Kerr,
J.:—This
is
an
appeal
by
way
of
Special
Case
stated
for
the
opinion
of
the
Exchequer
Court
of
Canada
pursuant
to
its
General
Rules
150
and
151,
and
continued
in
the
Federal
Court
of
Canada,
in
respect
of
the
appellant’s
appeal
from
the
income
tax
assessments
made
by
the
respondent
for
the
company’s
1962,
1964
and
1965
taxation
years.
In
its
1962
to
1965
taxation
years
the
company
received
certain
grants
from
the
National
Research
Council
and
the
Department
of
Defence
Production
for
scientific
research
and
to
sustain
technological
capability
in
Canadian
industry,
as
more
fully
set
forth
in
the
Special
Case,
and
the
appeal
relates
to
the
treatment
of
the
said
grants
for
income
tax
purposes.
The
Special
Case
reads
as
follows,
the
facts
stated
therein
being
admitted
by
the
parties
for
the
purpose
of
such
Case
:
1.
The
Appellant
is
a
body
corporate,
incorporated
on
the
17th
day
of
April,
1951
by
Letters
Patent
pursuant
to
the
laws
of
the
Province
of
Manitoba.
2.
The
Appellant
carried
on
business
in
Canada
at
the
City
of
Winnipeg
in
each
of
the
years
1961
to
1965
inclusive,
and
duly
filed
an
income
tax
return,
including
financial
statements,
for
each
of
the
said
years
as
required
by
the
Income
Tax
Act.
3.
The
profit
of
the
Appellant
in
each
of
the
said
years
was
calculated
on
the
basis
of
its
taxation
year
coinciding
with
the
calendar
year.
4(a).
The
Appellant,
during
its
1961
to
1965
taxation
years,
made
in
Canada
the
following
expenditures
in
respect
of
scientific
research,
which
expenditures
were
in
connection
with
an
agreement
and
application
undertaken
by
it
and
referred
to
in
paragraph
9
hereof,
all
of
which
expenditures
were
of
a
current
nature
except
for
the
amounts
of
$1,218.15
in
1961,
$3,211.68
in
1964
and
$10,462.00
in
1965,
which
amounts
were
capital
expenditures,
as
follows:
Year
|
Total
|
1961
|
$25,200.66
|
1962
_.
|
$26,766.27
|
1963
|
$35,386.99
|
1964
|
$37,969.08
|
1965
|
$46,960.22
|
4(b).
The
Appellant,
during
its
1962
to
1965
taxation
years,
received
from
the
National
Research
Council
and
the
Department
of
Defence
Production
the
following
amounts:
Year
|
Total
|
1962
|
$37,202.23
|
1963
|
$13,472.52
|
1964.
|
$17,643.07
|
1965
|
$16,157.52
|
4(c).
The
Appellant,
in
computing
its
income,
did
not,
and
in
its
books
of
account
did
not,
include
as
a
receipt,
or
part
of
its.
gross
sales,
the
amounts
referred
to
in
paragraph
4(b).
5.
However,
the
Appellant,
in
each
year,
in
computing
the
amount
deductible
under
Section
72
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
offset
the
amounts
referred
to
in
paragraph
4(b)
against
the
expenses
referred
to
in
paragraph
4(a),
so
that
in
computing
its
income,
it
deducted
the
net
amount.
Particulars
are
as
follows:
(a)
For
1962
it
reduced
its
research
costs
by
an
amount
of
$10,103.58,
identified
as
labour
and
material
recoveries
;
reduced
its
overhead
costs
by
an
amount
of
$13,977.98,
identified
as
research
refund
or
overhead,
and
increased
its
net
profit
in
the
amount
of
$138,120.67,
identified
as
1961
research
costs
recovered.
Exhibit
1
of
Exhibit
Book
(b)
For
1963
it
reduced
its
research
and
development
costs
by
$12,265.67,
identified
as
government
subsidies,
and
reduced
its
administrative
expenses
by
an
amount
of
$1,206.85,
identified
as
government
research
subsidies.
Exhibit
2
of
Exhibit
Book
(c)
For
1964
it
reduced
its
research
and
development
expenses
by
an
amount
of
$17,643.07,
identified
as
government
subsidies.
Exhibit
3
of
Exhibit
Book
(d)
For
1965
it
reduced
its
research
and
development
expenses
by
an
amount
of
$16,157.52,
identified
as
government
subsidies.
Exhibit
4
of
Exhibit
Book
6.
With
respect
to
the
adjustments
referred
to
in
paragraph
5
hereof,
the
Respondent
assessed
tax
to
the
Appellant
on
the
basis
that
the
adjustments
made
by
the
Appellant
were
proper
adjustments
to
arrive
at
its
taxable
income.
7.
The
Appellant
now
contends
that
the
adjustments
outlined
in
paragraph
5
hereof
were
incorrectly
made
and
should
not
have
been
made
in
arriving
at
its
taxable
income
for
each
year;
rather,
its
taxable
income
for
each
year
should
be
reduced
from
that
reported
and
assessed
by
the
following
amounts
:
1962
|
$37,202.23
|
1963
|
$13,472.52
|
1964
|
$17,643.07
|
1965
|
$16,157.52
|
THE
AMOUNTS
REFERRED
TO
IN
PARAGRAPHS
4(b),
5
AND
7
HEREOF
WERE
PAID
TO
THE
APPELLANT
IN
THE
CIRCUMSTANCES
OUTLINED
IN
THE
PARAGRAPHS
TO
FOLLOW.
8.
The
business
of
the
Appellant
is
that
of
manufacture
and
research,
the
research
being
of
such
a
character
as
to
bring
the
expenses
in
connection
therewith
within
the
provisions
of
section
72
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
9.
The
amounts
referred
to
in
paragraphs
4(b),
5
and
7
hereof
were
amounts
received
by
the
Appellant
from
the
Government
of
Canada
as
a
result
in
part
of
an
agreement
entered
into
by
the
Appellant
with
Her
Majesty
the
Queen
in
right
of
Canada
and
in
part
as
a
result
of
applications
by
the
Appellant
to
the
National
Research
Council.
10.
The
Appellant,
in
the
calendar
year
1962,
was
aware
that
through
the
National
Research
Council
there
might
be
available
to
it
assistance
pursuant
to
the
Industrial
Research
Assistant
Program
and
to
this
end
communicated
with
officers
of
the
National
Research
Council
and
received
replies
therefrom.
Exhibits
5,
6,
'7'
and
8
of
Exhibit
Book
11.
The
communiciations
resulted
in
the
Appellant,
by
letter
dated
the
29th
day
of
October,
1962,
sending
to
the
National
Research
Council
a
formal
application
for
financial
assistance,
pursuant
to
the
Industrial
Research
Assistance
Program,
in
the
amount
of
$5,000
for
a
research
project
for
the
fiscal
year
ending
the
3lst
day
of
March,
1963,
which
application
bears
the
date
the
29th
day
of
October,
1962.
Exhibits
9
and
10
of
Exhibit
Book
12.
By
letter
dated
the
21st
day
of
November,
1962,
the
National
Research
Council
advised
the
Appellant
that
its
application
dated
the
29th
day
of
October,
1962
had
been
approved,
with
which
was
enclosed
a
copy
of
‘
General
Conditions
of
Grant’’,
which
letter
asked
for
acceptance
by
the
company.
Exhibits
11
and
12
of
Exhibit
Book
13.
The
Appellant
indicated
its
acceptance
of
the
assistance
by
returning
to
the
National
Research
Council
a
copy
of
the
letter
to
it
of
the
21st
day
of
November,
1962,
with
its
acceptance
noted
thereon.
Exhibit
11
of
Exhibit
Book
14.
In
December
1962
and
January
1963
correspondence
passed
between
the
Appellant
and
the
National
Research
Council
as
to
the
manner
of
invoicing
pursuant
to
the
General
Conditions
of
Grant.
Exhibits
13,
14,
15
and
16
of
Exhibit
Book
15.
The
Appellant
applied
for
approval
of
its
application
for
a
grant
for
the
1963-64
fiscal
year
in
the
amount
of
$14,500,
which
approval
was
confirmed
by
letter
of
the
5th
day
of
April,
1963.
Exhibits
17,
18
and
19
of
Exhibit
Book
16.
By
letter
of
the
30th
day
of
December,
1963,
to
which
was
attached
Summary
of
Financial
Details,
the
Appellant
applied
for
approval
of
its
application
for
a
grant
for
the
1964-65
fiscal
year
in
the
amount
of
$17,000,
which
approval,
after
receipt
of
further
information,
was
given
by
letter
of
the
5th
day
of
March,
1964
and
acknowledged
by
letter
of
the
9th
day
of
March,
1964.
Exhibits
20,
21,
22,
23
and
24
of
Exhibit
Book
17.
A
supplemental
grant
for
the
fiscal
year
1964-65
was
required
to
pay
an
increased
amount
which
would
be
required
in
that
year;
it
was
applied
for
and
granted
in
the
amount
of
$1,300.
Exhibits
25,
26,
27,
28,
29
and
30
of
Exhibit
Book
18.
By
letter
of
the
30th
day
of
December,
1964,
to
which
was
attached
Summary
of
Financial
Details,
the
Appellant
applied
for
approval
of
its
application
for
a
grant
for
the
1965-
66
fiscal
year
in
the
amount
of
$18,000
which,
after
further
information
was
provided,
was
granted,
with
the
company
being
duly
advised
and
acknowledging
the
advice.
Exhibits
31,
32,
33,
34
and
35
of
Exhibit
Book
19.
Pursuant
to
its
applications,
the
approvals
and
as
required
by
the
General
Conditions
of
Grant,
the
Appellant
sent
invoices
to
the
National
Research
Council
in
the
period
from
January
1963
to
December
1965
at
the
rate
of
about
one
for
each
month,
which
invoices
relected
the
amounts
paid
by
the
Appellant
to
the
person
or
persons
named
therein.
Exhibit
36
(being
13
of
such
invoices)
of
Exhibit
Book
20.
Consequent
to
the
approval
of
the
said
applications
and
the
said
invoices,
the
Appellant
received
or
became
entitled
to
receive
amounts
totalling
$42,647.29
which
amount,
together
with
the
amounts
received
or
entitled
to
be
received,
as
indicated
by
paragraph
26
hereof,
reduced
its
research
costs
in
the
manner
described
in
paragraph
5.
21.
The
funds
to
pay
the
amount
of
the
grants
made
by
the
National
Research
Council
were
authorized
by
the
following
Votes
under
the
estimates
of
the
National
Research
Council:
(a)
Vote
10
of
the
Special
Appropriations
Act
1963
for
the
year
ending
the
31st
day
of
March,
1963,
being
chapter
2
of
the
Statutes
of
Canada
1963;
(b)
Vote
10
of
the
Appropriations
Act
No.
5,
1963
for
the
year
ending
the
31st
day
of
March,
1964,
being
chapter
42
of
the
Statutes
of
Canada
1963
;
(ce)
Vote
15
of
the
Appropriations
Act
No.
10,
1964
for
the
year
ending
the
31st
day
of
March,
1965,
being
chapter
34
of
the
Statutes
of
Canada
1964-65;
(d)
Vote
15
of
the
Appropriations
Act
No.
1,
1966
for
the
year
ending
the
31st
day
of
March,
1966,
being
chapter
3
of
the
Statutes
of
Canada
1966-67,
the
first
three
of
which
Votes
read
‘‘assistance
towards
research
in
industry’’
and
the
last
Vote
reading
‘‘assistance
towards
research
in
industry
under
terms
and
conditions
approved
by
the
Governor-in-Council
including
authority,
notwithstanding
section
30
of
the
Financial
Administration
Act,
to
make
commitments
for
the
current
year
not
to
exceed
a
total
of
$4,500,000.”
22.
The
Appellant
by
a
proposal
dated
the
17th
day
of
May,
1961,
proposed
to
the
Department
of
Defence
Production
that
it
had
a
program
to
develop
certain
marketable
instruments
which
would
be
of
use
to
that
Department.
Exhibit
37
of
Exhibit
Book
23.
The
Department
of
Defence
Production
advised
the
Appellant
by
letter
dated
the
12th
day
of
October,
1961,
that
approval
in
principle
for
the
contract
had
been
given
and
the
Appellant
replied
thereto
by
letter
bearing
date
the
30th
day
of
October,
1961.
Exhibits
38
and
39
of
Exhibit
Book
24,
An
Agreement
made
in
duplicate
as
of
the
11th
day
of
April,
1962
was
entered
into
between
‘‘Her
Majesty
the
Queen
in
right
of
Canada
(hereinafter
called
Her
Majesty)
herein
represented
by
and
acting
through
the
Minister
of
Defence
Production
(hereinafter
called
the
Minister
of
the
First
Part)
and
Nuclear
Enterprises
Ltd.,
of
the
City
of
Winnipeg,
Province
of
Manitoba,
(hereinafter
called
the
Contractor
of
the
Second
Part).”
Exhibit
40
of
Exhibit
Book
25.
Pursuant
to
the
terms
of
the
Agreement,
the
Appellant
filed
with
the
Department
of
Defence
Production
on
Form
DDP
392
fifteen
claims
for
progress
payments
in
the
period
from
June
1st,
1962
to
December
31st,
1965,
each
of
which
reflected
amounts
paid
by
the
Appellant
for
the
period
shown
and
as
described
in
the
claim
Exhibit
41
of
Exhibit
Book
96.
Pursuant
to
the
said
contract
and
the
said
claims,
the
Appellant
received,
or
became
entitled
to
receive,
amounts
totalling
$41,828.05,
being
the
total
adjusted
amounts
of
the
said
claims
which,
together
with
t‘ïre
amount
received
or
en-
titled
to
be
received,
as
indica*ed
by
paragraph
20
hereof,
reduced
its
research
costs
in
the
manner
described
in
paragraph
5.
27.
The
funds
to
pay
the
amount
for
the
fiscal
years
1963
and
1964
due
pursuant
to
the
Agreement
between
the
Appellant
and
Her
Majesty
the
Queen
were
provided
for
by
the
following
Votes
of
the
Department
of
Defence
Production:
(a),
Vote
25
of
the
Special
Appropriations
Act
1963
for
the
year
ending
the
31st
day
of
March,
1963,
being
chapter
2
of
the
Statutes
of
Canada
1963
;
and
(b)
Vote
25
of
the
Appropriations
Act
No.
5,
1963
for
the
year
ending
the
31st
day
of
March,
1964,
being
chapter
42
of
the
Statutes
of
Canada
1963,
both
of
which
Votes,
except
as
to
amounts,
read
as
follows:
“To
sustain
technological
capability
in
Canadian
Industry
by
supporting
selected
defence
development
programs,
on
terms
and
conditions
approved
by
Treasury
Board,
and
to
authorize,
notwithstanding
section
30
of
the
Financial
Administration
Act,
total
commitments
of
$16,500,000
for
the
foregoing
purposes
during
the
past
and
subsequent
fiscal
years.
’
’
28.
The
funds
to
pay
the
amounts
for
the
fiscal
year
1965
due
pursuant
to
the
Agreement
between
the
Appellant
and
Her
Majesty
the
Queen
were
provided
for
by
the
Vote
of
the
Department
of
Industry
as
follows
:
Vote
5
of
the
Appropriations
Act
No.
10,
1964
for
the
year
ending
the
81st
day
of
March,
1965,
being
chapter
34
of
the
Statutes
of
Canada
1964,
which
reads
as
follows:
“To
sustain
technological
capability
in
Canadian
Industry
by
supporting
selected
defence
development
programs,
on
terms
and
conditions
approved
by
Treasury
Board,
and
to
authorize,
notwithstanding
section
30
of
the
Financial
Administration
Act,
total
commitments
of
$16,500,000
for
the
foregoing
purposes
during
the
past
and
subsequent
fiscal
years.
’
’
29.
To
date
none
of
the
amounts
received
by
the
Appellant
pursuant
to
the
Industrial
Research
Assistance
Program
have
been
repaid
by
it
to
the
National
Research
Council.
30.
To
date
no
amount
pursuant
to
paragraph
7
of
the
said
Agreement
has
Jeen
paid!
by
the
Appellant
to
Her
Majesty
the
Queen
in
right
of
Canada.
.
\.
31.
While
the
contract
(Exhibit
40)
was
not
executed
until
April
llth,
1962,
the
amount
to
be
paid
pursuant
to
the
contract
related
to
work
done
on
and
after
February
Ist,
1961.
32.
Services
in
accordance
with
the
contract
(Exhibit
40)
in
the
amount
of
$18,728.28
were
performed
in
the
calendar
year
1961
but
were
not
paid
for
until
sometime
in
the
1962
calendar
year.
.
33.
For
the
purposes
of
section
72A
the
Appellant
’s\“
basic
scientific
expenditure’’
in
1961
was
in
the
amount
of
$95
200.66
and
consequently,
in
each
of
the
years
1962
to
1964
inclusive,
since
the
expenditures
by
the
Appellant
after
having
been
reduced
by
the
amounts
received
from
the
Government
of
Canada
through
the
National
Research
Council
and
the
Department
of
Defence
Production
did
not
exceed
the
amount
of
$25,200.66,
the
Appellant
was
not
entitled
in
any
of
those
years
to
the
special
deduction
permitted
by
section
72A.
However,
since
the
Appellant’s
expenditures
in
the
year
1965
after
having
been
reduced
by
the
amounts
received
from
the
Government
of
Canada
through
the
National
Research
Council
and
the
Department
of
Defence
Production
did
exceed
its
“basic
scientific
expenditure’’
as
established
in
1961,
it
was
entitled
to
deduct
and
was
allowed
a
deduction
pursuant
to
section
72A
for
the
year
1965
in
the
amount
of
$2,819.50.
34.
Had
the
Appellant
been
paid
the
$18,728.28
in
its
1961
taxation
year
for
the
services
performed
in
that
year
pursuant
to
the
contract
(Exhibit
40),
its
‘‘
basic
scientific
expenditure”
for
that
year
would
have
been
$6,472.38.
Had
the
Appellant’s
“basic
scientific
expenditure’’
for
its
1961
taxation
year
been
$6,472.38,
the
Appellant
would
have
been
entitled
pursuant
to
section
72A
to
the
special
deduction
thereby
provided
in
each
of
the
years
1962
to
1965
inclusive.
B.
QUESTIONS
FOR
THE
COURT
35.
The
questions
for
the
opinion
of
the
court
are
as
follows
:
A.
Whether
the
Appellant
(i)
in
computing
its
income
for
the
1962
to
1965
taxation
years
inclusive
is
required
to
include
in
its
income
the
amounts
received
by
it
from
the
National
Research
Council;
or
(ii)
the
portion
of
the
outlays
for
scientific
research
in
respect
of
which
the
Appellant
received
a
grant
from
the
National
Research
Council
were
not
expenditures
in
respect
of
scientific
research
within
the
meaning
of
section
72
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
B.
Whether
the
Appellant
(i)
in
computing
its
income
for
its
1962
to
1965
taxation
years
inclusive
is
required
to
include
in
its
income
the
amounts
received
by
it
from
the
Department
of
Defence
Production
;
or
(ii)
the
portion
of
the
outlays
for
scientific
research
in
respect
of
which
the
Appellant
received
a
grant
from
the
Department
of
Defence
Production
were
not
expenditures
for
scientific
research
within
the
meaning
of
section
72
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
C.
DISPOSITION
36.
The
parties
agree
that
(a)
if
the
court
shall
be
of
the
opinion
in
the
affirmative
on
both
questions
the
judgment
shall
be
entered
for
the
Respondent
dismissing
the
appeal
with
‘costs;
(b)
if
the
court
shall
be
of
the
opinion
in
the
negative
on
either
question
A
or
B,
or
both,
the
judgment
shall
be
entered
for
the
Appellant
allowing
the
appeal
with
costs
and
referring
the
assessments
back
to
the
Respondent
for
the
purpose
of
reassessing
in
accordance
with
the
opinion
of
the
court.
37.
Nothing
herein
shall
be
deemed
to
restrict
any
right
which
the
parties
may
have
with
respect
to
an
appeal
to
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
from
the
judgment
of
the
Exchequer
Court
in
respect
of
this
Special
Case.
Section
72
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
allows
deductions
from
income
of
certain
expenditures
in
respect
of
scientific
research.
Section
72A
allows
additional
deductions
for
such
research.
Section
72(1),
as
applicable
to
the
1962-65
taxation
years
concerned,
reads
as
follows
:
72.
(1)
There
may
be
deducted
in
computing
the
income
for
a
taxation
year
of
a
taxpayer
who
carried
on
business
in
Canada
and
made
expenditures
in
respect
of
scientific
research
in
the
year
(a)
all
expenditures
of
a
current
nature
made
in
Canada
in
the
year
(i)
on
scientific
research
related
to
the
business
and
directly
undertaken
by
or
on
behalf
of
the
taxpayer,
(ii)
by
payments
to
an
approved
association
that
undertakes
scientific
research
related
to
the
class
of
business
of
the
taxpayer,
(iii)
by
payments
to
an
approved
university,
college,
research
institute
or
other
similar
institution
to
be
used
for
scientific
research
related
to
the
class
of
business
of
the
taxpayer,
(iv)
by
payments
to
a
corporation
resident
in
Canada
and
exempt
from
tax
under
this
Part
by
paragraph
(gc)
of
subsection
(1)
of
section
62,
(v)
by
payments
to
a
corporation
resident
in
Canada
for
scientific
research
related
to
the
business
of
the
taxpayer;
and
(b)
such
amount
as
may
be
claimed
by
the
taxpayer
not
exceed-
ding
the
lesser
of
(i)
the
expenditures
of
a
capital
nature
made
in
Canada
(by
acquiring
property
other
than
land)
in
the
year
and
any
previous
year
ending
after
1958
on
scientific
research
relating
to
the
business
and
directly
undertaken
by
or
on
behalf
of
the
taxpayer,
or
(ii)
the
undepreciated
capital
cost
to
the
taxpayer
of
the
property
so
acquired
as
of
the
end
of
the
taxation
year
(before
making
any
deduction
under
this
paragraph
in
computing
the
income
of
the
taxpayer
for
the
taxation
year).
Section
72(1)
was
amended
by
Statutes
of
Canada
1966-67,
c.
91,
Section
12,*
by
revising
the
opening
wording
of
subsection
(1)
preceding
paragraph
(a)
and
by
adding
a
new
paragraph
(c),
to
read
as
follows:
72.
(1)
There
may
be
deducted
in
computing
the
income
for
a
taxation
year
of
a
taxpayer
who
carried
on
business
in
Canada
and
made
expenditures
in
respect
of
scientific
research
in
the
year
the
amount
by
which
the
aggregate
of
(a)
all
expenditures
of
a
current
nature
made
in
Canada
in
the
year
(i)
on
scientific
research
related
to
the
business
and
directly
undertaken
by
or
on
behalf
of
the
taxpayer,
(ii)
by
payments
to
an
approved
association
that
undertakes
scientific
research
related
to
the
class
of
business
(iii)
by
payments
to
an
approved
university,
college,
research
institute
or
other
similar
institution
to
be
used
for
scientific
research
related
to
the
class
of
business
of
the
taxpayer,
(iv)
by
payments
to
a
corporation
resident
in
Canada
and
exempt
from
tax
under
this
Part
by
paragraph
(gc)
of
subsection
(1)
of
section
62,
(v)
by
payments
to
a
corporation
resident
in
Canada
for
scientific
research
related
to
the
business
of
the
taxpayer;
(b)
such
amount
as
may
be
claimed
by
the
taxpayer
not
exceeding
the
lesser
of
(i)
the
expenditures
of
a
capital
nature
made
in
Canada
(by
acquiring
property
other
than
land)
in
the
year
and
any
previous
year
ending
after
1958
on
scientific
research
relating
to
the
business
and
directly
undertaken
by
or
on
behalf
of
the
taxpayer,
or
(ii)
the
undepreciated
capital
cost
to
the
taxpayer
of
the
property
so
acquired
as
of
the
end
of
the
taxation
year
(before
making
any
deduction
under
this
paragraph
in
computing
the
income
of
the
taxpayer
for
the
taxation
year),
and
(c)
all
expenditures
in
the
year
by
way
of
repayment
of
amounts
paid
to
the
taxpayer
under
an
Appropriation
Act
and
on
terms
and
conditions
approved
by
the
Treasury
Board
for
the
purpose
of
advancing
or
sustaining
the
technological
capability
of
Canadian
manufacturing
or
other
industry,
exceeds
the
aggregate
of
amounts
paid
to
him
in
the
year
under
an
Appropriation
Act
and
on
terms
and
conditions
described
in
paragraph
(c).
Subsections
(1)
and
(3)
of
Section
72A,
which
were
applicable
to
the
1962-66
taxation
years,
read
as
follows
:
72A.
(1)
In
addition
to
the
deductions
allowed
for
the
year
by
section
72,
a
corporation,
other
than
a
corporation
referred
to
in
subsection
(2),
that
carried
on
business
in
Canada
and
made
expenditures
in
respect
of
scientific
research
in
a
taxation
year,
may
deduct
in
computing
its
income
for
the
year
50%
of
the
amount
by
which
(a)
the
aggregate
of
(i)
all
expenditures
of
a
current
nature
made
in
Canada
in
the
year,
as
described
in
subpagraphs
(i)
to
(v)
of
paragraph
(a)
of
subsection
(1)
of
section
72,
on
scientific
research,
and
(ii)
all
expenditures
of
a
capital
nature
made
in
Canada
(by
acquiring
property
other
than
land)
in
the
year
on
scientific
research,
exceeds
(b)
the
aggregate
of
(i)
the
base
scientific
expenditure
of
the
corporation,
and
(ii)
any
amount
paid
to
the
corporation
in
the
year
in
respect
of
scientific
research
undertaken
by
the
corporation
(A)
by
Her
Majesty
in
right
of
Canada
or
a
province,
(B)
by
a
person
resident
in
Canada,
or
(C)
by
a
person
not
resident
in
Canada
if
such
person
is
entitled,
in
respect
of
the
payment,
to
a
deduction
in
computing
his
income
by
virtue
of
subparagraph
(v)
of
paragraph
(a)
of
subsection
(1)
of
section
72.
(3)
For
the
purposes
of
subsections
(1)
and
(2),
the
base
scientific
expenditure
of
a
corporation
is
an
amount
equal
to
(a)
the
aggregate
of
all
expenditures
of
a
current
or
capital
nature
(by
acquiring
property
other
than
land)
made
in
Canada
by
the
corporation
in
the
last
taxation
year
of
the
corporation
that
ended
before
April
11,
1962,
on
scientific
research
related
to
the
business
of
the
corporation,
minus
(b)
any
amount
paid
to
the
corporation
in
the
year
referred
to
in
paragraph
(a)
as
described
in
subparagraph
(ii)
of
paragraph
(b)
of
subsection
(1),
but
where
the
corporation
had
no
taxation
year
that
ended
before
April
11,
1962,
its
base
scientific
expenditure
is
nil.
The
appellant
claims
that
Section
72
authorizes
the
deduction
of
all
capital
expenditures
for
scientific
research
and
that
there
is
no
requirement
in
the
Act
that
grants
made
by
the
Government
of
Canada
for
such
research
be
applied
directly
in
reduction
of
such
deductions
or
be
used
indirectly
to
reduce
the
deductions
by
taking
the
grants
into
taxable
income.
The
respondent
says
that
the
grants
were
income
of
the
appellant
from
its
business;
that
the
profit
from
its
business
is
determined
after
the
grants
were
reflected
in
its
business
accounts;
that
the
appellant
did
not
have
expenses
within
the
meaning
of
Section
12(1)(a)
of
the
Act
to
the
extent
that
those
expenses
were
reimbursed
by
the
Government
of
Canada
and
that
the
company
only
made
expenditures
in
respect
of
scientific
research
within
the
meaning
Section
72
to
the
extent
that
those
expenditures
exceeded
the
grants
received
by
the
company.
The
purpose
of
the
research
assistance
program
of
the
National
Research
Council
is
set
forth
in
the
Exhibit
Book
at
page
61
as
‘intended
to
stimulate
interest
of
Canadian
industry
in
research
and
development
and
promote
the
establishment
of
new
industrial
research
facilities
and
the
expansion
of
existing
facilities
across
Canada”.
The
cost
of
a
project
is
shared
on
the
basis
of
approximately
equal
contributions
by
N.R.C.
and
industry,
and
the
division
in
costs
in
general
provides
for
the
salaries
and
wages
of
scientific
and
technical
staff
to
be
paid
by
N.R.C.
and
payment
for
equipment
and
overhead
by
industry,
with
upper
and
lower
limits
(p.
63).
An
application
for
a
grant
must
show,
inter
alia,
the
proposal
and
supporting
information
to
enable
N.R.C.
to
assess
company
suitability
and
qualifications,
the
feasibility
of
the
project,
prospects
of
success
and
its
value
in
promoting
expansion
of
industrial
research
in
Canada,
a
brief
summary
of
the
costs
to
be
borne
by
the
company,
the
duration
of
the
program
and
successive
annual
costs
(pp.
65-68).
After
an
exchange
of
letters
the
company
made
an
application
in
October
1962
to
N.R.C.
for
financial
assistance
for
a
project
subsequently
called
‘
Scintillation
751’’,
involving
scientific
research
(pp.
73-82).
It
gave
estimates
of
scientific
and
technical
staff
costs
and
requested
financial
aid
equivalent
to
80%
or
better
of
such
costs,
and
proposed
to
absorb
the
half
of
the
cost
of
capital
equipment,
assistant
service
costs
and
overhead,
which
costs
it
estimated
would
be
double
the
scientific
and
technical
staff
costs.
The
application
was
approved
by
N.R.C.,
subject
to
General
Conditions
(pp.
93-95)
and
the
company
accepted
the
assistance
granted.
The
General
Conditions
include
paragraph
1,
which
repeats
the
purpose
previously
referred
to
herein
of
N.R.C.
assistance,
and
paragraphs
2,
7
and
16,
as
follows:
2.
Financial
assistance
will
be
given
primarily
to
assist
industry
in
establishing
and
maintaining
relatively
longterm
applied
research
projects
in
science
and
engineering
which
offer
a
reasonable
potential
for
achieving
a
major
advance
in
performance
or
technique.
Such
projects
will
not
include
those
currently
under
way
in
the
company
or
which
would
normally
be
undertaken
by
the
company,
unless
industrial
research
assistance
will
make
possible
a
substantial
increase
in
such
projects.
7.
Financial
assistance
normally
will
be
limited
to
salaries
and
wages
of
scientific
and
technical
personnel
directly
and
continuously
employed
on
the
research
project
and
will
exclude
the
cost
of
supporting
services
such
as
drafting
rooms,
machine
shops,
photographic
and
X-ray
departments,
etc.
Consultants’
fees
also
are
excluded,
except
under
special
circumstances.
Such
excluded
amounts
may
be
considered
as
part
of
the
company’s
matching
share.
Salaries
may
include
pension
and
health
insurance
contributions
and
other
fringe
benefits
normally
paid
by
the
company.
16.
Payment
is
to
be
made
monthly
in
arrears
on
receipt
of
invoices
from
the
company
dated
as
of
the
end
of
the
calendar
month
and
submitted
to
reach
the
Secretary
of
CIRA
by
the
tenth
day
of
the
following
month.
It
is
essential
that
all
invoices
be
received
by
the
tenth
of
April
following
the
end
of
the
fiscal
year
in
order
to
receive
payment
under
Government
financial
procedures.
Otherwise
the
payments
may
become
the
responsibility
of
the
company.
N.R.C.
continued
to
support
the
program
under
the
same
General
Conditions
in
the
later
taxation
years
concerned.
A
renewal
application
dated
December
24,
1964
(p.
131
in
Exhibit
Book)
shows
total
estimates
of
expenditures
and,
apparently,
an
intention
on
the
part
of
the
company
that
the
company
would
bear
half
of
the
total
and
N.R.C.
would
provide
the
other
half.
Turning
now
to
the
grants
paid
by
the
Department
of
Defence
Production,
they
were
in
respect
of
what
was
subsequently
called
a
‘‘Pulse
Shape
Discrimination
Programme’’.
In
its
proposal
to
the
Department
referred
to
in
pargraph
22
of
the
Special
Case
the
appellant
requested
a
grant
of
funds
“to
allow
the
development
of
phase
1
and
phase
2
of
this
proposal
and
further
approval
by
the
Department
in
advance
for
the
repayment
of
the
granted
funds
by
way
of
company
invested
funds
in
the
research
programme
outlined
as
phase
3
of
this
proposal,
and
representing
a
50:50
contribution
by
the
company
toward
financing
of
the
project’’.
The
company
supplied
proposed
cost
figures
to
the
Department
showing
a
50:50
distribution
of
costs
as
follows:
Funds
requested
under
Vote
72
|
$50,000.00
|
Company’s
contribution
to
programme
|
$50,000.00
|
Total
Cost
of
Programme
|
$100,000.00
|
The
contract
between
the
company
and
Her
Majesty,
referred
to
in
paragraph
24
of
the
Special
Case,
contained
a
covenant
that
the
company
would
carry
out
the
work
described
therein,
and,
inter
alia,
the
following
paragraphs
in
respect
of
price,
payment
and
repayment:
4,
PRICE
Her
Majesty
shall
pay
the
Contractor
50%
of
the
costs
reasonably
and
properly
incurred
by
the
Contractor
in
the
performance
of
the
work
commencing
the
1st
day
of
February,
1961,
without
profit
or
fee,
such
costs
to
be
determined
in
accordance
with
the
Costing
Memorandum
and
verified
by
Audit
Services
Division,
Office
of
the
Comptroller
of
the
Treasury,
Department
of
Finance;
provided,
however,
that
the
costs
payable
by
Her
Majesty
to
the
Contractor
hereunder
shall
not
exceed
the
sum
of
$50,000.00.
Notwithstanding
the
said
limitation
on
the
amount
of
Her
Majesty’s
contribution,
the
Contractor
shall
remain
obligated
to
perform
the
work
hereunder.
It
is
understood
by
the
parties
hereto
that
sales
tax
shall
not
be
exigible
on
the
design
and
development
work
covered
by
this
agreement
6.
PAYMENT
As
promptly
as
possible
after
the
first
day
of
each
calendar
month,
the
Contractor
shall
furnish
to
Audit
Services
Division,
Office
of
the
Comptroller
of
the
Treasury,
Department
of
Finance,
a
certified
statement
and
progress
claim
showing
the
costs
reasonably
and
properly
incurred
hereunder
in
the
preceding
month.
The
first
of
such
statements
shall
include
the
costs
incurred
from
the
1st
day
of
February,
1961,
up
to
and
including
the
month
for
which
the
statement
is
submitted.
Such
statement
and
progress
claim
shall
be
prepared
in
such
manner
and
accompanied
by
copies
of
such
vouchers,
invoices,
payrolls
and
other
documents
or
information
as
the
Minister
of
the
Audit
Services
Division
may
require.
If
such
statement
and
progress
claim
is
satisfactory
to
Her
Majesty,
Her
Majesty
shall
promptly
pay
the
Contractor
50%
of
the
amount
thereof,
such
payments
being
subject
to
the
limitation
set
out
in
Section
4
hereof.
7.
REPAYMENT,
REINVESTMENT
AND
PROFIT
LIMITATION
(1)
The
Contractor
shall
pay
to
Her
Majesty
all
profits
in
excess
of
amounts
which
the
Minister
shall
determine
to
be
fair
and
reasonable
derived
from
the
work
and
from
future
contracts
resulting
from
the
work
(other
than
contracts
to
which
reference
is
made
in
subsection
(2)
of
this
Section
7)
until
the
total
contribution
of
Her
Majesty
hereunder
shall
have
been
repaid.
(2)
In
the
event
Her
Majesty
shall
enter
into
any
contract
with
the
Contractor
covering
the
purchase
by
Her
Majesty
for
her
own
account
of
development
or
production
arising
from
the
work
to
be
performed
hereunder,
all
profit
in
excess
of
10%
derived
from
such
contracts
shall
be
refunded
to
Her
Majesty,
but
such
refuds
shall
not
be
applied
in
repayment
of
the
contribution
made
by
Her
Majesty
hereunder;
provided
that
upon
repayment
of
the
said
contribution
as
provided
in
this
Section,
the
obligations
of
the
Contrator
under
this
subsection
(2)
shall,
subject
to
the
provisions
of
the
Defence
Production
Act
and
any
provisions
contained
in
such
future
production
contracts,
cease
and
determine.
(4)
In
lieu
of
the
payments
to
be
made
by
the
Contractor
under
this
Section
the
Contractor
may,
upon
terms
approved
by
the
Minister
expend
on
future
development
projects,
an
amount
related
to
Her
Majesty’s
contribution
hereunder,
provided
such
projects
and
the
amount
of
expenditure
thereon
are
specifically
authorized
by
the
Minister.
(7)
Without
limiting
the
repayment
provisions
of
this
Section,
the
Contractor
may
repay
to
Her
Majesty
at
any
time
any
outstanding
balance
of
the
contribution
made
by
Her
Majesty
hereunder.
13.
TERMINATION
The
Minister
may,
by
giving
written
notice
to
the
Contractor,
terminate
this
agreement
as
regards
Her
Majesty’s
share
of
any
costs
incurred
by
the
Contractor
in
the
performance
of
the
work
after
receipt
of
such
notice
by
the
Contractor.
In
the
event
of
such
termination
by
the
Minister,
the
Contractor
shall
have
no
further
obligation
to
Her
Majesty
to
perform
the
work
covered
by
this
agreement.
The
company
submitted
claims
for
progress
payments
which
showed
total
amounts
of
listed
costs,
‘‘Less
50%
share’’,
and
the
company
claimed
for
the
other
50%.
Two
cases
were
cited
by
counsel
in
their
arguments,
Okalta
Oils
Limited
v.
M.N.R.,
[1955]
C.T.C.
39,
and
St.
John
Dry
Dock
&
Shipbuilding
Company
Limited
v.
M.N.R.,
[1944]
C.T.C.
106.
In
the
Okalta
case
(supra),
a
Crown
corporation
financed
the
company’s
costs
of
drilling
an
oil
well.
The
well
proved
unproductive.
The
company
claimed
that
the
expenses
of
the
drilling
were
deductible
from
its
income.
Cameron,
J.
rejected
the
claim.
He
said
that
he
found
it
impossible
to
put
upon
Section
8(6)
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
a
construction
that
would
enable
a
company
that
had
all
its
expenses
paid
for
by
the
Crown
to
be
repaid
for
such
expenses
out
of
taxes
that
would
otherwise
accrue
to
the
Crown.
In
the
St.
John
Dry
Dock
case
(supra),
the
company
received
a
subsidy
from
the
Dominion
Government
as
an
aid
in
the
construction
of
a
dry
dock.
The
Minister
assessed
the
subsidy
as
income
received
by
the
company.
The
company
took
the
position
that
the
subsidy
was
not
taxable
income
but
was
a
capital
payment.
After
reviewing
a
number
of
English
and
American
decisions
dealing
with
subsidies,
Thorson,
P.
held
in
favour
of
the
company,
saying,
inter
alia
(page
126)
:
In
the
present
case,
the
purpose
of
the
Act
and
the
agreements
and
Orders
in
Council
made
under
its.
authority
was
to
secure
the
construction
of
a
dry.
dock
of
the
first
class
on
the
Atlantic
Coast
and
the
subsidy
payments
were
made
as
an
aid
to
such
construc-
:
tion
in
order
to
accomplish
the
purpose
of
the
Act.
That
purpose
was
a
special
one,
in
the
public
interest,
quite
apart
from
the
trade
and
business
operations
of
the
appellant
and
had
nothing
whatever
to
do
with
its
trade
or
business
profits
or
gains.
Since
the
subsidy
was
paid
and
received
for
such
special
purpose,
in
the
national
interest,
it
cannot
be
said
to
be
a
trade
or
business
receipt
or
revenue
in
the
hands
of
the
appellant
or
an
item
of
trade
or
business.
profit
or
gain
‘to
it.
It
was
paid
and
received
for
the
purpose
which
the
Act
was
designed
to,
achieve
and,
in
my
opinion,
_.
that
statutory
purpose
stamps
the
subsidy
as
an
amount
that
should
not
be
regarded
as
an
item
of
annual
net
profit
or
gain
or
gratuity
to
the
appellant
or
taken
into
computation
for
income
tax
Purposes.
J
do
not
think
that
it
was
ever
intended
by
Parliament
that,
after
payment
of
the
subsidy
had
been
authorized
by
the
Government
in
aid
of
the
construction
of
the
dry
dock
by
the
appellant,
and
after
the
dock
had
been
completed
by
the
appellant
and
the
purpose
of
the
Act
accomplished,
a
substantial
and
increasingly
large
portion
of
the
aid
to
construction
should
come
back
to
the
Government
in
the
form
of
income
tax.
The
subsidy
payments,
even
if
it
be
assumed
that
they
were
received
by
the
appellant,
were
not
trade
or
business
receipts
of
the
appellant
or
part
of
its
operating
revenue,
or
items
of
its
trade
or
business
profits
or
gains,
nor
were
they
paid
or
received
as
interest
or
a
return
on
share
or
debenture
capital,
but
rather
for
the
purpose
of
advancing
or
re-imbursing
a
capital
expenditure
by
the
appellant
and
as
a
capital
contribution
or
grant
in
respect
of
such
expenditure,
and,
furthermore,
they
were
paid
and
received
for
the
accomplishment
of
a
special
purpose
in
the
national
interest
quite
apart
from
the
trade
or
business
operations
of
the
appellant
and
not
connected
with
them.
For
these
several
reasons
I
conclude
that
the
subsidy
payments
in
this
case
were
not
subject
to
income
tax
under
the
Income
War
Tax
Act.
Counsel
for
the
appellant
in
this
case
said
that
the
two
projects
were
not
far
apart
in
what
they
involved
and
he
submitted
that
the
purpose
of
the
grants
was
not
for
the
benefit
of
the
company
but
was
rather
for
the
good
of
Canada
and
that
such
purpose
is
the
criterion
for
taxability;
the
grants
were
not
to
maintain
or
promote
profits
nor
concerned
with
the
profit
structure
of
the
company,
and
although
profits
to
the
company
might
come
eventually
profit
was
not
contemplated
in
the
course
of
the
projects;
they
were
not
trading
ventures
for
profit;
the
grants
were
not
trade
receipts
or
expenditures;
the
undertakings
were
not
the
ordinary
commercial
contracts;
and
this
is
a
deserving
case
because
there
was
no
payment
of
grant
in
the
year
1961
for
work
done
in
that
year
and
consequently
the
company’s
base
scientific
expenditure
in
that
year
was
higher
than
if
a
grant
had
been
paid,
and
the
result
was
as
set
forth
in
paragraph
33
of
the
Special
Case
to
the
disadvantage
of
the
company.
Counsel
for
the
respondent
argued
that
the
grants
were
paid
to
the
appellant
because
of,
and
in
the
course
of,
its
business
operations
and
its
contract
and
undertaking,
and
was
income
to
the
company
therefrom;
whether
or
not
profits
were
contemplated
is
irrevelant;
the
company
at
all
times
knew
that
it
would
bear
only
half
the
costs
of
the
projects,
and
in
the
result
it
did
not
have
the
costs
that
were
paid
for
by
the
grants;
Secion
72
is
in
the
Act
to
permit
a
deduction
that
Section
12(1)
(a)
otherwise
would
prohibit
;
the
1966-67
amendment
corrected
a
deficiency
in
Section
72
by
allowing
repayments
of
grants
to
be
deducted
and
the
section
as
amended
is
consistent
with
the
Crown’s
position
that
the
grants
are
income
or
reduce
the
costs
that
the
company
may
deduct,
and
that
they
are
not
deductible
until
repaid.
In
the
present
case,
I
am
unable
to
give
the
applicable
provisions
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
a
construction
that
the
appellant
should
not
only
not
be
required
to
include
the
grants
as
income
but
should
also
be
allowed
to
deduct
from
its
other
income
the
expenditures
that
in
reality
were
paid
for,
not
by
the
appellant,
but
by
N.R.C.
and
Department
of
Defence
Production.
Therefore,
my
opinion
on
both
questions
in
the
Special
Case
is
in
the
affirmative,
and
the
appeal
will
be
dismissed,
with
costs.
MINISTER
OF
NATIONAL
REVENUE,
Appellant,
WILLIAM
PANKO,
Respondent.
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
(Abbott,
Judson,
Ritchie,
Pigeon
and
Laskin,
JJ.),
June
28,
1971,
on
appeal
from
a
judgment
of
the
Exchequer
Court,
reported
[19701
C.T.C.
397.
Income
tax—Federal—Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148—Sections
The
taxpayer
had.
pleaded
guilty
to
offences
under
Section
132(1)
(a),
(d)
for
attempted
evasion
of
tax
and
had
been
fined
amounts
aggregating
$25,000
in
respect
of
the
1960
to
1965
taxation
years.
Later,
the
Minister
re-assessed
those
years
and
added
penalties
under
Section
56(2)
of
the
Act.
It
was
common
ground
that
if
the
penalties
had.
been
contemplated
under
Section
56(1)
they
would
have
been
proscribed
by
Section
132(3),
which
specifically
referred
to
penalties
under
Section
56(1)
but
not
those
under
Section
56(2).
On
appeal,
both
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
and
the
Exchequer
Court
found
in
favour
of
the
taxpayer,
holding
that
relief
from
all
penalties
under
Section
56
could
reasonably
be
inferred
from
the
language
of
Section
132(3).
HELD:
Per
Judson,
J.
(concurred
in
by
Abbott
and
Ritchie,
JJ.)
:
There
was
no
ambiguity
in
the
relevant
legislation.
The
penalties
in
issue
were
assessed
under
Section
56(2)
and
were
not
subject
to
the
condition
provided
for
in
Section
132(3),
the
plain
terms
of
which
did
not
create
“an
absurdity
in
the
law”
or
make
necessary
an
inference
that
the
section
must
be
applied
not
only
to
an
assessment
under
Section
56(1)
but
also
to
one
under
Section
56(2).
Per
Laskin,
J.,
dissenting
(concurred
in
by
Pigeon,
J.)
:
The
offence
was
caught
by
Section
56(1),
under
which
the
proscribed
conduct
was
brought
by
conviction
under
Section
132(1)
(d),
and
the
taxpayer
was
not
liable
to
a
penalty
under
Section
56(2).
There
was
therefore
no
right,
by
reason
of
Section
132(3),
to
impose
a
penalty
in
addition
to
the
fines.
The
Minister’s
appeal
was
allowed.
G.
W.
Ainshe,
Q.C.
and
J.
R.
Powers
for
the
Appellant.
J.J.
Mahony
for
the
Respondent
Jupson,
J.
(concurred
in
by
Abbott
and
Ritchie,
JJ.)
:—
During
each
of
the
years
1960
to
1965
inclusive,
the
respondent,
William
Panko,
suppressed
income
in
the
total
amount
of
$165,801.70.
For
this
offence
he
was
prosecuted
under
Section
132
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
Two
informations
were
laid,
one
information
containing
a
charge
for
each
of
the
years
1960
to
1965
inclusive
for
having
violated
Section
132(1)
(a),
and
the
other
information
contained
one
charge
for
having
violated
Section
132(1)
(d)
for
the
period
March
23,
1961
to
June
30,
1966.
Panko
pleaded
guilty
and
was
fined
a
total
of
$20,000
for
the
violations
of
Section
132(1)
(a)
and
$5,000
under
Section
132(1)
(d).
Sec-
tion
132(1)
(a)
deals
with:
false
or
deceptive
statements
in
a
return;
Section
132(1)
(d)
deals
with
wilful
evasion.
After
this,
the
Minister
gave
notices
of
re-assessment,
one
for
each
of
the
years
1960
to
1965,
and
at
the
same
time
assessed
penalties
totalling
$16,134.25.
The
sole
question
in
this
appeal
is
whether
the
Minister
had
authority
to
assess
a
penalty
pursuant
to
Section
56(2)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
at
a
time
subsequent
to
the
laying
of
the
informations.
Both
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
and
the
Exchequer
Court
have
found
against
the
Minister
on
this
point.
It.
is
necessary
to
begin
with
an
examination
of
the
interrelation
of
Section
56
of
the
Act
and
Section
132
as
they
stood
before
the,
1960
amendments
made
by
1960,
c.
43.
Before.
the
1960
amendment
there
could
be
no
doubt
about
the
law.
Section
56
then
had
no
subsections.
It
read
as
follows
:
56.
Every
person
who
has
wilfully,
in
any
manner,
evaded
or
attempted
to
evade
payment
of
the
tax
payable
by
him
under
this
Part
for
a
taxation
year
or
any
part
thereof
is
liable
to
a
penalty,
to
be
fixed
by
the
Minister,
of
not
less
than
25
per
cent
and
not
more
than
50
per
cent
of
the
amount
of
the
tax
evaded
or
sought
to
be
evaded.
A
taxpayer
who
had
wilfully
evaded
payment
of
tax
was
liable
to
two
types
of
penalty
:
(1)
If
found
guilty
following
a
prosecution
under
Section
132(1)
(d)
to
a
fine,
fixed
by
the
court,
of
not
less
than
$25
and
not
exceeding
$10,000,
plus,
in
an
appropriate
case,
an
amount
not
exceeding
double
the
amount
of
the
tax
evaded.
(2)
A
penalty
assessed.
by
the
Minister,
under
Section
56,
of
not
less
than
25
per
cent
and
not
more
than
50
per
cent
of
the
tax
evaded.
There
was
a
limitation
on
the
Minister”
S
power
to
assess
a
penalty.
Subsection
(3)
of
Section
132
provided
that,
if
found
guilty
and
fined
under
that
section,
the
taxpayer
was
not
liable
to
pay
a
penalty
under
Section
56
for
the
same
evasion
unless
such
penalty
had
been
assessed
prior
to
the
laying
of
the
information
under
Section
132.
The
1960
amendments
added
two
new
subsections
to
Section
56.
The
original
section
was
renumbered
subsection:
(1).
Subsection
(2)
provided
,
for
a
penalty
based
upon
less
stringent
grounds.
It
gave
the
Minister
no
discretion
as
to
the
amount
of
the
penalty
which
was
fixed
at
a
flat
25
per
cent.:The
new
subsection
(3)
‘provided
that
where
a
taxpayer.
is
liable
to
any
penalty
under
Section
56(2),
he
is
not
liable
to
a
penalty
under
Section
56(1)
in
respect
of
the
same
statement
or
omission.
In
full,
the
new
subsections
(2)
and
(3)
read:
56.
(2)
Every
person
who,
knowingly,
or
under
circumstances
amounting
to
gross
negligence
in
the
carrying
out
of
any
duty
or
obligation
imposed
by
or
under
this
Act,
has
made,
or
has
participated
in,
assented
to
or
acquiesced
in
the
making
of,
a
statement
or
omission
in
a
return,
certificate,
statement
or
answer
filed
or
made
as
required
by
or
under
this
Act
or
a
regulation,
as
a
result
of
which
the
tax
that
would
have
been
payable
by
him
for
a
taxation
year
if
the
tax
had
been
assessed
on
the
basis
of
the
information
provided
in
the
return,
certificate,
statement
or
answer
is
less
than
the
tax
payable
by
him
for
the
year,
is
liable
to
a
penalty
of
25%
of
the
amount
by
which
the
tax
that
would
so
have
been
payable
is
less
than
the
tax
payable
by
him
for
the
year.
(3)
Where
a
person
is
liable
to
a
penalty
under
subsection
(2)
-
in
respect
of
any
statement
or
omission
in
a
return,
certificate,
statement
or
answer
filed
or
made
as
required
by
or
under
this
Act
or
a
regulation,
he
is
not
liable
to
any
penalty
under
subsection
(1)
in
respect
of
the
same
statement
or
omission.
Thé
amending
Act
also
expressly
provided
that
the
new
subsections
(2)
and
(3)
of
Section
56
apply
only
in
respect
of
any
statement
or
omission
made
after
the
coming
into
force
of
the
amending.
Act,
namely
August
1,
1960.
The
amending
Act
also
replaced
subsection
(3)
of
Section
132,
but
the
only
change
was
to
substitute
the
words
‘‘subsection
(1)
of
section
56”
for
the
words
‘‘section
56’’
in
the
original
Act.
‘Section
132(3)
then
read:
132.
(3)
Where
a
person
has
been
convicted
under
this
section
of
wilfully,
in
any
manner,
evading
or
attempting
to
evade
payment
of
taxes
imposed
by
Part
I,
he
is
not
liable
to
pay
a
penalty
imposed
under
subsection
(1)
of
section
56
for
the
same
evasion
or
attempt
unless
he
was
assessed
for
that
penalty
before
the
information
or
complaint
giving
rise
to
the
conviction
was
laid
or
made.
I
can
find
no
ambiguity
in
the
law
as
amended
and
I
think
that
the
Minister’s
submissions
are
right.
The
new
subsection
(2)
of
Section
56
provided
for
a
new
and
independent
penalty
to
that
provided
under
subsection
(1)
which
continued
to
apply
with
respect
to
statements
made
prior
to
August
1,
1960.
The
other
amendments
were
consequential.
The
penalties
in
issue
here
were
assessed
under
Section
56(2)
and
are
not
subject
to
the
condition
provided
for
in
Section
132(3).
The
error
in
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
and
in
the
Exchequer
Court
is
to
be
found
in
the
common
conclusion
that
penalties
must
be
assessed
before
the
information
or
complaint
under
both
Section
56(1)
and
Section
56(2)
.
This
pays
no
heed
to
the
plain
terms
of
Section
132(3),
above
quoted,
which
limits
the
need
for
prior
assessment
to
Section
56(1).
For
the
above
reasons,
the
plain
terms
of
Section
132(3)
do
not
create
‘‘an
absurdity
in
the
law’’
or
make
necessary
an
inference
that
the
section
must
be
applied
not
only
to
an
assessment
under
Section
56(1)
but
also
to
one
under
Section
56(2).
I
would
allow
the
appeal
with
costs
both
here
and
in
the
Exchequer
Court,
set
aside
the
judgment
of
the
Exchequer
Court
and
the
decision
of
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
and
restore
the
assessments.
LASKIN,
J.
(concurred
in
by
Pigeon,
J.)
:—The
respondent
taxpayer
failed
to
report
certain
income
in
six
successive
taxation
years,
1960
to
1965
inclusive.
In
January
1967
two
informations
were
laid
against
him,
one
including
six
charges
under
Section
132(1)
(a)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
and
the
other
consisting
of
a
single
charge
under
Section
132(1)
(d)
comprehending
the
six
taxation
years.
He
pleaded
quilty
to
all
charges,
and
fines,
as
varied
on
an
appeal,
totalling
$25,000
were
levied
against
him.
Thereafter,
he
was
re-assessed
for
tax;
and
the
Minister
included
in
the
re-assessment
notices
dated
May
2,
1967
penalties
for
each
of
the
six
taxation
years,
pursuant
to
Section
56(2)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
and
amounting
in
all
to
$16,134.25.
The
taxpayer
objected
to
the
inclusion
of
the
penalties,
relying
on
Section
132(3)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
and
his
objection
was
sustained
by
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
and,
on
appeal,
by
Kerr,
J.
of
the
Exchequer
Court.
The
question
in
this
court
is
simply
whether
the
Minister,
on
the
facts
herein,
was
authorized
to
impose
the
penalties.
Section
132(1)
(a)
and
(d)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
so
far
as
material,
reads
as
follows:
132.
(1)
Every
person
who
has
(a)
made,
or
participated
in,
assented
to
or
acquiesced
in
the
making
of,
false
or
deceptive
statements
in
a
return,
certificate,
statement
or
answer
filed
or
made
as
required
by
or
under
this
Act
or
a
regulation,
(d)
wilfully,
in
any
manner,
evaded
or
attempted
to
evade,
compliance
with
this
Act
or
payment
of
taxes
imposed
by
this
Act,
.
.
.
is
guilty
of
an
offence
and,
in
addition
to
any
penalty
otherwise
provided,
is
liable
on
summary
conviction
[to
a
fine
or
to
the
fine
and
imprisonment].
Having
been
convicted
under
Section
132(1)
(d),
the
taxpayer
was,
ex
facie,
entitled,
on
the
facts
herein,
to
the
benefit
of
Section
132(3)
which
is
in
these
words:
132.
(3)
Where
a
person
has
been
convicted
under
this
section
of
wilfully,
in
any
manner,
evading
or
attempting
to
evade
payment
of
taxes
imposed
by
Part
I,
he
is
not
liable
to
pay
a
penalty
imposed
under
subsection
(1)
of
section
56
for
the
same
evasion
or
attempt
unless
he
was
assessed
for
that
penalty
before
the
information
or
complaint
giving
rise
to
the
conviction
was
laid
or
made.
The
contention
of
the
Minister
that
the
penalties
were
imposed
under
Section
56(2)
and
not
under
Section
56(1)
would
be,
of
course,
a
complete
answer
if
there
was
power
to
exact
them
in
this
case.
In
order
to
appreciate
the
competing
contentions
of
the
parties,
I
reproduce
the
text
of
Section
56
and
shall
relate
its
history.
The
section
now
reads
:
56.
(1)
Every
person
who
has
wilfully,
in
any
manner,
evaded
or
attempted
to
evade
payment
of
the
tax
payable
by
him
under
this
Part
for
a
taxation
year
or
any
part
thereof
is
liable
to
a
penalty,
to
be
fixed
by
the
Minister,
of
not
less
than
25%
and
not
more
than
50%
of
the
amount
of
the
tax
evaded
or
sought
to
be
evaded.
1950,
c.
40,
s.
19.
(2)
Every
person
who,
knowingly,
or
under
circumstances
amounting
to
gross
negligence
in
the
carrying
out
of
any
duty
or
obligation
imposed
by
or
under
this
Act,
has
made,
or
has
participated
in,
assented
to
or
acquiesced
in
the
making
of,
a
statement
or
omission
in
a
return,
certificate,
statement
or
answer
filed
or
made
as
required
by
or
under
this
Act
or
a
regulation,
as
a
result
of
which
the
tax
that
would
have
been
payable
by
him
for
a
taxation
year
if
the
tax
had
been
assessed
on
the
basis
of
the
information
provided
in
the
return,
certificate,
statement
or
answer
is
less
than
the
tax
payable
by
him
for
the
year,
is
liable
to
a
penalty
of
25%
of
the
amount
by
which
the
tax
that
would
so
have
been
payable
is
less
than
the
tax
payable
by
him
for
the
year.
(3)
Where
a
person
is
liable
to
a
penalty
under
subsection
(2)
in
respect
of
any
statement
or
omission
in
a
return,
certificate,
statement
or
answer
filed
or
made
as
required
by
or
under
this
Act
or
a
regulation,
he
is
not
liable
to
any
penalty
under
subsection
(1)
in
respect
of
the
same
statement
or
omission.
Prior
to
1960,
Section
56
consisted
of
the
single
provision
now
shown
as
Section
56(1),
and
Section
132(3)
similarly
referred
then
to
Section
56
simpliciter.
In
1960,
by
Section
16
of
c.
43,
what
are
now
subsections
(2)
and
(3)
of
Section
56
were
enacted
and
expressly
given
a
prospective
operation;
and
at
the
same
time,
by
Section
31
of
c.
43,
Section
132(3)
was
amended
to
limit
its
application
to
Section
56(1),
thus
maintaining
it
in
its
previous
state
when
it
was
simply
Section
56.
There
is
no
necessary
connection
between
Section
56
and
Section
132,
since
the
Minister
may
exact
penalties
under
Section
56
(extrajudicially
so
to
speak,
although
subject
to
taxpayer
challenge)
without
summary
conviction
proceedings
being
taken
under
Section’132.
A
connection
arises
however
between
Section
56
and
Section
132(3)
when
there
has
been
a
conviction
under
Section
132(1)
(d).
If
both
are
to
be
pursued,
the
penalty
assess
a
penalty
for
the
same
conduct
as
expressed
in
Section
56(1).
Wilful
evasion
or
attempted
wilful
evasion
of
tax
is
redressible
by
a
penalty
under
Section
56(1)
and
by
prosecution
under
Section
132(1)
(d).
If
both
are
to
be
pursued,
the
penalty
must
be
assessed
before
the
information
is
laid
under
Section
132(1)
(d);
otherwise
the
penalty
cannot
be
exacted.
although
there
be
a
conviction
for
which
a
fine
or
a
fine
and
imprisonment
are
imposed.
Section
56(3)
also
excludes
a
penalty
under
Section
56(1)
in
the
situation
therein
set
out.
Since
the
taxpayer
was
convicted
under
Section
132(1)
(d),
the
question
arises
whether
the
Minister
can
ignore
Section
132(3)
and
impose
a
penalty
under
Section
56(2),
in
respect
of
the
very
conduct
which
offended
Section
132(1)
(d),
by
relying
on
Section
56(3)
as
well
as
on
Section
56(2).
Proper
perspective
on
this
issue,
in
the
light
of
the
facts
which
gave
rise
to
it,
is
realized
by
reading
Section
56
and
Section
132(3)
together.
I
should
say
at
this
point
that
counsel
for
the
Minister
does
not
rely
in
any
way
on
the
fact
that
convictions
were
entered
under
Section
132(1)
(a)
in
addition
to
the
conviction
under
Section
132(1)
(d).
He
does
however
contend,
on
the
one
hand,
for
a
limited
reading
of
Section
56(1)
(despite
the
words
‘‘in
any
manner’’)
so
as
to
exclude
therefrom
the
statements
or
omissions
described
in
Section
56(2),
and
he
seeks,
on
the
other
hand,
to
bring
the
conduct
in
this
case,
which
is
caught
by
Section
56(1)
(being
in
the
terms
set
out
in
Section
132(1)
(d)
),
within
Section
56(2)
by
reason
of
the
word
“knowingly”.
Thus,
he
would
justify
the
imposition
of
the
penalty
under
Section
56(2)
by
a
segmented
interpretation
and
application
of
Section
56(1)
;
and
on
this
basis
he
would
invoke
Section
56(3)
to
support
the
exaction
of
that
penalty
to
the
exclusion
of
a
penalty
under
Section
56(1).
In
short,
the
Minister
would
exclude
statements
or
omissions
from
Section
56(1)
(despite
the
words
therein
‘‘in
any
manner’’)
but
at
the
same
time
would
not
find
“wilfully”
and
‘‘knowingly’’
mutually
exclusive.
In
my
opinion,
this
is
not
only
tortured
construction,
but
it
suggests
also
expedient
shifting
of
position
by
the
Minister
on
facts
which
do
not
warrant
it
and,
indeed,
it
suggests
afterthought.
No
problem
would
have
arisen
if
the
Minister
(as
it
was
open
to
him
to
do
and
as
he
had
ample
time
to
do)
had
assessed
penalties
before
proceeding
to
prosecute
under
Section
132(1)
(d),
or
if
he
had
been
content
to
limit
prosecution
to
offences
under
Section
132(1)(a).
Counsel
for
the
Minister
conceded
a
possible
overlap
in
the
conduct
that
is
referred
to
in
Section
56(1)
and
in
Section
56
(2)
but
he
contended
that
nonetheless
the
liability
to
penalties
was
mutually
exclusive.
This,
indeed,
was
the
point
taken
by
counsel
for
the
taxpayer
who
contended
that
mutual
exclusiveness
meant
a
two-way
street;
if
liability
to
a
penalty
under
Section
56(2)
excluded
liability
under
Section
56(1),
so
would
liability
to
a
penalty
under
Section
56(1)
exclude
liability
under
Section
56(2);
and
he
submitted
further
that
the
conduct
comprehended
by
Section
56(1)
was
different
from
that
under
Section
56(2).
What
counsel
for
the
Minister
argues,
however,
in
amplification
of
his
contentions
already
noted,
is
that
when
the
Minister
is
faced
with
a
factual
situation
which
would
justify
a
penalty
either
under
Section
56(1)
or
under
Section
56(2)
he
is
obliged
by
reason
of
Section
56(3)
to
act
under
Section
56(2)
in
imposing
a
penalty,
with
the
result
that
none
can
be
imposed
under
Section
56(1).
It
is
in
this
sense
that
his
submission
must
be
taken
that
the
penalties
under
Section
56
are
mutually
exclusive;
and
it
depends,
of
course,
on
accepting
as
valid
the
contention
that
the
same
conduct
may
be
caught
by
Section
56(1)
and
by
Section
56(2),
not
in
the
segmented
sense
already
commented
upon,
but
in
the
fuller
sense
that
the
Minister
may
choose
to
treat
the
conduct,
although
cognizable
under
Section
56(1),
as
coming
under
Section
56(2)
which
imposes
a
lesser
maximum
penalty.
The
positions
of
the
parties
may
be
tested
in
a
number
of
ways.
First,
if
Section
56(1)
and
Section
56(2)
are
themselves
mutually
exclusive
(in
that
to
do
something
wilfully
is
different
from
doing
it
knowingly
or
through
gross
negligence),
then
Section
56(3)
must
be
regarded
as
simply
emphasizing
that
there
is
no
overlapping.
There
is
some
support
for
this
in
the
legislative
scheme,
since
subsections
(2)
and
(38)
of
Section
56
were
enacted
at
the
same
time
in
supplement
of
Section
56(1).
However,
it
may
be
thought
strange
that
Section
56(3)
is
needed
to
reinforce
an
exclusiveness
that
already
is
evident
from
the
formulations
of
Section
56(1)
and
Section
56(2).
Hence,
although
I
see
no
reason
to
doubt
that
such
a
reinforcement
may
have
been
provided
ex
abundanti
cautela,
I
shall
assume
that
Section
56(3),
far
from
fortifying
mutual
exclusiveness,
evidences
an
overlapping.
If
so,
it
poses
the
question
whether
the
Minister
is
given
a
choice
of
treating
the
delinquency
of
the
taxpayer
under
the
less
onerous
penalty
provision
or
whether
he
must
always
so
treat
it
for
penalty
purposes.
Second,
therefore,
and
assuming
that
the
Minister
has
an
election
whether
to
treat
the
delinquency
as
falling
under
Section
06(1)
or
under
Section
56(2),
he
has
on
the
facts
herein
treated
it
as
falling
under
Section
56(1)
by
prosecuting
to
a
conviction
under
Section
132(1)
(d).
On
this
view,
there
can
be
no
assessment
of
a
penalty
under
Section
56(2).
It
would
be
unthinkable
for
the
Minister
to
urge
that
although
he
has
prosecuted
under
Section
132(1)
(d)
without
previously
assessing
a
penalty
under
Section
56(1),
he
may
recede
from
his
election
and
also
treat
the
conduct
as
falling
within
Section
56(2)
for
penalty
purposes.
Third,
assuming
that,
for
penalty
purposes,
there
being
an
overlapping
application
of
the
respective
provisions
to
the
facts
herein,
the
Minister
must
act
under
Section
56(2),
then
several
situations
may
be
envisaged
:
(1)
The
Minister
lays
no
charges
but
assesses
a
penalty
under
Section
56(2).
He
is
then
precluded
from
assessing
one
under
Section
56(1)
but
he
is
not
precluded
from
prosecuting
under
Section
132(1)
(a);
and
assuming
he
also
prosecutes
under
Section
132(1)
(d),
no
penalty
could
then
be
assessed
under
Section
56(1),
whether
or
not
there
was
a
conviction
under
Section
132(1)
(d);
this
would
result
from
the
effect
of
Section
56(3)
or
Section
132(3).
(2)
If
the
Minister
lays
charges
under
Section
132(1)
(a)
and
there
is
a
conviction
he
may
still
assess
a
penalty
under
Section
56(2)
and
if
there
is
liability
to
such
a
penalty
(it
is
not
precluded
by
laying
the
charges
under
Section
132(1)
(a)),
then
none
can
be
assessed
under
Section
56(1).
(3)
The
Minister
lays
charges
under
Section
132(1)
(d)
alone
or
under
both
Section
132(1)
(d)
and
Section
132(1)
(a)
without
previously
assessing
a
penalty.
That
is
the
present
case;
and
the
argument
that
a
penalty
may
still
be
imposed
under
Section
56(2)
must
rest
on
the
premise
of
overlapping
and
that
the
Minister
is
obliged
to
act
in
such
ease
under
Section
56(2).
The
fact
that
no
penalty
may
be
exacted
under
Section
56(1)
is
the
result
then
not
of
Section
132(3)
but
of
Section
56(3).
The
difficulty
with
this
construction
is
that
a
taxpayer
whose
delinquency
falls
within
both
Section
56(1)
and
Section
56(2)
would
never
be
liable
to
a
penalty
under
Section
56
(1)
(and
note
that
Section
56(3)
speaks
of
a
person
being
liable
to
a
penalty),
although
it
is
claar
under
Section
132(3)
that
a
Section
56(1)
penalty
is
envisaged
as
open
to
assessment.
Of
the
three
possible
constructions
of
the
relevant
provisions,
namely,
mutual
exclusiveness,
election
by
the
Minister,
and
mandatory
duty
on
the
Minister,
the
first
two
support
the
conclusion
that
on
the
facts
herein
the
taxpayer
is
not
liable
to
the
penalty
under
Section
56(2);
and
the
third
supports
the
assessment
of
the
penalty
on
a
strained
reading
of
the
statutory
Provisions.
It
is
certainly
rational
construction
to
view
separate
subsections,
which
define
conditions
upon
which
different
penalties
are
assessable,
as
dealing
with
different
situations
unless
it
can
clearly
be
seen
that
the
same
conduct
may
be
within
both.
Penalty
provisions
are
normally
considered
as
appendant
and
not
governing.
Even
if
there
be
an
overlap
in
Section
56(1)
and
Section
56(2)
so
that
the
same
misconduct
is
embraced
by
both,
the
penalty
appropriate
thereto
may
be
held
to
have
been
determined
according
to
the
provision
under
which
enforcement
proceedings
are
first
taken.
Indeed,
to
say
that
a
person
is
liable
to
a
penalty
is
merely
to
expose
him
to
the
risk
thereof;
only
when
the
necessary
action
or
step
is
taken
to
exact
it
does
it
become
effective.
Assuming,
therefore,
that
there
may
be
cases
where
the
Minister
has
a
choice
in
assessing
under
Section
56(1)
or
under
Section
56(2),
he
has,
in
my
opinion,
lost
that
choice
here
(and
Section
56(3)
is
in
consequence
spent)
when
a
charge
has
been
successfully
prosecuted
under
Section
132(1)
(d)
without
any
penalty
having
been
assessed
before
the
charge
was
laid.
The
proscribed
conduct
having
thus
been
brought
under
Section
56(1),
there
was
no
right,
by
reason
of
Section
132(3),
to
impose
a
penalty
in
addition
to
the
fines.
Finally,
a
broader
consideration
moves
me
to
the
conclusion
to
which
I
would
come.
There
is
no
presumption,
certainly
not
in
this
case,
in
favour
of
Ministerial
statutory
power.
If
there
is
difficulty,
as
on
the
view
most
favourable
to
the
Minister
there
is
in
this
case,
in
reconciling
connecting
provisions
of
an
enactment,
that
construction
that
permits
their
most
compatible
application
in
any
fact
situation
is
to
be
preferred.
In
concluding
these
reasons,
I
feel
that
I
should
advert
to
an
issue
which
emerged
during
the
course
of
the
argument
by
counsel
for
the
Minister,
namely,
whether
the
effect
of
the
1960
amendments
was
to
deprive
Section
56(1)
of
any
prospective
application
and
whether
Section
132(3)
was
likewise
limited
to
past
occurrences.
In
short,
the
contention
appeared
to
be
that
an
implied
repeal
was
effected
of
these
provisions,
because
the
1960
amendments
involved
a
departure
from
the
previous
policy
of
forbidding
an
assessed
penalty
in
addition
to
a
judicially
im-
posed
penalty
after
a
charge
and
conviction
under
Section
132(1)(d).
Any
such
contention
is
without
merit.
There
is
no
language
in
the
legislation
to
support
it
and
Section
10
of
the
Interpretation
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
158,
as
amended
(now
Section
10
of
the
Interpretation
Act,
1967-68
(Can.),
c.
7)
is
against
it.
Not
only
is
there
a
strong
presumption
against
the
implied
repeal
of
legislation,
but
the
suggested
change
of
policy
is
inconsistent
with
the
retention
of
the
same
policy
under
Section
131(3)
of
the
Income
Tax
Act.
For
all
the
foregoing
reasons,
which
differ
somewhat
from
those
below,
I
would
dismiss
the
appeal
with
costs.