MacGuigan,
J.:—This
appeal
is
brought
against
the
respondent's
final
decision,
set
out
in
a
letter
of
June
5,
1986,
that
the
appellant
does
not
qualify
for
registration
as
a
charity
under
the
Income
Tax
Act
("the
Act").
The
relevant
provision
of
the
Act
is
subsection
149.1(1),
which
reads
as
follows:
149.1
(1)
In
this
section,
section
172
and
Part
V,
(a)
“charitable
foundation”
means
a
corporation
or
trust
constituted
and
operated
exclusively
for
charitable
purposes,
no
part
of
the
income
of
which
is
payable
to,
or
is
otherwise
available
for,
the
personal
benefit
of
any
proprietor,
member,
shareholder,
trustee
or
settlor
thereof
and
that
is
not
a
charitable
organization;
(b)
“charitable
organization”
means
an
organization,
whether
or
not
incorporated,
(i)
all
the
resources
of
which
are
devoted
to
charitable
activities
carried
on
by
the
organization
itself,
(ii)
no
part
of
the
income
of
which
is
payable
to,
or
is
otherwise
available
for,
the
personal
benefit
any
proprietor,
member,
shareholder,
trustee
or
settlor
thereof,
What
is
in
question
in
the
case
at
bar
is
whether
the
appellant
qualifies
as
a
charitable
organization
under
subparagraph
149.1
(1)(b)(i)
“all
the
resources
of
which
are
devoted
to
charitable
activities.”
Since
charity
is
not
defined
in
the
Act,
the
issue
falls
to
be
determined
by
common-law
principles.
The
locus
classicus
at
common
law
is
the
judgment
of
Lord
Macnaghten
in
The
Commissioners
for
Special
Purposes
of
the
Income
Tax
v.
Pern
sei,
[1891]
A.C.
531
at
583;
[1891-4]
All
E.R.
28
at
55
where
charity
is
classified
in
a
fourfold
way:
(1)
the
relief
of
poverty;
(2)
the
advancement
of
education;
(3)
the
advancement
of
religion;
and
(4)
other
purposes
beneficial
to
the
community,
not
falling
under
any
of
the
preceding
heads.
In
argument
before
this
Court
the
appellant
contended
that
it
qualifies
under
the
fourth
division
as
having
other
community-beneficial
purposes.
With
respect
to
this
category,
it
is
not
enough,
the
auhorities
state,
that
the
activities
in
question
be
laudable
and
worthwhile
in
themselves.
In
the
words
of
Stone,
J.
in
this
Court
in
Toronto
Volgograd
Committee
v.
M.N.R.,
[1988]
1
C.T.C.
365
at
375;
88
D.T.C.
6192
at
6199
they
must
also
"meet
the
test
of
'charity'
in
the
sense
that
they
are
beneficial
to
the
community
in
a
way
the
law
regards
as
charitable.”
In
D'Aguiar
v.
Guyana
Commissioner
of
Inland
Revenue,
[1970]
T.R.
31
at
33,
Lord
Wilberforce
outlined
the
following
approach
to
the
question:
The
difficulties
inherent
in
the
definition
of
the
fourth
heading
have
been
well
exemplified
in
the
decisions
of
the
Courts
both
before
and
since
1891.
.
.
.
But
the
process
which
the
Court
must
follow,
however
difficult,
is
now
fairly
well
established.
It
must
first
consider
the
trend
of
those
decisions
which
have
established
certain
objects
as
charitable
under
this
heading,
and
ask
whether,
by
reasonable
extension
or
analogy,
the
instant
case
may
be
considered
to
be
in
line
with
these.
Secondly,
it
must
examine
certain
accepted
anomalies
to
see
whether
they
fairly
cover
the
objects
under
consideration.
Thirdly
—
and
this
is
really
a
cross-check
upon
the
others
—
it
must
ask
whether,
consistently
with
the
objects
declared,
the
income
and
property
in
question
can
be
applied
for
purposes
clearly
falling
outside
the
scope
of
charity:
if
so,
the
argument
for
charity
must
fail.
A
more
fundamental
approach
was
taken
by
Stone,
J.
in
this
Court
in
Native
Communications
Society
of
B.C.
v.
M.N.R.,
[1986]
3
F.C.
471
at
479-80;
[1986]
2
C.T.C.
170
at
174:
A
review
of
decided
cases
suggests
that
at
least
the
following
propositions
may
be
stated
as
necessary
preliminaries
to
a
determination
whether
a
particular
purpose
can
be
regarded
as
a
charitable
one
falling
under
the
fourth
head
found
in
Lord
Macnaghten's
classification:
(a)
the
purpose
must
be
beneficial
to
the
community
in
a
way
which
the
law
regards
as
charitable
by
coming
within
the
“spirit
and
intendment"
of
the
preamble
to
the
Statute
of
Elizabeth
if
not
within
its
letter.
(National
AntiVivisection
Society
v.
Inland
Revenue
Commissioners,
[1948]
A.C.
31
(H.L.),
at
pages
63-64;
In
re
Strakosch,
deed.
Temperley
v.
Attorney-General,
[1949]
Ch.
529
(C.A.),
at
pages
537-538),
and
(b)
whether
a
purpose
would
or
may
operate
for
the
public
benefit
is
to
be
answered
by
the
court
on
the
basis
of
the
record
before
it
and
in
exercise
of
its
equitable
jurisdiction
in
matters
of
charity
(National
Anti-Vivisection
Society
v.
Inland
Revenue
Commissioners
(supra),
at
pages
44-45,
63).
Stone,
J.
restated
the
list
of
charitable
objects
in
the
preamble
of
the
Statute
of
Elizabeth
(43
Eliz.
I,
c.
4)
in
modern
English,
according
to
an
English
precedent,
as
follows
(at
pages
478-9;
C.T.C.
174):
.
.
.
the
relief
of
aged,
impotent,
and
poor
people
.
.
.
maintenance
of
sick
and
maimed
soldiers
and
mariners,
schools
of
learning,
free
schools,
and
scholars
in
universities
.
.
.
repair
of
bridges,
ports,
havens,
causeways,
churches,
seabanks
and
highways
.
.
.
education
and
preferment
of
orphans
.
.
.
relief,
stock
or
maintenance
for
houses
of
correction
.
.
.
marriages
of
poor
maids
.
.
.
supportation,
aid
and
help
of
young
tradesmen,
handicraftsmen
and
persons
decayed
.
.
.
relief
or
redemption
of
prisoners
or
captives,
and
for
aid
or
ease
of
any
poor
inhabitants
concerning
payment
of
fifteens,
setting
out
of
soldiers
and
other
taxes.
It
is
in
answering
the
question
as
to
what
falls
within
"the
spirit
and
intendment"
of
the
preamble
to
the
Statute
of
Elizabeth
that
some
movement
has
recently
occurred
in
the
common
law.
Stone,
J.
noted
this
flexibility,
supra,
at
pages
480-1
(C.T.C.
174-5),
as
follows:
Can
it
be
said
that
the
purposes
of
the
appellant
fall
within
"the
spirit
and
intendment"
of
the
preamble
to
the
Statute
of
Elizabeth
and,
therefore,
within
the
fourth
head
of
Lord
Macnaghten's
definition
of
the
word
"charity"?
In
answering
this
question
we
must
bear
in
mind
what
Lord
Greene,
M.R.
had
to
say
in
In
re
Strakosch
(supra),
at
page
537:
In
Williams'
Trustees
v.
Inland
Revenue
Commissioners
([1947]
A.C.
447),
the
House
of
Lords
has
laid
down
very
clearly
that
in
order
to
come
within
Lord
Macnaghten's
fourth
class,
the
gift
must
be
not
only
for
the
benefit
of
the
community
but
beneficial
in
a
way
which
the
law
regards
as
charitable.
In
order
to
satisfy
the
latter
it
must
be
within
the
“spirit
and
intendment"
of
the
preamble
to
the
Statute
of
Elizabeth.
That
preamble
set
out
what
were
then
regarded
as
purposes
which
should
be
treated
as
charitable
in
law.
It
is
obvious
that
as
time
passed
and
conditions
changed
common
opinion
as
to
what
was
properly
covered
by
the
word
charitable
also
changed.
This
has
been
recognized
by
the
courts
as
the
most
cursory
examination
of
the
cases
shows.
[Emphasis
added.]
More
recently,
in
Scottish
Burial
Reform
and
Cremation
Society
Ltd.
v.
Glasgow
Corpn.,
[1968]
A.C.
138
(H.L.),
Lord
Wilberforce
reminds
us
that
"the
law
of
charity
is
a
moving
subject".
I
refer
more
fully
to
his
opinion
on
the
point
as
expressed
at
page
154
of
the
report:
On
this
subject,
the
law
of
England,
though
no
doubt
not
very
satisfactory
and
in
need
of
rationalisation,
is
tolerably
clear.
The
purposes
in
question,
to
be
charitable,
must
be
shown
to
be
for
the
benefit
of
the
public,
or
the
community,
in
a
sense
or
manner
within
the
intendment
of
the
preamble
to
the
statute
43
Eliz.
I,
c.
4.
The
latter
requirement
does
not
mean
quite
what
it
says;
for
it
is
now
accepted
that
what
must
be
regarded
is
not
the
wording
of
the
preamble
itself,
but
the
effect
of
decisions
given
by
the
courts
as
to
its
scope,
decisions
which
have
endeavoured
to
keep
the
law
as
to
charities
moving
according
as
new
social
needs
arise
or
old
ones
become
obsolete
or
satisfied.
Lord
Macnaghten's
grouping
of
the
heads
of
recognized
charity
in
Pemsel's
case
([1891]
A.C.
531,
583)
is
one
that
has
proved
to
be
of
value
and
there
are
many
problems
which
it
solves.
But
three
things
may
be
said
about
it,
which
its
author
would
surely
not
have
denied:
first
that,
since
it
is
a
classification
of
convenience,
there
may
be
purposes
which
do
not
fit
neatly
into
one
or
other
of
the
headings;
secondly,
that
the
words
used
must
not
be
given
the
force
of
a
statute
to
be
construed;
and
thirdly,
that
the
law
of
charity
is
a
moving
subject
which
may
well
have
evolved
even
since
1891.
[Emphasis
added.]
Nor
should
we
ignore
the
advice
of
Lord
Upjohn
as
expressed
in
the
same
case.
In
deciding
whether
the
charity
there
in
question
fell
within
the
spirit
and
intendment
of
the
preamble
to
the
Statute
of
Elizabeth,
he
said
(at
page
150):
This
so-called
fourth
class
is
incapable
of
further
definition
and
can
to-day
hardly
be
regarded
as
more
than
a
portmanteau
to
receive
those
objects
which
enlightened
opinion
would
regard
as
qualifying
for
consideration
under
the
second
heading.
This
Court
went
on
(per
Stone,
J.)
in
the
Native
Communications
Society
case
to
hold
that
a
non-profit
corporation
whose
purposes
included
developing
radio
and
television
productions
relevent
to
the
native
people
of
British
Columbia,
training
native
people
as
communication
workers,
and
delivering
information
on
issues
affecting
native
people
was
a
charitable
organization
within
the
spirit
and
intendment
of
the
preamble
to
the
Statute
of
Elizabeth.
The
Court
came
to
that
conclusion
despite
the
large
admixture
of
information-giving
in
the
corporation
educational
program,
thus
verifying
Lord
Upjohn's
approach
to
the
fourth
class
as
"a
portmanteau
to
receive
those
objects
which
enlightened
opinion
would
regard
as
qualifying
under
the
second
heading,”
i.e.,
the
advancement
of
education.
In
the
light
of
this
decision
there
may
well
be
an
argument
to
be
made
that
an
organization
similarly
dedicated
to
the
interests
of
the
urban
disadvantaged
as
the
British
Columbia
society
was
to
the
interests
of
the
native
people
should
qualify
as
a
charity.
But,
on
the
facts,
this
is
not
such
a
case.
The
appellant
is
the
result
of
a
merger
between
two
other
local
associations
(N.D.G.
Tenants
Association
and
N.D.G.
Block
Association)
and
"took
over
the
objectives
of
the
Block
Association
because
these
seemed
best
suited
to
the
needs
of
the
group
and
the
community"
(Appeal
Book,
p.
65).
These
objects
were
as
follows
(Appeal
Book,
p.
16):
1.
To
assist
individuals
who
seek
information
affecting
their
condition
of
life
and
community
services.
2.
To
provide
a
forum
for
group
education
of
interested
community
members
and
help
animate
people
in
dealing
wth
social
issues
that
affect
them
and
their
community.
3.
Through
community
media
and
door
to
door
contact,
to
expand
the
accessibility
to
community
resources
to
individuals
otherwise
lacking
the
necessary
information
about
community
activities,
services
and
issues.
4.
Subject
to
the
provisions
of
the
private
education
act
and
of
the
regulations
adopted
in
implementation
thereof,
to
develop,
encourage
and
maintain
programs
of
adult
education,
free
of
charge
to
the
public
in
the
member
community.
Priority
is
given
to
education
programmes
serving
the
wider
community
and
cultural
interests.
5.
To
direct
our
services
to
any
individual
who
is
disadvantaged.
The
appellant
argued
that
the
last
object
should
be
taken
to
subsume
all
others
so
that
the
association
would
be
regarded
as
having
the
sole
aim
of
aiding
the
disadvantaged.
I
cannot,
however,
so
read
the
association’s
purposes.
The
groups
to
be
helped
under
the
other
objects
are
already
specified:
individuals
"who
seek
information
affecting
their
condition
of
life
and
community
services,”
group
education
"of
interested
community
members,"
individuals
"otherwise
lacking
the
necessary
information
about
community
activities,
services
and
issues,”
"programs
of
adult
education,
free
of
charge
to
the
public
in
the
member
community.”
As
I
read
the
objects,
the
scope
of
association
activities
is
universalist,
within
the
geographical
area
of
Notre
Dame
de
Grace,
as
defined
in
the
by-law
(Appeal
Book,
p.
43).
With
respect
to
its
activities,
the
appellant's
own
description
of
its
work
is
as
follows
(Appeal
Book,
p.
66):
The
purposes
of
our
Association
are
certainly
to
help
alleviate
poverty
and
most
of
our
work
is
with
low-income
group.
However,
as
stated
before,
we
do
not
establish
"a
means
test"
that
is
used
to
screen
residents
that
come
to
us.
This
goes
against
the
democratic
principles
of
our
Association
and
would
expose
the
users
of
service
to
embarrasing
situations.
We
exist
to
help
residents
in
the
community
and
this
said,
must
remain
fairly
open.
No,
not
all
members
of
the
community
would
be
availed
of
our
services;
the
rich
will
not
receive
them.
A
recipient
of
service
does
not
have
to
be
a
member.
It
seems
to
me
that
this
passage
reveals
the
ambivalence
of
the
appellant
between
being
a
general
neighbourhood
association
with
a
universal
orientation
and
one
dedicated
exclusively
to
the
cause
of
the
urban
poor.
The
social
causes
favoured
by
the
appellant
are
numerous
and
of
both
orientations
(Appeal
Book,
p.
102):
Over
the
years,
the
former
community
organizations
(N.D.G.
Tenant
and
N.D.G.
Block
Associations)
that
merged
to
form
Neighbourhood
was
[sic]
responsible
for
defending
people's
rights
and
tackling
large
issues
that
involved
the
well-being
of
the
community
(e.g.
Street
Safety
Campaign,
Bus
105
Transportation
Campaign,
Elmhurst
Battle
Against
Conversion
to
Condominiums,
Renaissance
Sherbrooke,
Common
Front
of
Tenant
Associations
and
Bill
187,
Third
Image
Oral
History
Exhibition,
Project
Investigation,
N.D.G.
Skate
Drive,
and
the
Campaign
for
the
Abolishment
of
Water
Taxes).
The
Neighbourhood
Association
wishes
to
continue
this
proud
tradition.
Arguably,
all
of
these
causes
are
beneficial
to
the
community,
but
they
are
not,
in
my
view,
within
the
spirit
and
intendment
of
the
Statute
of
Elizabeth,
nor
do
they
fulfil
the
requirement
of
the
Act
that
“all
the
resources
.
.
.
are
devoted
to
charitable
activities."
The
fundamental
problem
is
not
the
absence
of
a
means
test,
for
which
a
rough-and-ready
assessment
might
perhaps
be
substituted.
It
is,
as
I
see
it,
the
ambivalence
of
the
appellant
as
to
its
real
goal.
Moreover,
there
is
nothing
on
the
facts
in
the
instant
case
that
would
enable
Lord
Upjohn's
analysis
to
be
invoked.
It
is
not
a
near
miss
with
respect
to
the
advancement
of
education,
which
an
enlightened
public
opinion
must
then
recognize
through
the
fourth
category.
If
there
were
an
overriding
thrust
to
the
appellant's
work,
it
was
apparently
an
activist
one
as
a
tenants'
association
(Appeal
Book,
pp.
158-9)
rather
than
as
an
educational
one.
This
case
also
differs
from
the
Native
Communications
Society
case
in
that
there
Stone,
J.
was
able
to
say
(at
page
484;
C.T.C.
177)
that
"The
record
before
us
does
not
contain
even
the
slightest
hint
that
the
appellant
engages
or
intends
to
engage
in
political
activities.”
The
authorities
have
consistently
held
that
the
presence
of
political
objectives
negatives
an
organization's
claim
to
benefit
the
community
as
a
charity.
This
Court,
for
example,
recently
so
held
in
Positive
Action
Against
Pornography
v.
M.N.R.,
[1988]
1
C.T.C.
232;
88
D.T.C.
6186,
which
followed
(at
page
239;
D.T.C.
6191)
the
definition
of
political
purposes
adopted
by
Slade,
J.
in
McGovern
and
Others
v.
Attorney
General
and
Another,
[1982]
2
W.L.R.
222
(Ch.D.)
at
240;
[1982]
Ch.
321
at
340
as
a
direct
and
principal
purpose
"to
procure
changes
in
the
laws
of
this
country"
or
"to
procure
a
reversal
of
government
policy
or
of
partial
decisions
of
governmental
authorities
in
this
country."
In
the
case
at
bar,
the
respondent
raised
this
issue
directly
with
the
appellant
in
its
letter
of
November
28,
1985,
as
follows
(Appeal
Book,
pp.
155-6):
Object
2
also
appears
to
be
primarily
directed
at
the
provision
of
a
forum
for
an
exchange
of
ideas
and
information,
advocating
for
tenants’
rights
and
for
socializing.
Such
objects
have
been
held
not
to
be
exclusively
charitable
at
law.
In
addition,
some
of
the
information
provided
by
the
Association
can
be
seen
as
directed
towards
achieving
a
political
purpose
and
as
such
cannot
be
viewed
as
an
activity
directed
towards
the
"advancement
of
education”.
An
example
of
such
an
instance
is
the
letter
writing
campaign
encouraged
by
the
Association
in
relation
to
Federal
funding
cutbacks
in
the
Canada
Works
Program.
In
addition,
we
also
note
the
Association’s
participation
in
the
following:
Bus
105
Transportation
Campaign,
Renaissance
Sherbrooke,
Common
Front
of
Tenant
Association
and
Bill
1207
Elmhurst
Battle
Against
Conversion
to
Condominiums,
Project
Investigation
and
the
Campaign
for
the
Abolishment
of
Water
Taxes.
In
connection
with
this,
we
would
also
like
to
mention
that
a
registered
“charitable
organization"
must
devote
all
of
its
resources
to
charitable
activities
carried
on
by
it.
It
has
been
well
established
by
the
courts
that
if
a
purpose
is
the
attainment
of
a
political
objective,
such
a
purpose
is
not
charitable.
By
the
same
principle,
the
furtherance
of
a
particular
purpose
by
political
means
would
not
constitute
the
devotion
of
an
organization's
resources
to
activities
of
a
charitable
nature.
Where
an
organization's
efforts
are
directed
toward
bringing
public
pressure
to
bear
upon
the
decisions
of
a
government
with
respect
to
legislative
matters,
the
courts
have
taken
the
view
that
the
organization’s
activities
are
political
and
not
charitable.
This
would
include
such
activities
as
lobbying,
public
demonstrations
conducted
by
an
organization
to
influence
legislation,
solicitation
of
the
public
to
engage
in
a
letter-writing
campaign
designed
to
induce
a
government
to
enact
or
maintain
legislation
advocated
by
the
organization,
the
support
or
opposition
of
specific
candidates
for
election
on
the
basis
of
their
personal
stand
on
an
issue,
and
other
similar
types
of
activities.
The
fact
that
such
activities
are
carried
out
by
an
organization
with
charitable
objectives
does
not
make
the
nature
of
the
activity
less
political.
The
Department
has
long
taken
the
view
that
the
taking
of
written
or
oral
representations
by
a
registered
charity
to
an
elected
representative
presenting
the
organization’s
interest
and
point
of
view
is
not
an
activity
that
would
in
and
of
itself
be
considered
political
in
nature.
Similarly,
the
presentation
of
briefs,
either
with
or
without
invitation,
to
commissions
or
committees,
setting
out
an
organization's
views
on
a
matter
related
to
its
charitable
mandate
and
recommending
corrective
measures
would
not,
by
itself,
constitute
a
political
activity.
However,
we
would
reiterate
that
if
an
organization
attempts
to
influence
a
governmental
stance
or
action
through
the
exercise
of
demand
or
pressure
tactics
in
order
to
bring
a
particular
view
advocated
by
the
organization
into
effect,
it
will
have
engaged
in
a
non-charitable,
political
activity.
In
the
recent
budget
speech,
however,
the
Government
proposed
the
introduction
of
a
relieving
measure
to
allow
a
registered
charity
to
engage
in
nonpartisan,
political
activities
that
are
ancillary
and
incidental
to
its
charitable
purposes.
The
proposal
recognizes
that
ancillary
and
incidental
advocacy
activities
in
support
of
its
charitable
goals
are
an
appropriate
use
of
a
charity's
resources.
These
would
include
activities
intended
to
influence
public
opinion
generally,
such
as
advertising,
mailing
or
rental
of
facilities
for
meetings
on
public
issues.
We
would,
however,
emphasize
that
an
organization
constituted
for
a
political
purpose
or
purposes
would
remain
ineligible
for
registration.
Moreover,
the
percentage
of
resources
that
a
registered
charity
may
devote
to
such
political
activities
will
be
limited.
The
relevant
part
of
the
“relieving
measure"
referred
to
in
this
letter,
applicable
to
1985
and
subsequent
taxation
years,
is
as
follows
(33-34-35
Eliz.
II,
1986,
c.
6,
subsection
85(2)):
(2)
Section
149.1
of
the
said
Act
is
further
amended
by
adding
thereto,
immediately
after
subsection
(6)
thereof,
the
following
subsection:
“(6.2)
For
the
purposes
of
paragraph
(1)(b),
where
an
organization
devotes
substantially
all
of
its
resources
to
charitable
activities
carried
on
by
it
and
(a)
it
devotes
part
of
its
resources
to
political
activities,
(b)
such
political
activities
are
ancillary
and
incidental
to
its
charitable
activities,
and
(c)
such
political
activities
do
not
include
the
direct
or
indirect
support
of,
or
opposition
to,
any
political
party
or
candidate
for
public
office.
the
organization
shall
be
considered
to
be
devoting
that
part
of
its
resources
to
charitable
activities
carried
on
by
it.”
The
appellant's
reply
to
the
respondent's
letter
was
in
a
letter
of
February
7,
1986,
as
follows
(Appeal
Book,
pp.
158-9):
We
acknowledge
receipt
of
your
letter
dated
Nov.
28,
85,
postmarked
Dec.
10,
85,
and
are
replying
accordingly.
One
item
that
should
be
clarified
right
away
is
that
the
items
that
you
point
out
as
being
political
and
not
for
the
“advancement
of
education”
are
activities
that
were
for
the
benefit
of
low-income
or
poor
persons,
e.g.
(i)
Federal
funding
cutbacks
in
the
Canada
Works
Program.
These
cuts
would
have
stopped
many
poor
children
from
attending
summer
day
camps
in
Mtl.
(ii)
Bus
105,
Transporation
changes
affected
seniors
(many
poor)
whose
mobility
made
it
extremely
difficult
for
them
to
use
the
new
system.
(iii)
Renaissance
Sherbrooke.
Improvement/Renovation
of
NDC's
largest
artery
would
have
to
be
considered
a
public
benefit
conferred
on
the
whole
community.
(iv)
Battle
against
conversion
to
condominium
at
Elmhurst.
The
effect
on
the
poor
(had
this
conversion
occurred)
would
have
been
dramatic.
Elmhurst
is
a
low
rent
neighbourhood
composed
of
immigrants,
welfare
recipients,
and
unemployed.
(v)
Campaign
for
Water
Tax
Abolition.
This
was
geared
to
welfare
recipients
who
were
getting
evicted.
We
strongly
believe
that
we
attempt
to
relieve
poverty,
advance
education,
and
advance
other
purposes
of
benefit
to
the
whole
community.
There
appears
to
be
a
very
fine
line
between
the
presenting
of
briefs
establishing
the
interests
of
an
organization
and
the
recommending
of
corrective
measures
(as
all
being
NONPOLITICAL)
and
on
the
other
hand,
the
influencing
of
the
government
via
demands
and
pressure
tactics
to
get
one's
point
of
view
into
affect
[sic]
(as
being
POLITICAL).
We
believe
that
working
on
behalf
of
tenants
should
be
amended
as
being
charitable
and
that
the
introduction
of
a
relieving
measure
to
allow
a
group
to
engage
in
non-partisan
political
activities
that
are
ancillary,
incidental
to
its
charitable
purposes
would
be
a
good
idea.
It
seems
that
Revenue
Canada
discriminates
against
tenant
associations
while
groups
like
le
Comité
des
Malades
(Claude
Brunet)
have
no
trouble
getting
charitable
status.
It
may
fairly
be
said
that
in
this
letter
the
appellant
admitted
the
facts
alleged,
but
attempted
to
put
them
into
context.
The
key
to
the
application
of
the
relieving
measure,
it
seems
to
me,
is
that
any
political
activities
carried
on
must
be
“ancillary
and
incidental
to
its
charitable
activities."
Consequently,
the
"part
of
its
resources"
that
may
legitimately
be
devoted
to
political
activities
must
needs
be
a
small
and
subordinate
part.
This
interpretation
is
in
keeping
with
this
Court's
decision
in
Positive
Action
Against
Pornography,
supra,
where
Stone,
J.
said
at
page
240
(D.T.C.
6192)
that
the
relieving
subsection
did
not
assist
the
appellant
in
that
case
"as
the
appellant's
purposes
and
activities
are
not
‘ancillary
and
incidental’
but,
rather,
are
primarily
of
a
political
nature
and
therefore
non-
charitable."
Even
if
the
appellant
cannot
be
dismissed
as
merely
a
tenant
association
as
the
respondent
suggested,
it
is
apparent
to
me
from
the
record
that
it
not
only
has
activities
beyond
education
but
that
it
is,
in
effect,
an
activist
organization.
Whether
it
is
that
for
the
most
part,
or
only
in
large
part,
I
think
matters
not.
It
is
such
in
sufficient
part
not
to
be
able
to
take
advantage
of
the
relieving
measure.
Thus,
for
this
reason
too,
it
fails
to
qualify
as
a
charity.
If
the
appellant's
case
had
been
argued
in
reliance
on
any
of
the
three
other
of
Lord
Macnaghten's
categories,
there
might
perhaps
have
been
other
issues
to
canvass.
I
might,
however,
add
that
I
cannot
see
that
the
appellant
would
have
been
further
ahead
by
presenting
its
case
differently.
I
believe
it
put
its
best
foot
forward
in
the
argument
made.
In
the
result,
I
must
dismiss
the
appeal,
but
would
exercise
discretion
and
make
no
order
as
to
costs.
Appeal
dismissed.