JACKETT,
P.:—This
is
an
appeal
from
a
Declaration
of
the
Tariff
Board
that
certain
"‘transformers’’
are,
within
the
meaning
of
paragraph
(a)
of
Schedule
V
to
the
Excise
Tax
Act,
"machinery
and
apparatus
sold
to
or
imported
by
manufacturers
or
producers
for
use
by
them
directly
in
the
manufacture
or
production
of
goods’’
and
that,
subject
to
certain
conditions
specified
in
the
Declaration,
such
‘‘transformers’’
are
consequentially
subject
to
certain
lesser
rates
of
tax’’
under
that
Act.
The
Declaration
in
question
was
made
by
the
Tariff
Board
by
virtue
of
the
powers
vested
in
it
by
Section
57(1)
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act,
which
reads:
57.
(1)
Where
any
difference
arises
or
where
any
doubt
exists
as
to
whether
any
or
what
rate
of
tax
is
payable
on
any
article
under
this
Act
and
there
is
no
previous
decision
upon
the
question
by
any
competent
tribunal
binding
throughout
Canada,
the
Tariff
Board
constituted
by
the
Tariff
Board
Act
may
declare
what
amount
of
tax
is
payable
thereon
or
that
the
article
is
exempt
from
tax
under
this
Act.
The
appeal
to
this
Court
is
authorized
by
Section
58(1)
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act,
which
reads:
58.
(1)
Any
of
the
parties
to
proceedings
under
section
57,
namely,
(a)
the
person
who
applied
to
the
Tariff
Board
for
a
declaration,
(b)
the
Deputy
Minister
of
National
Revenue
for
Customs
and
Excise,
or
(c)
any
person
who
entered
an
appearance
with
the
Secretary
of
the
Tariff
Board
in
accordance
with
subsection
(2)
of
section
57,
may,
upon
leave
being
obtained
from
the
Exchequer
Court
of
Canada
or
a
judge
thereof,
upon
application
made
within
thirty
days
from
the
making
of
the
declaration
sought
to
be
appealed,
or
within
such
further
time
as
the
Court
or
judge
may
allow,
appeal
to
the
Exchequer
Court
upon
any
question
that
in
the
opinion
of
the
Court
or
judge
is
a
question
of
law.
Leave
was
granted
under
Section
58
by
order
of
this
Court
dated
January
11,
1968,
to
appeal
upon
the
following
question
of
law
:
(1)
Did
the
Tariff
Board
err
as
a
matter
of
law
in
deciding
that
the
transformers
in
issue
are
"machinery
and
apparatus
sold
to
or
imported
by
manufacturers
or
producers
for
use
by
them
directly
in
the
manufacture
or
production
of
goods”
within
the
meaning
of
paragraph
(a)
of
Schedule
V
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act?
This
question
of
law
is
subject
to
the
same
comment
as
that
made
concerning
the
question
of
law
dealt
with
in
Canadian
Lift
Truck
Co.
Ltd.
v.
Deputy
Minister
of
National
Revenue
for
Customs
and
Excise
(1956),
1
D.L.R.
(2d)
497,
by
Kellock,
J.
speaking
for
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
at
page
498:
The
question
of
law
above
propounded
involves
at
least
two
questions,
namely,
the
question
as
to
whether
or
not
the
Tariff
Board
was
properly
instructed
in
law
as
to
the
construction
of
the
statutory
items,
and
the
further
question
as
to
whether
or
not
there
was
evidence
which
enabled
the
Board,
thus
instructed,
to
reach
the
conclusion
it
did.
While
the
construction
of
a
statutory
enactment
is
a
question
of
law,
and
the
question
as
to
whether
a
particular
matter
or
thing
is
of
such
a
nature
or
kind
as
to
fall
within
the
legal
definition
is
a
question
of
fact,
nevertheless
if
it
appears
to
the
appellate
Court
that
the
tribunal
of
fact
had
acted
either
without
any
evidence
or
that
no
person,
properly
instructed
as
to
the
law
and
acting
judicially,
could
have
reached
the
particular
determination,
the
Court
may
proceed
on
the
assumption
that
a
misconception
of
law
has
been
responsible
for
the
determination;
Edwards
v.
Bairstow,
[1955]
3
All
E.R.
48.*
There
has
been
no
attack
in
this
appeal
on
the
findings
of
fact
of
the
Tariff
Board.
The
appellant’s
contention
in
this
Court
is,
in
effect,
that,
on
the
facts
as
found
by
the
Tariff
Board,
the
transformers
in
question
do
not
fall
within
the
meaning
of
the
words
used
in
paragraph
(a)
of
Schedule
V
to
the
Excise
Tax
Act
when
the
meaning
of
those
words,
as
used
in
relation
to
the
particular
subject
matter,
has
been
correctly
ascertained.
This
would
therefore
appear
to
be
the
sort
of
question
of
law
considered
by
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
Rogers-Majestic
Corporation
Limited
v.
City
of
Toronto,
[1943]
S.C.R.
440,
Vaal
v.
The
Queen,
[1960]
S.C.R.
913,
and
Sikyea
v.
The
Queen,
[1964]
S.C.R.
642.
The
tax
that
gave
rise
to
the
application
to
the
Tariff
Board
is
the
9
per
cent
consumption
or
sales
tax
imposed
by
Section
30(1)
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act
on
the
"‘sale
price”
of
all
"‘goods’’
that
have
been
inter
alia
‘‘
produced
or
manufactured
in
Canada”
or
"imported
into
Canada’’.
Certain
exceptions
to
the
generality
of
the
tax
imposed
by
Section
30(1)
are
created
by
Section
382,
which
reads
in
part:
32.
(1)
The
tax
imposed
by
section
30
does
not
apply
to
the
sale
or
importation
of
the
articles
mentioned
in
Schedule
III.
(3)
There
shall
be
imposed,
levied
and
collected
only
three-
ninths
of
the
tax
imposed
by
section
30
on
the
sale
or
importation
of
the
articles
enumerated
in
Schedule
V,
and
with
respect
to
any
such
articles
delivered
to
the
purchaser
or
imported
or
taken
out
of
warehouse
for
consumption
after
March
31,
1968,
the
tax
imposed
by
section
30
shall
not
apply.
The
particular
exception
with
which
the
Tariff
Board
Declaration
appealed
from
is
concerned
is
subsection
(3)
of
Section
32,
which
was
enacted
by
chapter
79
of
the
Statutes
of
1966-67,
when
read
with
that
part
of
Schedule
V
to
the
Excise
Tax
Act,
which
reads
:
The
following
articles:
(a)
machinery
and
apparatus
sold
to
or
imported
by
manufacturers
or
producers
for
use
by
them
directly
in
the
manufacture
or
production
of
goods;
Reference
should
also
be
made
to
paragraphs
8
and
4
of
Part
VI
of
Schedule
III,
which
reads
as
follows:
3.
Electricity.
4.
Fuel
oil
for
use
in
the
generation
of
electricity
except
where
the
electricity
so
generated
is
used
primarily
in
the
operation
of
a
vehicle.
Before
coming
to
the
facts,
it
should
be
noted
that,
while
Section
30
imposes
the
tax
in
question
on
the
sale
price
of
"goods”
in
which
context
the
word
goods”
would
appear
to
be
used
in
the
common
sense
of
merchandise
or
wares
(which
probably
includes
all
moveable
tangible
property),
it
is
common
ground
that
the
word
"
goods”,
both
in
Section
30
and,
what
is
more
important
from
the
respondent’s
point
of
view
in
this
case,
in
paragraph
(a)
of
Schedule
V,
must
be
construed
as
including
"‘electricity''
which,
according
to
the
Shorter
Oxford
English
Dictionary
(Third
Edition),
according
to
the
view
now
current,
is
"‘a
peculiar
condition
of
the
molecules
of
a
body
or
of
the
ether
surrounding
them’’,*
even
though
this
‘‘peculiar
condition”
could
hardly
be
regarded
as
falling
within
any
sense
in
which
the
word
goods”
is
ordinarily
used
in
the
English
lan-
œuage.
The
reason
why
the
parties
are
agreed
on
the
view
that
the
word
"
goods
‘
‘
in
these
provisions
must
be
read
as
including
"electricity’’
is
that,
by
virtue
of
Section
32(1),
the
tax
imposed
by
Section
30
does
not
apply
to
the
sale
or
importation
of
the
e
articles”
mentioned
in
Schedule
III,
and
one
of
the
"‘articles’’
mentioned
in
that
schedule
is
‘‘electricity’’
(see
paragraph
3
of
Part
VI
of
Schedule
III).
The
parties
are
in
agreement
that
the
reasoning
in
Dominion
Press,
Limited
v.
Minister
of
Customs
and
Excise,
[1928]
A.C.
340,
is
applicable
to
constrain
one
to
the
conclusion
that
the
word
‘‘goods’’
in
the
charging
section
(Section
30)
must
be
read
as
including
all
the
things
enumerated
as
"‘articles’’
in
the
schedule
referred
to
in
the
exempting
provision
(Section
32(1))
and
that,
therefore,
the
same
word
“goods”,
when
used
in
another
provision
that
is
part
of
the
same
taxation
scheme—i.e.
Schedule
V—must
also
be
read
as
including
«
electricity”.
As
the
parties
to
this
appeal
are
agreed
upon
this
view,
I
adopt
it
for
the
purposes
of
this
appeal,
without
expressing
any
opinion
as
to
its
soundness.
It
should
be
noted,
however,
that
it
is
the
fact
that
electricity
has
none
of
the
ordinary
characteristics
of
the
tangible
moveable
property
that
is
normally
referred
to
by
the
words
"‘article’’
and
""
goods”
that
vives
rise
to
the
special
difficulties
encountered
in
applying
paragraph
(a)
of
Schedule
V
to
the
problem
raised
by
this
appeal.
Having
accepted
the
view,
for
the
purpose
of
this
case,
that
^electricity”
is
‘‘goods’’
within
the
meaning
of
that
word
in
Section
30
and
in
Schedule
V,
it
becomes
necessary
to
reach
a
conclusion
as
to
the
sense
in
which
the
word
"‘electricity’’
is
employed
in
this
connection.
It
is
clear
from
reading
the
Board’s
Declaration
that
the
word
"‘electricity’’
is
used
in
the
evidence
given
in
this
case
in
two
different
senses,
viz.:
(a)
electric
energy,
and
(b)
electric
current.
What
Section
30(1)
imposes
a
tax
on
is
the
"‘sale
price’?
of
""goods”.
As
used
in
that
subsection,
and
therefore
in
Schedule
V,
‘‘goods’’
are
something
that
is
sold.
What
an
electric
power
company
produces
and
sells
is
electric
power
in
the
sense
of
electric
energy.*
It
is,
therefore,
in
my
view,
"‘electricity’’
in
the
sense
of
electric
energy
that
is
‘‘goods’’
within
Schedule
V.
What,
therefore,
is
necessary,
if
the
Declaration
appealed
from
is
correct,
is
that
the
transformers
in
question
are
machinery
or
apparatus
sold
to
or
imported
by
manufacturers
or
producers
for
use
by
them
directly
in
the
manufacture
or
production
of
electric
energy.
I
have
expressed
this
view
as
to
the
meaning
of
the
word
^goods’’
in
the
relevant
portion
of
Schedule
V
at
this
point
because,
as
will
subsequently
appear,
as
I
appreciate
the
facts
found
by
the
Board,
the
electric
energy
generated
in
a
generating
plant
is
unchanged
when
it
passes
via
a
transformer
from
one
circuit
to
another
while
the
electric
current
in
the
primary
circuit
of
a
transformer
is
transformed
by
the
transformer
into
a
completely
different
and
altered
electric
current
in
the
secondary
circuit.
It
is
this
change
in
the
electric
current
upon
which
the
Board,
as
I
understand
its
Declaration,
bases
its
conclusion
that
a
transformer
at
the
end
of
a
transmission
line
is
used
in
the
production
of
the
electric
energy
that
is
sold.
It
is
important
to
the
appreciation
of
the
balance
of
these
reasons
to
keep
it
in
mind
that
they
are
based
upon
the
view
that
I
have
expressed
that
the
‘‘electricity’’
that
falls
within
the
word
‘‘goods’’
is
electric
energy
and
upon
my
appraisal
of
the
Board’s
findings
of
fact
that
electric
energy
is
not
changed
by
a
transformer.
IT
turn
now
to
the
facts
as
found
by
the
Tariff
Board.
As
I
appreciate
the
Tariff
Board’s
Declaration,
the
findings
of
fact
are
contained
in
the
following
portion
thereof:
The
applicant’s
principal
business
is
the
manufacture
or
production
and
the
sale
of
electricity
to
municipalities,
industries
and
individuals.
The
electricity
sold
to
the
customers
is
measured,
by
an
appropriate
meter,
in
kilowatt
hours;
for
lighting
and
ordinary
appliances,
the
electricity
is
generally
sold
to
customers
at
120-240
volts,
though
many
customers,
particularly
municipalities
and
industries,
may
purchase
electricity
at
considerably
higher
voltages.
The
evidence
reveals
that,
at
its
generating
stations,
the
applicant
produces
electricity
from
a
source
of
energy
that
is
not
electricity,
for
example
water
power
or
thermal
energy;
the
electrical
power
generated
at
these
stations
is
usually
generated
at
a
voltage
considerably
higher
than
that
used
by
the
applicant’s
household
customers
and
lower
than
that
used
by
some
of
its
other
customers
;
for
purposes
of
transmission
over
distances,
the
voltage
of
the
electric
power
delivered
by
the
generator
is
almost
invariably
transformed
to
a
much
higher
voltage;
at
this
very
high
voltage
electric
power
is
generally
not
of
use
to
the
great
majority
of
the
applicant’s
customers;
consequently,
it
is
usually
transformed
to
a
lower
voltage,
frequently
at
one
or
more
substations,
and,
in
any
event,
at
some
point
in
the
system
in
the
proximity
of
the
consuming
customer,
to
the
voltage
normally
purchased
by
him.
Though
this
is
the
pattern
for
the
greatest
number
of
consumers,
there
are
certain
customers
who
require
high
voltages;
for
their
purposes
the
electricity
may
be
transformed
to
higher
instead
of
lower
voltages
or,
in
very
exceptional
cases,
there
could
be
direct
transmission
from
a
generating
station
to
such
customers
without
any
transformation.
The
transformation
of
voltage,
upwards
or
downwards,
is
performed
by
a
device
known
as
a
transformer.
Exhibit
R-4,
filed
by
the
respondent,
is
a
publication
of
the
American
Institute
of
Electrical
Engineers,
approved
by
the
American
Standards
Association,
entitled
"Definitions
of
Electrical
Terms,
Group
15,
Transformers,
Regulators,
Reactors
and
Rectifiers”;
paragraph
15.00.100,
on
page
6
of
Exhibit
R-4,
defines
a
transformer
as
"an
electric
device,
without
continuously
moving
parts,
which
by
electromagnetic
induction
transfers
electric
energy
from
one
or
more
circuits
to
one
or
more
other
circuits
at
the
same
frequency,
usually
with
changed
values
of
voltage
and
current”.
The
Quillet
Encyclopédie
Pratique
de
Mécanique
et
d’Electricité,
published
in
1956,
in
Volume
1,
at
page
1291,
defines
a
transformer
as
an
‘appareil
statique
a
induction
destiné
à
transformer
un
système
de
courants
alternatifs
en
un
autre
système
de
courants
alternatifs
d’intensité
et
de
tension
généralement
différentes.”
According
to
the
Larousse
du
XX
Siècle
dictionary
“intensité”
is
measured
in
amperes
(Vol.
4,
p.
86,
vo.
intensité)
and
“tension”
is
measured
in
volts
(Vol.
6,
p.
640,
vo.
tension).
Essentially,
the
transformer
consists
of
a
core
of
ferric
metal
around
which
are
wound
two
coils
of
wire,
electrically
insulated
from
the
core
and
from
each
other,
known
as
the
primary
coil
and
the
secondary
coil.
The
primary
coil
or
winding
is
connected
to
a
source
of
alternating
current;
in
this
instance
the
source
is
either
the
applicant’s
generator
or
its
transmission
line.
The
secondary
coil
or
winding
is
connected
to
the
secondary
circuit;
in
this
instance,
for
simplicity
of
example,
the
secondary
circuit
is
taken
to
be
the
circuit
that
conducts
the
alternating
current
delivered
to
and
used
by
the
applicant’s
customer.
Even
when
the
customer
is
not
using
power,
a
negligible
alternating
current
flows
through
the
primary
circuit
sufficient
to
develop
a
magnetic
flux
within
the
ferric
core;
this
magnetic
flux,
in
turn,
induces
a
voltage
at
the
terminals
of
the
secondary
coil.
When
the
secondary
circuit
is
closed
and
power
is
being
used
to
perform
work
for
the
applicant’s
customers,
an
induced
alternating
current
flows
in
the
secondary
circuit
and
secondary
coil.
The
current
in
the
primary
coil
consists
of
a
flow
of
electrons
in
the
primary
circuit
of
which
the
primary
coil
is
part;
the
current
in
the
secondary
coil
consists
of
a
flow
of
electrons
in
the
secondary
circuit
of
which
the
secondary
coil
is
part;
because
the
wires
conducting
each
current
are
insulated,
no
flow
of
electrons,
and
therefore
no
current,
is
conducted
between
the
primary
circuit
and
the
secondary
circuit
nor
between
either
circuit
and
the
core
of
the
transformer.
Except
for
negligible
inefficiencies
in
the
transformer,
certain
relationships
exist
between
the
magnitudes
of
the
electrical
characteristics
of
the
two
circuits.
The
frequency
or
cycle
of
alternation
is
the
same
in
both
circuits;
the
number
of
watts,
which
measures
the
amount
of
electrical
energy
actually
being
used
in
the
secondary
circuit,
is
equal
to
the
number
of
watts
being
expended
in
the
primary
circuit.
However
two
important
differences
do
exist,
one
in
the
number
of
volts
and
one
in
the
number
of
amperes;
the
volt
is
the
unit
of
pressure
or
of
electromotive
force
and
the
ampere
is
the
unit
of
current
flow;
the
number
of
watts,
or
units
of
energy
consumed,
is
the
product
of
the
number
of
volts
and
the
number
of
amperes;
thus,
because
the
number
of
watts
remains
unchanged,
any
change
in
the
number
of
volts
or
of
amperes
involves
a
corresponding
change
in
the
other.
In
the
transformer,
the
ratio
of
the
number
of
volts
induced
in
the
secondary
coil
to
the
number
of
volts
in
the
primary
coil
is
equal
to
the
ratio
of
the
number
of
turns
of
wire
in
the
secondary
coil
to
the
number
of
turns
of
wire
on
the
primary
coil;
similarly,
the
ratio
of
the
number
of
amperes
in
the
secondary
circuit
to
the
number
of
amperes
in
the
primary
circuit
is
the
reciprocal
of
this
same
ratio
of
the
number
of
turns
of
wire
on
the
two
coils.
Consequently,
when
power
is
being
used,
though
the
number
of
watts
of
power
or
energy
expended
in
the
secondary
circuit
is
equal
to
the
number
of
watts
expended
in
the
primary
circuit,
nevertheless
the
number
of
volts
and
the
number
of
amperes
in
the
two
circuits
are
different.
In
other
words,
the
transformer
changes
the
voltage
and
the
amperage.
It
is
clear
from
the
evidence
that
without
transformations
of
voltage
at
one
or
more
appropriate
places,
the
electric
energy
produced
by
the
applicant
at
its
generating
stations
would
seldom
be
a
product
usable
by
its
customers
or
saleable
to
them.
In
the
view
of
the
witness
Haber!
and
the
witness
Wildi,
both
experts
in
the
field,
the
operation
of
transformation
results
in
the
production
or
generation
of
electricity
in
the
secondary
coil
of
the
transformer;
in
Haberl’s
opinion
electricity
is
produced
by
a
generator
from
a
source
of
energy
that
is
not
electrical
and
is
equally
produced
by
a
transformer
through
a
source
of
energy
that
is
electrical,
namely,
the
primary
current
in
the
first
coil
of
the
transformer
and,
in
both
cases,
the
electricity
is
produced
by
the
same
method:
electromagnetic
induction.
This
opinion
was
confirmed
by
the
witness
Wildi.
The
witnesses
did
not
view
the
action
of
the
transformer
as
the
mere
transmission
of
existing
electricity
in
a
modified
form
but
rather
as
the
production
of
new
electricity
in
a
different
form.
The
respondent
filed
as
Exhibit
R-3,
a
publication
of
the
American
Institute
of
Electrical
Engineers,
approved
by
the
American
Standards
Association,
entitled
"Definitions
of
Electrical
Terms,
Group
35,
Generation,
Transmission
and
Distribution"
;
both
the
oral
evidence
and
paragraph
35.10.065,
on
page
5
of
Exhibit
R-3,
establish
that
a
"generating
station”
produces
electricity
from
some
other
form
of
energy.
This
production
of
electricity
at
a
generating
station,
as
in
the
transformer,
is
done
by
electromagnetic
induction
initiated
by
a
form
of
energy
which
is
not
electrical
as
it
is
in
the
transformer.
Both
the
witnesses
Haberl
and
Wildi
were
called
by
the
appellant.
The
witness
Kidd
was
called
by
the
respondent.
All
three
were
men
learned
in
the
technical
aspects
of
this
appeal.
Though
their
evidence
was
largely
consistent,
there
were
nevertheless
certain
differences
in
extent,
stress
or
interpretation
of
fact
or
theory.
Kidd
rather
considered
the
transformers
to
be
links
in
the
T
and
D
(transmission
and
distribution)
system.
He
expressed
the
following
opinions:
At
page
240
of
the
transcript:
A.
Well,
in
the
commercial
sense,
in
the
sense
in
which
these
words
are
usually
recognized
in
the
electrical
utility
business,
I
cannot
agree
that
electrical
energy
is
produced
in
a
transformer.
The
common
concept
is
that
electrical
energy
is
produced
from
other
sources
of
energy
in
a
generating
station
and
that
a
transformer
does
no
more
than
transfer
electrical
energy,
unchanged
in
value,
from
one
circuit
to
another,
its
principal
objective
being
concerned
with
the
changing
of
voltage
or
pressure,
but
not
in
any
way
modifying
the
amount
of
electrical
energy
which
goes
through
it,
other
than
a
certain
amount
of
inevitable
loss
of
energy
in
the
device,
which
is
very
small.
At
page
257
:
A.
Yes.
Well,
as
I
have
indicated
previously,
it
is
my
view
and
my
belief
that
it
is
the
common
concept
in
the
electrical
utility
business
that
electrical
energy
is
produced
in
a
generating
plant
and
that
electrical
energy,
when
it
leaves
the
generating
plant,
is
in
that
form
and
is
not
further
added
to
or
supplemented
from
that
point
forward.
At
page
283
:
Q.
Now,
a
little
further
on,
my
friend
referred
you
to
some
of
the
evidence
which
we
heard
yesterday,
and
specifically
he
referred
to
an
answer
or
a
statement,
which
one
of
the
witnesses
made
yesterday,
to
the
effect
that
electricity
is
produced
in
a
transformer,
and
he
asked
you
to
comment
on
that
statement.
You
said,
according
to
my
notes,
"I
cannot
agree
that
electrical
energy
is
produced
in
a
transformer.”
Now,
I
put
it
to
you
that
none
of
the
witnesses
who
were
here
yesterday,
who
gave
testimony,
said
that
electrical
energy
is
produced
in
a
transformer.
I
put
it
to
you
that
what
they
said
was
that
electricity,
in
the
sense
of
an
electric
current,
was
produced,
or
if
you
like
induced,
in
the
secondary
winding
of
a
transformer.
A.
U-huh.
Q.
Now,
taking
that
statement
in
that
form,
would
you
agree?
A.
Yes,
I
would.
From
the
evidence
it
appears
that
the
current
in
the
primary
coil
of
a
transformer
is
electrically
insulated
from
the
core
of
the
transformer
and
from
the
secondary
winding
of
the
transformer.
By
electromagnetic
induction,
initiated
by
the
electrical
energy
of
the
primary
alternating
current,
a
new
and
separate
alternating
current
is
produced
in
the
secondary
winding
of
a
transformer.
The
current
in
the
secondary
circuit
usually
differs,
not
in
the
number
of
watts
or
of
cycles,
but
in
the
number
of
volts
and
of
amperes.
However
the
operation
of
a
transformer
is
no
mere
transmission
in
the
sense
of
causing
the
primary
current
to
pass,
go
or
be
conveyed
or
conducted
from
the
primary
circuit
of
the
secondary
circuit.
These
findings
may,
I
think,
for
present
purposes
be
summarized
as
follows:
(1)
The
respondent
produces
electricity,
in
the
sense
of
electric
energy,
from
a
source
of
energy
that
is
not
electricity
(for
example,
water
power
or
thermal
energy)
at
its
generating
stations.
(2)
The
electric
energy
generated
at
generating
stations
is
usually
generated
"at
a
voltage”
considerably
higher
than
that
used
by
household
customers
and
lower
than
that
used
by
some
other
customers.
(3)
For
purposes
of
transmission
over
distances,
the
"‘volt-
age’’
of
the
electric
energy
delivered
by
the
generator
is
almost
invariably
transformed
to
a
much
higher
voltage
at
which
voltage
it
is
generally
not
of
use
to
the
great
majority
of
customers.
(4)
The
electric
energy,
after
being
transmitted,
is
usually
transformed
at
some
point
or
points
in
the
system
in
the
proximity
of
the
consuming
customer,
to
a
""voltage”
required
by
the
customer,
which
may
be
higher
or
lower
than
that
at
which
it
was
transmitted.
(5)
The
transformation
of
voltage
is
performed
by
a
device
known
as
a
transformer,
which
has
been
described
as
a
device,
without
continuously
moving
parts,
which
by
electromagnetic
induction
transfers
electric
"
"
energy
‘
‘
from
one
circuit
to
another,
usually
with
changed
values
of
voltage
and
current,
and
has
also
been
described
as
an
apparatus
intended
to
transform
one
system
of
alternating
currents
into
another
system
of
alternating
currents
generally
of
different
"‘intensité’’
and
"‘tension’’.
(6)
The
transformer
consists
of
a
core
of
ferric
metal
around
which
are
wound
two
coils
of
wire,
electrically
insulated
from
the
core
and
from
each
other,
known
as
the
primary
coil
and
the
secondary
coil.
The
primary
coil
is
connected
to
a
source
of
alternating
current
(a
generator
or
a
transmission
line).
The
secondary
coil
is
connected
to
the
secondary
circuit
(e.g.
the
circuit
that
conducts
the
alternating
current
to
a
customer).
(7)
The
current
in
the
primary
coil
consists
of
a
flow
of
electrons
in
the
primary
circuit
of
which
the
primary
coil
is
part,
and
the
current
in
the
secondary
coil
consists
of
a
flow
of
electrons
in
the
secondary
circuit
of
which
the
secondary
coil
is
part.
Because
the
wires
conducting
each
current
are
insulated,
no
flow
of
electrons,
and
therefore
no
current,
is
conducted
between
the
primary
circuit
and
the
secondary
circuit,
nor
between
either
circuit
and
the
core.
(8)
The
amount
of
electric
energy
(which
is
measured
in
watts”)
actually
being
used
in
the
secondary
circuit
is
approxi-
mately
equal
to
that
expended
in
the
primary
circuit,
but
the
number
of
volts
(which
is
the
unit
of
pressure
or
of
electromotive
force)
and
number
of
amperes
(which
is
the
unit
of
current
flow)
are
different—these
varying
with
the
number
of
turns
of
wire
in
the
respective
coils.
(9)
Without
the
transformation
of
voltage,
the
electric
energy
produced
by
the
respondent
at
its
generating
stations
would
seldom
be
usable
by
its
customers
or
saleable
to
them.
In
addition,
it
seems
to
me
to
be
implicit
in
the
Board’s
findings,
although
not
clearly
expressed
as
findings
of
fact,
that
the
Board
had
concluded
(a)
that
it
was
the
electric
energy
generated
in
the
respondent’s
generators
that
ultimately
reached
its
customers,
and
(b)
that
a
transformer
produces
a
new
and
different
electric
current
and,
in
that
sense,
new
and
different
electricity,
but
does
not
produce
new
or
different
electric
energy
;
and
I
think
that
it
is
a
necessary
inference
from
the
Board’s
findings
that
the
same
electric
energy
is
conveyed
by
one
or
more
electric
currents
of
different
voltages
from
one
place
to
another.
This
seems
to
me
to
be
clear
from
the
fact
that
the
last
piece
of
evidence
quoted
by
the
Board
(supra)
before
completing
its
findings
of
fact
was
a
concession
wrung
from
the
appellant’s
expert
witness
on
cross-examination
by
counsel
for
the
respondent,
who
obtained
the
witness’s
agreement
to
the
following
question
:
Now,
I
put
it
to
you
that
none
of
the
witnesses
who
were
here
yesterday,
who
gave
testimony,
said
that
electrical
energy
is
produced
in
a
transformer.
I
put
it
to
you
that
what
they
said
was
that
electricity,
in
the
sense
of
an
electric
current,
was
produced,
or
if
they
like
induced,
in
the
secondary
winding
of
a
transformer.
The
appellant’s
witness,
so
cross-examined,
said
that
he
would
agree
with
"‘that
statement
in
that
form’’,
and
the
Board
quoted
that
part
of
his
evidence
immediately
before
completing
their
findings
of
fact
by
a
passage
that
indicates,
as
it
seems
to
me,
that
they
accept
the
statement
so
proposed
by
counsel
for
the
respondent
and
accepted
by
the
expert
witness
for
the
appellant.
It
follows,
as
it
seems
to
me,
that,
if
electric
energy
is
not
produced
in
the
transformer,
the
electric
energy
that
reaches
the
consumer
must
have
been
produced
in
the
generating
plant
and
must
have
been
conveyed
by
means
of
various
electric
currents
from
that
plant
to
its
place
of
user.
It
also
follows,
as
it
seems
to
me,
that,
when
the
findings
speak
of
power
or
energy
of
a
particular
“voltage”,
the
reference
is
to
power
or
energy
that
is
being
transmitted
by
an
electric
current
of
that
“voltage”.
The
respondent’s
(applicant’s)
position
before
the
Tariff
Board
is
summarized
in
the
Board’s
Declaration
as
follows:
The
applicant's
position
is
that
the
electricity,
either
in
the
form
produced
at
its
generating
stations
or
in
the
form
existing
in
its
long
distance
transmission
lines,
is
not
generally
suitable
for
sale
or
consumption
and
that
it
is
not
in
fact
generally
sold
or
consumed;
rather,
the
applicant
urged,
the
electricity
which
is
sold
by
it
and
used
by
the
customer
is
the
electricity
which
is
induced
in
the
secondary
winding
of
its
transformers
in
proximity
to
its
customer
and
delivered
from
there
to
the
customer;
thus,
it
further
urged,
the
usable
electricity
sold
and
delivered
is
produced
by
such
transformers
and
the
transformers
are,
therefore,
‘‘used
.
.
.
directly
in
the
manufacture
or
production
of
goods”.
The
position
of
the
appellant
(respondent)
before
the
Board
at
that
time
is
summarized
in
the
Board’s
Declaration
as
follows:
The
respondent’s
position
is
that
the
electricity
sold
and
delivered
by
the
applicant
is
manufactured
or
produced,
within
the
meaning
of
“manufacture
and
production
of
goods”
as
used
in
paragraph
(a)
of
Schedule
V
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act,
only
at
the
applicant’s
generating
station
and
not
by
the
transformers
in
proximity
to
the
applicant’s
customer
or
at
intermediate
substations;
he
urged
that
such
transformers
are
used
in
the
transmission
or
distribution
of
electricity
and
to
increase
or
decrease
the
voltage
of
the
electricity
but
not
to
manufacture
or
produce
it;
thus,
he
further
urged
that
it
was
not
the
intention
of
Parliament
to
lessen
the
taxation
on
machinery
and
apparatus
used
in
the
distribution
of
goods
or
in
such
a
modification
or
transformation
of
the
electricity
manufactured
or
produced
at
the
generating
station.
In
his
brief,
the
respondent
argued
that
all
transformers,
except
those
installed
at
the
generating
station
in
close
proximity
to
and
for
use
in
conjunction
with
the
generating
equipment,
serve
rather
in
the
transmission
and
distribution
of
power
than
in
its
manufacture
or
production.
The
problem
that
I
find
most
difficult
in
deciding
this
appeal
is
that
of
determining
whether
the
process,
to
which
I
shall
refer
at
a
later
point
in
these
reasons,
whereby
the
Board
reached
its
conclusion,
involves
certain
findings
of
fact
in
addition
to
those
that
I
have
already
summarized.
If
it
does
involve
such
additional
findings
of
fact,
such
findings
are
binding
on
this
Court.
If,
on
the
other
hand,
all
that
the
Board
is
doing
by
such
process
of
reasoning,
is
applying
its
understanding
of
the
statute
(considered
in
the
light
of
its
application
by
the
courts
to
other
sets
of
facts)
to
the
basic
facts
that
I
have
already
summarized,
it
is
this
Court’s
duty
to
decide
whether
the
Board’s
reasoning
in
so
doing
was
valid,
and,
if
it
concludes
that
it
was
not,
to
substitute
its
own
view
of
the
proper
application
of
the
statute
to
the
basic
facts
as
found
by
the
Board.
That
being
so,
it
seems
appropriate
for
me
to
put
in
my
own
words
the
problem
facing
the
Board,
as
I
understand
it,
on
the
facts
as
found
by
the
Board.
On
the
one
hand
the
respondent
produces
electricity,
electric
energy
or
electric
power
(which
terms
I
am
using
as
more
or
less
interchangeable
and
without
definition)
by
generating
it
at
its
generating
plants
by
the
use
of
other
kinds
of
energy
or
power.
This
electric
energy
is
transmitted
from
the
generating
plant
through
a
transmission
line
by
means
of
an
electric
current
at
a
voltage
value
at
which
it
could
not
be
delivered
to
the
customer.
The
electric
energy
is
transferred
from
the
transmission
line
for
delivery
to
the
customer
by
a
‘‘transformer’’
that
does
not
transfer
the
electric
current
from
the
transmission
line
to
the
distributor
line,
but
induces
a
new
electric
current
at
a
different
voltage
value
that
is
acceptable
to
the
customer.
If
what
the
respondent
is
doing
is
producing
electric
energy
and
selling
that
electric
energy
to
its
customers,
and
the
various
transformations
in
current
that
take
place
are
merely
changes
that
are
incidental
to
transmission
or
to
varying
uses
and
that
do
not
change
the
nature
of
the
electric
energy
that
is
being
sold,
then
the
transformer
has
no
part
in
the
manufacture
or
production
of
what
is
sold.
If,
on
the
other
hand,
what
the
respondent
is
selling
is
electric
current
of
defined
specifications,
and
if
the
transformation
from
a
current
at
one
voltage
to
a
current
at
another
voltage
is
the
creation
of
something
that
is,
from
a
commercial
point
of
view,
something
new,
then
the
transformer
has
played
a
part
in
the
manufacture
or
production
of
that
which
the
respondent
sold.
The
Board
dealt
with
this
problem
in
the
following
parts
of
its
Declarati
:
The
definitions
of
transformer
quoted
earlier—that
from
Exhibit
R-4
and
that
from
Quillet—appear
to
differ
in
one
respect.
In
the
definition
from
Exhibit
R-4,
the
transformer
transfers
electric
energy
from
one
circuit
to
another
at
the
same
frequency
but
with
changed
values
of
voltage
and
current;
the
stress
appears
to
be
on
the
mere
transfer
of
electric
energy
from
one
circuit
to
another,
where
the
energy—measured
in
watts—is
unchanged
but
the
current—measured
in
amperes—and
the
voltage
are
changed.
In
the
Quillet
definition
the
transformer
transforms
an
alternating
current
system
to
another
alternating
current
system
of
generally
different
current
and
voltage;
the
stress
is
not
on
mere
transfer
but
rather
on
the
change
in
form,
the
metamorphosis
or
in
the
words
used
by
the
Shorter
Oxford
Dictionary
to
define
“transformation”:
“Change
of
a
current
into
one
of
different
potential,
or
different
type,
or
both,
as
by
a
transformer.”
The
Board,
faced
with
the
stress
in
the
definition
of
transformers
in
Exhibit
R-4
on
the
one
hand
and
the
stress
given
by
both
Quillet
and
the
Shorter
Oxford
Dictionary
on
the
other,
goes
beyond
the
concept
of
mere
transfer
and
accepts
that
of
production.
Because
this
production
is
done
in
the
transformers
and
by
the
transformers,
they
are
apparatus
sold
to
or
imported
by
the
applicant
for
use
by
it
directly
in
the
manufacture
or
production
or
goods.
It
is
clear
from
the
evidence
that
this
change
of
the
electrical
energy
from
an
unusable
form
to
a
usable
form
is
effected
in
and
by
the
applicant’s
transformers.
Prior
to
being
changed
in
the
transformers,
the
“goods”—the
electricity—are
not
generally
suitable
for
sale,
use
or
consumption;
it
therefore
appears
to
be
an
ineluctable
conclusion
that
this
process
of
transformation
is
a
process
of
manufacture
or
production
and
that
the
apparatus
used
in
the
process—the
transformers—is
consequently
used
directly
in
the
manufacture
or
production
of
the
electricity,
a
product
which
is
included
within
the
meaning
of
“goods”
in
the
Act.
The
electrical
energy
produced
by
the
applicant
is
not
a
commodity
which
is
ordinarily
used
by
or
sold
to
its
customer
until
it
has
been
transformed;
it
exists,
prior
to
such
transformation,
in
a
form
which
is
not
generally
marketable
because
it
is
unsuited
for
the
use
of
most
customers.
The
action
of
transformers
such
as
the
applicant’s,
whether
or
not
it
produces
an
electricity
new
and
separate
from
that
in
the
primary
circuit,
has
been
held
to
be
a
productive
or
manufactory
action
in
both
the
case
of
City
of
Louisville
v.
Howard
and
the
case
of
Curry
v.
Alabama
Power
cited
above.
Because
it
is
the
transformation
in
issue
that
turns
the
electrical
energy
into
a
form
that
can
be
used
by
the
customer,
this
transformation
must
be
considered
to
be
part
of
the
manufacture
and
production
of
electricity.
Because
the
transformation
of
voltage
is
done
exclusively
in
the
transformers
and
by
the
transformers,
they
are
apparatus
sold
to
or
imported
by
the
applicant
for
use
by
it
directly
in
the
manufacture
or
production
of
goods.
In
the
Board’s
view,
as
I
understand
it,
the
transfer
of
electric
energy
from
an
electric
current
at
one
voltage
to
an
electric
current
at
another
voltage
is
the
change
of
the
electrical
energy
from
an
‘‘unusable
form’?
to
a
‘‘usable
form’’.
If
that
is
a
finding
of
fact
based
on
the
evidence
before
the
Board,
in
my
view,
I
am
bound
by
that
finding.
Even
if
it
is
a
finding
of
fact,
however,
I
must,
nevertheless,
consider
whether
it
is
a
finding
that
leads
one
to
a
conclusion
that
the
‘‘change’’
in
“form”
is
“manufacture
or
production’’
of
electric
energy
within
the
meaning
of
the
words
‘‘manufacture
or
production’’
as
interpreted
by
previous
decisions.
If
I
were
to
decide
the
case
on
my
understanding
of
the
Board’s
basic
findings
of
fact
and
apart
from
the
conclusion
of
the
Board
to
which
I
have
just
referred,
I
should
have
concluded
that
what
the
respondent
produced
and
sold
was
electric
energy,
and
that
the
electric
current
was
the
means
of
transmitting
such
energy
but
not
the
thing
sold.
As
I
understand
the
Board’s
basic
findings
of
fact
on
the
evidence,
electric
energy
may
be
transferred
quite
freely
from
one
electric
current
to
another
with
a
different
voltage
value
(by
the
use
of
a
transformer)
and
the
electric
energy
that
is
finally
sold,
as
long
as
it
remains
in
course
of
transmission
to
the
point
where
it
is
ultimately
converted
into
some
other
manifestation
such
as
light,
heat
or
work,
is,
both
before
and
after
it
is
sold,
capable
of
being
transported
by
currents
of
either
higher
or
lower
voltage
values
and,
from
that
point
of
view,
can
never
be
said
to
have
been
put
into
an
ultimate
state
of
‘‘manufacture’’
or
a
final
“form”.
It
is
a
matter
of
convenience,
having
regard
to
what
is
being
done
with
electric
energy
(transmission
or
ultimate
use)
as
to
whether
it
is
conveyed
by
means
of
an
electric
current
at
one
voltage
value
or
another.
I
do
not
understand
the
Board
to
have
held
that
a
transformer
effects
any
change
in
the
electric
energy,
which,
on
their
findings,
as
it
seems
to
me,
is
the
thing
sold
(apart
from
a
certain
wastage
by
reason
of
the
inefficiencies
of
transmission
).
To
put
it
another
way,
repeating
in
substance
what
I
said
at
an
earlier
stage
of
these
reasons,
as
I
understand
the
Board’s
basic
finding
of
facts,
what
is
‘‘sold’’
is
the
electric
power
or
electric
energy,
and
not
electric
current,
which
is
the
means
by
which
the
electric
energy
or
power
is
transmitted.
If
that
is
right,
the
word
‘‘electricity’’
in
Schedule
III
to
the
Excise
Tax
Act
means
the
electric
energy
or
power
(because
clearly
Sections
30
and
32
are
dealing
with
that
which
is
‘‘sold’’)
and
does
not
mean
the
electric
current
which
is
merely
the
means
of
transmission.
When,
therefore,
a
transformer
changes
the
character
of
electricity
in
the
sense
of
electric
current,
but
does
not
change
the
character
of
the
electric
power
or
energy
that
is
transferred
by
means
of
it,
it
does
not
change
the
character
of
“goods”
within
the
meaning
of
Schedule
V,
paragraph
(a),
and
is
not,
therefore,
‘‘for
use
.
.
.
in
the
manufacture
or
production
of
goods”.
My
next
problem
is
to
consider
whether
the
conclusion
reached
by
the
Board
on
this
question
(as
to
there
being
a
change
in
the
form
of
the
electricity)
is
a
finding
of
fact
or
an
application
of
the
statutory
provision
to
the
basic
facts
as
they
found
them
before
reaching
this
conclusion.
I
have
reached
the
conclusion
that
the
part
of
the
Declaration
where
the
Board
reached
the
conclusion
that
there
was
a
change
in
the
‘‘form’’
of
the
‘‘electricity’’
does
not
constitute
a
finding
of
fact
based
on
the
evidence
given
before
the
Board.
After
the
Board
had,
by
the
portion
of
the
Declaration
that
I
have
quoted
at
length,
set
out
in
detail
what
were
clearly
its
findings
on
the
evidence,
the
Board
turned
to
an
examination
of
decisions
of
other
courts
on
similar
questions
arising
under
other
statutes,
and
quoted
at
length
from
such
decisions.
It
also
referred
to
two
United
States
decisions
that
‘‘reached
opposite
conclusions’’
and
stated
that
it
was
‘‘not
adopting
the
majority
opinions
expressed
in
these
two
cases’’.
In
addition,
it
expressly
gave
reasons
why
it
felt
justified
in
adopting
‘‘the
same
reasoning”
as
was
used
by
the
Tax
Appeal
Board
in
an
income
tax
appeal.
This
review
of
legal
authorities
preceding
the
portion
of
the
Declaration
where
the
Board
dealt
with
the
nub
of
the
problem
indicates,
as
it
seems
to
me,
that
the
Board
did
not
regard
it
as
something
that
could
be
solved
by
a
finding
on
the
evidence
adduced
before
it.
The
Board
then
attacked
the
problem
by
contrasting
a
definition
of
a
transformer
that
described
a
transformer
as
something
that
‘‘transfers
electric
energy’’
from
one
circuit
to
another
with
changed
values
of
voltage,
commenting
that
the
stress
there
appeared
‘‘to
be
on
the
mere
transfer
of
electric
energy
from
one
circuit
to
another
where
the
energy—measured
in
watts—is
unchanged,
but
the
current—measured
in
amperes—and
the
voltage
are
changed’’
(the
italics
are
mine),
with
a
definition
that
says
that
the
transformer
“transforms
an
alternating
current
system’’,
commenting
that
the
stress
was
there
not
on
mere
transfer
but
rather
on
change
of
form,
and
with
a
definition
of
“transformation”
as
‘‘Change
of
current
into
one
of
different
potential,
or
different
type,
or
both,
.
.
.”
The
Board
then
said
that
it,
faced
with
these
two
different
stresses,
‘
goes
beyond
the
mere
concept
of
transfer
and
accepts
that
of
production’’.
Here
it
is
clear
that
the
conclusion
that
there
was
‘‘production’’
rather
than
mere
‘‘transfer’’
was
based
on
two
definitions
(Quillet
and
Shorter
Oxford),
both
of
which
spoke
of
transforming
or
changing
a
‘‘current
system”
or
a
‘‘current’’
into
another
current
system
or
current.
There
was
no
reference
in
such
definitions
to
a
transformation
of
electricity
in
the
sense
of
electric
energy,
which
clearly
on
the
evidence
adopted
by
the
Board
passes
unchanged
from
one
circuit
to
the
other.
Nevertheless,
and
this
is
where
I
find
it
difficult
to
follow
the
Board’s
reasoning,
after
a
reference
to
a
submission
by
counsel
for
the
respondent,
the
Declaration
proceeds
with
the
statement
that
‘‘It
is
clear
from
the
evidence
that
this
change
of
the
electrical
energy
from
an
unusable
form
to
a
usable
form
is
effected
in
and
by
the
applicant’s
transformers’’.
It
is
certainly
clear
from
the
evidence
that
‘‘this
change’’
from
one
electric
current
to
one
of
a
different
character
is
effected
in
and
by
the
applicant’s
transformers.
What
the
Board
has
done
at
this
point
and
in
the
remainder
of
its
reasoning
on
this
question
is,
as
it
appears
to
me,
to
identify
the
electric
energy
and
the
electric
current
as
being
one
and
the
same
thing.
If
that
were
the
correct
view
of
the
matter,
I
would
have
no
difficulty
in
accepting
the
Board’s
conclusion.
However,
in
view
of
the
Board’s
acceptance
of
the
evidence
that
the
electric
energy
is
transferred
from
one
circuit
to
another
unchanged
while
a
completely
new
electric
current
of
different
character
is
produced
in
the
transformer,
I
have
difficulty
in
accepting
the
Board’s
language
in
the
concluding
part
of
its
judgment
where
it
speaks
of
‘‘electrical
energy’’
being
a
“commodity”
that
is
not
ordinarily
used
until
it
has
been
‘‘transformed’’,
having
existed
prior
to
‘‘transformation’’
in
a
‘‘form
which
is
not
generally
marketable”,
and
finally
concludes:
Because
it
is
the
transformation
in
issue
that
turns
the
electrical
energy
into
a
form
that
can
be
used
by
the
customer,
this
transformation
must
be
considered
to
be
part
of
the
manufacture
and
production
of
electricity.
Because
the
transformation
of
voltage
is
done
exclusively
in
the
transformers
and
by
the
transformers,
they
are
apparatus
sold
to
or
imported
by
the
applicant
for
use
by
it
directly
in
the
manufacture
or
production
of
goods.
This
conclusion,
that
the
transformation
turns
the
‘‘electrical
energy
into
a
form’’
different
from
what
it
was,
is,
as
it
seems
to
me,
incompatable
with
the
case
put
forward
by
the
respondent
and
accepted
by
the
Board
that
it
was
the
electric
current
and
not
the
electric
energy
that
was
changed
in
character
by
the
transformer.
If,
as
it
seems
to
me,
the
electric
energy,
which
is
the
thing
sold,
was
not,
according
to
the
Board’s
findings
of
fact,
manufactured
or
produced
by
the
transformer
in
question,
it
follows
that
the
transformer
was
not
used
in
the
manufacture
or
production
of
‘‘goods’’
within
the
meaning
of
the
exempting
provision
in
question.
However,
even
if
I
accept
it
that
the
Board’s
conclusion
that
what
happens
when
a
transformer
is
used
to
change
the
voltage
at
which
energy
is
being
transmitted
is
to
change
the
electrical
energy
“from
an
unusable
form
to
a
usable
form”
is
a
finding
of
fact
that
I
must
accept,
I
am
of
opinion
that
what
happens
when
a
transformer
is
so
used
is
not
manufacture
or
production
of
electric
energy
within
the
meaning
of
those
words
as
reflected
in
the
decisions
to
which
the
Board
refers.
The
decisions
to
which
the
Board
refers
in
that
connection
are
The
King
v.
Vandeweghe
Ltd.,
[1934]
S.C.R.
244;
[1928-34]
C.T.C.
257;
Biltrite
Tire
Co.
v.
The
King,
[1937]
S.C.R.
364:
[1935-37]
C.T.C.
306;
The
King
v.
Plotkins,
[1939]
Ex.
C.R.
1;
[1938-39]
C.T.C.
138;
M.N.R.
v.
Dominion
Shuttle
Co.
Ltd.
(1934),
72
Que.
S.C.
15;
Gruen
Watch
Co.
Ltd.
v.
Attorney
General
of
Canada,
[1950]
C.T.C.
440;
Hiram
Walker
v.
Corp.
of
Town
of
Walkerville,
[1933]
S.C.R.
247
;
City
of
London
v.
John
Labatt
Ltd.,
[1953]
O.R.
800;
Greenmelk
Co.
Ltd.
v.
Township
of
Chatham,
[1955]
O.W.N.
757;
Dominion
Distillery
Products
Ltd.
v.
The
King,
[1928]
Ex.
C.R.
170;
[1935-37]
C.T.C.
364;
Admiral
Steel
Products
Ltd.
v.
M.N.R.,
40
Tax
A.B.C.
322.
In
all
those
cases
the
process
concerning
which
a
question
was
raised
as
to
whether
it
was
manufacture
or
production
was
a
process
that
created
something
that,
from
a
commercial
point
of
view,
was
not
previously
in
existence.
In
some
cases,
something
ready
to
be
used
for
a
certain
purpose—e.g.
usable
tires,
or
cross
arms—had
been
created
from
something
that
could
not
be
used
for
that
purpose—e.g.
worn-out
tires
or
raw
material
that
could
have
been
put
to
any
one
of
many
different
uses,
such
as
sawn
lumber.
In
other
cases,
one
step
further
had
been
taken
in
the
sequences
of
steps
of
a
manufacturing
or
productive
character
whereby
raw
materials
are
gradually
advanced
from
being
in
a
state
of
nature
to
being
incorporated
or
transformed
into
some
economically
desirable
object—e.g.,
by
the
dressing
and
dyeing
of
furs
or
by
the
slitting,
flattening,
shearing
and
edging
of
strip
steel.
In
all
these
cases,
a
definitive
change
has
been
made
in
the
character
of
the
material
or
materials
that
went
into
the
process.
In
all
these
cases,
whether
or
not
it
is
physically
possible
to
reconvert
the
product
of
the
process
to
the
materials
that
went
into
the
process,
there
is
no
intention
ever
to
make
such
a
reconversion
because
the
whole
object
of
the
process
was
to
create
something
that
was
commercially
new
and
usable
either
as
completely
or
partially
manufactured
goods.
Turning
to
electric
energy
and
what
happens
to
it
when
it
becomes
available
in
a
current
of
one
voltage
instead
of
another
voltage,
the
most
significant
thing
is
that,
whatever
the
real
nature
of
the
change
that
is
effected
(and
I
frankly
admit
my
lack
of
any
real
grasp
of
the
nature
of
that
change),
the
product
of
the
process
can
quite
readily
be
changed
back
to
the
thing
with
which
the
process
started
by
the
use
of
another
and
somewhat
different
transformer.
As
I
understand
the
Board’s
findings
of
fact,
it
is
inherent
in
the
very
nature
of
electric
energy
that
it
can
quite
readily
be
changed
from
one
voltage
to
another,
and
is
in
fact
changed
from
one
voltage
to
another,
in
the
generating
plant,
during
the
course
of
transmission,
and,
indeed,
very
frequently,
by
a
purchaser
after
he
has
taken
delivery
of
it.
In
other
words,
if
I
correctly
appraise
the
Board’s
findings,
a
change
in
voltage
is
not
a
change
in
the
character
of
electrical
energy
but
is
merely
a
manifestation
of
one
of
its
inherent
characteristics.
Just
as
a
plastic
material
is
not
changed
in
character
when
it
is
shaped
to
fit
containers
for
the
purpose
of
shipment,
so
electric
power
is
not,
from
a
commercial
point
of
view,
something
different
in
character
when
its
voltage
is
raised
for
transmission
or,
indeed,
when
its
voltage
is
varied
again
so
that
it
will
be
receivable
by
a
particular
customer’s
facilities.
In
the
decision
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
The
Queen
v.
York
Marble,
Tile
and
Terrazzo
Ltd.,
[1968]
C.T.C.
44,
which
has
been
handed
down
since
the
Board
delivered
its
Declaration
in
this
case,
Spence,
J.,
delivering
the
judgment
of
the
Court,
adopted,
for
the
purposes
of
that
case,
a
definition
cited
in
an
earlier
decision,
i.e.,
that
‘‘manufacture
is
the
production
of
articles
for
use
from
raw
or
prepared
material
by
giving
to
these
materials
new
forms,
qualities
and
properties
or
combinations
whether
by
hand
or
machinery’’.
Recognizing
the
difficulty
of
adapting
this
definition
for
application
to
a
process
applied
to
something
the
nature
of
which
is
as
difficult
to
grasp
as
is
the
idea
of
electric
energy,
nevertheless,
it
does
seem
to
me
that
electric
energy
that
is,
for
the
moment,
by
reason
of
having
passed
through
a
transformer,
being
conducted
at
one
voltage
instead
of
at
another,
but
which,
by
reason
of
its
inherent
nature,
can
be
readily
changed
to
any
other
voltage,
has
not
been
given
any
new
form,
quality
or
property
from
a
commercial
point
of
view.
I
feel
more
confident
as
to
the
correctness
of
my
conclusion
that
what
happens
when
electric
energy
passes
from
one
current
to
another
through
a
transformer
is
not
‘‘manufacture
or
production
of
goods’’
within
the
meaning
of
those
words
in
Schedule
V
when
I
consider
what
the
incidence
of
the
consumption
or
sale
tax
would
be
on
the
interpretation
of
Sections
30(1)
and
31(1)
(d)
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act
that
would
flow
from
the
view
adopted
by
the
Board.
(I
make
this
test
as
though
there
were
no
exemption
for
electricity
because
the
concepts
of
manufacture
and
production
in
Sections
30
and
31,
and
in
Schedule
V,
must
be
the
same
whether
or
not
electricity
1s,
for
the
moment,
exempt.)
Whenever
‘‘goods’’
are
‘‘manufactured’’
or
“produced”,
the
consumption
or
sales
tax
is
payable
whether
or
not
they
are
sold
(Section
30(1))
or
are
‘‘for
use
by
the
manufacturer
or
producer
and
not
for
sale’’
(Section
31(1)
(d)).
This
dual
nature
of
the
tax
is
set
out
clearly
in
The
Queen
v.
York
Marble,
Tile
&
Terrazzo
Ltd.
(supra),
per
Spence,
J.
as
follows:
It
should
be
noted
that
the
Excise
Tax
Act
in
Section
30
imposes
not
only
a
sales
tax
but
a
consumption
tax
and
that
*
‘tion
31(1)
(d)
of
the
said
Excise
Tax
Act
makes
specific
provis
‘n
for
goods
which
although
manufactured
or
produced
in
Canada
were
for
use
by
the
manufacturer
or
producer
and
not
for
sale.
This
Court
in
The
King
v.
Fraser
Companies
Ltd.,
[1931]
S.C.R.
490,
held
that
a
corporation
which
produced
lumber
and
used
the
same
in
the
performance
of
a
building
contract
was
liable
for
the
tax
and
again,
in
The
King
v.
Dominion
Bridge
Co.
Ltd.,
[1940]
S.C.R.
487,
held
that
a
company
which
produced
steel
members
in
order
to
fabricate
them
in
the
superstructure
of
a
bridge
was
liable
to
the
tax.
Applying
the
Board’s
conclusion
that
passing
electric
energy
through
a
transformer
is
‘‘a
process
of
manufacture
or
production”
of
goods
within
the
meaning
of
these
statutory
provisions
would
mean
that,
if
there
were
no
exempting
provision,
a
separate
tax
would
become
payable
whenever
the
voltage
had
to
be
changed
by
the
purchaser
of
the
power.
I
find
it
impossible
to
believe
that
the
words
manufacture
and
production
were
used
in
a
sense
that
would
have
any
such
result.
On
any
view
as
to
the
meaning
of
the
words
used
in
the
statute
that
would
occur
to
any
ordinary
person
concerned
with
such
matters,
changing
the
voltage
of
electricity
is
not
the
manufacture
or
production
of
new
electric
energy,
but
merely
a
normal
step
in
the
utilization
of
electricity
having
regard
to
its
inherent
nature.
I
am,
therefore,
of
the
view
that
the
appeal
should
be
allowed
with
costs
and
that
a
‘‘formal
Declaration’’
should
be
substituted
to
accord
with
the
views
that
I
have
expressed
for
that
contained
in
the
penultimate
paragraphs
of
the
Board’s
Declaration.
I
shall
hear
the
parties
on
the
form
that
the
Declaration
should
take,
and
on
the
question
of
costs,
when
the
appellant
moves
for
.judgment.