Muldoon,
J.:—In
the
plaintiff's
motion,
dated
and
filed
on
May
14,
1992,
which
came
on
for
hearing
in
Winnipeg
on
June
30,
1992,
the
plaintiff
seeks:
1.
an
order
pursuant
to
section
179
of
the
Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148
(am.
S.C.
1970-71-72,
c.
63)
(the
"Act")
as
it
existed
prior
to
amendment
in
1985
that
the
proceedings
herein
be
held
in
camera,
or
in
the
alternative
that
the
proceedings
herein
be
held
in
camera
under
the
existing
legislation;
and
2.
such
further
or
other
order
as
the
Court
may
deem
just.
In
support
of
the
motion
is
filed
the
affidavit
of
Murdoch
MacKay,
Q.C.,
the
president
of
the
plaintiff
corporation.
The
action
was
instituted
in
this
Court
by
the
plaintiff,
on
February
26,
1986,
as
an
appeal
by
way
of
proceedings
de
novo
under
the
Income
Tax
Act.
During
the
defendant's
oral
discovery
of
the
plaintiff,
represented
therein
by
its
president,
Mr.
MacKay,
he
declined
to
answer
questions
calculated
to
elicit
the
names,
and
other
identifying
characteristics
of
the
deceased
farm
manager
and
two
foreign
principal
investors
in
the
plaintiff
corporation.
The
plaintiff,
in
effect,
accuses
the
defendant's
counsel
of
simple
bloody-mindedness
in
pressing
for
such
identifying
information
to
be
placed
in
the
record,“
although”,
as
Mr.
MacKay
deposes,
such
evidence
was
"divulged
to
the
defendant
and
the
taxing
authorities.”
Whatever
pejorative
may
be
asserted
against
the
defendant,
when
the
plaintiff,
in
August,
1990,
resisted
the
defendant's
motion
to
compel
answers
to
questions
28,
29,
30,
145
and
161,
as
well
as
to
complete
undertakings
given
in
questions
45,
64,
65
and
118,
and
to
produce
the
document
referred
to
in
questions
35
and
36,
the
defendant's
motion
was
granted
on
August
23,
1990.
The
plaintiff
appealed
against
this
Court's
order
to
compel
answers.
The
second
executive
paragraph
of
that
order
of
August
23,
1990,
contemplated
the
plaintiff's
appeal
and
accorded
a
structured
stay
of
proceedings
in
order
to
accommodate
the
appeal.
The
appeal
was
dismissed
on
May
12,
1992,
substantially
for
the
reasons
expressed
by
the
motions
judge,
Muldoon,
J.
In
the
Appeal
Division’s
unanimous
reasons
for
judgment,
delivered
from
the
bench
by
Mr.
Justice
Stone,
there
are
the
following
paragraphs:
In
its
amended
memorandum,
the
appellant
submits
that
section
179
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
as
it
stood
when
its
shareholders,
apparently
non-residents
of
Canada,
made
the
subject
investment
in
Canada
and,
indeed,
when
the
matter
was
first
brought
forward
by
the
appellant
in
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
from
which
the
proceedings
in
the
Trial
Division
were
brought
by
way
of
appeal,
entitled
the
appellant,
upon
making
a
simple
request
therefor,
to
nave
the
proceedings
held
in
camera.
A
later
amendment
to
that
section,
which
became
effective
prior
to
the
commencement
of
the
proceedings
in
the
Trial
Division,
requires
a
taxpayer
wishing
in
camera
proceedings
to
establish
to
the
satisfaction
of
the
court
that
the
circumstances
of
the
case
justify
in
camera
proceedings.
In
our
view,
it
is
not
at
all
to
the
point
for
this
Court
to
determine
at
this
time
whether
the
former
or
revised
text
of
section
179
will
govern
any
request
the
appellant
may
make
for
in
camera
proceedings.
If
such
a
request
should
be
made
it
could
only
be
presented
to
the
Trial
Division
rather
than
to
this
Court
on
the
present
appeal.
This
appeal
is
for
the
determination
only
of
those
issues
which
are
raised
against
the
judgment
of
August
23,
1990.
No
issue
of
entitlement
to
in
camera
proceedings
was
determined
by
that
judgment.
The
fact
of
the
existence
of
section
179
and
that
it
may
be
invoked
by
the
appellant,
does
not
assist
that
party
in
its
arguments
on
this
appeal.
That
is
the
genesis
of
the
present
motion.
Mr.
MacKay's
affidavit,
in
its
pertinent
passages,
tells
no
more
than
this:
6.
THAT
the
unnamed
persons
are
nationals
of
a
foreign
country
who
would
be
jeopardized
in
that
country
for
having
Canadian
investments.
7.
THAT
as
a
result
of
the
defendants
[sic]
insistance
[sic]
upon
naming
the
heretofore
unnamed
persons
on
the
record
Roseland
Farms
Ltd.
does
request
that
the
proceedings
in
this
matter
be
held
in
camera.
8.
THAT
I
make
this
affidavit
in
support
of
a
motion
to
this
Honourable
Court
that
the
proceedings
herein
be
continued
in
camera
and
all
discoveries
or
documentation
be
sealed.
The
previous
legislation,
which
the
plaintiff's
counsel
insists
still
applies
to
this
tax
litigation,
runs
as
follows:
179.
Proceedings
under
this
division
shall
be
held
in
camera
upon
request
made
to
the
Federal
Court
by
the
taxpayer.
The
taxpayer
was
accorded
an
absolute
right
to
complete
control
of
the
openness,
or
otherwise,
of
the
proceedings.
Not
so
now.
The
new
version
of
section
179
to
which
Royal
Assent
was
accorded
on
October
29,
1985,
provides
this:
179.
Proceedings
in
the
Federal
Court
under
this
division
may,
on
the
application
of
the
taxpayer,
be
held
in
camera
if
the
taxpayer
establishes
to
the
satisfaction
of
the
Court
that
the
circumstances
of
the
case
justify
in
camera
proceedings.
The
plaintiff's
counsel
avers
that
in
the
Tax
Court
proceedings
the
Crown
agreed
to
the
confidentiality
of
the
foreign
principals.
He
reported
that
Mr.
MacKay
had
intimated
in
testimony
that
they
are
Italians;
but
such
is
the
nature
of
the
unspecified
jeopardy
they
would
suffer
if
their
identities
were
revealed
in
the
public
domain
that
the
plaintiff
would
simply
have
to
desist
from
its
appeal,
if
it
had
to
make
that
revelation.
That
would
hand
to
the
Crown
an
easy,
unearned
victory
according
to
counsel.
If
so,
so
be
it.
The
question
of
so-called
"retroactivity"
of
legislation
was
much
discussed
by
counsel.
The
defendant's
counsel,
noting
that
in
common
law,
there
is
a
general
presumption
against
retroactive
application
to
substantive
vested
rights,
then
cited
the
corollary
stated
in
Maxwell
on
The
Interpretation
of
Statutes,
(12th
ed.),
London:
Sweet
&
Maxwell,
1969.
Found
at
page
222,
it
runs
briefly
thus:
The
presumption
against
retrospective
construction
has
no
application
to
enactments
which
affect
only
the
procedure
and
practice
of
the
courts.
No
person
has
a
vested
right
in
any
course
of
procedure,
but
only
the
right
of
prosecution
or
defence
in
the
manner
prescribed
for
the
time
being,
by
or
for
the
court
in
which
he
sues,
and
if
an
Act
of
Parliament
alters
that
mode
of
procedure,
he
can
only
proceed
according
to
that
altered
mode
“Alterations
in
the
form
of
procedure
are
always
retrospective,
unless
there
is
some
good
reason
why
they
should
not
be."
.
In
Driedger,
The
Construction
of
Statutes,
Toronto:
Butterworths,
1974,
at
pages
139
to
148,
the
learned
author
seems
to
take
issue
with
the
misuse
of
the
terms
retroactive"
and
retrospective".
In
explaining
his
semantic
concerns,
he
wrote,
at
page
140:
What
is
a
retrospective
or
a
retroactive
statute?
These
words
are
derived
from
Latin
root
words
meaning
“
looking”
or
"operating",
and
“
backwards”.
A
retrospective
statute
must
therefore
be
one
that
is
operative
with
respect
to
a
time
prior
to
its
enactment.
A
statute
or
a
provision
thereof
may
be
made
retrospective
in
one
of
two
ways:
either
it
is
stated
that
it
shall
be
deemed
to
have
come
into
force
at
a
time
prior
to
its
enactment;
or
it
is
expressed
to
be
operative
with
respect
to
past
transactions
as
of
a
past
time,
as,
for
example,
the
Act
of
Indemnity
considered
in
Phillips
v.
Eyre,
(1870),
L.R.
6
Q.B.
1.
Unless,
therefore,
a
statute
alters
a
right
as
of
a
prior
time
it
cannot
correctly
be
called
retrospective
within
the
normal
meaning
of
that
word.
Of
course,
one
must
always
recognize
that
Parliament
may
change
the
law,
not
in
the
past,
but
for
the
future
at
a
certain
present
time,
which
occurs
on
the
day
on
which
the
statutory
provision
comes
into
force.
Then
everyone
is
affected
by
that
new
law
at
the
same
time
and
in
the
same
way.
The
case
of
Minchau
v.
Busse,
[1940]
2
D.L.R.
282
(S.C.C.),
cited
for
the
plaintiff,
is
not
entirely
in
point
here.
Also,
not
entirely
contrary
but
rather
in
accord
with
the
reasoning
here
are
the
passages
of
the
judgment
of
Sir
Lyman
Duff,
C.J.C.
at
pages
304-05.
Parliament
may
also,
of
course,
provide
that
certain
existing
rights
or
privileges
affected
by
the
new
law
may
be
preserved,
or
even
merely
continued
until
a
future
date.
It
is
very
sensitive
of
Parliament
to
do
that
so
that
the
affected
persons
may
take
the
opportunity
to
make
reasonable
preparations
and
adjustments.
But
Parliament
is
not
lawfully
bound
to
do
so.
Indeed,
by
means
of
the
apt
expression
of
parliamentary
will,
it
may
enact
the
exact
opposite.
When
enacting
procedural
laws,
Parliament
may
express
its
will
in
plain
unvarnished
language.
The
new
section
179
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
is
just
such
legislation.
It
is
procedural.
It
is
for
immediate
effect,
not
retroactive
effect.
If
one
could
say
that
anyone
had
a
vested
taxpayer's
right
to
in
camera
litigation,
one
must
note
that
the
new
provision
does
not
take
it
away
or
suppress
it,
but
rather
reasonably
alters
the
procedure
by
which
the"right"
may
be
exercised.
The
taxpayer
may
exercise
the
“right”
if
the
taxpayer
establishes
to
the
satisfaction
of
the
Court
that,
in
the
circumstances,
in
camera
proceedings
are
justified.
If
the
prior
legislation
gave
an
ipse
dixit,
an
unquestionable,
absolute
right”,
the
legislation
could
be
said
to
have
been
unconstitutionally
over-generous,
for
the
notion
of
"open
court"
is
the
historic
constitutional
norm,
if
not
imperative,
of
the
Canadian
tradition.
McPherson
v.
McPherson,
[1936]
A.C.
177
(P.C.);
Attorney-General
for
Nova
Scotia
v.
Maclntyre,
[1982]
1
S.C.R.
175,
132
D.L.R.
(3d)
385,
at
page
185
(S.C.R.).
Proceedings
held
in
camera
are
the
exception
which
must
be
satisfactorily
justified—as
is
now
provided
in
section
179.
The
appeal
division
of
this
Court
made
reference
to
the
MacIntyre
judgment
in
considering
the
case
of
C.D.
(applicant)
v.
M.N.R.
(respondent),
[1991]
1
C.T.C.
379,
91
D.T.C.
5210,
.whose
headnote,
in
part,
suffices
for
some
appreciation
of
the
judgment
of
Mr.
Justice
Décary
therein:
Prior
to
the
hearing
of
his
appeal
before
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada,
the
taxpayer
applied
under
section
16
of
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada
Act
for
an
order
that
the
hearing
be
held
in
camera.
The
application
was
dismissed
(unreported)
and
the
taxpayer
applied
under
section
28
of
the
Federal
Court
Act
for
an
order
reversing
the
Tax
Court's
finding.
Held:
The
taxpayer's
application
(which
was
held
in
camera)
was
dismissed.
As
Dickson,
J.
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
pointed
out
in
A.G.
(Nova
Scotia)
v.
McIntyre
when
speaking
of
in
camera
hearings,
covertness
is
the
exception
and
openness
is
the
rule.
In
this
way,
public
confidence
in
the
integrity
of
the
court
system
and
public
understanding
ofthe
administration
of
justice
are
fostered.
With
the
advent
of
the
freedom
of
the
press
provisions
of
paragraph
2(b)
of
the
Charter,
moreover,
openness
of
the
courts
became
an
even
better
recognized
and
protected
principle
than
it
had
been
at
common
law.
In
addition,
Cory,
J.
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada
indicated
in
Edmonton
Journal
v.
Alberta
(A.G.),
[1989]
2
S.C.R.
1326,
64
D.L.R.
(4th)
577,
that
the
rights
enshrined
in
section
2(b)
of
the
Charter
should
only
be
restricted
in
the
clearest
of
circumstances.
Against
this
background,
therefore,
the
taxpayer
could
not
be
heard
to
say
that
his
fear
of
professional
disciplinary
proceedings,
should
the
facts
of
his
appeal
become
public
knowledge,
constituted
sufficient
justification
for
an
in
camera
hearing.
Indeed,
to
accede
to
this
argument
would
be
to
afford
the
taxpayer
a
protection
not
even
afforded
to
witnesses
fearing
criminal
proceedings.
Accordingly,
in
the
absence
of
any
error
of
law
on
the
part
of
the
Tax
Court
of
Canada,
the
taxpayer's
application
was
dismissed.
Clearly
section
179
does
not
deal
with
a
vested
or
a
substantive
right,
but
rather
with
procedure,
the
manner
in
which
the
Court
conducts
its
proceedings.
It
is
as
much
a
matter
of
procedure
as
are
the
currently
over-used
and
counter-constitutional
“
confidentiality
orders"
so
favoured
by
litigation
counsel
in
commercial
and
intellectual-property
cases.
Section
179
is
for
immediate
effect,
and
obedience,
upon
coming
into
force.
Finally,
counsel
for
the
plaintiff
stated
that
in
proceedings
before
the
Appeal
Division
it
had
been
remarked
that
the
matter
in
issue
bears
on
important
matters
of
high
principle.
He
asserted
that
this
matter
of
such
importance
could
not,
therefore,
reside
in
merely
procedural
legislation.
That
is
not
so.
Indeed
matters
of
the
highest
importance
reside
in
“
mere”
procedures.
Professor
A.V.
Dicey,
in
his
classical
1885
opus,
updated
unto
its
10th
edition
in
1959
and
reprinted
at
least
into
the
1970's,
An
Introduction
to
the
Study
of
the
Law
of
the
Constitution,
in
Chapter
V,"
The
Right
to
Personal
Freedom”,
wrote
of
habeas
corpus.
Habeas
corpus
is
not
unimportant!
Here
are
passages
on
pp.
220-21:
The
whole
history
of
the
writ
of
habeas
corpus
illustrates
the
predominant
attention
paid
under
the
English
constitution
to
"remedies"
that
is,
to
modes
of
procedure
by
which
to
secure
respect
for
a
legal
right,
and
by
which
to
turn
a
merely
nominal
into
an
effective
or
real
right.
The
Habeas
Corpus
Acts
are
essentially
procedure
Acts.
[Emphasis
added.]
It
surely
does
not
follow
that
important
principles
are
never
confined
to
merely
procedural
legislation.
Habeas
corpus
is
entrenched
by
paragraph
10(c)
of
the
Charter
of
Rights
and
Freedoms,
which
enunciates
many
another
right,
each
an
important
principle,
residing
in
mere
procedure.
Accordingly,
the
first
application
for
relief,
to
resurrect
and
to
apply
section
179
of
the
Income
Tax
Act
as
it
existed
prior
to
the
amendment
in
1985,
must
be
dismissed.
The
Appeal
Division,
as
noted,
dismissed
the
plaintiff's
appeal
from
this
Court's
order
of
August
23,
1990,
whereby
answers
were
to
be
compelled.
The
execution
of
that
order
should
not
be
attempted,
obviously,
until
there
be
some
definitive
resolution
of
the
second
prong
of
the
plaintiff's
motion.
The
second,
alternative
prong
received
little,
if
any
attention
either
in
Mr.
MacKay's
affidavit,
or
in
the
oral
submissions
of
counsel.
Toward
the
end
of
the
hearing,
the
plaintiff's
counsel
asked
for
the
opportunity
to
present
further
and
better
affidavit
evidence
to
support
the
application
to
invoke
the
version
of
section
179
now
in
force.
The
Court
is
inclined
to
grant
that
request,
in
the
interest
of
fairness.
The
plaintiff
is
accorded
time
until
close
of
business
in
the
registry
on
Thursday,
August
21,
1992,
in
which
to
file
and
serve
that
further
affidavit
evidence.
The
plaintiff's
application
is
adjourned
until
the
first
motions
day
in
Winnipeg
on
or
after
September
8,
1992.
The
parties
by
counsel
may
agree
in
writing,
to
be
filed,
upon
more
convenient
dates,
subject
to
what
follows.
The
Court
as
presently
constituted
is
not
seized
of
the
plaintiff's
adjourned
application
to
hold
the
proceedings
herein
under
the
post-amendment
version
of
section
179.
Indeed,
this
judge
has
now
been
more
than
sufficiently
involved
in
this
case,
which
would
benefit
from
the
fresh
approach
of
another
judge
to
be
deployed
by
the
Associate
Chief
Justice.
Order
accordingly.