WALSH,
J.:—This
is
an
action
to
demand
payment
from
defendant
under
the
provisions
of
Sections
30
and
31
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act
and
Section
10
of
the
Old
Age
Security
Act
of
the
amount
of
$5,324.11
in
respect
of
certain
matrices
produced
or
manufactured
in
Canada
for
defendant’s
own
use
and
not
for
sale
during
the
period
between
October
1,
1963
and
July
11,
1966.
In
addition
the
penalties
prescribed
by
subsection
(4)
of
Section
48
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act
are
claimed.
The
significance
of
the
date
July
11,
1966
is
that
this
was
the
date
when
the
Act
14-15
Eliz.
II,
ce.
40,
making
certain
amendments
to
the
Excise
Tax
Act
and
in
particular
replacing
Schedule
III
thereto
received
Royal
Assent.
It
is
therefore
the
provisions
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act
as
it
existed
during
the
period
in
question
which
we
must
consider.
Defendant.
denies
that
the
matrices
in
question
are
subject
to
tax
but
admits
that
if
they
were
the
amount
of
tax
claimed
would
be
correct.
Defendant’s
various
alternative
arguments
are
as
follows:
1.
That
the
matrices
in
question
were
not
manufactured
or
produced
“for
use’’
by
the
defendant
within
the
meaning
of
Section
31(1)
(d)
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act.
2.
That
they
are
not
“goods”
within
the
meaning
of
Section
30
of
the
said
Act.
3.
That
if
they
are
subject
to
tax
on
the
interpretation
of
the
provisions
of
Sections
30
and
31
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act
they
are
nevertheless
exempt
by
virtue
of
the
provisions
of
Section
32
on
the
grounds
that
they
constitute
materials
.
.
.
consumed
or
expended
directly
in
the
process
of
manufacture
or
production
of
goods’’,
to
wit,
in
the
manufacture
of
rubber
stamps
within
the
meaning
of
Schedule
III
to
the
Act.
4.
That
the
matrices
in
question
are
not
subject
to
tax
since
they
are
used
for
the
purposes
of
manufacturing
a
taxable
article
of
goods,
to
wit,
the
said
rubber
stamps,
and
the
imposition
of
tax
in
connection
with
the
manufacture
or
production
of
them
would
constitute
double
taxation.
5.
The
tax
would
not
be
a
‘‘consumption
or
sales
tax”
within
the
meaning
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act.
Seetion
31(1)
(d)
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act*
reads
as
follows:
31.
(1)
Whenever
goods
are
manufactured
or
produced
in
Canada
under
such
circumstances
or
conditions
as
render
it
difficult
to
determine
the
value
thereof
for
the
consumption
or
sales
tax
because
(d)
such
goods
are
for
use
by
the
manufacturer
or
producer
and
not
for
sale;
the
Minister
may
determine
the
value
for
the
tax
under
this
Act
and
all
such
transactions
shall
for
the
purposes
of
this
Act
be
regarded
as
sales.
Section
32(1)
reads:
32.
(1)
The
tax
imposed
by
section
30
does
not
apply
to
the
sale
or
importation
of
the
articles
mentioned
in
Schedule
III.
The
relevant
portions
of
Schedule
III
as
it
read
prior
to
July
11,
1966
had
a
paragraph
under
the
heading
Printing
and
Educational”
reading
as
follows:
Typesetting
and
composition,
metal
plates,
cylinders,
matrices,
film,
art
work,
designs,
photographs,
rubber
material,
plastic
material
and
paper
material,
when
impressed
with
or
displaying
or
carrying
an
image
for
reproduction
by
printing,
made
or
imported
by
or
sold
to
a
manufacturer
or
producer
for
use
exclusively
in
the
manufacture
or
production
of
printed
matter;
Under
another
heading
“Processing
Materials’’
it
included
:
Materials
(not
including
grease,
lubricating
oils
or
fuel
for
use
in
internal
combustion
engines)
consumed
or
expended
directly
in
the
process
of
manufacture
or
production
of
goods.
Schedule
III
following
the
1966
amendment
contained
a
section
(Part
XIII)
headed
‘‘Production
Equipment
and
Processing
Materials’’
in
which
Section
3
reads
exactly
the
same
as
the
paragraph
quoted
from
the
heading
‘‘Printing
and
Educational”
in
the
old
Schedule
III
and
Section
2
reads
exactly
the
same
as
the
paragraph
quoted
which
appeared
under
the
heading
‘‘Processing
Materials’’
in
the
old
Schedule
III.
Section
1,
however,
reads
as
follows:
1.
All
of
the
following
when
for
use
by
manufacturers
or
producers
directly
in
the
manufacture
or
production
of
goods:
(a)
dies,
jigs,
fixtures
and
moulds;
(b)
patterns
for
dies,
jigs,
fixtures
and
moulds;
and
(c)
tools
for
use
in
or
attachment
to
production
machinery
that
are
for
working
materials
by
turning,
milling,
grinding,
polishing,
drilling,
punching,
boring,
shaping,
shearing,
pressing
or
planing.
and
as
a
result
of
this
it
is
now
common
ground
that
the
matrices
in
question
are
exempt
from
excise
tax
since
July
11,
1966.
The
Agreed
Statement
of
Facts
sets
out
that
during
the
period
in
question
defendant
was
engaged
in
the
process
of
making
rubber
stamps
which
were
subject
to
the
tax
imposed
by
Section
30
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act
and
the
defendant
paid
tax
on
these
stamps.
As
part
of
the
process
of
making
them
defendant
made
the
matrices
and
the
issue
between
the
parties
is
whether
defendant
is
liable
to
pay
the
tax
imposed
by
Section
30
in
respect
of
the
said
matrices
by
virtue
of
the
operation
of
Section
31
of
the
Act.
The
process
used
by
the
defendant
to
make
the
rubber
stamps
is
described
as
follows:
(a)
The
defendant
makes
lead
slugs
from
molten
lead
which
slugs
are
fashioned
into
letters
or
other
characters
intended
to
be
exhibited
by
the
finished
stamps.
The
lead
slugs
when
complete
are
locked
up
together
in
a
chase.
(b)
A
bakelite
board
is
then
placed
over
the
chase
and
by
means
of
pressure
the
defendant
causes
the
board
to
be
indented
with
the
characters
of
the
lead
slugs.
The
bakelite
mould
thus
produced
is
referred
to
as
a
matrix.
(c)
The
matrix
is
then
applied
to
a
sheet
of
uncured
rubber
and
by
means
of
heat
and
pressure
the
rubber
is
forced
into
the
indentations
in
the
matrix
and
cured.
(d)
After
the
rubber
sheet
has
been
given
the
impression
from
the
matrix
and
cured
it
is
cut
into
individual
stamps
each
of
which
is
mounted
on
a
wooden
handle
and
sold
in
that
form.
(e)
When
the
stamps
have
been
completed
by
the
defendant
the
lead
slugs
are
remelted
for
subsequent
use.
The
matrices
are
not
suitable
for
further
use
and
are
therefore
discarded.
The
Agreed
Statement
of
Facts
also
sets
out
that
on
September
19,
1966
defendant
applied
to
the
Tariff
Board
pursuant
to
Section
57
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act
for
a
declaration
that
the
matrices
in
question
were
exempt
from
tax
under
the
Act,
which
application
was
dismissed
by
declaration
dated
October
5,
1966.
This
declaration
was
appealed
to
the
Exchequer
Court
pursuant
to
Section
58
of
the
Act
and
by
a
judgment
of
Jackett,
P.
dated
December
2,
1966
the
appeal
was
dismissed.*
No
appeal
was
taken
from
this
judgment.
Plaintiff
in
its
reply
to
the
Statement
of
Defence
raises
the
question
that
defendant
may
not
raise
the
issue
that
the
matrices
in
question
are
exempt
under
the
provisions
of
Section
32
of
the
Act
by
virtue
of
their
being
mentioned
in
Schedule
III
to
the
Act
as
this
is
res
judicata.
The
first
argument
raised
by
defendant
is
that
matrices
in
question
were
not
manufactured
or
produced
‘‘for
use’’
of
the
defendant
within
the
meaning
of
Section
31(1)
(d)
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act.
This
section
deals
with
the
tax
when
articles
are
not
manufactured
or
produced
and
sold
by
the
manufacturer
or
producer,
but
are
used
by
himself
and
hence
it
is
difficult
to
determine
the
value
for
purposes
of
the
tax,
which
is
nevertheless
imposed
on
a
value
determined
by
the
Minister,
such
use
being
regarded
as
a
sale.
The
question
of
the
interpretation
of
the
words
‘‘use
by
the
manufacturer
or
producer’’
contained
in
this
section
and
in
its
predecessor
Section
87(d)
of
the
Special
War
Revenue
Actt
which
used
the
identical
wording
has
been
dealt
with
in
a
number
of
cases.
The
case
of
The
King
v.
Henry
K.
Wampole
and
Co.
Ltd.,
[1931]
8.C.R.
494,
dealt
with
the
tax
on
special
small
packages
of
the
Wampole
products
which
were
put
up
for
free
distribution
amongst
physicians
and
druggists
as
samples.
This
case
held,
reversing
the
judgment
of
the
Exchequer
Court
on
this
point,
that
the
‘*
‘use’
by
the
manufacurer
or
producer
of
goods
not
sold
includes
any
use
whatever
that
such
manufacturer
or
producer
may
make
of
such
goods,
and
is
wide
enough
to
cover
their
‘use’
for
advertising
purposes
by
the
distribution
of
them
as
free
samples,
.
.
.”.
The
appeal
was
dismissed
however
on
another
point,
the
question
of
double
taxation,
which
will
be
dealt
with
later.
The
same
year
the
Supreme
Court
in
the
case
of
The
King
v.
Fraser
Companies
Ltd.,
[1931]
S.C.R.
490,
reversing
an
Exchequer
Court
judgment,
held
that
the
real
intention
was
to
levy
the
tax
on
the
sale
price
of
all
goods
produced
or
manufactured
in
Canada
whether
the
goods
so
produced
should
be
sold
by
the
manufacturer
or
consumed
by
himself
for
his
own
purposes.
In
this
case
respondent
was
a
manufacturer
of
lumber
for
sale
but
consumed
a
portion
of
it
in
constructing
and
building
operations
which
it
also
carried
out,
this
lumber
being
taken
from
the
stock
in
its
yards
and
not
produced
or
manufactured
especially
for
the
purpose
for
which
it
was
used.
In
the
case
of
The
King
v.
Domimon
Bridge
Co.
Ltd.,
[1940]
S.C.R.
487;
[1940-41]
C.T.C.
99,
which
dealt
with
tax
on
the
structural
steel
used
by
the
defendant
in
the
construction
of
bridges,
the
reasoning
in
the
Fraser
case
was
followed,
and
the
use
of
the
members
of
the
superstructure
for
the
purpose
of
fulfilling
the
contract
to
construct
the
bridge
was
held
to
be
taxable.
A
similar
finding
was
made
in
the
case
of
The
Queen
v.
Dante
Albert
Saracini
and
Albert
Saracini,
[1959]
Ex.C.R.
63;
[1958]
C.T.C.
355,
in
which
the
defendants,
being
builders
of
houses,
produced
or
manufactured
kitchen
cabinets
for
the
purpose
of
installing
them
in
the
houses
being
constructed
by
them,
which
houses
were
later
sold.
The
cabinets
were
constructed
in
a
warehouse
apart
from
and
some
distance
from
the
site
of
the
house
construction
but
were
made
according
to
the
precise
specifications
and
measurements
required
by
each
house
and
were
not
manufactured
for
sale
to
other
buyers.
After
reviewing
the
previous
jurisprudence
Cameron,
J.
found
the
facts
in
this
case
almost
identical
with
those
of
the
Dominion
Bridge
case.
In
an
earlier
case
of
Bank
of
Nova
Scotia
v.
The
King,
[1930]
S.C.R.
174,
where
the
defendant
bank
had,
without
any
object
of
gain
but
for
convenience,
a
printing
plant
with
which
it
printed
and
made
up
ledgers,
forms
and
other
printed
material
required
by
it
for
carrying
on
its
business,
it
was
held,
confirming
the
judgment
of
the
Exchequer
Court,
that
the
bank
was
a
manufacturer
or
producer
and
liable
for
consumption
or
sales
tax
on
these
materials.
This
judgment
emphasized
that
it
was
not
necessary
that
the
goods
in
question
be
manufactured
or
produced
for
sale,
as
this
would
involve
the
exclusion
from
consideration
of
section
87(d)
of
the
Special
War
Revenue
Act
(Section
31(1)
(d)
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act).
These
cases
all
differ
somewhat
from
the
present
one
in
that
in
the
Fraser
Companies,
Dominion
Bridge,
and
Saracini
cases
the
goods
used
were
incorporated
in
the
final
product,
in
the
Bank.
of
Nova
Scotia
case
(supra)
the
goods
were
not
incorporated
in
a
final
product
but
were
used
by
the
bank
itself
in
its
business,
and
in
the
Wampole
case
(supra)
the
samples,
while
distributed
to
doctors
and
druggists
in
order
to
promote
the
company’s
business
and
not
sold,
nevertheless:
found
their
way
into
the
hands
of
third
persons
in
an
unaltered
form.
In
the
present
case
while
the
matrices
could
theoretically
have
been
used
again
according
to
the
evidence
of
David
Saltzman,
the
secretary
of
the
defendant,
at
the
hearing,
it
was
impractical
to
do
so,
and
it
is
admitted
in
the
Agreed
Statement
of
Facts
they
are
discarded
and
hence
are
destroyed
in
the
process
of
manufacturing
the
final
product
so
they
do
not
form
part
thereof.
Despite
these
differences,
however,
I
find,
in
the
light
of
this
jurisprudence,
that
the
matrices
were
‘‘for
use
by
the
manufacturer
or
producer
and
not
for
sale’’
within
the
meaning
of
Section
31(1)
(d)
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act
and
would
be
taxable
as
such
unless
they
can
be
brought
within
the
exception
of
Section
32(1).
The
second
argument
raised
by
defendant
was
that
the
matrices
are
not
“goods”
within
the
meaning
of
Section
30
of
the
Act.
In
support
of
this
defendant’s
counsel
argued
that
the
word
“goods”
as
used
in
the
Act
implies
a
commercial
connotation
of
something
marketable
and
that
in
this
sense
the
matrices
are
not
‘‘goods’’.
In
rendering
judgment
in
the
Sara-
cini
case
Cameron,
J.
stated
(at
page
65
[356]
)
:
For
some
years
prior
to
the
period
in
question,
the
defendants
in
constructing
their
houses
were
accustomed
to
having
their
own
carpenters
(or
the
firms
to
which
they
had
sublet
the
carpentry
work)
build
the
kitchen
cabinets
piece
by
piece
in
the
proper
place
in
the
kitchen
of
the
house
under
construction,
where
it
remained
permanently.
Constructed
in
situ,
and
in
that
fashion,
the
cabinet
was
built
as
part
of
the
individual
house
and
admittedly
never
was
“goods”
as
that
word
is
used
in
the
Excise
Tax
Act.
He
dealt
then
with
the
distinction
arising
from
the
fact
that
the
cabinets
were
subsequently
built
outside,
in
a
warehouse,
though
to
the
specific
measurements
of
the
house
in
which
they
were
to
be
installed
and
were
never
sold
as
cabinets
to
third
parties.
He
went
on
to
say
at
page
67
[358]
:
Now
in
order
to
attract
this
tax
it
is
clear
that
the
goods
need
not
be
sold.
If
they
are
“goods”
and
consumed
or
used
by
the
manufacturer
they
are
liable
to
the
tax,
unless
especially
exempted.
Referring
to
the
Dominion
Bridge
case
which
he
found
indistinguishable
from
that
before
him,
he
stated
:
The
decision
in
that
case
must
have
been
based
on
a
finding
that
the
component
parts
of
the
bridge
were
in
fact
“goods”
within
the
meaning
of
the
Act.
The
Supreme
Court
case
of
Quebec
Hydro
Electric
Commission
v.
Deputy
Minister
of
National
Revenue,*
dealing
with
transformers
used
to
convert
electricity
to
voltage
levels
required
by
customers
and
whether
such
transformers
were
used
directly
in
the
manufacture
or
production
of
goods,
stated
that
it
was
common
ground
that
electricity
falls
within
the
meaning
of
the
word
‘‘goods’’
in
the
relevant
provisions
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act
and
the
appellant
was
therefore
a
manufacturer
or
producer
of
"goods”
for
the
purposes
of
the
said
provisions.
Moreover
‘‘matrices
for
use
exclusively
in
the
manufacture
or
production
of
printed
matter’’
are
specifically
referred
to
in
Schedule
JII
(supra),
which
indicates
that
they
are
considered
as
""goods”
within
the
meaning
of
Sections
30
and
31
of
the
Act,
and
the
fact
that
it
has
been
found
that
this
exception
did
not
cover
the
present
matrices
by
the
declaration
of
the
Tariff
Board
and
judgment
of
Jackett,
P.
(supra)
does
not
affect
this.
In
view
of
this,
and
of
the
wide
interpretation
given
by
the
jurisprudence
to
the
word
‘‘goods’’
as
used
in
the
Act,
I
cannot
find
that
the
meaning
should
be
limited
to
articles
which,
whether
not
they
are
actually
sold,
can
by
themselves
be
considered
objects
of
commerce.
Even
if
this
narrower
interpretation
were
acceptable
the
witness
Saltzman
admitted
that
the
matrices
could
be
used
20
or
20
times
before
wearing
out
even
though
this
is
never
done
as
it
is
cheaper
to
make
new
ones.
In
the
context
and
in
accordance
with
the
intention
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act
therefore,
I
believe
that
matrices
must
be
considered
as
""goods”
within
the
meaning
of
Section
30
of
that
Act.
Leaving
aside
for
the
moment
the
important
third
argument
raised
by
defendant
we
can
consider
together
the
fourth
and
fifth
arguments
to
the
effect
that
the
matrices
are
not
subject
to
tax
since
they
are
used
for
the
purpose
of
manufacturing
a
taxable
article
or
goods,
to
wit,
the
rubber
stamps,
and
that
the
imposition
of
the
sales
tax
in
connection
with
the
manufacture
or
production
of
the
matrices
would
therefore
constitute
double
taxation,
or
alternatively
would
not
be
a
consumption
or
sales
tax
within
the
meaning
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act.
The
defendant
argues
that
double
taxation
is
repugnant
to
the
law,
which
argument
appellant
counters
by
pointing
out
that
there
are
many
instances
in
the
Excise
Tax
Act
itself
where
double
taxation
clearly
takes
place,
notably
in
the
application
of
Section
31(1)
(d)
unless
the
articles
can
be
brought
within
one
of
the
exceptions
of
Section
32.
In
support
of
his
argument
defendant
relies
strongly
on
the
judgment
of
Anglin,
C.J.C.
in
the
Wampole
case
(supra),
in
which
action
it
was
stated
that
the
cost
of
producing
the
samples
was
paid
by
the
company
as
a
necessary
expense
of
business
and
treated
in
the
company’s
books
as
a
necessary
cost
of
production
of
articles
manufactured
and
sold
in
respect
of
which
last
mentioned
articles
the
company
has
paid
sales
tax.
In
rendering
the
majority
judgment
the
learned
Chief
Justice
states
(at
page
497)
:
It
is
obvious
to
me
that
it
cannot
have
been
the
intention
of
the
Legislature
to
tax
the
same
property
twice
in
the
hands
of
the
manufacturer.
Having
regard
to
the
admission
of
paragraph
4,
above
quoted,
such
double
taxation
would
ensue
were
we
to
hold
the
samples
here
in
question
to
be
now
subject
to
the
consumption
or
sales
tax,
it
being
there
admitted
that
the
cost
of
producing
such
samples
is
included
in
the
cost
of
production
of
articles
manufactured
and
sold,
in
respect
of
which
.
.
.
the
company
has
paid
sales
tax.
If
the
cost
or
value
of
these
goods
used
as
samples
has
already
been
a
subject
of
the
sales
tax
in
this
way,
it
would
seem
to
involve
double
taxation
if
they
should
now
be
held
liable
for
sales
tax
on
their
distribution
as
free
samples.
He
goes
on
to
say
:
If
it
was
not
intended
.
..
to
make
an
admission
that
the
sales
tax
had
already
been
paid
upon
the
cost
of
producing
the
samples
for
free
distribution,
that
paragraph
in
the
Special
Case
is
wholly
irrelevant
and
most
misleading
and
I
cannot
understand
the
Crown
assenting
to
its
insertion
unless
it
intended
thereby
to
make
the
admission
I
have
stated.
It
appears
to
me
that
to
apply
this
finding
too
widely
would
negate
to
a
large
extent
the
provisions
of
Section
31(1)
(d)
by
virtue
of
which
a
sales
tax
is
paid
on
goods
used
by
a
manufacturer
in
the
process
of
manufacturing
a
final
product
on
which
sales
tax
will
also
be
payable.
Since
the
tax
paid
on
the
goods
used
in
the
manufacturing
process
will
in
most
eases
be
taken
into
consideration
by
the
manufacturer
in
his
sale
price
of
the
final
product
there
will
be
double
taxation
when
the
tax
is
paid
on
same.
It
would
seem,
therefore,
that
the
Wampole
case
must
be
considered
as
a
special
situation
based
upon
the
specific
admission
by
the
appellant
therein
that
the
cost
of
producing
the
samples
was
treated
as
a
necessary
expense
of
the
cost
of
production
of
the
articles
sold.
While
it
would
certainly
be
reasonable
to
presume
in
the
present
case
that
the
cost
of
the
matrices
is
taken
into
consideration
by
defendant
in
pricing
the
final
product,
the
rubber
stamps,
on
which
the
sales
tax
is
paid,
there
is
no
specific
admission
to
this
effect
in
the
Statement
of
Facts
or
evidence.
There
would
also
seem
to
be
a
further
distinction
which
can
be
made
between
the
present
circumstances
and
the
Wampole
case,
in
that
in
the
Wampole
case
it
was
the
identical
goods
which
would
have
been
taxed
twice
while
in
the
present
case
it
would
have
been
a
different
article
which
was
taxed
and
then
used
in
the
course
of
production
of
the
final
product.
The
question
of
what
is
meant
by
a
consumption
or
sales
tax
is
I
believe
well
dealt
with
in
Tariff
Board
Appeal
No.
916,*
General
Scrap
and
Car
Shredder
Limited
v.
Deputy
Minister
of
National
Revenue,
Customs
and
Excise,
where
it
was
stated
:
Turning
now
to
the
arguments
of
counsel
for
the
appellant
and
dealing
first
with
“context”,
it
seems
to
the
Board
that
the
concept
of
the
consumption
or
sales
tax
embodied
in
the
Excise
Tax
Act
is
that
the
tax
should
be
collected
only
once
on
any
goods
as
distinct
from
the
concept
of
a
“turnover”
tax
where,
broadly
speaking,
a
tax
is
collected
each
time
the
goods
change
hands.
It
is
true
there
are
some
goods,
the
cost
of
which
it
is
necessary
to
incur
to
manufacture
or
produce
other
goods
which
are
subject
to
the
consumption
or
sales
tax
and
the
goods
they
are
used
to
manufacture
or
produce
are
also
subject
to
the
consumption
or
sales
tax;
such
goods
as
the
materials
used
in
the
construction
of
buildings,
office
equipment,
and
delivery
trucks.
However,
dealing
with
the
chain
of
transactions
from
the
acquisition
of
machinery
and
equipment,
the
purchase
of
materials,
including
those
materials
which
may
be
consumed
or
expended
in
the
manufacture
or
production
processes,
right
through
to
the
sale
of
the
finished
goods,
the
concept
of
the
consumption
or
sales
tax
is
that
the
tax
shall
apply
only
to
the
final
sale
of
the
goods
by
a
manufacturer
or
producer.
There
have
been
many
amendments
to
the
Excise
Tax
Act
over
the
years
exempting
goods
used
in
the
manufacturingprocesses
which
serve
to
illustrate
this
concept
of
the
manner
in
which
the
Act
is
intended
to
apply.
Obviously,
for
goods
to
be
exempt
from
the
Act,
there
must
be
a
provision
for
their
exemption
but
where
two
interpretations
of
provisions
of
the
Act
appear
equally
sound
in
other
respects
then
it
seems
to
the
Board
that
that
interpretation
which
avoids
the
pyramiding
of
the
tax
should
be
followed
rather
than
one
which
would
have
the
opposite
effect.
Thus
while
conceding
that
the
tax
is
intended
to
be
a
“consumption
or
sales
tax’’,
by
virtue
of
the
provisions
of
Sections
80
and
31
of
the
Act,
and
conceding
that
the
Act
recognizes
in
general
that
double
taxation
is
repugnant,
it
nevertheless
appears
that
this
is
accomplished
by
the
use
of
the
exemptions
provided
for
in
Section
32
of
the
Act
and
that
Section
31(1)
(d)
does
permit
double
taxation
unless
the
goods
in
question
can
be
brought
within
one
of
the
exemptions
of
Section
32
and
the
Schedules
referred
to
therein.
I
now
turn
to
defendant’s
argument
that
the
matrices
are
exempt
under
the
heading
‘‘
Processing
Materials”
in
Schedule
III
to
the
Act
as
‘‘materials
.
.
.
consumed
or
expended
directly
in
the
process
of
the
manufacture
or
production
of
goods’’
and
before
dealing
with
the
merits
of
this
contention
it
is
first
necessary
to
decide
whether
the
claim
for
exemption
under
any
section
of
Schedule
III
is
res
judicata
as
the
result
of
the
declaration
of
the
Tariff
Board
and
judgment
of
the
Exchequer
Court
respecting
these
matrices
previously
referred
to.
It
is
essential
to
the
determination
of
this
issue
to
examine
very
carefully
the
nature
of
the
application
to
the
Tariff
Board
for
a
ruling,
the
wording
of
its
ruling,
and
the
wording
of
the
judgment
of
the
Exchequer
Court
confirming
this
ruling
in
order
to
determine
whether
the
claim
for
exemption
under
Schedule
III
has
been
previously
adjudicated
upon
or
not.
In
his
letter
to
the
Tariff
Board
requesting
a
ruling
dated
March
16,
1966
(Exhibit
P-5)
defendant’s
solicitor
states
as
follows:
It
is
our
client’s
contention
that
the
matrices
are
exempt
in
virtue
of
the
1963
amendment
to
the
Excise
Tax
Act,
wherein
the
following
goods
were
enumerated
as
being
exempt
from
tax:
“Typesetting
and
composition,
metal
plates,
cylinders,
matrices,
file,
art
work,
designs,
photographs,
rubber
material,
plastic
material
and
paper
material,
when
impressed
with
or
displaying
or
carrying
an
image
for
reproduction
by
printing,
made
or
imported
by
or
sold
to
a
manufacturer
or
producer
for
use
exclusively
in
the
manufacture
or
production
of
printed
matter”.
The
department
has
taken
the
position
that
these
matrices
are
not
being
used
for
printing,
while
it
is
our
contention
that
the
definition
of
printing
includes
rubber
stamping.
In
the
Crown’s
brief
to
the
Tariff
Board
(Exhibit
P-6)
it
is
stated
under
the
heading
‘‘
Point
in
Issue’’:
‘‘The
issue
in
this
application
is
whether
the
matrices
made
by
the
applicant
are
articles
mentioned
in
Schedule
III
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act
under
the
heading
‘Printing
and
Educational’.”
In
the
decision
of
the
Tariff
Board
(Appendix
1
of
Exhibit
P-1,
Agreed
Statement
of
Facts)
the
first
paragraph
reads:
This
is
an
application
under
the
provisions
of
Section
57
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act
for
a
declaration
that
matrices
used
in
the
production
of
rubber
stamps
are
exempt
from
the
consumption
or
sales
tax
by
virtue
of
the
1963
amendment
to
Schedule
III
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act.
The
next
paragraph
then
states
that
the
applicant
contended
the
exemption
should
be
made
under
he
heading
‘‘Printing
and
Educational”
and
refers
to
the
paragraph
under
that
heading
quoted
above.
It
then
describes
the
process
of
making
rubber
stamps
and
then
states
‘It
is
the
application
of
the
sales
tax
under
Section
31(1)
(d)
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act
to
the
matrices
which
is
the
subject
of
this
appeal”.
The
Board
then
discussed
the
argument
that
the
matrices
were
used
in
the
production
of
printed
matter
and
in
its
concluding
paragraph
stated
:
The
Board
declares
that
the
rubber
sheet
is
not
“printed
matter”
within
the
meaning
to
be
attached
to
these
words
in
the
exempting
provision.
The
Board
declares
also
that,
in
use,
a
rubber
stamp
does
not
produce
“printed
matter”
within
the
meaning
to
be
attached
to
these
words
in
the
exempting
provision.
Accordingly,
the
application
is
dismissed.
In
the
judgment
of
the
Exchequer
Court
Jackett,
P.
in
his
Reasons
for
Judgment
starts
out:
This
is
an
appeal,
under
Section
58
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
100,
as
amended,
from
a
declaration
made
by
the
Tariff
Board
on
October
5,
1966,
to
the
effect
that
an
article,
known
as
a
matrix
and
used
in
the
course
of
producing
the
rubber
sheet
portion
of
rubber
stamps,
did
not
fall
within
Schedule
III
to
the
Act
as
it
was
during
a
period
of
approximately
three
years
prior
to
the
amendments
thereto
effected
by
chapter
40
of
the
Statutes
of
1966,
so
as
to
bring
the
sales
of
such
articles,
during
that
period,
within
the
exempting
provision
of
Section
32
and
thus
to
exempt
such
sales
from
the
consumption
or
sales
tax
imposed
by
Section
30
of
the
Act.
He
refers
to
the
order
of
the
Court
made
on
November
22,
1966,
granting
leave
to
appeal
on
the
following
question
of
law:
‘‘
Did
the
Tariff
Board
err
as
a
matter
of
law
in
determining
that
matrices
used
in
the
production
of
rubber
stamps
are
not
made
for
use
exclusively
in
the
manufacture
or
production
of
printed
matter?”
He
then
reviews
the
arguments
presented
before
him
and
concludes
that
the
matrices
used
in
this
process
are
not
being
used
in
the
manufacture
or
production
of
printed
matter.
He
then
states
:
In
conclusion
I
wish
to
mention,
so
as
to
avoid
any
misunderstanding
as
to
what
is
being
decided
at
this
time,
that
the
only
question
raised
by
this
appeal
is
the
applicability
of
Schedule
III
to
the
matrices
made
and
used
in
the
course
of
making
rubber
stamps.
The
question
as
to
whether
sales
tax
is
payable
on
the
matrix
made
and
used
as
part
of
the
process
of
making
a
rubber
stamp
as
well
as
on
the
rubber
stamp
itself,
even
though
the
matrix
has
no
function
except
as
one
of
the
stages
in
manufacturing
the
rubber
stamp
and
even
though
the
matrix
does
not
exist
as
an
independent
article
of
commerce,
is
a
separate
question
that
has
not
been
raised
by
this
appeal.
The
law
relating
to
res
judicata
is
so
well
known
that
it
is
not
necessary
to
review
it
at
length
here.
It
has
been
well
expressed
in
a
judgment
of
the
Supreme
Court
in
he
case
of
Bertha
Maynard
and
Cecil
Maynard
v.
Ruth
Lillian
Martin,
[1951]
S.C.R.
346
at
358,
where
Cartwright,
J.,
now
Chief
Justice,
states:
The
following
passage
from
the
judgment
of
Maugham,
J.,
as
he
then
was,
in
Green
v.
Weatherill
([1929]
2
Ch.
213
at
221,
222),
seems
to
me
to
state
concisely
the
principles
which
are
applicable:
“the
plea
of
res
judicata
is
not
a
technical
doctrine,
but
a
fundamental
doctrine
based
on
the
view
that
there
must
be
an
end
to
litigation:
see
In
re
May
(28
Ch.D.
516,
518);
Badar
Bee
v.
Habib
Merican
Noordin
([1909]
A.C.
615).
In
the
latter
case
it
may
be
observed
that
Lord
Macnaghten
in
delivering
the
judgment
cites
from
the
Digest
and
relies
on
the
maxim
“Except™
rei
judicatae
obstat
quotiens
eadem
quaestio
inter
easdem
personas
revocatur’’.
In
the
leading
case
of
Henderson
v.
Henderson
(3
Hare,
100,
114),
there
is
to
be
found
the
following
statement
of
the
law
by
Wigram,
V.C.:
“I
believe
I
state
the
rule
of
the
Court
correctly
when
I
say
that
where
a
given
matter
becomes
the
subject
of
litigation
in
and
of
adjudication
by
a
court
of
competent
jurisdiction,
the
Court
requires
the
parties
to
that
litigation
to
bring
forward
their
whole
case
and
will
not
(except
under
special
circumstances)
permit
the
same
parties
to
open
the
same
subject
of
litigation
in
respect
of
matter
which
might
have
been
brought
forward
as
part
of
the
subject
in
contest,
but
which
was
not
brought
forward
only
because
they
have
from
negligence,
inadvertence
or
even
accident,
omitted
part
of
their
case.
The
plea
of
res
judicata
applies,
except
in
special
cases,
not
only
to
points
upon
which
the
Court
was
actually
required
by
the
parties
to
form
an
opinion
and
pronounce
a
judgment,
but
to
every
point
which
properly
belonged
to
the
subject
of
litigation
and
which
the
parties,
exercising
reasonable
diligence,
might
have
brought
forward
at
the
time”.
This
passage
has
recently
been
approved
by
the
Privy
Council
in
the
case
of
Hoystead
v.
Commissioner
of
Taxation
([1926]
A.C.
155
170).”
In
the
judgment
of
the
Judicial
Committee
in
Hoystead
v.
Commissioner
of
Taxation
(supra),
at
page
165
is
the
following:
“Parties
are
not
permitted
to
begin
fresh
litigations
because
of
new
views
they
may
entertain
of
the
law
of
the
case,
or
new
versions
which
they
present
as
to
what
should
he
a
proper
apprehension
by
the
Court
of
the
legal
result
either
of
the
construction
of
the
documents
or
the
weight
of
certain
circumstances.
If
this
were
permitted
litigation
would
have
no
end,
except
when
legal
ingenuity
is
exhausted.
It
is
a
principle
of
law
that
this
cannot
be
permitted,
and
there
is
abundant
authority
reiterating
that
principle.”
Another
expression
of
this
principle
is
found
in
the
Supreme
Court
case
of
Herbert
Millar
Ellard
v.
Dame
Ellen
Millar,
[1930]
S.C.R.
319,
where
the
headnote
reads
in
part
as
follows:
As
a
rule,
under
Quebec
law,
the
authority
of
res
judicata
applies
only
to
the
dispositif
or,
in
the
language
of
the
code
(art.
124
1
C.C.),
“to
that
which
has
been
the
object
of
the
judgment’;
but
it
will
also
result
from
the
implied
decision
which
is
the
necessary
consequence
of
the
express
dispositif
in
the
judgment.
In
this
case,
upon
an
action
previously
brought,
a
final
judgment
between
the
same
parties
had
annulled
two
deeds
for
the
reason
that
the
annuity
thereby
provided
should
have
been
$2,000,
instead
of
$800.
Although
the
dispositif
of
the
judgment
stated
that
the
action
was
maintained
“so
far
as
the
annulment
of
the
deeds
was
prayed
for”,
that
involved
a
determination
of
the
true
amount
of
the
annuity
as
being
$2,000,
which
was
the
same
question
as
that
sought
to
be
controverted
in
the
present
case;
and
such
question
was
concluded
as
between
the
parties
by
the
judgment
in
the
first
case.
In
the
case
of
The
Queen
v.
Mead
Johnson
of
Canada
Limited,
11966]
S.C.R.
457;
[1966]
C.T.C.
201,
the
Court
held,
reversing
the
judgment
of
the
Exchequer
Court,
that
the
Tariff
Board
having
decided
that
Metrecal
in
powdered
form
was
subject
to
sales
tax
as
being
a
pharmaceutical,
and
leave
to
appeal
from
that
decision
having
been
refused
by
the
Exchequer
Court,
the
Court
could
not
now
review
this
decision.
In
the
light
of
the
foregoing
jurisprudence
it
appears
that
if
the
defendant
had
merely
applied
to
the
Tariff
Board
for
a
ruling
that
the
matrices
in
question
were
exempt
from
taxation
under
Section
32
of
the
Act
because
they
were
included
in
Schedule
III,
and
had
then
merely
raised
one
of
the
two
possible
claims
for
exemption
under
this
Schedule,
namely,
that
they
were
exempt
because
they
were
used
exclusively
in
the
manufacture
or
production
of
printed
matter,
and
had
neglected
to
raise
the
issue
of
the
other
possible
claim
for
exemption,
namely,
that
they
were
materials
consumed
or
expended
directly
in
the
process
of
manufacture
or
production
of
goods,
and
the
decision
of
the
Board
and
subsequently
of
the
Court
had
been
to
the
effect
that
these
matrices
were
not
exempt
under
Schedule
III,
there
would
have
been
a
clear
case
of
res
judicata,
and
the
fact
that
defendant
had
neglected
to
raise
the
second
argument
at
the
time
of
the
hearing
before
the
Tariff
Board
would
not
have
justified
it
in
now
raising
it
before
the
Court
in
the
present
proceedings
in
which
it
is
called
upon
to
pay
the
tax
due
on
these
matrices.
I
believe,
however,
that
a
close
examination
of
its
application
to
the
Tariff
Board
makes
it
clear
that
what
defendant
asked
for
was
a
ruling
that
the
matrices
were
used
in
the
manufacture
or
production
of
printed
matter
and
that
it
was
on
this
question
only
that
the
Board
made
its
ruling.
As
a
consequence
of
the
ruling
they
did
not
qualify
under
Schedule
III
for
exemption
on
this
ground.
The
final
paragraph
of
the
decision
of
the
Tariff
Board
indicates
that
all
that
was
really
decided
by
it
was
that
‘‘the
Board
declares
that
the
rubber
sheet
is
not
printed
matter
within
the
meaning
to
be
attached
to
these
words
in
he
exempting
provision.
The
Board
declares
that,
in
use,
a
rubber
stamp
does
not
produce
printed
matter
within
the
meaning
to
be
attached
to
these
words
in
the
exempting
provision’’.
It
is
clear
from
the
wording
of
the
order
of
the
Exchequer
Court
granting
leave
to
appeal,
previously
quoted,
that
this
was
the
only
issue
which
was
before
Jackett,
P.
on
the
appeal
before
him.
It
appears
from
the
careful
wording
of
the
judgment
in
that
case
that
this
was
the
only
issue
on
which
the
Court
expressed
its
opinion.
It
would
appear
therefore
that
the
findings
in
both
the
Mead
Johnson
ease
(supra)
and
the
Ellard
v.
Millar
case
(supra)
can
be
distinguished.
In
the
latter
case
although
the
judgment
merely
maintained
the
action
in
so
far
as
the
annulment
of
the
deeds
was
prayed
for
there
was
a
clear
implication
that
there
had
been
a
determination
that
the
true
amount
of
the
annuity
was
$2,000
although
the
judgment
did
not
say
so,
and
this
matter
could
therefore
not
be
litigated
again.
There
is
certainly
no
implication
in
the
decision
of
the
Tariff
Board
or
of
the
Exchequer
Court
in
the
present
case
that
the
question
of
the
claim
for
exemption
on
the
grounds
that
the
matrices
are
materials
consumed
or
expended
directly
in
the
process
of
manufacture
or
production
of
goods
was
ever
argued
or
considered.
I
believe
it
would
be
an
unduly
strict
interpretation
of
the
law
relating
to
res
judicata
to
hold
that
because
defendant
applied
to
the
Tariff
Board
for
a
ruling
on
an
exemption
from
duty
under
Schedule
III
on
one
ground
when
he
might
at
the
same
time
have
applied
on
two
grounds
he
has
now
lost
the
right
to
have
the
second
ground
considered,
despite
the
fact
that
it
was
never
dealt
with
before
either
by
the
Tariff
Board
or
by
the
Court.
We
are
not
dealing
merely
with
an
additional
argument
which
was
not
raised
in
support
of
the
initial
claim
before
the
Tariff
Board
for
a
ruling
granting
exemption,
but
with
a
new
claim
for
exemption
under
a
different
subheading
of
Schedule
III.
In
view
of
this
finding
it
now
remains
to
consider
whether
matrices
are
‘‘materials
consumed
or
expended
directly
in
the
process
of
manufacture
or
production
of
goods’’
so
as
the
bring
them
within
the
heading
‘‘
Processing
Materials’’
in
Schedule
III
as
it
existed
between
October
1,
1963
and
July
11,
1966.
In
Tariff
Board
Appeal
No.
750
Armalite
Co.
Ltd.
et
al.
v.
Deputy
Minister
of
National
Revenue
for
Customs
and
Excise,*
exemption
was
claimed
for
anode
bags,
buffs,
rotary
bristle
brushes
and
rotary
wire
brushes
used
in
the
metal
finishing
industry
all
of
which
are
discarded
after
a
short
period
of
use.
It
was
agreed
by
both
parties
that
the
goods
under
appeal
‘‘were
consumed
or
expended
directly
in
the
process
of
manufacture
or
production
of
goods’’,
so
the
only
issue
before
the
Board
was
whether
they
fell
within
the
meaning
of
the
word
‘‘materials’’.
The
Board
held
that
the
word
‘‘materials’’
as
used
in
Schedule
III
does
not
cover
manufactured
articles
but
refers
to
matter
or
substances
considered
as
such,
for
example,
metal,
cloth,
powders,
pastes,
etc.
In
the
case
of
Delta
Glucose
Refinery
Limited
v.
Deputy
Minister
of
National
Revenue
for
Customs
and
Excise,
Tariff
Board
Appeal
No.
173,*
it
was
held
that
activated
carbon
used
in
the
manufacture
of
glucose
lost
in
time
its
usefulness
as
a
clarifying
agent,
but
that
it
has
not
been
consumed
in
that
it
is
commercially
feasible
to
reactivate
it,
and
referred
with
approval
to
an
earlier
ruling
in
Appeal
No.
100
which
had
stated
that:
""Many
things
are
made
useless
for
further
performance
in
that
particular
operation,
but
if
they
are
not
consumed,
eaten
up,
gone,
not
there,
they
are
not
consumed
within
the
meaning
of
the
Act
.
.
.
(There)
has
to
be
sensible
and
substantial
disappearance
instead
of
mere
uselessness
for
further
operation.’
’
The
case
of
Rio
Tinto
Mining
Company
of
Canada
Limited
and
Consolidated
Denison
Mines
Limited
v.
The
Deputy
Minister
of
National
Revenue
for
Customs
and
Excise]
dealt
with
a
claim
for
exemption
from
sales
tax
of
rock
bolts
used
in
mining
operations
for
the
purpose
of
supporting
disturbed
or
loose
rock,
thereby
preventing
the
loose
rock
from
falling
into
the
mine
aperture
from
the
ceiling
or
walls.
One
of
the
claims
for
exemption
was
that
the
goods
were
consumed
or
expended
directly
in
the
process
of
the
manufacture
or
production
of
goods.
The
Board
held
that
‘‘while
it
was
true
that
the
rock
bolts
were
‘expended’
in
the
sense
that
they
could
be
used
only
once,
such
expenditure
was
not
‘directly
in
the
process
of
manufacture
or
production
of
goods’
but
was
for
a
purpose
ancillary
to
the
mining
operation.
The
rock
bolts
were
not
"consumed’
within
the
meaning
of
that
word
as
used
in
Schedule
III,
which
requires
substantial
disappearance
instead
of
mere
uselessness
for
further
operations.’’
In
the
appeal
of
this
ruling
to
the
Exchequer
Court
the
appeal
was
based
solely
on
the
claim
for
exemption
on
another
ground,
namely,
that
the
rock
bolts
constituted
safety
devices
and
equipment
for
the
prevention
of
accidents
in
the
manufacturing
or
production
of
goods,
the
appeal
on
the
grounds
that
they
constituted
materials
consumed
or
expended
directly
in
the
process
of
manufacture
or
production
of
goods
being
abandoned,
so
unfortunately
this
question
was
not
dealt
with
further,
either
in
the
Exchequer
Court
or
in
the
Supreme
Court,
in
this
case.
The
finding
of
the
Board
in
the
Delta
Glucose
case
(supra)
can
perhaps
be
distinguished
in
that
the
carbon
could
be
reactivated
and
used
again
and
hence
was
properly
held
not
to
have
been
“consumed”.
On
the
other
hand
in
the
Armalite
case
(supra)
it
was
agreed
by
both
parties
that
the
anode
bags,
buffs,
rotary
bristle
brushes
and
rotary
wire
brushes
were
in
fact
‘‘consumed
or
expended
directly
in
the
process
of
manufacture
or
production
of
goods’’.
This
seems
to
bear
a
closer
resemblance
to
the
matrices
in
the
present
case,
although
the
agreement
of
the
Minister
to
this
seems
perhaps
to
be
somewhat
contrary
to
the
ruling
in
case
No.
100
referred
to
in
the
Delta
Glucose
case
(supra)
to
the
effect
that
even
if
goods
are
rendered
useless
for
further
performance
in
the
particular
operation
they
are
not
consumed
unless
they
have
been
eaten
up
or
gone
entirely
so
as
to
constitute
a
substantial
disappearance
instead
of
a
mere
uselessness
for
further
operation.
In
any
event
although
there
is
no
similar
agreement
in
the
present
case
that
the
goods
were
‘‘consumed
or
expended
directly
in
the
process
of
manufacture
or
production
of
goods’’
it
was
admitted
in
the
Agreed
Statement
of
Facts
that
the
matrices
are
not
suitable
for
further
use
and
are
therefore
discarded.
The
Delta
Glucose
case
was
interpreting
the
words
‘
‘
consumable
materials
’
as
they
appeared
in
Schedule
III
to
the
Act
at
that
time,
but
the
words
used
in
Schedule
III
in
the
period
under
consideration
in
the
present
case
are
‘‘consumed
or
expended’’
which
I
consider
to
be
broad
enough
to
include
the
matrices
which
are
discarded
after
one
use.
The
finding
of
the
Tariff
Board
in
the
Armalite
case
(supra),
however,
is
that
the
word
‘‘materials’’
as
used
in
Schedule
III
under
the
heading
‘*
Processing
Materials’’
must
mean
something
such
as
metal,
cloth,
powders,
pastes,
etc.
and
not
things
constructed
from
such
materials
into
articles
of
specific
design,
size
and
shape.
The
decision
points
out
that
the
Act
uses
the
words
“articles
and
materials’’
in
several
places,
and
the
word
“materials”
only
in
others.
Examining
the
Act,
I
find
under
the
heading
‘‘Goods
Enumerated
in
Customs
Tariff
Items’’
in
Schedule
III
the
words
‘‘Article
and
materials
to
be
used
exclusively
in
the
manufacture
of
goods
enumerated
as
customs
tariff
items
.
.
.”.
Under
the
heading
‘‘Municipalities’’
in
Schedule
III
the
words
used
are
‘‘
Articles
and
materials
to
be
used
exclusively
in
the
manufacture
of
the
foregoing’’,
whereas
in
the
clause
we
are
now
considering
the
word
‘‘materials’’
is
used
alone,
and
it
is
also
used
alone
under
the
heading
“Goods
Enumerated
in
Customs
Tariff
Items’’
where
one
paragraph
reads
“Materials,
not
including
plant
equipment
consumed
in
process
of
manufacture
or
production,
that
enter
directly
into
the
cost
of
the
goods
enumerated
in
Customs
Tariff
.
.
.’’.
The
claim
for
exemption
we
are
now
considering
appears
under
the
heading
‘‘Processing
Materials”
and
we
must
give
some
significance
to
this.
However
we
must
not
lose
sight
of
the
fact
that
it
is
significant
that
the
words
‘‘articles
and
materials’’
are
used
in
some
sections
of
Schedule
III
and
the
word
‘‘materials’’
alone
in
other
sections
and
it
1
a
reasonable
assumption
that
this
was
done
deliberately.
If
a
distinction.
must
be
made
therefore
between
the
word
‘‘articles’’
and
the
word
‘‘materials’’
it
would
appear
that
the
matrices
in
question
should
be
considered
as
‘‘articles’’
rather
than
‘‘materials’’.
The
bakelite
board
on
which
the
characters
are
imprinted
from
the
lead
slugs
would
be
a
‘‘
material”
as
would
the
lead
from
which
the
slugs
are
made,
but
once
imprinted
it
becomes
a
matrix
which
would
appear
to
be
an
“article”
rather
than
a
‘‘material’’.
The
fact
that
the
matrices
are
subsequently
‘‘
‘
consui^d
or
expended
in
the
process
of
manufacture”
of
the
rubber
stamps
as
I
have
found
does
not
alter
the
fact
that
before
they
are
so
consumed
or
expended
they
constitute
‘‘articles’’
rather
than
‘‘materials’’.
An
exception
to
a
taxing
statute
must
be
strictly
interpreted,
and
I
find
myself
in
agreement
with
the
distinction
made
by
the
Tariff
Board
in
the
Armalite
case.
Judgment
will
therefore
be
rendered
in
favour
of
plaintiff
for
$5,324.11
together
with
the
penalties
prescribed
by
Section
48(4)
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act
accrued
to
date
of
payment
of
the
tax
payable,
and
costs
of
this
action,
to
be
taxed.