ROBERTSON,
J.A.:
This
is
an
appeal
by
the
Nanaimo
Community
Hotel
Company
Limited
from
the
judgment
of
Macfarlane
J.,
[1944]
Canada
Tax
Cases
102,
dismissing
its
motion
for
a
writ
of
certiorari
directed
to
the
Board
of
Referees,
next
to
be
mentioned,
then
sitting
in
Vancouver,
B.C.
$.
13
of
the
Excess
Profits
Tax
Act
empowers
the
Minister
to
appoint
a
Board
of
Referees
to
advise
and
aid
him
in
exercising
his
powers
under
the
Act,
and
authorizes
the
Board
to
exercise
its
powers
conferred
under
the
Act.
Pursuant
to
this
section
the
Minister,
on
1st
November,
1940,
appointed
three
members
of
the
Board.
An
Order-in-Council
dated
16th
November,
1940—after
referring
to
the
appointment—assigned
to
the
Board,
inter
alia,
the
power
and
duty
“to
determine
within
the
Provision
of
the
said
Act
the
standard
profits
of
any
taxpayer
or
group
of
taxpayers
that
may
be
referred
to
it
for
consideration
by
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue.’’
8.
5
of
the
Act
permits
a
taxpayer
who
is
convinced
that
his
standard
profits
are
so
low
that
it
would
not
be
just
to
determine
his
liability
to
tax
under
the
Act
by
reference
thereto
because
his
business
was
of
a
class
which
during
the
standard
period
was
depressed
.
.
.
to
compute
his
standard
profits
at
such
greater
amount
as
he
may
think
just,
but
not
exceeding
a
certain
amount,
with
the
proviso
that
if
the
Minister
is
not
satisfied
that
the
business
of
the
taxpayer
was
depressed
or
that
the
standard
profits
as
computed
by
the
taxpayer
are
fair
and
reasonable
he
may
direct
that
the
standard
profits
be
ascertained
by
the
Board
;
whereupon
the
Board,
in
its
sole
discretion,
is
bound
to
ascertain
the
standard
profits
at
such
an
amount
as
the
Board
thinks
just,
subject
to
certain
limitations;
or
the
Minister
may,
instead
of
referring
the
matter
to
the
Board,
assess
the
taxpayer
in
accordance
with
the
provisions
of
the
Act.
The
company,
taking
the
position
that
the
standard
profits
were
so
low
during
the
standard
period
fixed
by
s.
2
of
the
Act
that
it
would
not
be
just
to
determine
its
liability
to
tax
under
the
Act
by
reference
thereto,
made
a
return
in
which
it
computed
its
profits
at
a
figure
which
was
unsatisfactory
to
the
Minister
who,
pursuant
to
s.
5,
supra,
referred
the
matter
to
the
Board,
which
by
then
consisted
of
four
members.
Subsection
4
of
s.
5
of
the
Act
provides
that
the
decision
of
a
Board
shall
not
be
operative
until
approved
by
the
Minister,
whereupon
the
decision
shall
be
"
"
final
and
conclusive.
‘
The
company
was
notified
that
a
hearing
would
be
held
in
Vancouver
on
27
th
April,
1943.
On
that
date
only
two
members
of
the
Board
were
present.
The
company
appeared
by
counsel.
It
alleges
that
a
partial
hearing
took
place
and
then
adjournment
was
had
to
enable
the
company
to
supply
further
evidence,
but
before
it
could
do
so
the
Board
on
15th
May,
1943,
gave
its
decision,
which
is
contained
in
a
letter
dated
15th
May,
1945,
signed
by
the
Chairman
of
the
Board
and
the
two
members
who
sat
in
Vancouver.
The
Board’s
decision
which
was
against
the
company
‘s
contention,
was
approved
by
the
Minister
on
or
before
the
26th
May,
1943.
The
company
was
advised
by
the
commissioner
of
Income
Tax
by
letter
dated
9th
June,
1943,
to
"‘appeal
against
an
assessment
based
on
the
Board
‘s
decision
as
provided
by
the
relevant
sections
of
the
Act,’’
and
a
further
letter
of
8th
July,
1943,
re-iterated
this
advice.
On
the
13th
September,
1943,
purporting
to
act
under
s.
12,
an
assessment
was
made
against
the
company
on
the
basis
of
the
Board
‘s
decision.
On
October
4th,
1943,
the
company
appealed,
the
grounds
being
(1)
that
the
Board
was
not
properly
constituted,
as
only
two
members
sat;
and
(2)
that
the
Board
had
decided
without
hearing
all
the
evidence.
On
27th
May,
1944,
the
company
were
notified
that
since
the
Board’s
decision
had
been
approved
of
by
the
Minister
its
"‘only
recourse
is
the
Exchequer
Court
of
Appeal
.
.
.
and
the
claim
could
only
be
reviewed
by
the
Board
on
the
direction
of
the
Court.’’
Notwithstanding
its
appeal,
the
company
on
3rd
June,
1944,
filed
a
notice
of
motion
in
the
Supreme
Court
of
British
Columbia
for
a
writ
of
certiorari
to
remove
the-Board’s
decision
into
that
Court
so
that
it
might
be
quashed.
The
sole
question
for
decision
is
whether
or
not
the
Supreme
Court’s
jurisdiction
in
the
circumstances
of
this
case
has
been
taken
away.
Counsel
for
the
Board
takes
the
position
that
the
Exchequer
Court
has
exclusive
jurisdiction
in
the
matter.
S.
14
of
the
Act
reads
:
“14.
Without
limiting
any
of
the
provisions
contained
in
this
Act,
sections
forty
to
eighty-seven
both
inclusive,
of
the
‘Income
War
Tax
Act,’
excepting
section
seventy-six
A
thereof,
shall,
mut
at
is
mutandis,
apply
to
matters
arising
under
the
provisions
of
this
Act
to
the
same
extent
and
as
fully
and
effectively
as
they
apply
under
the
provisions
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act.”
S.
66
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act,
later
referred
to
as
the
‘‘
Income
Act
’
provides,
in
part,
as
follows
:
“66.
Subject
to
the
provisions
of
this
Act,
the
Exchequer
Court
shall
have
exclusive
jurisdiction
to
hear
and
determine
all
questions
that
may
arise
in
connection
with
any
assessment
made
under
this
Act.
.
.
.”
The
learned
Judge
below
held
that
s.
66
ousted
the
jurisdiction
of
the
Supreme
Court
and
accordingly
dismissed
the
motion.
The
appellant
submits
that
the
appeal
sections
58
et
seq.
have
no
application
to
a
decision
of
the
Board,
approved
of
by
the
Minister,
because
the
statute
declares
its
decision
to
be
final
and
conclusive;
and
that
there
would
be
no
purpose
in
taking
an
appeal
because
the
appeal
in
the
first
instance
under
s.
58
is
to
the
Minister
himself,
he
having
already
approved
the
Board’s
decision.
I
see
no
difficulty
however
as
to
this,
because
if
an
appeal
is
taken
s.
59
provides
that
the
Minister
is
to
duly
consider
the
appeal
and
to
affirm
or
amend
the
assessment.
He
might
upon
reconsideration
amend
the
assessment.
If
he
did
not
feel
disposed
to
do
so,
then
his
duty
under
s.
59
would
be
to
notify
the
appellant
of
his
decision,
whereupon,
if
the
appellant
was
dissatisfied
therewith
he
might,
pursuant
to
s.
60,
mail
to
the
Minister
a
notice
of
dissastisfaction,
with
the
result
that
the
matter
would
come
up
finally
for
trial
in
the
Exchequer
Court.
Further
than
this,
the
Board’s
decision,
although
approved
by
the
Minister,
would
not
be
final
and
conclusive
if
the
Board
was
not
properly
constituted—see
Murphy
v.
Rex,
[1911]
A.C.
401—
or,
if
the
Board
"‘didn't
fairly
listen
to
both
sides,
for
that
is
a
duty
lying
upon
anyone
who
decides
anything.”
See
Board
of
Education
v.
Rice
and
Others,
[1911]
A.C.
179
at
182.
In
either
of
these
circumstances
the
decision
would
be
null
and
void.
Further,
I
cannot
understand
how
a
decision
can
be
said
to
be
final
and
conclusive
if
there
is
an
appeal
from
it.
In
Corporation
of
District
of
Oak
Bay
v.
Corporation
of
the
City
of
Victoria
(1941),
56
B.C.
345
it
appeared
that
an
appeal
had
been
taken
from
a
decision
of
the
Commission
to
the
Lieutenant-Governor
in
Council
under
s.
105
of
the
Public
Utilities
Act,
which
provides
for
appeals
‘‘upon
any
question
of
fact’’;
and
under
s.
106
of
the
same
Act
the
Lieutenant-Governor
in
Council
had
referred
the
appeal
to
the
Court
of
Appeal.
The
appeal
had
to
do
with
whether
or
not
a
certain
rate
was
unjust
or
unreasonable.
Under
an
amendment
made
in
1939
to
s.
8
of
the
Act
it
was
provided
that
it
should
be
a
question
of
fact
‘‘of
which
the
Commission
shall
be
the
sole
judge
whether
any
rate
is
unjust
or
unreasonable.”
It
was
argued
that
this
was
intended
to
repeal
sections
105
and
106
as
to
appeals
on
questions
of
fact.
McDonald
J.A.
(afterwards
C.J.B.C.)
said
at
p.
369
that
he
had
a
strong
view
that
nothing
of
the
kind
was
intended
and
that
the
language
in
the
amendment
"‘makes
the
Commission
the
sole
judge
of
that
fact,
but
as
a
judge
of
first
instance
only.’’
In
other
words,
he
said
the
decision
of
the
Commission
on
that
question
was
final
and
binding
upon
all
the
world,
saving
only
this,
that
the
right
of
appeal
provided
by
Sections
105
and
106
was
not
interfered
with.
He
pointed
out
that
s.
73,
providing,
shortly:
"‘that
the
finding
or
determination
of
the
Commission
upon
any
question
of
fact
within
its
jurisdiction
shall
be
binding
and
conclusive
upon
all
persons
and
in
all
Courts”
was
just
as
vigorous
and
forcible
in
regard
to
the
finality
and
conclusiveness
of
the
Commission
‘s
findings
of
fact
as
are
those
of
the
addition
to
s.
8,
and
yet
these
provisions
were
followed
by
appeal
sections
105
and
106
of
the
original
Act.’’
Macdonald,
C.J.B.C.
and
MeQuarrie
J.A.
agreed
with
McDonald,
J.A.
I
think,
therefore,
that
an
appeal
would
lie
notwithstanding,
the
language
that
the
decision
of
the
Board
is
to
be
final
and
conclusive.
Then
it
is
submitted
that
s.
66,
supra,
only
applies
to
the
assessment
itself
or
matters
subsequent
to
its
being
made,
and
does
not
apply
to
any
question
arising
before
the
assessment
is
made.
To
my
mind
the
language
‘‘in
connection
with
any
assessment’’
clearly
covers
all
the
preceding
steps
leading
up
to
the
assessment
being
made;
and
this
view
is
confirmed
by
s.
67
of
the
Income
Act
which
says
:
“An
assessment
shall
not
be
varied
or
disallowed
because
of
any
irregularity,
informality,
omission
or
error
on
the
part
of
any
person
in
the
observation
of
any
directory
provision
up
to
the
date
of
the
issuing
of
the
notice
of
assessment.”
It
may
be
noted
in
passing
that
this
view
agrees
with
that
of
the
Commissioner
of
Income
Tax
as
shown
by
his
letters
of
the
9th
June,
1943
and
8th
July,
1943,
supra.
Then
it
is
said
that
s.
66
cannot
affect
the
power
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
British
Columbia
to
issue
a
writ
of
certiorari
because
the
Exchequer
Court,
being
a
statutory
court,
has
no
common-law
powers.
Sec.
19
of
the
Exchequer
Court
Act
as
amended
by
s.
1
of
cap.
13
of
23
&
24,
Geo.
5
provides,
in
part,
that
that
Court
shall
have
exclusive
original
jurisdiction
in,
inter
alia,
“19
(j)
Every
application
for
a
writ
of
habeas
corpus
ad
subjiciendum
or
a
writ
of
certiorari
or
a
writ
of
prohibition,
or
a
writ
of
mandamus,
in
relation
to
any
officer
or
man
of
any
Canadian
Naval,
Military
or
Air
Forces
serving
outside
of
Canada,
or
in
relation
to
any
proceedings,
or
to
any
act
or
omission
respecting
any
such
officer
or
man,
to
the
same
extent
as
and
under
similar
circumstances
in
which
jurisdiction
now
exists
in
the
Exchequer
Court
of
Canada
or
in
the
courts
or
judges
of
the
several
provinces
in
respect
of
similar
matters
within
Canada.”
This
implies
that
the
power
to
issue
a
certiorari
does
exist
in
the
Exchequer
Court.
I
think
the
power
existed
at
all
times,
as
I
shall
now
endeavour
to
show:
British
Columbia
entered
into
Confederation
in
1871.
S.
129
of
the
British
North
America
Act
provided
that
all
laws
in
foree
and
all
courts
of
civil
and
criminal
jurisdiction
were
continued
subject,
except
as
to
Imperial
Acts,
to
be
repealed,
abolished
or
altered
by
the
Parliament
of
Canada
or
the
Legislature
of
British
Columbia
according
to
the
authority
of
the
Parliament
or
of
the
Legislature
under
the
Act.
English
civil
and
criminal
laws
so
far
as
the
same
were
not
from
local
circumstances
inapplicable
as
they
existed
on
the
9th
November,
1858,
and
except
as
altered
or
repealed
by
competent
authority,
were
then
in
force
in
British
Columbia.
There
was
only
one
Court,
namely,
the
Supreme
Court
of
British
Columbia,
which,
generally
speaking,
possessed
and
exercised
all
the
powers
which
the
separate
courts
of
Queen’s
Bench,
Common
Pleas
and
Exchequer
had
in
England.
See
Mr.
Justice
Martin’s
dissenting
judgment
in
Attorney-General
v.
E.
f;
N.
Ry
Co.
(1899),
7
B.C.
231,
especially
at
p.
235
as
to
the
history
of
the
Supreme
Court
and
the
powers
of
the
Exchequer
Court
possessed
by
it.
The
English
Court
of
Exchequer
was
then
a
common-law
court
as
well
as
a
court
of
revenue.
It
had
also
enjoyed
equitable
jurisdiction,
but
this
had
been
taken
from
it.
See
s.
1
of
cap.
5
of
5
Victoria.
It
had
exclusive
jurisdiction
as
to
matters
of
revenue,
and
had
the
right
by
certiorari
to
remove
proceedings
from’
an
inferior
tribunal
"into
the
office
of
Pleas,’’
or
"‘by
a
kind
of
injunction”
to
remove
matters
affecting
the
revenue
from
the
cognizance
of
other
superior
courts.
In
Tidd’s
Practice
of
the
Courts
of
King’s
Bench
and
Common
Pleas
and
Modern
Decisions
in
the
Exchequer
of
Pleas—1828—
9th
ed.,
at
p.
38,
after
pointing
out
the
respective
jurisdictions
the
King’s
Bench
and
Common
Pleas,
it
is
said
as
to
the
jurisdiction
of
Exchequer
of
Pleas
:
"The
court
of
Pleas,
in
the
Exchequer,
is
holden
before
the
barons;
and
has
jurisdiction
of
all
causes
which
concern
the
king’s
profit
of
revenue,
as
of
debts
or
duties
to
the
king;
.
.
.”
.
and
at
p.
397
:
‘
"
Suits
commenced
in
inferior
courts
of
record
may,
it
seems,
be
removed
by
certiorari
into
the
Exchequer,
by
the
Plaintiff
or
defendant:
And
this
Court,
having
an
original
and
in
many
cases
an
exclusive
jurisdiction
in
fiscal
matters,
will
not
permit
questions
in
the
decision
of
which
the
king’s
revenue
is
interested,
to
be
discussed
before
any
other
tribunal.
On
such
occasions,
the
Court
interposes
upon
motion,
by
ordering
the
proceedings
to
be
removed
into
the
office
of
pleas.
The
usual
order,
in
cases
of
this
nature,
is
that
the
action
be
removed
out
of
the
King’s
Bench
or
Common
Pleas,
or
other
court
in
which
it
is
depending,
into
the
office
of
pleas
in
the
Exchequer
;
and
that
it
shall
be
there
in
the
same
forwardness
as
in
the
court
out
of
which
the
action
is
removed.
This
order,
however,
does
not
operate
as
a
certiorari
to
remove
the
proceedings,
but
as
a
personal
order
on
the
party,
to
stay
them
there.
.
.
.”
In
Farwell
v.
The
Queen
(1893),
22
S.C.R.
553
the
facts
were
that
an
information
of
intrusion
had
been
exhibited
by
the
Attorney-General
for
Canada
in
the
Exchequer
Court
of
Canada
to
compel
Farwell
to
execute
a
surrender
or
conveyance
of
certain
lands
for
which
a
Crown
grant
had
been
issued
to
him
by
the
Province
of
British
Columbia
to
the
Crown
in
right
of
Canada.
Objection
was
taken
that
the
Parliament
of
Canada
could
not
give
concurrent
original
jurisdiction
to
the
Exchequer
Court
in
actions
and
suits
of
a
civil
nature
at
common
law
or
in
equity.
King
J.,
with
whom
the
Chief
Justice,
Fournier
J.
and
I
think,
Gwynne
J.
agreed,
said
at
p.
562
:
“The
king
has
the
undoubted
privilege
of
suing
in
any
Court
he
pleases
and
‘where
the
matter
in
suit
in
another
court
concerns
the
revenue
or
touches
the
profit
of
the
king,
he
has
the
right
to
remove
the
suit
into
the
Exchequer’.’’
He
then
referred
to
Cawthorne
v.
Campbell
(1790),
1
Anstruther
205,
in
which
Eyre
C.B.
gave
the
Court’s
judgment,
showing
the
numerous
cases
in
which
the
Court
of
Exchequer
had
issued
what
amounted
to
an
injunction
against
other
courts
to
prevent
the
proceedings
with
reference
to
matters
of
revenue
being
continued
in
those
courts.
This
case
was
followed
in
Anonymous
(1793)
145
E.R.
846.
In
that
case
an
action
had
been
brought
in
the
Court
of
Common
Pleas
against
a
revenue
officer
for
an
alleged
assault
in
the
performance
of
his
official
duties.
The
Court
of
Exchequer
removed
the
cause
into
the
‘‘
Office
of
Pleas
of
this
Court.”
In
Vol.
1
of
Holdsworth’s
History
of
English
Law
at
p.
238
it
is
said
:
"
"
A
good
instance
of
this
peculiar
union
of
legal
and
equitable
procedure
used
in
the
Exchequer,
sitting
as
a
Court
of
revenue,
is
furnished
by
the
power
possessed
by
it
of
removing
matters
affecting
the
revenue
or
the
property
of
the
crown
from
the
cognizance
of
other
courts.
Eyre,
C.B.
described
it
as
a
kind
of
injunction
to
stay
proceedings
in
another
court
qualified
by
the
liberty
given
to
sue
in
the
Exchequer.
He
speaks
of
it
as
being
a
piece
with
the
anomalous
jurisdiction
of
the
court
of
revenue
in
the
Exchequer,
which
has
here
adopted
an
equitable,
rather
than
a
legal
procedure.
’
’
At
p.
874
of
9
Halsbury
2nd
ed.
appears
the
following
relating
to
certiorari:
"
At
an
early
period
the
Court
of
Exchequer
acquired
power
to
issue
the
writ
in
eases
relating
to
the
revenue
(see
Churton
v.
Wilkin,
[1884]
N.W.
62).
But
as
late
as
1828
it
could
not
issue
the
writ
for
any
other
purpose
(Tidd’s
Practice
(1828),
p.
397).
A
little
later,
however,
it
obtained
the
same
jurisdiction
in
certiorari
as
the
Court
of
Common
Pleas
(see
Archbold’s
Practice
(1847),
p.
452).”
In
re
Kingman
v.
Hird
(1814),
1
Price
206
proceedings
in
trespass
in
the
Court
of
Great
Sessions
for
the
County
of
Anglesey
were
removed
into
the
Exchequer
Court
by
certiorari.
So
that
it
seems
clear
that
in
1875
the
Court
of
Exchequer
in
England
had
exclusive
jurisdiction
with
reference
to
matters
of
revenue,
and
could
proceed
by
certiorari
to
remove
proceedings
from
an
inferior
tribunal
into
it
or
by
a
"‘kind
of
injunction’’
remove
matters
affecting
revenue
of
the
Crown
from
the
cognizance
of
the
Queen’s
Bench
or
Common
Pleas.
The
Supreme
Court
of
British
Columbia,
generally
speaking,
enjoys
today
and
enjoyed
in
1871
all
the
powers
of
the
Court
of
Exchequer
in
England
and
all
the
machinery
necessary
for
the
exercise
thereof.
See
Attorney-General
v.
E.
&
N.
Ry
Co.,
supra,
at
p.
235.
As
there
was
only
one
Supreme
Court
of
original
jurisdiction
in
British
Columbia,
no
question
of
"‘a
kind
of
injunction’’
could
arise.
Although
the
English
Judicature
Act
was
passed
in
1873
it
did
not
come
into
force
until
the
1st
November
1875,
up
to
which
time
the
Exchequer
Court
in
England
was
a
separate
court
of
revenue
as
well
as
of
common
law.
See
Judicature
Act
1875,
36
and
37
Victoria,
Cap.
66,
sec.
16(4).
This
was
the
position
of
affairs
at
the
time
of
Confederation.
It
is
submitted
that
the
words
‘
4
exclusive
jurisdiction’’
in
s.
66,
supra,
are
not
sufficient
to
deprive
the
Supreme
Court
of
the
right
to
issue
a
certiorari.
No
doubt
there
must
be
found
in
the
legislation
under
consideration
precise
words
to
take
away
from
the
Supreme
Court
of
British
Columbia
the
jurisdiction
to
issue
a
writ
of
certiorari,
if
that
is
the
purpose.
The
Supreme
and
Exchequer
Court
Act.
cap.
11
of
the
Statutes
of
Canada,
1875,
was
assented
to
on
the
8th
April,
1875
and
therefore
passed
while
the
Court
of
Exchequer
in
England
was
a
separate
court.
S.
58
of
the
Act
provided
in
part
that
the
Exchequer
Court
was
to
have
concurrent
original
jurisdiction
in
Canada
in
all
cases
in
which
it
was
sought
‘‘to
enforce
any
law
of
the
Dominion
of
Canada
relating
to
the
revenue’’
and
exclusive
original
jurisdiction
in
all
cases
in
which
a
demand
should
be
made
or
relief
sought
in
respect
of
any
matter
which
might
in
England
be
the
subject
of
a
suit
or
action
in
the
Court
of
Exchequer
on
its
revenue
side
against
the
Crown
or
any
officer
of
the
Crown.
S.
59
gave
the
Court
concurrent
original
jurisdiction
with
the
Courts
of
the
several
provinces
in
all
other
suits
of
a
similar
nature
at
common
law
and
equity
in
which
the
Crown
in
the
interest
of
Canada
might
be
plaintiff
or
petitioner
:
And
s.
61
provided
the
procedure
in
suits
and
actions
within
the
jurisdiction
of
the
Exchequer
Court
should,
unless
otherwise
provided,
be
regulated
by
the
practice
and
procedure
of
Her
Majesty’s
Court
of
Exchequer
at
New
Westminster
on
its
revenue
side.
The
act
now
in
force
is
Chap.
34
of
R.S.C.
1927.
Ss.
18,
19
and
20
provide
that
the
Exchequer
Court
is
to
have
exclusive
original
jurisdiction
in
a
number
of
cases
consisting,
generally,
of
suits
against
the
Crown.
Ss.
22,
25
and
27
give
the
Court
jurisdiction
in
cases
of
patents,
copyrights
and
trademarks,
interpleader
and
railway
debts.
S.
30
gives
the
Court
coneurrent
original
jurisdiction
in
Canada,
inter
alia—
(a)
in
all
cases
relating
to
the
revenue
in
which
it
is
sought
to
enforce
any
law
of
Canada
.
.
.
(c)
in
all
cases
in
which
demand
is
made
or
relief
sought
against
any
officer
of
the
Crown
for
anything
done
or
omitted
in
the
performance
of
his
duty
as
such
officer,
and
(d)
in
all
other
actions
and
suits
of
a
civil
nature
at
common
law
or
equity
in
which
the
Crown
is
plaintiff
or
petitioner.
These
correspond
in
substance
to
the
provisions
of
ss.
58
and
59,
supra,
except
that
the
Court,
which
formerly
had
exclusive
jurisdiction
with
regard
to
(c),
has
it
no
longer.
S.
36
provides
the
practice
and
procedure
in
suits
and
actions
in
the
Court
shall,
as
far
as
applicable
.
.
.
be
regulated
by
the
practice
and
procedure
in
similar
suits,
actions
and
matters
in
the
High
Court
of
Justice
on
the
1st
October,
1887—the
date
when
the
Canadian
Exchequer
Court
Act
of
that
year
came
into
force.
In
National
Trust
Co.
Ltd.
v.
The
Christian
Community
of
Universal
Brotherhood
Ltd.
et
al.,
[1941]
S.C.R.
601,
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
held,
under
the
special
circumstances
of
that
case,
that
a
section
of
the
F
armer
s
f
Creditors
Arrangement
Act
declaring
that
in
the
case
of
a
petition
under
that
Act
the
County
Court
should
have
exclusive
jurisdiction
in
bankruptcy
did
not
exclude
the
right
of
the
appellant
to
maintain
an
action
in
the
Supreme
Court
of
British
Columbia
for
a
declaration
that
the
applicant
was
not
a
farmer
within
the
meaning
of
the
Act.
As
I
understand
this
decision,
the
Court
did
not
find
it
necessary
to
decide
the
broad
question
as
to
the
respective
jurisdictions
of
the
Supreme
Court
and
County
Court.
See
Duff
C.J.
at
p.
609
and
Rinfret
J.
(now
C.J.
of
C.)
at
629-30.
In
view
of
the
history
of
the
Exchequer
Court
of
England
and,
its
exclusive
jurisdiction
in
matters
of
revenue,
and,
the
legislation
in
Canada
to
which
I
have
referred,
I
am
of
the
opinion
that
the
intention
was
to
give
to
the
Exchequer
Court
of
Canada
the
same
jurisdiction
as
the
English
Court
of
Ex-
chequer
has
enjoyed,
and
to
oust
the
jurisdiction
of
all
other
Courts
where
exclusive
jurisdiction
is
conferred;
and
that
to
carry
out
this
purpose
the
words
in
s.
66
conferring
exclusive
jurisdiction
are
clear
and
express.
Unless
this
meaning
is
given
to
these
words,
I
can
see
no
object
in
giving
exclusive
jurisdiction
to
the
Exchequer
Court
in
the
matters
specified.
It
is
further
submitted
that
the
Supreme
Court
of
British
Columbia
enjoys
its
powers
by
reason
of
Imperial
legislation
and
that
therefore
there
is
no
right
in
the
Parliament
of
Canada
to
pass
legislation
under
s.
101
of
the
British
North
America
Act
taking
away
from
the
Supreme
Court
the
right
of
certiorari
in
any
matter
whatsoever
because
of
the
exception
in
s.
129
of
the
said
Act.
I
would
point
out
that
s.
129
commences
:
""Except
as
otherwise
provided
by
this
Act,’’
which
takes
us
to
a
consideration
of
s.
101.
That
Section
provides
:
"‘101.
The
Parliament
of
Canada
may,
notwithstanding
anything
in
this
Act,
from
time
to
time
provide
for
the
constitution,
maintenance,
and
organization
of
a
General
Court
of
Appeal
for
Canada,
and
for
the
establishment
of
any
additional
Courts
for
the
better
administration
of
the
laws
of
Canada.”
So
that
the
powers
under
s.
101
may
be
exercised
nothwith-
standing
s.
129
or
s.
92,
so
long
as
Parliament
does
not,
under
the
guise
of
legislating
under
s.
101,
make
laws
which
are
exclusively
within
the
jurisdiction
of
the
Province;
although
in
legislating
competently
under
s.
101
or
any
of
the
heads
of
s.
91
it
may
affect
property
and
civil
rights
in
the
Province.
See
Proprietary
Articles
Trade
Association
v.
Attorney-General,
[1981]
A.C.
310
at
326-7.
The
legislation
in
question
comes
within
s.
101
and
clause
3
of
s.
91
of
the
British
North
America
Act.
In
view
of
this
and
the
non
ostante
clause
in
s.
101
it
seems
to
me
the
Dominion
power
is
plenary.
The
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
considered
s.
101
so
far
as
it
affected
the
right
of
the
Dominion
Parliament
to
enact
legislation
under
it,
to
abrogate
appeals
to
the
Privy
Council
in
Reference
Re
Privy
Council
Appeals,
[1940]
1
D.L.R.
299.
I
am
of
the
opinion
that
the
views
of
the
learned
Justices
upon
the
question
under
consideration
in
that
case
are
equally
applicable
to
the
case
at
bar.
It
is
to
be
observed
that
the
limitations
in
s.
129
of
the
British
North
America
Act
as
to
the
right
to
repeal,
abolish
or
alter
Imperial
Acts
are,
as
Sir
Lyman
Duff,
C.J.C.
says
at
p.
292
of
The
Reference
re
Privy
Council
Appeals,
supra,
"‘no
longer
in
foree.’’
See
also
British
Coal
Corporation
v.
The
King,
[1935]
A.C.
500
at
520,
where
Viscount
Sankey,
L.C.
says,
speaking
of
the
limitations
in
s.
129
as
affected
by
the
Statute
of
Westminster,
"‘But
these
limitations
have
now
been
abrogated
by
the
statute.
There
now
remains
only
such
limitations
as
flow
from
the
statute
itself.’’
Sir
Lyman
Duff,
C.J.C.
said
at
p.
299
Re
Reference
Re
Privy
Council
Appeals,
supra,
that
the
phrase
"‘law
of
Canada’’
embraces
any
law
"‘in
relation
to
some
subject-matter,
legislation
in
regard
to
which
was
within
the
legislative
competence
of
the
Dominion,
‘‘
referring
to
Consolidated
Distilleries
Ltd.
v.
The
King,
[1933]
A.C.
508
at
522.
At
p.
301
he
says,
referring
to
s.
101,
that
since
the
legislative
authority
may
be
executed
in
Canada
"‘notwithstanding
anything
in
the
Act’’
you
cannot
imply
any
restriction
of
power
because
of
anything
in
s.
92
;
that
"‘whatever
is
granted
by
the
words
of
the
section,
read
and
applied
as
prima
facie
intended
to
endow
Parliament
with
power
to
effect
high
political
objects
concerning
the
self-government
of
the
Dominion
(s.
3
of
the
B.N.A.
Act)
in
the
matter
of
Judicature
is
to
be
held
and
exercised
as
a
plenary
power
in
that
behalf
with
all
ancillary
powers
necessary
to
enable
Parliament
to
attain
its
objects
fully
and
completely”;
and,
further,
that
since,
by
virtue
of
the
words
in
s.
101,
Parliament
may
legislate
for
objects
within
the
ambit
of
s.
101
regardless
of
any
powers
the
Provinces
possess,
to
affect
appeals
to
the
Judicial
Committee,
it
follows
that
the
general
power
of
Parliament
to
make
provision
for
the
peace,
order
and
good
government
of
Canada
in
relation
to
such
objects
is
in
no
way
limited
by
the
exception
of
local
matters,
"‘assigned
exclusively
by
the
introductory
words
of
s.
91
to
the
legislatures
of
the
Provinces”;
and
consequently
no
existing
judicial
authority
competent
to
affect
the
course
of
judicature
in
Canada
can
be
an
obstacle
precluding
the
Parliament
of
Canada
from
making
its
legislation
relating
to
these
objects
effective.
At
p.
302
he
said
‘‘the
primacy
of
Parliament
under
s.
101
is
just
as
absolute
as
under
the
enumerated
clauses
of
s.
91;”
and
finally
at
p.
306
he
said:
‘‘I
venture
to
suggest
as
regards
s.
101
that
‘notwithstanding
anything
in
the
Act’
includes
within
its
purview
that
part
of
s.
129
as
well
as
all
other
sections
of
the
Act.’’
This
was,
I
presume,
based
on
his
statement
at
p.
292
that
since
the
Statute
of
Westminster
the
limitation
in
s.
129
as
to
repealing,
abolishing
or
altering
Imperial
Legislation
was
no
longer
in
foree.
Mr.
Justice
Rinfret,
as
he
then
was,
now
Chief
Justice
of
Canada,
speaking
of
s.
101,
said
at
p.
310
‘‘the
legislative
authority
conferred
on
the
Dominion
by
that
section
is
exclusive,
paramount
and
plenary.’’
Kerwin
J.
said
at
p.
350:
“
.
.
.
This
non
obstante
clause
places
the
Dominion
power
on
the
same
footing
as
those
conferred
by
the
specially
enumerated
heads
of
s.
91.”’
Mr.
Justice
Taschereau
in
Valin
v.
Langlois
(1879),
3
S.C.R.
p.
74,
refers
to
the
argument
advanced
that
the
Dominion
Parliament
could
not
in
any
way
increase
or
decrease,
give
or
take
away
from,
or
in
any
manner
interfere
with
the
jurisdiction
of
the
provincial
courts
as
a
radically
and
entirely
false
and
erroneous
interpretation
of
section
92,
No.
14.
Speaking
of
the
criminal
law
he
says:
"Cannot
parliament
in
virtue
of
s.
101
of
the
Act
create
new
courts
of
criminal
jurisdiction
and
enact
that
all
crimes,
all
offences,
shall
be
tried
exclusively
before
these
new
courts?
I
take
this
to
be
beyond
controversy.
‘
‘
And
later
on
he
says:
"
"
I
also
think
it
clear
that
parliament
may
say,
for
instance,
that
all
judicial
proceedings
on
promissory
notes
and
bills
of
exchange
shall
be
taken
before
the
Exchequer
Court
or
before
any
other
Federal
Court.
This
would
be
certainly
interfering
with
the
jurisdiction
of
the
provincial
courts.
But
I
hold
it
has
the
power
to
do
so
quoad
all
matters
within
its
authority.
‘
‘
Mr.
Justice
Clement
at
pp.
537-8
of
his
work
on
the
Canadian
Constitution,
3rd
ed.,
says:
"‘No
question,
of
course,
can
arise
as
to
the
power
to
confer
concurrent
jurisdiction.
To
that
extent
the
scope
and
policy
of
section
101
is
obvious.
The
moot
point
is
as
to
the
right
to
confer
an
exclusive
jurisdiction;
and
upon
that
point,
it
is
conceived,
the
view
of
Mr.
Justice
Taschereau
is
more
in
consonance
with
the
scheme
and
policy
of
the
Act
than
is
that
of
Chief
Justice
Wilson.
In
this
view,
the
Dominion
Parliament
may
take
from
provincial
Courts
the
cognizance
of
those
matters
within
Dominion
competence
which
it
may
think
fit
to
assign
to
Courts
of
its
own
creation,
or
it
may
take
them
from
one
provincial
Court
and
assign
them
to
another.”
For
the
above
reasons
I
think
the
Court
of
Exchequer
has
exclusive
jurisdiction
to
deal
with
the
matter
in
question.
The
appeal
must
be
dismissed.
O’HALLORAN,
J.A.:
This
case
revolves
around
two
main
questions;
(1)
whether
Counsel
for
the
appellant
Hotel
Company
was
given
a
fair
hearing
by
the
Board
of
Referees
(a
statutory
tribunal)
when
he
appeared
before
it
in
Vancouver
to
uphold
the
‘‘standard
profit’’
it
claimed
to
be
entitled
to
under
“The
Excess
Profits
Tax
Act
1940’’;
and
(2)
whether
the
certiorari
jurisdiction
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
British
Columbia
to
ascertain
if
that
hearing
was
conducted
fairly
and
judicially,
has
been
ousted,
and
vested
exclusively
in
the
Exchequer
Court
of
Canada.
The
latter
question
is
one
of
far
reaching
public
importance.
It
is
the
right
to
certiorari,
and
not
the
right
to
appeal
from
the
Board
of
Referees,
which
we
have
to
consider.
The
two
are
vastly
different
things.
It
is
vital
to
the
true
decision
of
this
appeal
to
avoid
treating
the
exercise
of
supervisory
jurisdiction
by
the
Supreme
Court
through
the
medium
of
the
high
prerogative
common-law
remedy
of
certiorari
as
if
it
were
a
trial
by
the
Supreme
Court
of
an
assessment
or
revenue
matter
or
a
decision
thereon.
Too
much
stress
cannot
be
placed
upon
the
distinction
between
the
two
things.
For
unless
it
is
fully
recognized
in
limine
and
kept
in
mind
throughout,
I
see
no
escape
from
conclusions
which
must
contain
inherent
fallacy.
The
learned
Judge
of
the
Supreme
Court
from
whom
this
appeal
is
taken,
did
not
decide
the
first
question,
viz.,
whether
or
not
a
fair
hearing
was
had.
The
second
question
was
presented
to
him
in
the
form
of
a
preliminary
objection
to
his
jurisdiction
to
hear
the
first
question
on
the
motion
for
certiorari.
The
learned
Judge
held
he
had
not
jurisdiction,
and
gave
effect
to
the
preliminary
objection,
thus
deciding
the
second
question
by
holding
that
his
certiorari
jurisdiction
was
ousted
in
favour
of
the
Exchequer
Court
of
Canada.
With
respect,
I
must
reach
the
conclusion
that
he
had
certiorari
jurisdiction.
In
my
opinion
the
motion
for
certiorari
ought
to
be
referred
back
to
proceed
before
a
Judge
of
the
Supreme
Court.
It
may
then
be
decided
whether
there
did
occur
a
""violation
of
an
essential
of
justice’’
in
the
sense
that
term
has
been
frequently
interpreted
in
this
Court,
notably
in
re
Low
Hong
Hing
(1926),
37
B.C.
295
at
302;
Ex
parte
Yuen
Vick
Jun
(1938),
54
B.C.
541
at
pp.
549,
551
and
555
and
Rex
v.
Moran
and
McLaren
(1940),
55
B.C.
491,
which
in
turn
were
largely
founded
on
The
King
v.
Mahony
(1910),
2
Ir.
Rep.
695,
which
was
approved
in
Rex
v.
Nat
Bell
(1922),
91
L.J.P.C.
146.
Such
decisions
as
Crawley
v.
Anderson
(1868),
7
N.S.R.
385;
In
re
Berquist
(1925),
35
B.C.
368,
and
The
King
v.
Wandsworth
Justices,
[1942]
1
K.B.
281,
are
also
informative
on
this
latter
aspect.
I
put
the
case
as
I
have
to
make
it
clear
that
this
Court,
in
the
exercise
of
its
appellate
jurisdiction,
is
not
concerned
now
as
to
whether
or
not
there
was
a
judicial
hearing
before
the
Board
of
Referees
on
the
first
question.
That
first
question
has
not
yet
been
determined
by
a
Judge
of
the
Supreme.
Court
in
certiorari
proceedings,
and
is
not
truly
before
us
until
it
has
been.
Interjection
of
evidence
and
argument
relating
to
it,
and
discussion
of
evidence
and
argument
concerning
the
machinery
of
taxation
and
assessment
under
"‘The
Excess
Profits
Tax
Act,
1940,”
or
concerning
appeals
from
the
Board
of
Referees,
in
my
judgment
tends
to
obscure
the
real
point
upon
which
this
appeal
depends,
and
does
not
assist
this
Court
in
determining
whether
the
learned
Judge
was
right
or
wrong
in
the
opinion
he
formed
regarding
his
jurisdiction
to
entertain
the
motion
for
certiorari.
The
effective
question
before
us
for
decision
is
whether
or
not
the
certiorari
jurisdiction
of
the
learned
Supreme
Court
Judge
to
entertain
the
first
question
was
ousted
as
he
held
it
was.
The
learned
Judge’s
reasoning
is
best
expressed
in
his
own
language
from
which
it
appears
his
opinion
is
based
wholly
on
s.
66
of
the
“Income
War
Tax
Act.”
The
learned
Judge
said
in
material
part
:
“Section
66
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
reads
in
part
as
follows
:—
"
66.
Subject
to
the
provisions
of
this
Act
The
Exchequer
Court
shall
have
exclusive
jurisdiction
to
hear
and
determine
all
questions
that
may
arise
in
connection
with
any
assessment
made
under
this
act.
.
.
.’
Mr.
Cunliffe
argues
that
that
section
presupposes
that
an
assessment
has
been
made,
and
that
as
I
understand
him,
the
words
‘in
connection
with’
mean
‘consequent
upon.’
I
do
not
think
that
is
the
correct
construction
to
be
put
upon
these
words.
One
of
the
very
generally
accepted
meanings
of
‘connection’
is
Relation
between
things
one
of
which
is
bound
up
with
or
involved
in
another’;
or
again
‘having
to
do
with.’
The
words
include
matters
occurring
prior
to
as
well
as
subsequent
to
or
consequent
upon
so
long
as
they
are
related
to
the
principal
thing.
The
phrase
‘having
to
do
with’
perhaps
gives
as
good
a
suggestion
of
the
meaning
as
could
be
had.
I
think
Section
66
is
sufficient
to
oust
the
jurisdiction
of
this
Court
to
deal
with
a
decision
on
which
an
assessment
is
subsequently
made.”
In
my
opinion,
with
respect,
for
reasons
developed
hereafter;
(1)
Section
66
of
the
“Income
War
Tax
Act”
does
not
take
away
Certiorari
from
the
Supreme
Court
of
British
Columbia;
and
(2)
The
British
North
America
Act
does
not
empower
the
Parliament
Of
Canada
to
do
so.
Several
prefatory
observations
ought
to
be
made.
The
respondent
Board
of
Referees
appears
as
a
statutory
tribunal
of
inferior
jurisdiction,
and
of.
the
decisions
referred
to
in
National
Trust
Company
Limited
v.
Christian
Community
etc.
(1940),
55
B.C.
516
at
pp.
529-530
and
in
Lee
v.
Workmen
f
s
Compensation
Board
(1942),
57
B.C.
412
at
pp.
429-430
and
438-441.
As
to
the
enlarged
scope
of
Certiorari
see
Crawley
v.
Anderson,
supra,
The
Security
Export
Co.
v.
Hetherington,
[1923]
S.C.R.
539,
Duff
J.
at
555,
and
Lee
v.
Workmen
f
s
Compensation
Board,
supra,
at
p.
431.
It
is
also
essential
to
have
a
clear
apprehension
of
the
nature
of
the
jurisdiction
exercised
in
Certiorari.
It
is
thus
stated
in
National
Trust
Company
Ltd.
V.
Christian
Community,
supra,
at
p.
541
(and
see
also
at
p.
527
and
pp.
540
and
542)—
(C
.
such
proceedings
are
an
appeal,
and
they
are
not
a
hearing
de
novo;
they
cannot
go
into
the
merits
of
the
dispute
between
the
parties.
The
only
remedy
the
applicant
may
obtain,
for,
(apart
from
any
extension
or
abridgement
of
certiorari
in
a
particular
statute),
the
only
jurisdiction
the
Supreme
Court
(of
the
Province)
has
in
such
proceedings,
is
to
review
the
proceedings
in
the
inferior
Court
or
tribunal,
to
ascertain
if
the
inferior
Court
or
tribunal
has
acted
without
jurisdiction
or
in
violation
of
the
essentials
of
justice.”
In
this
ease,
on
Certiorari
the
Judge
cannot
review
the
correctness
of
any
decision
of
the
Board
of
Referees
“in
connection
with”
the
appellant’s
assessment,
which,
the
Board
would
have
power
to
make,
if
it
did
not
violate
an
essential
of
justice,
or
exceed
its
jurisdiction.
It
is
not
a
trial
in
connection
with
the
correctness
of
the
assessment.
No
question
arises
concerning
the
exclusive
jurisdiction
of
the
Exchequer
Court
of
Canada
to
hear
and
determine
"
"
all
questions
that
may
arise
in
connection
with
’
the
appellant’s
assessment,
provided
the
decision
of
the
Board
of
Referees
is
made
after
a
proper
hearing
in
a
matter
and
manner
in
which
the
Board
has
jurisdiction.
The
appellant’s
complaint
concerns
another
matter
entirely,
viz.,
the
manner
in
which
the
Board
of
Referees
acted
in
arriving
at
a
decision.
The
appellant
complains
that
the
Board
violated
essentials
of
Justice
in
the
way
it
came
to
its
decision.
The
appellant’s
complaint
is
not
against
a
wrong
decision
as
such
by
the
Board,
but
it
is
a
complaint
that
no
proper
hearing
was
held
by
the
Board
to
justify
any
decision,
right
or
wrong.
To
put
it
as
Lord
Parmoor
did
in
Local
Government
Board
v.
Arlidge
(1914),
84
L.J.K.B.
72,
at
87,
it
is
contended
the
Board
did
not
determine
the
assessment
“in
a
judicial
spirit
in
accordance
with
the
principles
of
substantial
justice.”
The
appellant
says
in
effect
that
it
has
been
deprived
of
the
imprescriptible
civil
right
of
a
British
subject
(cf.
Darling
J.
with
Avory
and
Salter
J
J.
concurring
in
Tyrrel
v.
Cole
(1918),
120
L.T.
156)
to
have
a
fair
hearing
in
a
matter
which
affects
its
property,
and
it
seeks
the
aid
of.
the
inherent
jurisdiction
of
the
Supreme
Court,
to
quash
a
decision
which
it
alleges
is
a
denial
of
justice
according
to
law.
And
see
also
I
ames
v.
Wylie
(1844),
1
Car.
&
K.
257,
Lord
Denman
at
263
and
Russell
V.
Russell
(1880),
14
Ch.D.
Jessel
M.R.
at
478.
Since
the
respondent
asserts
s.
66
of
the
"
"
Income
War
Tax
Act”
has
deprived
the
Supreme
Court
of
British
Columbia
of
its
supervisory
jurisdiction
on
certiorari
and
the
learned
Judge
has
so
held,
it
is
essential
to
understand
what
the
jurisdiction
of
that
Court
is.
The
Supreme
Court
of
this
Province
is
a
Superior
Court
of
inherent,
original,
supervisory
and
general
jurisdiction
at
common
law,
quite
apart
from
any
statutory
confirmation
or
re-statement
of
that
inherent
and
common-law
jurisdiction,
and
also
quite
apart
from
any
additional
jurisdiction
which
has
been
conferred
upon
it
by
Dominion
or
Provincial
Statutes,
cf.
Stephen
et
al.
v.
Stewart
(No.
2)
(1943),
59
B.C.
297,
at
301-2.
The
Ancient
rule
in
Peacock
v.
Bell
(1667),
85
E.R.
at
87-8
applies
to
its
general
common-law
jurisdiction,
that
nothing
shall
be
intended
to
be
cut
of
its
jurisdiction,
"‘but
that
which
specially
appears
to
be
so”;
and
vide
Beaton
v.
Sjolander
(1903),
9
B.C.
439
(Full
Court)
at
441-2
and
Stephen
et
al.
v.
Stewart
et
al.
supra,
at
301-2.
Within
the
Province
it
has
""universal
jurisdiction
and
superintendency”
per
Willes
J.
in
Mayor
of
London
v.
Cox,
(1867)
L.J.
Ex.
225.
Included
in
the
Supreme
Court’s
inherent
jurisdiction
is
the
exercise
of
supervisory
jurisdiction
through
the
medium
of
the
high
prerogative
remedies
of
habeas
corpus,
certiorari,
mandamus
and
prohibition,
to
prevent
inferior
tribunals
acting
without
jurisdiction,
in
excess
or
in
abuse
of
their
jurisdiction,
and
in
violation
of
the
essentials
of
justice,
of.
National
Trust
Company
Limited
v.
The
Christian
Community,
etc.
(1940),
55
B.C.
516
at
pp.
527-8,
541-2,
and
at
545;
at
the
latter
page
it
is
made
clear
that
such
supervisory
jurisdiction
in
no
wise
interferes
with
the
jurisdiction
conferred
by
Parliament
upon
special
tribunals
such
as
the
Board
of
Referees
in
this
case,
but
it
does
enable
the
Supreme
Court
to
Supervise
the
conduct
and
decisions
of
such
tribunals
should
they
act
unjudicially
and
cf.
also
The
Queen
v.
The
Overseers
of
Walsall
(1877),
47
L.J.Q.B.
711,
Cockburn,
L.C.J.
at
718,
and
Lee
v.
Workmen
f
s
Compensation
Board
(1942),
57
B.C.
412,
at
pp.
429-432
and
439-441.
Coming
now
to
the
first
branch
of
this
appeal,
that
Certiorari
is
not
taken
away
by
s.
66
of
the
“Income
War
Tax
Act.”
It
must
first
be
said
that
the
Supreme
Court
of
this
Province
has
the
same
inherent
jurisdiction
to
issue
Certiorari
as
the
King’s
Courts
in
England.
It
possesses
that
jurisdiction
by
virtue
of
its
Imperial
origin
and
descent
through
the
Supreme
Court
of
Vancouver
Island
and
its
Judges.
That
Court
was
created
and
appointed
directly
under
an
Act
of
the
Imperial
Parliament
12
&
13,
Vic.
C.
48
(28
July
1849)
"An
Act
to
provide
for
the
Administration
of
Justice
in
Vancouver’s
Island,”
and
that
Act
was
passed
before
Vancouver
Island
became
a
Colony
properly
so-called,
cf.
The
Thrasher
case
(1882)
1
B.C.
(Pt.
1)
153,
Crease
J.
at
192-4
and
210;
S.
v.
S.
(1877)
1
B.C.
(Pt.
1),
Crease
J.
at
44,
and
Reynolds
v.
Vaughan
(1872)
1
B.C.
(Pt.
1)
Begbie
C.J.
p.
4.
In
due
course,
two
separate
Colonies,
Vancouver
Island
with
its
dependencies,
and
the
Mainland
of
British
Columbia,
came
into
being,
each
with
its
own
Supreme
Court.
The
Supreme
Court
of
Vancouver
Island
"'was
created
direct
from
England”
per
Crease
J.
in
The
Thrasher
case
at
p.
193.
When
the
two
Colonies
eventually
united
in
1866,
the
two
Colonial
Courts
were
finally
merged
by
the
"Courts
Merger
Ordinance,
1870,”
(C.
54
of
Coneol.
Stats,
of
1877)
and
cf.
S.
V.
S.,
supra;
the
Thrasher
case,
supra;
Atty.-Gen.
v.
E.
c
N.
Ry.
(1899),
7
B.C.
at
234;
Atty.-
Gen.
v.
Ludgate
(1904),
11
B.C.
at
260
and
267,
aff.
1906
75
L.J.P.C.
114
and
Sheppard
v.
Sheppard
(1908),
13
B.C.
at
506-9.
When
the
Colony
of
British
Columbia
became
a
Province
of
the
Dominion
of
Canada
on
20
July,
1871,
it
carried
into
Confederation
its
Supreme
Court
and
its
two
Imperially
appointed
Superior
Court
Judges
(Begbie,
C.J.B.C.
and
Crease
J.),
with,
not
only
the
jurisdiction
it
had
inherited
from
the
Supreme
Court
of
the
Original
separate
mainland
Colony
of
British
Columbia,
and
the
jurisdiction
it
had
subsequently
acquired,
but
also
the
status,
authority,
and
original,
inherent
(including
certiorari
jurisdiction),
and
any
other
jurisdiction
it
possessed
by
virtue
Of
its
Imperial
origin
and
descent
through
the
Supreme
Court
of
Vancouver
Island
and
its
Judges.
Moreover
the
jurisdiction
of
the
said
Court
and
the
faculties
of
its
Judges
were
recognized
by
s.
129
of
the
B.N.A.
Act.
It
is
later
pointed
out
that
s.
101
of
the
B.N.A.
Act
does
not
empower
the
taking
away
of
that
Imperially
descended
inherent
jurisdiction
which
the
Court
possessed
when
the
Province
entered
Confederation.
Certiorari
cannot
be
taken
away
in
the
absence
of
specific
and
unequivocal
positive
statutory
language.
It
will
be
apparent
that
our
decision
upon
this
first
branch
of
the
appeal
does
not
depend
upon
whether
or
not
the
Exchequer
Court
of
Canada
possesses
concurrent
certiorari
jurisdiction.
Even
if
the
latter
Court
does
possess
concurrent
certiorari
jurisdiction
that
is
not
enough
to
devest
the
Supreme
Court
of
its
ancient
jurisdiction
in
certiorari.
The
jurisdiction
may
be
concurrent,
but
it
cannot
be
taken
away
from
the
Supreme
Court
and
vested
exclusively
in
the
Exchequer
Court
in
the
absence
of
specific
and
unequivocal
positive
statutory
language.
The
decisions
show
certiorari
cannot
be
taken
away
simply
by
conferring
‘exclusive
jurisdiction”
upon
another
Court
as
is
done
in
s.
66
of
the
“Income
War
Tax
Act.”
In
fact,
language
which
seemed
expressly
to
take
away
certiorari
has
been
held
not
to
do
so,
perhaps
reflecting
judicial
disapproval
of
parliamentary
interference
with
those
ancient
judicial
faculties
of
the
King
in
person,
which,
by
the
custom
of
the
land
and
the
sanction
of
exercise
since
time
immemorial,
have
come
to
be
regarded
as
constitutionally
vested
in
the
King’s
JJudges
and
not
in
Parliament.
In
Rex
V.
Nat
Bell
(1922),
91
L.J.P.C.
146,
the
Judicial
Committee,
per
Lord
Sumner,
at
162-3,
intimated
that
Parliament
had
long
accepted
these
judicial
interpretations.
In
The
King
v.
Reeve
(1760),
96
E.R.
127,
Lord
Mansfield
held
that
certiorari
could
not
be
taken
away
by
general
words,
but
only
by
express
negative
words.
In
that
case
objection
has
been
taken
to
the
issuance
of
certiorari
because
an
appeal
was
provided
by
a
statute
which
also
enacted
that
such
appeal
should
be
final
and
that
no
other
Court
should
interpose.
The
Statute
(The
Conventicle
Act
22
Car.
2
C.
1)
provided
in
s.
6
that
.
.
no
other
Court
whatsoever
shall
intermeddle
with
any
cause
or
causes
of
appeal
upon
this
Act,
but
they
shall
be
finally
determined
in
the
Quarter-sessions
only.”
That
of
course
is
much
stronger
than
s.
66
of
the
“Income
War
Tax
Act,
’
but
Lord
Mansfield
said
:—
“There
is
no
colour,
that
these
negative
words
should
take
away
the
jurisdiction
of
this
Court
to
issue
writs
of
certiorari.
They
will
perhaps
take
away
the
writ
of
error
that
has
been
mentioned.
But
this
Court
has
an
inherent
power
to
issue
certioraris,
in
order
to
keep
all
inferior
courts
within
due
bounds,
unless
expressly
forbid
so
to
do,
by
the
words
of
the
law.
If
the
justices
have
done
right
below,
you
may
show
it,
and
quash
the
certiorari.
But
if
there
be
the
least
doubt,
this
Court
will
grant
the
writ.”
(The
italics
are
mine.)
That
reasoning
is
followed
throughout
cf.
The
King
v.
Plowright
(1689),
87
E.R.
60;
Rear:
v.
Moreley
(1760),
97
E.R.
696;
The
King
v.
Jukes
(1800),
8
Term
Reports
542;
The
Queen
v.
The
Justices
of
St.
Albans
(1853),
22
L.J.M.C.
142;
Crawley
v.
Anderson
(1868),
7
N.S.R.
385;
The
Queen
v.
the
((
Troop
ff
Company
(1899),
29
S.C.R.
662
at
673;
Re
Sing
Kee
(1901),
8
B.C.
20
(Martin
J.)
;
The
Colonial
Bank
of
Australia
v.
Willan
(1874),
43
L.J.P.C.
39
at
44,
and
Rex
v.
Nat
Bell
1922),
91
L.J.P.C.
at
162-3.
In
The
Queen
v.
The
Cheltenham
Paving
Commissioners
(1841),
113
E.R.
1211,
approved
in
Colonial
Bank
of
Australia
v.
Willian,
supra,
the
Statute
provided
(p.
1212)
:
"
"
that
no
order,
verdict,
rate,
assessment,
judgment,
conviction
or
other
proceeding
touching
or
concerning
any
of
the
matters
aforesaid,
or
touching
or
concerning
any
offence
against
this
Act,
or
any
by-law
or
order
to
be
made
in
pursuance
thereof,
shall
be
quashed
or
vacated
for
want
of
form
only,
or
be
removed
or
removable
by
certiorari,
or
any
other
writ
or
process
whatsoever,
into
any
of
His
Majesty’s
Courts
of
Record
at
Westminster;
any
law
or
statute
to
the
contrary
thereof
in
anywise
notwithstanding.^
(The
italics
are
mine.)
But
despite
this
expressive
language
(which
does
not
appear
in
s.
66
of
the
‘‘Income
War
Tax
Act”),
Lord
Chief
Justice
Denman
quashed
the
order
because
three
Magistrates
who
were
interested
took
part
in
the
decision.
In
the
case
at
Bar
the
appellant
alleges
that
not
only
did
the
Board
refuse
him
a
fair
hearing
but
it
was
also
improperly
constituted.
The
Lord
Chief
Justice
said
(p.
1214)
:
66
three
Magistrates
who
were
interested
took
a
part
in
the
decision.
It
is
enough
to
show
that
this
decision
was
followed
by
an
Order;
and
J
will
not
enquire
what
the
particular
question
was,
nor
how
the
majority
was
made
up,
nor
what
the
result
would
have
been
if
the
Magistrates
who
were
interested
had
retired.
The
Court
was
improperly
constituted
;
and
that
rendered
the
decision
invalid.
.
.
.
1‘
A
statutory
clause
taking
away
Certiorari
must
be
understood
to
assume
that
an
order
has
been
made
by
the
proper
authority.
It
cannot
be
said
a
proper
authority
has
been
exercised,
if
as
alleged
here,
a
fair
hearing
has
been
denied.
A
more
recent
example
is
Samejima
v.
The
King,
[1932]
S.C.R.
640.
That
was
a
Habeas
Corpus
case,
but
in
so
far
as
this
appeal
is
concerned
its
principle
applies
equally
to
Certiorari
and
in
this
respect
cf.
Rex
v.
Commanding
Officer
of
Morn
Hill
Camp
(1916),
86
L.J.K.B.
410,
Lord
Reading
at
413,
and
In
re
Low
Hong
Hing
(1926),
37
B.C.
295
at
302.
The
relevant
s.
23
of
the
Immigration
Act,
C.
93,
R.S.C.
1927,
read:
“No
Court,
and
no
Judge
or
officer
thereof,
shall
have
Jurisdiction
to
review,
quash,
reverse,
restrain
or
otherwise
interfere
with
any
proceeding,
decision
or
order
of
the
Minister
or
of
any
Board
of
Inquiry,
or
officer
in
charge,
had,
made
or
given
under
the
authority
and
in
accordance
with
the
provisions
of
this
Act
relating
to
the
detention
or
deportation
of
any
rejected
immigrant,
passenger
or
other
person,
upon
any
ground
whatsoever,
unless
such
person
is
a
Canadian
citizen
or
has
Canadian
domicile.”
(The
italics
are
mine.)
Here
one
would
think
are
express
negative
words
of
the
kind
Lord
Mansfield
referred
to
in
The
King
v.
Reeve,
supra,
and
special
attention
is
directed
to
the
underlined
words
“upon
any
ground
whatsoever.”
Samejima
was
not
a
Canadian
citizen
and
had
not
Canadian
domicile.
Upon
arrest
for
being
unlawfully
in
Canada,
he
was
discharged
on
Habeas
Corpus
by
Fisher
J.
(1932),
44
B.C.
317.
He
was
re-arrested
and
Murphy
J.,
on
a
second
Habeas
Corpus
application
refused
his
release.
An
appeal
to
this
Court—In
re
Immigration
Act
and
Samejima
(1932),
45
B.C.
401
was
dismissed
upon
an
equal
division
of
the
Court.
Macdonald
C.J.B.C.,
and
MePhillips
J.A.
founded
their
judgments
on
the
ground
that
s.
23
quoted
above,
completely
ousted
the
jurisdiction
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
this
Province.
An
appeal
to
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
was
successful.
It
was
there
held
that
notwithstanding
the
apparent
express
exclusion
of
the
jurisdiction
of
the
Courts,
and
the
presence
of
the
words
"‘upon
any
ground
whatsoever”
that
what
was
done,
had
not
been
done
under
the
authority
and
in
accordance
with
the
provisions
of
the
Immigration
Act.
In
this
case
the
statute
does
not
prescribe
the
duties
of
the
Board
of
Referees
with
the
detail
which
the
Immigration
Act
did
in
the
Samejima
ease.
The
duties
of
the
Board
are
generally
stated
but
that
does
not
relieve
it
from
the
common
law
duty
of
giving
the
appellant
a
fair
hearing
which
is
the
inalienable
right
of
every
Canadian.
If
the
Board,
as
the
uncontradicted
affidavit
of
the
appellant
asserts,
has
in
fact
violated
an
essential
of
justice,
then
it
has
not
acted
under
its
statutory
authority
and
in
accordance
with
the
common
law
in
force
in
this
Province
since
before
Confederation,
and
Certiorari
is
as
readily
available
to
the
appellant
as
Habeas
Corpus
was
to
Samejima.
In
fact
much
more
so
because
of
the
lack
of
express
negative
words
which
appeared
in
the
Samejima
case.
And
see
also
Shin
Shim
v.
The
King,
[1938]
4
D.L.R.
(S.C.
of
Can.).
There
is
a
recent
decision
which
applies
in
principle
although
it
did
not
concern
Habeas
Corpus,
Certiorari,
Mandamus
or
Prohibition.
It
turned
upon
whether
the
jurisdiction
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
this
Province
as
a
Court
of
first
instance
had
been
taken
away
by
a
Dominion
Statute.
The
case
is
National
Trust
Company
Limited
v.
The
Christian
Community
etc.,
[1941]
S.C.R.
601,
reversing
the
decision
of
this
Court
in
1940,
55
B.C.
516.
After
the
Christian
Community
had
invoked
the
"‘Farmers’
Creditors
Arrangement
Act,”
the
National
Trust
Company
Limited
issued
a
writ
against
it
out
of
the
Supreme
Court
for
a
declaration
that
it
was
not
a
‘‘farmer’’
within
the
meaning
of
the
Act
it
has
invoked,
and
obtained
a
declaratory
judgment
accordingly.
On
appeal
this
Court
held
that
Parliament
had
expressly
devested
the
Supreme
Court
of
all
original,
auxiliary,
and
ancillary
jurisdiction
in
the
premises
by
enacting
in
s.
5(1)
of
the
F.C.A.
Act
(see
p.
534
of
55
B.C.)
that
in
matters
to
which
the
F.C.A.
Act
related,
the
County
Court
of
the
district
in
which
the
farmer
lived
“shall
have
exclusive
jurisdiction
subject
to
appeal.”
It
is
to
be
observed
that
the
same
language,
‘‘exclusive
jurisdiction”
appears
in
s.
66
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act.
In
my
opinion
nothing
in
particular
turns
on
the
words
‘‘in
connection
with”?
in
s.
66
upon
which
the
learned
Judge
seems
to
have
based
his
decision
(see
the
quoted
reasons
above).
I
assume
that
the
ordinary
meaning
conveyed
by
these
words
is
fully
comprised
in
the
term
“exclusive
jurisdiction.’’
This
Court
reasoned
in
the
National
Trust
case
that
Parliament,
by
using
the
term
‘‘
exclusive
jurisdiction”
had
expressed
its
intendment
that
the
Supreme
Court’s
jurisdiction
as
a
Court
of
first
instance
was
ousted
in
favour
of
the
County
Court,
and
so
held.
It
was
pointed
out
in
this
Court,
however,
at
pp.
527
and
540-2
(55
B.C.)
that
this
did
not
oust
the
Supreme
Court’s
supervisory
jurisdiction
by
way
of
Habeas
Corpus,
Certiorari,
Mandamus
or
Prohibition,
and
as
I
read
the
judgments
in
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
this
latter
view
was
not
questioned.
But
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
did
uphold
the
jurisdiction
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
this
Province
as
a
Court
of
first
instance
declaring
that
the
language
of
the
F.C.A.
Act
conferring
exclusive
jurisdiction
upon
the
County
Court
did
not
go
far
enough
to
oust
the
jurisdiction
of
the
provincially
constituted
Supreme
Court
as
a
Court
of
first
instance
notwithstanding
Barraclough
v.
Brown
(1897),
66
L.J.Q.B.
672
(H.L.)
and
similar
decisions
referred
to
in
this
Court
at
pp.
534-5
of
55
B.C.
The
facts
were
that
assets
of
the
Christian
Community
at
the
time
it
invoked
the
F.C.A.
Act,
were
in
the
hands
of
a
receiver
appointed
by
an
order
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
this
Province.
Sir
Lyman
Duff,
C.J.C.
(Davis
and
Hudson
JJ.
concurring)
said
at
p.
610
that
‘‘only
the
most
precise
language’’
would
justify
a
conclusion
that
Parliament,
in
conferring
exclusive
jurisdiction
upon
the
County
Court,
intended
to
deprive
the
Supreme
Court
of
jurisdiction
in
a
case
where
a
receiver
had
been
appointed
by
the
Supreme
Court.
It
had
appeared
to
this
Court,
that
the
giving
of
exclusive
jurisdiction
to
the
County
Court,
in
case
of
bankruptcy,
would
be
clearly
sufficient
to
create
that
Jurisdiction
immediately
an
act
of
bankruptcy
occurred,
and
under
the
House
of
Lords
decision
in
Barraclough
v.
Brown,
supra,
and
similar
decisions,
that
it
would
be
sufficient
to
deprive
any
other
Court
immediately
and
entirely
of
jurisdiction.
But
Sir
Lyman
Duff,
C.J.C.
repeated
at
p.
610
that
‘‘only
the
very
clearest
language’’
could
justify
a
conclusion
the
jurisdiction
of
the
Supreme
Court
was
ousted,
and
invoked
Stradling
v.
Morgan
(1560),
75
E.R.
305
at
311
and
315.
In
my
judgment
the
principle
of
statutory
construction
enunciated
in
Stradling
v.
Morgan
and
thus
approved
(it
was
also
approved
by
Sir
William
Ritchie,
C.J.C.
in
Valin
v.
Langlois
(1879),
3
S.C.R.
at
27)
is
equally
applicable
to
both
branches
of
this
appeal.
It
is
expressed
at
p.
315
of
75
E.R.
in
these
words:
“From
which
cases
it
appears,
that
the
sages
of
the
law
heretofore
have
construed
statutes
quite
contrary
to
the
letter
in
some
appearance,
and
those
statutes
which
comprehend
all
things
in
the
letter,
they
have
expounded
to
extend
but
to
some
things,
and
those
which
generally
prohibit
all
people
from
doing
such
an
act,
they
have
interpreted
to
permit
some
people
to
do
it,
and
those
which
include
every
person
in
the
letter
they
have
adjudged
to
reach
to
some
persons
only,
which
expositions
have
always
been
founded
upon
the
intent
of
the
Legislature,
which
they
have
collected
sometimes
by
considering
the
cause
and
necessity
of
making
the
Act,
sometimes
by
comparing
one
part
of
the
Act
with
another,
and
sometimes
by
foreign
circumstances.
So
that
they
have
ever
been
guided
by
the
intent
of
the
Legislature,
which
they
have
always
taken
according
to
the
necessity
of
the
matter,
and
according
to
that
which
is
consonant
to
reason
and
good
discretion.”
The
authorities
are
clear
from
Lord
Mansfield’s
time
onward
that
certiorari
cannot
be
taken
away
in
the
absence
of
express
and
unequivocal
statutory
language.
It
is
a
venerable
principle
which
has
come
down
to
us
with
the
approval
of
generation
after
generation
of
Judges
and
Legislators.
But
there
is
not
one
word
about
certiorari
in
s.
66
of
the
‘‘
Income
War
Tax
Act.’’
It
must
be
conceded
also
that
there
is
nothing
in
the
Exchequer
Court
Act
c.
34,
R.S.C.
1927
and
amending
Acts
which
expressly
gives
that
Court
exclusive
Certiorari
jurisdiction.
In
fact
there
is
nothing
in
that
statute
which
expressly
gives
the
Exchequer
Court
even
concurrent
jurisdiction
in
Certiorari.
But
despite
the
lack
of
these
two
indicia
of
jurisdiction,
it
was
argued
that
the
Exchequer
Court
has
exclusive
Certiorari
jurisdiction
in
any
matter
affecting
the
revenue.
I
find
difficulty
in
following
the
reasoning
which
seeks
to
support
this
submission.
So
far
as
I
can
grasp
it,
it
is
grounded
first,
upon
the
1933
amendment
to
the
‘‘
Exchequer
Court
Act’’
which
confers
jurisdiction
in
Certiorari
upon
the
Exchequer
Court
in
respect
to
persons
serving
in
the
Armed
Forces
outside
Canada,
but
in
terms
which
implied
that
Court
already
had
certain
concurrent
Certiorari
jurisdiction
within
Canada;
and
secondly,
that
the
Canadian
Court
of
Exchequer
was
endowed
at
its
inception
with
the
same
jurisdiction
as
the
English
Court
of
Exchequer,
and
as
it
is
argued
the
latter
Court
had
exclusive
jurisdiction
in
matters
affecting
the
revenue,
so
also
has
the
Canadian
Court;
and
hence,
it
is
reasoned
the
Canadian
Court
must
have
exclusive
Certiorari
jurisdiction
in
matters
arising
out
of
disputes
affecting
the
revenue.
The
short
answer
to
both
grounds
is
that
the
1933
amendment
to
the
‘‘
Exchequer
Court
Act,
‘
‘
denies
the
existence
of
exclusive
Certiorari
jurisdiction
in
the
Exchequer
Court,
since
it
plainly
concedes
that
whatever
Certiorari
jurisdiction
the
Exchequer
Court
may
possess
is
concurrent
with
the
jurisdiction
of
the
provincially
constituted
Courts.
Section
19(j)
of
the
1933
amendment
confers
Certiorari
jurisdiction
upon
the
Exchequer
Court
in
relation
to
persons
in
the
Armed
Forces
outside
of
Canada
:
"
to
the
same
extent
as
and
under
similar
circumstances
in
which
jurisdiction
now
exists
in
the
Exchequer
Court
of
Canada
or
in
the
Courts
or
Judges
of
the
several
Provinces
in
respect
of
similar
matters
within
Canada.’’
(The
italics
are
mine.
)
To
my
mind
that
statutory
language
which
plainly
concedes
concurrent
Certiorari
jurisdiction
in
the
Courts
and
Judges
of
the
several
Provinces
closes
the
door
completely
upon
the
contention
of
exclusive
Certiorari
jurisdiction
in
the
Exchequer
Court.
While
the
Exchequer
Court
Act
thus
definitely
rules
out
exclusive
Certiorari
jurisdiction
in
that
Court,
it
is
in
point
also
to
note
that
even
if
it
did
not,
the
second
ground
fails
to
withstand
critical
analysis.
When
the
references
to
the
jurisdiction
of
the
English
Court
of
Exchequer
are
sifted
down
to
the
point
where
they
may
understandably
have
application
to
the
Cana-
dian
Exchequer
Court,
I
am
unable
to
find
that
second
ground
means
in
principle
and
effect
any
more
than
this,
that
because
s.
66
of
the
‘‘
Income
War
Tax
Act’’
gave
the
Canadian
Exchequer
Court
exclusive
jurisdiction
in
matters
of
assessment
it
thereby
carries
with
it
exclusive
Certiorari
Jurisdiction
in
any
matter
arising
out
of
a
dispute
affecting
assessments.
But
that
submission
has
already
been
dealt
with
in
the
foregoing
pages
where
it
is
established,
fortified
by
copious
references
to
long
accepted
authorities,
first,
that
language
such
as
that
used
in
the
‘‘
Income
War
Tax
Act’’
is
not
sufficient
to
take
away
Certiorari,
and,
secondly,
that
the
nature
and
scope
of
Certiorari
itself
denies
that
its
exercise
may
in
any
wise
affect
the
Exchequer
Court’s
exclusive
jurisdiction
in
assessment
matters.
There
ought
to
be
no
need
to
say
that
Certiorari
is
not
an
action
or
a
suit.
Its
very
nature
makes
inapplicable
the
proposition
that
the
King
has
the
privilege
of
suing
in
any
Court
he
pleases.
These
Certiorari
proceedings
are
not
a
suit
or
action
by
or
against
the
King.
In
Certiorari
"‘there
is
no
lis;
there
is
no
action.’’
Lord
Bramwell
(Lord
Watson
concurring)
in
Cox
v.
Hakes
(1890),
60
L.J.Q.B.
89
at
98
used
these
words
regarding
habeas
corpus,
but
they
apply
equally
to
Certiorari.
To
summarize
briefly—(1)
The
guiding
decisions
in
Certiorari
show
that
language
of
the
kind
used
in
s.
66
of
the
"‘Income
War
Tax
Act’’
is
not
sufficient
to
take
away
Certiorari
jurisdiction
from
the
Supreme
Court;
(2)
The
‘‘
Exchequer
Court
Act''
not
only
fails
to
confer
exclusive
Certiorari
jurisdiction
upon
the
Exchequer
Court,
but
by
plain
implication
confers
certain
concurrent
jurisdiction
upon
that
Court;
(3)
The
ratio
decidendi
of
Samejima
v.
The
King,
[1932]
8.C.R.
640
and
National
Trust
Company
v.
The
Christian
Community,
etc.,
[1941]
S.C.R.
610
are
conclusive
against
holding
exclusive
Certiorari
jurisdiction
lies
in
the
Exchequer
Court.
With
respect,
it
follows
as
an
inescapable
conclusion,
that
s.
66
of
the
"‘Income
War
Tax
Act’’
does
not
attempt
to
take
away
Certiorari
from
the
Supreme
Court
of
British
Columbia.
The
conclusion
just
reached
on
the
first
branch
is
sufficient
in
itself
to
require
this
appeal
to
be
allowed.
But
it
is
worthy
of
note
that
it
is
re-enforced
by
a
conclusion
which
in
my
judgment,
emerges
from
a
study
of
the
second
branch
of
the
appeal,
viz.,
that
the
British
North
America
Act
does
not
empower
the
Parliament
of
Canada
to
take
away
Certiorari
from
the
Supreme
Court
of
British
Columbia;
or,
to
put
it
another
way,
the
‘*
Exchequer
Court
Act’’
does
not
attempt
to
do
so,
because
the
B.N.A.
Act
is
not
competent
to
give
it
that
power.
In
this
aspect
it
is
essential
to
keep
in
mind
the
observations
made
at
the
outset
of
this
judgment
concerning
the
nature
of
the
jurisdiction
exercised
in
Certiorari,
and
the
Character
of
the
Supreme
Court’s
inherent
power
to
exercise
that
jurisdiction
through
its
imperial
origin
and
descent.
In
Valin
v.
Langlois
(1879),
3
S.C.R.
1,
it
was
said
at
p.
19
(affirmed
(1874),
5
A.C.
115)
that
the
provincially
constituted
Courts
(and
cf.
In
re
Vancini
(1904),
34
S.C.R.
621)
:
‘
"
are
not
mere
local
Courts
for
the
Administration
of
the
local
laws
passed
by
the
local
Legislatures
of
the
Provinces
in
which
they
are
organized.”
Section
129
of
the
B.N.A.
Act
(see
also
s.
10
of
the
Terms
of
Union)
reads
in
relevant
part:
"Except
as
otherwise
provided
by
this
Act,
all
laws
in
force
.
.
.
at
the
Union,
and
all
Courts
of
civil
and
criminal
jurisdiction
.
.
.
existing
.
.
.
at
the
Union,
shall
continue
.
.
.
as
if
the
Union
had
not
been;
subject
nevertheless
(except
with
respect
to
such
as
are
enacted
by
or
exist
under
Acts
of
the
Parliament
of
Great
Britain
.
.
.
)
to
be
repealed,
abolished,
or
altered
by
the
Parliament
of
Canada,
or
by
the
Legislature
of
the
respective
Province.
.
.
.’
(The
italics
are
mine.)
In
my
judgment,
the
true
interpretation
of
the
exception
in
that
section,
leads
to
the
conclusion
that
the
inherent
Certiorari
jurisdiction
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
British
Columbia,
derived
as
it
is
from
the
imperially
created
Supreme
Court
of
Vancouver
Island,
is
not
subject
to
be
"‘repealed,
abolished
or
altered’’
by
the
Parliament
of
Canada.
It
has
been
suggested
that
the
exception
in
s.
129
has
been
repealed
by
the
‘‘Statute
of
Westminster
1931.”
But
that
is
denied
in
plain
words
by
s.
7(1)
thereof
which
reads:
“Nothing
in
this
Act
shall
be
deemed
to
apply
to
the
repeal,
amendment
or
alteration
of
the
British
North
America
Acts
1867
to
1930,
or
any
order,
rule
or
regulation
made
thereunder.
’
The
Reference
re
Privy
Council
Appeals,
[1940]
S.C.R.
49
related
to
the
jurisdiction
of
the
Canadian
Parliament
to
abrogate
the
jurisdiction
of
the
Judicial
Committee
to
hear
appeals
from
Canadian
Courts.
That
reference
was
concerned
with
Parliament’s
extra-territorial
jurisdiction
and
also
its
jurisdiction
to
subtract
from
His
Majesty’s
prerogative
as
exercised
by
the
Judicial
Committee.
British
Coal
Corporation
v.
The
King,
[1935]
A.C.
500,
concerned
the
constitutionality
of
prohibiting
appeals
in
criminal
matters
to
the
Judicial
Com-
mittee
after
the
passing
of
the
Statute
of
Westminster.
That
decision
was
expressly
limited
to
the
type
of
criminal
appeal
there
under
consideration.
With
respect,
I
cannot
find
that
the
ratio
decidendi
of
either
the
decision
or
the
reference
excludes
the
proposition
contained
in
the
second
branch
of
this
appeal.
I
think
it
is
also
plain
from
its
context
that
the
observations
at
p.
74
in
Valin
v.
Langlois
(1879),
3
S.C.R.
1,
were
not
directed
to
the
case
of
a
Court
of
Imperial
origin
and
descent.
The
Supreme
Court
of
Vancouver
Island
from
which
the
Supreme
Court
descends,
was,
as
Mr.
Justice
Crease
said
in
The
Thrasher
case
(1882),
1
B.C.
(Pt.
1)
at
93,
"created
direct
from
England.”
That
Court
was
not
constituted
by
the
Colony
of
Vaneouver
Island,
nor
was
it
constituted
by
a
subordinate
province
of
a
Colony,
and
see
The
Thrasher
case,
supra,
at
pp.
194
and
212,
and
Reference
re
Privy
Council
Appeals,
[1940]
S.C.R.
at
pp.
103,
109,
111,
114,
and
120.
The
introductory
words
of
s.
129
‘‘except
as
otherwise
provided
by
this
Act’’
lead
to
ss.
91,
92
and
101,
of
the
B.N.A.
Act.
We
are
concerned
with
the
latter
section
whereunder
Parliament
is
empowered
to
provide:
“.
.
.
for
the
establishment
of
any
additional
Courts
for
the
better
administration
of
the
laws
of
Canada.”
The
Exchequer
Court
of
Canada
was
created
under
that
authority.
Its
entire
jurisdiction
stems
from
those
words
in
s.
101.
It
is
purely
the
creature
of
those
statutory
words.
It
has
no
inherent
jurisdiction
such
as
is
possessed
by
the
Supreme
Court
of
British
Columbia.
In
Bow
McLachlan
&
Co.
v.
“Camosun’’?
(Owners)
(1910),
79
L.J.P.C.
17,
Lord
Gorrell
at
20,
said
of
the
Exchequer
Court
of
Canada
that
it
“‘has
no
general
common
law
jurisdiction,’’
and
see
also
pp.
19
and
25.
Section
101
deserves
examination
for
what
it
does
not
say,
as
well
as
for
what
it
does
say.
It
does
not
say
these
statutory
“additional
Courts’’
shall
have
inherent
jurisdiction
or
a
general
common
law
jurisdiction
such
as
is
possessed
by
Courts
of
common
law,
or
that
they
shall
have
exclusive
jurisdiction
in
administering
the
‘‘laws
of
Canada.”
These
important
jurisdictional
omissions
must
be
regarded
as
vital
when
determining
the
jurisdiction
of
a
statutory
Court
which
can
have
no
jurisdiction
but
what
the
B.N.A.
Act
is
competent
to
give
it.
If
s.
101
is
not
competent
to
confer
exclusive
Certiorari
Jurisdiction
upon
the
Exchequer
Court
it
must
follow
that
court
cannot
possess
exclusive
Certiorari
jurisdiction.
If
that
is
so,
then
the
Certiorari
jurisdiction
of
the
Supreme
Court
cannot
be
ousted,
for
to
prove
it
is
ousted,
it
must
be
shown
affirmatively
that
the
jurisdiction
is
vested
exclusively
in
the
Exchequer
Court,
vide
Lord
Hardinge
in
Derby
(Earl
of)
v.
Athol
(Duke
of)
(1749),
27
E.R.
982,
"A
plea
to
the
jurisdiction
of
a
general
Court
(a
superior
Court
of
general
jurisdiction),
must
shew
where
the
jurisdiction
vests,
as
well
as
negatively,
that
it
is
not
there,’’
and
see
also
Board
v.
Board
(1919),
88
L.J.P.C.
165
at
168.
Turning
next
to
what
s.
101
does
say.
The
power
is
to
establish
"additional
Courts’’
for
the
better
administration
of
‘‘the
laws
of
Canada.”
The
expression
‘‘additional
Courts’’
can
only
mean
more
Courts.
There
is
not
a
hint
that
these
Courts
shall
supplant
existing
Courts
under
s.
129
which
have
Imperial
origin,
or
oust
their
jurisdiction
in
any
respect.
They
are
"additional
Courts’’
in
no
wise
interfering
with‘the
existing
Courts
under
s.
129
which
have
Imperial
origin.
They
must
be
"a
means
to
some
end
competent
to
the
latter’’
as
it
was
put
in
the
Board
of
Commerce
case
post.
One
would
think
the
expression
"laws
of
Canada”
in
its
context
of
s.
101
must
mean
just
what
it
says,
viz.,
laws
of
that
Federal
entity
known
as
Canada
organized
by
the
B.N.A.
Act
(s.
3),
as
distinguished
from
the
laws
of
the
several
Provinces.
No
one
has
suggested
that
the
"laws
of
Canada”
include
any
‘‘lex
non
scripta.’’
Cf.
The
King
v.
Hume
et
al.,
[1930]
S.C.R.
531.
Counsel
for
the
respondent
relied
on
G.T.
Railway
of
Canada
v.
Atty.
Gen.
of
Canada
(1907),
76
L.J.P.C.
23,
but
apart
from
other
distinctive
considerations
it
did
not
concern
s.
101.
In
Atty-Gen.
of
Canada
v.
Atty.-Gen.
of
Alberta
(1922),
91
L.J.P.C.
40,
{The
Board
of
Commerce
case)
the
Judicial
Committee
(per
Viscount
Haldane)
at
p.
47
said
s.
101
“
.
cannot
be
read
as
enabling
that
Parliament
(Dominion)
to
trench
on
provincial
rights,
such
as
the
powers
over
property
and
civil
rights
in
the
Provinces
exclusively
conferred
on
their
Legislatures.
Full
significance
can
be
attached
to
the
words
in
question
without
reading
them
as
implying
such
capacity
on
the
part
of
the
Dominion
Parliament.
It
is
essential
in
such
cases
that
the
new
judicial
establishment
should
be
a
means
to
some
end
competent
to
the
latter.
9}
(The
italics
are
mine.)
The
foregoing
is
made
to
apply
equally
to
‘‘The
Administration
of
Justice
in
the
Province”
under
s.
92(14).
I
do
not
conceive
that
any
one
will
question
that
denial
of
a
fair
hearing
in
the
Province,
to
a
property
owner
in
the
Province,
in
matters
relating
to
his
property
in
the
Province,
is
a
denial
of
a
civil
right
in
the
Province
within
s.
92(13).
It
is
a
plain
denial
of
justice
in
the
Province
contrary
to
the
law
of
the
Province.
As
I
view
it,
it
is
as
much
the
duty
of
Dominion
officials
to
observe
the
provincial
law
requiring
a
fair
hearing,
as
it
is
their
duty
to
obey
the
provincial
and/or
municipal
traffic
laws.
Cf.
Workmen^
Compensation
Board
v.
C.P.R.
(1919),
88
L.J.P.C.
at
172.
It
is
a
cardinal
principle
of
the
common
law
of
England
which
forms
part
of
the
law
of
this
Province,
that
a
tribunal
shall
hear
the
whole
case
and
allow
a
full
opportunity
therefor^
and
that
any
departures
thereform
may
be
corrected
promptly
by
the
efficacious
remedies
afforded
by
the
appropriate
high
prerogative
writs
in
which
are
included
Certiorari
and
Mandamus.
Property
and
civil
rights’’
in
s.
92(14)
"‘are
plainly
used
in
their
largest
sense’’
as
said
in
Citizens
Insurance
Co.
v.
Parsons
(1882),
51
L.J.P.C.
11
at
18
and
in
The
Natural
Products
Marketing
Act
Reference,
[1936]
S.C.R.
398
at
416.
The
remedy
of
Certiorari
to
prevent
a
violation
of
an
essential
of
justice
is
in
its
essence
a
civil
right.
For
regarded
in
its
true
character,
Certiorari,
as
was
said
of
Mandamus
in
The
Mayor
of
Rochester
v.
The
Queen
(1858),
120
E.R.
791
at
794,
(per
Pollock
C.B.
and
Martin
B.)
is
a
great
constitutional
remedy
for
error
and
misgovernment
and
it
is
the
duty
of
the
Court
to
be
vigilant
to
apply
it
in
every
case,
to
which,
by
any
reasonable
construction
it
may
be
made
applicable.
As
one
of
the
high
prerogative
writs
including
Habeas
Corpus,
Mandamus
and
Prohibition,
Certiorari
is
not
a
part
of
the
original
proceedings
before
the
statutory
tribunal.
That
is
to
say
it
is
not
part
of
the
assessment
proceedings
before
the
Board
of
Referees.
It
is
in
the
nature
of
a
new
proceeding
brought
by
the
subject
to
enforce
a
civil
right
(in
this
case
a
fair
hearing)
of
which
he
claims
to
have
been
deprived.
The
same
principle
governs
in
this
respect
as
was
applied
in
Habeas
Corpus
in
Ex
parte
Tom
Tong
(1883),
108
U.S.
556
;
Kurtz
v.
Moffitt
(1885),
115
U.S.
487;
Ex
parte
Fong,
[1929]
1
D.L.R.
223;
and
Ea:
Parte
Yuen
Yick
Jun
(1938),
54
B.C.
541—applied
in
Re
Wilby
(No.
1)
(1944),
60
B.C.
at
374.
In
Farnsworth
v.
Montana
(1889),
129
U.S.
104
at
113
it
was
held
the
same
principle
applied
in
Prohibition
as
in
Habeas
Corpus.
In
Rex
v.
Electricity
Commissioners
(1924),
93
L.J.K.B.
390,
Atkin
L.J.
at
406
said
there
was
no
difference
in
principle
between
Certiorari
and
Prohibition.
The
Queen
v.
The
Justices
of
Surrey
(1870),
39
L.J.M.C.
145
was
cited
by
Lord
Blackburn
in
Julios
v.
The
Bishop
of
Oxford
(1880),
49
L.J.Q.B.
577
at
591,
as
a
Certiorari
case
applicable
to
Mandamus
and
Prohibition.
The
House
of
Lords
in
Local
Government
Board
v.
Arlidge
(1914),
84
L.J.K.B.
72
applied
the
same
principles
to
Certiorari
as
it
had
applied
to
Mandamus
in
Board
of
Education
v.
Rice
(1911),
80
L.J.K.B.
786.
The
principle
of
Habeas
Corpus
was
applied
to
Mandamus
in
Re
McLean
(1914)
57
B.C.
at
58
and
59,
per
Sloan,
C.J.B.C.
(then
J.A.)
with
whom
McQuarrie,
J.A.
agreed
in
legal
substance.
In
both
Rex
v.
Commanding
Officer
of
Moru
Hill
Camp
(1916),
86
L.J.K.B.,
Lord
Reading
at
413,
and
in
re
Low
Hong
Hing
(1926),
37
B.C.,
Martin
J.A.
at
302
applied
the
principle
of
Habeas
Corpus
to
Certiorari.
It
is
true
that
Habeas
Corpus
involves
personal
liberty
and
thus
no
doubt
stands
at
the
right
hand
of
all
the
high
prerogative
‘writs.
But
it
is
intimately
related
to
Certiorari,
cf.
Houldsworth,
Vol.
9,
p.
109.
For
if
a
person
is
detained
or
penalized
it
is
generally
grounded
on
some
order,
statute
or
written
authority
which,
as
the
cause
of
detention
or
punishment,
must
first
be
quashed
on
removal
of
the
proceedings
from
the
inferior
tribunal
to
a
Superior
Court
of
general
common
law
jurisdiction.
If
a
person
may
be
penalized
if
he
disregards
a
decision
reached
at
an
unfair
hearing,
his
remedy
is
by
Certiorari
to
quash
the
decision
which
is
the
occasion
for
his
punishment,
and
see
Lee
v.
Workmen‘s
Compensation
Board
(1942),
57
B.C.
at
441.
To
summarize
briefly
the
reasoning
which
supports
the
conclusion
on
the
second
branch
of
the
appeal.
The
inherent
common
law
Certiorari
jurisdiction
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
British
Columbia
(1)
is
inherited
from
the
Supreme
Court
of
Vancouver
Island
created
by
an
Act
of
the
Parliament
of
Great
Britain
within
the
meaning
of
section
129
of
the
B.N.A.
Act;
(2)
it
was
not
taken
away
by
the
B.N.A.
Act,
and
section
101
of
the
B.N.A.
Act
did
not
confer
power
on
Parliament
to
do
so;
(3)
alternatively,
it
is
not
taken
away
(a)
since
section
101
does
not
expressly
and
unequivocally
provide
for
the
taking
away
of
Certiorari
as
is
found
to
be
indispensably
required
under
the
authorities
referred
to
in
the
first
branch
of
the
appeal,
and
(b)
Certiorari
jurisdiction
must
be
first
shewn
to
exist
in
The
Exchequer
Court
of
Canada
which
Bow
McLachlan
&
Co.
v.
i(
Camosun
"
(owners)
denies;
and
(4)
because
the
right
to
Certiorari
is
a
civil
right
of
the
same
general
character
as
the
right
to
Habeas
Corpus
which
is
a
vested
jurisdiction
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
this
Province
and
forms
no
part
of
the
‘‘laws
of
Canada”
as
that
term
is
used
in
s.
101;
and
(5)
the
right
to
a
fair
hearing
is
a
civil
right
in
the
Province
under
s.
92(13)
the
protection
of
which
is
within
the
vested
jurisdiction
of
the
Provincially
constituted
Supreme
Court
and
which
for
reasons
stated
in
paras.
1
to
4
just
above
the
B.N.A.
Act
does
not
permit
to
be
taken
away
from
a
Court
of
Imperial
origin.
I
am
accordingly
of
opinion
that
the
learned
Judge’s
jurisdiction
was
not
ousted,
and
that
this
opinion
may
be
supported
on
either
branch
of
the
appeal.
Other
grounds,
as
contained
in
his
factum,
were
urged
by
Counsel
for
the
respondent
to
the
effect
that
Certiorari,
even
if
the
Supreme
Court’s
jurisdiction
were
not
ousted,
is
nevertheless
not
an
available
or
a
proper
remedy
in
the
circumstances
of
this
case.
Some
of
those
grounds
are
answered
by
what
is
contained
in
the
decisions
to
which
I
have
referred
on
the
two
branches
of
the
appeal,
and
see
for
example
Dumont
v.
Commissioner
of
Provincial
Police
(1940),
55
B.C,
298,
affirmed
generally
[1941]
S.C.R.
317.
"
But
there
is
one
submission
of
Counsel
for
the
respondent
that
ought
not
to
be
passed
without
comment.
It
is
thus
stated
in
the
factum
:
"‘that
the
King
cannot
be
forced
by
the
subject
to
sit
in
his
own
Court
and
bring
upon
Certiorari
to
be
tried
by
himself,
a
claim
of
the
subject
against
the
Crown
which
he
has
sent
to
an
inferior
Court
to
be
decided,
and
this
without
the
issue
by
the
Crown
of
any
fiat.’’
This
with
respect
betrays
a
misconception
of
what
the
remedy
of
Certiorari
really
is.
I
need
not
repeat
here
what
was
said
in
Ex
parte
Yuen
Yick
Jun
(1938),
54
B.C.
at
549-550.
Nor
is
there
properly
viewed,
any
claim
here
by
the
subject
against
the
Crown
in
Certiorari
proceedings.
No
doubt
such
a
claim
exists
in
the
assessment
proceedings,
but
with
that
Court
is
not
concerned
in
Certiorari
proceedings
as
I
have
sought
to
explain
elsewhere
in
this
judgment.
This
aspect
was
also
considered
in
the
Mandamus
ease
of
Lee
v.
Workmen’s
Compensation
Board
(1942),
57
B.C.
412
at
pp.
434-439,
and
decisions
there
examined
and
discussed,
and
see
also
Dumont
v.
Commissioner
of
Provincial
Police
(1940),
55
B.C.,
Sloan,
C.J.B.C.
(then
J.A.)
at
302-3.
Certiorari,
properly
understood
is
not
an
alternative
remedy
to
an
appeal,
nor
is
it
a
procedural
step
in
the
original
proceedings.
The
subject
here
is
not
attempting
to
command
the
Crown
or
to
command
a
servant
of
the
Crown
against
the
Crown.
Quite
the
contrary.
The
subject
is
acting
under
the
Crown,
and
seeks
from
the
Crown
through
its
Judges
to
obtain
Certiorari
to
compel
respect
to
the
Crown
by
obedience
to
the
common
law
in
foree
in
this
Province.
The
Crown
has
deposited
in
the
Judges
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
this
Province
its
faculties
in
this
respect.
If
a
Crown
servant
or
an
agent
of
Parliament
refuses
or
neglects
to
obey
the
Crown
it
is
the
function
of
the
Courts
to
compel
his
obedience.
It
is
the
function
of
the
Courts
to
interpret
the
laws
and
enforce
them.
In
a
proper
case
the
Crown
will
assist
its
subject
by
grant
of
Certiorari
or
other
appropriate
high
prerogative
writ,
if
he
shows
that
he
has
been
deprived
of
his
common
law
rights
by
the
illegal
action
of
any
statutory
Board,
and
cf.^Lee
v.
Workmen’s
Compensation
Board,
supra,
at
pp
439-6.
Upon
no
ground
advanced
in
this
appeal
do
I
consider
that
Certiorari
may
be
properly
refused,
if
the
learned
Judge
of
the
Supreme
Court
before
whom
the
matter
shall
be
heard,
is
satisfied
that
a
violation
of
an
essential
of
justice
did
actually
occur.
I
would
allow
the
appeal
and
remit
the
case
to
the
Supreme
Court
to
enable
the
motion
for
Certiorari
to
be
heard.
SMITH,
J.A.:
This
is
an
appeal
from
an
order
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
British
Columbia,
made
on
the
26th
July
1944,
dismissing
a
motion
for
a
writ
of
certiorari.
The
appellants
are
a
company
engaged
in
the
business
of
operating
a
hotel
at
Nanaimo,
B.C.
The
present
litigation
was
initiated
in
consequence
of
alleged
misconduct
in
the
proceedings
of
a
Board
of
Referees
set
up
under
the
terms
of
the
Excess
Profits
Tax
Act,
Chap.
32
of
the
Statutes
of
Canada
1940.
The
intention
of
this
Act
is
that
a
further
tax
should
be
assessed
upon
excess
profits
and
that
in
the
assessment
thereof
the
Minister
should
have
the
assistance
of
a
special
Board
to
decide
upon
certain
matters
preliminary
to
the
computation
of
the
assessment.
It
may
be
helpful
to
briefly
mention
the
relevant
sections
of
the
Act
together
with
one
or
two
sections
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
which
are
incorporated
therein
by
reference.
The
expression
“standard
period’’
of
the
former
Act
is
defined
as
comprising
the
calendar
years
1936
to
1939
inclusive
and
the
expression
“standard
profits’’
as
the
average
yearly
profits
during
the
standard
period.
Sec.
3
of
the
Act
authorizes
the
imposition
of
a
tax
on
excess
profits,
namely,
that
portion
of
the
profits
of
a
taxpayer
in
excess
of
the
standard
profits.
See.
5(1)
provides
that
if
a
taxpayer
is
convinced
that
owing
to
his
business
being
depressed,
his
standard
profits
were
so
low
during
the
standard
period
that
it
would
not
be
just
to
determine
his
liability
with
reference
thereto,
he
may
compute
his
standard
profits
at
such
greater
amount
as
he
thinks
just;
and
provides
further
that
in
that
event
the
Minister,
if
not
satisfied
either
that
the
business
was
depressed
or
that
the
computed
profits
are
fair
and
reasonable,
may
direct
that
the
standard
profits
be
ascertained
by
a
Board
of
Referees
and
that
the
Board
shall
thereupon
in
its
sole
discretion
ascertain
the
standard
profits
at
such
amount
as
the
Board
thinks
just,
subject
to
certain
limitations
which
are
not
material
to
the
matters
at
issue.
See.
5(4)
provides
that
the
decisions
of
the
Board
of
Referees
shall
not
be
operative
until
approved
by
the
Minister,
whereupon
"‘the
said
decision
shall
be
final
and
conclusive”;
and
provides
further
that
if
a
decision
is
not
approved
by
the
Minister
it
shall
be
submitted
to
the
Treasury
Board
who
shall
thereupon
determine
the
standard
profits
and
"‘the
decision
of
the
Treasury
Board
shall
be
final
and
conclusive.”
The
Board
of
Referees
to
which
reference
has
been
made
is
authorized
under
Sec.
13
"‘to
advise
and
aid
(the
Minister)
in
exercising
the
powers
conferred
upon
him
under
this
Act.’’
(This
Board
was
duly
appointed
and
at
the
material
dates
consisted
of
four
members
under
the
Chairmanship
of
Mr.
Justice
Harrison
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
New
Brunswick.)
Sec.
14
is
the
incorporating
section
and
states
that
"‘without
limiting
any
of
the
provisions
contained
in
this
Act,
sections
40
to
87,
both
inclusive,
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
.
.
.
shall
mutatis
mutandis
apply
to
matters
arising
under
the
provisions
of
this
Act.’’
It
will
be
sufficient
for
our
present
purpose
to
note
that
these
incorporated
sections
provide
that
an
appeal
may
be
brought
by
"‘any
person
who
objects
to
the
amount
at
which
he
is
assessed’’
and
that
this
appeal
is
in
the
first
place
to
the
Minister
(Sec.
58)
and
thence,
if
the
appellant
is
dissatisfied
with
the
Minister’s
decision,
to
the
Exchequer
Court
of
Canada.
Sec.
66
expressly
provides
that
"
‘
Subject
to
the
provisions
of
this
Act
the
Exchequer
Court
shall
have
exclusive
jurisdiction
to
hear
and
determine
all
questions
that
may
arise
in
connection
with
any
assessment
made
under
this
Act.”
The
appellants,
considering
their
business
depressed
within
the
meaning
of
Sec.
5(1),
took
advantage
of
these
provisions
and
computed
their
standard
profits
at
the
sum
of
$10,378.32
and
the
Minister,
not
being
satisfied,
directed
that
the
standard
profits
be
determined
by
the
Board
of
Referees.
The
appellants
were
notified
that
their
standard
profits
claim
would
be
heard
at
Vancouver,
B.C.
on
27th
April,
1943,
and
were
requested
to
have
a
representative
of
the
Company
appear
before
the
Board
at
that
time.
Mr.
Cunliffe
duly
appeared
for
the
Company.
The
appellants
complain
of
the
constitution
and
conduct
of
the
Board
upon
this
hearing.
Mr.
Cunliffe
filed
an
affidavit
stating
that
the
Board
was
composed
of
two
members
only
instead
of
four,
that
the
hearing
was
adjourned
on
the
understanding
that
there
would
be
a
further
hearing
after
Mr.
Cunliffe
had
secured
and
sent
to
the
Board
certain
further
particulars
of
the
Company’s
business;
that
one
of
the
members
told
him
(Mr.
Cunliffe)
that
when
the
Board
had
made
its
decision
Mr.
Cunliffe,
if
he
so
desired,
could
make
further
submissions
to
the
Minister
before
he
(the
Minister)
formally
approved
thereof;
that
contrary
to
this
understanding,
not
only
was
there
no
further
-
hearing,
but
the
Board’s
decision,
approved
by
the
Minister,
was
handed
down
before
the
Board
received
the
further
particulars
to
which
reference
has
been
made.
The
Board’s
view
of
these
allegations
was
not
disclosed.
The
position
taken
by
its
Conusel
on
the
hearing
before
us
was
set
out
in
his
factum
as
follows
:
‘‘There
is
no
evidence
before
the
Court
as
to
whether
the
Board
of
Referees
accepts
this
version
of
what
happened
and
whether
the
understanding
of
the
members
of
the
Board
was
the
same
as
that
of
Mr.
Cunliffe.
This
would
have
been
disclosed
in
the
return
made
to
the
Writ
of
Certiorari
had
the
issue
of
the
same
been
ordered.”
And
further
on
as
follows:
"
"
The
actual
procedure
usually
adopted
by
the
Board
of
Referees
was
not
disclosed
in
the
material
before
the
trial
Judge,
as
it
would
have
been
in
the
return
which
would
have
been
made
had
a
writ
issued.’’
The
motion
for
the
writ
of
certiorari
came
before
Mr.
Justice
Macfarlane
and
the
question
of
jurisdiction
was
raised
as
a
preliminary
objection.
The
learned
Judge
decided
against
the
appellant
on
that
issue.
As
I
have
reached
the
same
conclusion
the
lack
of
evidence
on
the
Board’s
position
becomes
immaterial.
But
before
leaving
this
aspect
of
the
matter
it
may
be
useful
to
observe
that
these
statutory
advisory
Boards
should
not
be
regarded
as
Courts,
and
subject
to
strict
Court
procedure.
As
it
happens
I
have
presided
over
three
such
Boards
in
recent
years.
We
have
always
considered
ourselves
free
to
follow
the
methods
of
procedure
best
adapted
to
the
work
in
hand,
provided
that
all
parties
had
an
opportunity
of
being
fully
heard
or
of
otherwise
stating
their
case
and
their
view;
this
being
a
duty
"
"
lying
upon
anyone
who
decides
anything.
”
These
would
appear
to
be
the
principles
enunciated
in
such
cases
as
Board
of
Education
v.
Rice,
[1911]
A.C.
179
at
182;
Local
Government
Board
v.
Arlidge,
[1915]
A.C.
120;
The
Imperial
Tobacco
Co.
Ltd.
v.
McGregor,
[1939]
O.R.
213;
The
King
v.
Noxzema
Chemical
Co.
of
Canada
Limited,
[1941]
Ex.
C.R.
155
(at
165
and
166).
I
think
the
usefulness
and
efficacy
of
such
Boards
would
be
greatly
curbed
if
they
were
to
be
fettered
by
procedure
of
a
less
elastic
nature.
The
Board
handed
down
its
decision
dated
at
Ottawa
the
15th
May,
1943.
It
was
signed
by
the
Chairman
and
two
members
of
the
Board,
and
was
subsequently
duly
approved
by
the
Minister.
The
Company’s
standard
profits
were
determined
at
the
sum
of
$7,500.00.
On
this
basis
an
assessment
was
made
for
the
years
1941
and
1942
and
received
by
the
Company.
The
Company
appealed
to
the
Minister
from
this
assessment
under
Sec.
58.
This
appeal
was
pending
during
the
currency
of
the
proceedings
before
Mr.
Justice
Macfarlane.
It
was
dismissed
by
the
Minister
on
5th
October,
1944,
after
the
dismissal
of
the
motion
for
oertiorari.
In
my
opinion
the
sole
question
before
us
is
whether
the
Supreme
Court
of
British
Columbia
had
jurisdiction
to
direct
the
issue
of
a
writ
of
certiorari
in
the
circumstances
of
this
case.
The
answers
turns
upon
the
interpretation
of
sec.
66
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act,
which,
as
already
noted,
states
that
"‘the
Exchequer
Court
shall
have
exclusive
jurisdiction
to
hear
and
determine
all
questions
that
may
arise
in
connection
with
any
assessment
made
under
this
Act’’
(1.e.,
the
Excess
Profits
Act).
It
was
submitted
that,
notwithstanding
this
section,
the
Exchequer
Court
had
no
jurisdiction
to
review
the
proceedings
of
the
Board
of
Referees
because
sec.
5(4)
provided
that
the
decisions
of
the
Board,
after
approval
by
the
Minister,
‘‘shall
be
final
and
conclusive’’;
and
that
while
the
Exchequer
Court
might
have
jurisdiction
concerning
any
other
question
that
might
arise
in
connection
with
the
assessment
it
had
none
over
questions
which
had
been
determined
by
the
Board.
I
am
unable
to
accept
this
view.
Sec.
5(4)
and
sec.
66
must
be
read
so
that
they
may
live
together
and
not
so
that
one
may
destroy
the
other.
Looking
at
them
thus,
I
have
no
doubt
that
the
words
“final
and
conclusive”
are
referable
only
to
proceedings
before
the
Board
after
their
approval
by
the
Minister.
So
far
as
the
Board
and
the
Minister
are
concerned
they
are
then
“final
and
conclusive.”
But
I
do
not
think
they
are
Intended
to
be
final
and
conclusive
as
regards
the
provisions
dealing
with
appeals
which
are
to
be
found,
and
to
be
found
only,
in
the
incorporated
sections.
(Cf.
Corporation
of
the
District
of
Oak
Bay
v.
Corporation
of
the
City
of
Victoria
(1941),
56
B.C.
345.
It
was
then
submitted
that
even
if
the
Exchequer
Court
had
Jurisdiction
in
this
regard
it
was
by
way
of
appeal
only
and
that
this
did
not
displace
the
inherent
common-law
jurisdiction
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
British
Columbia
to
direct
such
proceedings
to
be
brought
before
it
for
review
by
means
of
the
remedial
writ
of
certiorari.
But
neither
am
I
able
to
accept
this
view.
I
have
had
the
benefit
of
reading
the
judgment
of
my
brother
Robertson
and
I
was
impressed
by
the
force
of
his
conclusion
that,
in
the
circumstances
now
before
us,
the
Exchequer
Court
has
concurrent
jurisdiction
to
examine
the
Board’s
proceedings
by
way
of
certiorari.
But
even
if
this
were
not
so,
I
think
see.
66,
by
its
very
words,
gives
the
Exchequer
Court
jurisdiction
to
review
the
Board’s
fiindings
either
by
way
of
appeal
or
by
any
way
of
summary
application
that
may
be
open
to
it
under
sec.
36
of
the
Exchequer
Court
Act.
I
agree
with
Mr.
Justice
Macfarlane
that
the
words
of
sec.
66
“include
matters
occurring
prior
to,
as
well
as
subsequent
to,
or
consequent
upon,
so
long
as
they
are
related
to”
the
assessment.
It
seems
to
me
not
open
to
argument
that
the
lawful
determination
by
the
Board
of
the
amount
of
the
standard
profits
is
one
of
the
fundamental
elements
in
the
computation
of
the
assessment.
And
therefore
it
would
seem
that
this
question,
like
all
other
questions,
is
given
over
to
the
‘‘exclusive
jurisdiction”
of
the
Exchequer
Court.
There
can
be
no
doubt
that
Courts
should
scrutinize
most
carefully
any
statute
which
purports
to
take
away
the
commonlaw
right
of
certiorari
and
that
such
right
should
not
be
held
taken
away
unless
the
language
is
imperative.
We
were
referred
to
an
abundance
of
authorities
to
that
effect.
But
these
authorities
for
the
most
part
dealt
with
legislation
of
a
unitary
system
of
government.
None
of
them
touches
the
exact
case
before
us,
where
we
have
a
federal
system
of
government
and
where
the
manifest
intention
of
the
Federal
Government
is
to
give
exclusive
Jurisdiction
to
a
Federal
Court
set
up
for
the
primary
purpose
of
dealing
with
matters
of
revenue
and
other
matters
in
which
the
Crown
is
concerned.
(Bow,
McLachlan
v.
The
‘‘Camosun,’’
[1909]
A.C.
597;
Farwell
v.
The
Queen
(1893),
22
S.C.R.
553;
Rex
v.
McCarthy
(1919),
18
Ex.
C.R.
410;
46
D.LR.
456
(approved
S.C.
11
Oct.
1921).
I
agree
with
my
Brother
Robertson
that
under
the
authority
of
the
Reference
re
Privy
Council
Appeals,
[1940]
S.C.R.
49,
there
can
now
be
no
doubt
that
the
Federal
Parliament
has
jurisdiction
to
create
such
Court
and
to
confer
upon
it
such
jurisdiction.
For
these
reasons
I
think
the
appeal
should
be
dismissed.