Mahoney,
J:—The
issue
is
the
meaning
of
the
phrase
“all
reasonable
and
proper
costs’’
as
used
in
subsection
178(2)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.*
A
secondary
issue
is
whether
this
action
was
properly
classified
as
a
Class
Il
action
under
Tariffs
A
and
B
of
the
Appendix
to
the
Rules
of
this
Honourable
Court.
The
decision
of
my
brother
Dubé
on
the
substantive
issue
raised
in
this
action
has
been
reported.!
Nevertheless,
it
is
convenient
to
recite
certain
of
the
facts,
as
they
appear
on
the
record,
germane
to
the
question
of
costs.
The
defendant
was
employed
throughout
1972
as
a
truck
driver
by
Imperial
Oil
Limited
delivering
its
products
throughout
southern
New
Brunswick
from
a
base
in
St
John.
His
total
income
for
the
year
was
$10,494.83.
He
was
not
reimbursed
by
his
employer
for
the
cost
of
his
noon
meal
unless
he
was
away
from
the
terminal
over
12
hours.
In
computing
his
taxable
income
for
the
year
he
claimed
a
deduction
of
$495
for
180
lunches
at
$2.75
each
for
which
he
had
not
been
reimbursed.
The
Minister
of
National
Revenue
disallowed
the
$495
deduction
and
assessed
accordingly.
The
plaintiff
successfully
appealed
to
the
Tax
Review
Board.!
The
deduction
could
only
be
sustained
if
it
were
found
that
Imperial
Oil
Limited
were
“a
person
whose
principal
business
was
passenger,
goods
or
passenger
and
goods
transport”
as
stipulated
by
paragraph
8(1
)(g)
of
the
Act.
There
were
no
other
issues
raised
by
the
Statement
of
Claim
in
this
action.
The
defence
argued
that
the
defendant
was
not
employed
by
Imperial
Oil
Limited
but
by
its
Transportation
Department—the
argument
accepted
by
the
Tax
Review
Board—and,
in
the
alternative,
that
the
transport
of
goods
was
a
principal
business
of
Imperial
Oil
Limited
in
any
case.
I
shall
deal
first
with
the
subsidiary
issue.
The
material
provisions
of
Tariffs
A
and
B
contained
in
the
Appendix
to
the
Rules
are:
TARIFF
A
COURT
COSTS
GENERAL
1.
(1)
For
the
purpose
of
this
Tariff,
any
step
in
a
proceeding
in
the
Trial
Division
shall
be
classified
as
being
Class
I,
Class
II
or
Class
III.
(3)
Unless
the
Court
otherwise
directs
in
respect
of
a
particular
step
in
a
proceeding,
or
in
respect
of
all
steps
in
a
particular
proceeding,
(a)
where
a
step
is
a
step
in
a
proceeding
(other
than
a
proceeding
to
which
paragraph
(b)
applies)
in
which
there
is
an
amount
involved
on
the
face
of
the
proceedings
that
is
less
than
$5,000,
it
shall
be
classified
as
a
Class
I
step,
(b)
where
a
step
is
a
step
in
a
proceeding
that
is,
or
was
in
its
inception,
an
appeal
to
the
Trial
Division
or
any
other
proceeding
in
the
Trial
Division
where
no
judgment
is
being
sought
for
payment
of
an
ascertained
amount,
it
shall
be
classified
as
a
Class
Il
step,
(c)
where
a
step
is
a
step
in
a
proceeding
in
which
there
is
an
amount
involved
on
the
face
of
the
proceedings
that
is
$5,000
or
more
and
less
than
$50,000,
it
shall
be
classified
as
a
Class
II
step,
(d)
where
a
step
is
a
step
in
a
proceeding
not
otherwise
covered
by
this
paragraph,
it
shall
be
classified
as
a
Class
III
step.
TARIFF
B
AMOUNTS
TO
BE
ALLOWED
ON
A
PARTY
AND
PARTY
TAXATION
1.
Section
1
of
Tariff
A
is
applicable
with
necessary
changes
to
this
Tariff.
Certain
of
the
subsequent
provisions
of
both
Tariffs
provide
for
the
payment
of
fees
to
the
Registry
and
for
the
allowance
of
fees
on
a
party
and
party
taxation
in
varying
amounts
for
the
same
step
depending
upon
the
class
of
the
proceeding
in
which
the
step
is
taken.
Section
175
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
regulates
the
manner
in
which
appeals
to
the
Federal
Court,
other
than
appeals
required
by
section
180
to
be
instituted
in
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal,
are
to
be
taken.
This
action
was
governed
by
section
175.
Subsection
175(3)
provides,
In
part,
as
follows:
175.
(3)
An
appeal
instituted
under
this
section
shall
be
deemed
to
be
an
action
in
the
Federal
Court
to
which
the
Federal
Court
Act
and
the
Federal
Court
Rules
applicable
to
an
ordinary
action
apply,
except
.
.
.
None
of
the
exceptions
contained
in
the
balance
of
the
section
nor
in
Rule
800
are
material
to
the
present
issue.
In
Columbia
Records
of
Canada
Ltd
v
MNR,
[1972]
CTC
324,
an
appeal
from
a
taxing
officer,
my
brother
Gibson
held:
I
am
of
opinion
that
an
appeal
to
the
Trial
Division
of
this
Court
under
and
pursuant
to
the
Income
Tax
Act
is
(1)
an
“action”
and
not
an
“appeal”
and
(2)
the
judgment
sought
is
“a
final
determination
of
the
tax
payable”
and
therefore
is
not
a
proceeding
in
which
“no
judgment
is
being
sought
for
payment
of
an
ascertained
amount”
within
the
meaning
of
those
words
in
item
1
(3)(b)
of
said
tariff
“A”.
I
fully
agree
with
that
decision.
As
to
the
proper
classification
of
this
action,
less
than
$5,000
was
involved
and
the
only
question
is
whether
that
fact
was
apparent
“on
the
face
of
the
proceedings’’.
The
Statement
of
Claim
contained
the
following:
7.
The
Deputy
Attorney
General
of
Canada
respectfully
submits
that
the
Defendant,
in
computing
his
income
for
the
1972
taxation
year,
is
not
entitled
to
deduct
the
sum
of
$495.00
disbursed
for
meals
as
he
was
not
an
employee
of
a
person
whose
principal
business
was
passenger,
goods
or
passenger
and
goods
transport
within
the
meaning
of
section
8(1)(g)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
CLAIM
The
Deputy
Attorney
General
of
Canada,
on
behalf
of
Her
Majesty,
therefore
claims
that:
iii)
it
is
ordered
pursuant
to
the
provisions
of
subsection
(2)
of
Section
178
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
RSC
1952,
c
148,
as
amended
by
s
1,
c
63,
SC
1970-71-72,
that
there
shall
be
paid
to
the
Defendant,
after
taxation
thereof,
all
of
his
reasonable
and
proper
costs
in
connection
therewith.
The
fact
that
the
amount
involved
in
this
action
was
less
than
$5,000
does,
in
my
opinion,
appear
on
the
face
of
the
proceedings.
The
amount
of
taxable
income
involved
appeared
on
the
face
of
the
proceedings;
it
was
$495.
It
is
to
be
assumed
that
the
tax
payable—
the
ascertained
amount
involved—will
not
exceed
the
taxable
income
involved.
In
any
case,
where
subsection
178(2)
is
invoked
by
the
Statement
of
Claim,
the
amount
of
tax
involved—the
ascertained
amount—necessarily
cannot
exceed
$2,500.
I
find
that
this
action
was
not
properly
classified
as
a
Class
II
action;
it
should
have
been
classified
as
Class
l.
In
view
of
the
disposition
I
intend
to
make
of
the
main
issue,
I
do
not
propose
to
give
effect
to
the
foregoing
finding
at
this
time.
I
should
be
surprised
if
the
fees
properly
to
be
taxed
under
subsection
178(2)
did
not
exceed
those
provided
by
Tariff
B
for
a
Class
Il
action.
As
to
fees
paid
the
Registry,
the
practical
effect
of
such
an
implementation
would
merely
be
to
shuffle
debits
and
credits
among
various
emanations
of
the
Crown
at
some
cost
to
the
public,
perhaps
more
than
the
excess
of
fees
to
be
transferred.
I
now
turn
to
the
quantum
of
costs
required
to
be
awarded
under
subsection
178(2).
In
his
decision
allowing
the
plaintiff’s
appeal,
Mr
Justice
Dube
ordered
as
follows
[p
681]:
The
defendant
may
however
find
some
consolation
in
the
fact
that
pursuant
to
subsection
178(2)
of
the
Act,
there
shall
be
paid
to
him
all
his
reasonable
and
proper
costs.
If
both
parties
cannot
agree
as
to
costs,
there
shall
be
taxation
thereof.
The
taxing
officer
considered
that
he
had
no
authority
to
do
anything
but
tax
party
and
party
costs
on
the
basis
of
Tariffs
A
and
B.
There
is
no
dispute
as
to
his
allowance
of
disbursements.
He
allowed
fees
of
$775
for
a
Class
II
action.
The
defendant
seeks
to
recover
fees
paid
or
payable
to
his
counsel
in
the
aggregate
of
$3,921.35
based
on
6.60
hours
spent
on
the
case
by
a
senior
counsel,
charged
at
$80
per
hour,
3.75
hours
spent
by
another
partner
charged
at
$75
per
hour
and
77.80
hours
spent
by
a
junior
associate
charged
at
$40
per
hour.
I
should
note
that
counsel
were
not
involved
in
the
appeal
to
the
Tax
Review
Board.
The
hourly
rates
are,
in
my
view,
entirely
reasonable
and
there
is,
of
course,
no
intimation
that
the
time
charged
was
not
actually
devoted
to
the
case.
At
the
same
time,
it
does
appear
to
have
been
an
inordinate
amount
of
time
having
regard
to
the
issues
defined
by
the
pleadings.
The
question
is
whether
Parliament,
in
requiring,
in
the
circumstances
envisaged
by
subsection
178(2),
that
this
Court
“order
the
Minister
to
pay
all
reasonable
and
proper
costs
of
the
taxpayer”
intended
the
Court
to
invoke
one
of
the
recognized
classifications
of
costs,
or
whether
it
intended
to
create
a
new
classification.
There
are
now
two
recognized
classifications
of
costs
payable
by
one
party
to
another:
costs
as
between
party
and
party
and
costs
as
between
solicitor
and
client.
I
see
no
present,
practical,
value
in
perpetuating
refinements
developed
in
other
jurisdictions
and
other
times
which,
however
meaningful
there
and
then,
serve
no
useful
purpose
here
and
now.
Any
relationship
that
either
category
bears
to
the
account
which
a
solicitor
may
properly
render
his
own
client
is
purely
coincidental
since
that
account
may
well
embrace
services
ordered
by
and
rendered
to
the
client
which
were
superfluous
to
the
conduct
of
the
action
and,
hence,
under
no
circumstances
for
the
ultimate
account
of
the
opposing
party
whatever
the
outcome.
Aside
from
decisions
dealing
specifically
with
subsection
178(2),
to
which
I
shall
return,
I
have
been
unable
to
locate
any
authority
dealing
with
the
term
“reasonable
and
proper
costs”
where
the
adjectives
are
conjoined.
Paragraph
22
of
the
Third
Schedule
to
the
Coal
Act,
1938,
1-2
Geo
VI,
c
52
(UK),
provided,
in
prescribed
circumstances,
that
the
Coal
Commission
constituted
by
the
Act
“shall
pay
the
costs
reasonably
incurred
by
any
person
.
.
.”.
In
Williams
v
Sharpe,
[1949]
1
Ch
595,
the
substantive
issue
was
the
identification
of
persons
having
a
beneficial
interest
in
freehold
compulsorily
taken
by
the
Commission.
The
Court
of
Appeal
held
that,
notwithstanding
a
number
of
previous
decisions
on
the
same
point
by
the
same
trial
judge,
the
costs
of
the
appeal
had
been
reasonably
incurred
and
it
directed
they
be
paid,
by
the
Commission,
“as
between
party
and
party’’.*
There
is
no
indication
in
the
reasons
that
the
option
of
solicitor
and
client
costs
was
considered
nor
is
there
any
indication
of
the
nature
of
the
award
of
costs
by
the
trial
judge.
The
Court
of
Appeal
dismissed
the
appeal
and,
in
considering
costs,
directed
itself
entirely
to
the
question,
in
essence,
whether
or
not,
in
the
circumstances,
it
had
been
reasonable
to
take
the
appeal
at
all.
While
the
judgment
of
Jenkins,
J,
from
which
the
appeal
in
Williams
v
Sharpe
was
taken,
is,
so
far
as
I
have
been
able
to
ascertain,
not
reported,
at
least
three
of
his
earlier
decisions,
to
which
the
same
statutory
provision
applied,
are.
In
each
he
awarded
costs
“taxed
as
between
solicitor
and
client’’.t
Under
the
circumstances,
I
have
difficulty
in
accepting
the
Court
of
Appeal
decision
in
Williams
v
Sharpe
as
authority
for
the
proposition
that
the
expression
“costs
reasonably
incurred’’
means
“costs
as
between
party
and
party”.î
In
the
Bankruptcy
Act,
RSC
1970,
c
B-3,
it
is
provided:
168.
(2)
The
court
in
awarding
costs
may
direct
that
the
costs
shall
be
taxed
and
paid
as
between
party
and
party
or
as
between
solicitor
and
client,
or
the
court
may
fix
a
sum
to
be
paid
in
lieu
of
taxation
or
of
taxed
costs,
but
in
the
absence
of
any
express
direction
costs
shall
follow
the
event
and
shall
be
taxed
as
between
party
and
party.
That
provision
was
enacted
in
1949§
and
was
in
effect
when
the
Ontario
Court
of
Appeal
awarded
‘all
proper
costs
and
expenses”
and
a
Registrar
in
Bankruptcy
found:
I
The
order
does
not
direct
costs
to
be
paid
as
between
solicitor
and
client.
Having
reached
that
conclusion,
the
learned
Registrar
might
well
have
decided
that
he
had
no
alternative,
in
view
of
the
express
terminology
of
the
section,
but
to
tax
the
costs
‘‘as
between
party
and
party”.
He
chose
instead
to
survey,
at
some
considerable
length,
a
variety
of
precedents
dealing
mainly
with
a
court’s
jurisdiction
as
to
costs
and
concluded
(at
p
225),
without
reference
to
the
express
provision
of
the
Bankruptcy
Act,
that
“proper
costs’’
herein
are
limited
to
party
and
party
costs
throughout
and
should
be
taxed
on
a
party
and
party
scale.
Under
the
circumstances,
that
decision
is
questionable
authority
for
the
proposition
that
An
award
of
“all
proper
costs
and
expenses’’
is
limited
to
party
and
party
costs,
and
does
not
mean
costs
as
between
solicitor
and
client.*
No
doubt
such
an
award
is
not
an
“express
direction”,
as
required
by
subsection
168(2)
of
the
Bankruptcy
Act,
that
costs
be
taxed
and
paid
“as
between
solicitor
and
client”
but
it
is
by
no
means
an
express
direction,
outside
the
purview
of
that
Act,
that
they
be
taxed
and
paid
“as
between
party
and
party”.
Subsection
36(2)
of
the
Expropriation
Act,
RSC
1970
(1st
Supp),
c
16,
requires
that
in
the
circumstances
therein
set
forth
.
.
.
the
Court
shall
direct
that
the
whole
of
such
party’s
costs
of
and
incident
to
the
proceedings,
determined
by
the
Court
on
a
solicitor
and
client
basis,
be
paid
by
the
Crown.
This
provision
is
cited
by
the
plaintiff
in
support
of
the
proposition
that
since
Parliament
had
in
mind
the
significance
of
the
term
“costs
.
.
.
on
a
solicitor
and
client
basis”
when
it
enacted
the
Expropriation
Act
during
the
Second
Session
of
the
28th
Parliament,
it
must
have
meant
something
different
when
it
spoke
of
“all
reasonable
and
proper
costs”
in
subsection
178(2)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
enacted
during
the
Third
Session
of
the
same
28th
Parliament.!
The
fact
is
that
numerous
legislative
enactments,
in
force
long
before
Parliament
adopted
subsection
36(2),
had
provided,
in
the
circumstances
envisaged
by
that
subsection,
for
payment
of
‘‘full
costs”
to
the
expropriated
owner
and
that
the
courts
had
held
the
term
“full
costs”
to
mean
costs
as
between
solicitor
and
client.
Similarly,
where
the
award
of
costs
in
such
circumstances
was
in
the
discretion
of
the
court
rather
than
directed
by
the
legislation,
the
discretion
was
commonly
exercised
to
the
same
result.
Likewise,
when
it
enacted
subsection
21(3)
of
the
Trade
Union
Act,
RSC,
1970,
c
T-11,
Parliament
simply
recognized
what
judges
had
long
held
in
the
exercise
of
their
discretion:
that
in
the
circumstances
of
an
action
contemplated
by
section
21,
necessarily
taken
by
trustees
in
the
execution
of
their
trust,
costs
ought
to
be
awarded
to
them
on
the
scale
as
between
solicitor
and
client.
My
brother
Walsh
had
occasion
to
consider
this
matter
in
The
Queen
v
Lavigueur,
[1973]
CTC
773;
73
DTC
5538.
In
that
case,
the
amount
of
tax
involved
in
the
action
was
only
$222.19
but
it
appears
that
the
tax
implications
for
future
years
were,
in
the
aggregate,
most
substantial.
In
dealing
with
costs
in
his
reasons,
Mr
Justice
Walsh
recited
a
number
of
contentions
advanced
on
behalf
of
the
defendant
as
to
the
significance
of
subsection
178(2)
including
the
proposition
that
‘all
reasonable
and
proper
costs
.
.
.
extends
to
solicitor
and
client
fees
.
.
.
over
and
above
these
taxable
court
costs”.
He
concluded:
“I
am
in
agreement
with
these
contentions”
but
issued
the
following
caveat
(p
784
[5546]):
.
.
.
While
in
view
of
the
difficulty
of
the
issue
these
reasonable
and
proper
costs
would
be
more
than
the
mere
taxable
costs
allowed
in
a
Class
I
action
into
which
category
this
action
would
fall,
they
must
nevertheless
be
kept
in
moderation
and
not
exceed
proper
solicitor
and
client
fees
which
the
defendant
might
reasonably
be
expect?d
to
pay
himself
but
for
subsection
178(2)
in
an
action
in
which
the
amount
in
issue
did
not
exceed
$2,500.
If
the
parties
cannot
agree
on
the
amount
of
costs
to
be
taxed
on
this
basis
under
Rule
349
they
may
appeal
same
to
the
Court.
A
check
of
the
Court
file
in
that
case
indicates
that
the
parties
did
agree.
Costs
were
not
taxed.
In
The
Queen
v
Pascoe,
[1976]
2
FC
277,
Preston,
Prothonotary,
gave
reasons
for
his
taxation
of
a
bill
of
costs
in
an
action
to
which
subsection
178(2)
applied,
at
least
to
the
action
in
the
Trial
Division
([1975]
CTC
58;
75
DTC
5024).
The
Crown’s
appeal
to
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal
([1975]
CTC
656;
75
DTC
5427)
was
successful
to
the
extent
that
the
original
assessments
which
had
been
disallowed
by
the
Tax
Review
Board
and
partly
restored
by
the
trial
judge
were
fully
restored
by
the
Court
of
Appeal.
The
trial
judge
had
awarded
costs
as
provided
in
subsection
178(2)
and
these,
according
to
the
Prothonotary’s
reasons,
had
“already
been
paid”
when
he
was
called
upon
to
tax
the
costs
which
the
Court
of
Appeal
had
awarded
in
the
following
terms:
There
shall
be
paid
to
the
Defendant,
after
taxation
thereof,
all
of
his
reasonable
and
proper
costs
both
in
the
Trial
Division
and
in
this
Court.
It
would
be
unlikely,
in
the
circumstances,
that
the
Court
of
Appeal
intended
to
convey
anything
different
by
its
use
of
the
term
“reasonable
and
proper
costs”
than
is
conveyed
by
subsection
178(2).
At
the
same
time,
it
should
be
noted
that
the
award
of
costs
by
the
Court
of
Appeal
was
without
reference
to
that
provision,
which
applies
only
to
an
appeal
“from
a
decision
of
the
Tax
Review
Board”.
I
am
unaware
of
any
procedure
by
which
an
“appeal”,
as
opposed
to
an
application
under
section
28
of
the
Federal
Court
Act,
RSC
1970
(2nd
Supp),
c
10,
could
be
taken
from
the
Board
direct
to
the
Federal
Court
of
Appeal.
Certainly,
in
the
Pascoe
case
the
appeal
was
from
the
Trial
Division.
The
award
of
costs
on
that
scale
by
the
Court
of
Appeal
was
in
the
exercise
of
its
discretion,
not
because
it
was
bound
by
subsection
178(2)
to
do
so.
If,
in
saying
at
page
278,
I
do
not
think
it
is
proper
to
interpret
“all
reasonable
and
proper
costs’’
to
include
all
costs
properly
collectable
under
the
terms
of
a
solicitor
and
client
taxation.
the
Prothonotary
had
in
mind
“solicitor
and
client’’
in
the
context
cf
the
account
which
a
solicitor
might
successfully
tax
against
his
own
client,
I
am
in
agreement
with
his
result.
If,
however,
he
had
in
mind
the
solicitor
and
client
costs
properly
to
be
taxed
and
recovered
by
one
party
to
an
action
from
another,
I
find
myself
in
disagreement
with
him
and,
more
unfortunately,
him
in
disagreement
with
Mr
Justice
Walsh.
However,
his
description
of
the
circumstances
and
his
reference
to
“a
full
solicitor
and
client
bill”
in
his
reasons
lead
me
to
believe
that
we
are
all
on
the
same
wavelength.
I
have
no
doubt
that
Parliament
had
only
one
purpose
in
mind
in
enacting
subsection
178(2).
It
was
not
altruistic.
As
part
of
the
tax
reform
package,
Parliament
made
it
easier
and
even
less
expensive
than
theretofore
for
a
taxpayer
to
appeal
his
assessment
to
the
Tax
Review
Board.
It
wanted
to
enable
the
Crown
to
bring
to
this
Court
for
decision
important
questions
of
principle
in
cases
which,
because
of
the
small
amount
of
tax
involved,
the
taxpayer
would
likely
abandon,
regardless
of
principle,
rather
than
incur
the
expense
involved
in
defending
an
action
in
this
Court,
even
successfully,
if
conventional
rules
as
to
party
and
party
costs
pertained.
The
instant
case
exemplifies
what
Parliament
had
in
mind.
The
taxable
income
involved
is
$495.
The
total
tax
involved,
federal
and
provincial,
is
about
$160.
Even
for
the
entire
balance
of
his
normal
working
life,
the
defendant’s
tax
savings,
as
a
result
of
the
Tax
Review
Board
decision,
could
scarcely
have
reached
$4,000
in
constant,
1972,
dollars.
But
the
Tax
Review
Board
decision
did
not
apply
only
to
the
defendant;
it
was
a
precedent
for
scores,
if
not
hundreds,
of
truck
drivers
similarly
employed
by
Imperial
Oil
Limited
and
thousands,
perhaps
tens
of
thousands,
similarly
employed
by
others
in
the
delivery
of
their
employer’s
goods.
The
principle
was
important,
not
in
terms
of
the
defendant’s
income
tax
for
1972
or
even
for
his
working
life,
but
in
terms
of
the
overall
application
and
administration
of
the
Act.
Had
the
defendant
not
resisted
the
action
to
judgment,
he
would
have
had
to
pay
the
tax
involved
but
the
Tax
Review
Board
decision
would
have
been
the
precedent
invoked
by
hundreds,
or
thousands,
of
similarly
situated
truck
drivers
in
filing
their
future
tax
returns.
Parliament
did
not,
in
enacting
subsection
178(2),
intend
to
create
a
new
classification
of
costs
nor
did
it
employ
the
term
“all
reasonable
and
proper
costs”
as
a
synonym
for
party
and
party
costs.
It
is
the
Crown,
not
the
taxpayer,
that
decides,
notwithstanding
the
picayune
amount
directly
in
issue
in
the
case,
that
the
principle
is
so
important
that
it
should
sue.
It
does
not
sue
only
because
it
wants
that
money—in
this
case,
$160;
if
that
were
all
that
was
involved
it
probably
would
not
sue
at
all.
It
sues
because
it
wants
the
decision
of
the
Tax
Review
Board
varied
or
reversed.
Parliament
intended
that,
when
so
sued,
the
taxpayer
be
able
to
defend
himself,
as
he
may
be
competently
advised,
undeterred
by
the
expense
involved,
so
long
as
it
is
reasonably
and
properly
incurred.
While
the
taxpayer
is
not
to
be
deterred
by
financial
considerations
from
undertaking
his
defence,
he
is
not
being
given
a
licence
to
squander
public
funds
in
a
frivolous
or
luxurious
manner,
nor
are
those
whom
he
retains.
If
they
charge
a
fair
fee
for
time
necessarily
spent
in
the
defence
of
the
action,
they
may
expect
their
client
to
be
put
in
funds,
or
reimbursed,
for
its
payment.
If
they
charge
more
he
and
they
may
have
a
problem,
depending
on
their
arrangements
and
his
ability
to
pay.
As
I
have
indicated,
I
consider
the
hourly
rates
charged
herein
to
be
reasonable
and
the
number
of
hours
spent
to
have
been
inordinate.
I
have
an
amount
in
mind
which
I
should,
after
a
review
of
all
the
material
on
hand,
be
prepared
to
fix
as
a
reasonable
and
proper
fee
in
lieu
of
further
taxation.
At
the
same
time,
the
defendant
ought
to
have
the
opportunity
to
tax
the
bill
of
costs
as
between
solicitor
and
client.
If
he
takes
that
opportunity,
the
taxing
officer
will
have
to
go
into
matters
not
explored
on
the
party
and
party
taxation
and
the
defendant
may
be
able
to
convince
him
that,
having
particular
regard
to
the
importance
and
complexity
of
the
issue
and
without
too
much
weight
being
given
the
small
amount
directly
involved,
the
investment
of
some
90
hours
of
his
solicitors’
time
was
reasonably
necessary
to
a
proper
defence
of
the
action.
The
bill
of
costs
will
be
remitted
to
the
taxing
officer
for
taxation
as
between
solicitor
and
client.
If
the
defendant
wishes
to
waive
further
taxation
and
the
plaintiff
consents,
he
may
apply
under
Rules
324
and
344(7),
and
I
will
fix
costs.