MacGuigan,
J.
(Urie,
J.
concurring):
—This
appeal,
from
a
judgment
of
Muldoon,
J.
of
February
17,
1987,
relates
entirely
to
section
34
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act,
which
reads
as
follows:
34.
Where
goods
subject
to
tax
under
this
Part
or
under
Part
III
are
sold
at
a
price
that
in
the
judgment
of
the
Minister
is
less
than
the
fair
price
on
which
the
tax
should
be
imposed,
the
Minister
has
the
power
to
determine
the
fair
price
and
the
taxpayer
shall
pay
the
tax
on
the
price
so
determined.
Section
34,
concerning
as
it
does
the
fair
price
on
which
tax
should
be
imposed,
relates
back
to
subsection
27(1),
which
imposes
a
sales
tax
on
the
sale
price
of
all
goods
"produced
or
manufactured
in
Canada."
The
parties
agreed
on
the
facts,
as
set
out
in
their
agreed
statement
of
facts,
which
I
take
from
the
reasons
for
judgment
of
the
trial
judge
(Appeal
Book,
pp.
247-9
(“A.B.
247-9")),
adapted
to
reflect
the
positioning
of
the
parties
on
the
appeal:
1.
The
Respondent
is
a
body
corporate
duly
incorporated
pursuant
to
the
laws
of
the
Province
of
British
Columbia.
The
Respondent
was
incorporated
in
July
of
1981.
Reasons
for
incorporation
were
provided
to
Revenue
Canada.
At
all
material
times
the
Respondent
was
engaged
in
the
business
of
manufacturing
finishing
paint
products
applied
by
brush,
including
clears,
stains
and
enamels.
2.
The
Respondent
is
a
licensed
manufacturer
under
the
Excise
Tax
Act.
3.
Although
the
Respondent
solicited
orders
from
other
customers,
all
of
the
products
manufactured
by
it,
with
the
exception
of
2,000
gallons
sold
to
one
customer,
were
sold
to
Flecto
Coatings
Ltd.
("Flecto")
which
constituted
less
than
2%
of
the
Plaintiffs
manufactured
products.
4.
The
Respondent
remitted
sales
tax
every
month
on
all
sales
of
such
products
as
required
by
section
50
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act.
The
tax
remitted
was
based
on
the
manufacturer's
selling
price
in
accordance
with
section
27
of
the
Act.
5.
The
Respondent
is
wholly
owned
by
Flecto
which,
for
the
period
August
to
December,
1981
(period
of
time
of
fair
price
determination)
and
thereafter
carried
on
business
as
a
distributor
of
said
goods
purchased
from
the
Respondent
and
of
similar
paint
in
aerosol
cans
manufactured
by
independent
third
parties.
6.
Prior
to
the
incorporation
of
the
Respondent
in
1981
Flecto
purchased
under
contract
the
bulk
of
its
brush
paint
goods
from
Bute
Chemical,
Reichold
Chemical
and
KG
Packaging
as
well
as
purchased
all
of
its
aerosol
paint
products
from
KG
Packaging.
Subsequent
to
the
incorporation
of
the
Respondent,
the
Respondent
purchased
all
of
its
aerosol
paint
products
from
Spray-on.
7.
For
several
years
Flecto
was
considered
by
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
("the
Minister")
to
be
a
distributor
of
the
brush
paint
goods
in
issue
manufactured
by
others
and
sold
in
bulk
to
Flecto.
On
January
1,
1981
the
Excise
Tax
Act
was
amended
to
alter
the
definition
of
marginal
manufacturing
such
that
Flecto
was
considered
by
Revenue
Canada
and
paid
sales
tax
as
a
deemed
manufacturer
of
the
brush
paint
goods
in
issue.
8.
After
incorporation
of
the
Respondent,
Flecto
purchased
underwritten
contract
all
said
brush
paint
products
from
the
Respondent
at
a
price
based
on
the
formula
set
out
in
Exhibit
6.
During
the
four
month
period
August
to
December,
1981,
inclusive,
Flecto
purchased
the
brush
paint
products
in
issue
from
the
Respondent
at
a
price
equivalent
to
a
cost
calculated
by
the
Respondent
plus
25%
markup.
9.
Flecto,
at
all
material
times,
in
turn,
sold
all
of
the
said
products
that
it
distributed
to
five
wholesale
companies
situated
in
Canada.
10.
By
letter
dated
October
16,
1981
from
Revenue
Canada,
Excise
Branch,
Pacific
Region,
the
Respondent
was
advised
of
a
proposal
regarding
fair
price
for
tax.
11.
The
Respondent
was
advised
by
letter
dated
May
5,
1982
from
Revenue
Canada
of
the
amount
of
tax
and
penalty
owing
for
the
period
August
1,
1981
to
December
31,
1981.
12.
The
Respondent,
by
letter
dated
May
14,
1982,
objected
to
the
said
proposal
regarding
fair
price.
13.
Further
submissions
were
made
by
the
Respondent
to
Revenue
Canada,
Excise
Branch
Pacific
Region,
and
further
correspondence
was
received
by
the
Respondent
from
that
office.
14.
The
Respondent
was
given
full
opportunity
to
make
submissions
to
the
Minister
regarding
the
proposal
to
make
a
determination
of
fair
price
under
section
34
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act
and
in
fact
numerous
submissions
were
made
to
the
Minister
regarding
competitors
(including
imported
goods),
the
definition
of
what
constitutes
the
industry
and
marketing
levels.
15.
Acting
under
section
34
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act
and
on
the
advice
of
his
Deputy
Minister,
the
Minister,
on
October
27,
1983,
made
a
determination
that
the
“fair
price"
of
said
brush
goods
manufactured
by
the
Respondent
and
sold
to
Flecto
during
the
period
August
to
December
1981
was
Flecto's
selling
price
to
the
said
wholesalers
less
allowable
discounts
or
deductions
in
accordance
with
ET
[i.e.,
Excise
Tax]
memoranda
and
other
policy.
16.
In
arriving
at
his
decision,
the
Minister
did
not
compare
prices
of
similar
products
sold
by
other
manufacturers
in
Canada
and
did
not
audit
the
Respondent's
cost
of
sales,
mark-up
and
profit
margin.
The
Minister
did
not
consider
relevant
to
this
determination
of
the
Respondent's
calculation
of
sales
price
based
on
the
cost
plus
percentage
mark-up
formula.
The
Minister
did
consider
as
relevant
the
volume
and
sales
levels
of
other
manufacturers
in
relation
to
a
distributor
level
and
the
determination
of
the
existence
of
a
distributor
level.
17.
With
respect
to
the
existence
of
a
distributor
level
the
Minister
conducted
a
survey
of
the
industry.
The
Respondent
has
not
seen
this
survey
although
an
application
was
made
to
this
Honourable
Court
in
Chambers
for
disclosure
of
same
as
part
of
the
discovery
process.
The
Minister
considered
that
this
was
a
specified
public
interest
within
the
meaning
of
section
36.1
of
the
Canada
Evidence
Act
which
position
was
accepted
by
the
Honourable
Chambers
Judge.
18.
The
Minister’s
said
determination
of
fair
price
was
based
on
“tax
equity"
and
to
prevent
an
“unfair
advantage”
in
the
industry.
19.
Although
the
Minister
was
made
aware
of
certain
facts
regarding
the
period
of
time
prior
and
subsequent
to
the
fair
price
determination
period
such
facts
were
not
considered
relevant
by
the
Minister.
This
is
because
the
Minister
has
considered
that
“fair
price
determinations
are
established
on
the
conditions
that
prevail
during
the
period
of
the
determination
and
not
some
past
or
future
conditions
or
circumstances.
20.
There
are
no
regulations
regarding
the
delegation
of
the
Minister's
power
under
section
34
of
the
Act.
In
this
case
the
Minister
himself
made
the
subject
determination
of
fair
price.
21.
There
are
no
definitive
guidelines
or
criteria
for
the
Minister
as
to
what
he
is
to
consider
when
making
a
determination
of
fair
price.
The
Minister,
however,
with
respect
to
marketing
levels,
has
adopted
a
general
guideline
that
15%
of
the
sales
in
an
industry
should
be
to
an
independent
distribution
system
before
a
distribution
level
can
be
considered
to
exist
for
the
purposes
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act.
Since,
however,
each
case
depends
upon
its
own
facts
the
15%
requirement
may
not
always
be
necessary
and
in
a
specific
fair
price
situation
10%
or
sometimes
less
to
independents
may
be
representative
after
all
competitive
circumstances
are
considered.
22.
After
making
the
said
fair
price
determination
the
Department
of
National
Revenue,
Excise
Branch,
advised
the
Respondent
in
writing
of
the
amount
owing
for
the
period
August
to
December
of
1981
and
demanded
payment.
23.
Since
the
Respondent
commenced
litigation
disputing
the
said
fair
price
determination
the
Minister
agreed
to
refrain
from
taking
execution
proceedings
and
no
such
execution
proceedings
have
in
fact
been
taken.
24.
The
Respondent
disagrees
with
the
Minister
on
the
facts
relating
to
the
nature
of
the
business,
what
constitutes
the
industry,
what
constitutes
similar
products
and
similar
packaging
and
the
marketing
levels
for
the
said
products.
25.
Flecto,
since
1981,
has
continued
to
purchase
the
aforesaid
brush
goods
from
the
Respondent,
however,
no
further
determinations
of
"fair
price”
have
been
made
by
the
Minister
pending
this
appeal
with
respect
to
all
or
any
parts
of
the
period
of
time
since
January
1,
1982
to
date.
The
only
evidence
at
the
trial
in
addition
to
this
agreed
statement
of
facts
was
the
testimony
of
Philippe
Claude
Hannan
(“Hannan”),
Director
of
the
Policy
and
Legislation
Directorate
of
the
Excise
Branch
of
the
Department
of
National
Revenue,
which
is
found
in
the
Transcript
of
Verbal
Testimony
(”T”).
The
trial
judge
held
for
the
plaintiff/respondent
on
two
principal
grounds:
(1)
that
section
34
was
unconstitutional
at
the
time
of
the
Minister’s
determination
of
fair
price
on
October
27,1983,
as
repugnant
to
the
rule
of
law;
(2)
that
the
Minister
erred
in
law
in
determining
that
“fair
price"
under
section
34
is
concerned
with
price
on
the
basis
of
commercial
relationships
rather
than
the
ingredients
of
the
actual
selling
price
between
a
vendor
and
purchaser.
He
issued
a
declaration
on
both
grounds,
as
well
as
on
several
other
points
which
arise
only
incidentally,
if
at
all,
on
this
appeal.
I
shall
deal
first
with
the
constitutional
questions
in
issue
and,
subsequently,
with
the
administrative
law
issue.
After
having
earlier
made
the
point
that
the
rule
of
law
was
implicitly
guaranteed
by
the
preamble
to
the
Constitution
Act,
1867
in
its
reference
to
"a
Constitution
similar
in
Principle
to
that
of
the
United
Kingdom"
(see
In
the
Matter
of
Three
Bills
Passed
by
the
Legislative
Assembly
of
the
Province
of
Alberta
at
the
1937
(Third
Session)
Thereof
etc.
(the
Alberta
Press
Case,
[1938]
S.C.R.
100)
and
explicitly
protected
by
the
preamble
to
the
Canadian
Charter
of
Rights
and
Freedoms
("the
Charter"),
the
trial
judge's
constitutional
analysis
of
section
34
was
as
follows
(A.B.
273-7):
[I]t
may
be
seen
that
section
34
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act
is
no
paradigm
of
the
rule
of
law.
It
is,
indeed,
so
contrary
to
the
rule
of
law
that
it
can
surely
be
declared
to
be
unconstitutional.
It
accords
arbitrary
administrative
discretion,
without
any
guidelines
or
directives,
to
the
Minister
whose
determination
is
not
subject
to
any
objective
second
opinion
as
is
inherent
in
an
appeal
provision.
Even
if,
in
fact
and
theory,
section
34
does
not
transgress
the
specific
rights
and
freedoms
proclaimed
in
the
Charter,
that
constitutional
document
itself,
in
section
26,
claims
no
monopoly
in
the
promulgation
of
Canadians'
other
existing
rights
and
freedoms.
The
rule
of
law
is
a
central
principle
of
our
Constitution
and
it
is
transgressed
by
section
34.
The
rule
of
law
existed
in
our
Constitution
long
before
the
entrenchment
of
the
Charter.
Therefore,
ill
conceived
laws
could
well
have
run
afoul
of
the
rule
of
law,
or
evinced
a
vagueness
to
be
exploited
by
the
Crown's
servants,
and
can
still
exhibit
those
characteristics,
without
engaging
the
Charter
or
the
Bill
of
Rights.
By
levying
his
determination
of
“fair
price"
against
Vanguard,
the
minister
at
a
stroke
of
the
pen
imposes
a
heavy
burden
of
tax
debt.
Since
the
Minister
did
not
agree
with
Vanguard’s
submissions,
it
and
its
shareholders
and
directors
are
left
with
the
burdensome
decree
of
the
one-and-only,
far-from-disinterested
and
un-
contradictable
authority
whom
section
34
recognizes
in
conjuring
the
“fair
price
on
which
the
tax
should
be
imposed”.
The
"tax
should
be
imposed"
in
the
sole
judgment
of
the
Minister
whose
duty
is
to
collect
tax?
Section
34
certainly
makes
a
despot
of
the
Minister.
If
this
formulation
be
so
decent
and
reasonable
as
the
Minister's
counsel
say
it
is,
why
Parliament
could
provide
that
all
Canadians
should
subject
their
lives
and
livelihoods
to
some
chosen
official
who
finds
himself
in
as
paramount
a
conflict
of
official
interest
as
does
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
when
determining
that
taxpayers
should
really
contribute
more
revenue
to
the
Crown,
pursuant
to
section
34
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act.
It
is
said
that
the
Minister
merely
determines
"the
fair
price
on
which
the
tax
should
be
imposed”,
and
that
is
innocuous
enough.
The
Minister
does
not
really
levy
the
tax.
That
is
technically
true,
but
what
solace
to
anyone
is
that?
In
Morguard
Properties
Ltd.
v.
City
of
Winnipeg,
[1983]
2
S.C.R.
493,
3
D.L.R.
(4th)
1,
Mr.
Justice
Estey,
for
the
unanimous
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
is
reported
(S.C.R.
page
511;
D.L.R.
page
15)
as
noting:
In
this
case
it
is
not
the
assessment
which
directly
imposes
the
tax
burden
.
.
.
;
but
the
distinction
is
without
practical
significance
as
it
is
the
assessment
which
starts
the
process
and
which
inevitably
increases
the
burden
on
the
taxpayer
if
the
assessment
is
improperly
enlarged.
More
will
be
written
herein
about
the
Minister's
method
of
arriving
at
"the
fair
price”,
but
at
this
stage
it
may
be
noted
that
the
Minister
never
determines
that
“fair
price
on
which
the
tax
should
be
imposed"
to
be
less
than
the
taxpayer
charges.
The
Minister
never
invokes
section
34
in
order
to
reduce
anyone's
tax
burden.
As
in
this
case,
it
is
always
enlarged.
Whether
it
is
improperly
enlarged
or
not,
will
be
further
considered
herein.
Now,
it
is
further
said
that
the
absence
of
any
provision
for
an
appeal
against
the
Minister's
absolute
determination
of
"the
fair
price”
does
naught
to
render
section
34
constitutionally
infirm.
The
provision
for
an
appeal
seemed
constitutionally
important
enough
to
the
House
of
Lords
when
there
was
none,
and
latterly,
to
the
Appeal
Division
of
this
Court
when
there
was
such
a
provision
.
.
.
So
it
is
that
the
provision
of
an
appeal
is
seen
to
be
constitutionally
important,
as
it
necessarily
is
according
to
the
rule
of
law,
in
order
to
limit
an
exercise
of
sole
and
autocratic
discretion
such
as
the
Minister
wields
under
section
34
of
the
Act
Section
34
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act
is
so
repugnant
to
the
rule
of
law
that
it
is
easily
declared
to
be
unconstitutional.
Were
it
not
for
the
supremacy
of
Parliament
legislating
in
its
proper
sphere
of
competence,
it
would
be
equally
easy
to
declare
section
34
to
be
void
and
of
no
force
and
effect.
How
much
effect
the
Court
will
give
to
it
will
be
imminently
discussed,
but
this
is
the
point
to
state
that
this
Court,
acting
on
constitutional
principles,
does
not
and
cannot,
validate
section
34.
One
might
be
tempted
to
conclude
from
some
of
the
trial
judge's
language
that
he
found
section
34
to
be
unconsitutional
in
the
sense
in
which
the
majority
in
Re
Resolution
to
Amend
the
Constitution,
[1981]
1
S.C.R.
753
found
unconstitutional
the
Government
proposal
to
cause
the
Canadian
Constitution
to
be
amended
without
the
consent
of
the
provinces,
viz.,
although
the
proposal
was
against
the
conventional
rules
of
the
constitu-
tion,
those
conventions
could
not
be
enforced
by
the
courts.
As
the
majority
put
it
(at
page
881),
"The
conflict
is
not
of
a
type
which
would
entail
the
commission
of
any
illegality.”
However,
that
that
was
not
the
trial
judge's
meaning
is
apparent
from
the
fact
that
he
quashed
the
Minister’s
decision
and
granted
a
declaration
that
section
34
was
unconstitutional
“in
that
it
is
repugnant
to,
and
operates
directly
contrary
to,
the
rule
of
law”
(A.B.
292).
As
I
understand
the
learned
trial
judge,
therefore,
he
held
section
34
“legally”
unconstitutional
as
contrary
to
the
rule
of
law
because
(1)
it
provided
for
the
exercise
of
discretionary
authority
unrestrained
by
rules
or
guidelines
(2)
in
combination
with
an
absence
of
any
statutory
right
of
appeal.
The
respondent
supported
this
holding
and
also
advanced
two
arguments
which
had
not
been
successful
with
the
trial
judge,
viz.,
that
section
34
is
unconstitutional
as
a
delegation
of
discretionary
power
and
as
contravening
section
7
of
the
Charter.
I
shall
consider
these
two
contentions
before
returning
to
that
based
on
the
trial
judge's
holding.
The
first
of
these
additional
arguments
by
the
respondents
is
easily
met.
The
real
foundation
of
this
argument
was
the
decision
of
the
United
States
Supreme
Court
in
A.L.A.
Schechter
Poultry
Corporation
et
al.
v.
United
States
of
America,
295
U.S.
495,
(1935),
where
it
was
held
that
in
the
absence
of
statutory
standards,
Congress
cannot
delegate
its
legislative
powers
to
the
national
Government.
But
this
decision
is
founded
upon
the
principle
of
the
separation
of
powers
inherent
in
the
U.S.
Constitution,
and
can
have
no
relevance
to
a
constitution
based
on
responsible
government.
Further,
no
analogy
can
be
drawn
to
the
totally
different
situation
where
there
is
a
question
of
the
division
of
legislative
power
between
federal
and
provincial
governments.
The
authorities
cited
by
the
respondent
all
relate
to
the
proper
construction
of
statutes
and
not
to
constitutional
issues:
Attorney
General
v.
Wilts
United
Dairies,
Limited
(1922),
38
T.L.R.
781
(H
of
L);
Gruen
Watch
Company
of
Canada
Limited
et
al.
v.
Attorney-General
of
Canada
(1950),
4
D.T.C.
784
(Ont.
S.C.),
appealed
as
Bulova
Watch
Company
Limited
et
al.
v.
Attorney
General
for
Canada
[1951]
C.T.C.
94;
5
D.T.C.
462
(Ont.
C.A.);
and
the
Vestey
case,
supra,
The
Vestey
case
is
the
only
one
which
raises
ostensible
constitutional
questions,
in
the
following
language
of
Lord
Wilberforce
(at
page
1172,
page
984
All
E.R.):
A
proposition
that
whether
a
subject
is
to
be
taxed
or
not,
or,
if
he
is,
the
amount
of
his
ability,
is
to
be
decided
(even
though
within
a
limit)
by
an
administrative
body
represents
a
radical
departure
from
constitutional
principle.
It
may
be
that
the
revenue
could
persuade
Parliament
to
enact
such
a
proposition
in
such
terms
that
the
courts
would
have
to
give
effect
to
it:
but,
unless
it
has
done
so,
the
courts,
acting
on
constitutional
principles,
not
only
should
not,
but
cannot,
validate
it.
But
the
constitutional
issues
are
apparent
rather
than
real,
since
as
Lord
Wilberforce
shortly
makes
clear,
all
that
is
at
stake
is
"the
better
interpretation
of
the
section”
(at
page
1175,
page
987
All
E.R.).
In
the
U.K.
context,
the
concept
of
constitutional
principles
is
a
rhetorical
overlay
which
can
be
persuasive
as
to
interpretation
but
which
can
never
have
the
consequence
of
rendering
legislation
of
no
effect.
As
in
the
Resolution
to
Amend
the
Constitution
reference,
supra,
if
there
is
"unconstitutionality,"
it
is
without
legal
consequence.
There
is
therefore
no
basis
in
precedent
and
none
in
the
Constitution
for
acceding
to
the
respondent's
argument
that
section
34
contains
an
uncon-
stitutional
delegation
of
discretionary
power,
and
I
would
adopt
the
trial
judge's
conclusion
on
the
point.
I
should
add
that,
of
course,
the
intention
of
Parliament
to
confer
on
the
Minister
power
to
determine
a
fair
price
under
section
34
is
far
too
clear
to
permit
of
an
argument
based
only
on
statutory
construction
as
in
the
Vestey
case,
especially
since
the
Minister
has
been
acting
for
many
years
under
the
interpretation
of
that
section
by
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
in
The
King
v.
Noxzema
Chemical
Company
of
Canada
Ltd.,
[1942]
S.C.R.
178;
[1942]
C.T.C.
21;
D.T.C.
542,
a
decision
that
will
be
fully
explored
below.
The
respondent's
invocation
of
section
7
of
the
Charter
rests
on
the
contention
that
the
economic
security
is
included
in
the
protection
of
"liberty"
and
"security
of
the
person"
in
section
7,
even
though
counsel
admitted
in
argument
that
property
rights
as
such
are
not
included
in
those
protections,
which
read
as
follows:
Everyone
has
the
right
to
life,
liberty
and
security
of
the
person
and
the
right
not
to
be
deprived
thereof
except
in
accordance
with
the
principles
of
fundamental
justice.
The
exact
meaning
of
these
phrases
is
still
open
for
decision,
having
been
expressly
left
open
by
the
Supreme
Court
in
Singh
et
al.
v.
the
Minister
of
Employment
and
Immigration,
[1985]
1
S.C.R.
177;
17
D.L.R.
(4th)
422,
14
C.R.R.
13,
in
Operation
Dismantle
Inc.
et
al.
v.
The
Queen
et
al.,
[1985]
1
S.C.R.
441;
18
D.L.R.
(4th)
481;
59
N.R.
1;
13
D.R.R.
287,
and
in
Reference
re
s.
94(2)
of
the
Motor
Vehicles
Act
(British
Columbia),
[1985]
2
S.C.R.
486;
24
D.L.R.
(4th)
536;
18
C.R.R.
30.
The
trial
judge
followed
Strayer,
J.
in
Smith,
Kline
&
French
Laboratories
Ltd.
et
al.
v.
Attorney
General
of
Canada,
[1986]
1
F.C.
274
at
313;
24
D.L.R.
(4th)
321,
at
363-4:
In
my
view
the
concept
of
“life,
liberty
and
security
of
the
person"
take
on
a
colouration
by
the
association
with
each
other
and
have
to
do
with
the
bodily
wellbeing
of
a
natural
person.
As
such
they
are
not
apt
to
describe
any
rights
of
a
corporation
nor
are
they
apt
to
describe
purely
economic
interests
of
natural
person.
There
are,
admittedly,
a
number
of
recent
judicial
decisions
against
confining
the
definition
of
liberty
to
mere
freedom
from
bodily
restraint
and
to
extending
the
notion
of
security
of
the
person
to
include
at
least
some
economic
interests:
The
Queen
in
Right
of
New
Brunswick
v.
Fisherman's
Wharf
Ltd.
(1982),
40
N.B.R.
(2d)
42
(Q.B.);
135
D.L.R.
(3d)
307;
Canada,
carrying
on
business
under
the
firm
name
and
style
of
Eve
Studio
et
al.
v.
City
of
Winnipeg
(1984),
28
Man.
R.
(2nd)
211
(Man.
Q.B.);
Regina
v.
Robson
(1985);
19
D.L.R.
(4th)
112
(B.C.C.A.);
Re
Mia
and
Medical
Services
Commission
of
British
Columbia
(1985),
61
B.C.L.R.
273
(S.C.);
17
D.L.R.
(4th)
385.
On
the
other
hand,
there
are
decisions
to
the
contrary:
Gershman
Produce
Company
Ltd.
v.
The
Motor
Transport
Board
(1985),
36
Man.
R.
(2d)
81
(C.A.),
19
C.R.R.
132;
Regina
v.
Neale
(1986),
46
Alta.
L.R.
(2d)
225
(C.A.);
26
C.R.R.
1;
Re
Bassett
and
Government
of
Canada
et
al.
(1987),
53
Sask.
R.
81
(C.A.);
35
D.L.R.
(4th)
537;
Regina
v.
Higgins
(1987),
40
D.L.R.
(4th)
600
(Sask.
C.A.).
However,
with
one
exception
the
economic
interests
so
far
recognized
by
the
Courts
relate
to
personal
rights:
the
right
to
drive
a
motor
vehicle
(Robson);
the
right
to
a
billing
number
to
practise
as
a
physician
(Mia).
The
exception
is
the
Fisherman's
Wharf
case,
decided
immediately
after
the
coming
into
effect
of
the
Chapter,
where
the
Court
said
(at
pages
53-4
N.B.R.,
315-6
D.L.R.):
The
Charter
is
silent
in
specific
reference
to
property
rights.
In
that
circumstance
it
can
only
be
assumed,
in
my
view,
that
the
expression
“right
to
.
.
.
security
of
the
person"
as
used
in
s.
7
must
be
construed
as
comprising
the
right
to
enjoyment
of
the
ownership
of
property
which
extends
to
“security
of
the
person"
and
that
in
consequence
the
further
words
of
s.
7,
viz,
“and
the
right
not
to
be
deprived
thereof
except
in
accordance
with
the
principles
of
fundamental
justice”
must
extend
to
the
right
not
to
be
deprived
of
property
rights
which
tend
to
extend
to
the
security
of
the
person.
The
purported
right
of
the
Crown,
if
such
is
conferred
by
s.
19(1)
of
the
Sales
Tax
Act,
to
confiscate
without
compensation
the
property
of
an
owner
other
than
a
vendor
for
the
purpose
of
collecting
a
tax
can
only,
in
my
view,
be
considered
outside
the
principles
of
fundamental
justice,
to
use
the
words
employed
by
s.
7
of
the
Charter,
and
not
inside
such
reasonable
limits
as
can
be
demonstrably
justified
in
a
free
and
democratic
society,
to
use
the
words
employed
by
s.
1.
The
respondent
took
great
comfort
in
this
decision,
but
I
think
it
cannot
be
regarded
as
persuasive
at
this
stage
of
Charter
interpretation,
especially
since,
in
upholding
the
decision
on
appeal,
the
New
Brunswick
Court
of
Appeal
was
careful
to
base
its
decision
exclusively
on
reasons
of
statutory
interpretation:
Re
Estabrooks
Pontiac
Buick
Ltd.
et
al.
(1982),
44
N.B.R.
(2d)
201.
The
principal
judgment
was
that
of
La
Forest,
J.A.
(as
he
then
was),
who
rested
his
conclusion
on
legislative
history
and
the
presumption
that
"a
statute
should
not,
in
the
absence
of
clear
words,
be
construed
as
taking
the
property
of
an
individual
without
compensation”
(at
page
211).
In
the
same
vein
Stratton,
J.A.
(as
he
then
was)
put
the
issue
this
way
(at
page
206):
Where,
as
here,
the
expression
of
the
legislative
intent
is
unclear
and
the
statute
is
susceptible
of
two
meanings,
it
is
my
opinion
the
court
must
make
a
choice
on
the
assumption
that
the
legislature
did
not
intend
to
disturb
existing
rights.
It
is
in
my
view
unnecessary
to
decide
in
the
present
case
to
what
extent
the
protection
of
economic
interests
should
be
read
into
section
7,
or
indeed
whether
any
principles
of
fundamental
justice
have
been
violated,
since
I
am
of
the
opinion
that
in
any
event
the
triad
of
life,
liberty
and
security
of
the
person
must
be
taken
to
be
interrelated,
at
least
to
the
extent
that
they
are
all
attributed
to
natural
persons.
Whether
or
not
they
are
a
unitary
whole
so
as
to
constitute
a
single
right,
in
my
view
they
have
a
fundamental
connection
springing
from
and
expressing
human
nature
and
dignity.
In
fact,
the
issue
has
already
been
decided
by
this
Court,
where,
on
appeal
from
Strayer,
J.,
Hugessen,
J.
for
the
Court
expressly
approved
both
Strayer,
J.'s
conclusion
and
his
reasoning:
Smith
Kline
&
French
Laboratories
Limited
et
al.,
supra,
at
364
F.C.,
290
C.R.R.
It
is
also
in
accord
with
the
view
of
Bayda,
C.J.S.
in
the
Higgins
case,
supra,
at
page
609,
that
"the
concept
‘life,
liberty
and
security
of
the
person'
addresses
itself
to
the
human
person."
I
therefore
agree
with
the
conclusion
of
the
learned
trial
judge
in
the
case
at
bar.
The
remaining
constitutional
issue
is
that
of
the
rule
of
law.
With
this
concept
one
is
at
an
intersection
of
philosophy,
political
science
and
law
and
must
be
careful
in
a
legal
context
to
ground
oneself
on
legal
principles
and
precedents.
The
best
legal
source
is
the
Reference
re
Language
Rights
under
Section
23
of
the
Manitoba
Act,
1870,
and
Section
133
of
the
Constitution
Act,
1867,
[1985]
1
S.C.R.
721
at
750-1;
19
D.L.R.
(4th)
1
at
24;
[1985]
4
W.W.R.
385
at
409,
where
the
Court
said:
Additional
to
the
conclusion
of
the
rule
of
law
in
the
preambles
of
the
Constitution
acts
of
1867
and
1982,
the
principle
is
clearly
implicit
in
the
very
nature
of
a
constitution.
The
Constitution,
as
the
supreme
law,
must
be
understood
as
a
purposive
ordering
of
social
relations
providing
a
basis
upon
which
an
actual
order
of
positive
laws
can
be
brought
into
existence.
The
founders
of
this
nation
must
have
intended,
as
one
of
the
basic
principles
of
nation
building,
that
Canada
be
a
society
of
legal
order
and
normative
structure:
one
governed
by
rule
of
law.
While
this
is
not
set
out
in
a
specific
provision,
the
principle
of
the
rule
of
law
is
clearly
a
principle
of
our
Constitution.
More
particularly,
the
Court
distinguished
two
aspects
of
the
rule
of
law,
at
pages
748-9
S.C.R.;
page
22
D.L.R.;
page
408
W.W.R.:
The
rule
of
law,
a
fundamental
principle
of
our
Constitution,
must
mean
at
least
two
things.
First,
that
the
law
is
supreme
over
officials
of
the
government
as
well
as
private
individuals,
and
thereby
preclusive
of
the
influence
of
arbitrary
power.
Indeed,
it
is
because
of
the
supremacy
of
law
over
the
government,
as
established
in
s.
23
of
the
Manitoba
Act,
1870,
and
s.
52
of
the
Constitution
Act,
1982,
that
this
court
must
find
the
unconstitutional
laws
of
Manitoba
to
be
invalid
and
of
no
force
and
effect.
Second,
the
rule
of
law
requires
the
creation
and
maintenance
of
an
actual
order
of
positive
laws
which
preserves
and
embodies
the
more
general
principle
of
normative
order.
Law
and
order
are
indispensable
elements
of
civilized
life.
However,
in
the
Manitoba
Language
Reference
it
was
the
second
aspect
of
the
rule
of
law
that
the
Court
analyzed
in
some
depth,
whereas
in
the
case
at
bar,
it
is
the
first
aspect
that
is
in
question.
The
appellant
did
not,
of
course,
challenge
the
validity
of
the
rule
of
law,
but
contended,
inter
alia,
that
it
should
be
[sic]
not
be
invoked
in
an
action
for
a
declaration,
particularly
when
it
had
not
been
specifically
sought
in
the
statement
of
claim.
But
as
the
appellant
indicated,
the
granting
of
declaratory
relief
is
a
discretionary
matter,
and
the
substance
of
the
issue
having
been
fully
argued
before
this
Court,
I
am
not
disposed
to
dispose
of
the
matter
now
on
a
procedural
basis.
The
respondent
invoked
the
principle
of
the
rule
of
law
on
the
basis
of
three
textbooks
(A.B.
Dicey,
Introduction
to
the
Study
of
the
Law
of
the
Constitution,
8th
ed.,
1931;
H.W.R.
Wade,
Administrative
Law,
4th
ed.,
1977,
E.C.S.
Wade
and
G.
Godfrey
Phillips,
Constitional
Law
3rd
ed.)
and
the
two
cases
relied
on
by
the
trial
judge
(the
Vestey
and
Krag-Hansen
cases,
supra).
The
fundamental
text
is
that
of
Dicey,
at
page
198,
where
the
author
says
of
the
rule
of
law:
It
means,
in
the
first
place,
the
absolute
supremacy
or
predominance
of
regular
law
as
opposed
to
the
influence
of
arbitrary
power,
and
excludes
the
existence
of
arbitrariness,
of
prerogative,
or
even
of
wide
discretionary
authority
on
the
part
of
the
government.
Englishmen
are
ruled
by
the
law,
and
by
the
law
alone;
a
man
may
with
us
be
punished
for
a
breach
of
law,
but
he
can
be
punished
for
nothing
else.
Wade
writes
to
similar
effect,
at
pages
23-4.
The
rule
of
law
has
a
number
of
different
meanings
and
corollaries.
Its
primary
meaning
is
that
everything
must
be
done
according
to
law
.
.
.
That
is
the
principle
of
legality.
But
the
rule
of
law
demands
something
more,
since
otherwise
it
would
be
satisfied
by
giving
the
government
unrestricted
discretionary
powers,
so
that
everything
that
they
did
was
within
the
law.
Quod
principi
placuit
legis
habet
vigorem
(the
sovereign's
will
has
the
force
of
law)
is
a
perfectly
legal
principle,
but
it
expresses
rule
by
arbitrary
power
rather
than
rule
according
to
ascertainable
law.
The
secondary
meaning
of
the
rule
of
law,
therefore,
is
that
government
should
be
conducted
within
a
framework
of
recognized
rules
and
principles
which
restrict
discretionary
power.
.
.
The
principle
of
legality
is
a
clear-cut
concept,
but
the
restrictions
to
be
put
upon
discretionary
power
are
a
matter
of
degree.
Wade
and
Phillips
add
a
further
wrinkle,
at
p.
51:
The
rule
of
law,
however,
demands
that,
so
far
as
is
practicable,
where
an
individual
plans
his
affairs
reasonably
with
due
regard
for
public
welfare,
he
shall
receive
compensation,
if
he
suffers
damage
as
the
result
of
a
change
in
the
law
or
the
exercise
of
a
discretionary
authority
granted
in
the
general
interest.
To
enable
the
citizen
to
foresee
as
far
as
possible
the
consequences
of
his
actions
and
as
a
safeguard
against
arbitrary
officials
the
grant
of
discretionary
authority
should
prescribe
the
general
lines
on
which
it
should
be
exercised.
Discretionary
power
does
not
mean
arbitrary
power.
Even
if
these
writers
were
taken
as
definitive
authorities,
it
is
clear
that
their
analyses
are
hedged
about
with
qualifications
("a
matter
of
degree,”
“so
far
as
is
practicable,”
“as
far
as
possible”)
and
do
not
establish,
and
are
not
meant
to
establish,
that
the
courts
will
refuse
to
enforce
any
legislative
text
which
is
clear.
The
most
they
have
done
is,
as
in
the
Vestey
case,
to
use
such
notions
to
establish
which
is
the
better
of
two
possible
interpretations.
The
other
case
relied
on
by
the
respondent
was
Krag-Hansen,
where
the
taxpayer
sought
to
invalidate
a
statutory
provision
as
contrary
to
section
7
on
the
ground,
inter
alia,
that
the
provision
allowed
only
part
of
the
Minister's
decision
to
be
contested.
But
the
Court
in
that
case
did
not
find
it
necessary
to
reach
section
7
at
all,
because
it
held
that
the
taxpayer
misinterpreted
the
provision:
in
fact
the
provision
allowed
the
whole
of
the
Minister's
decision
to
be
contested.
This
decision,
therefore,
can
stand
as
no
authority
as
to
either
section
7
or
the
rule
of
law.
Moreover,
the
rule
of
law
has
never
been
taken
to
include
a
right
to
appeal.
Indeed,
the
tradition
of
the
common
law
has
been
to
regard
the
right
of
appeal
as
a
purely
statutory
right
to
which
there
is
no
entitlement.
It
is,
as
Fauteux,
J.
said,
in
Welsh
v.
The
King,
[1950]
S.C.R.
412
at
428,
“an
exceptional
right.”
Jones
and
de
Villars,
Principles
of
Administrative
Law,
1985,
at
pages
330-1,
express
the
same
idea
as
follows:
There
is
no
legal
or
constitutional
requirement
that
an
appeal
should
exist
from
any
decision
made
by
a
statutory
delegate
.
.
.
The
creation
of
an
appellate
mechanism
lies
in
the
gift
of
the
legislature.
In
the
words
of
Morris,
L.J.
in
Healey
v.
Minister
of
Health,
[1954]
3
All
E.R.
449
at
453,
"the
courts
cannot
invent
a
right
of
appeal
where
none
is
given.”
The
existence
of
a
right
of
appeal
has
often
been
found
to
be
merely
an
indication
that
the
delegated
discretion
is
quasi-judicial
rather
than
administrative:
Cooper
v.
The
Board
of
Works
for
the
Wandsworth
District
(1863),
143
E.R.
414.
It
must
also
be
said
that
the
respondent
is
mistaken
in
his
assertion
that
the
discretion
entrusted
to
the
Minister
by
section
34
is
entirely
subjective
because
of
the
words
“in
the
judgment
of
the
Minister."
In
my
view
that
is
a
misinterpretation
of
the
section.
The
Minister’s
power
is
to
determine
"the
fair
price
on
which
the
tax
should
be
imposed.”
Fair
is
expressed
by
the
word
raisonnable
in
the
French
version,
which
may
be
translated
in
English
by
"reasonable"
as
well
as
by
“fair”.
These
two
words
have
always
been
used
to
express
objective
standards
in
the
law.
“Fair”
is
one
of
the
most
frequently
used
words
for
objectivity
in
administrative
law,
as
"reasonable"
is
in
tort
and
criminal
law.
Mr.
Justice
Linden,
Canadian
Tort
Law,
3rd
ed.,
page
112,
writes
of
the
reasonable
person
concept:
“This
is
an
objective
standard
not
a
subjective
one."
"Reasonable",
indeed,
is
the
principal
word
employed
in
the
Charter
as
a
measure
of
what
is
objectively
right:
see
sections
1,
6,
8,
and
11.
"Fair"
is
used
in
the
same
way
in
section
11.
I
must
defer
for
a
few
pages
my
view
of
the
actual
exercise
of
ministerial
discretion
in
this
case,
but
my
conclusion
on
the
constitutional
question
must
be
that
section
34
is
not
unconstitutional
as
being
repugnant
to
or
operating
contrary
to
the
rule
of
law.
The
administrative
law
question
for
decision
necessitates
a
close
look
at
the
Supreme
Court
decision
in
the
Noxzema
case,
supra,
where
the
facts
were
very
similar
to
those
in
the
case
at
bar
and
the
law
was
identical.
This
was
an
information
exhibited
by
the
Attorney
General
of
Canada
for
recovery
of
sales
and
excise
tax.
The
respondent
("Noxzema")
gave
exclusive
selling
rights
to
Better
Proprietaries
Limited
("Proprietaries")
and
during
the
seven-month
period
in
question
sold
to
it
the
whole
of
its
manufactured
products
for
resale
to
wholesalers
and
chain
stores.
Because
an
officer
and
shareholder
of
Noxzema
was
also
an
officer
and
shareholder
of.
Proprietaries,
the
arrangement
attracted
the
attention
of
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue,
who
held
that
the
fair
price
for
tax
purposes
was
the
price
at
which
Proprietaries
sold
the
goods,
not
the
price
at
which
it
bought
them.
The
Minister
acted
under
the
then
section
98
of
the
Special
War
Revenue
Act,
which
is,
except
in
minor
detail,
on
all
fours
with
the
present
section
34
of
the
successor
Act:
S.
98
|
S.
34
|
Where
goods
subject
to
tax,
under
|
Where
goods
subject
to
tax
under
|
this
Part
or
under
Part
XI
of
this
Act
are
|
this
Part
or
under
Part
III
are
sold
at
a
|
sold
at
a
price
which
in
the
judgment
of
|
price
that
in
the
judgment
of
the
Minis
|
the
Minister
is
less
than
the
fair
price
|
ter
is
less
than
the
fair
price
on
which
|
on
which
the
tax
should
be
imposed,
|
the
tax
should
be
imposed,
the
Minis
|
the
Minister
shall
have
the
power
to
|
ter
has
the
power
to
determine
the
fair
|
determine
the
fair
price
and
the
tax
|
price
and
the
taxpayer
shall
pay
the
tax
|
payer
shall
pay
the
tax
on
the
price
so
|
on
the
price
so
determined.
|
determined.
|
|
Maclean,
J.
at
trial,
[1941]
Ex.
C.R.
155;
[1940-41]
C.T.C.
242;
found
that
the
business
arrangement
between
the
two
companies
was
bona
fide
and
that
"Noxzema
did
sell
its
goods
to
Proprietaries
at
fair
prices"
(at
page
168,
252
C.T.C.).
He
held
that
the
absence
of
a
right
of
appeal
did
not
prevent
Noxzema,
in
an
action
by
the
Crown
for
a
debt,
from
raising
any
proper
and
available
defence,
that
the
Minister's
act
in
determining
a
fair
price
under
the
statute
was
a
judicial
act,
and
that
this
act
failed
by
reason
of
its
arbitrariness
to
meet
the
test
of
proper
judicial
principles.
Ultimately,
he
felt,
the
issue
came
down
to
this
(at
page
173,
256
C.T.C.):
Did
the
Act,
in
the
circumstances
here,
empower
the
Minister
to
fix
the
sale
prices
of
Noxzema
at
other
than
its
actual
sale
prices,
when
they
were
not
below
the
fair
prices
as
between
a
manufacturer
and
a
dealer,
the
dealer
being
an
independent
trading
corporation?
I
think
not.
There
is
no
evidence
to
show
that
the
sale
prices
of
Noxzema
were
less
than
the
fair
prices,
in
fact
the
evidence
indicates
that
its
prices
were
the
fair
prices
when
sold
to
a
selling
and
distributing
organization
which
had
to
assume
the
expenses
of
sale
and
distribution.
I
do
not
think
the
statute
can
be
construed
to
mean
that
the
Minister
might
arbitrarily
advance
the
sale
prices
of
Noxzema
for
the
purposes
of
the
tax,
without
evidence
that
such
prices
were
less
than
the
fair
prices,
when
sold
in
the
circumstances
I
have
described.
A
test
of
the
fairness
of
the
prices
at
which
Noxzema
sold
its
goods
to
Proprietaries
is
that
they
were
the
same
prices
as
those
at
which
it
had
previously
sold
its
goods
to
the
trade,
less
the
expenses
of
sale
and
distribution
which
were
now
to
be
borne
by
Proprietaries.
The
trading
position
of
Noxzema
was
not
adversely
affected
so
far
as
net
profits
were
concerned,
and
in
fact
its
gross
sales
increased
about
thirty
percent
in
the
first
eighteen
months
of
the
arrangement
with
Proprietaries.
I
think
that
s.
98
contemplates
the
case
where
the
producer
has
sold
his
goods
to
a
dealer
below
the
normal
market
prices,
below
the
average
of
the
prices
of
other
manufacturers
of
the
same
class
of
goods,
and
was
not
designed
or
intended
to
meet
the
facts
developed
in
the
case
under
consideration.
I
am
therefore
of
the
opinion
that
the
Minister
was
not
empowered
in
this
case
to
determine
that
the
sale
prices
of
Noxzema
should
be
those
of
the
independent
trading
corporation,
Proprietaries,
and
that
Noxzema
is
not
liable
to
pay
the
taxes
in
question
on
the
sale
prices
determined
by
the
Minister.
In
the
Supreme
Court
the
majority
judgment
was
delivered
by
Kerwin,
J.
(for
himself,
Rinfret
and
Hudson,
JJ.),
and
there
was
a
concurring
judgment
by
Davis,
J.
(concurred
in
by
Duff,
C.J.C.).
All
the
members
of
the
Court
were
of
the
view
that
the
Minister’s
power
under
section
98
was
purely
administrative,
and
therefore
non-reviewable.
All
the
members
of
the
Court
were
also
unwilling
to
make
the
distinction
the
trial
judge
had
made
between
the
absence
of
a
statutory
right
to
appeal,
which
he
had
called
(at
page
169,
253
C.T.C.)
a
"common
law
right"
to
raise
any
proper
defence.
Kerwin,
J.
expressed
his
reasons
this
way
(at
pages
185-6
S.C.R.,
27-8
C.T.C.,
546
D.T.C.):
I
therefore
turn
to
the
grounds
upon
which
the
President
proceeded
and
which,
of
course,
are
relied
upon
by
the
respondent.
I
proceed
upon
the
assumptions
that
Better
Proprietaries
Limited
is
an
independent
sales
corporation
and
that
the
Minister
thought
otherwise.
Even
with
these
assumptions,
we
cannot
be
aware
of
all
the
reasons
that
moved
the
Minister
and,
in
any
event,
his
jurisdiction
under
section
98
was
dependent
only
upon
his
judgment
that
the
goods
were
sold
at
a
price
which
was
less,
—
not,
be
it
noted,
less
than
what
would
be
a
fair
price
commercially
or
in
view
of
competition
or
the
lack
of
it,
—
but
less
than
what
he
considered
was
the
fair
price
on
which
the
taxes
should
be
imposed.
The
legislature
has
left
the
determination
of
that
matter
and
also
of
the
fair
price
on
which
the
taxes
should
be
imposed
to
the
Minister
and
not
to
the
court.
In
my
view,
section
98
confers
upon
the
Minister
an
administrative
duty
which
he
exercised
and
as
to
which
there
is
no
appeal.
Davis,
J.
wrote
to
similar
effect
(at
page
180
S.C.R.,
29
C.T.C.,
543
D.T.C.):
The
important
question
that
arises
upon
this
appeal
is
one
of
law,
as
to
the
position
of
the
Minister
under
this
sectionof
the
statute
—
that
is,
whether
his
act
is
purely
an
administrative
act
in
the
course
of
settling
from
time
to
time
the
policy
of
his
Department
under
that
statute
in
relation
to
the
various
problems
which
arise
in
the
administration
of
the
statute,
or
whether
he
is
called
upon
under
the
section
of
the
statute
to
perform
a
duty
of
that
sort
which
is
often
described
as
a
quasi-judicial
duty.
My
own
view
is
that
it
is
a
purely
administrative
function
that
was
given
to
the
Minister
by
Parliament
in
the
new
sec.
98;
to
enable
him
to
see,
for
instance,
that
schemes
are
not
employed
by
one
or
more
manufacturers
or
producers
in
a
certain
class
of
business
which,
if
the
actual
sale
price
of
the
product
is
taken,
may
work
a
gross
injustice
to
and
constitute
discrimination
against
other
manufacturers
or
producers
in
the
same.
class
of
business
who
do
not
resort
to
such
schemes
which
have
the
result
of
reducing
the
amount
on
which
the
taxes
become
payable.
If
that
be
the
correct
interpretation,
in
point
of
law,
of
the
section
in
question,
then
the
administrative
act
of
the
Minister
is
not
open
to
review
by
the
Court.
It
is
to
be
observed
that
no
statutory
right
of
appeal
is
given.
In
the
case
at
bar
the
appellant
argued
that
close
attention
must
be
paid
to
the
Court's
endorsement,
apparent
from
its
choice
of
words,
of
the
actual
exercise
of
ministerial
discretion.
However,
adopting
the
interpretation
of
the
learned
trial
judge,
I
can
read
the
passages
above
cited
only
as
indicating
an
acceptance
by
the
Court
of
the
Minister's
right
to
exercise
his
discretion
as
he
saw
fit
(“in
the
judgment
of
the
Minister”).
In
my
view
the
words
used
by
the
Court
indicated
the
reason
the
Court
came
to
its
conclusion
that
the
decision
was
purely
administrative.
As
Kerwin,
J.
said,
"we
cannot
be
aware
of
all
the
reasons
that
moved
the
Minister,”
(at
pages
185-6
S.C.R.;
28
C.T.C.,
546
D.T.C.).
The
Court's
view
of
the
inappropriateness
of
review
led
them
to
characterize
the
ministerial
decision
as
administrative.
Both
judgments,
it
is
true,
appear
to
go
on
to
consider,
alternatively,
what
the
result
would
have
been
if
the
Minister’s
decision
were
quasi-judicial,
and
both
concluded
that
in
that
event
all
that
would
have
been
necessary
would
have
been
that
the
taxpayer
had
a
fair
opportunity
to
be
heard,
which
both
parties
admitted
did
occur.
Neither
judgment
suggested
any
constraint
on
the
Minister
in
relation
to
the
question
which
he
was
required
by
the
Act
to
determine,
despite
the
law
to
that
effect
laid
down
by
Lord
Loreburn
in
Board
of
Education
v.
Rice,
[1911]
A.C.
179
at
182.
Nevertheless,
I
believe
that
the
ratio
decidendi
of
the
Noxzema
case,
was
that
squarely
so
stated
by
the
Court,
viz.
that
the
Minister’s
decision
was
an
administrative
one,
and
therefore
completely
non-reviewable.
It
must
at
once
be
apparent
that
this
ratio
has
been
superseded
by
the
subsequent
evolution
of
the
law.
After
Ridge
v.
Baldwin,
[1964]
A.C.
40,
Nicholson
v.
Haldimand-Norfolk
Regional
Police
Commissioners,
[1979]
1
S.C.R.
311;
23
N.R.
410
and
Martineau
v.
Matsqui
Institution
Disciplinary
Board,
[1980]
1
S.C.R.
602;
30
N.R.
119,
there
can
no
longer
be
any
doubt
that
even
purely
administrative
decisions
are
amenable
to
judicial
review.
Indeed,
this
was
common
ground
to
the
parties.
The
appellant's
Memorandum
of
Fact
and
Law
(at
p.
12)
put
the
point
this
way:
63.
An
administrative
tribunal
in
exercising
a
purely
administrative
discretion
can
exceed
its
jurisdiction,
inter
alia,
by
proceeding
with
an
improper
purpose
in
mind
or
by
considering
irrelevant
or
extraneous
material,
or
omitting
to
consider
relevant
material,
or
by
exercising
its
power
on
irrelevant
grounds
or
without
regard
to
relevant
considerations.
Given
that,
in
the
case
at
bar,
as
in
the
Noxzema
case,
the
Minister
scrupulously,
even
generously,
provided
the
taxpayer
with
a
fair
hearing,
what
is
at
stake
is
only
the
issue
of
whether
he
acted
within
his
statutory
jurisdiction,
more
precisely
by
omitting
to
consider
relevant
material,
or
by
exercising
his
power
without
regard
to
relevant
considerations.
Before
turning
to
a
close
examination
of
the
facts
in
relation
to
the
law,
I
should
add
that
I
am
unable
to
accept
the
view
of
the
trial
judge
that
section
34
is
deficient
in
not
ordaining
a
time
for
the
payment
of
tax.
I
take
the
view
that
the
words
"the
taxpayer
shall
pay
the
tax"
create
a
liability
and
imply
that
payment
shall
be
forthwith.
Similarly,
I
am
unable
to
accept
his
conclusion
that
the
Minister's
decision
under
section
34
cannot
be
made
on
a
retrospective
basis,
since
I
agree
with
the
appellant's
submission
that
the
plain
words
of
section
34
require
the
goods
in
question
to
be
“sold”.
I
do
not
therefore
regard
these
as
issues
to
be
pursued
further.
The
Agreed
Statement
of
Facts
makes
it
clear
that,
in
making
a
fair
price
determination
in
relation
to
the
appellant
under
section
34
of
the
Act,
the
Minister
did
not
take
into
account
prices
of
similar
products
sold
by
other
manufacturers
in
Canada
(I
shall
call
this
the
external
price
criterion)
and
did
not
audit
the
respondent's
cost
of
sales,
mark-up
and
profit
margin
(I
shall
call
this
the
internal
price
criterion).
What
he
did
look
at
was
the
existence
of
a
distributor
level
comparable
to
the
role
of
Flecto
in
the
industry
generally
(I
shall
call
this
the
marketing
pattern
criterion).
He
accomplished
this
through
a
survey
of
the
industry
using
a
general
guideline
that
10
per
cent
—
15
per
cent
of
the
sales
in
an
industry
would
have
to
be
through
an
independent
distribution
system
before
any
such
distribution
system
could
be
considered
to
exist
for
purposes
of
the
Act.
The
Minister
in
effect
found
that
in
the
paint
industry
in
Canada
there
was
no
distributor
level
but
that
generally
speaking
the
manufacturer
sold
to
a
wholesaler,
who
sold
to
a
retailer,
who
sold
to
the
public.
He
therefore
concluded
that
the
fair
price
on
which
the
respondent's
tax
should
be
imposed
was
Flecto's
sale
price
to
its
wholesalers.
The
respondent
disagreed
with
the
Minister
on
the
facts
"relating
to
the
nature
of
the
business,
what
constitutes
the
industry,
what
constitutes
similar
products
and
similar
packaging
and
the
marketing
levels
for
the
said
products"
(Agreed
Statement
of
Facts,
par.
24).
The
respondent
also
disputed
the
Minister's
refusal
to
consider
fair
price
determination
on
any
past
or
future
conditions
or
circumstances
but
only
on
those
prevailing
during
the
period
of
the
determination,
in
this
case
the
five-month
period
from
August
to
December
31,
1981.
I
should
state
at
once
that
I
do
not
believe
this
Court
can
review
the
Minister’s
exercise
of
his
discretion
in
determining
how
a
marketing
pattern
criterion
is
to
be
interpreted
and
applied
to
the
facts.
As
Dickson,
J.
(as
he
then
was)
put
it
for
the
Court
in
The
Corporation
of
the
City
of
Prince
George
v.
Payne,
[1978]
1
S.C.R.
458
at
463;
15
N.R.
386
at
390,
"it
is
no
part
of
a
Court's
task
to
determine
the
wisdom
of
the
Council's
decision
.
.
.
The
Court's
sole
concern
is
whether
the
Council
acted
within
the
four
corners
of
its
jurisdiction.”
Hence
in
the
case
at
bar
the
question
is
not
whether
the
Minister
correctly
exercised
his
discretion
as
to
the
marketing
pattern
in
the
industry
but
whether
he
was
within
the
four
corners
of
his
jurisdiction
in
addressing
that
criterion,
and
only
that
criterion,
of
fair
price.
The
analysis
of
this
question
is
greatly
aided
by
the
testimony
of
the
departmental
official
Hannan.
The
Minister's
theory
in
assessing
fair
price
under
section
34
is
explained
as
follows
(7
100-104):
[F]or
purposes
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act,
sale
price
is
described
as
the
price
on
which
the
tax
will
be
calculated.
Now
that
sale
price
should
include
all
the
normal
costs
including
an
element
of
profit
to
get
the
particular
product
in
question
to
market
under
normal
conditions
in
a
free
and
open
market.
.
.
Well,
normal
cost.
.
.
of
getting
that
product
to
market
includes
the
total
manufacturing
cost,
that
is
the
cost
of
the
materials,
the
overheads,
an
element
of
profit
and
when
I
am
talking
about
overhead,
what
I
mean
there
is
items
such
as
advertising,
warranties,
commissions,
all
those
type
of
elements.
that
are
not
directly
related,
shall
we
say
to
the
particular
value
of
the
cost
of
materials
going
into
that
product.
Now
all
those
normal
costs
is
to
get
that
product
as
I
indicated
to
you,
to
the
market
in
an
open
market
condition
.
.
.
[O]ur
mandate
is
to
collect
the
taxes
levied
under
the
Act
in
a
fair
and
equitable
situation
or
conditions
and
therefore
Section
34
provides
authority
for
the
Minister
to
try
and
prevent
schemes
or
arrangements
if
you
would
say,
whereby
the
sale
price
is
distorted
or
reduced
by
the
introduction
or,
shall
we
say,
abnormal
market
conditions
and
under
such
circumstances
by
reducing
the
sale
price
it
would
reduce
the
amount
of
tax
payable
thereby
reducing
revenue
to
the
Crown
and
also
providing
that
particular
individual
or
person
with
a
tax
advantage
by
virtue
of
the
fact
that
he
is
paying
less
tax,
vis-a-vis
the
competition
within
his
industry,
in
a
free
and
open
market
under
normal
conditions
.
.
.
Now,
if
any
of
the
normal
costs
involved
that
build
up
the
sale
price
or
the
fair
price
are
reduced
or
eliminated,
then
it
could
lead
the
Minister
to
conclude
that
you
do
not
have
a
complete
—
or
you
have
a
sale
price
that
includes
all
the
elements
of
cost
and
therefore
would
not
be
a
fair
price
.
.
.
[A]
fair
price
would
be
the
price
on
the
open
market
that
includes
all
the
normal
elements
of
cost
of
getting
that
product
to
market.
It
seems
to
me
that
the
market
pattern
criterion
is
a
reasonable
one
to
apply,
but
that
to
apply
it
exclusively
is
unreasonable.
For
instance,
suppose
the
price
at
which
a
manufacturer
sells
to
a
non-arm's-length
distributor
were
the
same
as
that
at
which
his
competitors
sell
directly
to
wholesalers.
That
it
would
be
unreasonable
in
such
circumstances
not
to
have
taken
into
account
the
competitors'
prices
is
not
only
patent,
but
is
also
contrary
to
the
Minister’s
own
policy
in
an
analogous
case
(7
121):
[A]
manufacturer
sells
to
three
retailers
that
are
completely
independent,
arm's
length
and
that
represents
a
good
portion
of
his
business.
He
sets
up
another
retailer
which
he
controls
or
which
he
owns
and
he
sells
to
that
retailer
at
the
same
price
he
sells
to
the
others
that
would
constitute
an
acceptable
sales
price
and
therefore
it
would
be
a
fair
price.
It
would
only
be
by
looking
to
the
competitive
extrinsic
prices
that
it
would
be
possible
to
arrive
at
a
reasonable
conclusion,
but
the
Minister’s
approach
would
exclude
that
possibility,
despite
Hannan's
admission
that
a
competitive
price
would
be
a
fair
price.
Hannan
admitted
as
well
that
section
34
was
also
considered
to
apply
to
completely
arm's-length
situations,
where,
for
instance,
there
were
loss
leader
sales
by
a
company
trying
to
break
into
a
market
(7116,170)
or
there
was
an
extra
marketing
level
beyond
what
was
normal
in
the
industry
(7
170,
187-8).
But
to
determine
whether
a
price
was
set
below
cost
would
certainly
require
an
invocation
of
the
internal
price
criterion,
just
as
only
the
external
criterion
could
indicate
that
the
price
was
out
of
line
with
that
of
the
competition.
As
an
aid
to
interpretation,
the
Minister
has
published
Memorandum
ET
202
(A.B.
196-211)
on
Values
for
Tax
and
a
further
Guidelines
for
Fair
Price
Cases
Under
Section
34
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act
(A.B.
213-244).
Hannan
conceded
that
there
is
no
legal
authority
for
ET
202
or
the
Guidelines
(7
217-8).
What
we
are
driven
back
to
is
therefore
section
34
itself.
I
have
already
noted
that
in
the
French
text
of
the
section
"the
fair
price"
is
expressed
by
"le
prix
raisonnable."
This
text
therefore
provides
an
interpretation
of
fair
in
the
sense
of
reasonable.
To
my
mind,
a
construction
which
limits
itself
to
only
one
of
at
least
three
relevant
criteria
cannot
be
said
to
be
either
fair
or
reasonable.
I
must
therefore
conclude
that,
in
looking
only
at
the
marketing
pattern
criterion,
the
Minister
did
not
act
within
the
four
corners
of
his
jurisdiction,
but
that
he
omitted
to
consider
relevant
material
and
exercised
his
power
without
regard
to
relevant
considerations.
The
appeal
should
succeed
in
part
and
the
judgment
of
the
trial
judge
be
set
aside
with
respect
to
the
four
parts
of
his
second
paragraph.
The
trial
judge's
first
paragraph
will
thus
no
longer
need
to
be
numbered
as
such,
and
the
whole
of
the
operative
judgment
should
therefore
read
as
follows:
THIS
COURT
ORDERS
AND
ADJUDGES
THAT:
(1)
The
determination
of
“fair
price"
made
by
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
on
October
27,
1983
under
section
34
of
the
Excise
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1970,
c.
E-13
as
amended,
with
respect
to
the
brush
goods
manufactured
by
the
plaintiff
and
sold
to
Flecto
Coatings
Ltd.
during
the
period
August
to
December
1981
be
quashed,
(2)
The
plaintiffs
action
so
far
as
it
is
under
paragraph
17(4)(b)
of
the
Federal
Court
Act
is
hereby
dismissed,
(3)
The
plaintiff
is
entitled
to
and
shall
have
from
the
defendant,
(pursuant
to
subsection
57(3)
of
the
Federal
Court
Act),
its
party
and
party
costs
of
this
action
to
be
taxed.
Despite
the
respondent's
argument,
I
am
not
convinced
that
the
trial
judge’s
order
as
to
costs
should
be
varied,
but
because
of
the
divided
success,
there
should
be
no
costs
on
this
appeal.