CARTWRIGHT,
J.
(concurred
in
by
Kerwin,
J.:—These
appeals
were
argued
together
and
raise
the
same
questions
relating
to
taxes
demanded
on
income
for
the
1947
taxation
year.
To
make
clear
what
these
questions
are
it
will
be
sufficient
to
refer
briefly
to
the
facts
in
the
case
of
the
first
appeal.
The
respondent
Spruce
Falls
Power
and
Paper
Company
Limited
carries
on
the
business
of
manufacturing
and
selling
sulphite
pulp
and
newsprint
paper.
It
has
the
right
to
cut
the
timber
on
extensive
limits
in
the
Province
of
Ontario.
It
conducts
logging
operation
on
these
limits
in
the
course
of
which
it
cuts
the
standing
timber
into
pulpwood
logs
which
it
transports
to
its
mill
at
Kapuskasing,
Ontario.
At
the
mill
these
logs
are
processed
or
manufactured
into
sulphite
pulp
and
newsprint
paper.
The
business
of
the
appellant
is
thus
a
wholly
integrated
operation,
in
the
course
of
which
it
acquires
a
raw
product
in
its
natural
state,
namely
standing
timber,
and
through
a
series
of
operations
converts
such
raw
product
into
finished
or
semifinished
products,
namely
sulphite
pulp
and
newsprint
paper,
which
it
sells
to
the
ultimate
consumer
thereof.
In
respect
of
such
business
the
respondent
filed
a
return
under
The
Corporations
Tax
Act,
1939,
of
the
Province
of
Ontario
showing
net
income
for
the
year
ending
December
31,
1947
of
$5,807,161.33
and
tax
payable
thereon
of
$406,501.29.
In
its
amended
return
of
Dominion
of
Canada
Income
and
Excess
Profits
Taxes
for
the
year
ending
December
31,
1947,
the
respondent
claimed
to
deduct
from
its
taxable
income
46.36%
of
the
said
tax
of
$406,501.29,
i.e.
$188,-
454.00,
as
being
tax
on
its
income
derived
from
logging
operations
within
the
meaning
of
Section
5(1)
(w)
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
and
the
regulations
made
thereunder.
This
deduction
was
disallowed
by
the
appellant
but
was
allowed
in
full
by
the
learned
trial
judge.
The
two
questions
which
we
have
to
determine
are
whether
the
respondent
is
entitled
to
any
deduction
and,
if
so,
whether
the
amount
of
the
deduction
claimed
is
correctly
computed.
The
answer
to
the
first
question
turns
on
the
construction
of
the
relevant
provisions
of
the
statute
and
the
regulations.
The
relevant
regulations
are
P.S.
331,
dated
January
30,
1948
and
P.C.
952,
dated
March
6,
1948
which
amended
section
one
of
P.C.
331.
It
is
not
necessary
to
repeat
their
terms.
The
meaning
of
the
words
used
construed
in
their
ordinary
sense
appears
to
me
to
be
entirely
consistent
with
the
view
taken
by
the
learned
trial
judge
and
indeed
I
find
the
construction
he
has
placed
upon
them
a
more
natural
one
than
that
contended
for
by
the
appellant.
At
the
time
both
of
the
Orders-in-Council
referred
to
were
passed
the
enabling
section
under
which
they
were
made,
Section
5,
subsection
(1),
paragraph
(w)
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
as
amended
by
11
Geo.
VI,
ce.
63,
Section
4,
subsection
(5),
read
as
follows
:
“
4
Income’
as
hereinafter
defined
shall
for
the
purpose
of
this
Act
be
subject
to
the
following
exemptions
and
deductions
.
.
.
:
(w)
Such
amount
as
the
Governor
in
Council
may,
by
regulation,
allow
for
amounts
paid
in
respect
of
taxes
imposed
on
the
income,
or
any
part
thereof,
by
the
Government
of
a
province
by
way
of
tax
on
income
derived
from
mining
operations
or
income
derived
from
logging
operations.
’
’
Subsection
(6)
of
Section
4
of
11
Geo.
VI,
c.
63,
reads
as
follows
:
“
(6)
Paragraph
(w)
of
subsection
one
of
section
five
of
the
said
Act,
as
enacted
by
subsection
five
of
this
section,
is
applicable
to
income
of
the
nineteen
hundred
and
forty-seven
and
subsequent
taxation
years
and
to
tax
payable
thereon
but
in
the
case
of
the
nineteen
hundred
and
forty-seven
taxation
year
no
amount
may
be
deducted
thereunder
greater
than
that
proportion
of
the
total
amount
that
might
be
deducted
in
respect
of
the
whole
taxation
year
that
the
number
of
days
in
the
said
taxation
year
in
the
calendar
year
nineteen
hundred
and
fortyseven
is
of
the
number
of
days
in
the
whole
of
the
taxation
year.
’
’
By
Section
2(2)
of
11
and
12
George
VI
c.
53,
(assented
to
on
June
30,
1948)
paragraph
(w)
was
repealed
and
the
following
was
substituted
therefor
:
“
(w)
such
amount
as
the
Governor
in
Council
may,
by
regulation,
allow
in
respect
of
taxes
on
income
for
the
year
from
mining
or
logging
operations.’’
As
subsection
(6)
of
Section
4
of
11
Geo.
VI,
c.
63,
quoted
above,
was
not
amended
it
would
follow
that
the
expressed
intention
of
Parliament
was
that
paragraph
(w)
as
last
enacted
should
be
applicable
to
income
of
the
1947
and
subsequent
taxation
years
and
to
tax
payable
thereon.
The
appellant
contends
that
the
validity
of
the
regulations
is
to
be
determined
and
that
they
are
to
be
construed,
so
far
as
their
construction
is
governed
by
the
terms
of
the
enabling
statute,
with
reference
to
paragraph
(w)
as
it
appeared
in
the
1947
statute
rather
than
that
in
the
1948
statute
and
that
whichever
statute
is
applicable
gave
power
to
the
Governor
in
Council
to
allow
a
deduction
from
income
of
taxes
on
income
from
logging
operations
only
if
such
tax
was
specifically
imposed
as
and
expressly
limited
to
a
tax
on
income
derived
from
such
operations
and
that
no
power
was
given
to
enact
regulations
allowing
a
deduction
in
respect
of
taxes
on
income
from
logging
operations
paid
under
a
taxing
statute
applying
to
income
generally.
The
learned
trial
judge
has
held
that
the
governing
statutory
provision
is
paragraph
(w)
as
enacted
in
1948.
Mr.
Mundell
argues
that
this
is
wrong.
His
submission
is
that
the
paragraph
as
enacted
in
1947
was
the
only
enabling
statute
in
force
when
the
regulations
were
passed,
that
their
validity
must
be
determined
with
reference
to
that
section
and
that
if
they
were
not
authorized
by
it
they
were
void
and
there
was
nothing
upon
which
Section
20(a)
of
the
Interpretation
Act
could
operate
when
the
1948
amendment
was
passed.
I,
at
present,
incline
to
the
view
that
Mr.
Mundell’s
argument,
in
this
regard,
would
be
unanswerable
in
a
case
in
which
the
amending
statute
was
clearly
prospective.
The
question
is
rendered
difficult
by
the
fact
that
the
1948
amendment
is
made
retrospective
in
its
operation.
Parliament
could
of
course
by
aptly
framed
legislation
validate
regulations
which
had
been
previously
passed
but
were
for
some
reason
invalid.
Parliament
is
assumed
to
be
familiar
with
the
law
and
with
the
orders
of
the
Governor
in
Council
of
general
application
and
it
is
arguable
that,
when
it
provided
that
paragraph
(w)
as
enacted
in
1948
should
apply
to
the
1947
taxation
year,
it
intended
that
the
already
existing
regulations
should
be
deemed
to
have
been
passed
under
the
new
paragraph.
I
do
not,
however,
find
it
necessary
to
decide
this
question
in
this
appeal,
because
if
it
be
assumed,
as
I
will
now
assume,
that
the
statutory
provision
to
which
we
should
have
regard
is
paragraph
(w)
as
enacted
in
1947
I
am
of
opinion
that
the
decision
of
the
learned
trial
judge
was
right.
It
would
have
been
a
simple
matter
for
the
draftsman
of
the
paragraph
to
have
made
it
clear
that
the
operation
of
the
section
was
to
be
restricted
to
a
tax
specifically
and
exclusively
levied
on
income
from
logging
operations
but
Parliament
has
not
seen
fit
to
use
such
words
and
the
words
used
seem
to
me
to
be
apt
to
authorize
the
regulations
passed
by
the
Governor
in
Council
construed
as
they
have
been
construed
by
the
learned
trial
Judge.
It
is
said
for
the
appellant
that
the
words
‘‘by
way
of
tax
on
income
derived
.
.
.
from
logging
operations’’
support
the
construction
for
which
he
contends,
but
in
my
view
the
words
‘‘by
way
of’’
are
not
words
of
art
and
the
ordinary
meaning
of
the
words
of
the
clause
taken
as
a
whole
seems
to
me
to
include
the
tax
here
in
question.
Leaving
aside
for
the
moment
the
question
of
the
accuracy
of
the
computation,
it
is
clear
that
the
$188,454.00
which
the
respondent
claims
to
be
entitled
to
deduct
from
its
taxable
income
was
imposed
by
way
of
a
tax
on
income
and
that
the
income
upon
which
this
amount
of
tax
fell
was
derived
from
logging
operations.
It
would,
I
think,
be
a
forced
construction
of
the
clause
to
hold
that
it
has
no
operation
in
the
case
of
a
tax
on
income
which
does
in
fact
fall
upon
income
derived
from
logging
operations
merely
because
it
also
falls
on
the
income
of
the
taxpayer
from
other
sources.
I
should
have
arrived
at
the
above
conclusion
from
a
consideration
of
the
words
of
the
statute
alone
and
it
appears
to
me
to
be
fortified
by
a
consideration
of
the
following
circumstances.
As
I
have
said
already,
Parliament
is
assumed
to
know
the
existing
law
including
the
public
statutes
of
the
provinces
and
we
are
informed
by
all
counsel
that
there
was
not
in
force
in
any
province
in
the
year
1947
any
legislation
under
which
a
tax
was
levied
on
income
derived
from
logging
operations
which
would
answer
the
description
of
the
only
sort
of
tax
to
which,
in
the
appellant’s
submission,
clause
(w)
could
have
application.
It
is
said
for
the
appellant
that
this
is
not
significant
as
the
clause
and
the
regulations
passed
thereunder
were
intended
to
look
only
to
the
future
but
if
this
is
so
it
is
difficult
to
understand
why
the
1948
amendment
was
made
retrospectively
applicable
to
the
1947
taxation
year.
So
far
as
logging
operations
and
income
derived
therefrom
are
concerned,
to
adopt
the
construction
for
which
the
appellant
contends
would
have
the
result
of
leaving
both
the
legislation
and
the
regulations
without
subject
matter
in
a
year
to
which
they
were
expressly
made
applicable.
It
would
further
appear
that
the
construction
adopted
by
the
learned
trial
Judge
avoids,
while
that
contended
for
by
the
appellant
would
bring
about,
a
result
involving,
to
borrow
the
words
of
my
brother
Rand,
an
apparent
discrimination
which
might
seem
unjust.
For
these
reasons,
even
on
the
assumption
that
it
is
to
the
1947
form
of
paragraph
(w)
that
we
should
look,
I
agree
with
the
conclusions
of
the
learned
trial
judge
in
regard
to
the
first
question
above
mentioned.
In
regard
to
the
second
question,
as
to
whether
the
amount
of
the
deduction
claimed
was
correctly
computed
in
accordance
with
the
regulations
and
particularly
whether
it
was
computed
in
accordance
with
sound
accounting
principles
with
reference
to
the
value
of
the
logs
at
the
time
of
their
delivery
at
the
respondent’s
mill,
I
am
in
agreement
with
the
reasons
and
the
conclusion
of
the
learned
trial
judge.
I
would
dismiss
both
appeals
with
costs.
KELLOCK,
J.
(concurred
in
by
Taschereau,
J.)
:
—
These
appeals,
which
were
argued
together,
involve
the
construction
of
Section
5(1)
(w)
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
as
enacted
by
Section
2(2)
of
chapter
53
of
the
Statutes
of
1948,
which
came
into
force
on
June
30
of
that
year.
The
question
between
the
parties
arises
in
the
determination
of
the
‘‘net
taxable
income”
of
each
company
under
the
Excess
Profits
Tax
Act,
which
statute,
by
Section
2(1)
(c)
of
the
Second
Schedule,
makes
applicable
the
provisions
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
in
determining
such
income.
The
question
of
construction
which
arises
in
each
case
is
as
to
whether
the
words
‘‘in
respect
of
taxes
on
income
for
the
year
from
.
.
.
logging
operations’’
in
Section
5(1)
(w)
are
limited
to
a
provincial
tax
imposed
specifically
on
such
income,
or
whether
the
paragraph
contemplates
as
well,
the
deduction
of
a
part
of
a
general
income
tax,
apportioned
on
the
basis
of
the
proportion
which
income
from
logging
bears
to
total
income.
In
the
court
below
the
latter
view
was
taken
and
the
appellant
contends
that
this
view
is
erroneous.
Prima
facie
the
language
of
the
statute
is
specific.
The
deduction
authorized
is
the
amount
‘‘
in
respect
of
taxes
paid
to
.
.
.
a
province
on
income
derived
from
logging
operations.’’
The
respondents’
contention
really
is
that
this
language
is
to
be
read
as
meaning
‘‘in
respect
of
that
proportion
of
taxes
paid
to
a
province
which
corresponds
to
the
proportion
which
income
received
from
logging
bears
to
the
total
income
taxed.’’
Both
parties
sought
to
interpret
the
legislation
by
reference
to
regulations
passed
under
antecedent
legislation,
as
well
as
by
reference
to
the
earlier
legislation
itself.
Counsel
for
the
appellant
also
referred
us
to
other
Dominion
and
provincial
legislation
which
it
was
said
formed
part
of
a
general
scheme
which
included
the
legislation
which
is
here
directly
in
question.
Section
5(1)
(w)
was
first
enacted
in
1946
by
Section
41
of
chapter
55,
and
came
into
force
on
August
31,
1946.
As
so
enacted,
the
section
was
as
follows:
“5
(1)
‘Income’
as
hereinbefore
defined
shall
for
the
purpose
of
this
Act
be
subject
to
the
following
exemptions
and
deductions,
(w)
such
amount
as
the
Governor
in
Council
may
by
regulation
allow
in
respect
of
taxes
paid
by
the
government
of
a
province
or
income
derived
from
mining
or
logging
operations
in
the
province.”
At
the
time
of
this
enactment
the
Domimon-Provincial
Taxation
Agreement
Act,
1942,
6
George
VI,
e.
13,
and
complementary
provincial
legislation,
was
in
force.
The
agreements
provided
for
thereby
were,
as
provided
by
Section
2
of
the
Dominion
statute,
in
force
‘‘for
the
duration
of
the
war
and
for
a
certain
readjustment
period
thereafter”.
In
fact,
they
continued
in
some
cases
until
the
end
of
the
year
1946,
and
in
the
remainder
until
the
closing
months
thereof.
Under
the
terms
of
these
agree-
ments
the
provinees
undertook
to
repeal
or
suspend
all
income
and
corporation
taxes.
It
was,
however,
provided
that
the
provinces
might,
notwithstanding,
levy
‘‘taxes,
license
fees
and
royalties
upon
or
in
respect
of
natural
resources
within
the
Province”.
We
were
advised
that
in
some
of
the
provinces
there
had
been
in
existence
for
some
years
before
1946,
taxes
on
income
from
mining
operations
but
no
similar
taxation
specifically
on
income
from
logging
operations.
The
agreements,
however,
precluded
all
provincial
taxation
on
personal
or
corporation
income.
Having
regard
to
this
legislative
background,
Section
5(1)
(w)
would
appear
to
have
been
directed
to
permitting
deduction
of
specific
taxes,
and
not
to
have
had
any
reference
to
general
provincial
taxes
on
income
which
did
not
then
exist
and
were
prohibited
under
the
existing
legislation.
On
July
17,
1947,
Section
5(1)
(w)
was
repealed
by
Section
4(5)
of
chapter
63
of
the
Statutes
of
1947
and
the
following
substituted
:
44
(w)
Such
amount
as
the
Governor
in
Council
may,
by
regulation,
allow
for
amounts
paid
in
respect
of
taxes
imposed
on
the
income,
or
any
part
thereof,
by
the
Government
of
a
Province
by
way
of
tax
on
income
derived
from
mining
operations
or
income
derived
from
logging
operations.”
The
French
version
of
the
statute
is
as
follows
:
44
(w)
Le
montant
que
le
gouverneur
en
conseil
peut
admettre
par
règlements
pour
des
montants
versés
à
l’égard
des
impôts
établis
sur
le
revenu
ou
sur
une
partie
du
revenu
par
le
gouvernement
d’une
province
sous
forme
d’impôt
sur
le
revenu
provenant
d’opérations
minières
ou
sur
le
revenu
provenant
d’opérations
forestières.
’
’
The
words
44
by
way
of
tax”
and
the
words
‘‘sous
forme
d’impôt”,
in
my
opinion,
even
more
clearly
preclude
the
view
that
there
was
in
the
contemplation
of
Parliament
anything
other
than
a
provincial
tax
specifically
imposed
on
income
from
logging
or
mining.
Moreover,
on
the
same
day
as
Section
5(1)
(w)
was
amended,
namely,
July
17,
1947,
chapter
58
of
11
George
VI,
was
also
enacted,
by
Section
3(1)
(a)
of
which
authority
was
given
to
the
Minister
of
Finance,
with
the
approval
of
the
Governor
in
Council
on
behalf
of
the
Government
of
Canada,
to
enter
into
agreements
with
the
governments
of
the
provinces
under
which
the
latter
should
refrain
from
levying
personal
income
taxes,
corporation
income
taxes,
and
corporation
taxes
as
should
be
defined
in
the
agreement,
in
respect
of
the
period
of
five
years
commencing
January
1,
1947.
By
subsection
(2)
it
was
enacted
that
notwithstanding
anything
in
subsection
(1),
such
agreements
might
provide
that
the
provinces
might
“(a)
levy,
or
empower
a
municipality
to
levy
income
tax
or
corporation
income
tax
on
income
earned
during
the
whole
or
any
part
of
the
period
mentioned
in
paragraph
(a)
of
subsection
one
derived
from
mining
operations
or
on
income
so
earned
derived
from
logging
operations
as
defined
in
the
agreement
;
“(b)
impose
corporation
income
tax,
in
such
manner
as
may
be
agreed
upon,
at
a
rate
of
five
per
centum
on
income
of
corporations
earned
during
the
whole
or
any
part
of
the
period
mentioned
in
paragraph
(a)
of
subsection
one
attributable
to
their
operations
in
that
province
.
.
.
”
Subsection
(6)
of
Section
4
of
chapter
63
of
the
1947
statutes,
which
amended
the
Income
War
Tax
Act,
had
provided
that
Section
5(1)
(w)
of
that
Act
should
be
applicable
to
income
of
the
1947
and
subsequent
taxation
years.
By
July
17,
1947,
British
Columbia,
Saskatchewan,
Manitoba,
New
Brunswick
and
Prince
Edward
Island
had
already
enacted
enabling
legislation
with
respect
to
Dominion-Provincial
taxation
agreements,
and
on
August
27,
1947,
Nova
Scotia
followed
suit.
Paragraph
8
of
the
form
of
agreement
provided
for
by
this
provincial
legislation,
of
which
that
enacted
by
British
Columbia
is
an
example,
is
as
follows:
“8.
(1)
Notwithstanding
anything
contained
in
clause
six
British
Columbia
may,
during
the
period
commencing
on
January
1,
1947,
and
ending
on
December
31,
1951,
impose,
levy
and
collect
royalties
and
rentals
on
or
in
respect
of
natural
resources
within
the
province
of
British
Columbia.
(2)
Notwithstanding
anything
contained
in
clause
six,
British
Columbia
or
any
municipality
authorized
by
British
Columbia
may,
during
the
period
mentioned
in
paragraph
one
of
this
clause,
impose,
levy
and
collect
taxes
on
income
derived
from
mining
operations
or
income
derived
from
logging
operations,
or
from
both,
carried
on
in
the
province
of
British
Columbia
during
the
said
period,
but
no
such
tax
shall
be
imposed
by
a
municipality
except
in
lieu
of
a
tax
on
property
or
on
any
interest
in
property,
other
than
residential
property
or
any
interest
therein,
of
the
person
carrying
on
the
said
mining
or
logging
operations.
(3)
Canada
will
allow
as
a
deduction
in
computing
income
under
the
Income
War
Tax
Act
of
the
period
mentioned
in
paragraph
one
of
this
clause,
royalties
and
rentals,
and
taxes,
mentioned
in
paragraphs
one
and
two
of
this
clause,
respectively.”
Having
regard,
therefore,
to
the
situation
revealed
by
this
legislation,
there
can
be
no
doubt
in
my
opinion
that
the
type
of
taxation
to
which
Section
5(1)
(w),
as
enacted
in
1947,
was
directed,
was
provincial
taxation
specifically
imposed
on
income
from
mining
or
logging
operations,
that
is,
for
amounts
paid
in
respect
of
taxes
imposed
on
the
income
or
any
part
of
the
income
of
the
taxpayer
“by
way
of
tax
on
income
derived
from
mining
or
.
.
.
logging
operations’’,
or
in
the
language
of
the
French
version,
‘‘sous
forme
d’impôt”
on
income
so
derived.
No
regulations
had
been
passed
under
Section
5(1)
(w)
as
enacted
in
1946
and
when
the
paragraph
was
amended
in
1947,
it
did
not
accord
with
paragraph
8
of
the
agreements
in
that
it
did
not
provide
for
deduction
in
the
case
of
a
municipal
tax.
On
January
30,1948,
by
P.C.
331,
regulations
were,
however,
passed,
the
first
recital
stating
that
an
amendment
to
Section
5(1)
(w)
would
be
proposed
at
the
then
present
session
of
Parliament
to
take
care
of
this
omission.
It
was
also
recited
that
the
proposed
amendment
would
implement
the
undertaking
contained
in
clause
8
of
the
agreements
relative
to
taxes
on
income
derived
from
mining
or
logging
operations.
Paragraph
3
of
the
regulations
in
so
far
as
they
apply
to
income
from
logging
operations
is
as
follows
:
“3.
In
these
regulations,
(a)
“Income
derived
from
logging
operations’
by
a
person
means
(i)
where
logs
are
sold
by
him
to
any
person
at
the
time
of
or
prior
to
delivery
to
a
sawmill,
pulp
or
paper
plant
or
other
place
for
processing
or
manufacturing
logs,
or
delivery
to
a
carrier
for
export
from
Canada,
or
delivery
otherwise,
the
net
profit
or
gain
derived
by
him
from
(A)
the
acquisition
of
the
timber
or
the
right
to
eut
the
timber
from
which
the
logs
were
obtained,
and
the
cutting
and
sale,
or
the
cutting,
transportation
and
sale
of
the
logs,
or
(B)
the
acquisition,
transportation
and
sale
of
the
logs,
or
(ii)
where
he
does
not
sell
but
processes,
manufactures
or
exports
from
Canada
logs
owned
by
him,
the
net
profit
or
gain
reasonably
deemed
to
have
been
derived
by
him
from
(A)
the
acquisition
of
the
timber
or
the
right
to
cut
the
timber
from
which
the
logs
were
obtained,
and
the
cutting
and
the
transportation
of
the
logs
to
the
sawmill,
pulp
or
paper
plant
or
other
place
for
processing
or
manufacturing,
or
to
the
carrier
for
export
from
Canada,
as
the
case
may
be,
or
(B)
the
acquisition
of
the
logs
and
the
transportation
of
them
to
such
point
of
delivery
computed
in
accordance
with
sound
accounting
principles
with
reference
to
the
value
of
the
logs
at
the
time
of
such
delivery,
excluding
any
amount
added
thereto
by
reason
of
processing
or
manufacturing
the
logs.
’
’
It
is
argued
for
the
respondents
that
this
paragraph
supports
their
contention
that
Section
5(1)
(w)
contemplates
the
deduction
of
an
apportioned
part
of
a
general
provincial
income
tax
in
that
the
regulation
provides
for
the
segregation
of
income
from
logging
from
other
income.
Even
if
it
would
be
proper
to
construe
that
statute
by
reference
to
the
regulations,
I
do
not
think
that
this
contention
is
sound.
Whether
Section
5(1)
(w)
referred
to
a
specific
tax
or
a
general
tax,
if
a
person
in
the
pulp
and
paper
business,
for
example,
who
carried
on
his
own
logging
operations,
was
to
be
permitted
to
deduct
the
tax
in
respect
of
income
from
the
purely
logging
operations,
it
was
necessary
that
the
regulations
should
provide
a
basis
for
the
segregation
of
that
income.
Accordingly,
the
regulations
with
respect
to
both
logging
and
mining
income
are
completely
colourless
so
far
as
this
contention
is
concerned.
P.C.
331
was
amended
on
March
6,
1948,
by
a
new
paragraph
one,
which
reads
as
follows:
“1.
Subject
to
these
regulations
the
amount
that
a
person
may
deduct
from
income
under
paragraph
(w)
of
subsection
one
of
section
five,
is
an
amount
not
exceeding
the
proportion
of
the
total
taxes
therein
mentioned
paid
by
him
to
(a)
the
Government
of
a
Province,
or
(b)
a
municipality
in
lieu
of
taxes
on
property
or
any
interest
in
property
other
than
his
residential
property
or
any
interest
therein
that
the
part
of
his
income
that
is
equal
to
the
amount
of
(c)
income
derived
by
him
from
mining
operations
as
defined
herein,
or
(d)
income
derived
by
him
from
logging
operations
as
defined
herein
is
of
the
total
income
in
respect
of
which
the
taxes
therein
mentioned
were
so
paid.”
This
provision
substituted
deduction
of
a
proportion
of
the
tax
paid
for
the
provision
of
paragraph
one
as
originally
passed
in
January,
1948,
under
which
actual
taxes
paid
by
the
taxpayer
on
income
from
mining
or
logging
operations
was
deductible,
although,
in
view
of
the
definitions
in
paragraph
three
of
the
original
regulations,
some
difficulty
might
well
have
arisen
in
cases
where
the
ascertainment
of
the
income
by
a
province
differed
from
the
basis
laid
down
in
that
paragraph.
It
was
no
doubt
to
obviate
any
such
difficulty
that
the
amendment
was
passed.
As
amended,
the
deduction
authorized
was
the
fraction
of
the
provincial
or
municipal
tax
represented
by
the
taxpayer’s
income
from
logging
operations
as
defined
by
the
regulations,
divided
by
the
taxpayer’s
total
income
in
respect
of
which
the
taxes
mentioned
in
Section
5(1)
(w)
were
paid,
i.e.,
the
total
income
from
logging
as
defined
by
the
provincial
legislation.
The
enactment
of
the
statute
of
1948,
and
the
repeal
of
Section
5(1)
(w)
as
enacted
in
1947,
did
no
more,
in
my
opinion,
than
remove
the
limitation
on
deduction
to
provincial
taxes
and
permit
the
deduction
of
municipal
taxes.
In
my
opinion,
therefore,
the
appeals
should
be
allowed
with
costs
here
and
below.
RAND,
J.:—The
question
raised
by
these
appeals
is
the
right
of
the
respondent
companies
to
a
deduction
from
income
and
excess
profit
taxes
for
the
year
1947
under
paragraph
(w)
of
subsection
(1)
of
Section
5
of
the
Income
War
Tax
Act.
The
deduction
is
in
respect
of
taxes
paid
to
the
governments
of
Ontario
and
Quebec
on
income
under
the
Corporation
Taxation
Act
of
each
province.
Paragraph
(w)
as
enacted
in
1947
reads:
“Such
amount
as
the
Governor
in
Council
may,
by
regulation,
allow
for
amounts
paid
in
respect
of
taxes
imposed
on
the
income,
or
any
part
thereof,
by
the
Government
of
a
province
by
way
of
tax
on
income
derived
from
mining
operations
or
income
derived
from
logging
operations.’’
As
repealed
and
re-enacted
in
1948,
it
is
in
these
words:
“Such
amount
as
the
Governor
in
Council
may,
by
regulation,
allow
in
respect
of
taxes
on
income
for
the
year
from
mining
or
logging
operations.”
The
provincial
taxes
were
on
the
income
of
total
operations
carried
on
by
the
companies
which
included
not
only
logging
operations
but
also
the
production
of
pulp
and
paper.
The
companies
claim
the
right
to
allocate
a
portion
of
those
taxes
to
the
logging
operations;
the
contention
of
the
Crown
is
that
paragraph
(w)
applies
only
to
taxes
which
are
specifically
imposed
in
relation
to
income
from
logging
operations
as
a
separate
subject
matter,
even
though
the
latter
may
be
part
of
a
larger
operation
as
in
the
cases
before
us.
On
its
face,
the
1947
version,
by
the
words
‘‘by
way
of
tax
on
income
derived
.
.
.
from
logging
operations’’
indicates
a
tax
related
by
the
province
exclusively
to
the
income
from
those
particular
activities.
But
Mr.
Johnson
lays
down
as
the
first
component
of
his
argument,
the
proposition
that
in
interpreting
(w)
we
should
apply
the
rule
of
apportionment
approved
by
the
Judicial
Committee
in
Commissioner
of
Taxation
v.
Kirk,
[1900]
A.C.
588,
and
followed
in
International
Harvester
Company
v.
Provincial
Tax
Commission,
[1949]
A.C.
86;
[1948]
C.T.C.
307,
and
Provincial
Treasurer
of
Manitoba
v.
Wrigley
Company
Limited,
[1950]
A.C.
1;
[1949]
C.T.C.
377.
That
rule
is
this:
that
when
a
tax
is
imposed
on
a
segment
of
business
whose
total
operations
extend
beyond
the
taxing
jurisdiction,
the
income
from
the
whole
of
the
operations
is
to
be
treated
as
distributed
over
the
range
of
processes
which
make
up
that
whole.
This
furnishes
a
basis
on
which
the
taxation
of
the
income
attributable
to
the
portion
carried
on,
say,
in
a
province,
can
be
determined
:
it
may
be
a
distribution
of
the
income
in
relation
to
the
cost
of
each
such
process
or
by
means
of
any
other
formula
that
will
fairly
reflect
the
share
in
the
end
result
which
it
contributes.
The
fallacy
in
this
lies
in
the
fact
that
the
rule
is
one
relating
to
the
taxation
of
a
constructively
segregated
portion
of
an
entire
business;
but
there
is
no
question
of
taxation
here
;
the
paragraph
deals
only
with
an
allowable
deduction
of
taxes
exacted
by
another
authority.
What
it
is
directed
to
is
a
provincial
tax
that
is
imposed
upon
an
exclusive
entirety
of
logging
operations,
or
specifically
on
logging
operations
as
a
part
of
a
larger
entirety
for
which
some
rule
of
apportionment
is
necessary.
Mr.
Johnson’s
argument
is
one,
in
a
proper
case,
to
be
addressed
to
the
taxing
authority
of
Ontario
when
such
a
tax
is
imposed
as
in
the
decisions
mentioned.
But
there
is
no
such
provincial
tax
here,
and
there
is,
therefore,
nothing
on
which
the
paragraph
can
op-
erate.
What
he
asks
is
that
the
plain
language
of
the
clause
be
complicated
by
the
application
of
a
rule
designed
for
an
entirely
different
purpose.
Then
it
is
said
that
the
regulations
made
under
the
authority
of
the
paragraph
as
it
was
enacted
in
1947
must,
because
of
its
repeal
by
the
1948
enactment,
be
read
with
the
latter,
and
that,
so
read,
the
companies
bring
themselves
within
the
provisions
of
both.
The
regulations
were
made
by
P.C.
351
on
January
30,
1948.
The
preamble
refers
to
the
language
of
paragraph
(w),
1
‘by
way
of
taxes
on
income
derived,
etc.”
and
the
deduction
was
to
be
in
relation
to
taxes
on
income
earned
only
from
January
1,
1947,
whatever
might
be
the
accounting
period
of
the
taxpayer
ending
in
that
year.
It
recites
the
intention
to
propose
an
amendment
to
paragraph
(w)
in
relation
to
taxes
‘‘imposed
on
the
income
or
any
part
thereof
by
any
municipality
authorized
.
.
.
by
way
of
tax
on
income
derived
from
.
.
.
logging
operations.’’
By
paragraph
(2)
of
the
operative
part,
a
receipt
for
payment
of
the
taxes
in
respect
of
which
the
deduction
is
claimed
is
required.
By
paragraph
(3)
‘‘income
derived
from
logging
operations’’
is
defined
for
both
the
case
of
logs
which
are
cut
and
prepared
and
then
sold,
and
where
they
are
carried
into
further
manufacture;
and
a
basis
is
laid
down
for
computing
income
‘‘with
reference
to
the
value
of
the
logs
at
the
time
of
such
delivery”,
meaning,
where
further
operations
are
carried
on,
the
delivery
to
the
sawmill,
pulp
or
paper
plant
or
other
place
where
they
commence.
Paragraph
(1)
of
the
regulation
was
amended
on
March
6,
1948
by
a
re-enactment
providing
that
the
amount
deductible
under
paragraph
(w)
shall
not
exceed
“the
proportion
of
the
total
taxes
therein
mentioned
[in
paragraph
(w)]
paid
by
him
to
(a)
the
government
of
a
province
.
.
.
that
the
part
of
his
income
that
is
equal
to
the
amount
of
.
.
.
(d)
income
derived
by
him
from
logging
operations
as
defined
herein
is
of
the
total
income
in
respect
of
which
the
taxes
therein
mentioned
[paragraph
(w)]
were
so
paid.”
The
important
words
are
‘‘income
.
.
.
from
logging
operations
as
defined
herein’’
that
is,
the
basis
set
up
in
the
regulations.
In
other
words,
if
that
basis
should
produce
only
one-half
of
the
amount
of
income
taxed
by
the
province,
then
only
one-half
of
the
taxes
paid
could
be
deducted
under
(w).
The
Dominion
did
not
intend
to
allow
deduction
on
the
basis
of
larger
income
than
that
produced
by
the
application
of
its
own
formula.
What
is
clear
is
that
the
denominator
of
that
fraction
is
a
figure
determined
not
by
the
Minister
or
any
court
but
by
the
province.
This,
in
turn,
is
connected
with
the
Dominion-Provincial
taxing
agreements
to
which
I
shall
later
refer.
But
it
is
argued
that
(w),
re-enacted
in
1948,
is
broader
than
that
of
1947,
both
of
which
were
declared
to
apply
to
the
taxation
year
1947;
that
it
allows
an
income
on
logging
operations
to
be
ascertained
by
the
Minister
or
court
by
apportioning
the
total
income
taxed
by
the
province;
and
that
the
regulations
must
be
interpreted
in
the
light
of
that
change.
The
latter
are
governed
by
Section
20
of
the
Interpretation
Act;
but
their
meaning
must
be
gathered
in
the
light
of
the
provision
by
which
they
were
authorized;
and
if
so
construed,
they
are
consistent
with
the
repealing
enactment,
they
remain
in
force,
if
not,
they
are
so
far
superseded.
I
see
no
difference
in
meaning
between
paragraph
(w)
of
1947
and
that
of
1948.
The
object
of
the
latter
was
to
extend
the
deduction
to
similar
taxation
by
municipalities.
But
if
the
1948
language
is
to
be
taken
to
permit
a
deduction
in
cases
of
taxation
such
as
we
have
in
the
cases
before
us,
the
regulations
would
be
inconsistent
with
it
and
would
stand
repealed,
and
there
would
then
be
none
to
authorize
any
deduction.
Since
the
regulations
were
allowed
to
stand,
it
must
be
taken
that
the
Governor
in
Council,
at
least,
interpreted
the
1948
amendment
to
the
same
effect
as
the
language
of
1947.
That
the
intention
of
Parliament
is
carried
out
by
this
interpretation
is
confirmed
by
Section
3(2)(a)
of
chapter
58
of
the
Dominion
statutes,
1947.
This
enactment
authorized
the
Dominion
government
to
enter
into
taxing
agreements
with
the
provinces,
one
effect
of
which
was
that
the
latter
agreed
not
to
impose
personal
or
corporation
income
taxes
for
five
years,
subject
to
the
exception,
among
others,
that
the
government
of
a
province
might
“
(a)
levy
or
empower
a
municipality
to
levy
income
tax
or
corporation
income
tax
on
income
earned
during
the
whole
or
any
part
of
the
period
mentioned
in
paragraph
(a)
of
subsection
(1)
derived
from
.
.
.
logging
operations.
’
’
I
entertain
no
doubt
that
this
language
means
a
specific
tax
on
the
income
derived
from
such
an
operation,
ascertained
by
the
province
or
municipality
and
nothing
else;
all
other
income
was
ruled
out.
The
purpose
was
to
apply
consistently
a
principle
of
not
affecting
provincial
taxation
of
natural
resources
in
their
immediate
and
direct
exploitation.
This
statute
was
assented
to
on
July
17,
1947,
the
day
of
the
enactment
of
paragraph
(w)
for
that
year,
and
that
the
one
was
intended
to
be
consistent
with
the
other
is
inescapable.
The
question
arises
here
only
by
reason
of
the
fact
that
neither
Ontario
nor
Quebec
availed
itself
of
the
tax
proposals.
The
apparent
discrimination
between
specific
taxation
of
ascertained
income
from
logging
operations
and
that
involved
in
total
income
attributable
to
them
may
seem
unjust
but
when
the
language
of
the
legislation
is
reasonably
free
from
doubt,
that
impression
becomes
irrelevant.
The
net
income
of
total
operations
does
not
necessarily
reflect
a
net
return
from
all
of
its
constituent
segments
and
that
was
appreciated
here
by
leading
evidence
to
show
the
logging
operations
to
have
been
by
themselves
profitable.
But
we
cannot
speculate
on
that
or
any
other
possible
element
in
the
policy
behind
the
limitative
provision
:
it
is
sufficient
that
Parliament
has
made
its
intention
clear.
Since,
then,
in
neither
case
is
there
a
provincial
tax
on
income
from
the
logging
operations
segregated
according
to
the
terms
of
the
taxing
statute,
the
case
is
not
within
either
the
regulations
or
paragraph
(w),
and
the
Minister
was
right
in
his
refusal
to
allow
the
deductions
claimed.
The
appeals
must,
therefore,
be
allowed
and
the
actions
dismissed
with
costs
in
both
courts.
Appeals
allowed.