BASTI\
J.
(013113
from
the
Bench)
:—I
am
entitled
to
assume
that
the
first
category
of
documents
do
not
relate
to
the
affairs
of
the
two
taxpayers
and,
therefore,
are
privileged.
I
shall
now
deal
with
the
second:
category
which
does
relate:
to
Radio
Oil.
Ltd.
and
Gerald
Heehter.
I
consider
I
am
entitled
to
infer
the
suite
in
the
penthouse
was
occupied
by
Gerald
Hechter
as
his
personal
residence.
When
a
company
enters
in
its
books
as
company
debts
accounts
incurred
by
the
president
for
his
personal
benefit
the
company
records
to
that
extent
are
false.
In
my
opinion
there
is
proof
that
this
occurred
on
three
occasions
and;
in
the
absence
of
some,
satisfactory
explanation,
and
I
emphasize
that,
establishes
a
prima
facie
case
of
fraud
which
destroys
the
clients’
privileges
of
non-disclosure.
This
would
apply
to
both
the
company
and
its
president
since
both
are
involved
in
the
fraud.
From
the
cases
I:
have
read
I’
believe
I
should
examine
the
documents
seized,
in
the
hands
of
the
solicitors,
relating
to
Radio
Oil
Ltd.
and
its
president,
Mr.
Hechter,
and
release
to
the
Income
Tax
Department
all
those
related
to
advice
on
matters
which
may
relate
to
tax
liability.
Having
established
a
prima
facie
case
of
fraudulent
conduct
in
relation
to
certain
accounts,
which
indicate
a
general
course
of
conduct
in
matters
which
may
affect
tax
liability,
the
Income
Tax
Department
is
entitled
to
conduct
a
complete
investigation
unhampered
by
normal
privilege
accorded
to
solicitor
and
client
relationship.
I
do
not
consider
the
client,
in
the
circumstances
of
this
case,
should
be
entitled
to
claim
privilege
with
respect
to
communications
other
than
the
three
instances
revealed
‘in
evidence,
particularly
as
the
field
auditor
for
the
Department,
Mr.
Hill,
stated,
that
apart
from
these
three.
items
he
was
aware
of
from
one
hundred
to
one
hundred
and
twenty-five
instances
which,
in
his
opinion,
called
for
further
investigation.
The
loss
of
privilege
is
intended
to
be
a
loss
or
penalty
imposed
on
a
taxpayer
who
appears
to
have
acted
wrongfully.
If
the
loss
of,
privilege
applied
only
to
such
instances
as
have
been
produced
in
evidence
it
would
not
be
a
penalty
at
all,
as
it
is
most
unlikely
there
would
be
a
communication
between
the
taxpayers
and
their
solicitors
with
respect
to
these
particular
matters.
I
consider
that
all
communications
between
the
solicitors
and
the
two
taxpayers
which
may
affect
tax
liability
are
within
the
scope
of
the
loss
of
privilege.
It
is
now
my
duty
to
see
whether
the
documents
in
the
second
class
are,
on
this
basis,
privileged.
From
the
results
of
the
preliminary
investigation
of
the
Department,
the
Department’s
field
auditor,
it
is
apparent
two
taxpayers,
Radio
Oil
Ltd.
and
the
president
and
principal
shareholder,
Gerald
Morley
Hechter,
carried
out
a
scheme
to
reduce
the
tax
to
be
paid
ultimately
by
the
company
by
various
means,
such
as
the
company
paying
personal
accounts
of
the
company’s
president,
Mr.
Hechter.
There
are
several
cases
which
were
referred
to
by
counsel
where
there
was
a
finding
of
a
prima
facie
case
of
fraud.
The
learned
Judges
designated
a
general
area
related
to
the
fraud
and
in
that
area
ruled
that
the
privilege
normally
accorded
to
communication
between
solicitor
and
client
did
not
apply.
In
the
case
of
In
re
Modern
Film
Distributors
Ltd.,
[1968]
C.T.C.
549,
the
learned
Judge
held
a
prima
facie
case
of
fraud
had
been
established
in
support
of
the
allegation
in
one
of
the
paragraphs
of
the
Department’s
affidavit,
and
‘‘it
should
therefore
be
found
that
all
the
documents
in
the
files
designed
to
put
into
effect
or
give
effect
to
the
relationship
therein
referred
to
are
not
privileged”.
He
designated
this
the
“Roman
relationship’’.
In
the
case
of
In
re
Atkins
Durbrow
(Erie)
Ltd.
et
al.,
[1968]
C.T.C.
405,
the
learned
Judge
found
that
a
prima
facie
case
of
fraud
had
been
established.
He
rejected
the
argument
of
the
taxpayer
that
only
a
few
documents
had
any
bearing
on
the
company,
Atkins
&
Durbrow
(Erie)
Ltd.,
and
Mr.
Milner,
and
that
all
other
documents
should
be
released
to
the
taxpayer.
He
said:
“In
view
of
the
tangled
corporate
web
woven
and
carried
by
Mr.
Milner
it
would
take
a
team
of
accountants
to
determine
the
specific
relevancy
of
some
of
the
documents.’’
In
this
case
the
fraud
involves
the
relationship
between
Radio
Oil
Ltd.
and
Gerald
Hechter,
and
in
accordance
with
the
precedent
I
have
referred
to
I
believe
I
should
remove
the
privilege
from
communications
which
throw
light
on
this
relationship.
I
cannot
assume
that
the
method
of
evading
the
payment
of
income
tax
was
restricted
to
the
elementary
course
of
having
the
company
pay
Mr.
Hechter’s
debts.
The
evidence
of
Mr.
Hill
points
to
acts
other
than
the
three
instances
revealed
in
evidence,
and
these
may
involve
more
sophisticated
means
of
carrying
out
a
scheme
of
tax
evasion.
As
in
the
Atkins
&
Durbrow
case,
the
documents
to
be
released
to
the
Department
should
not
be
limited
to
those
which
relate
specifically
to
the
examples
of
fraud
which
have
been
shown.
Now,
that
is
the
basis
upon
which
I
am
ruling.
MINISTER
OF
NATIONAL
REVENUE,
Appellant,
and
THE
CANADA
TRUST
COMPANY
and
MARIE
JACQUELINE
COLETTE
RUTH
SHAW,
Executors
or
THE
ESTATE
OF
WILLIAM
THEO
SHAW,
Respondents.
Exchequer
Court
of
Canada
(Jackett,
P.),
January
8,
1971,
on
appeal
from
a
decision
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board,
reported
[1970]
Tax
A.B.C.
167.
Estate
tax—Federal—Estate
Tax
Act,
S.C.
1958,
c.
29—Section
3(1)(j),
(m)—Accident
insurance—Proceeds
of
double
indemnity
life
insurance—Whether
proceeds
includable
in
aggregate
net
value
of
estate—French
version
of
the
Act.
The
Minister
sought
to
include
in
the
value
of
the
deceased’s
estate
the
proceeds
of
two
accident
insurance
policies
on
his
life
and
also
th:
double
indemnity
portion
of
proceeds
paid
under
a
life
insurance
policy.
The
executors
opposed
such
treatment
on
the
ground
that
accident
insurance
was
not
life
insurance
within
Section
3(1)
(m)
nor
was
it
an
“other
interest”
within
Section
3(1)
(j).
An
appeal
on
those
grounds
was
allowed
by
the
Board,
from
whose
decision
the
Minister
now
appealed.
In
addition
to
relying
on
Section
3(1)
(j)
the
Minister
also
now
advanced
two
alternative
grounds
in
support
of
the
assessment:
(1)
that
the
proceeds
were
property
passing
on
the
death
of
the
deceased
within
the
opening
words
of
Section
3(1),
and
(2)
that
the
two
policies
were
property
of
which
the
deceased
was
competent
to
dispose
within
Section
3(1)
(a).
HELD:
As
to
the
amount
payable
pursuant
to
the
double
indemnity
clause,
there
was
no
insurance
legislation
in
Canada
that
would
classify
“double
indemnity
insurance”
otherwise
than
as
life
insurance.
The
policy
in
question
was
clearly
‘‘a
policy
of
insurance
effected
on
the
life
of
the
deceased”
within
Section
3(1)
(m)
and
the
appeal
in
this
respect
therefore
succeeded.
As
to
the
accident
policies,
the
applicability
of
Section
3(1)
(j)
was
to
be
considered
without
reference
to
any
decisions
bearing
on
the
corresponding
provision
of
the
U.K.
Finance
Act.
So
considered,
there
was
no
sense
of
the
word
“interest”
which
was
appropriate
to
that
word
as
used
in
Section
3(1)
(j)
and
the
inclusion
of
the
two
amounts
in
question
could
not
be
justified
under
that
section.
As
to
the
first
of
the
Minister’s
alternative
arguments,
the
beneficiary
of
the
policies,
both
before
and
after
the
death
of
the
deceased,
had
the
same
rights,
namely,
those
of
the
“obligee”
in
whom
inhered
any
rights
existing
under
the
contracts.
It
followed
that
no
such
rights
were
property
passing
on
the
death
of
the
deceased.
The
Minister’s
second
alternative
argument
was
not
pressed.
The
appeal
was
allowed
in
part.
George
W.
Ainslie,
Q.C.
and
Elizabeth
McFayden
for
the
Appellant.
Gordon
F.
Henderson,
Q.C.,
Heber
Nethery,
Q.C.
and
Robert
I).
Chapman
for
the
Respondent.
‘ASES
REFERRED
to:
Sinclair
v.
Blue
Top,
[1947]
4
D.L.R.
561;
S.
<£’
S.
Industries
Inc.
v.
Rowell,
[1966]
S.C.R.
419;
Vaskevitch
Estate
v.
M.N.R.,
[1969]
1
Ex.
C.R.
519;
[1969]
C.T.C.
47;
D’Avigdor-Goldsmid
v.
Inland
Revenue
Commissioners,
[1953]
A.C,
347;
Westminster
Bank
Ltd.
v.
Inland
Revenue
Commissioners,
[1958]
A.C.
210
;
Smythe
v.
M.N.R.,
[1968]
2
Ex.
C.R.
189
;
[1969]
C.T.C.
558;
way
Estate
v.
M.N.R.,
[1966]
Ex.
C.R.
64;
[1965]
C.T.C.
288
;
M.N.R.
v.
Pillsbury
Holdings
Ltd.,
[1965]
1
Ex.
C.R.
676
;
[1964]
©.T.C.
294;
M.N.R.
v.
Worsley
Estate,
[1967]
1
Ex.
C.R.
473;
[1966]
C.T.C.
804;
Attorney-General
V.
Robinson,
[1901]
2
I.R.Q.B.
67.
JACKETT,
P.:—This
is
an
appeal
from
a
decision
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
dated.
February
27,
1970,
allowing
an
appeal
from
an
assessment
made
under
the
Estate
Tax
Act
on
January
26,
1968,
by
reducing
the
aggregate
net
value
of
the
property
passing
on
the
death
of
the
late
William
Theo
Shaw,
who
died
on
December
9,
1966,
as
fixed
by
that
assessment,
by
an
amount
of
$75,000
being
the
amount
paid
under
certain
insurance
policies
by
reason
of
the
accidental
death
of
the
deceased.
The
appeal
was
argued
on
a
special
case
stated
by
the
parties.
During
his
life,
the
deceased
entered
into
certain
contracts
of
insurance
with
certain
insurers,
the
particulars
of
which
are
as
follows
:
(a)
Accident
Insurance
"Policy
No.
N-619404
issued
by
Loyal
Protective
Life
Insurance
Company
providing
for
the
payment
of
$5,000
in
the
event
of
the
accidental
death
of
the
deceased.
(b)
Group
Accident
Insurance.
Policy
No:
11574,
Certificate
299,
issued
by
the
Union
Mutual
Life
Insurance
Company
providing
for
payment
of
$50,000
in
the
event
of
the
accidental
death
of
the
deceased.
(c)
Life
Insurance
Policy
No.
3167416-5
issued
by
the
London
Life
Insurance
Company
providing
for
the
payment
of
$20,000
in
the
event
of
death
and
providing
for
an
additional
payment
of
$20,000
in
the
event‘of
accidental
death
of
the
deceased.
,•
*:
.
Copies
of
the
actual
insurance
policies
have
not
been
placed
before
the
Court
but
a
copy
of
the
certificate
issued
under
the
Union
Mutual
Group
Accident
Insurance
Policy
is
attached
to
the
special
case.
The
other
facts
are
agreed
by
the
special
case
to
be
as
follows
:
The
respondent,
Mary
Collette
Shaw,
wife
of
the
deceased
was
named
as
the
beneficiary
of
the
Loyal
Protective
Life
Insurance
Company
Policy.
No
beneficiary
was
named
by
the
deceased
with
respect
to
the
other
two
policies
of
insurance.
(Notwithstanding
this
agreement
by
the
parties,
the
copy
of
the
certificate
issued
under
the
Union
Mutual
Group
Accident
Policy
shows
that
‘‘The
Estate
of
William
Theo
Shaw’’
had
been
named
thereby
as
“Beneficiary”;
and,
in
my
view,
this
provision
in
the
contract
document
must
prevail
over
the
agreement
by
the
parties.*)
During
his
lifetime,
the
deceased
paid
the
insurers
all
the
amounts
which
under
the
contracts
of
insurance
he
had
covenanted
to
pay,
and
no
other
person
had
any
claim
to
ownership
of
the
said
policies
of
insurance.
The
deceased
died
on
December
9,
1966
as
a
result
of
:
injuries
sustained
in
an
automobile
accident.
The
respondents
are
the
executors
of
the
deceased.
Upon
the
accidental
death
of
the
deceased,
the
insurers,
pursuant
to
the
provisions
of
the
contracts
of
insurance,
paid
sums
of
$5,000,
$50,000
and
$20,000
respectively
to
the
respondents.
The
$20,000
referred
to
herein
is
the
additional
$20,000
paid
by
the
London
Life
Insurance
Company
upon:
accidental
death;
the
$20,000
paid
by
them
on
death
is
not
in
issue
in
this
appeal.
In
computing
the
aggregate
net
value
of
property
passing
on
the
death
of
the
deceased
under
the
provisions
of
the
Estate
Tax
Act,
the
appellant
included
the
sums
of
$5,000,
$50,000,
$20,000
paid
by
the
insurance
companies
and
issued
a
notice
of
assessment,
dated
January
26,
1968.
The
respondents
objected
to
the
said
assessment
and
appealed
to
the
Tax
Appeal
Board.
By
a
judgment
dated
February
27,
1970
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
allowed
the
appeal,
reduced
the
aggregate
net
value
of
property
passing
on
the
death
of
the
deceased
by
the
amount
of
$75,000
and
referred
the
matter
back
to
the
appellant
for
re-assessment
accordingly.
The
appeal
was
argued
in
this
Court
on
the
assumption
that,
by
virtue
of
the
policies
and
the
appropriate
governing
provin-
cial
insurance
legislation,
the
amounts
in
question
became
payable,
upon
the
accidental
death
of
the
deceased,
either
to
his
legal
representatives
or
to
the
named
beneficiary.
There
is
nothing
in
the
facts
to
show
what
is
the
proper
law
of
thé
insurance
contracts
in
question.
During
argument,
however,
reference
was
made
to
The
Insurance
Act
of
Ontario,
as
it
appears
in
the
Revised
Statutes
of
1960,
and
I
am
assuming
for
the
purposes
of
these
reasons
that
it
is
the
applicable
law.
I
propose
to
consider
first
the
question
raised
concerning
the
$20,000
paid
under
the
London
Life
Insurance
Policy.
By
the
London
Life
Insurance
Policy,
the
insurer
undertook
to
pay
to
the
‘‘Beneficiary’’
upon
the
death
while
the
policy
was
in
force
of
the
‘‘Life
Insured’’
(being
the
deceased)
the
“Face
Amount’’
stated
in
the
policy,
which
was
$20,000.
In
addition,
the
insurer
agreed
thereby
that,
if
the
death
resulted,
during
the
continuance
of
the
policy,
‘‘from
bodily
injury
..
.”’
and
such
death
was
caused
solely
by
‘‘external;
violent
and
accidental
means
.
.
.’’,
it
would
pay
in
addition
to
the
face
amount
of
the
policy
the
amount
of
the
‘‘Double
Indemnity
Accident
Benefit
Shown
.
.
.’’,
which
was
$20,000.
Both
the
“Face
Amount’’
of
$20,000
and
the
‘‘Double
Indemnity
Accident
Benefit’’
of
$20,000
were
paid
and
the
appellant
included
them
both
in
the
“aggregate
net
value
of
property
passing
on
death”
as
determined
by
the
assessment
under
attack,
relying
on
Section
3(1)
(m)
of
the
Estate
Tax
Act,
which
reads,
in
part:
8.
(1)
There
shall
be
included
in
computing
the
aggregate
net
value
of
the
property
passing
on
the
death
of
a
person
the
value
of
all
property,
wherever
situated,
passing
on
the
death
of
such
person,
including,
without
restricting
the
generality
of
the
foregoing,
(m)
any
amount
payable
under
a
policy
of
insurance
effected
on
the
life
of
the
deceased
.
.
.
The
Tax
Appeal
Board
held
that
the
$20,000
double
indemnity
accident
benefit
was
not
properly
included
as
property
passing
on
the
death.
I
am
of
opinion
that,
as
to
the
amount
of
$20,000
in
question,
the
appeal
must
succeed.
The
London
Life
Insurance
policy
is
“a
policy
of
insurance
effected
on
the
life
of
the
deceased’’,
no
matter
what
definition
of
those
words
one
adopts,
and
the
double
indemnity
accident
benefit
is
an
amount
payable
under
that
policy.
That
the
double
indemnity
accident
benefit
is
an
amount
payable
under
the
policy
is
obvious.
That
the
policy
is
a
policy
of
insurance
that
was
effected
on
the
‘‘life’’
of
the
deceased
is
clear
from
the
essential
nature
of
the
contract,
which
is
a
con-
tract
Whereby
a
fixed
amount
is
payable
on
the
‘death”
of
the
deceased
and
an
increased
amount
is
payable
at
the
same
time
if
the
‘
*
death
’
’
was
caused
by
‘
‘
violent
and
accidental
’
’
means.
It
is
a
contract
for
payment
of
a
benefit
upon
the
termination
of
the
life,
which
benefit
varies
according
to
the
manner
of
such
termination.
The
Court.
can,
I
think,
take
judicial
knowledge
of
the
fact
(which
everyone
who
has
done
business,
as
an
agent
or
prospective
insured;
with
insurance
companies
in
Canada
knows)
that
one
of
the
classes
of
life
insurance
sold
by
Canadian
life
insurance
companies
is
double
indemnity
insurance.
So
far
as
I
am
aware,
there
is
no
insurance
legislation
in
Canada
that
classifies
‘‘double
indemnity
insurance’’
otherwise
than
as
life
insurance.
See,
for
example,
the
Ontario
Insurance
Act,
R.S.O.
1960,
c.
190,
paragraph
17
of
Section
1
of
which
reads
as
follows
:
17.
“double
indemnity
insurance”
means
insurance
undertaken
by
an
insurer
as
part
of
a
life
insurance
contract
whereby
the
terms
of
the
policy
provide
for
the
duration
of
such
insurance
for.
more
than
one
year
and
for
payment
only
in
the
event
of
the
death
of
the
insured
by
accident
of
an
additional
amount
of
insurance
money
not
exceeding
the
amount
payable
in
the
event
of
death
from
other
causes;
I
turn
now
to
the
other
two
policies,
which
may
for
present
purposes
be
dealt
with
together.
In
both
cases,
there
is
an
obligation
to
pay
‘‘insurance
money’’
in
the
event
of
“accident
to
the
person
.
.
.
insured’’.
In
the
one
case,
there
is
an
obligation
to
pay
specified
lump
sums
if
such
an
accident
results
in
certain
permanent
injuries,
such
as
loss
of
a
hand
and
a
foot
or
the
sight
of
an
eye,
or
if
such
an
accident
results
in
loss
of
life.
In
the
other
case,
there
is
a
corresponding
obligation
plus
an
obligation
to
pay
benefits
in
respect
of
periods
of
disability
resulting
from
accident
or
sickness.
These
are,
in
my
view,
‘‘accident
insurance”
policies
within
the
meaning
of
the
expression
in
common
parlance
in
Canada
and
within
the
relevant
definition
in
the
Ontario
Insurance
Act
(supra),
viz.:
1.
In
this
Act,
except
where
inconsistent
with
the
interpretation
of
any
Part,
1.
“accident
insurance”
means
insurance
by
which
the
insurer
undertakes,
otherwise
than
incidentally
to
some
other
class
of
insurance
defined
by
or
under
this
Act,
to
pay
insurance
money
in
the
event
of
accident
to
the
person
or
persons
insured,
but
does
not
include
insurance
by
which
the
insurer
undertakes.
to
pay
insurance
money
both
in
the
event
of
death
by
accident
and
in
the
event
of
death
from
any
other
cause;
Presumably,
the
deceased’s
wife
was
designated
as
a
beneficiary
under
the
Loyal
Protective
Policy
by
virtue
of
Section
244
of
the
Ontario
Insurance
Act,
which
reads:
244,
(1)
Where
insurance
money
is
payable
upon
death
by
accident,
the
insured,
or,
in
the
case
of
group
accident
insurance,
the
person
insured,
may
designate
in
writing
a
beneficiary
to
receive
the
insurance
money
or
part
thereof
and
may
alter
or
revoke
in
writing
any
prior
designation.
(2)
If
the
beneficiary
is
not
living
at
the
time
of
the
death
of—
the
person
insured,
the
insurance
money
is
payable
to
the
insured
or
his
estate,
or,
in
the
case
of
group
accident
insurance,
the
estate
of
the
person
insured,
unless
the
instrument
by
which
the
beneficiary
is
designated
otherwise
provides.
(3)
A
beneficiary
designated
under
subsection
(1)
may
upon
the
death
of
the
person
insured
enforce
for
his
own
benefit
the
payment
of
insurance
money
payable
to
him
and
payment
to
the
beneficiary
discharges
the
insurer,
but
the
insurer
may
set
up
any
defence
that
it
could
have
set
up
against
the
insured,
or
the
person
insured
in
the
case
of
group
accident
insurance,
or
the
personal
representative
of
either
of
them.
Having
regard
to
Section
228
(
3),
this
provision
also
applies
to
a
group
accident
insurance
and
would,
therefore,
also
be
authority
for
designation
of
the.
deceased’s
“estate”
(which
is,
of
course,
another
way
of
referring
to
the
persons
who,
after
his
death,
become
the
executors
of
his
will
or
his
personal
representatives)
as
beneficiary
under
the
Union
Mutual
Group
Accident
Insurance
Policy.
The
appellant
included
the
amounts
of
$5,000
and
$50,000
that
were
paid
under
the
two
accident
policies
in
the
aggregate
net
value
of
the
property
passing
on
the
death
of
the
deceased
under
Section
3(1)
(j)
of
the
Estate
Tax
Act,
the
English
version
of
which
reads:
3.
(1)
There
shall
be
included
in
computing
the
aggregate
net
value
of
the
property
passing
on
the
death
of
a
person
the
value
of
all
property,
wherever
situated,
passing
on
the
death
of
such
person,
including,
without
restricting
the
generality
of
the
foregoing,
(j)
any
annuity
or
other
interest
purchased
or
provided
by
the
deceased,
either
by
himself
alone
or
in
concert
or
by
arrangement
with
any
other
person,
to
the
extent
of
the
beneficial
interest
therein
arising
or
accruing
by
survivorship
or
otherwise
on.
the
death
of
the
deceased;
and.
the
French
version
of
which
reads:
3.
(1)
Dans
le
calcul
de
la
valeur
globale
nette
des
biens
transmis
au
décès
d’une
personne,
on
doit
inclure
la
valeur
de
tous
les
biens,
quelle
qu’en
soit
la
situation,
transmis
au
décès
de
cette
personne,
y
compris,
sans
restreindre
la
généralité
de
ce
qui
précède,
(j)
toute
annuité
ou
tout
autre
intérêt
acheté
ou
établi
par
le
défunt,
soit
par
lui
seul,
soit
de
concert
ou
d’accord
avec
une
autre
personne,
dans
la
proportion
de
l’intérêt
bénéfi-
ciaire
né
ou
acquis
en
l’espèce
par
survivance
ou
autrement
au
décès
du
de
cujus;
The
Tax
Appeal
Board
has
held
that
the
appellant
was
wrong
in
concluding
that
Section
3(1)
(j)
applied
to
the
two
amounts
paid
under
the
accident
policies.
In
this
Court,
the
appellant
contends
that
Section
3
(
1
)
(j)
does
support
the.
assessment
as
far
as
these
two
amounts.
are
concerned,
and
the
respondent
contends
that
it
does
not.
i
.
:
The
Estate
Tax
Act
was,
in
1958,
a
completely
new
taxing
statute.
Paragraph
(j)
of
Section
3(1)
was,
however,
taken
almost
verbatim
from
several
similar
statutes
dating
at
least
back
to
the
United
Kingdom
Finance
Act,
1894*
and,
while
there
have
been
no
decisions
that
bear
on
the
question
as
to
the
application
of
Section
3
(
1
)
(j)
in
the
present
circumstances,
there
have
been:
many
decisions
that
would
have
to
be
considered
if
the
problem
arose
under
one
of
the
other
provisions
that
read
in
almost
the
same
words
as
paragraph
(j).
The
words,
as
used
in
such
other
provisions,
have
been
given
an
application
that
has
been
affected
by
the
context
of
the
whole
of
the
statutes
in
which
such
‘other
provisions
have
been
found.
The
context
in
which
Section
3(1)
(j)
is
found
in
the
Estate
Tax
Act
is
completely
different,
and,
for
that
reason
alone,
I
do
not
think
it
can
be
assumed
that
Parliament
intended
paragraph
(j)
to
have
whatever
effect
may
have
been
assigned
to
the
same
words
by
decisions
interpreting
such
earlier
provisions.!
I
am
strengthened
in
my
decision
to
take
this
position
by
the.
fact
that
an
intensive
study
of
decisions
concerning
such
other
provisions,
with
the
very
careful
and
thorough
assistance
of
experienced
counsel,
leaves
me
in
a
state
of
some
bewilderment
as
to
the
effect.
of
the
provision
in
the
Finance
Act,
1894
and
by
the
fact
that
the
Canadian
decisions
on
provincial
legislation
have
contented
themselves
with
applying
the
available
decisions
with
reference
to
the
Finance
Act,
1894.
I
propose,
therefore,
to
consider
whether
Section
3(1)
(j)
supports
the
inclusion
of
the
amounts
paid
under
the
accident
policies
on
the
basis
that
there
are
no
decisions
that
have
any
bearing
on
the
matter.t
The
question
that
has
to
be
decided
at
the
outset
is
whether
there
is
here
‘‘any
annuity
or
other
interest
purchased
or
pro-
vided:
by
the
deceased’’
within
the
meaning
of
those
words
in
paragraph
(j).
If
that
question
is
decided
in
the
negative,
that
will
be
an
end
of
the
matter
as
far
as
Section
3(1)
(j)
is
concerned.
What
we
have,
in
each
case,
is
a
contract,
by
virtue
of
which,
when
it
is
read
with
the
governing
provincial
insurance
legislation,
a
certain
amount
became
payable
to
a
designated
beneficiary
on
the
happening
of
a
certain
event
(the
accidental
death
of
the
deceased)/
Neither
that
contract
nor
the
payment
for
which
it
provides
is
an
annuity.
The
question
to
be
decided
is,
therefore,
whether
one
or
the
other
is
an
‘‘interest’’
within
the
meaning
of
that
word
in
the
English
version
or
an
“intérêt”
within
the
meaning
of
that
word
in
the
French
version.
I
know
of
no
sense
belonging
to
the
word
“intérêt”
that
is
in
any
way
appropriate
to
that
word
as
used
in
Section
3(1)
(j).
See,
for
example,
Dictionnaire
Quaillet
de
la
Langue
Française
at
page
989.
I
have
only
been
referred
to
one
sense
that
the
English
word
interest”
has
that
is
in
any
way
appropriate.
That
sense
appears
in
The
Concise
Oxford
Dictionary,
5th
edition,
at
page
635,
as
follows:
1.
Legal
concern,
title,
right,
(in
property)
.
.
.
Used
in
this
sense,
Section
3(1)
(j)
refers
to
an
“interest”
in
something,
which
interest
has
been
purchased
or
provided
by
the
deceased.
A
common
use
of
the
word
“interest”
in
such
a
context
is
to
refer
to
a
life
interest
in
property,
a
reversionary
interest
in
property,
or
a
leasehold
interest
in
property.
I
have
no
doubt
that
the
word
can
also
be
used
to
refer
to
the
“interest”
of
an
absolute
owner
of
property
but
it
would
be
a
rare
use.
A
much
more
common
use
of
the
word
would
be
to
refer
to
such
interest
as
a
beneficiary
may
have
in
trust
property.
The
word
“interest”
is
not,
however,
according
to
my
understanding
of
the
ordinary
use
of
English
language,
appropriate
to
refer
to
an
obligation
to
pay
money
upon
the
happening
of
an
event
some
time
in
the
future
or
to
the
actual
payment
when
made.
Such
an
obligation
is
not
an
“interest”
in
property.
It
is
an
obligation
to
find
and
transfer
(pay)
unascertained
property
(money)
at
some
as
yet
undetermined
time
in
the
future.
There
is
no
interest
in
any
property
created
by
entering
into
the
contract.*
The
contract
merely
creates
a
conditional
obligation
to
pay
money.
Finally,
there
is
no
sense
of
the
word
‘‘interest’’
that.
extends.
to
a
payment
of
money
as
such.
My
conclusion
is,
therefore,
that
the
inclusion
of
the
two
amounts
paid
under
the
accident
policies
cannot
be
justified
under
Section
3(1)
(j).
In
this
Court,
for
the
first
time,
the
appellant
attempted
to
justify
the
inclusion
of
the
amounts
in
question
by
reference
to
statutory
provisions
that
were
not
relied
upon
by
him
when
he
made
the
assessment
under
attack.
These
alternative
positions
are
only
of
importance,
for
present
purposes,
as
far
as
the
amounts
paid
under
the
accident
policies
are
concerned,
as
I
have
concluded
that
the
amount
paid
under
the
double
indemnity
life
insurance
policy
was
properly
included
under
the
provision
relied
on
when
the
assessment
was
made.
The
respondent
takes
the
preliminary
objection,
on
this
branch
of
the
case,
that
the
Minister
is
restricted,
on
an
appeal
from
an
assessment,
to
the
provisions
of
the
statute
on
which
he
relied
in
making
the
assessment.
Having
regard
to
the
conclusions
that
I
have
reached,
on
the
Minister’s
alternative
grounds,
it
is
not,
strictly
speaking,
necessary
for
me
to
deal
with
this
preliminary
objection.
My
view
is,
however,
that
there
is
no
substance
in
it.
By
Section
12(1)
of
the
Estate
Tax
Act,
the
Minister
has
a
duty
to
assess
‘‘the
amount
of
tax
payable”.
By
Section
22(1),
any
person
who
objects
to
an
assessment
made
by
the
Minister
‘‘of
the
amount
of
tax
payable”
may
serve
a
notice
of
objection
and,
by
Section
23(1),
where
a
person
has
served
such
a
notice
of
objection
to
an
assessment,
he
may
appeal
to
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
to
have
the
“assessment”
vacated
or
varied.
Section
24(1)
provides
for
an
appeal
from
the
decision
of
the
Board
to
this
Court.
In
my
view,
on
a
correct
appreciation
of
these
provisions,
the
question
that
has
to.be
determined
at
each
stage
is
whether
the
‘‘amount
of
tax
payable”
as
assessed
is
in
excess
of
the
amount
contemplated
by
the
statute.
If
it
is
not
in
excess
of
that
amount,
the
appeal
should
be
dismissed
even
though
the
fore
property
of
the
obligee;
and
that
it
follows
that,
when
something
is
done
that
creates
such
a
right,
it
results
in
the
coming
into
existence
of
whatever
“interest”
there
may
be
in
such
property.
In
my
view,
however,
paragraph
(j)
is
directed
to
the
purchase
or
provision
of
an
“interest”
as
such,
and
being
a
charging
provision,
it
should
be
strictly
construed
and
should
not
be
extended
by
such
a
process
of
rationalization
to
embrace
every
contract
creating
contractual
or
statutory
rights.
“The
liability
of
the
subject
under
a
taxing
statute
ought
not
to
be
arrived
at
by
a
course
of
subtle
and
sophistical
argument
.
.
.”.
See
per
Viscount
Simon
in
D’Avigdor-
Goldsmid
v.
Inland
Revenue
Commissioners,
[1953]
A.C.
347
at
362.
I
find
some
support
for
my
view
in
the
doubts
expressed
by
Lord
Morton
concerning
the
meaning,
apart
from
authority,
of
this
“curious
phrase”
in
the
corresponding
provision
in
the
United
Kingdom
Finance
Act,
1894.
See
D’Avigdor-Goldsmid
v.
I.R.C.
(supra)
at
page
367
and
Westminster
Bank
Ltd,
v.
I.R.C.,
[1958]
A.C.
210
at
224.
Minister
based
himself
on
a
wrong
provision.
On
the
other
hand,
if
to
support
the
assessment
‘on
some
alternative
provision,
the
Minister
has
to
rely
on
facts
other
than
those
that
he
found
or
assumed
in
making
the
assessment,
the
onus
is
on
the
Minister,
in
my
view,
to
allege
and
establish
such
facts.
Compare
Smythe
v.
M.N.R.,
[1969]
C.T.C.
558;
[1968]
2
Ex.
C.R.
189,
per
Gibson,
J.
at
page
202,
Conway
Estate
v.
M.N.R.,
[1965]
C.T.C.
283;
[1966]
Ex.
C.R.
64,
per
Thurlow,
J.
at
pages
68-9,
and
M.N.R.
v.
Pillsbury
Holdings
Lid.,
[1964]
C.T.C.
294;
[1965]
1
Ex.
C.R.
676,
per
Cattanach,
J.
at
page
686.
It
is
this
latter
onus
that
I
had
in
mind
in
the
concluding
portion:
of
my
judgment
in
M.N.R.
v.
Worsley
Estate,
[1966]
C.T.C.
804;
[1967]
1
Ex.
C.R,
473.
I
turn
to
the
appellant’s
two
alternative
bases
for
supporting
the
inclusion
of
the
amounts
paid
under
the
accident
policies.
In
the
first
place,
the
‘appellant
contends
that
the
two
accident
policies
were
property
passing
on
the
death
of
the
deceased
within
the
opening
words
of
Section
3(1)
of
the
Estate
Tax
Act.
As
already
indicated,
in
my
view,
in
the
case
of
both
of
these
policies,
there
was,
immediately
before
the
accidental
death
of
the
deceased,
a
beneficiary
that
had
been
designated
for
the
purposes
of
Section
244
of
the
Ontario
Insurance
Act.
Such
beneficiary
was,
by
virtue
of
Section
244(3),
the
“obligee”
in
whom
inhered
any
property
rights
in
respect
of
accidental
death
existing
by
virtue
of
the
contracts
before
the
death,
and
such
beneficiary
continued
to
be
the
obligee
in
whom
any
such
rights
inhered
after
the
death.
It
follows
that
no
such
rights
were
property
passing
on
the
death
of
the
deceased.
The
appellant’s
second
alternative
basis
for
supporting
the
inclusion
of
the
amounts
paid
under
the
accident
policies
was
that
the
two
accident
policies
were
property
of
which,
immediately
prior
to
death,
the
deceased
was
competent
to
dispose.
This
contention
was
mentioned
in
this
Court
for
the
purpose
of
keeping
the
position
open
for
the
appellant
on
an
appeal
from
the
judgment
of
this
Court.
The
point
was
not
pressed
in
this
Court
having
regard
to
the
decision
in
M.N.R.
v.
Worsley
Estate
(supra).*
My
conclusion
is,
therefore,
that
the
judgment
appealed
from
should
be
quashed
and
that
the
assessment
appealed
from
should
be
referred
back
to
the
appellant
for
re-assessment
on
the
basis
that
the
amounts
of
$5,000
and
$50,000
received
under
Accident
Insurance
Policy
No.
N-619404,
issued
by
Loyal
Protective
Life
Insurance
Company,
and
Group
Accident
Insurance
Policy
No.
11574,
Certificate
299,
issued
by
the
Union
Mutual
Life
Insurance
Company,
respectively,
should
not
be
included
in
the
aggregate
net
value
of
the
property
passing
on
death.
AS
indicated,
I
have
considered
the
matter
on
the
assumption
that
the
Ontario
Insurance
Act
is
applicable
and
on
the
basis
that
the
deceased’s
estate
was
nominated
as
beneficiary
under
the
Group
Policy.
If
either
party
is
of
the
view
that
I
am
mistaken
on
either
or
both
of
these
assumptions
and
that
such
mistake
or
mistakes
affects
the
outcome,
I
should
be
glad
to
hear
counsel
with
regard
thereto
and
to
reconsider
my
conclusions.
With
regard
to
costs.
success
is
divided
but,
in
my
view,
the
appeal
is
successful
on
a
point
that
did
not
account
for
more
than
one-quarter
of
the
work
involved
in
the
appeal.
In
the
circumstances,
the
respondent
will
be
entitled
to
one-half
the
amount
of
costs
of
the
appeal
taxed
on
the
ordinary
basis.
Subject
to
either
party
applying
for
further
argument
in
relation
to
the
matters
referred
to
above,
an
‘application
may
be
made
under
Rule
172(1)
(b)
for
judgment
as
indicated.
above.
ABBOTT
LABORATORIES,
LIMITED,
Suppliant,
and
HER
MAJESTY
THE
QUEEN,
Respondent.
Exchequer
Court
of
Canada
(Kerr,
J.),
January
18,
1971,
in
a
Petition
of
Right
to
recover
sales
tax
paid
under
protest.
Sales
tax—Federal—Excise
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
100—Section
32—
In
a
Petition
of
Right
the
suppliant
sought
to
recover
some
$5,674
in
sales
tax
paid
under
protest
under
Section
30
of
the
Act
in
respect
of
its
product
“Sucaryl”.
In
the
suppliant’s
view
Sucaryl,
a
noncaloric,
artificial
sweetener,
was
exempt
from
tax
under
Section
1
of
Part
VIII
of
Schedule
III
of
the
Act
(as
provided
for
in
Section
32
of
the
Act)
as
a
substance
“sold
or
represented
for
use
in
the
diagnosis,
treatment,
mitigation
or
prevention
of
a
disease,
disorder,
abnormal
physical
state
.
.
.”.
The
product
was
sold
both
by
prescription
and
without
prescription
to
the
general
public
and,
in
the
Crown’s
view,
was
not
sold
for
the
described
purposes
but
as
a
sugar
substitute,
its
only
merit
being
not
in
the
substance
itself
but
in
the
consequent
reduction
in
the
consumption
of
sugar.
HELD:
The
product
in
question
was
not
within
the
exempting
provision
referred
to.
Neither
the
suppliant’s
intention
in
marketing
the
product,
as
revealed
by
its
advertising,
nor
the
potentiality
of
the
product
for
the
use
described
in
the
statute,
brought
the
substance
within
the
exemption.
Petition
dismissed.
II.
Reward
Stikeman,
Q.C.
and
Bruce
Verchere
for
the
Suppliant.
Derek
Aylen,
Q.C.
and
Saul
Franklin
for
the
Respondent.
Cases
REFERRED
to
:
The
Queen
v.
Mead
Johnson
of
Canada
Ltd.,
[1966]
Ex.
C.R.
3829;
[1965]
C.T.C.
339;
[1966]
S.C.R.
457;
[1966]
C.T.C.
201;
Pfizer
Corporation
et
al.
v.
The
Queen,
[1966]
Ex.
C.R.
125;
[1965]
C.T.C.
394;
[1966]
S.C.R.
449;
[1966]
C.T.C.
194.
Kerr,
J.:—This
is
a
Petition
of
Right
for
recovery
of
$5.674.96*
that
was
paid
by
the
suppliant
under
protest
as
federal
sales
tax
imposed
by
Section
30
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
100,
in
respect
of
a
product
manufactured
and
sold
in
Canada
by
the
suppliant,
the
product
being,
as
the
evidence
shows,
a
non-caloric
artificial
sweetener
known
as
"Sucaryl"
Section
32
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act
provides
that
the
tax
imposed
by
Section
30
does
not
apply
to
the
sale
of
the
articles
mentioned
in
Schedule
III.
That
Schedule
is
divided
into
parts,
each
with
a
heading.
Part
VIII
has
the
heading
‘‘
Health’’,
and
Section
1
thereof
reads
as
follows:
1.
Any
material,
substance,
mixture,
compound
or
preparation,
of
whatever
composition
or
in
whatever
form,
including
materials
for
use
exclusively
in
the
manufacture
thereof,
sold
or
represented
for
use
in
the
diagnosis,
treatment,
mitigation
or
prevention
of
a
disease,
disorder,
abnormal
physical
state,
or
the
symptoms
thereof,
in
humans
or
animals
or
for
restoring,
correcting
or
modifying
organic
functions
in
humans
or
animals,
but
not
including
cosmetics
or
confectionery
products.
The
issue
for
determination
is
whether
Sucaryl
qualifies
for
exemption
under
the
said
Section
1.
The
suppliant
says
in
its
petition
that
Sucaryl
is
used
by
individual
consumers
to
treat,
prevent
or
mitigate
such
diseases,
disorders
and
abnormal
physical
states
as
obesity,
diabetes,
tooth
decay
and
arteriosclerosis,
that
it
is
manufactured
and
sold
by
the
suppliant
with
the
intent
and
object
that
it
‘be
purchased
and
used
by
individual
consumers
to
treat,
prevent
or
mitigate
the
said
diseases,
disorders
and
abnormal
physical
states;
and
that
it
is
a
substance
sold
for
use
in
the
treatment,
mitigation
or
prevention
of
a
disease,
disorder,
abnormal
physical
state,
or
the
symptoms
thereof,
in
humans,
within
the
meaning
of
Section
1
and
therefore
is
exempt
from
the
tax.
The
respondent
in
the
statement
of
defence
says
that
Sucaryl
is
used
by
individual
consumers
and
by
manufacturers
and
producers
of
foodstuffs
as
a
sugar
substitute,
and
is
not
sold
or
represented
for
use
in
the
treatment,
prevention
or
mitigation
of
a
disease,
disorder,
abnormal
physical
state
or
the
symptoms
thereof,
within
the
meaning
of
the
said
Section
1.
Sucaryl
is
sold
in
tablet-and
liquid
forms
and
in
a
granulated
form:
that
can
be
sprinkled
on
food,
all
of
which
are
for.
use
in
place
of
sugar
in
drinks,
e.g.
coffee
and
tea,
and
in
food,
e.g.
desserts.
The
active
ingredients
are
sodium
and
calcium
cyclamates,
in
a
ratio
of
10
parts
of
cyclamate
to
1
of
saccharin.
Saccharin
has
been
sold
for
50
years
as
an
artificial
sweetener,
but
it
is
said
to
have
some
disadvantages
that
Sucaryl
does
not
have.
Several
other
products,
which
are.
competitive
with
Sucaryl,
are
sold
under
their
various
trade
names.
The
supplant
manufactures
and
sells
many
drugs
and
health
products
in
Canada.
It
also
has
business
associations
and
affiliations
in
other
countries
and
is
recognized
as
a
company
whose
business
is
largely
in
the
health
field.
Mr.
Cornell,
its
president,
gave
a
brief
history
of
the
development
of
Sucaryl,
from
which
it
appears
that
the
company
learned
in
the
1940’s
that
cyclamates
had
sweetening
power
and
the
company,
after
experimentation,
marketed
the
first
Sucaryl
product,
about
the
year
1950,
to
doctors
and
drug
stores,
and
later,
in
the
late
1950’s
and
early
1960’s,
promoted
the
product
directly
to
consumers,
followed
in
1966
by
distribution
directly
to
the
food
trade.
A
bulletin
(Exhibit
5).
issued
by
the
company
to
its
sales
people
in
1950,
when
the
product
was
first
put
on
the
market,
described
it
as
a
substitute
for
sugar
and
stated
that
its
background
consisted
of
extensive
clinical
studies
as
a
sweetening
agent
for
diabetics,
and
also
that
it
is
useful
in
anti-obesity
diets.
A
press
release
(Exhibit
6)
which
accompanied
the
bulletin,
stated:
that
while
Sucaryl
would
be
prescribed
and
recommended
by
physicians
it
would
also
be
available
at
drug
stores
without
prescription
and
would
be
used
by
all
classes
of
people
in
all
states
of
health.
The
promotion
of
the
product
directly.
to
the
publie
is
i
through
advertisements
in
newspapers
and
magazines
(the
lay
press,
as
distinguished
from
medical
publications)
including
Readers
Digest,
Time,
Chatelaine
and
Weekend
Magazine,
and,
in
the
more
recent
years,
through.
television.
The
company’s
recommended
budget
for
consumer
advertising
expenditures
in
1969
was
$220,000,
of
which
$1,360
was
for
advertising
in
medical
and
pharmaceutical
publications.
The
explanation
given
by
the
company’s
Director
of
Marketing
for
the
relatively
small
latter
amount
was
that
physicians
and
retail
pharmacists.
have
an
excellent
knowledge
of
Sucaryl
and
the
company
does
not
need
to
spend
money
to
tell
them
something
that
they
already
know
.
.
Actual
expenditures
for
advertising
in
the
company
’s
fiscal
year
December
1,
1968
to
November
30,
1969
were:
Approximately
30,000
trade
size
packages
were
given
away
to
physicians,
dieticians
and
nurses,
and,
in
addition,
204,213
recipe
pamphlets
were
sent
out
in
response
to
consumer
requests
and
by
distribution.
to
physicians
and
dieticians
(Exhibit
12).
Consumer
advertising
in
media
|
(T.V.
and
print)
|
$232,033.33
|
Other
consumer
advertising
|
122.7
|
22,079.19
|
Direct
mail
RARE
CEE
|
|
429.19
|
Product
literature
|
_'
|
497.34
|
|
;
$255,039.05
|
Mr.
Ferrari,
the
company’s
Director
of
Marketing,
joined
the
company
in
1968
as
marketing
manager
and
became
Director
of
Marketing
in
June,
1969,
with
responsibility
for
the
advertising,
marketing
and
selling
activities
of
the
company
in
Canada.
The
Marketing
Department
conducts
outside
research
and
consumer
surveys
to
find
out
how
many
households
in
Canada
are
using
artificial
sweeteners,
what
type
they
are
using
and
for
what
purpose,
who
recommended
the
product,
and
whether
the
purchasers
bought
it
in
a
drug
store
or
in
a
grocery.
The
company
learned
from
those
studies
that
approximately
20%
of
all
the
households.
use
some
kind
of
artificial
sweetener,
and
of.
that
number
about
45%
use
Sucaryl
and
the
remainder
use
saccharin
or
some
cyclamate
sweetener.
One
of
the
objectives
of
the
surveys
is
to
obtain
a
‘‘consumer
profile’’
to
which
advertising
may
be
directed.
Samples
of
advertisements
were
produced.
in
Exhibits
8
and
9.
The
advertisements.
present.
Sucaryl
as
an
effective
substitute
for
sugar
and
they
say
that
it
has
the
sweetening
effect
of
sugar
without
the
calories
that
sugar
has.
The
advertising
i
is
directed
to
the
ultimate
consumer
and
the
product
is
available.
011
the
market
to
anyone
who
wishes
to
purchase
it.
Dr.
Beaton,
a
professor
of
nutrition
and
head
of
the
Department
of
Nutrition
at
the
University
of
Toronto,
was
called
by
the
suppliant
and
gave
his
opinion
(a)
that
Sucaryl
is
a
noncaloric
artificial
sweetener,
•(b)
that
a
purpose
of
Sucaryl
is
to
enable
individuals
to
reduce
their
consumption
of
sugar,
and
(ec)
that
Sucaryl
may
be
and
is
used
to
reduce
caloric
intake
and
thus
control
weight,
and
to
ensure
a
proper
diet
and
thus
provide
for
a
proper
nutritional
balance.
He
based
those
opinions
on
what
he
stated
to
be
certain
other
opinions
and
facts,
including
the
following:
excessive
caloric
intake
leads
to
or
causes
overweight
and
obesity;
overweight
is
an
abnormal
physical
state
and
obesity
is
a
disease;
an
individual
can
prevent,
treat
or
mitigate
overweight
and
obesity
by
regulating
or
reducing
caloric
intake
;
such
regulation
and
reduction
by
means
of
elimination
of
sugar
may
be
facilitated
by
the
use
of
Sucaryl;
Sucaryl
assists
in
the
maintenance
of
the
palatability
of
diets
in.
which
sugar:
restriction
is
a
prominent
feature,
and
is
conducive
to
adherence
to
the
diet.
On
cross-examination
he
said
that,
to
his
knowledge,
Sucaryl
is
not
used
in
any
way
other
than
by
adding
it
to
food;
that
all
Sucaryl
does
is
to
make
food
taste
sweet;
that
if
an
obese
or
diabetic
person
replaces
sugar
with
Sucaryl
it
is
the
absence
of
the
sugar
and
not
the
presence
of
the
Sucaryl
that
brings
about
the
desired
result;
that
in
diet
therapy
the
attempt
is
to
reduce
the
calories
and
still
maintain
a
nutritionally
balanced
diet,
and
Sucaryl
will
make
such
a
diet
more
palatable
and
will
help
to
make
the
person
accept
and
keep
to
the
diet.
Mr.
Labow,
another
witness
called
by
the
suppliant,
is
a
practising
pharmacist
in
Montreal.
He
said
that
he
has
been
selling
Sucaryl
in
his
drug
store
ever
since
it
came
on
the
market
and
that
it
is
sold
across
the
counter,
both
with
and
without
a
doctor’s
prescription.
An
advertising
firm,
John
B.
Leopold
Advertising
Limited,
has
handled
all
the
suppliant’s
advertising
for
the
past
61%
years.
Mr.
Leopold,
its
president,
stated
that
Abbott’s
objectives
were
to
portray
Sucaryl
as
a
caloric
free
sweetener
for
the
use
of
individuals
who
are
overweight
or
on
a
diet
or
weight
watching.
His
firm
conducted
research
and
consumer
polls
to
determine
the
type
of
individual
using
Sucaryl
and
to
ascertain
what
media
should
be
used
in
the
advertising.
Evidence
was
given
by
Mr.
Labelle,
the
suppliant’s
sales
manager,
and
by
Mr.
Goulet,
one
of
its
hospital
area
managers,
in
respect
of
the
sales
organization
and
selling
activities
of
the
company.
Canada
is
divided
into
8
districts,
each
of
which
has
1.
district
manager,
5
hospital
area
managers
and
6
or
7
hospital
managers.
The
hospital
manager
visits
hospitals
and
their
medical
staffs,
pharmacists
and
dieticians,
to
promote
the
sale
of
Sucaryl
and
also
the
company’s
ethical
drugs,
i.e.
drugs
promoted
only
to
the
medical
and
pharmaceutical
professions.
The
area
manager
visits
doctors
and
drug
stores
for
the
same
purpose.
Booklets
describing
Sucaryl
and
its
uses
(Exhibit
19),
and
recipes
(Exhibit
14),
calorie
charts
and
samples
of
Sucaryl
are
given
to
hospitals,
doctors
and
drug
stores.
At
times,
representatives
attend
meetings
of
diabetic
associations
for
the
same
purpose.
The
company
receives
many
requests
for
its
booklets
and
samples.
Sucaryl
is
also
sold
through
food
brokers
for
ultimate
sale
in
groceries
and
supermarkets.
Dr.
Nash,
a
medical
doctor
who
is
an
assistant
physician
and
teacher
at
the
Royal
Victoria
Hospital
in
Montreal,
is
also
the
suppliant’s
Scientific
Director
responsible
for
the
company’s
medical
and
research
departments,
pharmaceutical
development
and
quality
assurance.
He
gave
his
opinion
that
Sucaryl
is
a
non-caloric
artificial
sweetener,
that
its
purpose
is
to
provide
a
suitable
substitute
for
sugar
in
the
diet,
and
that
it
may
be
and
is
used
in
the
mitigation
and
prevention
of
arteriosclerosis,
hypertension
and
diabetes,
and
in
the
treatment,
mitigation
or
prevention
of
obesity
and
overweight.
He
based
those
opinions
on
what
he
stated
to
be
medical
facts
and
opinions,
including
the
following:
obesity
is
a
disease;
overweight
is
an
abnormal
physical
state;
persons
who
are
overweight
or
obese
are
prone
to
arteriosclerosis,
heart
disease,
hypertension
and.
diabetes;
a
form
of
arteriosclerosis
is
atherosclerosis,
in
which
certain
arteries
become
thickened
through
fatty
deposits
composed
of
cholesterol
and
triglycerides;
excess
sugar
can
raise
the
level
of
triglycerides
in
the
blood,
and
saturated
fats
can
increase
the
level
of
cholesterol,
and
thus
there
is
a
link
between
atherosclerosis
and
the
consumption
of
sugar
and
between
atherosclerosis
and
obesity
or
overweight,
and
both
sugar
eating
and
obesity
or
overweight
can
predispose
to
the
development
of
arteriosclerosis;
heart
disease
and
heart
failure
in
obese
and
overweight
persons
may
result
by
reason
of
the
excess
weight
the
body
must
carry,
the
increase
in
the
volume
of
blood
to
be
pumped.
and
resulting
hypertension
(rise
of
pressure
‘in
the
arteries);
obesity
and
overweight
predispose
to
diabetes;
and
the
avoidance
of
obesity
or
overweight
will
help
to
prevent
all
of
those
diseases.
Dr.
Nash
also
outlined
the
company’s
activity
in
developing
and
testing
new
drugs
and
other
products,
carrying
out
basic
chemical
research
to
find
out
about
new
therapeutic
compounds
and
new
drugs,
developing
dosage
forms
for
new
drugs,
and
laboratory.
testing
and
inspection
to
ensure.
quality
control
¢
of
the
company’s
products.
The
development
by
the
company
of
a
new
drug
or
chemical
product
for
use
by
humans
proceeds
by
various
stages,
including
testing
in
animals,
a
clinical
submission
to
the
Food
and
Drug
Directorate
(FDD)
of
the
Department
of
National
Health
and
Welfare,
then
testing
in
humans
if
a
clearance
to
do
so
is
given
by
the
FDD,
compilation
of
case
histories
in
the
testing
conducted,
and
eventually
a
complete
further
submission
to
the
FDD.
The
final
step
is
to
obtain
approval
by
the
FDD
of
a
monograph
submitted
by
the
company,
which
sets
forth
the
product’s
use,
dosage,
precautions
and
claims.
There
was
evidence
that
the
development
‘of
Sucaryl
was
carried
out
in
that
manner
before
it
was
put
on
the
market.
Dr.
Nash
said
that
in
his
mind
there
is
no
distinction
between
obesity
and
overweight
and
that
it
is
difficult
to
say
where
obesity
starts,
that
certainly
a
weight
that
is
20%
above
the
norm
in
Metropolitan
Life
Standards
is
obese,
10%
may
be.
During
his
cross-examination
it
was
disclosed
that
in
1966
there
was
a
difference
of
opinion
between
the
suppliant
and
the
FDD
as
to
whether
Sucaryl
should
be
treated,
insofar
as
labelling
was
concerned,
as
a
food
or
as
a
drug,
and
in
a
letter
to
the
FDD,
dated
June
>
à,
1966,
Dr.
Nash
expressed
the
following
view
:
Our
opinion
here
has
always
been
that
Sucaryl
is
nota
drug
and
our
current
labelling
reflects
this
belief.
During
our
telephone
conversation
you
said
that
your
Directorate
does
regard
Sucaryl
as
a
drug.
Nevertheless,
we
still
find
it
hard
to
make
it
fit
the
definition
on
page
1
of
the
Act—e.g.,
Sucaryl
is
a
“mixture
of
substances
manufactured
.
'.
.
for
use
in
.
.
.
treatment,
mitigation
or
prevention
of
.
.
.'
an
abnormal
physical
state”
(i.e.
obesity).
In
our
view,
it
is
not
the
Sucaryl
which
treats
or
mitigates
the
obesity,
but
the
lack
of
sugar
consumption
which
accompanies
the
use
of
Sucaryl.
Thus
Sucaryl,
being
without
any
action
in
the
body,
does
not
seem
to
fit
the
intent
of
this
definition.
On
the
other
hand,
Sucaryl
fits
the
definition
of
a
food
in
that
it
is
“sold
or
represented
for
use
food
or
drink
for
man
.
.
.”
and
“may
be
mixed
with
food
for
any
purpose
whatever”.
In
the
United
States,
as
you
know,
Sucaryl
is
not
regarded
as
a
drug
by
the
F.D.A.
.
,
That
letter
brought
a
reply,
dated
June
10,
1966,
from
the
FDD,
in
which
it
was
said
that
Sucaryl
:
in
packaged
form
should
conform
to
the
drug
labelling
requirements
of
the
Food
and
Drug
Regulations,
and
the
letter
said,
inter
alia
:
.
It
is
rather
academic,
we
believe,
to
argue
that
a
synthetic
sweetener
does
not
treat
or
mitigate
obesity
but
that
this
is
accomplished
by
the
lack
of
sugar.
Actually
the
synthetic
sweetener
replaces
sugar
and,
in
this
manner,
it
can
be
maintained
that
it
is
used
as
a
treatment
for
the
abnormal
condition.
,,
However,
I
can
understand
your
contention
that
Sucaryl
fits
into
the
definition
of
“food”.
Indeed
you
will
find
that
the
nonsweetening
agents
are
listed
in
Table
IX
of
Division
16
(Food
Additives)
of
the
Food
and
Drug
Regulations.
Thus
we
recognize
that
when
a
synthetic
sweetener
is
incorporated
in
a
food
by
a
manufacturer,
the
synthetic
sweetener
itself
is,
by
definition,
a
food.
It
waS
agreed
by
the
parties
and
there
was
evidence
that
there
is
a
direct
correlation
between
obesity
and
mortality
rates.
Dr.
le
Riche,
called
by
the
suppliant,
is
a
medical
doctor
and
a
professor
and
head
of
the
Department
of
Epidemiology
and
Biometrics
at
the
University
of
Toronto.
He
gave
his
opinion
to
substantially
the
same
effect
as
that
given
by
Dr.
Nash
in
the
latter’s
affidavit
(Exhibit
21).
Dr.
le
Riche’s.
opinion
in
his
affidavit
(Exhibit
24)
that
‘‘obesity
is
a
disease
and
overweight
is
an
abnormal
physical
state’’
1s,
however,
contrary
to
an
opinion
given
by
him
in
1965
when
he
gave
evidence
for
a
defendant
company
in
this
court
in
the
Metrecal*
case,
as
appears
in
his
answers,
as
follows
:
Q.
Isn’t
obesity
or
overweight
a
disease?
|
A.
It
is
not
a
disease,
|
sir,
it
is
a
type
of
body-build.
|
|
By
His
Lordship:
|
|
Q.
Is
it
an
abnormal
physical
state?
|
A.
No
sir,
it
is
not
an
|
abnormal
physical
state.
|
|
In
explanation
of
the
differing
opinions
Dr.
le
Riche
said
that
he
changed
his
mind
since
giving
the
earlier
opinion.
Dr.
Wilson,
called
by
the
suppliant,
is
a
medical
doctor
in
general
practice
in
the
Province
of
Quebec.
He
gave
his
opinion
that
the
purpose
of
Sucaryl
is
to
enable
persons
to
reduce
their
consumption
of
sugar
and
that
it
may
be
and
is
used
to
reduce
caloric
intake,
and
thus
reduce
or
limit
the
individual’s.
weight,
and
to
keep
the
person
on
a
balanced
diet
and
thus
ensure
adequate
nutrition.
He
said
that
the
appearance
of
diabetes
can
be
retarded
by
dieting
and
reduction
of
the
intake
of
sugar,
and
he
prescribes
Sucaryl
to
his
patients
who
are
overweight
or
obese,
suffering
from
hypertension
or
arteriosclerosis
or
who
are
arthritic
or
diabetic,
to
reduce
or
limit
their
weight,
as
a
preventive
measure.
He
regards
obesity
as
a
disease
and
thinks
that
diabetes
may
be
reduced
by.
cutting
down
on
overweight.
He
said
that
10
or
15
pounds.
overweight
is
not
a
disease
or
an
abnormality;
that
Sucaryl
itself
is
not
doing
anything
physiologically
or
pharmacologically
but
it
is
an
additive
to
food
to
make
the
food
taste
sweet;
that
the
benefit
to
the
patient
comes
from
the
sweet
taste
and
if
a
person
can
get
used
to
the
taste
of
food
without
a
sweet
taste
he
would
not
require
Sucaryl
or
saccharin.
Miss
Beaulieu,
a
witness
called
by
the
respondent,
is
a
qualified
nutritionist
and
dietician
who:
has
a
Master
of
Science
degree
with
specialty
in
food
and
nutrition.
She
has
had
extensive
experience
in
that
field,
including
about
7
years
as
a
clinical
dietician
and
2
years
as
Chief
Therapeutic
Dietician
in
the
Montreal
General
Hospital.
She
said
that
Sucaryl
is
a
non-nutritive
food
additive
that
has
no.
caloric
value
and
although
it
may
be
used
to
improve
the
flavour
of
a
diet
it
has
no
effect
upon
the
course
of
any
disease
or
abnormal
physical
state
or
the
symptoms
thereof,
and,
when
it
is
used,
any
effect
on
the
diet
is
as
a
result
of
the
absence
of
sugar,
not
the
presence
of
Sucaryl.
As
I
understand
her
evidence,
she
regards
Sucaryl,
when
it
is
used,
as
not
being
part
of
a
dietary
treatment
(for
the
purpose
of
a
diet
is
to
provide
the
proper
amount
of
carbohydrates,
proteins,
fats,
minerals,
vitamins
and
water,
by
selection
of
various
foods
in
various
quantities)
because
Sucaryl
is
not
a
food
and
therefore
cannot
be
part
of
a
dietary
treatment.
Dr.
Gourzis,
a
medical
doctor
with
a
Ph.D.
in
Pharmacology
from
the
University
of
Manitoba,
now
employed
as
Director
of
Clinical
Pharmacology
by
Schering
Corporation,
an
ethical
drug
firm
in
Bloomfield,
N.J.,
was
also
called
as
a
witness
by
the
respondent.
He
said
that
Sucaryl
is
a
non-nutritive
chemical
substance,
the
sole
purpose
of
which
as
a
food
additive
is
to
provide
artificial
sweetening
;
it
has
no
known
therapeutic
action
and
has
not
been
shown
to
alter
the
course
of
any
disease,
disorder
or
abnormal
physical
state,
or
the
symptoms
thereof;
it
does
not
provide
symptomatic
relief
or
influence
the
prescribed
regimen
of
treatment;
it
does
not
fit
into
any
of
the
categories
of
drugs
and
therapeutic
regimens,
including
suppression
of
appetite
or
diet
restriction,
used
in
the
treatment,
prevention
or
mitigation
of
obesity
or
diabetes;
although
often
used
as
an
adjunct
(i.e.
not
contributing
to
the
primary
purpose
of
the
treatment)
in
the
diet
of
obese
or
diabetic
persons,
it
does
not
reduce
the
signs
or
symptoms
or
alter
the
course
of
these
diseases;
and,
from
a
therapeutic
standpoint
any
beneficial
effect
upon
a
disease
condition
of
a
diet
that
includes
Sucaryl
is
only
as
a
result
of
the
absence
of
sugar,
not
the
presence
of
Sucaryl.
On
his
view
of
diet
as
the
proper
management
of
the
calories
in
foodstuffs
and
minerals
and
vitamins,
Sucaryl
does
not
fall
into
the
category
of
dietary
treatment,
because
it
is
not
a
foodstuff,
it
provides
no
calories
and
it
has
no
pharmacological
reaction.
On
cross-examination
Dr.
Gourzis
said
that
none
of
his
colleagues
prescribe
Sucaryl,
but
if
it
were
prescribed
for
a
patient
it
would
fall
into
treatment
in
the
sense
that
it
might
make
the
patient’s
life
a
little
more
comfortable,
and
its
effect
in
that
case,
being
subjective,
is
difficult
to
measure
;
and
it
would
be
treatment
of
the
patient,
not
of
his
disease
or
physical
condition
or
symptoms.
Dr.
Angel,
called
by
the
respondent,
is
a
medical
doctor
and,
inter
alia,
an
assistant
professor
in
the
Department
of
Medicine
in
the
University
of
Toronto
and
a
specialist
in
internal
medicine
doing
research
in
the
field
of
fatty
tissue
in
obesity,
arteriosclerosis,
diabetes
and
coronary
heart
disease.
He
said
that
the
generally
accepted
working
definition
of
an
obese
person
is
one
whose
weight
is
20%
above
the
Metropolitan
Life
Tables
of
ideal
weight;
obesity
is
a
disease
of
over-nutrition
characterized
by
excessive
amounts
of
adipose
tissue
(which
absorbs
fat)
;
Sucaryl
has
no
food
value
and
no
effect
with
respect
to
obesity
;
although
it
is
used
to
improve
the
quality
of
life
of
some
persons
it
has
no
effect
upon
the
disease,
because
obesity
is
a
nutritional
disorder
unrelated
to
the
presence
or
absence
of
Sucaryl
and
although
it
is
also
frequently
used
as
a
useful
adjunct
and
as
part
of
the
diet
of
obese
persons
it
plays
no
part
in
the
body
metabolism
and
does
not
alter
or
reverse
the
sequence
of
events
that
lead
to
the
obese
state
or
its
symptoms.
He
also
said
that
diabetes
is
a
genetic
disease
that
cannot
be
prevented,
that
obesity
is
not
a
cause
of
the
disease
but
may
bring
on
a
manifestation
and
aggravation
of
its
symptoms,
and
that.
the
manifestation
can
be
modified
and
ameliorated
by
treatment,*
including
an
appropriate
diet;
that
weight
reduction
and
restriction
of
sugar
are
frequently
indicated
for
diabetic
persons
and
Suearyl
is
a
useful
adjunct
in
a
diabetic
diet
but
it
has
no
effect
on
the
disease
or
its
symptoms;
patients
who
have
arteriosclerosis
and
an
accumulation
of
cholesterol
in
their
blood
vessels
frequently
substitute
Sucaryl
for
sugar
to
limit
the
carbohydrate
intake,
but
if
so
used
it
is
the
lack
of
carbohydrates,
not
the
presence
of
Sucaryl,
that
reduces
the
blood
cholesterol.
levels.
I
have
outlined
substantial
portions
of
the
evidence,
sufficient,
I
think,
to
indicate
generally
its
substance.
I
will
now
refer
to
principal
points
in
the
final
arguments.
Counsel
for
the
suppliant
contends
that
in
order
to
succeed
the
suppliant
need
only
establish
that
in
the
period
concerned
it
sold
Sucaryl
for
use
in
the
treatment,
mitigation
or
prevention
of
a
disease,
disorder
or
abnormal
physical
state
or
the
symptoms
thereof,
but
not
necessarily
exclusively
for
such
use;
that
the
company’s
intent
in
selling
Sucaryl
is
all
important
and
that
its
intent
and
purpose
was
that
Sucaryl
be
used
in
diets
of
individuals
as
an
aid
in
weight
control
or
weight
reduction
and
to
restrict
or
control
their
calorie
intake,
such
control
and
reduction
being
important
because
overweight
is
an
abnormal
physical
state
and
obesity
is
a
disease
and,
in
addition,
there
is
a
correlation
between
overweight
or
obesity
and
diabetes,
heart
disease
and
hypertension;
and
the
reduction
and
control
of
caloric
intake
is,
in
the
company’s
mind,
a.
means
of
treating,
preventing
or
mitigating
overweight
and
obesity
and
the
diseases
mentioned,
or
their
symptoms;
also
that
Sucaryl
was
used
and
was
capable
of
being
used
by
individuals
as
part
of
a
dietary
treatment
to
control
or
reduce
their
calorie
intake
and
weight
in
the
treatment,
prevention
or
mitigation
of
diabetes,
heart
disease,
overweight
and
obesity.
i
Counsel
for
the
respondent
argues
that
if
Sucaryl
is
sold
more
or
less
indiscriminately,
for
use
by
the
sick
and
by
the
well,
and
commonly
to
persons
who
are
merely
weight
watchers
and
not
obese,
it
is
not
exempt
from
the
tax
;
that
in
order
to
qualify
for
exemption
the
product
must
not
only
be
sold
for
one
or
more
of
the
uses
specified
in
the
Act
and
not
for
non-
specified
uses,
but
must
also
be
in
fact
useful
and
have
capability
for
one
or
more
of
the
specified
uses;
that
overweight
is
not
a
disease
or
an
abnormal
physical
condition
unless
it
is
so
extreme
as
to
properly
be
called
obesity,
which
is
generally
regarded
as
a
degree
of
overweight
of
about
20%
or
more
above
normal
weight,
that
Sucaryl
is
not
part
of
the
treatment
of
that
condition
or
of
any
disease;
that
the
exemption
applies
only
to
medicinal,
curative
and
preventive
substances,
and
Suearyl
has
no
curative,
therapeutic,
medicinal
or
preventive
effect
and
is
sold
indiscriminately
as
a
substitute
for
sugar,
and
there
is
no
exemption
from
tax
of
a
sugar
substitute
as
such.
*-
.
Section
1.
of
Part
VIII
of
Schedule.
III
was
enacted
in
1968
by
chapter
29
of
that
year.
It
is
largely
word
for
word
the
same
as
the
definition
of
‘‘pharmaceuticals’’
in
the
former
Section
2(1)
(cc)
of
the
Act,
which
was
repealed
at
the
same
time
by
chapter
29.
Prior
to
chapter
29
only
a
few
drugs
were
exempt
from
the
tax.
The
whole
range
of
pharmaceuticals
was
not
exempt.
Counsel
for
the
respondent
submitted
that
the
1968
amendments
were
designed
to
reduce
the
cost
of
drugs
to
the
consumer
by
giving
them
tax
exemption.
This
is
a
plausible
supposition.
No
other
reason
was
suggested
at
the
trial.
Sucaryl
is
not
a
drug
or
a
medicine
in
either
the
common
or
in
the
medical
use
of
those
words,
and
it
is
not
a
food.
Sucaryl
is
described
in
the
Compendium
of
Pharmaceuticals
and
Specialties,
published
by
the
Canadian
Pharmaceutical
Association
and
widely
used
by
pharmacists,
as
a
‘‘sweetening
agent,
a
non-Caloric
sweetener’’.
It
is
listed
under
“Diabetic
(sugar
free)
Preparations’’
but
is
not
referred
to
under
Diabetes
or
Antiobesity
agents
or
any
disease
or
as
an
appetite
depressant
or
in
the
treatment
or
relief
of
any
disease.
Section
1
of
Part
VIII
of
Schedule
III
contains
the
words
treatment
”,
“
mitigation
”,
“
prevention
”,
“
disease
’
’
and
‘
ab
normal
physical
state’’.
Various
dictionary
definitions
were
referred
to,
including
the
follOWing:
Treatment
Management
in
the
application
of
remedies;
medical
or
surgical.
(Shorter
Oxford
English
Dictionary,
Vol
1,
3rd
ed.,
1944,
reprinted
1947).
The
management
of
illness
by
the
use
of
drugs,
dieting
or
other
means
designed
to
bring
relief.
or
effect
a
cure.
(Britannica
Standard
Dictionary,
Vol.
2,
1958).
Action
or
manner
of
treating
of
patient
medically
or
surgically.
(Webster’s
Third
New
International
Dictionary,
1961).
Management
in
the
application
of
medicine,
surgery,
etc.
(Random
House
Dictionary
of
the
English
Language,
1966).
The
means
employed
in
effecting
the
cure
of
disease.
(Blakis-
ton's
New
Gould
Medical
Dictionary,
2nd
ed.).
...
(d)
manner
of
applying
remedies
to
cure;
mode
or
course
pursued
for
remedial
ends;
(Webster's
New
Twentieth
Century
Dictionary,
G.
&
C.
Miriam
Second
Edition).
.
.
3.
Management
in
the
application
of
remedies;
(The
Shorter
Oxford
English
Dictionary,
Third
Edition
1956).
Mitigate
Alleviate
(pain,
grief).
(Concise
Oxford
Dictionary,
4th
ed.,
1951,
reprinted
1952,
1954
and
1956).
To
make
less
severe,
.
.
painful;
(Webster's
Third
New
International
Dictionary,
1961).
To
moderate,
to
render
milder.
(Dorland's
Illustrated
Medical
Dictionary,
24th
ed.),
Allay,
make
milder,
moderate.
(Blakiston's
New
Gould
Medical
Dictionary
2nd
ed.).
To
make
mild
or
gentle.
To
make
weaker
or
milder.
(Stedman's
Medical
Dictionary,
Unabridged,
Second
Lawyers
Edition).
1.
To
alleviate,
as
suffering
;
to
assuage;
to
lessen:
to
ameliorate;
as,
to
mitigate
pain;
to
make
less
rigorous
or
less
severe;
(Webster's
New
Twentieth
Century
Dictionary,
G.
&
C.
Miriam
Second
Edition).
.
8.
To
alleviate
(a
disease,
.
.
.).
(The
Shorter
Oxford
English
Dictionary,
Third
Edition
1956).
Mitigation
Alleviation;
abatement
or
diminution,
as
of
anything
painful,
harsh,
severe.
(Webster’s
New
Twentieth
Century
Dictionary,
G.
&
C.
Miriam
Second
Edition).
Prevent
.
To
prevent
is
to
stop
something
effectually
by
forestalling
action
and
rendering
it
impossible.
(Random
House
Dictionary
of
the
English
Language,
1966).
.
7.
To
use
preventive
measures.
(The
Shorter
Oxford
English
Dictionary,
Third
Edition,
1956).
Prevention
.
.
.
the
action
of
keeping
from
happening
or
of
rendering
impossible
an
anticipated
event
or
an
intended
act;
a
means
of
prevention;
(The
Shorter
Oxford
English
Dictionary,
Vol.
1,
3rd
ed.,
1944,
reprinted
1947).
Obstruction
or
thwarting
of
disease.
(Third
New
International
Dictionary,
1961).
The
act
of
preventing;
effectual
hindrance.
(Random
House
Dictionary
of
the
English
Language,
1966).
Preventive
Intended
or
serving
to
ward
off
harm,
diseases,
etc.;
that
which
prevents
or
hinders,
as
a
medicine
to
ward
off
disease.
(Britan-
nica
Standard
Dictionary,
Vol.
2,
1958).
.
.
.
warding
off
disease.
(Stedman’s
Medical
Dictionary,
Unabridged,
Second
Lawyers
Edition).
.
In
medicine,
something
administered
to
prevent
disease
or
to
prevent
the
progress
of
a
disease;
(Webster’s
New
Twentieth
Century
Dictionary,
G.
&
C.
Miriam
Second
Edition).
Preventive
Treatment
The
institution
of
measures
designed
to
protect
a
person
from
an
attack
of
a
disease
to
which
he
has
been,
or
is
liable
to
be,
exposed.
(Stedman's
Medical
Dictionary,
Unabridged,
Second
Lawyers
Edition).
Obese
Excessively
fat;
corpulent;
overweight.
(The
Random
House
Dictionary
of
the
English
Language,
Unabridged
Edition
(1966)).
Corpulent.
(The
Concise
Oxford
Dictionary,
5th
ed.,
1964).
Very
fat
or
fleshy;
corpulent.
(Shorter
Oxford
English
Dictionary,
Vol.
II
(1944—revised
3rd
ed.)).
1A,
of
a
person:
excessively
corpulent:
(Webster's
Third
New
International
Dictionary,
14th
ed.,
1961).
Encumbered
with
excess
of
flesh;
very
corpulent;
exceedingly
fat,
syn.
see
corpulent.
(Funk
&
Wagnalls
New
Standard
Dictionary
of
the
English
Language,
18th
ed.,
1959).
Excessively
fat.
(Dorland's
Illustrated
Medical
Dictionary,
1965,
24th
ed.).
Extremely
fat;
corpulent.
(Blakiston's
New
Gould
Medical
Dictionary,
2nd
ed.,
1956).
Obesity
Generalized
weight
excess,
due
to
accumulation
of
fat,
beyond
10
to
20
per
cent
of
the
normal
range
for
the
particular
age,
sex,
and
height.
(Blakiston's
New
Gould
Medical
Dictionary,
2nd
ed.,
1956).
Corpulent
1.
Having
a
great
excess
of
fat;
very
fleshy,
obese.
(Funk
&
Wagnalls
New
Standard
Dictionary
of
the
English
Language,
18th
ed.,
1959).
.vu
..
.
.
There
was
no
unanimity
among
the
medical
witnesses
as
to
what
degree
of
overweight
constitutes
obesity,
but
they
were
agreed
that
a
person
whose
weight
is
20%
or
more
above
the
Metropolitan
Life
Tables
of
ideal
weight
is
obese,
and
that
obesity
is
a
disease.
I
think
that
such
a
percentage
of
overweight
is
within
the
relevant
dictionary
meanings
of
obesity,
and
that
a
much
greater
percentage
certainly
would
be.
But
I
do
not
think
that
it
is
necessary
to
decide
at
what
point
overweight
becomes
obesity
or
an
abnormal
physical
state.
Overweight
is
harmful
in
diabetes,
hypertension
and
arteriosclerosis;
it
is
harmful
when
it
is
extreme
even
where
there
is
none
of
those
diseases,
and
it
is
unhealthy
when
it
reaches
the
obesity
stage.
Sucaryl
is
prescribed
by
some
medical
doctors
for
use
in
diets
for
control
of
weight.
It
is
also
used
in
self-imposed
diets
for
the
same
purpose.
In
such
diets,
Sucaryl,
when
it
is
used,
is
a
substitute
for
sugar
and
the
only
part
it
plays
is
to
make
the
food
taste
sweet,
which
for
some
persons
makes
the
food
more
palatable
and
the
diet
more
acceptable
and
more
likely
to
be
adhered
to
than
if
the
food
were
unsweetened.
Of
itself,
it
has
no
therapeutic,
curative
or
preventive
effect
on
any
disease
or
abnormal
physical
state
or
the
symptoms
thereof.
It
has
no
nutritional
value.
It
is
not
an
appetite
depressant.
There
was
some
suggestion
that
even
if
making
food
more
palatable
and
making
a
diet
more
acceptable
is
considered
to
be
‘‘treatment’’
it
is
only
treatment
of
the
person
and
not
treatment
of
a
disease
or
abnormal
physical
state.
I
doubt
that
Parliament
had
in
mind
so
fine
a
distinction.
As
already
stated,
the
suppliant’s
advertising
presents
Suearyl
as
an
effective
substitute
for
sugar
and
claims
that
it
has
the
sweetening
effect
of
sugar
without
the
calories
that
sugar
has
and
is
directed
to
the
ultimate
consumer.
The
company
sells
it
to
be
available
on
the
market
to
anyone
who
wants
to
purchase
it,
in
drug
stores
and
in
grocery
stores
and
supermarkets..
The
company
also
sells
it
to
hospitals,
with
exemption
from
the
sales
tax
by
virtue
of
Section
2
of
Part
VIII
of
Schedule
III,
which
is
a
broad
exempting
provision
applicable
to
articles
and
materials
for
the
sole
use
of
publie
hospitals.
The
advertising
is
directed
to
weight
reduction
and
control,
to
not.
only
those
who
are
overweight
but
also
to
persons
not
overweight
who
want
to
keep
trim,
such
as
fashion
conscious
weight-watchers.
The
advertisements
contain
such
expressions
as
‘‘the
battle
of
the
bulge”;
“girth
control’’;
“calorie
counters’’;
“chubby
hubby”;
‘This
year
have
fun
and
eat
all
you
want
on
your
holidays—take
Suearyl’’;
“How
would
you
look
in
your
bathing
suit
this
summer’’;
If
you
have
a
weight
problem,
doesn’t
it
make
sense
to
avoid
these
calories
by
using
Sucaryl’’;
‘Enjoy
a
little
midnight
snack,
what
if
it
adds
a
few
extra
calories.
If
you.
used
Sucaryl
regularly,
you’ve
probably
saved
those
calories
during
the
day.
So
your
calorie
bank
is
balanced”;
‘‘
Kat,
drink
and
be
merry
with
Christmas
desserts
made
with
Sucaryl’’;
“You’re
in
if
you’re
thin—you’re
out
if
you’re
stout’’;
‘You
have
3
months
to
get
in
shape
for
summer’’;
‘‘Let
Sucaryl
help
hold
your
calorie-line
’
”
;
“
Diet
or
not—Suearyl
helps
hold
your
‘calorie-line
”;
“If
you’re
a
regular
sugar
user,
switch
from
sugar
to
Sucaryl
and
you’ll
cut
out
100’s
of
calories
per
day,
without
going
on
a
diet’’;
‘‘People
with
a
sweet
tooth
who
have
a
weight
problem,
or
who
just
want
to
keep
in
shape,
are
switching
to
Suearyl’’;
‘‘Suearyl
is
the
product
used
to
sweeten
over
90%
of
the
low-calorie
food
and
beverage
products
sold
through
your
stores”;
“If
you’re
watching
your
weight—switch
to
Sucaryl”;
“Sucaryl
is
the
easy
way
to
aid
your
diet
efforts’’
“When
your
diet
says
‘no
sweets’—switch
to
Sucaryl’’;
‘
‘
Sweeten
with
Sucaryl
for
low-calorie
diets
”
;
‘‘Most
families
have
calorie-counters
’
’.
My
attention
was
drawn
to
the
decision
of
Dumoulin,
J.,
of
this
court,
in
Pfizer
Corporation
et
al.
v.
The
Queen,
[1966]
Ex.
C.R.
125;
[1965]
C.T.C.
394,
where
the
i
issue
was
whether
a
food
product
in
biscuit
form,
called
“Limmits”,
was
taxable
under
the
Excise
Tax
Act.
In
that
ease
Mr.
J
ustice
Dumoulin
reached
a
threefold
decision
that:
1.
“Limmits”
are
not
biscuits
in
the
ordinary
or
statutory
sense
of
the
word.
2.
They
cannot
be
considered
“bakers’
biscuits”
as
intended
by
Schedule
III.
3.
Above
all
else,
the
“supremo,
ratio
decidendi”
is
that
“Limmits”,
pursuant
to
the
clear
language
of
paragraph
(cc),
subsection
(1)
of
Section
2,
are
“sold
or
represented”
in
such
a
way,
and
intended
to
secure
specified
results
that
unmistakably
stamp
them
with
statutory
qualification
of
“pharmaceuticals”.
As
already
stated
‘‘pharmaceuticals’’
then
had
a
statutory
definition
similar
to
the
present
exempting
Section
1
of
Part
VIII
of
Schedule
IIT.
Dumoulin,
J.
referred
to
‘‘the
undisputed
dietary
or
medicinal
nature
of
Limmits,
differentiating
them,
without
a
doubt,
from
the
non-pharmaceutically
treated
varieties
of
biscuits”;
as
a
“medicinal
preparation’’
with
‘‘medicated
ingredients
and
remedial
objectives’’;
as
a
pharmaceutically
compounded
mixture
and
a
food
containing
a
bulking
agent
which
imparts
a
feeling
of
fullness
that
reduces
the
sensation
of
hunger,
as
well
as
phosphorus,
caleium
and
vitamins
having
the
function
of
medicaments.
I
do
not
regard
that
decision,
based
as
it
was
on
evidence
very
different
from
the
evidence
in
the
present
case
and
dealing
with
a
product
very
different
from
Sucaryl,
as
laying
down
a
ratio
decidendi
that
should
apply
in
the
present
case
to
bring
Sucaryl
within
the
scope
of
the
present
exempting
Section
1.
On
appeal
to
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
([1966]
S.C.R.
449;
[1966]
C.T.C.
194)*
the
Supreme
Court
expressed
neither
agreement
nor
disagreement
with
the
trial
judge’s
finding
that
“Limmits”
was
a
‘‘pharmaceutical’’
but
said,
inter
ala,
that
the
product
contained
an
appetite
depressant
and
was
sold
as
an
elaborate
calorie-restricted
meal
for
the
purpose
of
reducing
weight,
but
that
to
be
exempt
from
the
sales
tax
it
had
to
be
a
specific
article
described
in
Schedule
III
(as
it
then
was)
and
that
the
product
was
not
such
an
article
and
was
therefore
subject
to
the
tax.
My
conclusion
and
determination
is
that
Sucaryl,
being
merely
an
artificial
sweetener,
a
substitute
for
sugar,
that
has
no
effect
other
than
sweetening
and
that
is
sold
indiscriminately
by
the
company
for
use
by
the
persons
and
for
the
purposes
set
forth
in
the
company’s
advertisements,
is
not
within
the
exempting
Section
1
of
Part
VIII
of
Schedule
III.
I
do
not
think
that
a
seller’s
intent
in
selling
a
product,
although
it
is
a
factor,
is
a
controlling
consideration
that
determines
whether
the
product
is
exempt
from
tax
under
the
section.
I
think
that
in
the
section
’s
health
context
it
is
implicit
that
the
product
have
a
potentiality
for
the
use
mentioned
in
the
section
and
that
its
sale
be
intended
to
be
at
least
principally
for
that
use.
But
even
if
the
seller’s
intent
is
the
controlling
consideration,
the
suppliant’s
intent,
Judging
from
its
advertising,
is
to
sell
Sucaryl
to
any
and
all
persons,
as
a.
substitute
for
sugar,
whether
or
not
they
are
healthy
and
whether
or
not
they
have
any
need
to
restrict
their
use
of
sugar
or
their
weight,
which
in
my
opinion
does
not
contemplate
sale
principally
for
use
in
the
treatment,
mitigation
or
prevention
of
a
disease,
disorder,
abnormal
physical
state,
or
the
symptoms
thereof,
and
puts
Sucaryl
outside
the
exempting
provision.
Therefore,
the
petition
will
be
dismissed,
with
costs
to
be
taxed
in
favour
of
the
respondent.