Maclean,
J.:—This
is
an
information
exhibited
by
the
Attorney-General
of
Canada,
whereby
it
is
sought
to
recover
from
the
defendant,
under
the
provisions
of
the
Special
War
Revenue
Act,
1915,
R.S.C.
1927,
ch.
179,
and
amendments.
thereto,
a
sales
or
consumption
tax
upon
certain
goods
produced
or
manufactured
by
it,
namely,
building
bricks,
and
which
were
sold
throughout
the
period
commencing
August
1,
1927,
and
ending
December
31,
1933.
The
amount
sued
upon
is
for
an
alleged
balance
of
$1,443.34
due
and
owing
as
sales
tax
by
the
defendant
to
the
plaintiff,
together
with
penalty
interest
calculated
to
the
30th
day
of
June,
1935,
amounting
altogether
to
the
sum
of
$1,940.95.
The
precise
provision
of
the
Special
War
Revenue
Act
applicable
here
is
sec.
86
which
in
part
reads
as
follows
:—
"‘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
the
sale
thereof
by
him.
”
The
Vancouver
Brick
and
Tile
Company
Ltd.
was
incorporated
under
the
laws
of
the
Province
of
British
Columbia
in
May,
1927,
and
in
May,
1935,
its
name
was
changed
to
the
B.C.
Brick
and
Tile
Company
Ltd.,
now
the
defendant
herein.
The
defendant
company
manufactures
common
building
bricks
at
Sullivan,
some
20
miles
distant
from
Vancouver,
B.C.
Its
entire
production
of
bricks
during
the
period
in
question
was
sold
annually
to
the
Victoria
Tile
and
Brick
Supply
Company
Ltd.,
a
company
incorporated
in
1923
and
since
that
date
carrying
on
the
business
of
selling,
by
retail
usually,
builders’
supplies
such
as
lime,
mortar,
gravel,
sand,
tiles,
bricks,
and
other
material,
and
which
would
be
purchased
by
the
Victoria
Tile
and
Brick
Company
usually
in
wholesale
quantities;
it
will
be
convenient
hereafter
to
refer
to
this
company
as
the
“Victoria
company
I.
In
addition
to
the
annual
output
of
bricks
produced
by
the
defendant
company,
the
Victoria
company
purchased
similar
bricks
and
bricks
of
other
types,
from
other
manufacturers.
The
total
annual
sales
of
the
Victoria
company
would
amount
to
$200,000
and
over;
the
value
of
the
bricks
manufactured
annually
by
the
defendant
company
and
sold
to
the
Victoria
company
amounted
to
somewhere
between
$8,000
and
$9,000.
The
defendant
company
has
paid
the
sales
tax
on
the
sale
price
of
the
bricks
which
it
sold
to
the
Victoria
company,
but
the
Crown
now
contends
that
the
tax
should
be
calculated
on
the
sale
price
of
the
Victoria
company.
Mr.
J.
A.
Wickson,
during
the
period
in
question,
was
the
president
of
the
defendant
company
and
also
of
the
Victoria
company.
His
holding
in
the
capital
stock
of
the
defendant
company
was
71
shares
out
of
a
total
issue
of
165
shares,
and
in
the
Victoria
company
he
held
51
shares
out
of
a
capital
stock
issue
of
112
shares.
His
wife
was
also
a
shareholder
in
both
companies
and
was
as
well
a
director
of
both
companies.
When
the
defendant
company
was
organized
the
Victoria
company
made
advances
to
the
former
company
for
the
purchase
of
machinery
and
equipment,
taking
shares,
as
I
understand
it,
in
such
company
for
such
advances;
at
any
rate
the
Victoria
company
was
a
shareholder
in
the
defendant
company
at
the
time
material
here.
A
Mr.
Ay
ling,
manager
of
the
defendant
company’s
plant
was
also
a
shareholder
in
that
company,
but
he
was
not
a
shareholder
in
the
Victoria
company.
The
shareholders
in
the
defendant
company
were
therefore
J.
A.
Wickson,
his
wife,
the
Victoria
company,
and
Ayling.
The
deceased
father
of
J.
A.
Wickson
was
a
shareholder
in
the
Victoria
company
anl
his
share
holdings
are
presently
registered
in
the
name
of
his
executors;
a
brother
of
J.
A.
Wickson
was
also
a
shareholder
in
the
Victoria
company,
but
in
1933
his
shares
were
acquired
by
J.
A.
Wickson.
I
think
it
may
fairly
be
conceded
that
for
all
practical
purposes
the
control
of
both
companies
was
in
J.
A.
Wickson
and
his
wife.
The
books
of
account
of
the
defendant
company,
during
the
period
in
question,
were
kept
by
the
Victoria
company
.at
its
office
in
Vancouver
for
which
service
an
annual
allowance
was
made
by
the
former
company
;
it
seems
that
presently
the
offices
of
both
companies
are
at
Sullivan,
B.C.
Neither
company’s
business
operations
were
financed
in
any
way
by
the
other.
The
defendant
company’s
annual
manufacturing
operations
were
largely
financed
by
means
of
advances
made
by
some
bank
under
sec.
88
of
the
Bank
Act.
The
Crown
contends
that
the
Victoria
company
was
merely
the
agent
of
the
defendant
company
in
the
sale
of
its
bricks,
and
was
therefore
taxable
on
the
sales
price
of
the
Victoria
company
;
this
contention
cannot,
I
think,
be
maintained.
While
the
same
persons
may
control
the
two
companies
yet
they
are
separate
entities,
and
even
the
shareholders
are
not
precisely
the
same;
their
respective
business
operations
are
really
quite
dis-
tinct
and
were
intended,
I
think,
so
to
be.
Each
company
finances
and
conducts
its
own
operations,
each
hires
and
pays
its
own
employees,
and
their
business
records
are
separately
maintained
;
there
is
no
division
of
profits
or
sharing
of
losses
between
the
two
companions.
During
the
period
in
question
the
defendant
company
sold
its
annual
production
of
bricks
to
the
Victoria
company
at
the
current
wholesale
price
just
as
other
manufacturers
of
bricks
would
sell
their
product
to
similar
business
concerns.
There
is
no
evidence
to
show
that
the
business
of
the
Victoria
company
was
in
fact
influenced,
controlled
or
directed,
by
the
defendant
company,
and
in
all
the
circumstances
here
that
would
seem
improbable.
That
the
defendant
company
sells
its
entire
annual
output
of
bricks
to
the
Victoria
company
does
not
appear
to
me
to
be
an
irregular
or
unusual
thing,
or
of
itself
suggestive
of
a
concealed
effort
to
defeat
the
revenue;
in
all
the
circumstances
it
was
not
unnatural
to
find
the
Victoria
company
a
willing
customer
of
the
defendant
company.
It
would
be
going
to
dangerous
limits
to
say,
that
because
the
officers
and
shareholders
of
the
two
companies
were
much
the
same,
and
because
the
companies
had
business
relations
the
one
with
the
other,
that
therefore
the
one
was
the
mere
agent
of
the
other;
there
must,
in
my
opinion,
be
a
state
of
facts
established
outside
that
disclosed
here,
to
make
the
defendant
company
liable
for
the
sales
tax
on
the
basis
of
the
price
received
by
the
Victoria
company,
and
not
upon
the
price
at
which
in
fact
the
defendant
company
sold
its
bricks
to
the
Victoria
company.
Counsel
for
both
parties
referred
me
to
the
judgment
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
the
Palmolive
case,
[19331
S.C.R.
131.
The
important
facts
of
that
case
are
to
be
found
very
fully
and
concisely
set
forth
in
the
judgment
of
Cannon,
J.,
particularly
at
pages
135
and
136,
and
I
need
not
repeat
them
here.
It
will
be
seen,
I
think,
that
the
principal
or
controlling
facts
appearing
in
that
case
are
not
at
all
similar
to
the
facts
in
the
case
presently
under
consideration.
It
was
held
by
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada,
in
the
Palmolive
case,
that
upon
all
the
facts
disclosed,
and
upon
the
authorities
mentioned,
the
manufacturing
company
was
merely
the
agent
of
the
selling
company,
and
that
it
was
the
latter
that
was
liable
for
the
sales
tax.
In
the
case
under
consideration
I
am
unable
to
see
how,
upon
the
facts
disclosed,
it
could
be
held
that
the
Victoria
company
was
the
agent
of
the
defendant
company,
and
to
make
the
Palmolive
case
applicable
here
some
such
agency
would
have
to
be
established.
Conceivably
it
might
be
argued
that
the
defendant
company
was
the
agent
of
the
Victoria
company,
and
that
it
was
that
company
that
was
liable
for
the
sales
tax,
but
that
company
is
not
a
party
to
this
action.
It
seems
to
me
that
there
is
nothing
in
the
facts
appearing
in
this
case
that
would
support
the
contention
that
the
Victoria
company
was
the
agent
of
the
defendant
company.
The
facts
in
the
Palmolive
case
are
so
dissimilar
that
I
really
do
not
think
any
assistance
is
to
be
gained
from
it
one
way
or
the
other.
It
is
my
opinion
therefore
that
the
contention
of
the
Crown
cannot
prevail
and
that
the
information
must
be
dismissed
with
costs.
Other
defences
were
raised
but
in
view
of
the
conclusion
which
I
have
just
expressed
it
is
not
necessary
to
discuss
them.
Judgment
accordingly.