
        to
        point
        out
        that
        the
        
        
        seller
        is
        in
        possession
        of
        all
        the
        available
        facts,
        that
        they
        are
        his
        facts,
        and
        
        
        that
        if
        they
        can
        be
        used
        to
        falsify
        the
        estimate
        he
        is
        the
        person
        possessing
        
        
        the
        best,
        if
        not
        the
        only,
        means
        of
        doing
        it.
        
        
        
        
      
        Under
        the
        provisions
        of
        s
        25,
        where
        it
        appears
        “that
        this
        Act
        or
        the
        regulations
        
        
        have
        not
        been
        complied
        with”
        the
        person
        making
        the
        examination
        
        
        shall
        “calculate
        the
        tax
        collected
        or
        due
        in
        such
        manner
        and
        form
        and
        by
        
        
        Such
        procedure
        as
        the
        Commissioner
        may
        deem
        adequate
        and
        expedient”.
        
        
        This
        deals
        likewise
        with
        collected
        taxes
        which
        have
        not
        been
        paid
        over
        to
        
        
        the
        Crown.
        By
        s
        8
        the
        moneys
        are
        to
        be
        ‘remitted
        to
        the
        Commissioner
        at
        
        
        the
        times
        and
        in
        the
        manner
        prescribed
        by
        the
        regulations’.
        The
        ‘tax
        collected
        
        
        or
        due’
        is
        a
        description
        of
        moneys
        so
        collected
        and
        not
        paid
        over
        in
        accordance
        
        
        with
        the
        regulations.
        From
        the
        language
        of
        the
        section,
        it
        is
        confined
        
        
        to
        cases
        of
        a
        failure
        to
        remit:
        it
        does
        not
        create
        a
        new
        means
        of
        proceeding
        
        
        against
        a
        seller
        for
        failing
        to
        collect
        the
        tax.
        Section
        30(2)
        deals
        
        
        specifically
        with
        that
        liability
        by
        way
        of
        summary
        conviction
        and
        the
        clear
        
        
        and
        precise
        terms
        in
        which
        that
        procedure
        is
        made
        available
        against
        default
        
        
        excludes
        that
        liability
        from
        the
        scope
        of
        s
        25.
        In
        this
        view
        of
        the
        section,
        
        
        there
        is
        created
        only
        additional
        procedure
        and
        the
        objection
        that
        it
        is
        not
        
        
        applicable
        to
        prior
        transactions
        must
        be
        rejected.
        But
        even
        if
        the
        word
        “due”
        
        
        extends
        to
        uncollected
        tax
        the
        objection
        raised
        would
        go
        only
        to
        an
        action
        
        
        on
        such
        a
        breach
        and
        would
        not
        affect
        a
        proceeding
        to
        recover
        collected
        
        
        tax,
        which
        this
        is.
        
        
        
        
      
      Unlike
      the
      
        Woolworth
      
      situation,
      the
      respondent
      (principal)
      is
      here
      
      
      asserting
      a
      claim
      as
      principal
      against
      his
      agent
      for
      moneys
      the
      agent
      
      
      has
      not
      received.
      The
      principal-respondent
      in
      the
      proceedings
      before
      
      
      this
      Court,
      by
      its
      first
      and
      second
      assessments
      has
      admitted
      to
      varying
      
      
      its
      implied
      or
      approved
      arrangements
      with
      its
      agent
      retrospectively.
      
      
      The
      effect
      of
      such
      a
      change
      in
      arrangements,
      if
      successful,
      
      
      would
      be
      to
      impose
      a
      tax
      on
      the
      vendor
      which,
      under
      the
      Statute
      is
      
      
      imposed
      on
      the
      purchaser,
      but
      to
      do
      so
      under
      the
      guise
      of
      an
      action
      
      
      for
      money
      had
      and
      received.
      Furthermore,
      the
      Ontario
      Statute
      does
      
      
      not
      authorize
      the
      assessment
      of
      the
      vendor
      for
      taxes
      “due”
      as
      distinct
      
      
      from
      “collected”
      and
      hence
      the
      concluding
      observation
      of
      Rand
      
      
      J
      quoted
      above
      is
      significant.
      The
      subsections
      of
      section
      13
      of
      the
      
      
      Ontario
      Act
      under
      which
      the
      assessment
      must
      be
      made,
      do
      not
      authorize
      
      
      the
      respondent
      to
      assess
      and
      reassess
      in
      these
      circumstances..
      
      
      In
      the
      
        Woolworth
      
      case
      the
      claim
      is
      treated
      as
      one
      for-“collected
      tax”;
      
      
      in
      these
      proceedings
      the
      claim
      has
      been
      presented
      and
      is
      here
      dealt
      
      
      with
      on
      the
      footing
      of
      tax
      “collectable”
      but
      not
      collected
      by
      the
      appellant.
      
      
      For
      these
      two
      reasons
      the
      
        Woolworth
      
      case
      is
      not
      here
      directly
      
      
      applicable,
      but
      buttresses
      the
      result
      by
      determining
      the
      true
      relationship
      
      
      in
      law
      between
      the
      appellant
      and
      the
      respondent.
      
      
      
      
    
      So
      far
      as
      the
      respondent
      rests
      its
      claim
      to
      assess
      the
      vendor
      Beckers
      
      
      for
      failure
      to
      collect
      properly
      applicable
      taxes,
      the
      respondent
      must
      
      
      come
      within
      subsection
      (3).
      So
      far
      as
      the
      respondent
      rests
      its
      claim
      
      
      to
      assess
      the
      vendor
      Beckers
      for
      failure
      to
      remit
      collected
      taxes,
      the
      
      
      respondent’s
      assessment
      must
      come
      within
      subsection
      (1).
      The
      respondent
      
      
      has
      not
      made
      any
      claim
      under
      either
      subsection
      and
      I
      cannot
      
      
      find
      any
      evidence
      which
      would
      support
      a
      claim
      to:
      assess
      the
      
      
      appellant
      on
      either
      basis.
      Because
      there
      is
      no
      evidence
      of
      failure
      to
      
      
      remit
      collected
      taxes,
      subsection
      (2)
      does
      not
      apply.
      Because
      a
      failure
      
      
      to
      collect
      tax
      does
      not
      expose
      the
      appellant
      to
      assessment
      under
      
      
      section
      13,
      the
      assessments
      cannot
      stand
      under
      that
      provision.
      In
      
      
      the
      end,
      therefore,
      there
      is
      no
      basis
      for
      these
      assessments
      in
      the
      
      
      Statute
      and
      the
      appeal
      must
      succeed
      unless
      other
      bases
      for
      these
      
      
      assessments
      can
      be
      found
      in
      the
      Statute.
      
      
      
      
    
      The
      appellant
      advances
      two
      additional
      arguments
      arising
      out
      of
      
      
      the
      peculiar
      facts
      of
      this
      case.
      Firstly,
      it
      is
      submitted
      that
      the
      respondent
      
      
      is
      estopped
      from
      making
      a
      further
      claim
      against
      its
      agent,
      the
      
      
      vendor,
      after
      the
      end
      of
      the
      two
      taxation
      periods
      during
      which
      the
      
      
      vendor
      performed
      its
      duties
      pursuant
      to
      the
      arrangement
      reached
      
      
      with
      the
      respondent.
      It
      is
      further
      submitted
      by
      the
      appellant
      that
      its
      
      
      claim
      in
      estoppel
      is
      supported
      by
      the
      documentary
      evidence
      indicating
      
      
      an
      acceptance
      by
      the
      respondent
      during
      the
      tax
      periods
      in
      question
      
      
      of
      the
      procedures
      followed
      by
      the
      appellant.
      In
      
        Robertson
      
      v
      
        Minister
      
        of
       
        Pensions,
      
      [1949]
      1
      KB
      227,
      Denning,
      J,
      as
      he
      then
      was,
      stated
      at
      231:
      
      
      
      
    
        The
        next
        question
        is
        whether
        the
        assurance
        in
        the
        War
        Office
        letter
        is
        
        
        binding
        on
        the
        Crown.
        The
        Crown
        cannot
        escape
        by
        saying
        that
        estoppels
        
        
        do
        not
        bind
        the
        Crown,
        for
        that
        doctrine
        has
        long
        been
        exploded.
        Nor
        can
        
        
        the
        Crown
        escape
        by
        praying
        in
        aid
        the
        doctrine
        of.executive
        necessity,
        
        
        that
        is,
        the
        doctrine
        that
        the
        Crown
        cannot
        bind
        itself
        so
        far
        as
        to
        fetter
        its
        
        
        future
        executive
        action.
        
        
        
        
      
      Although
      this
      authority
      may
      be
      limited
      by
      reasons
      of
      the
      remarks
      of
      
      
      the
      learned
      author,
      S
      A
      de
      Smith
      in
      
        Judicial
       
        Review
       
        of
       
        Administrative
      
        Action,
      
      3d
      ed,
      90,
      in
      some
      of
      its
      applications,
      it
      appears
      to
      have
      survived
      
      
      to
      this
      day
      in
      the
      law
      of
      estoppel
      as
      relating
      to
      departments
      of
      
      
      government
      and
      their
      dealings
      with
      other
      parties.
      
      
      
      
    
      As
      has
      been
      stated,
      the
      self-assessment
      procedure
      was
      the
      subject
      
      
      of
      a
      meeting
      of
      the
      minds
      of
      the
      audit
      staff
      of
      the
      Comptroller
      
      
      and
      Beckers
      and
      its
      auditors
      from
      the
      early
      application
      of
      the
      Act
      
      
      and
      certainly
      well
      before
      the
      advent
      of
      the
      first
      assessment
      period.
      
      
      Returns
      and
      remittances
      by
      Beckers
      were,
      therefore,
      made
      throughout
      
      
      the
      first
      assessment
      period
      on
      this
      basis
      and
      without
      any
      apparent
      
      
      reaction
      by
      the
      respondent.
      After
      the
      respondent’s
      audit
      staff
      proposed
      
      
      in
      late
      1967
      and
      early
      1968,
      some
      adjustments
      to
      the
      ratios
      
      
      of
      tax
      exempt
      sales,
      the
      appellant
      modified
      the
      self-assessment
      procedure
      
      
      and
      applied
      the
      modified
      procedure
      throughout
      the
      second
      
      
      assessment
      period.
      Again,
      the
      Beckers’
      returns
      and
      remittances
      
      
      throughout
      the
      second
      period
      were
      on
      the
      basis
      of
      the
      arrangements
      
      
      reached
      with
      respect
      to
      self-assessment
      formulas
      arising
      out
      of
      the
      
      
      first
      assessment
      period
      and
      no
      critical
      response
      was
      received
      from
      
      
      the
      respondent
      until
      after
      the
      close
      of
      the
      second
      assessment
      period.
      
      
      Factually,
      the
      evidence
      reveals
      the
      constituents
      necessary
      for
      the
      
      
      application
      of
      the
      doctrine
      of
      estoppel.
      Therefore,
      alternatively
      to
      the
      
      
      conclusion
      reached
      upon
      the
      examination
      of
      section
      13
      above,
      and
      
      
      applying
      the
      principles
      of
      agency
      as
      followed
      in
      the
      
        Woolworth
      
      case,
      
      
      the
      respondent-principal
      may
      not
      in
      an
      action
      for
      money
      had
      and
      received
      
      
      recover
      either
      “collected”
      or
      “collectable”
      tax
      on
      a
      basis
      which
      
      
      it
      is
      estopped
      from
      advancing.
      
      
      
      
    
      A
      somewhat
      related
      submission
      was
      made
      by
      the
      appellant
      based
      
      
      upon
      the
      revelation
      in
      the
      evidence
      that
      the
      respondent
      had
      accorded
      
      
      a
      competitor
      of
      the
      appellant
      Beckers
      a
      more
      generous
      treatment
      as
      
      
      a
      vendor
      under
      the
      Act
      than
      that
      proposed
      for
      Beckers
      in
      the
      assessments
      
      
      under
      appeal.
      No
      authorities
      were
      placed
      before
      the
      Court
      for
      
      
      the
      sweeping
      proposition
      that
      the
      executive
      branch
      of
      government
      
      
      must
      apply
      a
      taxing
      statute
      evenly
      across
      the
      community.
      No
      doubt,
      
      
      that
      is
      a
      truism
      but
      the
      remedy
      is
      not
      in
      reducing
      the
      impact
      of
      the
      
      
      Act
      to
      the
      lowest
      level
      of
      all
      assessments
      issued
      by
      the
      tax
      collector
      
      
      pursuant
      thereto.
      The
      remedy
      in
      all
      such
      cases
      is
      to
      apply
      the
      taxing
      
      
      Statute
      according
      to
      the
      plain
      meaning
      thereof
      and
      as
      it
      applies
      to
      
      
      the
      circumstances
      revealed
      in
      the
      evidence.
      In
      the
      determining
      relationship
      
      
      interpartes,
      I
      prefer
      to
      apply
      in
      these
      circumstances
      the
      
      
      doctrine
      of
      estoppel
      pursuant
      to
      
        Robertson
      
      v
      
        Minister
       
        of
       
        Pensions,
      
        Supra.
      
      Being
      unable
      to
      find
      any
      statutory
      authority
      for
      the
      issuance
      of
      the
      
      
      notice
      of
      assessment
      under
      appeal,
      it
      is
      unnecessary
      to
      deal
      with
      
      
      the
      extensive
      submissions
      by
      the
      appellant
      to
      the
      effect
      that
      the
      statute,
      
      
      if
      applied
      to
      the
      vendor
      Beckers
      as
      proposed
      in
      the
      assessments
      by
      
      
      the
      respondent,
      would
      be
      unconstitutional
      in
      that
      the
      Province
      of
      
      
      Ontario
      would
      thereby
      be
      imposing
      an
      indirect
      tax
      contrary
      to
      section
      
      
      92
      of
      the
      
        British
       
        North
       
        America
       
        Act.
      
      The
      Court
      was
      referred
      to
      
        Cairns
      
        Construction
       
        Limited
      
      v
      
        Saskatchewan,
      
      [1960]
      SCR
      619;
      
        Atlantic
       
        Smoke
      
        Shops
       
        Limited
      
      v
      
        Conlon,
      
      [1943]
      AC
      550;
      
        Bank
       
        of
       
        Toronto
      
      v
      
        Lambe
      
      
      
      (1887),
      12
      AC
      575;
      
        Simpsons-Sears
       
        Ltd
      
      v
      
        New
       
        Brunswick
       
        Provincial
      
        Secretary
      
      (1975),
      14
      NBR
      (2d)
      289;
      
        A
       
        G
       
        Canada
      
      v
      
        Reed,
      
      [1926]
      1
      DLR
      
      
      821.
      It
      would
      appear
      that
      none
      of
      the
      provisions
      of
      
        The
       
        Retail
       
        Sales
      
        Act
      
      applicable
      in
      these
      proceedings
      and
      as
      examined
      hereinabove,
      
      
      are
      inherently
      a
      transgression
      by
      the
      Province
      of
      Ontario
      of
      the
      limitation
      
      
      of
      sovereignty
      applied
      under
      the
      
        British
       
        North
       
        America
       
        Act,
      
      section
      
      
      92
      to
      the
      provincial
      authority.
      In
      any
      event,
      in
      view
      of
      the
      line
      of
      reasoning
      
      
      adopted
      above
      in
      disposing
      of
      these
      assessments
      this
      submission
      
      
      need
      not
      be
      answered.
      
      
      
      
    
      Finally,
      in
      the
      second
      assessment,
      reference
      is
      made
      in
      the
      explanatory
      
      
      attachment
      to
      “tax
      deficiency
      based
      on
      vendor’s
      own
      method
      
      
      of
      tax
      accountability”
      and
      to
      tax
      applicable
      to
      trucks
      transferred
      between
      
      
      Beckers
      and
      one
      of
      its
      subsidiaries.
      In
      the
      course
      of
      the
      trial
      
      
      the
      respondent
      acknowledged
      that
      this
      aspect
      of
      the
      assessment
      was
      
      
      improper
      as
      the
      transaction
      was
      not
      taxable
      and
      so
      in
      any
      event
      the
      
      
      second
      assessment
      should
      be
      reduced
      by
      the
      amount
      of
      $13,150.68.
      
      
      
      
    
      For
      these
      reasons,
      therefore,
      the
      appeal
      will
      be
      allowed
      and
      an
      
      
      order
      shall
      issue
      pursuant
      to
      subsection
      20(3)
      of
      the
      Act
      vacating
      
      
      the
      assessments.
      The
      Order
      shall
      further
      provide,
      pursuant
      to
      subsection
      
      
      (4)
      of
      section
      20
      that
      there
      shall
      be
      a
      refund
      of
      taxes
      paid
      
      
      by
      the
      appellant
      to
      the
      Treasurer
      under
      or
      by
      virtue
      of
      the
      said
      assessments
      
      
      and
      for
      the
      return
      of
      any
      bond
      or
      other
      security
      filed
      in
      respect
      
      
      thereof
      by
      the
      appellants.
      I
      can
      find
      no
      provision
      in
      the
      Statute
      for
      
      
      payment
      of
      interest
      to
      the
      appellant
      on
      payments
      made
      pursuant
      to
      
      
      these
      assessments,
      and
      no
      claim
      is
      made
      by
      the
      appellants
      for
      any
      
      
      such
      interest.
      Costs
      shall
      be
      to
      the
      appellant
      against
      the
      respondent.
      
      
      By
      reason
      of
      the
      disposition
      made
      of
      the
      constitutional
      issue
      there
      
      
      shall
      be
      no
      costs
      for
      or
      against
      the
      Attorney
      General
      of
      Ontario.