ANGERS
J.:—This
is
an
information
exhibited
by
the
Attorney-
General
of
Canada
on
behalf
of
His
Majesty
the
King
whereby
it
appears
that
the
latter
claims
from
the
defendant
the
sum
of
$10,844.46
for
sales
tax,
penalties
as
provided
for
by
section
106
of
the
Special
War
Revenue
Act
(R.S.C.
1927),
chapter
179,
to
the
date
of
payment
and
costs.
The
information
alleges
in
substance
that:
the
defendant
is
a
company
incorporated
under
the
provisions
of
the
Companies
Act
(R.S.C.
1927,
chapter
27)
having
its
head
office
at
the
City
of
Lachine,
Province
of
Quebec;
on
or
about
June
5,
1937,
at
the
City
of
Lachine
aforesaid,
the
defendant
entered
into
a
contract
with
the
Lake
Sulphite
Pulp
Company
Limited,
a
company
incorporated
under
the
laws
of
Ontario,
whereby
the
defendant
undertook
to
furnish
to
the
latter
certain
goods
manufactured
in
Canada
by
the
defendant,
namely
one
Dominion
Pulp
Drying
Machine
and
accessories
and
spare
parts
therefor
as
specified
in
the
said
contract,
for
a
total
price
of
$488,335;
by
the
terms
of
the
said
contract
the
Lake
Sulphite
Pulp
Company
Limited
undertook
to
pay
the
sale
price
to
the
defendant
as
follows:
9
monthly
payments
of
$48,800.
ech,
commencing
July
5,
1937,
and
continuing
on
the
5th
day
of
each
month
thereafter
until
a
total
of
$439,200.
should
have
been
paid,
and
the
balance
of
$49,135.
to
be
paid
after
the
machine
was
placed
in
operation,
but
in
no
event
later
than
six
months
from
the
date
of
final
shipment
or
offer
of
shipment
of
the
said
machine,
accessories
and
spare
parts
from
the
company’s
works;
under
the
terms
of
the
contract
the
property
in
the
said
goods
was
not
to
pass
to
the
purchaser
until
all
payments
under
the
contract
should
be
made;
the
defendant
had
been
granted
a
license
as
manufacturer
pursuant
to
section
95
of
the
Special
War
Revenue
Act
and
such
license
was
in
effect
at
all
times
material
to
the
performance
of
the
contract;
by
the
operation
of
section
86
of
the
Act
the
defendant
became
liable
to
pay
sales
tax
at
the
rate
of
8%
on
each
instalment
payable
under
the
said
contract
at
the
time
each
of
such
instalments
fell
due
and
became
payable;
the
defendant
has
made
no
payment
on
account
of
sales
tax
with
respect
to
the
instalments
which
fell
due
on
January
5,
February
5
and
Merch
5,
1938,
respectively,
which
payments
should
have
been
in
the
sum
of
$3,614.82
with
respect
to
each
of
the
instalments
which
fell
due
on
the
said
dates
and
the
defendant
has
omitted
or
refused
to
pay
the
said
taxes;
the
total
tax
thus
remaining
unpaid
is
$10,844.64
(should
be
$10,844.46)
;
by
the
Special
War
Revenue
Act
all
taxes
or
sums
payable
thereunder
are
recoverable
at
any
time
after
the
same
ought
to
have
been
accounted
for
and
paid
as
a
debt
to
His
Majesty
in
the
Exchequer
Court
of
Canada;
wherefore
the
Attorney-General
claims
the
sum
of
$10,844.46
sales
tax,
the
penalties
provided
for
by
section
106
of
the
Special
War
Revenue
Act
to
the
date
of
payment,
such
further
relief
as
to
this
Court
shall
seem
meet
and
the
costs
of
the
action.
In
answer
to
the
information
the
defendant
says
in
substance
as
follows:
it
admits
the
allegation
concerning
its
incorporation
and
head
office;
it
admits
that
at
all
times
material
herein
it
has
held
a
license
as
manufacturer
under
the
provisions
of
the
Special
War
Revenue
Act;
it
denies
the
other
allegations
of
the
information,
execpt
the
one
stating
that
in
virtue
of
the
contract
the
property
in
the
goods
was
not
to
pass
to
the
purchaser
until
all
payments
thereunder
should
be
made,
to
which
allegation
no
reference
is
made;
on
or
about
June
5,
1937,
it
submitted
to
Lake
Sulphite
Pulp
Company
Limited
a
proposal
to
construct
and
supply
to
the
latter
one
Dominion
Pulp
Drying
Machine
and
spare
parts,
which
said
proposal
was
accepted
on
August
3,
1937;
the
contract
concluded
bv
said
proposal
and
acceptance
stipulated
a
total
payment
to
the
defendant
of
$488,335.
being
the
price
of
said
machine
and
spare
parts
and
the
cost
of
prepaying
the
freight
on
the
same
to
Nipigon,
Province
of
Ontario;
in
said
contract
the
defendant
stipulated
that
the
sum
of
$488,335.
should
be
paid
in
nine
monthly
progress
payments
of
$48,800.
each
commencing
on
July
5,1937,
and
continuing
on
the
5th
day
of
each
month
thereafter
until
a
total
of
$439,200.
had
been
paid
and
that
payment
of
the
balance
should
be
made
after
the
machine
was
placed
in
operation,
but
in
no
event
later
than
six
months
from
the
date
of
final
shipment
or
offer
of
shipment
of
the
apparatus
from
the
company’s
works;
the
contract
was
made
in
the
Province
of
Quebec
and
by
its
terms
was
to
be
wholly
performed
within
said
province;
by
said
contract
the
defendant
undertook
to
proceed
with
the
construction
of
the
machine
and
parts
so
that
final
shipment
might
be
made
on
or
before
March
5,1938,
and
the
progress
payments
to
be
made
were
due
and
payable
only
as
and
when
the
construction
of
said
machine
and
parts
was
carried
on
in
compliance
with
that
undertaking;
on
or
about
January
5,
1938,
the
defendant
was
in
arrears
with
the
assembly
of
material
and
the
shop
work
essential
to
the
construction
of
the
machine
and
parts
and
Lake
Sulphite
Pulp
Company
Limited
refused
to
pay
the
progress
payment
which,
had
the
progress
schedule
of
the
contract
been
adhered
to,
would
have
been
payable
on
that
date,
and
further
refused
to
make
any
payment
on
February
5,1938,
the
defendant
having
failed
to
meet
the
progress
schedule
which
would
enable
shipment
to
be
made
in
accordance
with
its
undertaking;
on
February
22,
1938,
a
receiving
order
in
bankruptcy
was
made
against
Lake
Sulphite
Pulp
Company
Limited
and
no
further
work
has
been
done
under
said
contract,
nor
have
any
payments
been
made
in
respect
thereof
since
December
5,
1937,
and
the
Receiver
of
Lake
Sulphite
Pulp
Company
Limited
has
disavowed
said
contract
and
refused
to
perform
the
same
or
to
make
any
payments
thereunder;
all
payments
made
under
said
contract
were
by
its
terms,
until
full
and
final
payment
of
the
purchase
price,
made
as
rental
for
the
apparatus
and
as
liquidated
damages
for
default
and
no
sales
tax
was
due
until
full
and
final
payment
of
the
total
contract
price;
it
is
not
indebted
to
His
Majesty
in
the
sum
claimed
or
in
any
part
thereof
or
at
all
and
asks
that
the
information
be
dismissed
with
costs.
In
his
reply
the
plaintiff
says
in
substance
as
follows:
he
prays
acte
of
the
admissions
contained
in
the
statement
of
defence;
he
admits
that
the
total
payment
was
to
be
$488,335.
and
that
shipment
of
the
goods
was
to
be
made
at
Nipigon,
Ontario;
he
is
not
aware
of
the
fact
that
on
January
5,
1938,
the
defendant
was
in
arrears
with
the
construction
of
the
machine
and
that
Lake
Sulphite
Pulp
Company
Limited
refused
to
pay
the
progress
payment
which
would
have
been
payable
on
that
date,
had
the
progress
schedule
been
adhered
to,
and
that
it
further
refused
to
make
any
payment
on
February
5,
1938,
the
defendant
having
failed
to
meet
the
progress
schedule
which
would
enable
shipment
to
be
made
in
accordance
with
its
undertaking;
he
is
not
aware
either
of
the
fact
that
on
February
22,
1938,
a
receiving
order
in
bankruptcy
was
made
against
Lake
Sulphite
Pulp
Company
Limited
and
that
no
further
work
has
been
done
under
the
contract
and
that
no
payments
have
been
made
in
respect
thereof
since
December
5,
1937,
and
that
the
receiver
has
disavowd
the
contract
and
refused
to
perform
the
same;
in
any
event
these
facts
are
foreign
to
the
issue,
illegally
pleaded
and
should
be
expunged
from
the
record;
he
denies
the
other
allegations
of
the
information;
all
payments
pursuant
to
the
alleged
understanding
between
defendant
and
Lake
Sulphite
Pulp
Company
Limited
were
made
as
instalments
of
the
sale
price
and
not
as
rental
or
liquidated
damages;
never
at
any
time
was
it
contemplated
in
the
said
understanding
that
any
certain
progress
would
be
made
from
time
to
time.
The
contract,
in
the
form
of
a
proposal
by
the
defendant
to
Lake
Sulphite
Pulp
Company
Limited
and
an
acceptance
by
the
latter,
the
first
dated
June
5,
1937,
and
the
second,
August
3,
1937,
was
filed
as
exhibit
P
1.
The
proposal
made
by
the
defendant,
addressed
to
Lake
Sulphite
Pulp
Company
Limited,
Montreal,
contains
at
the
outset
the
following
stipulation:
"‘Dominion
Engineering
Company,
Limited
(hereinafter
called
the
Company),
proposes
to
furnish
apparatus
as
follows,
at
the
price,
on
the
terms
and
under
the
conditions
specified
herein;
it
being
agreed
that
wherever
the
word
‘apparatus’
appears
herein,
it
shall
be
understood
(wherever
the
context
so
permits)
to
comprise
any
and
all
of
the
goods;
wares
and
merchandise
which
may
be
made
the
subject
matter
of
the
proposed
contract
:—
Description
of
apparatus
One
(1)
Dominion
Pulp
Drying
Machine
with
Minton
Vacuum
Dryer,
having
a
wire
width
of
168",
in
accordance
with
the
attached
specifications,
but
not
including
stock,
white
water
or
vacuum
pumps,
condenser
equipment,
screens,
wires,
deckles,
felts,
ropes
or
other
clothing
or
any
electrical
equipment,
unless
specifically
stated
to
be
included.”
The
contract
provides
that
all
plans
and
specifications
thereto
shall
form
part
thereof.
There
is
no
plan
attached
to
the
contract
but
there
is
a
specification,
which
has
no
bearing
on
the
question
at
issue.
The
contract
provides
that
all
plans
and
specifications
thereto
ed
at
the
expense
of
the
purchaser,
unless
otherwise
agreed.
It
goes
on
to
say
that
the
services
of
engineers,
millwrights
or
mechanics
furnished
by
the
company
to
superintend
the
erection
or
operation
of
the
apparatus
shall
be
reimbursed
to
the
company
by
the
purchaser
monthly,
independently
of
the
contract
account,
at
the
company’s
regular
rates
at
the
time
the
work
is
done.
It
adds
that
all
labour
and
material
required
in
connection
with
these
services
will
be
furnished
by
the
purchaser.
Skipping
over
certain
articles
which,
to
my
mind,
have
no
materiality
herein,
I
deem
it
apposite
to
reproduce
verbatim
the
clause
dealing
with
the
payments
and
the
right
of
property
in
the
apparatus
in
question;
it
reads
thus:
"The
property
and
right
of
possession
in
the
apparatus
and
the
right
to
use
the
same
under
any
and
all
patents
relating
to
any
of
the
apparatus
herein
specified
shall
not
pass
from
the
Company
until
all
payments
hereunder
(including
deferred
payments
and
payments
of
notes
and
renewals
thereof,
if
any),
shall
have
been
fully
made
in
cash,
and
the
apparatus
herein
specified
shall
remain
the
personal
property
of
the
Company,
whatever
may
be
the
mode
of
its
attachment
to
the
realty
or
other
property,
until
fully
paid
for
in
cash,
and
the
Purchaser
agrees
to
perform
all
acts
which
may
be
necessary
to
perfect
and
assure
retention
of
title
to
the
said
apparatus
in
the
Company.
If
default
is
made
in
any
of
the
payments
in
the
manner
and
form
and
at
the
times
herein
specified
the
Company
may
retain
any
and
all
partial
payments,
which
have
been
made,
as
liquidated
damages
and
as
rental
for
the
use
of
such
apparatus,
and
the
Company
shall
be
entitled
to
the
immediate
possession,
of
said
apparatus
and
shall
be
free
to
enter
the
premises
where
such
apparatus
may
be
located
and
remove
the
same
as
its
property,
without
prejudice
for
recovery
of
any
further
damages
which
the
Company
may
suffer
from
any
cause
.
.
.
The
next
clause
in
the
contract
offering
some
interest
in
the
present
case
is
the
one
concerning
the
price;
it
is
worded
as
follows
:
"The
price
of
said
apparatus
is
Item
No.
1:
For
the
machine
complete
as
specified—Four
HUNDRED
AND
SEVENTY-THREE
THOUSAND,
NINE
HUNDRED
and
Twenty
Dollars
($473,920.00).
Item
No.
2:
For
spare
parts
as
listed
in
Page
No.
3-A—Fourteen
Thousand,
FOUR
HUNDRED
and
FIFTEEN
Dollars
($14,415.00).
The
above
prices
are
F.O.B.
the
Company’s
Works
with
freight
allowed
to
Nipigon,
Ontario,
and
including
Dominion
Government
Sales
Tax
of
8%.’’
I
do
not
think
that
it
is
necessary,
nay
even
advantageous,
to
quote
the
list
of
spare
parts
referred
to
in
item
No.
2.
The
following
clause
which
has
some
importance
is
the
one
fixing
the
terms
of
payment,
which
states:
"‘The
terms
of
payment
are
as
follows:—
Nine
(9)
monthly
progress
payments
of
FORTY-EIGHT
Thousand,
Eight
Hundred
DOLLARS
($48,800.00)
each,
commencing
July
5th,
1937,
and
continuing
on
the
fifth
of
each
month
thereafter
until
a
total
of
Four
HUNDRED
AND
THIRTY-NINE
Thousand,
Two
Hundred
Dollars
($439,200.00)
has
been
paid.
Final
payment
to
be
made
after
the
machine
is
placed
in
operation
but
in
no
event
later
than
six
months
from
the
date
of
final
shipment
or
offer
of
shipment
of
the
apparatus
from
the
Company’s
Works.’’
The
contract
then
provides
that
all
payments
shall
be
made
in
funds
at
par
Montreal
and
that,
in
case
partial
shipments
are
made,
pro
rata
payments
shall
be
made
therefor
and
it
adds
:
"If
the
manufacture
or
shipment
of
the
apparatus
herein
specified,
or
any
material
part
thereof,
is
delayed
from
any
cause
for
which
the
Purchaser
is
directly
or
indirectly
accountable,
the
date
of
completion
of
the
apparatus
shall
be
regarded
as
the
date
of
shipment
in
determining
when
payments
for
said
apparatus
are
to
be
made,
and
the
Company
shall
be
entitled
to
receive
reasonable
compensation
for
storing
the
completed
apparatus,
which
shall
be
held
at
Purchaser’s
risk.
The
Purchaser
shall
reimburse
the
Company
for
any
extra
cost
or
expense
incurred
in
the
manufacture,
delivery
or
installation
of
apparatus
due
to
such
delay.’’
Regarding
the
shipment
the
contract
stipulates
as
follows:
‘‘The
apparatus
specified
above
will
be
shipped
as
follows
:—
Final
shipment
on
or
before
March
5th,
1938.”
As
appears
from
the
information
the
claim
is
for
$10,844.46
representing
three
monthly
instalments
of
$3,614.82
each
which
allegedly
fell
due
on
January
5,
February
5
and
March
5,
1938,
on
account
of
sales
tax
in
connection
with
the
price
of
a
Dominion
pulp
drying
machine
and
spare
parts,
totalling
$488,335.,
payable
in
nine
monthly
progress
payments
of
$48,800.
commencing
July
5,
1937,
and
continuing
on
the
fifth
of
each
month
thereafter
until
a
total
of
$439,200.
has
been
paid
and
a
final
payment
of
$49,135.
to
be
made
after
the
machine
is
placed
in
operation,
but
in
no
event
later
than
six
months
from
the
date
of
final
shipment
or
offer
of
shipment
of
the
machine
from
the
defendant’s
factory.
The
evidence
discloses
that
the
work
on
the
construction
of
the
machine
started
at
the
defendant’s
plant
on
June
15,
1937,
and
that
it
stopped
on
February
11,
1938:
see
deposition
J.
Stanley
Houston,
Treasurer
of
the
defendant
company,
on
discovery,
pp.
3
and
11,
and
the
supplementary
answers
under
his
signature
filed
according
to
an
agreement
between
counsel
as
exhibit
P
2.
Notman,
manager
of
manufacturing
for
the
defendant
company,
said
that
the
"job
was
taken
on
June
5th,
1937"’.
He
added
that
the
first
two
months
would
be
used
in
preparing
the
drawings
and
patterns,
making
the
castings
and
getting
material
into
the
shop
(dep.,
p.
28).
Notman
also
stated
that
the
work
stopped
on
February
11,
1938
(dep.,
p.
32).
As
stipulated
in
the
contract,
the
machine
was
to
be
delivered
on
or
before
March
5,
1938.
When
the
work
was
stopped
on
February
11,
1938,
the
job
was
62.51%
complete,
equivalent
to
a
contractual
value
of
$277,500.
(dep.
Notman,
pp.
40
and
53).
The
defendant
company
was
at
that
time
entitled
to
$277,500.
but
had
received
$292,800
this
sum
is
made
up
as
follows
(see
exhibit
P
2)
:
1937
|
|
August
27
|
$97,600.
|
September
30
|
48,800.
|
October
7
|
48,800.
|
November
13
|
48,800.
|
1938
|
|
January
11
|
48,800.
|
The
defendant
company
had
accordingly
been
overpaid
$15,300.
(dep.
Notman,
p.
16),
The
proof
shows
that
the
defendant
company
paid
to
plaintiff
the
sales
tax
as
follows
(see
dep.
Houston
on
discovery,
pp.
4
and
7
and
exhibit
P
2)
:
on
the
instalments
of
July
and
Aug.
1937
on
September
30,
1937
""
©
instalment
of
September
1937
|
on
October
30,
1937
|
‘6
|
66
|
lt
October
1937
|
on
November
30,
1937
|
|
66
|
‘
November
1937
|
on
December
31,
1937
|
|
lt
December
1937
|
on
January
31,
1938.
|
The
instalments
maturing
on
January
5,
February
5
and
March
5,
1938,
were
not
paid;
nor
was
the
final
one
which
was
stipulated
payable
after
the
machine
was
placed
in
operation,
but
in
no
event
later
than
six
months
from
the
date
of
the
final
shipment
or
offer
of
shipment
of
the
machine
from
the
defendant
company’s
works.
The
sales
tax
on
these
instalments,
which
the
defendant
company
did
not
receive,
was
not
paid
by
the
latter
to
plaintiff,
as
already
stated,
the
plaintiff
is
claiming
the
sales
tax
on
the
first
three
of
these
instalments.
The
evidence
reveals
that
only
the
sole-plates,
described
by
Houston
as
"‘little
pieces
of
steel
that
you
stick
on
the
ground
‘‘
and
estimated
by
him
at
about
$1,200.
(dep.
on
discovery,
pp.
20,
in
fine,
and
21)
had
been
shipped
by
the
defendant
to
Lake
Sulphite
Pulp
Company
Limited,
the
shipment
being
made
on
January
17,
1938,
as
set
forth
on
exhibit
P
2.
The
machine
itself
or
at
least
the
part
thereof
which
had
been
made
was
not
delivered;
at
the
time
of
the
trial
it
was
still
in
the
defendant
company’s
yard
(dep.
Houston
on
discovery,
pp.
10
and
12).
The
defendant
company
got
behind
in
its
work,
principally
due
to
two
contracts
taken
prior
to
the
one
with
which
we
are
concerned.
Notman,
knowing
that
he
would
be
asked
to
explain
the
delay,
prepared
a
graph
which
he
filed
as
exhibit
D
1.
This
graph
indicates
the
estimated
number
of
machine
shop
hours
which
should
have
been
put
on
the
building
of
the
pulp
drying
machine
in
order
to
fulfil
the
contract
within
the
delay
therein
stipulated
and
the
number
of
hours
which
had
actually
been
spent
on
that
work:
the
first,
indicated
by
a
blue
line,
from
the
6th
August,
1937,
date
on
which
the
construction
of
the
machine
ought
to
have
been
commenced,
to
the
5th
of
March,
1938,
date
on
which
the
final
shipment
was
to
have
been
made;
the
second,
indicated
by
a
red
line,
from
the
24th
of
September,
1937,
date
on
which
the
construction
work
proper
was
begun,
to
the
11th
of
February,
1938,
date
on
which
the
work
ceased.
Asked
when
he
had
prepared
this
graph
Notman
replied
(p.
34)
:
"‘About
six
weeks
ago,
from
records
which
were
presented
to
me
by
our
accounting
department,
as
the
work
progressed
on
this
particular
job.”
He
said
that
he
saw
the
work
which
was
being
done
under
the
contract
every
day
and
that
the
records
of
what
was
actually
put
into
the
work
were
brought
to
him
in
the
usual
course
of
business,
he
prepared
the
graph
from
the
information
gathered
from
his
own
supervision
of
the
work
and
from
the
records
aforesaid
(ibid.,
p.
35).
Objection
was
taken
to
the
production
of
this
graph
on
the
ground
that
Notman
had
not
made
it
from
direct
information.
I
am
satisfied
that
the
witness
had
a
personal
knowledge
of
the
facts
about
which
he
testified.
Reverting
to
the
reasons
of
the
delay
incurred
in
the
construction
of
the
pulp
drying
machine
for
Lake
Sulphite
Pulp
Company,
Limited,
it
may
be
opposite
to
quote
an
extract
from
Notman’s
testimony
(p.
30)
:
“In
other
words,
why
were
you
behind
with
this
work?
A.
For
various
reasons,
the
two
principal
ones
being
that
we
had
taken
two
major
contracts
at
the
same
time;
one
for
the
Steel
Company
of
Canada,—a
blooming.
mill,—and
another
large
contract
for
the
Ontario
Paper,
for
two
newspring
machines
for
Comeau
Bay.
Q.
Were
those
contracts
taken
prior
in
time
to
this
contract
Exhibit
P-1?
A.
Yes,
both
contracts
were
taken
prior
to
this
one.
The
Ontario
Paper
was
taken
on
May
18th,
1936,
and
promised
for
shipment
on
October
1st,
1937.
Actually,
shipment
was
not
made
until
early
December
or
about
two
a
half
months
late.
BY
MR.
OUIMET:
Q.
What
were
the
actual
dates
of
shipment?
A.
Early
December,
in
the
ease
of
the
Ontario
Paper.
In
the
case
of
the
Steel
Company
of
Canada,
the
blooming
mill,
the
order
was
taken
on
March
2,
1937,
and
called
for
shipment
between
November
1st
and
December
1st,
1937.
Final
shipment
of
this
order
was
not
made
until
early
in
May,
or
five
months
late.’’
And
further
(p.
37)
:
"BY
THE
COURT:
Q.
To
sum
up
the
situation,
you
undertook
too
much,
your
company
did?
A.
Well,
apparently
so.
I
may
also
say
that
machine
tools
that
we
had
ordered
were
not
delivered
on
time.
One
of
them
was,
in
fact,
fourteen
months
late,
and
the
fact
that
we
ran
into
difficulties
and
delays,
first
of
all,
in
getting
the
necessary
materials,
brought
about
the
result
that
the
blooming
mill
came
in
in
November
five
months
late,
and
we
did
not
have
the
available
machine
tools
to
do
this
job,
and
we
were
just
getting
into
the
swing
of
it
when
the
contract
was
cancelled.
BY
MR.
OUIMET:
Q.
When
which
contract
was
cancelled?
A.
Not
cancelled,—I
mean,
when
the
Lake
Sulphite
job
was
held
up.”
Considering
the
condition
of
the
work
done
under
the
contract
on
the
5th
of
January,
as
indicated
by
the
red
curve
on
the
graph
(exhibit
D
1),
which
in
his
estimate
was
equal
to
48.61%
of
the
total,
Notman
said
it
was
a
physical
impossibility
to
ship
the
machine
on
the
5th
of
March.
Even
working
at
full
capacity
there
would
be
a
delay
of
two
months.
A
brief
quotation
from
his
deposition
seems
expedient
(p.
38)
:
"‘We
started
off
on
that
job
with
a
very
few
hours
per
week,
and
gradually
accelerated
until
we
got
to
the
maximum
number
of
hours
per
week,
which
is
a
relative
matter.
In
this
particular
case
two
to
three
thousand
hours
a
week
is
the
maximum
and
on
February
4th,
we
still
had
a
balance
of
21,000
hours
from
52,338
hours,
or
about
32,000
hours
still
to
be
put
in,
in
four
weeks.
We
could
not
possibly
put
in
the
necessary
number
of
hours
per
week.
We
could
not
make
shipments
by
March
5th,
regardless
of
whether
we
wanted
to
or
not.
It
was
a
physical
impossibility.
We
all
knew
we
were
going
to
be
late.
By
MR.
FORSYTH,
K.C.:
Q.
Now,
how
late
were
you
going
to
be,
utilizing
your
facilities
at
a
maximum?
A.
At
a
maximum,
we
were
going
to
be
two
months
late.
Notman
stated
that
a
percentage
of
48.61%
of
the
work
done
on
the
5th
of
January
represented
a
value
of
$213,500.
He
added
that
if
the
payment
of
$48,800.
made
on
the
11th
of
January
had
been
made
on
the
5th
in
accordance
with
the
terms
of
the
contract,
the
defendant
company
would
have
been
overpaid
a
sum
of
$79,300.
Notman
said
that
on
the
11th
of
February,
which
was
the
last
day
on
which
any
work
was
done,
the
physical
percentage
of
completion
of
the
contract
amounted
to
62.51%
The
defendant
company,
according
to
the
witness’
calculation
which
seems
to
me
accurate,
would
have
been
entitled
on
that
date
to
have
received
$277,500.
on
account
when
in
fact
it
had
received
over
$292,000.
The
defendant
company
had
then
been
overpaid
$15,300.
(dep.
Notman,
p.
40).
John
Stadler,
pulp
and
paper
engineer
of
thirty-nine
years
experience
in
Canada
and
vice-president
of
Lake
Sulphite
Pulp
Company
Limited,
testified
that
he
was
familiar
with
the
contract
as
he
had
drawn
the
specifications
and
had
taken
cognizance
of
and
approved
the
contract.
He
said
he
had
occasion
from
time
to
time
to
inspect
the
work
as
it
was
going
on
at
the
defendant’s
shop
and
to
consider
what
progress
was
being
made.
He
noticed
that
‘‘the
work
was
away
behind’’
(pp.
60
and
61).
Asked
if
he
had
taken
steps
about
payments
when
he
had
become
aware
of
the
delay,
Stadler
replied
in
the
affirmative
and
supplemented
his
answer
as
follows
(p.
61)
:
“A.
I
advised
Lake
Sulphite
secretary’s
department,
as
early
as
November
22nd,
that
no
further
payment
ought
to
be
made
to
Dominion
Engineering
on
some
other
supplies
they
were
behind
until
they
were
approved
by
me.
Q.
I
would
take
it,
Mr.
Stadler,
that
you
approved
the
payment
made
on
the
11th
of
January
to
Dominion
Engineering?
A.
I
regret
to
say,
I
did
not
approve
it.
Q.
But
it
was
made,
in
any
event?
A.
It
was
made,
yes.”
And
further
(p.
62)
:
"‘As
an
engineer,
did
you
take
any
steps
with
respect
to
payments
after
the
11th
of
January?
A.
No,
there
was
no
payment
approved.
As
an
engineer
I
approved
no
payment
after
November
22nd.
Q.
Could
you,
as
an
engineer,
have
approved
any
payment
after
that?
A.
No,
I
could
not.”
The
witness
added
that
he
could
not,
"because
the
progress
was
not
sufficient
to
justify
additional
payments’’
(ibid.).
Stadler
stated
that,
after
the
payments
had
been
stopped,
he
received
a
telephone
from
Houston,
the
treasurer
of
the
defendant
company,
asking
him
to
explain
why
he
had
refused
to
authorize
the
payments
and
that
on
March
7,
1939,
he
wrote
him
the
letter
filed
as
exhibit
D
2.
I
may
note
that
counsel
for
plaintiff
objected
to
the
production
of
this
letter
and
that
I
reserved
the
objection.
After
considering
the
matter
I
see
no
reason
why
the
filing
of
this
letter
should
be
disallowed.
By
itself
it
might
not
have
much
weight
and
might
perhaps
be
considered
as
un
afterthought;
but
there
is
evidence
in
the
record
that
the
execution
of
the
contract
was
not
progressing
satisfactorily
and
the
letter
in
question
constitutes
a
mere
confirmation
of
the
statements
made
by
the
witnesses.
The
letter
reads
thus:
“In
reference
to
telephone
conversation
regarding
the
above,
I
wish
to
confirm
my
statement
to
the
effect
that
the
reason
we
did
not
authorize
progress
payments
on
the
Pulp
Forming
and
Drying
Machine
contract
for
the
above
client,
after
December
1937,
is
due
to
the
fact
that
the
progress
made
on
this
work
was
considerably
behind
schedule.
In
fact,
it
would
appear,
after
a
careful
review
of
the
whole
situation,
that
Lake
Sulphite
Company
has
overpaid
you.
‘
‘
Referring
to
the
letter
exhibit
D
2,
counsel
for
the
defendant
asked
Stadler
from
what
he
had
drawn
the
conclusion
that
Lake
Sulphite
Pulp
Company
Limited
had
overpaid
Dominion
Engineering
Company
Limited
;
the
witness
replied
that
this
conclusion
was
drawn
from
the
records
in
his
office
concerning
the
progress
of
the
work
actually
completed.
After
some
remarks
which
are
not
material,
he
concluded
his
answer
as
follows
(p.
66)
:
“Q.
Certainly
you
did
have
the
advantage
of
seeing
the
machine
and
the
progress
that
had
been
made
on
it?
A.
Yes,
and
on
account
of
the
progress
not
being
up
to
date,
being
away
behind,—we
always
expect
machine
builders
to
fall
a
little
bit
behind,
but
in
this
case
they
fell
a
little
bit
behind
more
than
usual,—therefore,
on
the
22nd
of
November
I
instructed
Lake
Sulphite
to
make
no
further
payment.
Subse
quently,
a
payment
was
made,
which
I
told
you
I
did
not
authorize.
Q.
And
in
view
of
the
fact
a
payment
was
made
afterwards,
which
you
did
not
authorize,
did
that
cause
you
to
conclude
they
were
overpaid?
A.
Yes."
In
cross-examination
Stadler,
asked
if
the
order
given
on
November
22nd
that
his
company
should
not
pay
Dominion
Engineering
Company
Limited
referred
to
the
December
payment,
replied
that
his
order
was
that
no
further
payments
should
be
made
until
he
approved
them.
Stadler
said
that
he
became
president
of
Lake
Sulphite
Pulp
Company
Limited
on
December
28
or
29,
1937,
and
that,
when
the
December
payment
was
made
on
January
11,
1938,
he
was
president
(p.
68).
Asked
if
he
was
aware
that
this
payment
had
been
made,
Stadler
replied
that
it
was
conditional
on
a
subscription
by
Dominion
Engineering
Company
Limited
to
1-year
notes
issued
by
Lake
Sulphite
Pulp
Company
Limited.
According
to
him
the
payment
of
$48,800.
on
January
11,
1938,
was
made
conditionally
on
the
Dominion
Engineering
Company
Limited
buying
some
of
these
notes
(pp.
68
and
69).
Another
fact
which
in
itself
may
not
have
much
importance
but
which
elucidates
definitely
why
the
construction
of
the
pulp
drying
machine
was
not
completed
is
that,
in
the
early
part
of
1938,
Lake
Sulphite
Pulp
Company
Limited
was
in
financial
difficulties
and
that
a
winding
up
order
was
made
against
it.
A
claim
sworn
to
by
Houston
as
treasurer
of
the
defendant
company
was
filed
with
the
liquidators;
it
was
produced
as
exhibit
P
4.
A
statement
from
the
defendant
company
to
G.
S.
Currie,
receiver
for
Lake
Sulphite
Pulp
Co.
Ltd.,
showing
a
balance
of
$197,197.80
due
on
the
pulp
drying
machine
and
spare
parts
at
the
time
of
receivership,
was
filed
as
exhibit
P
3.
It
was
agreed
at
trial
that
this
statement
was
to
be
supplemented
by
a
letter
from
Mr.
Hansard,
of
defendant’s
counsel,
to
Mr.
Ouimet,
counsel
for
plaintiff,
and
annexed
to
the
statement.
The
production
of
this
letter
was
overlooked
by
counsel
and
a
copy
thereof
was
filed
on
the
1st
instant
at
my
request.
Asked
if
he
had
told
the
defendant
company
that
Lake
Sulphite
Pulp
Company
Limited
would
go
into
receivership,
Stadler
said
that
it
would
have
been
imprudent
to
give
this
information
and
that
he
had
no
duty
to
do
it,
especially
since
Dominion
Engineering
Company
Limited
had
been
overpaid.
Stadler
said
he
knew
that
the
defendant
company
had
been
overpaid
before
November,
1937.
Explaining
the
reason
of
the
overpayment,
Stadler
made
the
following
statements
(p.
74)
:
‘€
À.
I
would
say
yes,
they
were
overpaid;
but
there
is
a
certain
thing
in
engineering,
if
you
are
in
a
hurry
for
a
thing,
the
first
thing
that
happens,
if
you
stop
payment,
is
that
the
manufacturer
uses
it
as
an
excuse
to
delay
the
manufacturing.
That
is
the
reason
why
we
allow
a
certain
amount
of
overpayment,
provided
we
can
see
the
company
is
a
responsible
company,
which
I
think
Dominion
Engineering
is.’’
With
reference
to
the
letter
exhibit
D
2,
Stadler
stated
that
Houston
had
asked
him
to
expose
to
him
the
facts
as
he
had
them
on
his
records;
he
added
that
he
would
not
have
written
if
he
had
not
been
asked
to
do
it,
as,
in
his
opinion,
there
was
no
need
for
it
(p.
75).
Hubert
Gray
Welsford,
managing
director
of
Dominion
Engineering
Company
Limited,
declared
that
the
first
intimation
which
his
company
had
that
Lake
Sulphite
Pulp
Company
Limited
had
financial
difficulties
was
towards
the
end
of
December
1937
when
the
witness
Stadler
and
a
Mr.
Hanson
came
to
see
him
and
Mr.
Angus
(p.
82).
Welsford
added
that
Stadler
and
Hanson
told
them
that
their
company
had
some
difficulty
in
arranging
the
sale
of
its
bond
issue
through
the
bank,
that
it
required
additional
funds
to
complete
the
construction
and
that
it
proposed
to
sell
$1,250,000.
of
notes
and
that
Stadler
and
Hanson
then
asked
them
to
subscribe
to
these
notes.
Welsford
stated
that
both
he
and
Angus
undertook
to
subscribe
$50,000.
of
these
notes
through
the
Dominion
Bridge
Company
and
in
combination
with
it.
According
to
him
each
company
was
to
take
half,
namley
$25,000.
(pp.
82
and
83).
Asked
what
condition
he
and
Angus
had
imposed
upon
the
company’s
subscription,
Welsford
replied
(p.
83):
"‘A.
Well,
we
naturally
did
not
feel*inclined
to
spend
our
money
in
carrying
on
the
work
to
complete
the
machine
unless
we
were
assured
the
payments
were
going
to
be
met,
and
as
the
December
payment
had
not
been
made,
we
stipulated
the
payment
to
have
been
made
on
the
5th
of
December
would
have
to
be
made,
and
that
payment,
I
understand,
was
made
on
the
11th
of
January
or
thereabouts.
Q.
When
you
made
that
stipulation,
were
you
aware
that
your
work
was
in
arrears?
A.
Yes,
I
was
aware
of
that.”
Welsford
said
that
when
his
company
subscribed
to
notes
of
Lake
Sulphite
Pulp
Company
Limited,
it
had
no.
intimation
that
the
latter
was
on
the
verge
of
liquidation.
Indeed
his
company
would
hardly
be
likely
to
take
$50,000.
of
these
notes
if
it
had
any
idea
that
Lake
Sulphite
Pulp
Company
Limited
was
going
to
fail
(p.
88).
Welsford
declared
that
he
first
became
aware
of
the
insolvency
of
Lake
Sulphite
Pulp
Company
Limited
early
in
February,
shortly
before
his
company
stopped
work
on
the
construction
of
the
pulp
drying
machine.
Welsford
said
that
Stadler
telephoned
and
told
him
that
certain
things
had
come
to
his
knowledge
with
regard
to
the
financial
affairs
of
the
company
of
which
he
was
not
aware
at
the
time
he
had
asked
him
to
subscribe
to
the
notes.
The
witness
added
that
Stadler
intimated
to
him
at
the
time
that
Lake
Sulphite
Pulp
Company
Limited
would
not
be
able
to
meet
its
payments
on
the
contract
until
some
further
arrangements
had
been
made;
and
it
was
on
the
strength
of
this
information
that
the
defendant
company
stopped
work
on
the
contract,
because
payments
were
then
owing.
Called
as
witness
in
rebuttal,
Frederick
A.
Dean,
of
the
firm
of
McDonald,
Currie
and
Company,
accountants,
testified
that
G.
S.
Currie,
on
of
the
senior
partners,
was
appointed
receiver
to
Lake
Sulphite
Pulp
Company
Limited
in
liquidation.
Dean
was
asked
if
he
had
taken
communication
of
the
records
of
Lake
Sulphite
Pulp
Company
Limited
and
if
he
had
found
a
claim
filed
by
Dominion
Engineering
Company
Limited.
Counsel
for
defendant
objected
to
the
question
as
not
being
rebuttal
;
the
objection
was,
in
my
view,
well
founded
and
so
held.
Counsel
for
plaintiff
thereupon
made
an
application
to
re-open
his
case,
which
was
granted
with
the
understanding
that
counsel
for
the
defendant
would
be
allowed,
if
desired,
to
contradict
the
new
evidence
adduced.
Dean
filed
a
claim
sworn
to
by
J.
S.
Houston
as
treasurer
of
Dominion
Engineering
Company
Limited,
dated
April
6,
1938,
which
was
marked
as
exhibit
P
4.
In
cross-examination
Dean
said
that
the
claim
in
question
had
been
sent
to
the
provisional
liquidator,
Donald
McK.
McClelland,
of
the
firm
of
Price,
Waterhouse
and
Company,
and
had
been
transmitted
by
the
latter
to
McDonald,
Currie
and
Company.
Dean
could
not
say
whether
Dominion
Engineering
Company
Limited
had
taken
part
in
meetings
of
creditors
and
registered
a
vote
regarding
the
sale
of
the
assets;
he
was
almost
certain
however
that
the
company
had
not
voted.
Also
called
by
the
plaintiff
in
rebuttal,
J.
S.
Houston
filed
as
exhibit
P
5
a
letter
written
by
Dominion
Engineering
Company
Limited
under
his
signature
as
treasurer
of
the
company,
dated
April
6,
1938,
to
Donald
MeK.
McClelland,
c/o
Price,
Waterhouse
and
Company,
giving
particulars
of
the
company’s
claim
against
Lake
Sulphite
Pulp
Company
Limited
and
reading
in
part
as
follows:
"‘We
have
a
contract
with
Lake
Sulphite
for
the
manufacture
of
a
Pulp
Drying
Machine
equipped
with
a
Minton
Vacuum
Dryer,
for
a
price
of
$489,997.80
which
includes
extras,
sales
tax
and
freight.
Against
this
we
have
received
payments
on
account
amounting
to
$292,800.00,
the
balance
remaining
being
$197,197.80.
No
cancellation
having
taken
place
we
submit
as
our
claim
the
unpaid
balance
of
the
contract.
If
you
wish
us
to
formulate
our
claim
on
the
basis
of
cancellation
this
will
require
some
time
because
the
question
of
damages
arises.
For
your
information
the
work
under
the
contract
is
approximately
75%
complete.”
Asked
if
the
statement
contained
in
this
letter
that
"'the
contract
is
approximately
75%
complete’’
was
based
upon
investigation
that
he
had
made,
Houston
replied
in
the
negative.
He
added
that
he
since
had
an
opportunity
to
check
the
figures
with
Notman
and
to
verify
that
the
figures
stated
by
the
latter
in
his
testimony,
viz.
62.15%,
were
correct.
In
brief
the
evidence
discloses
the
following
material
facts:
Dominion
Engineering
Company
Limited
started
to
work
on
the
pulp
drying
machine
provided
for
in
the
contract
on
June
15,
1937,
and
the
work
ceased
on
February
11,
1938
;
Dominion
Engineering
Company
Limited
got
behind
in
its
work
mostly
due
to
the
fact
that
it
had
undertaken
more
than
it
could
perform
within
the
time
agreed
upon;
Lake
Sulphite
Pulp
Company
Limited
made
the
monthly
progress
payments
on
the
machine
purchased
from
Dominion
Engineering
Company
Limited
falling
due
on
the
5th
day
of
July,
August,
September,
October,
November
and
December,
1937,
on
the
following
dates,
viz.
the
first
two
on
August
27,
1937,
and
the
others
on
September
30,
October
7,
November
13,
1937,
and
January
11,
1938
;
in
view
of
the
delay
in
the
execution
of
the
contract
by
Dominion
Engineering
Company
Limited,
Lake
Sulphite
Pulp
Company
Limited
decided
not
to
make
any
further
payments
after
the
one
made
on
January
11,
1938,
which,
under
the
contract,
fell
due
on
December
5,
1937
;
when
the
work
was
stopped
on
the
building
of
the
machine
hy
Dominion
Engineering
Company
Limited
on
February
11,
1938,
Lake
Sulphite
Pulp
Company
Limited
had
overpaid
a
sum
of
$15,300.
;
Lake
Sulphite
Pulp
Company
Limited
was
in
financial
difficulties
towards
the
end
of
December
1937
and
it
went
into
liquidation
at
a
time
which
has
not
been
plainly
specified,
but
on
or
about
February
22,
1938;
a
provisional
liquidator
was
said
by
counsel
to
have
been
appointed
on
February
5
;
Dominion
Engineering
Company
Limited
paid
the
sales
tax
on
the
progress
payments
received
from
Lake
Sulphite
Pulp
Company
Limited
on
or
about
the
last
day
of
the
month
following
the
receipt
thereof,
to
wit
September
30,
October
30,
November
30
and
December
31,
1937,
and
January
31,
1938
;
Dominion
Engineering
Company
Limited
did
not
pay
any
sales
tax
on
the
sum
of
$15,300.
overpaid
by
Lake
Sulphite
Pulp
Company
Limited.
Notwithstanding
the
fact
that
the
defendant
received
only
$15,300.
on
the
progress
payment
falling
due
on
January
5,
1938,
and
did
not
receive
the
progress
payments
falling
due
on
February
5
and
March
5,
1938,
the
plaintiff
contends
that
he
is
entitled
to
the
sales
tax
on
the
full
amount
thereof.
The
plaintiff
bases
his
claim
on
section
86
of
the
Special
War
Revenue
Act
(R.S.C.,
1927,
chap.
179,
and
amendments),
the
relevant
provisions
whereof
reading
thus
:
"86.
1.
There
shall
be
imposed,
levied
and
collected
a
consumption
or
sales
tax
of
eight
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
delivery
of
such
goods
to
the
purchaser
thereof.
Provided
that
in
the
case
of
any
contract
for
the
sale
of
goods
wherein
it
is
provided
that
the
sale
price
shall
be
paid
to
the
manufacturer
or
producer
by
instalments
as
the
work
progresses,
or
under
any
form
of
conditional
sales
agreement,
contract
of
hire-purchase
or
any
form
of
contract
whereby
the
property
in
the
goods
sold
does
not
pass
to
the
purchaser
thereof
until
a
future
date,
notwithstanding
partial
payment
by
instalments,
the
said
tax
shall
be
payable
pro
tanto
at
the
time
each
of
such
instalments
falls
due
and
becomes
payable
in
accordance
with
the
terms
of
the
contract,
and
all
such
transactions
shall,
for
the
purposes
of
this
section,
be
regarded
as
sales
and
deliveries.
Provided
further
that
in
any
case
where
there
is
no
physical
delivery
of
the
goods
by
the
manufacturer
or
producer,
the
said
tax
shall
be
payable
when
the
property
in
the
said
goods
passes
to
the
purchaser
thereof.’’
As
plaintiff
claims
in
addition
to
the
sales
tax
the
penalties
provided
for
by
section
106
of
the
Act,
it
seems
convenient
to
reproduce
here
the
relevant
part
of
this
section
:
•
4
106.
1.
Every
person
liable
for
taxes
under
Parts
XI,
XII
and
XIII
of
this
Act
and
every
manufacturer
or
producer
licensed
under
section
ninety-five
thereof,
.
.
.
.
shall
file
each
month
a
true
return
of
his
taxable
sales
for
the
last
preceding
month
in
accordance
with
regulations
made
by
the
Minister
.
.
.
.
2.
If
no
taxable
sales
have
been
made
during
the
last
preceding
month,
a
return
verified
as
hereinbefore
provided,
shall
be
filed,
stating
that
no
such
taxable
sales
have
been
made.
3.
The
penalty
for
failure
to
file
the
return
required
by
subsections
one
and
two
of
this
section,
within
the
time
required
by
subsection
four
hereof,
shall
be
a
sum
not
less
than
ten
dollars
and
not
exceeding
one
hundred
dollars.
4.
The
said
return
shall
be
filed
and
the
tax
paid
not
later
than
the
last
day
of
the
first
month
succeeding
that
in
which
the
sales
were
made.
5.
In
default
of
payment
of
the
said
tax
or
any
portion
thereof
within
the
time
prescribed
by
this
Act
or
by
regulations
established
thereunder,
there
shall
be
paid
in
addition
to
the
amount
in
default,
a
penalty
of
two-thirds
of
one
per
centum
of
the
amount
in
default,
in
respect
of
each
month
or
fraction
thereof,
during
which
such
default
continues.
‘
‘
Section
95
to
which
section
106
refers
contains,
among
others,
the
following
provisio
:
<4
95.
1.
Every
manufacturer
or
producer
shall
take
out
an
annual
licence,
for
the
purpose
of
this
Part,
and
the
Minister
may
prescribe
a
fee
therefor,
not
exceeding
two
dollars.’’
It
is
agreed
that
defendant
at
all
times
material
held
a
licence.
The
Dominion
Pulp
Drying
Machine
which
forms
the
object
of
the
contract
is
either
divisible
or
indivisible.
If
it
is
indivisible,
the
plaintiff
has
no
claim
against
the
defendant
since
the
machine
was
not
delivered,
with
the
exception
of
the
soleplates
worth
about
$1,200.,
an
infinitesimal
proportion
of
the
whole,
when
one
considers
that
the
price
of
the
machine
complete
is
$488,335.
The
tax
indeed
is
payable
by
the
producer
or
manufacturer
of
the
goods
at
the
time
of
the
delivery
thereof
to
the
purchaser:
Sec.
86,
1(a).
If,
on
the
contrary,
the
machine
must
be
considered
as
divisible,
the
case
is
governed
by
the
first
proviso
of
section
86,
1(a).
In
this
case
the
tax
is
payable
pro
tanto
at
the
time
each
of
the
instalments
on
the
purchase
price
falls
due
and
becomes
payable
in
accordance
with
the
terms
of
the
contract.
Both
conditions
must
exist
in
order
that
the
tax
be
exigible.
The
sales
tax
payments
which
became
due
in
connection
with
the
instalments
on
the
purchase
price
which
matured
on
July
5,
August,
5,
September
5,
October
5,
November
5,
December
5,
1937,
were
made
on
the
dates
hereinabove
mentioned.
The
instalments
falling
due
under
the
contract
on
January
5,
February
5
and
March
5
were
not
effected.
On
February
11
when
the
work
was
discontinued,
Dominion
Engineering
Company
Limited
had
received
$15,300.
in
excess
of
the
value
of
the
work
it
had
done
and
on
this
sum
it
did
not
pay
any
sales
tax
to
the
plaintiff.
Counsel
for
plaintiff
referred
to,
but
did
not
insist
on,
section
87
in
order
to
show
the
legislators’
intentions
as
regards
contracts
which
may
be
doubtful
of
interpretation.
I
do
not
think
that
section
87
has
any
application
in
the
present
case.
It
was
urged
by
counsel
for
plaintiff
that
the
Special
War
Revenue
Act
being
a
taxing
statute
must
be
construed
as
"giv-
ing
the
broadest
authority
to
the
Crown
to
exact
taxation
as
provided
therein
‘
The
addition
of
the
last
words
of
the
phrase
"‘as
provided
therein’’
restricts,
undoubtedly
intentionally,
in
a
very
material
way,
the
scope
of
the
proposition;
however
I
believe
it
is
apposite
to
note
that
a
taxing
statute
must
be
construed
strictly:
Maxwell
on
the
Interpretation
of
Statutes,
8th
ed.,
250;
Inland
Revenue
Commissioners
v.
Duke
of
Westminster
[1936]
A.C.
1,
24;
Partington
v.
Attorney-General
(1869)
L.R.
4
H.L.
100,
122;
Tennant
v.
Smith,
[1892]
A.C.
150,
154;
Coz
v.
Rabbits
(1877-78),
3
App.
Cas.
473,
478;
Oriental
Bank
Corporation
and
Wright
(1879-80),
5
App.
Cas.
842,
856;
Harris
Co.
Lid.
v.
Rural
Municipality
of
Bjorkdale,
[1929]
2
D.L.R.
507,
512.
I
may
add
incidentally
that
taxation
is
the
rule
and
that
exemption
constitutes
a
privilege
which
must
be
strictly
construed:
Roenisch
v.
Minister
of
National
Revenue,
[1931]
Ex.
C.R.
1,
4
;
Toronto
General
Trusts
Corporation
v.
Corporation
of
City
of
Ottawa,
[1935]
S.C.R.
531,
536.
Counsel
for
plaintiff
submitted
that
the
tax
claimed
herein
is
proportionate
to
the
amounts
payable
in
instalments
‘‘
under
any
form
of
conditional
sales
agreement,
contract
of
hire-purchase
of
any
form,
etc.”
and
that
such
instalments,
under
a
fiction
of
the
law,
become
individual
sales
and
deliveries.
Counsel
thence
contended
that,
under
the
provisions
of
section
86,
1(a),
the
moment
instalments
fell
due,
irrespective
of
the
fact
that
they
had
not
yet
been
obtained
by
the
defendant,
the
tax
on
each
of
these
fictional
sales
and
deliveries
had
to
be
paid
to
the
Crown,
because
the
dates
on
which
these
instalments,
became
due
and
exigible,
as
stipulated
in
the
contract,
constituted
the
extreme
limits
agreed
upon
by
the
parties
thereto.
Counsel
submitted
that
the
parties
to
the
contract
had
qualified
and
determined
the
so-called
progress;
and
that
this
was
the
way
which
they
had
understood
between
themselves
that
the
progress
payments
were
to
be
made.
Counsel
maintained
therefore
that,
as
long
as
instalments
became
due
on
the
dates
mentioned
in
the
contract,
they
constituted
sales
and
deliveries
under
the
provisions
of
section
86,
1(a)
of
the
Act
and
that
the
defendant
had
to
turn
over
to
the
Crown
the
amount
of
the
sales
tax
on
each
of
the
progress
payments
of
$48,800.
specified
in
the
contract,
whether
these
payments
were
made
or
not.
I
must
say
that
I
cannot
agree
with
the
learned
counsel’s
interpretation
of
section
86,
1(a)
of
the
Act
and
cannot
accept
his
proposition
that
the
words
‘‘the
said
tax
shall
be
payable
pro
tanto
at
the
time
each
of
such
instalments
falls
due
and
becomes
payable
in
accordance
with
the
terms
of
the
contract”
are
intended
to
impose
the
tax
on
instalments
which
have
not
been
received.
This,
to
my
mind,
would
be
most
unfair
and
unreasonable.
The
interpretation
given
to
section
86,
1(a)
of
the
Act
by
counsel
for
plaintiff
is
repugnant
to
justice
and
reason
and
I
do
not
think
that
it
should
be
countenanced.
It
would
mean,
assuming
the
worst,
that,
if
the
purchaser
had
paid
in
one
progress
payment
($48,800.)
and
defaulted
on
the
eight
others
totalling
$390,400.,
the
vendor,
having
received
a
payment
of
$48,800.,
could
be
compelled
to
pay
a
sales
tax
of
$35,136.,
i.e.
8%
on
a
sum
of
$439,200.,
to
wit
nine
payments
of
$48,800.
each.
I
am
unable
to
conceive
that
such
was
the
legislators’
intention,
notwithstanding
the
fact
that
there
are
innumerable
pieces
of
legislation
which,
when
construed
literally,
may
lead
to
an
absurdity.
In
this
contention
the
following
may
be
consulted
beneficially:
Maxwell
on
the
Interpretation
of
Statutes,
8th
ed.,
pp.
169,
177
and
228
;
Craies
on
Statute
Law,
4th
ed.,
pp.
85
et
seq.
;
Beal,
Cardinal
Rules
of
Legal
Interpretation,
3rd
ed.,
pp.
343
et
seq.;
Halsbury
f
s
Laws
of
England,
2nd
ed.,
vol.
31,
v°
Interpretation,
no.
653;
Bonham
9
s
Case,
4
Coke’s
Reports,
367,
375.
At
page
169,
Maxwell
says:
"‘In
determining
either
the
general
object
of
the
Legislature,
or
the
meaning
of
its
language
in
any
particular
message,
it
is
obvious
that
the
intention
which
appears
to
be
most
in
accord
with
convenience,
reason,
justice,
and
legal
principles,
should,
in
all
cases
of
doubtful
significance,
be
presumed
to
be
the
true
one,
An
argument
drawn
from
an
inconvenience,
it
has
been
said,
is
forcible
in
law;
and
no
less,
but
rather
more,
force
is
due
to
any
drawn
from
an
absurdity
or
injustice.
But
a
Court
of
Law
has
nothing
to
do
with
the
reasonableness
or
unreasonableness
of
a
statutory
provision,
except
so
far
as
it
may
help
it
in
interpreting
what
the
Legislature
has
said
(Lord
Halsbury,
Cooke
v.
Vogeler,
[1901]
A.C.
107).’’
And
at
page,
117,
Maxwell
makes
the
following
comments:
"A
sense
of
the
possible
injustice
of
an
interpretation
ought
not
to
induce
Judges
to
do
violence
to
well-settled
rules
of
con-
sruction,
but
it
may
properly
lead
to
the
selection
of
one
rather
than
the
other
of
two
reasonable
interpretations
(Lord
Her-
schell
L.C.,
Arrow
Shipping
Co.
v.
Tyne
Commissioners,
[1894]
A.C.
516).
Whenever
the
language
of
the
Legislature
admits
of
two
constructions
and,
if
construed
in
one
way,
would
lead
to
obvious
injustice,
the
Courts
act
upon
the
view
that
such
a
result
could
not
have
been
intended,
unless
the
intention
had
been
manifested
in
express
words.’’
See
the
authorities
cited
in
note
(a)
at
the
foot
of
page
177.
Counsel
for
plaintiff
intimated
that
the
defendant
could
have
sought
the
annulment
of
the
contract
and
thereby
freed
itself
from
the
sales
tax;
he
observed
that
instead
the
defendant
let
the
contract
run
and
kept
on
working
on
the
construction
of
the
machine,
although
Lake
Sulphite
Pulp
Company
Limited
had
defaulted
twice
in
its
payments;
he
added
that
as
a
matter
of
fact
if
continued
working
until
the
11th
of
February,
1938,
five
days
after
Lake
Sulphite
Pulp
Company
Limited
was
in
the
hands
of
a
provisional
liquidator.
I
must
admit
that
I
fail
to
see
what
bearing
the
recourse
which
the
defendant
might
have
had
to
seek
the
annulment
of
the
contract
can
have
on
the
question
at
issue.
I
am
inclined
to
believe
that
the
defendant,
which
had
got
behind
in
the
performance
of
its
contract,
was
anxious
to
complete
the
machine
and
to
get
the
balance
of
the
progress
payments.
I
think
it
acted
wisely
in
continuing
to
build
the
machine
until
it
became
certain
that
the
liquidator
of
Lake
Sulphite
Pulp
Company
Limited
did
not
wish
to
complete
tho
payments
and
to
take
delivery
of
the
machine
for
the
benefit
of
the
liquidation.
What
became
of
the
portion
of
the
machine
which
had
already
been
constructed
on
the
11th
of
February,
1938,
when
the
work
was
stopped
has
not
been
divulged.
There
was
an
asset
of
some
value
which
it
seems
likely
could
have
been
disposed
of
either
in
its
present
state
or
else
completed.
Be
that.
as
it
may,
I
do
not
think
that
the
question
offers
any
interest
in
the
present
case.
What
the
Court
is
concerned
with
is
to
determine
whether
defendant
company
is
liable
to
pay
a.
sales
tax
on
instalments
or
progress
payments
which
it
did
not
receive.
Counsel
for
plaintiff
suggested
that
the
parties
to
the
contract
could
have
established
a
rate
of
progress,
had
they
wished
to
do
it,
and
could
have
inserted
in
the
contract
a
clause
stating
what
progress
would
have
to
be
made
between
such
and
such
a
date
;
he
noted
that
nothing
of
the
kind
had
been
included
in
the
contract
or
even
been
discussed
by
the
parties.
This
seems
to
me
irrelevant.
What
we
have
to
consider
is
the
contract
in
its
present
form.
Counsel
further
observed
that
Stadler,
Notman
and
Welsford
had
all
admitted
that
in
the
execution
of
such
contracts
there
always
were
delays
of
two,
three
and
even
six
months.
Counsel
concluded
that
in
the
present
instance
time
is
not
of
the
essence
of
the
contract
in
suit
;
that
on
the
contrary
there
is
a
clause
in
the
contract
(the
first
on
page
3)
stipulating
that
delay
will
not
entitle
the
purchaser
to
damages.
Counsel
pressed
the
point
that
the
evidence
discloses
that
it
was
due
to
the
purchaser’s
insolvency
that
the
machine
had
not
been
finished
and
that
the
work
would
have
gone
on
unhampered
and
the
machine
could
have
been
completed
within
six
weeks,
had
Lake
Sulphite
Pulp
Company
Limited
been
in
a
position
to
pay
it.
Taking
for
granted
that
these
facts
are
exact,
I
do
not
think
that
they
have
any
bearing
on
the
matter
in
litigation.
Counsel
for
plaintiff
reiterated
his
statement
that,
under
the
provisions
of
section
86,
1(a),
we
are
not
concerned
as
to
whe-
ther
or
not
the
progress
payments
were
received
by
the
defendant.
According
to
him,
this
section
does
not
require
that
the
payments
shall
have
been
received
in
order
to
be
taxed
;
it
says
that
the
tax
"‘shall
be
payable
pro
tanto
at
the
time
each
of
such
instalments
falls
due
and
becomes
payable’’.
In
counsel’s
view
it
is
not
material
whether
the
instalment
has
been
paid
;
the
moment
it
falls
due
and
becomes
payable
there
is
a
fictional
sale
and
delivery
and
as
such
it
is
taxable.
It
was
finally
submitted
by
counsel
for
plaintiff
that
if
the
defendant
had
wanted
to
be
paid
it
could
have
sued
under
its
contract,
because
Lake
Sulphite
Pulp
Company
Limited
was
behind
in
its
payments.
I
may
note
in
passing
that
this
is
not
exact;
the
contrary
is
rather
conformable
to
the
truth.
Counsel
added
that
in
turn
Lake
Sulphite
Pulp
Company
Limited
could
not
oppose
any
plea,
because
of
the
working
of
the
contract,
on
the
ground
of
delay.
He
emphasized
the
fact
that
the
payments
of
January
and
February
could
have
been
exacted
on
their
respective
dates
of
maturity.
He
admitted
however
that,
as
regards
the
payment
of
March
5,
it
is
a
somewhat
different
proposition
in
view
of
the
fact
that
Lake
Sulphite
Pulp
Company
Limited
had
gone
into
liquidation
and
was
no
longer
in
operation.
I
must
say
that
I
cannot
share
this
view,
I
do
not
think
that
it
is
judicially
sound.
Yet
as
the
point
seems
to
me
to
have
no
relevance
to
the
question
at
issue,
I
do
not
deem
it
advisable
to
waste
time
in
discussing
it
at
length;
it
will
suffice
to
refer
to
the
statement
of
Mr.
Justice
Mignault
in
the
case
of
Employers’
Liability
Assurance
Company
v.
Lefaivre,
[1930]
S.C.R.
1,
13,
concerning
the
exception
non
adimpleti
contractus.
I
may
point
out
that
Mr.
Justice
Mignault
was
dissenting
in
this
case,
but
the
observation
he
made
with
regard
to
this
exception
is
not,
as
claimed
by
counsel
for
defendant,
germane
to
the
dissent.
In
fact
Mr.
Justice
Rinfret,
who
delivered
the
judgment
of
the
majority
of
the
Court,
expressed
on
this
point
a
similar
opinion:
see
pages
7-and
following.
Counsel
for
plaintiff
added
that
the
defendant
could
have
continued
building
the
machine,
had
it
been
so
directed
by
the
liquidator
of
Lake
Sulphite
Pulp
Company
Limited
authorized
to
that
effect
by
the
Court.
This
is
quite
possible,
but
it
seems
to
me
foreign
to
the
matter
in
dispute.
Again
may
I
repeat
that
the
question
with
which
I
am
confronted
is
whether
the
defendant
company
is
liable
to
pay
a
sales
tax
on
progress
payments
which
it
has
not
collected.
It
seems
obvious
to
me
that
the
plaintiff
has
no
claim
under
the
first
paragraph
of
subsection
1(a)
of
section
86
which
provides
that
"‘there
shall
be
imposed,
levied
and
collected
a
consumption
or
sales
tax
of
eight
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
delivery
of
such
goods
to
the
purchaser
thereof’’.
The
machine
was
never
delivered,
with
the
exception
of
the
sole-plates
valued
at
approximately
$1,200.
;
one
of
the
essential
conditions
provided
for
in
paragraph
(a)
of
subsection
1
is
lacking.
Has
the
plaintiff
got
a
claim
under
the
first
proviso
of
article
86?
According
to
his
counsel’s
submission
he
has,
if
we
assume
that
the
sales
tax
is
payable
on
the
progress
payments
at
the
time
they
fall
due
and
become
payable
in
accordance
with
the
terms
of
the
contract,
independently
of
the
fact
that
they
have
not
been
paid.
As
previously
stated,
such
an
interpretation
of
the
first
proviso
in
article
86,
1(a)
seems
to
me
thoroughly
unjust
and
unreasonable.
I
may
add
that,
in
my
view,
it
is
not
only
repugnant
to
Justice
and
equity
but
even
to
simple
common
sense.
The
legislators
have
used,
in
this
proviso,
two
expressions
which,
at
first
sight,
may
perhaps
appear
to
be
synonymous,
viz.
“falls
due’’
and
"‘becomes
payable
Counsel
for
plaintiff
has
accepted
them
as
such.
I
may
say
that
I
feel
loath
to
believe
that
the
legislators
wittingly
used
two
expressions
having,
in
their
opinion,
exactly
the
same
meaning
and
scope
when
one
would
have
been
sufficient.
Our
legislators
are
sometimes
diffuse
and
redundant,
but
I
dare
not
think
that
they
would
be
to
that
extent.
I
believe
that
the
phrase
‘‘falls
due’’
is
intended
to
cover
the
terms
of
payment
as
set
forth
in
the
contract
and
that
the
phrase
"‘becomes
payable’’
refers
to
the
time
when
the
progress
payments
will
mature
and
become
exigible
in
accordance
with
the
progress
effectively
made
in
the
building
of
the
pulp
drying
machine.
This
seems
to
me
to
be
the
only
just,
equitable
and
reasonable
view
to
take
of
the
legislators
‘
intention.
Besides
one
must
not
overlook
the
provision
contained
in
the
second
proviso
of
the
said
article,
which
reads
thus
:
"
"
Provided
further
that
in
any
case
where
there
is
no
physical
delivery
of
the
goods
by
the
manufacturer
or
producer,
the
said
tax
shall
be
payable
when
the
property
in
the
said
goods
passes
to
the
purchaser
thereof.’’
There
was
no
physical
delivery
of
the
machine
by
the
defendant
company,
save
for
a
very
trifling
portion
thereof,
viz.
the
sole-plates,
worth
about
$1,200.,
and
the
property
of
the
machine
never
passed
to
the
purchaser.
In
virtue
of
the
contract
the
property
of
the
machine
shall
remain
in
the
defendant
company
until
all
payments
have
been
fully
made.
The
clause
of
the
contract
dealing
with
the
right
of
ownership
is
the
seventh
on
page
(2),
which
is
hereinabove
recited.
There
being
no
physical
delivery
of
the
machine
and
the
property
therein
having
remained
vested
in
the
vendor,
the
plaintiff’s
claim
seems
to
me,
for
this
additional
reason,
unfounded.
It
was
argued
on
behalf
of
defendant
that,
in
order
that
the
tax
be
exigible,
the
progress
payments
in
respect
of
which
it
is
claimed
must
have
fallen
due
and
become
payable;
in
his
view
both
conditions
must
exist.
The
progress
payments,
under
the
terms
of
the
contract
fell
due
on
the
5th
of
each
month
commencing
on
the
5th
of
July
and
continuing
for
nine
consecutive
months,
the
last
payment
falling
due
and
being
exigible
when
the
machine
was
placed
in
operation
but
in
no
event
later
than
six
months
from
the
date
of
final
shipment
or
offer
of
shipment
of
the
machine
from
the
defendant
company’s
works.
The
progress
payments,
as
the
name
implies,
only
became
payable
as
the
work
progressed.
Lake
Sulphite
Pulp
Company
Limited
made
the
payments
fairly
regularly
each
month,
with
the
exception
of
the
payment
maturing
on
December
5,
which
was
delayed
considerably.
The
instalments
which
were
payable
on
the
5th
of
July
and
the
5th
of
August
were
paid
on
the
27th
of
August;
one
must
not
overlook
the
fact
that
the
work
performed
on
the
construction
of
the
machine
itself
was
only
begun
on
or
about
the
3rd
of
September
and
that
when
the
July
and
August
instalments
were
paid
there
was
no
progress
made
on
the
machine
at
all.
The
payments
maturing
on
September
5,
October
5
and
November
5
were
made
on
September
30,
October
7
and
November
13.
The
progress
payment
which
was
longer
deferred
was
the
one
falling
due
on
December
5;
it
was
only
paid
on
January
11.
At
the
time
Lake
Sulphite
Pulp
Company
Limited
had
paid
more
than
the
progress
of
the
work
justified.
On
January
11,
taking
into
account
the
payment
of
$48,800.
made
on
that
day,
Lake
Sulphite
Pulp
Company
Limited
had
overpaid
$79,300.
to
the
defendant
(dep.
Notman,
p.
40).
The
work
was
continued
until
February
11,
1938,
when
it
ceased
definitively.
With
the
progress
made
in
the
work
between
the
11th
of
January
and
the
11th
of
February
the
overpayment
was
reduced
to
$15,300.
If
one
eliminates
the
word
"progress''
from
the
clause
relative
to
the
terms
of
payment,
the
contract
does
not
come
within
the
purview
of
the
first
proviso
of
section
86,
1(a)
which
deals
with
contracts
for
the
sale
of
goods
wherein
it
is
provided
that
the
price
shall
be
paid
to
the
manufacturer
or
producer
by
instalments
as
the
work
progresses.
In
that
case
the
contract
would
be
subject
to
the
first
paragraph
of
section
86,
1(a)
and,
as
there
was
no
delivery,
save
for
a
negligible
part
of
the
ma-
chine,
viz.
the
sole-plates
valued
at
approximately
$1,200.,
no
tax
can
be
levied,
imposed
and
collected.
It
was
contended
by
counsel
for
defendant
that,
if
the
manufacturer
is
unable
to
keep
up
to
the
progress
stipulated
in
the
contract,
the
obligation
of
the
purchaser
to
pay
is
suspended
until
the
manufacturer
catches
up
with
his
work.
This
contention
seems
rational
and
sensible.
After
due
consideration
I
have
reached
the
conclusion
that
the
contract
in
suit
is
governed
by
the
first
proviso
of
section
86,
1(a),
that
the
progress
payments
therein
stipulated
fell
due
and
were
exigible
in
the
proportion
the
work
progressed
and
that
the
sales
tax
thereon
was
payable
pro
tanto
at
the
time
such
payments
fell
due
and
became
payable.
If
there
was
no
progress
in
the
work
there
were
no
payments
due
and
if
there
were
no
payments
there
was
no
tax
leviable.
If
the
interpretation
hereinabove
given
to
the
expressions
“falls
due”
and
"
becomes
payable’’
in
the
first
proviso
is
not
accepted,
the
case
fails
in
virtue
of
the
stipulations
of
the
second
proviso,
seeing
that
there
was
no
physical
delivery
and
that
the
property
of
the
machine
did
not
pass
to
the
purchaser.
After
a
careful
perusal
of
the
contract
and
other
evidence,
documentary
and
oral,
of
the
law
and
of
counsel’s
argument,
I
do
not
think
that
the
plaintiff
is
entitled
to
impose
and
levy
a.
sales
tax
on
progress
payments
which
were
not
made
and
which
moreover
were
not
exigible.
Regarding
the
sum
of
$15,300.
which
Lake
Sulphite
Pulp
Company
Limited
overpaid
to
the
defendant,
it
would
normally
have
formed
part
of
the
progress
payment
falling
due
January
5,
1938,
if
the
work
had
been
continued
;
as
this
payment
never
became
payable
and
might
perhaps
be
recovered
by
Lake
Sulphite
Company
Limited
in
virtue
of
the
provisions
of
article
1048
C.C.—a
question
which
it
is
not
within
my
competence
to
determine—I
do
not
believe
that
any
sales
tax
can
be
imposed
and
levied
thereon.
For
the
aforesaid
reasons
there
will
be
judgment
dismissing
the
plaintiff’s
action
with
costs.
Action
dismissed.