Rothman,
JA:—This
is
an
appeal
by
the
Deputy
Minister
of
Revenue
of
Quebec
from
a
judgment
rendered
by
Judge
Louis-Philippe
Bouchard,
a
judge
of
the
Provincial
Court,
District
of
Quebec,
on
March
8,
1984,
dismissing
the
Deputy
Minister’s
objection
to
the
production
of
a
document
during
an
examination
on
discovery
after
defence.
Respondent,
Maria
Fava,
a
taxpayer
under
the
Quebec
Taxation
Act
(1977
LRQ
Ch
1-3),
was
reassessed
by
the
Minister
of
Revenue
of
Quebec
for
the
years
1976,
1977
and
1978
on
grounds
that
certain
amounts
paid
to
her
during
those
years
did
not
constitute
capital
gains,
as
she
claimed,
but
business
income.
She
appealed
to
the
Provincial
Court
and,
after
the
filing
of
the
defence,
she
summoned
the
departmental
auditor
who
had
prepared
the
audit
report
on
which
the
reassessment
was
based,
to
be
examined
on
discovery
under
Article
398
CCP,
and
to
allow
communication
of
all
documents
relevant
to
the
issues
in
the
appeal.
During
the
examination
on
discovery,
counsel
for
respondent
asked
that
the
auditor
produce
a
copy
of
the
audit
report
which
he
had
prepared.
Counsel
for
the
Deputy
Minister
objected
to
the
production
of
the
report
on
grounds
that
it
was
an
internal
document
that
the
Department
did
not
have
to
produce.
The
sole
issue
to
be
decided
in
this
appeal
is
whether
the
audit
report
is
protected
from
disclosure
by
professional
privilege.
In
his
factum,
appellant
defines
the
question
in
this
manner:
Il
s’agit
de
déterminer
si
le
rapport
de
vérification
est
un
document
privilégié
dont
l’appelant
peut
refuser
la
production.
L’appelant
ne
discutera
pas
les
autres
motifs
soulevés
par
lui
en
première
instance,
car
c’est
sur
la
question
du
privilège
que
permission
lui
a
été
donnée
d’en
appeler
devant
cette
Cour.
L’appelant
invoque
que,
lorsqu’un
contribuable
en
appelle
de
l’une
de
ses
cotisations
devant
la
Cour
Provinciale,
il
fournit
alors
à
ses
procureurs
le
rapport
de
vérification
concernant
ce
contribuable,
afin
de
leur
permettre
d’établir
une
défense.
Le
rapport
devient
alors
un
document
fourni
à
ses
procureurs,
à
l’occasion
ou
en
prévision
du
procès,
revêt
un
caractère
confidentiel,
participe
à
l’immunité
du
secret
professionnel
et
est
par
conséquent
privilégié
de
toute
production.
C’est
le
cas
du
rapport
de
M
J-C
Joncas,
dont
production
a
été
refusée
par
l’appelant.
It
is
to
be
noted
at
the
outset
that
no
question
of
Crown
or
ministerial
privilege
arises
in
this
case
since
no
affidavit
has
been
tendered
by
the
Minister
or
Deputy
Minister
establishing
that
the
disclosure
of
the
audit
report
would
be
contrary
to
public
order
as
contemplated
under
Article
308
CCP.
Further,
there
is
no
suggestion
that
the
report
contains
the
names
of
any
informers,
the
revelation
of
which
would
be
contrary
to
the
common
law
rule
against
the
disclosure
of
information
of
that
kind
(Bisaillon
v
Keable,
[1983]
2
SCR
60).
Nor
does
appellant
object
to
the
production
of
the
report
on
grounds
of
its
relevancy
to
the
issues
involved
in
the
reassessment
and
the
appeal
before
the
Provincial
Court.
Counsel
for
the
Deputy
Minister
contends,
in
essence,
that
since
the
audit
report
was
prepared
not
only
for
the
use
of
the
Minister
but
also
for
the
use
of
counsel
in
the
event
of
litigation,
it
is
protected
from
disclosure
on
grounds
of
the
professional
privilege
existing
between
the
Minister
and
his
attorneys.
He
invokes
Article
9
of
the
Quebec
Charter
of
Human
Rights
and
Freedoms
(1977
RSQ
Ch
C-12).
He
relies
on
the
decisions
of
this
Court
in
La
Prévoyance
Cie
d’Assurance
v
Construction
du
Fleuve
Ltée
([1982]
CA
532)
and
The
Montreal
Street
Railway
Co
v
Feigleman
((1913),
22
BR
102),
as
well
as
on
a
number
of
English
decisions
which
are
summarized
in
Seabrook
v
British
Transport
Commission
([1952]
2
All
ER
15).
There
is
no
doubt
that
a
report
prepared
by
a
party
for
the
use
of
his
counsel
in
a
lawsuit
that
is
pending
or
anticipated
is
protected
by
professional
privilege
and
its
disclosure
cannot
be
compelled.
This
is
equally
true
whether
the
report
is
prepared
by
the
party
directly
and
remitted
to
his
counsel
or
whether
it
is
requested
by
an
agent
or
employee
of
the
party
from
another
agent
or
employee
and
later
remitted
to
counsel.
The
Prévoyance
case
and
the
Feigleman
case,
(supra),
are
clear
authority
for
the
proposition
that
it
is
the
purpose
of
the
report
that
determines
its
privileged
character
and
not
the
identity
of
the
person
who
requests
it.
But
that
general
principle
does
not
solve
the
problem
here.
The
audit
report
in
the
present
case
was
not
prepared
solely
for
the
purpose
of
briefing
the
Minister’s
attorneys
with
a
view
to
pending
or
anticipated
litigation.
Nor
do
I
believe
that
this
was
its
predominant
purpose.
The
primary
purpose
of
the
audit
report
was
to
determine
the
taxable
income
of
the
taxpayer
for
the
years
in
question
and
to
enable
the
Minister
to
decide
whether
or
not
to
reassess
tax
on
her
income
for
those
years.
The
primary
purpose,
then,
was
to
enable
the
Minister
to
carry
out
his
duty
under
section
1010
of
the
Act:
1010.
1.
Le
ministre
peut,
en
tout
temps,
déterminer
l’impôt,
les
intérêts
et
les
pénalités
en
vertu
de
la
présente
partie,
ou
donner
avis
par
écrit
à
tout
contribuable
qui
a
produit
une
déclaration
fiscale
pour
une
année
d’imposition
à
l’effet
qu’aucun
impôt
n’est
payable
pour
cette
année
d’imposition.
2.
Le
ministre
peut
aussi
déterminer
de
nouveau
l’impôt,
les
intérêts
et
les
pénalités
en
vertu
de
la
présente
partie
et
faire
une
nouvelle
cotisation
ou
établir
une
cotisation
supplémentaire,
selon
le
cas
.
.
.
This,
of
course,
may
not
be
the
only
purpose
of
the
report.
Where
an
appeal
from
the
reassessment
does
ensue,
the
report
may
be
remitted
to
the
Minister’s
attorneys
for
use
in
the
litigation,
but
that,
in
my
view,
is
not
the
purpose
for
its
preparation
nor
its
predominant
purpose.
Where
a
document
or
report
has
been
prepared
for
more
than
one
purpose,
as
is
the
case
here,
the
English
authorities
appear
to
have
evolved
considerably
since
the
Seabrook
case,
(supra),
referred
to
by
appellant.
Phipson
(On
Evidence,
13th
edition,
1982,
p
303)
describes
the
present
state
of
the
law
as
follows:
Often
the
dealings
with
the
third
party
are
not
prompted
by
a
single
motive,
and
in
such
cases
it
is
necessary
to
investigate
the
purpose
for
which
the
communication
with
the
third
party
chiefly
took
place.
In
Waugh
v
BRB
([1980]
AC
521
HL),
a
claim
was
brought
under
the
Fatal
Accidents
Acts
and
the
widow
sought
discovery
of
an
accident
report
made
two
days
after
the
event.
The
report
contained
signed
statements,
and
one
of
the
purposes
for
which
it
was
prepared
was
submission
to
the
defendant’s
legal
advisers.
It
was
held
by
the
House
of
Lords
that
a
document
would
attract
legal
professional
privilege
only
if
the
sole
or
predominant
purpose
of
its
preparation
is
to
enable
it
to
be
used
by
lawyers,
and
the
older
authorities
to
the
contrary
were
overruled.
There
is
thus
no
need
any
more
to
use
the
escape
route
from
these
decisions
provided
in
Longthorn
v
BTC
(1959
1
WLR
530).
The
only
question
to
be
answered
is
whether
the
dominant
purpose
of
the
document
was
that
it
should
be
submitted
to
legal
advisers.
[Emphasis
added]
In
Waugh
v
British
Railways
Board
([1979]
2
All
ER
1169),
therefore,
the
House
of
Lords
specifically
rejected
the
proposition
that
a
document
is
privileged
where
anticipated
litigation
is
merely
one
of
its
purposes
and
held
that
it
would
only
be
privileged
if
the
dominant
purpose
for
which
it
was
prepared
was
the
submission
to
a
legal
adviser
for
advice
or
use
in
litigation.
Lord
Wilberforce,
after
considering
Seabrook
and
other
authorities,
stated
(1174):
My
Lords,
for
the
reasons
I
have
given,
when
discussing
the
case
in
principle,
I
too
would
refuse
to
follow
those
cases.
It
appears
to
me
that
unless
the
purpose
of
submission
to
the
legal
adviser
in
view
of
litigation
is
at
least
the
dominant
purpose
for
which
the
relevant
document
was
prepared,
the
reasons
which
require
privilege
to
be
extended
to
it
cannot
apply.
On
the
other
hand
to
hold
that
the
purpose,
as
above,
must
be
the
sole
purpose,
would,
apart
from
difficulties
of
proof,
in
my
opinion,
be
too
strict
a
requirement,
and
would
confine
the
privilege
too
narrowly:
as
to
this
I
agree
with
Barwick
CJ
and
in
substance
with
Lord
Denning
MR.
While
fully
respecting
the
necessity
for
Eveleigh
LJ
and
Sir
David
Cairns
to
follow
previous
decisions
of
their
court,
I
find
myself
in
the
result
in
agreement
with
Lord
Denning
MR’s
judgment.
I
would
allow
the
appeal
and
order
disclosure
of
the
joint
report.
Even
before
the
decision
in
Waugh,
moreover,
the
House
of
Lords
had
distinguished
the
Seabrook
case
from
cases
where
the
predominant
purpose
of
a
report
or
document
was
a
purpose
other
than
to
aid
in
anticipated
litigation.
In
Alfred
Crompton
Amusement
Machines
Ltd
v
Commissioners
of
Customs
and
Excise
([1972]
All
ER
1169,
1183),
Lord
Cross
of
Chelsea
stated:
One
day
it
may
be
necessary
for
this
House
to
consider
the
point
but
in
my
judgment
it
does
not
arise
for
decision
in
this
case.
In
the
Ogden
and
Seabrook
type
of
case
the
reports
in
question
are
obtained
for
two
or
more
quite
separate
purposes.
Here
the
two
purposes
for
which
the
documents
in
question
were
obtained
or
came
into
existence
were
parts
of
a
single
wider
purpose
—
namely,
the
ascertainment
of
the
wholesale
value
in
the
manner
prescribed
by
the
Act.
The
first,
and
the
sole
immediate,
purpose
was
to
help
the
commissioners
to
fix
what
in
their
opinion
was
the
true
value;
the
second
purpose
was
to
help
the
solicitor,
if
the
commissioners’
opinion
was
challenged,
to
prepare
their
case
for
the
arbitration.
It
was
not
—
and
hardly
could
have
been
—
suggested
that
the
mere
fact
that
the
commissioners
would
know
in
every
case
that
their
opinion
might
be
challenged
would
itself
enable
them
to
claim
that
such
documents
as
are
in
question
here
would
be
the
subject
of
legal
professional
privilege
whenever
in
fact
their
opinion
was
challenged.
What
is
said
to
make
them
privileged
in
this
case
is
the
fact
that
the
commissioners
happened
to
expect
that
there
would
be
an
arbitration
and
called
in
the
solicitor
to
“hold
their
hands”
in
the
early
stages.
But,
even
so,
in
this
case
just
as
much
as
in
cases
in
which
no
arbitration
was
in
fact
anticipated
the
commissioners
had
to
form
their
own
opinion
as
to
value
on
the
evidence
available
to
them,
including
these
documents,
before
any
arbitration
could
take
place.
This
feature
of
the
case
appears
to
me
to
distinguish
it
from
the
Ogden
or
Seabrook
type
of
case
.
.
.
The
position
seems
to
be
analogous
here.
The
prime
purpose
of
the
audit
report
was
to
enable
the
Minister
to
determine
the
taxpayer’s
income
and
to
assess
tax
on
that
income.
While
the
Minister
might
have
known
that
his
assessment
could
be
challenged
by
an
appeal
to
the
Provincial
Court
and
that,
in
such
event,
the
report
would
be
used
by
counsel,
that
was
not
the
purpose
for
its
preparation
nor
the
purpose
for
its
delivery
to
the
Minister.
In
my
view,
the
trend
towards
more
liberal
disclosure
of
evidence
is
no
less
evident
in
Canada
and
in
Quebec
than
it
is
in
England.
Mr
Justice
Le
Dain,
in
The
Queen
v
Hawker
Siddeley
Canada
Ltd
([1977]
2
FC
162,
166)
wrote:
The
dispute
in
this
case
is
as
to
whether,
on
the
documentary
evidence,
the
appellant
has
discharged
the
burden
of
clearly
showing
that
one
of
the
purposes
for
instituting
the
inquiry
was
the
preparation
of
a
report
that
would
be
submitted
to
legal
advisors
to
assist
them
in
anticipated
litigation.
A
party
should
bring
himself
clearly
within
the
requirements
of
a
claim
for
privilege.
It
is
in
the
interests
of
justice
that
there
be
the
fullest
possible
disclosure
of
all
relevant
material
capable
of
throwing
light
upon
the
issues
in
a
case.
We
are
all
of
the
opinion
that
the
appellant
has
not
discharged
this
burden
in
the
present
case.
It
is
no
doubt
reasonable
to
conclude
that,
at
the
time
the
Board
of
Inquiry
was
established,
the
possibility
of
litigation
was
contemplated
in
view
of
the
exchange
of
correspondence
that
had
taken
place
between
the
parties
only
shortly
before
the
appointment
of
the
Board.
The
evidence
does
not
clearly
show,
however,
that
a
purpose
in
setting
up
the
Board
was
to
obtain
a
report
that
would
be
laid
before
legal
advisors
to
assist
them
with
respect
to
such
litigation
.
.
.
The
need
for
openness
is
particularly
acute
in
tax
cases
where
the
burden
of
proof
is
on
the
taxpayer
to
establish
that
the
Minister’s
reassessment
was
incorrect.
This
can
be
a
very
heavy
burden
indeed
if
he
is
not
fully
informed
as
to
the
basis
of
that
reassessment.
It
is
true,
of
course,
that
the
audit
report
might
contain
information
that
is
not
directly
admissible
in
evidence.
We
have
not
examined
the
report.
There
might
well
be
statements
of
witnesses
that
amount
to
hearsay
and
parts
of
the
report
that
involve
opinions
and
conclusions
rather
than
facts.
For
that
reason,
there
can
be
no
question
of
allowing
the
production
of
the
report
as
evidence.
But
that
was
not
the
intention
of
the
judge
who
dismissed
the
objection.
It
seems
clear
that
he
intended
only
that
the
report
be
disclosed
to
respondent:
Le
rapport
ne
constituera
un
témoignage
écrit
que
si,
à
l’audition
au
mérite,
la
requérante
cherche
à
produire
le
rapport
pour
prouver
des
allégations
qui
y
sont
mentionnées.
L’objection,
qui
pourrait
être
alors
formulée,
sera
appréciée
par
le
juge
au
fonds,
mais
est
prématurée
au
stade
de
l’interrogatoire
au
préalable.
D’ailleurs,
de
façon
générale,
selon
le
choix
ou
l’utilisation
que
la
requérante
fera
au
mérite
l’intimé
pourra
toujours
s’objecter
à
ce
moment.
Quite
clearly,
each
of
the
documents
forming
part
of
the
report
will
have
to
be
examined
on
a
document
by
document
basis
to
determine
its
admissibility
in
evidence
(Solosky
v
R,
[1980]
1
SCR
821,
837).
But
counsel
for
the
Deputy
Minister
will
have
ample
opportunity
to
assert
any
relevant
objections
before
the
trial
judge
on
the
merits,
or,
if
necessary,
even
prior
to
trial,
before
the
Provincial
Court
or
a
judge
of
that
Court,
should
respondent
seek
to
introduce
into
evidence
any
inadmissible
documents
or
material
contained
in
the
audit
report
or
should
there
be
any
dispute
as
to
the
disclosure
of
the
names
of
witnesses
that
the
Deputy
Minister
considers
should
not
be
divulged.
At
this
stage,
however,
I
agree
with
the
first
judge
that
the
objection
is
premature.
In
deciding
the
present
appeal,
we
can
only
do
so
on
the
record
as
constituted
before
this
Court
and,
on
the
basis
of
the
record,
the
only
question
to
be
decided
is
whether
or
not
the
audit
report
is
protected
from
disclosure
by
professional
privilege.
For
the
reasons
given
above,
in
my
opinion
it
is
not.
I
would
therefore
dismiss
the
appeal
with
costs.
LA
COUR,
statuant
sur
l’appel
d’un
jugement
de
la
Cour
Provinciale
du
district
de
Québec,
rendu
par
M
le
juge
Louis-Philippe
Bouchard
le
8
mars
1984,
rejetant
l’objection
du
Sous-Ministre
du
Revenu
du
Québec
à
la
production
d’un
rapport
de
vérification
demandée
par
l’intimée
lors
d’un
interrogatoire
au
préalable
après
défense:
Après
étude
du
dossier,
audition
et
délibéré;
Pour
les
motifs
exposés
dans
l’opinion
écrite
de
monsieur
le
juge
Rothman
déposée
avec
le
présent
jugement,
à
laquelle
souscrivent
monsieur
le
juge
Kaufman
et
madame
le
juge
L’Heureux-Dubé:
REJETTE
l’appel
avec
dépens.