TELLIER,
C.J.—The
following
is
the
provision
of
the
Special
War
Revenue
Act,
R.S.C.
1927,
c.
179,
sec.
86
on
which
the
plaintiff
relies
:—
"
1
86.
In
addition
to
any
duty
or
tax
that
may
be
payable
under
this
Act
or
any
other
Statute
or
law,
there
shall
be
imposed,
levied,
and
collected
a
consumption
or
sales
tax
of
four
per
cent
on
the
sale
price
of
all
goods,—
""
(a)
produced
or
manufactured
in
Canada,
payable
by
the
producer
or
manufacturer
at
the
time
of
their
sale
by
him.’’
Has
the
plaintiff
""produced
or
manufactured’’
the
merchandise
upon
the
sale
price
of
which
the
plaintiff
claims
the
said
tax
of
four
per
cent?
The
evidence
as
well
as
certain
allegations
of
the
defence
would
seem
to
indicate
the
affirmative.
The
following
is
the
case
for
the
defendant
company
;
It
carries
on
a
business
in
Montreal
in
which
as
a
rule
and
in
the
ordinary
course
of
business
makes
or
manufactures,
upon
order
or
in
execution
of
bulk
contracts,
clothes,
costumes
or
uniforms,
furnishing
the
material
for
them
and
adjusting
them
to
the
measurement
of
those
who
wear
them
and
delivering
them
finally
to
those
who
have
ordered
them.
The
orders
or
contracts
come
to
him
either
from
individuals
who
need
clothes,
costumes
or
uniforms
for
their
own
personal
use
or
that
of
their
dependents,
or
from
large
employers
such
as
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue,
Chamber
of
Commerce,
Railway
Companies
or
Hotels,
the
Liquor
Commission,
the
Provincial
Police,
or
others
who
need
them
for
their
employees.
It
is
evident
that,
under
these
conditions,
the
defendant
must
be
considered
as
producing
and
manufacturing
of
clothes,
costumes
or
uniforms
leaving
his
establishment.
This
would
be
sufficient
to
dispose
of
the
case,
if
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
had
not,
in
the
exercise
of
the
power
conferred
upon
him
by
sec.
95
of
the
said
Special
War
Revenue
Act,
enacted
a
regulation
which
the
defendant
invoked,
the
text
of
which
is
as
follows
:—
"‘(11)
Merchant
tailors,
dressmakers,
milliners
and
florists
selling
exclusively
by
retail
to
the
consumer
or
user
are
classified
as
retailers
and
are
not
required
to
take
out
a
Sales
Tax
License.
‘
"
The
terms
‘merchant
tailor
‘
and
‘
dressmaker
‘
in
this
regulation
means
the
ordinary
merchant
and
the
ordinary
dressmaker
who
fits,
makes
and
sells
his
goods
to
the
order
of
the
individual
customer
on
the
same
premises
upon
which
they
are
made
and
not
through
agents
or
chain
of
stores.’’
The
defendant
alleges
that
because
of
this
provision
he
is
exempted
from
the
tax
which
the
plaintiff
claims
from
him.
The
following
is
the
text
by
virtue
of
which
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
has
enacted
the
said
regulations
:—
"‘The
Minister
may
nevertheless
direct
that
any
class
of
small
manufacturer
or
producer
selling
his
product
exclusively
by
retail,
shall
be
exempt
from
payment
of
consumption
or
Sales
Tax
on
goods
manufactured
or
produced
by
him
and
persons
so
exempted
shall
not
be
given
a
License.’’
Is
the
defendant
right
in
alleging
that
he
is
a
merchant
tailor
as
defined
by
the
above
Regulation?
As
has
been
said
above
he
makes
or
manufactures
upon
order
clothes,
costumes
or
uniforms
for
individuals
to
whom
he
sells
retail
for
their
own
personal
use
or
that
of
their
dependents
as
well
as
for
large
or
small
organizations
such
as
governments,
Ministers,
Municipal
Corporations,
Railway
Companies,
Hotels,
etc.,
who
order
them
wholesale
or
singly
for
their
employees
and
officers.
In
the
first
instance,
he
makes
what
the
ordinary
merchant
tailor
does
in
the
case
defined
by
the
Regulations,
in
the
second
instance,
his
product
is
no
longer
that
of
the
ordinary
merchant
tailor.
It
is
true
that
these
uniforms,
which
he
delivers
by
virtue
of
a
bulk
order
are
always
made
to
measure
and
adjusted
to
the
figure
of
the
various
employees
who
must
wear
them;
but
that
does
not
make
his
bulk
sale
a
retail
sale,
since
the
employees
are
not
parties
to
the
contract
and
are
used
merely
as
models,
so
to
speak.
Besides,
the
one
who
places
the
order
in
bulk
is
not
necessarily
the
consumer.
It
is
not
a
gift
which
he
makes
to
his
employees
and
officers
when
he
turns
over
to
them
the
uniforms
which
he
has
purchased
for
them.
His
contract
with
them
is
not
gratuitous,
but
for
value.
He
receives
something,
money
or
services,
in
return
for
each
uniform.
The
contrary
would
be
absurd.
The
defendant
has
kept
a
separate
account
for
his
orders
by
retail
and
those
in
bulk.
The
arrears
of
tax
claimed
from
his
are
calculated
according
to
his
own
books
as
he
admits.
They
concern
only
the
uniforms
sold
in
bulk,
not
those
sold
by
retail.
The
following
is
the
state
of
the
total
sales
in
bulk,
and
by
retail
for
each
one
of
the
five
years
in
question
:—
Year
|
Retail
|
Bulk
|
1924
|
$71,953.51
|
$
65,000.11
|
1925
|
65,455.61
|
104,967.11
|
1926
|
•
72,149.93
|
125,692.72
|
1927
|
72,571.56
|
136,539.26
|
1928
|
69,164.42
|
169,328.83
|
|
$391,285.08
|
$601,528.03
|
As
may
be
seen,
the
wholesale
business
exceeded
that
by
retail
considerably.
The
defendant
has
no
right
to
claim
exemption
from
the
tax
which
the
plaintiff
demands
from
him.
Nor
is
he
right
when
he
alleges
in
his
defence
since
this
tax
was
not
claimed
from
him
at
the
time
he
was
prevented
from
collecting
it
from
his
customers.
The
evidence
shows
the
contrary.
He
himself
understood
that
he
was
subject
to
the
tax
for
since
according
to
his
books,
his
accounts
and
correspondence
he
seemed
to
have
claimed
it
from
his
purchasers,
and
in
certain
cases
at
least
to
have
received
and
kept
it.
Under
these
conditions
the
plaintiff
has
a
right
to
his
claim.
I
would
allow
the
appeal,
and
reverse
the
judgment
below
with
costs.
I
would
grant
judgment
to
the
plaintiff
for
$14,914.77
with
interest
to
run
from
the
date
of
the
action
and
with
costs;
the
interest
to
be
calculated
as
fixed
by
the
Special
War
Revenue
Act
and
at
the
legal
rate
upon
the
surplus.
BERNIER,
J.:—The
question
to
decide
is
whether
the
appellant
company
comes
under
the
exception
provided
by
the
Federal
Statute,
R.S.C.
1927
e.
179.
Whoever
purchases
material
with
a
view
to
making
clothes
and
selling
them
is
a
merchant
or
manufacturer;
it
matters
little
whether
he
is
a
wholesale
or
retail
merchant.
By
virtue
of
sec.
95
of
the
Act,
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
is
authorized
to
exempt
from
payment
of
the
Tax
small
manufacturers
or
producers
who
sell
their
goods
exclusively
by
retail
(Regulation
1
and
2).
Another
Regulation
states
that
the
goods
manufactured
must
be
sold
‘‘to
the
order
of
the
individual
customer
on
the
same
premises
upon
which
they
are
made,
and
not
through
agents
or
chain
of
stores.”
It
seems
that
this
regulation
cannot
have
two
interpretations
:
it
means
that
the
small
manufacturer
or
whoever
amounts
to
the
same,
the
artisan
or
small
producer
must
make
the
clothes
and
sell
them
to
the
client
who
gives
his
measurements
for
them
;
in
other
words
he
must
sell
to
the
client
himself
who
gives
the
order
for
his
own
personal
use.
Does
the
appellant
company
come
within
the
exception
of
the
Act?
I
do
not
believe
so,
at
least
in
regard
to
that
part
of
his
business
which
consists
of
receiving
orders
for
the
manufacture
and
sale
in
series
of
very
considerable
quantities
of
elothes
manufactured
by
him,
but
with
a
view
to
being
dis-
tributed
to
the
employees
of
large
industries
such
as
railways,
hotels
or
large
public
institutions;
in
regard
to
this
part
of
his
business
which
is
the
only
part
for
which
he
is
taxed,
the
appellant
company
does
not
fall
within
the
exception;
it
is
subject
to
the
Tax.
I
would
allow
the
appeal
with
costs.
RIVARD,
J.:—The
Special
War
Revenue
Act,
R.S.C.
1927,
c.
178,
sec.
86,
places
a
consumption
or
sales
tax
upon
"‘the
sale
price
of
all
goods
produced
or
manufactured
in
Canada.’’
That
is
the
general
rule.
From
these
words
themselves
as
well
as
from
all
that
can
be
said
as
to
the
meaning
of
the
terms
"‘pro-
duced
or
manufactured,’’
I
have
no
hesitation
in
coming
to
the
conclusion
that
the
production
of
uniforms
is
included
within
that
description.
In
order
to
exclude
the
business
of
a
merchanttailor
from
this
section,
it
would
be
necessary
to
place
certain
restrictions
which
cannot
be
admitted
upon
the
text
or
to
suppose
that
the
Legislature
wished
to
belie
its
words.
What
can
a
merchant-tailor
do
in
his
shop
unless
he
manufactures
or
produces
?
If
then,
there
were
no
exceptions
to
the
general
rule
of
sec.
86,
the
case
would
be
determined.
But
there
are
two
exceptions
which
we
must
examine,
in
particular
that
provided
by
sec.
95(2)
which
authorizes
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
to
exempt
from
payment
of
the
sales
tax
through
regulations
issued
under
the
authority
of
sec.
99
"‘any
class
of
small
manufacturer
or
producer
selling
his
product
exclusively
by
retail.”
As
to
which
it
must
be
noted
that
the
exemption
must
not
exceed
the
limits
of
the
provision
authorizing
the
Minister
to
grant
it.
The
Minister
may
exempt
from
the
obligation
of
obtaining
a
licence
and
paying
the
sales
tax
only
those
who
would
be
justly
qualified
as
"‘small
manufacturers
or
producers’’
and
who
sell
only
by
retail.
The
exemption
therefore
may
be
granted
only
to
retailers
who
produce
only
in
small
quantities;
if
its
scope
were
increased
still
more,
the
exemption
would
be
ultra
vires.
Furthermore,
that
is
what
the
Minister
seems
to
have
had
in
view
when
he
enacted
regulations
for
certain
exemptions.
Regulation
11
exempts
merchant-tailors
‘‘selling
exclusively
by
retail
to
the
consumer
or
user.’’
This
addition
of
the
words
""to
the
consumer
or
user’’
makes
it
plain
that
it
relates
rather
to
the
small
producer,
or
merchant-tailor
whose
business
is
rela-
tively
restricted.
It
is
difficult
indeed
to
conceive
that
a
large
manufacturer
of
clothes
sells
each
one
of
his
products
to
the
individual
who
wears
it
;
he
could
occasionally
sell
to
a
consumer
or
manufacture
certain
clothes
specially
for
him
;
if
he
should
do
so
regularly
that
would
be
a
special
enterprise,
a
distinct
business,
aside
from
the
other
which
would
require
special
entries
in
his
books
(as
was
done
by
the
defendant).
But
it
cannot
be
said
that
such
large
manufacturer
sells
his
goods
"‘exclusively
to
the
consumer
or
user’’
as
the
principal
and
most
important
part
of
his
business.
The
Minister
has
however
taken
care
to
indicate
more
clearly
that
he
intended
to
exempt
from
the
payment
of
tax
only
the
small
merchant-tailor.
In
the
said
Regulation
11
he
says:—
"The
term
merchant
tailor
.
.
.
means
the
ordinary
merchant
tailor
who
fits,
makes
and
sells
his
goods
to
the
order
of
the
individual
customer
on
the
same
premises
upon
which
they
are
made,
and
not
through
agents
or
chain
of
stores.’’
Thus
he
very
clearly
extends
the
exemption
to
the
small
manufacturer
who
is
an
ordinary
merchant-tailor;
who
in
his
shop
receives
the
order
of
the
customer,
manufactures
according
to
his
instructions,
and
sells
a
suit
or
an
overcoat.
Is
the
suit
made
to
the
measure
of
the
customer
or
of
his
employee?
Would
the
overcoat
be
worn
by
him
or
by
his
chauffeur?
It
does
not
matter
;
it
is
the
work
of
an
ordinary
merchant-tailor,
of
a
small
producer,
and
under
Regulation
11
he
escapes
the
obligation
to
pay
the
tax.
To
him
the
client
whose
order
he
executed
is
deemed
to
be
the
customer
just
like
the
person
who
purchases
groceries
which
members
of
his
family
help
to
consume.
How
could
one
liken
to
this
small
producer,
the
manufacturer
equipped
to
make
clothes
on
a
large
scale,
who
calls
himself
"‘contractor
of
uniforms
and
liveries,’’
who
in
a
single
year
sells
$169,328.83
worth
of
uniforms
and
in
five
years
has
sold
$601,528.03
worth?
These
uniforms
and
liveries
were
made
by
requisition
upon
orders
according
to
the
instructions
and
orders
from
different
corporations
such
as
the
C.P.R.,
the
C.N.R.,
Mount-Royal
Hotel,
Ritz-Carlton
Hotel,
Chamber
of
Commerce,
Minister
of
Public
Works,
Bank
of
Montreal,
Provincial
Police,
etc.,
who
wished
large
quantities
for
their
employees.
The
fact
that
it
was
necessary
to
fit
the
uniforms
to
the
measurement
of
each
one,
does
not
alter
the
transaction.
The
defendant
none
the
less
carried
on
his
business
upon
a
large
scale;
he
produced
liveries
made
to
measure
and
when
necessary
sent
his
agents
out
to
take
the
measurements
wherever
the
employees
happened
to
be;
he
made
them
in
large
quantities
and
upon
orders
not
of
those
who
were
to
wear
them,
but
of
the
employers
who
pur-
chased
them
to
clothe
their
numerous
servants
and
who
paid
for
them
all
under
contracts
with
each
company.
That
is
not
carrying
on
the
business
of
a
small
manufacturer
or
ordinary
merchant-tailor,
or
selling
products
exclusively
by
retail,
nor
selling
them
exclusively
to
consumer
or
user.
For
that
part
of
his
business—the
only
part
for
which
he
is
taxed—the
defendant
does
not
come
within
the
exception;
the
general
rule
applies.
I
would
allow
the
appeal
with
costs,
and
condemn
the
defendant
to
pay
$14,914.77,
of
which
$11,78.12
is
for
taxes
and
$3,129.65
for
interest
accrued
from
the
date
of
the
action,
with
interest
to
run
from
December
1,
1930,
at
the
rate
of
two-thirds
of
1%
per
month
(sec.
106(3)
upon
$11,785.12
and
at
the
legal
rate
upon
$3,129.65
plus
costs.
LETOURNEAU,
J.:—It
seems
to
me
that
a
merchant
tailor
is
in
fact
and
in
principle
a
"‘producer’’
or
a
"‘manufacturer’’
(sec.
86(a))
;
however,
the
Minister
is
authorized
to
declare
an
exception
in
favour
of
every
class
of
small
producer
or
manufacturer
carrying
on
business
by
retail
(sec.
95(2))
;
and,
in
fact
a
regulation
was
enacted
(Reg.
11)
in
favour
of
whoever
is
a
merchant
tailor
within
the
meaning
given
to
these
words
by
the
Act,
that
is,
when
whoever
claims
this
quality
receives
and
serves
his
client
on
his
own
premises
without
the
use
of
agents
or
a
chain
of
stores.
As
a
result,
I
have
come
to
the
conclusion
that
the
appellant
is,
by
reason
of
these
circumstances
and
of
the
evidence,
within
the
limits
of
this
definition
given
by
the
Act
to
the
words
‘‘merchant
tailor;’’
and
upon
the
sole
condition
of
coming
within
the
provisions
of
the
above
mentioned
regulation,
I
am
of
the
opinion
that
the
appellant
could
still
benefit
from
the
exception
which
he
claims.
But
is
the
appellant
truly—at
least
in
regard
to
the
uniforms
ordered
from
it
by
certain
companies
for
their
employees—
within
the
condition
provided
by
this
regulation:
"Selling
exclusively
by
retail
to
the
consumer
or
user?’’
I
do
not
believe
so,
for
if
it
is
still
possible
to
say
that
these
companies
which
gave
him
orders
in
this
way
are
really
‘‘the
consumer
and
user’’
in
the
sense
that
these
words
could
have
in
regard
to
each
individual
who
might
order
for
his
wife,
his
children,
his
chauffeur,
it
remans
that
the
sales
arising
out
of
these
orders
cease
to
be
"exclusively
by
retail”
when,
as
in
the
present
case,
they
are
for
one
or
more
classes
of
employees.
Not
only
for
these
cases
can
it
be
said
that
the
sales
are
wholesale
because
capable
of
being
followed
by
sales
by
retail,
as
is
generally
the
case,
but
rather
because
of
not
being
"‘individual,’’
since
this
seems
to
have
been
the
real
criterion
of
the
Legislature
in
making
the
law
and
of
the
Minister
in
enacting
the
above
mentioned
regulation.
That
is
what
in
the
last
analysis
seems
to
result
from
all
the
words
"‘exclusively
by
retail
to
the
consumer
or
user,’’
especially
if
one
includes
the
words
"‘individual
customer’’
which
are
in
the
definition
given
to
the
word
‘‘merchant
tailor”
in
the
Act.
It
is
to
be
noted
that
the
‘‘individualization’’
which
might
be
seen
in
the
fact
that
each
man
had
to
furnish
his
measurements
or
have
them
taken,
is
independent
of
the
contract,
and
does
not
have
any
bearing
when
it
is
the
question
of
the
validity
of
the
contract,
but
has
true
relation
only
to
its
execution.
From
which
it
follows
in
my
opinion
that
these
sales
of
the
appellant
to
the
companies
from
whom
it
had
the
orders
were
not
‘‘exclusively
by
retail.’’
As
a
result,
the
exception
not
being
shown,
the
action
is
well
founded.
I
would
allow
the
appeal.
BOND,
J.:—I
would
maintain
the
appeal
for
the
reasons
stated
by
Rivard,
J.
Appeal
allowed.